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Humble Yourself? What Does That Mean? 010315

2 Chronicles 7:14: [God said to Solomon], “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray, and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”

Boy, this verse says a lot.   God is not talking to just anybody; He is talking to those of us who claim the Name of Jesus.  Just us.  Not all the people who have not yet invited Him into their hearts.

And what is the first thing He says to us?  He says, “Humble yourselves.”  [Quit thinking you’re so great.  Remember Who is really in charge here.  Who is the Potter and who is the clay.  Who created the earth and everything in it.  Oh, and quit thinking that you are in control!  Quit thinking that you don’t need Me to help you.  If you really think that, you’re just not paying attention; you are completely ignoring reality.  Do you know why you think you don’t need Me?  It’s because of all your affluence.  The reason it is so hard for a rich man to get into heaven is because his money and his stuff insulate him from the hard facts of life; so he begins to think he really IS in control, and he really doesn’t need Me.]

As my Momma might say, “You need Jesus in the worst way.”  Sometimes when I visit people in the hospital, and they’re not expected to live much longer, I ask them if they’ve made peace with God.  If they have, they’re quick to tell me so.  If they’re not so sure, it gives them a chance to think, which is all I’m hoping and praying for.

One lady said, “Since my husband died about 10 years ago, me and God haven’t had much to say to each other.”  As a result I was able to share God’s love and mercy and forgiveness with her, and she, like the thief on the cross, went to be with Jesus in Paradise.

A Dog in the Woods.010115

Last night about 9:00 PM we took the dogs for a walk.  We have two 6 month old rat terriers, a boy and a girl, Ragnar and Lagartha (aka Gertie).  Often our teen-age son Ian and I walk them.  Actually we run them.  I hold the dogs, straining at the leash; Ian runs down the street a block or two; then turns and calls them; I let go of the leashes and they run as fast as they can to Ian.  They love Ian and he loves them back, just as much.  These are the first dogs we have had since Ian has been old enough to remember.  They are truly his companions. ‘Course Gaye and I love them too, but not near as much as Ian.

So last night we did our routine til we were maybe 6 blocks down the street and then we turned back and did it again on the way home.  When we were maybe 2 or 3 houses from home, Ragnar got loose and ran for our back yard.  Ian chased him, but “Rags” beat him to the trees along the creek in back of our house and went exploring.  Usually when one of the dogs gets loose, he’ll run for a minute or two and then come back to the other dog.  But this time Rags didn’t come right away, so I gave Ian my cell phone/flash light so he could search the woods.

Well, he searched and searched but no luck.  Ian was getting desperate.  He was hollering at the top of his lungs, loud and long, “RAAAAAG-NAAAAAR” over and over.

Pretty soon I started saying, “Don’t holler so loud.  He’ll come back soon.  He doesn’t want to stay outside in the dark all night any more than you want him to.  He’ll get lonely in a few minutes and come.”

But he didn’t come.  We walked all around in the woods looking.  We went down the street to the place where you could go in the woods from the other end.  All the time hollering “Raaaag-Naaaar”.  But you could tell Ian was getting really worried, and I was getting a little concerned myself.  As I listened to Ian, I could tell he was getting scared Rags wasn’t coming back.  What if something had happened to him? Maybe the leash got caught and he got hung up in the bushes.  Maybe he fell in the creek and couldn’t get out.  Maybe he’d crossed the creek and couldn’t get back.

I started praying, “Lord, please let Rags come back.  Please don’t let anything happen to him.  Please help Ian not be scared.”  And every time I’d see Ian, I’d say, “It’s going to be OK;  he’ll be back soon.”  But I was beginning to wonder myself.

Finally we went to the back of the back yard, where he first ran away, and I said to Ian.  “We’re just going to have to wait. Come on and sit down on the back porch with Gertie, and see what happens.”  When we reached the porch, Ian sat down and petted Gertie; and I said to Ian, “Maybe we should pray.”  By this time he was crying, because he was so worried about Rags.

Ian said, “Sit down here and pray with me.”

I said, “You pray,” but he asked me to go first.  So I prayed, “Please Lord, let Rags come home.  Don’t let him get hurt.  Don’t let him get lost so he can’t figure out how to get home.  Thank you for answering these prayers.”

Then Ian prayed, “Dear Lord, please let Rags come home.  Please work everything out for good for all of us.  Do Your will.  We’re trusting You to take care of all of us. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.”

We got up.  I said I was going to bed.  I said Rags would come back soon and everything would be OK.  Ian went back outside the back fence to look for Rags one last time.  I was in the garage by this time, but I could still hear and I heard my wife say, “He found him.”

When I went back out, Ian says, “I just wanted to look one last time; and when I got the edge of the trees, I could see him coming out.”

“Thank God! ‘, I said, “Just goes to show you how God answers prayers.  Praise the Lord!”  We all stood in the yard and hugged ole Rags.  We were very glad that the lost had been found.  We all went in thinking about how God takes care of us, if we’ll just ask Him.  It reminded me of that verse in Luke, where it says that God will answer your prayers, and speedily too, if we’ll only trust him.  It was a perfect example of how God’s care meets a boy’s trust.  Praise the Lord from Whom all blessings flow!

It’s amazing how you can learn such good lessons from such a simple story. Prov. 3:5-6 Praise God from Whom all blessings flow.

PS A day or two later, we realized we’d lost Rags’ leash that night.  I went searching and found the leash, tangled up in some limbs.  The other end led down a hole.  I pulled on the leash pretty hard and out came the harness.  Looks like Rags was trapped in the hole, so we couldn’t hear him whine or bark, but he was able to wriggle free at almost exactly the same time we were praying.  I don’t know about y’all, but that sounds like God.

The Kingdom of God

Luke 17:20-21:  20 Now when He was asked by the Pharisees when the kingdom of God would come, He answered them and said, “The kingdom of God does not come with observation; 21 nor will they say, ‘See here!’ or ‘See there!’ For indeed, the kingdom of God is within you.”

Matthew 6:33 says “But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you.”

So what can we say about these things?  If the kingdom of God is within us (apparently even within the Pharisees) then how can we seek it? How can we find it?   What do we do to gain entry into the kingdom of God?

First let me tell you: I’m pretty sure that “the kingdom of God”, and “being saved”, and “having eternal life”, and “knowing God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit”, and even “walking after the Spirit” are all interchangeable expressions for “having a personal relationship with our Lord Jesus Christ”.

So how do you have a personal relationship with Jesus?  The Bible talks about several different ways to reach that relationship. Romans 10:9-10 says, “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and believe (trust) in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved; for with the heart one believes (trusts) unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made to salvation.”

In John 3:16, John says, “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes (trusts) in Him, will have eternal life.

In Genesis 15:6 and again in Romans 4:3, God said, “For Abram believed (trusted) God, and it was counted to him for righteousness.”

So what is the common element in all these verses?  If you trust Jesus as a total commitment of your whole being, then you immediately begin to experience that personal relationship that is called by all those names cited above, and because you have Jesus’ Spirit residing in your heart, that very day you enter into the kingdom of God.  And if you’re still trying to figure out how to trust Him; the only way to do it is to surrender your whole self to Him.

GIVING THANKS IN ALL THINGS. 092914

“In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”  Let’s see, that sounds almost exactly like Romans 8:28, “All things work together for good to them that love the Lord, to them that are the ‘called’ according to His purpose.”  If we are sitting in the middle of God’s purpose, and He is working everything out for good to US; we really can give thanks in all things, no matter what they may look like to the untrained eye, to the natural, non-Spirit-filled person on the street.  And it sounds like giving thanks in all things puts us in the middle of God’s will in Jesus.  That’s just another reason to ‘rejoice evermore’.  It’s a festival of love and praise and worship and thanksgiving all rolled into one.

Of course everyone knows that everything is NOT always sweetness and light all the time.  And since it’s not, we’re going to have spells of sorrow, sacrifice, pain, maybe even an occasional doubt.  But if I read this passage correctly, we’re supposed to rejoice and pray and give thanks in all things all the time; and I don’t know about you, but I just can’t get that done, in and of myself.  I just can’t be happy all the time, or good all the time, or obedient all the time.

So the only way I can get through to the ‘Festival of Praise’ is if and when I surrender my whole self to God, and let Him take care of me and my problems, so I can focus on the solution of Jesus, the same Jesus who is my Lord and Savior, and who is my Brother; the One who is with me by His Spirit.  That’s what brings me back to God every time, to rejoicing, and praying and giving thanks in all things.

FOCUSING ON GOD. 092814

habit

In the Message, 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 says, “Be cheerful no matter what; pray all the time; thank God no matter what happens. This is the way God wants you who belong to Christ Jesus to live.” In the KJV, I Thessalonians 5:16-18 says, “Rejoice evermore. Pray without ceasing. In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”

What about ‘Pray without ceasing’?  This verse feels like what Brennan Manning talks about in his devotional book, Reflections for Ragamuffins, about a consistent focusing your attention on God while doing your daily activities.  If you keep on practicing, for weeks or months, this discipline becomes a habit.  Manning called it a ‘persistent turning to God’.  He said Brother Lawrence called it, ‘the practice of the Presence of God.’

That, [persistent turning to God], doesn’t seem like work to me, or even a duty; but more like a privilege, an honor, an opportunity to draw closer to God in my spare moments; an act of love. Especially if it turns into a habit of drawing nearer to God so He’ll draw nearer to me.

Someone, not me, said that if you don’t spend a substantial amount of time with God (reading and studying the Bible; praying, meditating) at least four times a week, you just won’t develop the close, personal relationship with God that you (we all) want to develop.  ‘Praying without ceasing’ is not a ‘religious’ practice.  Though spending time with God every day is ideal, it is not something that has to be done exactly the same time, exactly the same place, in exactly the same position, every single time.  You can think about God, sing God songs, talk to God out loud while you’re driving down the road, or waiting in traffic, or looking out the window at your office.  (‘Course having a ‘standard’ time and place does have some benefit in answering our need for habit and routine)

Nowadays, people look like they’re talking to themselves all the time, when in fact they’re carrying on telephonic communication with someone while walking across the street or walking down the aisle in the grocery store.  So now we don’t look like we’ve lost our minds if we talk to God out loud when we get good and ready.   He’s already listening, and He may even be ready to give you an answer; whether you talk out loud, or say your say in your own heart and mind, while you’re waiting to get on the elevator, or sitting in the surgery waiting room, or broke down on the side of the highway.  All these things allow for personal preference.  You can even say Bible verses over in your mind as the Holy Spirit brings them to you.  How cool is that!

Please do remember that praying is not just about asking for stuff; it is even more about coming to know God for who He is; to glorify God and enjoy His Presence forever.  And maybe most of all it is about listening for what God has to tell you about what you’re worried about.  He may not say it in an audible voice (though many people have heard Him speak), but if you’re Listening, you’ll know when He tells you something, audible or not.

IF YOU’RE HAPPY AND YOU KNOW IT, IT’LL SHOW. 092714

In the Message, 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 says, “ Be cheerful no matter what; pray all the time; thank God no matter what happens. This is the way God wants you who belong to Christ Jesus to live.” In the KJV, I Thessalonians 5:16-18 says, “Rejoice evermore. Pray without ceasing. In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.”

You know what?  Like someone said, if you’re happy and thankful and blessed because you trust in Jesus, send a message to your face.  ‘Course, if you’re frowning all the time, it’s probably (almost certainly) because your face knows the truth about what is in your heart.  Like Jesus says in Luke 6:45, “Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.”  Same goes for your face.  “Out of the abundance of the heart [your eyes and your face] speak.”  Being happy because you have an ongoing, growing relationship with God through Jesus; and the Holy Spirit is residing in you heart; that’s just not something you can force or fake.

And if you claim to have that relationship, but you’re still unhappy, it’ll show on your face.  Most likely it’s because you still haven’t really surrendered your whole self to God, to let Him run your life.  You’re still trying to take care of everything for yourself, to stay in control.  And as long as you’re doing that, God will to let you.

But when you finally give up and let Him have your whole life and your whole self; then you’ll get that sense of relief that only God can give.  You’ll know what rest is all about.  You feel that sense of security, inside and out, that only Jesus can give.  THEN, you’ll be rejoicing all the time and giving thanks for everything that happens to you, good, bad or indifferent.  And your face will be glowing, your eyes will be sparkling, with God.  You just won’t be able to hold it in.  Like Peter said in Acts 4:18-20, “We just can’t help but tell what we’ve seen and heard.”  You’ll be saying, “I just can’t help but grin because I’m so glad to get to be here; right in the middle of the hollow of God’s hand!”  Hallelu Jah!

Mercy  092114

Tex Tonroy's avatarlifevolumeone

A Word about Mercy: In modern versions of the Bible, there are a lot of times when the word mercy in the King James Version is translated ‘love’, or ‘great love’ (or compassion) in the other versions.  And I guess mercy really is a facet of God’s love, but it is such a special facet of God’s love that it deserves some special attention.  In the dictionary, the word ‘mercy’ is defined as follows: 1 kind or compassionate treatment of an offender, adversary, prisoner, etc, in one’s power; compassion where severity is expected or deserved. 2 A disposition to be kind, forgiving, or helpful. 3 The power to show mercy or compassion: ‘to throw myself on his mercy’.  Antonyms of mercy are: harshness, severity, implacability, punishment, chastisement, vengeance.                                            …

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Mercy  092114

A Word about Mercy: In modern versions of the Bible, there are a lot of times when the word mercy in the King James Version is translated ‘love’, or ‘great love’ (or compassion) in the other versions.  And I guess mercy really is a facet of God’s love, but it is such a special facet of God’s love that it deserves some special attention.  In the dictionary, the word ‘mercy’ is defined as follows: 1 kind or compassionate treatment of an offender, adversary, prisoner, etc, in one’s power; compassion where severity is expected or deserved. 2 A disposition to be kind, forgiving, or helpful. 3 The power to show mercy or compassion: ‘to throw myself on his mercy’.  Antonyms of mercy are: harshness, severity, implacability, punishment, chastisement, vengeance.                                                            So you might say ‘mercy’ is love, or just like love,  but it has a depth of meaning that we don’t usually associate with love, certainly not what we humans usually think about when we say love.  Something about, ‘even though we’re worthless and don’t deserve anything but punishment, don’t deserve a thing except judgment and condemnation’, God says, “I don’t care.  Because I love them and I want them to love me, I’m going to be nice to them. It’s more than just regular, human love; it’s MERCY.   Psalms 100:6 (KJV) says, “For the Lord is good,  His mercy is everlasting, and His truth endures to all generations.”  His mercy is everlasting.  To obtain mercy all you’ve got to do is accept it.  He’ll never quit giving it to you.  He likes being merciful because He loves us and He wants us to have a relationship with Him.  Right now, no matter what you’ve done; He’s standing there with His hand out, waiting for you to come and take His hand.  That’s mercy.                                             There’s a soliloquy from ‘The Merchant of Venice’ by William Shakespeare. (Public domain). It says,  “The quality of mercy is not strain’d,                                                                                                               It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven                                                                                                  Upon the place  beneath: it is twice bless’d;                                                                                                It blesseth him that gives and him that takes:                                                                                              ‘Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes                                                                                                     The throned monarch better than his crown;                                                                                               His sceptre shows the force of temporal power,                                                                                           The attribute to awe and majesty,                                                                                                                 Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings;                                                                                               But mercy is above this sceptred sway,                                                                                                       It is enthroned in the hearts of kings,                                                                                                           It is an attribute to God himself,                                                                                                                   And earthly power doth then show likest God’s                                                                                           When mercy seasons justice.”                                                                                                                     That’s mercy.                                                                                                                                            While we’re talking about mercy, we need to talk also about grace.  Grace is the way we act when we’re brought up right; when our mommas actually taught us, actually showed us how people are supposed to act when they act graciously; when they let you see what true manners are all about.  Not so much about which fork to use as it is about how to make people feel comfortable and at ease in your home.  Grace is a sign of how you really are down in your heart, when the Spirit of God is residing there.   Someone said that Grace is ‘unmerited favor’; God being nice to you, even though you didn’t do anything to deserve it; and mercy is God being nice to you, even when you deserve to be punished.  Grace and mercy are just two faces of the same coin, and the coin is God’s love.  Oh, you’ve heard that expression haven’t you?  God is love.  .  (and mercy  .  .  .  and grace).                                                                                                       What do you think . . .What do you do?                                                                                              1] What is mercy to you?                                                                                                                          2] What is it about mercy that makes it so special?                                                                                3] What is the definition of grace?                                                                                                            4] What is it to you?

WHAT IS WORSHIP REALLY? 090814

On August 25, 2014, Max Lucado said, in his daily devotional, that worship is a “voluntary act of gratitude.” He goes on to say that you can’t plan worship, (as in “worship service”) because true worship (worship from the heart) arises from gratitude to a Lord God who has saved you, not just in a spiritual sense of giving you eternal life, but also in an immediate sense of saving you from your stupid (dare I say) evil self. Worship happens when it hits you that you have been healed of something that you KNOW is killing you; that you have been delivered from some evil that it nauseates you to think about the consequences of it.

Today is Sept. 9th, and I’m still going back to this devotional, because the contrast between ‘true’ worship and the kind of worship we usually experience on Sunday morning (or Saturday evening Mass, or whenever we go to ‘worship’ service) is so vivid. Max says ” We have tried to make a science out of worship. We can’t do that! We can’t do that any more than we can sell love or negotiate peace.” Wow! Where I come from “worship service” is a meeting where you sing 2 or 3 songs, listen to a few prayers, maybe say the Lord’s Prayer, hear a short sermon, occasionally take Communion, speak politely to the pastor at the end of the service, and go have Sunday dinner before watching the football game.

Just want you to know that Max is right. Worship is what happens when you are somewhere (sometimes even in church), and God brings to your mind how He delivered you from evil this week, in a near miss car wreck, or a serious confrontation with your boss over some deed undone or other failure at work. Worship is what happens when your blood pressure is so high that you’re feeling light-headed and you go to the doctor and they run all the tests, and everything is OK (I mean really OK). How does that happen? Must be God. Thank God that He really does care; that He really is looking out for you; that HE REALLY WILL NEVER LEAVE YOU NOR FORSAKE YOU. That’s worship.

Worship is what happens when you’re living from paycheck to paycheck and you just don’t quite make it to the end of the pay period before the ‘new’ bills are due; and a substantial sum of money just ‘falls out of the sky’. Whew! Did I ever need that to happen. You may not say anything to anyone else (though you should) but you KNOW down in your heart that it must be God. (’cause only He could have made that happen, just that way, at just the absolutely crucial time.) Thank God! Praise God! Hallelu-Jah!!!

Thanks Max. I pray that God will reveal Himself to us in all of these circumstances; that He will allow us to see what He’s doing, how much He cares, and WHO HE REALLY IS, so we can truly worship.

Teacher as Servant.090814

            In II Timothy 2: 24-26, Paul says to Timothy, “And a servant of the Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all, able to teach, patient, in humility correcting those who are in opposition, if God perhaps will grant them repentance, so that they may know the truth, and that they may come to their senses and escape the snare of the devil, having been taken captive by him to do his will.”

            I inserted a few explanatory changes: “The servant of the Lord must not argue with them, but be gentle to everybody, ready and able to teach, patient (there’s that ‘putting up with them’ again), humbly instructing those who oppose (you, God, themselves); maybe God will give them repentance to the recognition and acceptance of the truth, so they can withdraw themselves from the trap of the devil, by whom they are taken captive to do his will.” 

            Do you feel the built-in love that is contained in this verse?  It follows the “Love Chapter” I Corinthians 13. ‘Don’t argue with them’; that’s the part about not demanding your own way.  ‘Gentle’; that’s all about being kind, not irritable or grouchy, not boastful or proud or rude.  ‘Ready and able to teach’; willing to put up with them ‘not getting it’ and continuing to tell them the truth, to rejoice in the truth.  ‘Humbly instructing’;  when they say something mean and tacky, you don’t have to gig ‘em back; because the Spirit in you can believe the best for them, hope the best for them, and never give up praying for them. 

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What do you think . . .what do you do? 

1] If the point, the theme, of this story is discipleship, how does that “putting-up-with-them” love fit into the discipleship process?

2] How many different ways do we show God’s kind of love as we teach others to be disciples, to make disciples, and to teach disciples?

3] How many different aspects of I Corinthians 13 love do we see in this passage?