Archive for the ‘faith’ Category

Day 167: John 12:37-50 — Speaking or Cowering

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

John 12:42 gives me cause to wonder. Do we still have this problem today? Do we still hesitate to confess our belief in Jesus because of the multitude of Pharisees in our world today? Some would say there is no problem of believing in Jesus today — at least not in this country.

The following is a quote from Strong exhaustive concordance of the Bible “They sought for distinction and praise by outward observance of external rites and by outward forms of piety, and such as ceremonial washings, fastings, prayers, and alms giving; and, comparatively negligent of genuine piety, they prided themselves on their fancied good works.”

We live in a world where lip service is given to God by so many leaders of society and they carefully define the limits of what service to God should be. We find ourselves disagreeing with their limits, yet fail to speak up because of fear — fear we will be marked as a religious fanatic. We justify our silence by thinking “if I speak up then I’ll lose all chance to influence them”.

Brethren, influence is brought to bear only by people who have the courage to state that conviction in a way that others can see. Will you be a Pharisee or a disciple?

Day 166: 1 Chronicles 1:1-54; John 12:12-36 — His Care

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

Last month I had the chance to return to my home area and visit with old friends and relatives. While talking with my nephew I pointed to his two boys, one four and the other less than a year, and told him to make sure he taught them about their great-grandfather. Dad was one of my heroes. I would hope that the world would never forget him.

From time to time someone in the family will work on our family tree and uncover a new bit of information here or there. 1 Chronicles 1 is a researcher’s dream. It doesn’t give a lot of personal information about each person, but it quickly lays out the family history.

To contrast 1 Chronicles with John 12 might not make sense at first, but there is a connection. In John 12:21 (NAS) — These then came to Philip, who was from Bethsaida of Galilee, and began to ask him, saying, “Sir, we wish to see Jesus.” Did you catch it? “We wish to see Jesus.” That same request is made daily by the world of His followers today. In us they wish to see Jesus.

How can they see Jesus in us unless we have learned of Him to the point that we emulate Him in our everyday life? When the world sees Jesus in us, it’s not a performance—it is an automatic reflection of who we have become under His care.

Study of our ancestors will only satisfy our selfish curiosity. Study of the one who saved us and keeps us in God’s grace can lead us and others to an eternity with the Father. Now that is real satisfaction.

Day 160: 2 Kings 12:4-14:22; John 9:8-34 — Going Home

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

Theologians love to argue about theology. They set up straw men then knock them down. Many times in the process they fail to see and consider the simplest of facts that are before them. The reason is easy to discern — those simple facts will not help them make their case. In truth, many times, they will disprove their position.

The older I get the more I fall in love with words. I can remember a time when I would be reading something and come across an unfamiliar word. If I thought I understood the sentence without the knowing the word I just ignored it and went on. Now my best friend is my dictionary. I want to know what words mean because one or two words can change the entire meaning of something. Each word is like a fact. If we are allowed to pick only the words we want, we have no real understanding.

John 9:8-34

In this passage there are a lot of words but little or no communication because the leaders of the Jews simply do not want to know the facts. They are seeking evidence that will prove what they have already decided. The man born blind is no scholar and has no credentials but he has evidence. “Whether He is a sinner, I do not know; one thing I do know, that though I was blind, now I see.”

Theologians love the smallest of details but what we need is basic understanding. “Once I was lost but now I’m on my way home.”

Day 156: 2 Kings 5:1-14 — You big crybaby!

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Elisha.

What a lot of great stories in this prophet’s CV, huh? We read about the widow’s oil, the Shunammite’s dead son raised, and the “death in the pot” incident in chapter 4. We’ll read about the floating axehead in tomorrow’s reading, and don’t forget the bears who came out of nowhere to do in the forty-two punks making fun of God’s man (2 Kings 2:23-25).

Now here we are in Chapter 5, where Elisha is introduced to an Aramean Army commander named Naaman, who really knew how to throw a temper fit. You know the story:

  • Naaman had leprosy.
  • His wife’s Israelite servant girl told him about a prophet who would cure him.
  • Naaman didn’t go where the servant girl told him he would be healed; he went to the king of Israel instead.
  • This made the king mad, and he tore his robes.
  • Elisha heard the king had torn his robes (you ever wonder how Elisha heard?), and told the king to have Naaman come to him.
  • Naaman went to see the prophet.
  • Elisha wouldn’t even come out to meet this powerful Army commander; he sent a messenger out to tell Naaman to wash 7 times in the dirty Jordan River.
  • Naaman went off in a huff.

The rest of the story isn’t until tomorrow’s reading, but you know how it ends and we have enough for today anyway.

Two points:

  1. You need healing? You go where the healing is! How difficult is that? We’re all sick with sin that separates us from the Father (Romans 3:23, Isaiah 59:2), and there is only One healer who can eliminate that separation — Jesus, the Christ (John 14:6).
  2. The instructions given to Naaman were intended to show that healing would only come from God, and only on His terms, not on terms of Naaman’s own choosing. It may not make sense to us that we contact the saving blood of Jesus through the waters of baptism, yet this is how God told us it happens (Acts 2:38, Mark 16:16). Many people today who seek salvation are told falsely that salvation is effected through prayer, during which you ask Jesus into your heart and accept Him as your personal Savior. That theology does beg the question though — if Saul of Tarsus wasn’t saved after 3 days of prayer and fasting (Acts 9:8-12, 22:16), why would we believe we can access the saving blood of Jesus through prayer?

Question: To whom do you look for eternal healing? Whose instructions do you follow?

Day 150: John 5:17-30 — Wait wait wait…he said what?

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

Have you ever sat through a lecture in school or at work and only halfway paid attention? You start to drift off into what you have to do later that day or think about what you’d rather be doing. Maybe I’m just a bad listener. It’s okay…I can admit it.

One of the things I do to help me concentrate more on the lesson at hand is to put myself in the audience of Jesus. To put myself in the moment. I can only imagine that when Jesus is speaking in John 5:17-30 that there were at least a few bad listeners. And with all bad listeners you occasionally hear a part of what the speaker said that makes you stop and think, “Wait wait wait…he said what?!”

In this passage Jesus is explaining his equality with God. I can only imagine the looks of confusion and then rage by some of the people. Imagine, for instance, if a man got up in front of our church and declared himself equal with God. Think about the reactions. How would you react? I’m sure not too differently than the people of Jesus’ time.

My hat is off to those people in Jesus’ day that believed. I’m sure it couldn’t have been easy.

Day 148: John 4:46-54 — Look at who Jesus is!

Friday, May 28th, 2010

This story (John 4:46-54) raises the question of the relationship between signs and faith. Everyone wants a great miracle. We want to see the power of God. We want great spectacular special effects or the whole thing is a dud. For John the person who interprets a miracle solely as a miraculous act will remain focused on and limited by the act itself. To forever be wondering why they or a loved one can’t experience the same miraculous performance. Do we just see water turned into wine, a deathly-ill boy revived, a miraculous feeding with bread? I think there is more. All this makes Jesus a great miracle worker. We can proclaim, “Look what Jesus can do.” Yet, the gospel is more than what Jesus can do. The gospel is about who Jesus is! He is the giver of abundant gifts (John 2:1-11) and the giver of life (John 4:46-54). Jesus points to who God is and there is the foundation of faith. To see God in Jesus’ actions of healing is to recognize the truth of the confession of John 1:14, “The Word became flesh and lived among us.”

The official approached Jesus with only one thing on his mind. He was worried about his son. His son was at the point of death, and Jesus might be the one to heal him. His reasons for seeking Jesus were desperation and basic need. Yet he ended up receiving much more than he could have hoped for and, indeed, much more than he knew he needed. He received the gift of his son’s life and the gift of faith in Jesus. The official’s faith was evoked by Jesus’ love and the fact that the “The Word became flesh and lived among us.”

Day 144: 1 Kings 4:1-5:18; John 2:1-22 — What will you do with your gifts?

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Judah and Israel, a united kingdom, a population as numerous as the sands of the sea, flourish. The promise of a homeland for Israel had been fulfilled and all were blessed, each man rested under his own vine and fig tree. Solomon has more than enough to make his rule secure, and the wisdom God gave Solomon abounds in proverbs, songs, and teachings about the world God had given them. Now he will build the temple his father had planned for the God who blessed them. This will be a place to draw the nations and the place all Israel will come to worship the true King of the earth.

Jesus takes His place in the lives of the people He created. As one of us He shares the good times with us. A wedding party, a happy time, provides Jesus the opportunity to begin to demonstrate what He brings to us. We can study and exegete and postulate all day on the wine and verbs in the passage, and perhaps learn something after our minds become soaked with readings and discussions, but the great importance of John’s account would be lost. In the Word made flesh, God communicates to us that He always wants to bless us and give joy and meaning to both this life and the life to come. Jesus, as Man and God, states very powerfully that gifts have meaning and find their fulfillment when used to bless man and glorify God. At this wedding party He does both at the same time. When gifts are used as God intends, they will lead those looking for God to be turned to Him and be given reason to believe and live His will.

What a wonderful example we have! Yes, we know more of what comes later in both accounts, but take them as they are, now. Our Creator blesses us with gifts of many kinds. Take stock of them today. Ask how these abilities, whether many or few, may be used to bless the lives of people and in turn glorify the great and gracious God who freely gives to all, and gave His Son that we might live now and have hope of life to come.

Prayer: Holy, Righteous Father, help us today to see the goodness You provide, the gifts You give, that we may use them to bless others and bring glory to Your name.

Day 137: 2 Samuel 16:1-18:18; Luke 23:13-31 — Betray or Be Faithful ?

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Ahithophel cannot wait to turn on David when the usurper Absalom rose to power. Hushai remained faithful in the face of a new and awesome threat. The Jewish leadership cannot wait to have the Romans crucify Jesus. The disciples do not know what to do, frightened, they will watch at a distance, but watch. “Institutionalized religion, the church, the old God, is not for me.” versus “I will cling to the old rugged cross.” Absalom represents the new order, the fresh look at the world, bold, uncharted, powerful. David’s faithful know this is just not right. Jesus threatened the world as they knew it, threatened the entire system by which they understood, ruled, were comfortable, safe. Jesus’ disciples know that He has brought a new age from God Himself. “My God would not stand for these old ways, these dry, narrow minds. The Bible needs new eyes for a new age — perhaps no Bible at all. God is in me and you. We are all gods and goddesses.” versus “Jesus loves me this I know, because the Bible tells me so.”

How so human. How so full of self. Full of rebellion. Full of Satan. When God’s anointed is not what we want Him to be, then we proudly proclaim from our dark emptiness of ignorance, “I know better.” When the Creator does not reflect our image then man decides that is not the real God, there surely must be another that looks more like, well, like me!

Then the others, so determined to be faithful in the face of death itself; so committed to the One Who truly loves them. Not knowing but yet trusting the One Who leads. These are blessed, walking by faith, not by sight.

Ahithophel and Absalom died cruelly. David retook the throne and planned the end of his enemies. The anointed of God ruled the dominion given to him. Jesus arose from the grave, astounding all who saw Him, frustrating all of his enemies who heard, “He lives.” The will of our Creator cannot be stopped, will not be frustrated. We can either work with Him and be blessed or stand — momentarily — in His way and find our best human wisdom thwarted and ground to dust by the Rock of Ages.

The next time we find faith untenable, obedience unfathomable, spirituality an unsolvable puzzle and life that makes no sense, remember those faithful of ages past. The risks, which were no risks at all to those who could truly “see.”

Prayer: Holy, Righteous, True and Faithful One, may we be faithful to You in this day.

Day 132: Luke 21:25-36 — Good News, Jesus is Coming Back!

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Second Coming of ChristI have preached many funerals and have noticed two things. First, a person who did not believe in Jesus makes for a difficult service. Second, a person who was faithful to the Lord makes the funeral service easy for the family and for me. I don’t know why but it seems more and more sermons stay away from the topic of the Second Coming. The coming of the Son of Man is one of the important themes of Jesus’ teaching. It is emphasized over and over in the New Testament (e.g., Mark 13; Matthew 24; John 14; 1 Corinthians 15; 1 Thessalonians 4; 2 Thessalonians; 2 Peter 3; Revelation 22, etc.).

The old joke tells us that there are two inescapable aspects of life: we pay taxes and we will die. Death lends urgency and significance to each new day. For those who have no faith and no knowledge of God, death stands as a final denial of life. All that we may attempt or do is eventually swept away by time. The unavoidable philosophy of those who do not believe is the desire to make the most of every moment (“Go for the gusto”) with no respect for others. On the other hand, the Good News of Jesus Christ is that He is returning and that beyond the end of our time is the Lord, who has come among us in the person of Jesus. We believers live expectantly, filling each day with activity that is meaningful because this life is a precursor to something better and we hold our heads high, knowing that our redemption is near (Luke 21:28). These verses encourage me. When the very foundation of life seems to be shaken and times are tough (Luke 21:26) we read:

And then they will see the Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory.Luke 21:27, ESV

Our redemption is near (Luke 21:28), God’s Word will never pass away (Luke 21:33), Good News, Jesus is coming back!

Day 131: Luke 21:5-19 — Don’t be Fooled!

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

the end is nearThe other day, I was teaching a class with some teens. They had a fascination about the end of times. It seems they have experienced the teachings of the pseudo-religious prophets that manifest themselves in contemporary entertainment genres. The force of Jesus’ warning in Luke 21:7-11 is that disciples of Christ should not be misled by the false prophets who will come claiming authority and saying that the time is near. Such claims are the words of charlatans who prey upon the innocent. Nevertheless, the dangers and hardships that we experience are real. Truth is tested and faith is confirmed not in idle speculation but in the crucible of hard times. In Luke 21:5-19 Jesus foretells the coming destruction of the temple with a warning of the wars, earthquakes, famines, and plagues that will come and a warning to the disciples of the persecutions they must endure. We need to distinguish biblical teachings and sound biblical interpretation from the sensational claims carried by the media and popular religious best-sellers. We are not waiting for a call to ministry, we already have a call to disregard the false prophets; do not be led astray, and do not go after them (Luke 21:8). Those who wish to find a more energetic religious experience, therefore, should look not for signs of the future but for signals that it is time to live by Jesus’ call for obedience and faithfulness here and now.