Our Daily Bread #18
Towards Maturity
A DEEP DEPENDENCE Read: 2 Corinthians 3:1-11 Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think of anythiong as being from ourselves, but our sufficiency is from God. - 2 Corinthians 3:5 Five for Fighting is the stage name of a recording artist who soared to popularity after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. He sings the song "Superman (It's Not Easy)," a ballad that imagines what it must be like m be a superhero. Yet he struggles with the inadequacy of his strength to cope with the world's complexities. People seemed to identify with the song's theme. Real life proves we are insufficient to battle the overwhelming burdens that confront us. Even those who want to be self-sufficient can't manage life in their own strength. As followers of Christ, we have a resource that even Superman could never claim. In our relationship with God, we find a sufficiency for life that can overwhelm our inadequacies and enable us to live victoriously. This was Paul's encouragement to our hearts when he wrote to the believers at Corinth. He said, "Not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think of anything as being from ourselves, but our sufficiency is from God" (2 Car. 3:5). That makes all the difference in the world. Left to ourselves, we will be forced to live with the reality that we can never be adequate to grapple with life. But in God's strength we find all we need to navigate the storms of life in this turbulent world. - Bill Crowder All that I creed He will always be, All that I need till His face I see; All that I need through eternity, Jesus is all I need - Rowe WE MUST EXPERIENCE OUR WEAKNESS TO EXPERIENCE GOD'S STRENGTH. GETTING FREE Read: Mark 10:17-27 One thing you lack: Go your way, sell whatever you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. - Mark 10:21 Personal downsizing usually occurs when someone moves to a smaller home. Furniture and other possessions are sacrificed because there is no longer room for them. But when psychologist Jane Adams moved to a larger home, she still went through the difficult process of parting with many treasured items from her worldwide travels. Instead of downsizing, she was ridding herself of unnecessary things that bound her to the past. "Downsizing," she said, "is about pinching, restricting, and cutting back while keeping yesterday's dreams alive; divesting is about freedom, expansion, .. and dreaming new [dreams]." Instead of searching for meaning in possessions, we are called to find life and freedom in Jesus. To a religious young man whose possessions gripped him, Christ said: " 'One thing you lack: Go, your way, sell whatever you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, take up the cross, and follow Me.' But he was sad at this word, and went away sorrowful, for he had great possessions" (Mark 10:21-22). It's hard to imagine Jesus needing a storage unit for His extra stuff. If anything I own keeps me from obeying Him wholeheartedly, am I ready to open my hand, release it, and freely follow Him? - David McCasland No longer do I ask for things, For Christ is my desire; He walks with me and talks with me; He is my satisfier - Bang A FAITH THAT COSTS NOTHING AND DEMANDS NOTHING IS WORTH NOTHING. REACH FOR ... Read: Psalm 55:17,22 Oh, that I had wings like a dove I would fly away and be at rest. - Psalm 55:6 A television commercial asks, "What do you reach for when you're stressed?" Then it suggests, "Reach for [our product]:" The number of ways people try to deal with serious stresses in life are as numerous as there are people. Having a drink. Blaming God. Stuffing ourselves with food. Keeping our feelings inside. Blaming others. These responses might calm us, but they're just a temporary means of escaping our problems. No product we reach for can take them away. In Psalm 55, King David described his desire to escape from his difficulties; "My heart is severely pained within me .... Oh, that I had wings like a dove! I would fly away and be at rest" (w.4,6). After the betrayal of his friend and counselor Ahithophel, who had gone to help his enemy, David wanted to get away (vv.12-13; see 2 Sam.15). In this psalm he tells us that he reached out to God in his pain (vv.4-5,16). What do we reach for? Author Susan Lenzkes suggests that we reach out to the Lord and pour out our heart to Him. She writes, "It's all right - questions, pain, and stabbing anger can be poured out to the Infinite One and He will not be damaged.... For we beat on His chest from within the circle of its arms." - Anne Cetas Christian, when your way seems darkest, When your eyes with tears are dim, Straight to God your Father hastening, Tell your troubles all to Him. - Anon. WHEN WE PUT OUR CARES INTO GOD'S HANDS, HE PUTS HIS PEACE INTO OUR HEARTS. THE PERFECT STORM Read: Mark 4:35-41 They feared exceedingly, and said to one another, "Who can this be, that even the wind and sea obey Him!" - Mark 4:41 In his book "The Perfect Storm," author Sebastian Junger reports astonishing facts about the power of a hurricane: "A mature hurricane is by far the most powerful event on earth; the combined nuclear arsenals of the United States and the former Soviet Union don't contain enough energy to keep a hurricane going for one day. A typical hurricane ... could provide all the electric power needed by the United States for three or four years." Seafarers encounter diverse weather conditions. But those who experience a severe storm have one emotion in common - fear. Mark 4:35-41 records a gale that threatened the boat carrying Jesus and His disciples on the Sea of Galilee. In a panic, the disciples awakened Jesus. He calmly rebuked the wind and sea by saying, "Peace, be still!" (literally "hush") as if He were quieting an agitated child (v.39). Immediately, the gale stopped and the water became inexplicably placid. The disciples asked, "Who can this be, that even the wind and the sea obey Him!" (v.41). Do you feel as if your life's circumstances are a mighty storm? Look to the God-man Jesus Christ, who has authority over heaven and earth. He will give you the strength to survive the storm until He ultimately calms. it. - Dennis Fisher Our loving God is always near, Forever by our side; He'll bring us comfort in our fear, And peace that will abide. - Sper WHEN WE TRUST THE POWER OF GOD, HIS PEACE KEEPS US FROM PANIC. INTEGRITY 101 Read: Psalm 101:2 I will behave wisely in a perfect way ... I will walk within my house with a perfect heart. - Psalm 101:2 Officials in Philadelphia were astonished to receive a letter and payment from a motorist who had been given a speeding ticket in 1954. John Gedge, an English tourist, had been visiting the City of Brotherly Love when he was cited for speeding. The penalty was $15, but Gedge forgot about the ticket for almost 52 years until he discovered it in an old coat. "I thought, I've got to pay it," said Gedge, 84, who now lives in a nursing home in East Sussex. "Englishmen pay their debts. My conscience is clear." This story reminded me of the psalmist David's commitment to integrity. Although he made some terrible choices in his life. Psalm 101 declares his resolve to live blamelessly. His integrity would begin in the privacy of his own house (v.2) and extend to his choice of colleagues and friends (vv.6-7). In sharp contrast to the corrupt lives of most kings of the ancient Near East, David's integrity led him to respect the life of his sworn enemy, King Saul (1 Sam.24:4-6; 26:8-9). As followers of Jesus, we are called to walk in integrity and to maintain a clear conscience. When we honor our commitments to God and to others, we will walk in fellowship with God. Our integrity will guide us (Prov.11:3) and help us walk securely (10:9). - Marvin Williams Lord, cleanse my heart of all deceit, And teach me to be true; Help me to have integrity, In all I say and do. - Sper THERE IS NO BETTER TEST OF A MAN'S INTEGRITY THAN HIS BEHAVIOR WHEN HE IS WRONG. FLEXABILITY Read: James 4:15 Instead you ought to say, "If the Lord wills, we shall live and do this or that." - James 4:15 Over the years, it has been my privilege to lead several study trips to the Bible lands. In the months leading up to our group's departure, we would have a series of orientation meetings in preparation for our trip. Schedules, hotel accommodations, contact information - all could be changed at a moment's notice. For that reason, our preparation times always stressed the need for flexibility. A willingness to go with the flow and adjust to whatever changes we might encounter was especially valuable. Life has an element of unpredictability for which flexibility is the best response. James expressed a worldview of flexibility in chapter 4 of his epistle. While it is wise to plan for the future, we must do so with the recognition that God's purposes might be different from ours. Instead of rigidly saying, "Today or tomorrow we will go to such and such a city" (v.l3), James counseled us to flex to God's direction in our lives. He said, "Instead you ought to say, 'If the Lord wills, we shall live and do this or that' " (v.15). The adventure of following Christ is one that rests in His perfect plans - and flexibility helps us to be prepared for wherever His purposes might take us. - Bill Crowder He does not lead me year by year, Nor even day by day; But step by step my path unfolds: My Lord directs my way. - Ryberg A MAN'S HEART PLANS HIS WAY, BUT THE LORD DIRECTS HIS STEPS. - Proverbs 16:9 HEART TROUBLE Read: Ephesians 2:1-10 Create in me a clean heart, o god. - Psalm 51:10 What's the most common affliction that plagues people in the US? Heart trouble. More than any other ailment, it's the disease that causes an early death. But there's an affliction even more deadly than a malfunction of the organ that pumps blood through our bodies. It's a spiritual heart disease from which everyone suffers. "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" (Rom.3:23). Here's the diagnosis made by Jesus Christ, the greatest of all heart specialists: "Out of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies. These ate the things which defile a man" (Matt. 15:19-20). His words echo the verdict of Jeremiah 17:9, "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; who can know it?" That diagnosis includes all who are dead in their sins (Eph. 2:1). We need a new heart - to be made alive. But how can that happen? It takes the healing touch of our Lord. God showed His kindness to us in Christ Jesus when He gave His Son to die in our place. He makes us alive by grace through faith; "it is the gift of God" (Eph. 2:8). Ask Him for a spiritual heart transplant. - Vernon Grounds Now rest, my long-divided heart, Fixed on this blissful center, rest, Nor ever from my Lord depart, With Him of every good possessed. - Doddridge WE NEED MORE THGAN A NEW START, WE NEED A NEW HEART. Note: It is certainly true that out of the heart can come much evil. Jesus, as part of the eternal Godhead, had seen the heart of man from the very beginning. But the often quoted verse in Jeremiah (as given in the above) is completely misunderstood by most. The word "is" does not appear in the Hewbrew. And as Jeremiah would have understood, the human heart is NOT ALWAYS deceitful above all things, and desparately wicked. Many a person, because of their upbringing and teaching from parents etc. have more "good" coming from their hearts than wickedness (of course it is written that all our righteousness is filthy rags before God, but that it to do with our first coming to God in repentance, for we are still sinners). Understood correctly, Jeremiah acctually said, "The heart CAN BE deceiful above all things, and desperately wicked; who can know it?" God knows it! And though we may be one who is like a Job, full of a heart of righteousness (good living as other humans would consider it), we still need to come to a change of heart, and see ourselves next to God, then we realize we are still sinners, and a long way from perfection as God is perfect. Job, finally came to see himself next to the most Holy One, and proclaimed, "I have heard of thee by the hearing of the ear, BUT NOW mine eye (spiritual eye) seeth Thee. Wherefore I ABHOR (Hebrew - reject, melt) myself, and REPENT IN DUST AND ASHES" (Job 42:5-6). Job, found a NEW HEART, no more heart trouble for him. YOU also can have a new heart transplant. You just have to acknowledge you are a sinner, that you are unholy next to a Holy God. It does not matter how righteous in deeds and life others (or yourself) esteem you, or how vile and unrighteous your heart has been, as the world judges unrighteousness. Either way, you have sinned against the Most Holy One. Be like Job, confess, as Job did, before the PERFECT ONE, and find salvation for your soul - Keith Hunt. |
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