Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Psalms 52:5

5 God shall likewise destroy you forever;
He shall take you away, and pluck you out of your dwelling place,
And uproot you from the land of the living. Selah

For those that love evil more than good, “God shall likewise destroy you forever”.  That is, in the same way that you devise destruction and work deceitfully against others, you will be destroyed.  Jesus seems to speak on these terms in Matthew 7 when He says, “Judge not, that you be not judged.  For with what judgment you judge, you will be judged; and with the measure you use, it will be measured back to you.”  This would be in keeping with the Jewish law concerning false witnesses.  In Deuteronomy 19:21 it says the penalty for a confirmed false witness is “Your eye shall not pity: life shall be for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot.

Jesus addresses this in Matthew 5:38-39 saying, “You have heard that it was said, ‘An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’  But I tell you not to resist an evil person. But whoever slaps you on your right cheek, turn the other to him also.”  Jesus continues in verses 44-48 to say, “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I say to you, love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, and pray for those who spitefully use you and persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven; for He makes His sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust.  For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same?  And if you greet your brethren only, what do you do more than others?  Do not even the tax collectors do so?  Therefore you shall be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect.

Jesus is saying that everyone will be given the chance to see God and experience His grace, mercy, and forgiveness, even if the only person they see it in happens to be you - the person they are doing evil towards.  He is saying, “I love them, so you should love them.” 

I find that most people want to live in these verses and never get out.  These are wrongly used by Christians living in sin as the ‘I can do whatever I want and no one can say anything about it’ verses.  They forget that everything has a season, including sin.  They forget that there is only one righteousness, one good, and that is only in God.  They oppose Him, not other men. 

While it is easy to get confused in these seemingly opposing concepts, it is easier to miss David’s actual words.  The words “God shall” should not be missed.  How is it that David, who undoubtedly knew the law, would not quote the law about what should happen to these false witnesses, but instead writes about what God would do to them who “love evil more than good”?  I find this to be extended proof of the Spirit of God working in David’s life and how the Spirit of God is the same here as when Jesus speaks much later.  

David accepts that these men oppose God, not him.  This is the main reason that David would not kill Saul when he had the many opportunities to do so, he would not oppose God who had allowed Saul to be king.  He knew that the Lord has said “Vengeance is mine, I will repay”.  So he writes that “God shall destroy”.  And this is better as the Lord will repay justly.

I think it is very important to be subject to the rule of the Holy Spirit in our lives in this area.  We are to show mercy, grace, forgiveness, kindness, and love to those who oppose us so that they might see the works of God.  But there are times when I believe the Holy Spirit says that the season for that sin has ended and we can be lead to be the instruments of God's justice.  David had also experienced this as well.

Monday, November 24, 2014

Psalms 52:2-4

Your tongue devises destruction,
Like a sharp razor, working deceitfully.
You love evil more than good,
Lying rather than speaking righteousness. Selah
You love all devouring words,
You deceitful tongue.

Here I believe that David is describing truly evil people whose only intention is to hurt others. They say deceptive words to carve into others. They construct destruction through their words to others. They would rather lie and they relish in their lies. They have a sense of power in this way.

Some people are excellent at this. I think the word is politician and lawyer. I find myself today believing a much greater percentage of politicians are great liars than are lawyers. If that’s not the saddest sign of our society and our failed leadership in America, I’m not sure what could possibly be sadder.

The source of the desire for this type of destruction is they “love evil more than good”. This is a very hard lesson to learn. Some people just prefer evil. They are consumed in it and you can be sure they don’t have your best interest as even a slight consideration except in how it serves them (cue politician). This is a very hard concept to accept as we want to believe that people aren't really all that, are they?

If we feel a need to lie at some occasion, we need to be sure that there isn't a selfish need there. Are we loving evil in that moment more than good? I need to be careful to say wise and uplifting words to others. I should hope that all whom I encounter are blessed and more loved because I carried Christ with me in their presence. From Him, no deceit or evil will come.

James 3 says so much about the evil works of a tongue comparing it to a bit in a horse or a rudder on a ship. The tongue is small but from it a big thing can be controlled. He takes a good bit of time to discuss the question of how can good and evil come out of the same person. Or can it? In chapter 1 verse 26 he says, “Those who consider themselves religious and yet do not keep a tight rein on their tongues deceive themselves, and their religion is worthless.

I think the worst words of destruction are those testimonial words left unsaid. How many times has a Christian been in a situation in front of others where they could testify or give glory to God for who He is but refuse to do so. Either they fear the unacceptance of other men or they don't have the courage to stand in front of others for the very thing that is "the most important" in their life. I have to wonder if this means they "love evil more than good" by being lukewarm, of which, Jesus clearly had no taste for such a church.

What about the words of compassion to others left unsaid?  When a friend needs a kind word or a word of encouragement; when a child needs to hear how he is loved; when a spouse needs to hear how valuable they are to you - am I willing to say those words at that time?  Or does the emotion of the moment prevent me from doing it.  Again, is it embarrassment over my emotions (the disapproval of others), is it pride, is it false-teaching - we need to know what holds our testimony of God and our refusal to spread His love to others from coming out.

If we are truly thankful, grateful, and we depend upon Christ with our faith, it is so much easier to testify before others because we know God to be true and faithful. We know it. We have seen His hands work in our very own lives. When we do not doubt, we have no trouble standing on what we know.  When we know He has reached inside and touched us personally, He has flooded our soul with love, filled our heart with gladness, and brought peace to an internal battle, it is impossible not to show our love to others.  

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Psalms 52:1

1Why do you boast in evil, O mighty man?
The goodness of God endures continually.
Why indeed?  But I see it every day in so many ways.  The TV show, the movie, the news, the President, the Congress, other nations, the economy, other religions, family members, Christians, and in myself.  All it takes is a little ego and pride fuels the responses.  I heard a pastor preach one time that man will do anything to support his ego.  When a little pride or a little comfort can boost that confidence man brags on the results of his own evil. 

It is important to notice the contrast here between a man who boast in his own evil and David who kept his sin in secret. This is a difference between a child of God and a child of the devil. A child of devil boasts about his sins and flaunts them in everyone’s face. A child of God is under deep conviction and hides his sin.

But it’s all fools gold. Solomon recognized this and wrote extensively about it.  Vanity he called it and it’s worthless.  Our hypocrisy has no boundaries.  We do a little evil to support ourselves and then when it doesn’t have immediate severe consequences we boast in it.  David mocks this part of us by calling us “mighty man”.  Who are we in the light of God?  Do we not know that “God endures continually”?  Who indeed?

The pastor Alistair Begg has a wonderful radio message referring to the names of God.  You can find it HERE.  After listening to the significance of the names of God and getting a good reference and understanding of Who God is again, it is so easy to see how David can ask the question, "Why do yo boast in evil, O might man?" and what folly that is. 

Monday, November 17, 2014

Psalm 63 (Part V)

I cling to You;
    Your right hand upholds me.

Like a child who grabs hold of his parents leg for security, do you cling to God?  When you do, do you know that it is His hand that holds you?  Or do you feel alone?  Our faith must rest in His Word that tells us He holds us, He helps us, He rescues us, He comforts us, He delivers us, He is for us, He will never forsake us, and He saves us.

Those who want to kill me will be destroyed;
    they will go down to the depths of the earth.
10 They will be given over to the sword
    and become food for jackals.

The brutality of these verses is coupled by the enormity of the faith.  We do not think this way.  We do not declare with confidence that our enemies will be destroyed.  We take a "if God wills" approach and let that escape clause get us out of having to decide to put our heart into our faith and believe what we think we know in our heads.  How decidedly weak we are!  With all our tools and intelligence, the single most important thing we can do is decide to believe and declare it.  Know that God WILL answer today.  Know that He will "deal bountifully with you" (Ps 142:7).  Don't doubt.  Don't think He will.  Don't meagerly hope for it.  BELIEVE THAT GOD LOVES YOU, LISTENS TO YOU, AND LABORS FOR YOUR BEST TODAY.  Your enemy will be destroyed and removed from the earth.

11 But the king will rejoice in God;
    all who swear by God will glory in Him,
    while the mouths of liars will be silenced.

Everyone who knows the goodness and greatness of the one true living God will glory and rejoice in Him.  Everyone who declares against God, who say He is not the only living God, they are liars and will be silenced. 

When we hear someone dismiss God or claim that one of His ways is not the truth in the media or in a movie, do we hear that as a lie?  Why not?  A bigger question is when it is on a sit-com and the lie is repeated over and over and over, why do we keep watching?  Why do we let our kids keep watching?  We have to know that eventually that lie will sink in and disguise the truth.  Eventually, the slow erosion will convince us that it really isn't a lie and God's Word is so outdated.  We know this, right? ... So, what is the simple action that should follow that honesty?

One day all the liars will be silenced.  "Every knee shall bow and every tongue confess to God" (Ro 14:11).  No matter how we justify ourselves today, no matter how the world thinks or who they think is a god, one day everyone will know and will give an account of themselves before the truth that they knew was the truth but wouldn't accept.  One day our own lies will be silenced.  One day the lies we tell ourselves to cover what we don't want to see or be honest about will be silenced.  We should seek to live everyday with our knees bowed now and our tongue confessing now so our lies can be silenced now.  

Love

1 John 4: 16b God is love.
We've been talking about love in Sunday School and the simple question of "what is love" has proven to be both a simple and extremely complex answer.  For the Christian, the elegantly simple answer is "God."  Relaying that to a non-Christian, however, isn't quite so straightforward.  Dictionary.com has numerous definitions for both a noun as well as a verb ranging from descriptive terms such as affection and attachment to sexual acts or feelings.  I think the Greek language gives us better insight into the various things we lump into "love."  The Greek word agape describes that unconditional love that is quite literally God and describes that way in which he reaches out to relate to us.  This love existed before time and is independent of anything we might do to include whether we even accept it or not.  We are commanded to love God with all that we have and all that we are and to love others as we love ourselves.  This would simply be unachievable and therefore illogical if God wasn't love himself and first loved us.  With His love inside of us in the form of the Holy Spirit, we then have the capacity to love correctly:  unconditional love. 
More tomorrow

Friday, November 14, 2014

Psalms 63 (Part IV)

On my bed I remember You;
    I think of You through the watches of the night.
Because You are my help,
    I sing in the shadow of Your wings.

We remember God when we lay down to rest.  In that time the watches might would announce the changing of the guard or approximate time (they didn't have clocks).  But I think the thought is we will think of God when we lay down and every time we wake up during the night.  All our thoughts are on our wondrous and saving God.

Verse 7 is a critical verse for our understanding.  He sings under God's protection because God is his help, his rescuer.  This idea of being under the wings of God is found in many places in the Bible.  Psalm 17:8 says, "Keep me as the apple of Your eye; hide me under the shadow of Your wings."  Psalm 36:7 says, "How precious is Your lovingkindness, O God!  Therefore the children of men put their trust under the shadow of Your wings."  Psalm 57:1 says, "And in the shadow of Your wings I will make my refuge, until these calamities have passed by."  Psalm 91:4 says, "He shall cover you with His feathers, and under His wings you shall take refuge."  Jesus makes the reference Himself in Matthew 23:37 saying, "How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you were not willing!

This concept of a mother bird saving others with her wings is popular. In the recent movie, After Earth, the child is saved from freezing by an eagle who gives her life so that he would not die.


The eagle had lost all her young from some kind of tigers and the boy had fought the tigers but had not been able to save the small birds.  He was in the nest as food for the babies when they were to hatch by the way.  But that aside, the eagle searches for him apparently to help him while he thinks the bird is revengeful for losing the babies and wants to kill him.  There are many spiritual lessons in this one part of this movie.  (1.)  He runs from something that wants to befriend him and that eventually saves him.  I'm sure he would even fight it if it came close to him.  Sounds almost like how every lost person reacts to God.  (2.)  The eagle finds him when he is certainly going to die and sacrifices itself so he, who feared it and ran from it, could live.  Sounds a lot like Jesus to me.

I had a missionary tell me one time, "When life is just too tough to bear and you're not sure you're going to or want to survive, do what I do.  I just imagine myself at the foot of God.  I turn around and just back my way under His wing.  He'll keep me warm and safe."  I didn't realize until later the Biblical references that he was leaning on with that reference.  I think the mental imagery is very helpful. 

We take refuge under God's mighty and tender wings and we trust in them.  We can also find refuge in our friends, but our friends will die someday.  Then when the stress of life comes we'll turn for them and they won't be there.  God will always be there.  The old time hymn, Jesus, lover of my soul,  has these first two verses:
Jesus, lover of my soul,
Let me to Thy bosom fly,
While the nearer waters roll,
While the tempest still is high:
Hide me, O my Savior, hide,
Till the storm of life is past;
Safe into the haven guide;
O receive my soul at last.


Other refuge have I none,
Hangs my helpless soul on Thee;
Leave, oh, leave me not alone,
Still support and comfort me.
All my trust on Thee is stayed,
All my help from Thee I bring;
Cover my defenseless head
With the shadow of Thy wing.


God is able and wants to be our refuge.  We just have to be willing to get under His wing.

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Psalms 63 (Part III)

Because Your love is better than life,
    my lips will glorify You.
I will praise You as long as I live,
    and in Your name I will lift up my hands.
I will be fully satisfied as with the richest of foods;
    with singing lips my mouth will praise You.

God's love is better than life.  How many of us really can comprehend that statement?  The fullness of God's love, it's completion of us, our faith that it never fails, our faith that it always is what's best for us, is better than our actual physical life.  Our physical life is what seems the most real thing we know.  "Prick me and do I not bleed?"  Yet, our real life is our spiritual life knowing all physical things will pass.  Yet, God's love will not.  His eternal love is perfect and better than what seems most real. 

This is a very hard concept, however, I'm going to take it a little further.  We can live in this world, but not be a part of this world.  We can live in our physical bodies, but our heart can be in heaven, that is, with the Spirit of God.  The Bible describes living apart from God as being "of this world".  In John 8:23-24 Jesus says, "You are from beneath; I am from above.  You are of this world; I am not of this world.  Therefore I said to you that you will die in your sins; for if you do not believe that I am He, you will die in your sins."  In order to not be "of this world" we have to receive Him who is not of this world.  When we do, we can then live out of this world.  It's hard to imagine how it all fits together, but I know it is real and that love of God that allows that to happen is better than the life that is "of this world".

Because of this we glorify Him, we praise Him all night long.  We lift our hands up in honor of His name on High.  We are more satisfied with Him than with any physical sense we can imagine and we will sing and worship Him because He is our God and He loves us.

Year One

This morning I woke up very down.  The weight of all the pain and sorrow I have caused in my past had me burdened.  The weight of MY imperfection, MY weakness, MY refusal to listen to God, MY stubbornness, MY selfishness, MY justifications, MY actions.  While I know I'm a sinner, staring it in the eye and seeing the devastation on others is crushing; knowing that others have had to live with pain and scars because of you is damning.

When we prayed together this morning, which is the sweetest part of every day, tears welled up in my eyes.  In fact, as I type this tears are coming.

Yet Julie smiles and says, the day is a day of celebration.  And she is right.  We are a part of God's work.  God has worked in us and we are different.  Everything is better.  Every aspect of life is more alive, every day is more precious, every moment more meaningful, every minute is a minute you want to hold on to and keep.

When I wake up I thank God that I'm there, at home, with Julie.  When I see her I praise God that she smiles.  When I touch her I praise God that I can.  When I hug my kids I praise God that I'm there to do that.

Everything in life is a blessing.

Death: Where is Your Victory

1 Cor 15:  54 When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: “Death has been swallowed up in victory.”[h]
55 “Where, O death, is your victory?
    Where, O death, is your sting?”[i]
56 The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. 57 But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
 
Tuesday Reja received news of the death of an uncle.  For those of you that know her, you know that she is named after her four uncles, Robert, Ethridge, Johnny, and Alvin.  Robert, who went by his middle name Oben, and Ethridge, had previously passed away, and with Johnny's passing Tuesday, she has only one remaining namesake.  While Reja and I aren't very close to her extended Mississippi family, I've always admired how they all come together in celebration of family.  Approximately a year ago we drove to Columbia, MS for the funeral of Roberts wife, Billie, and what a remarkable visit it was with family.  Certainly there was a twinge of sadness, but the mood was more one of deep admiration of her commitment to Christ, family, and community, a pattern repeated throughout the entire Beasley family. 
I marvel at how the world deals with the sting and finality of death without the hope found in Christ.  To me, the fact that Christ conquered death is the singular source for all hope in the entire universe.  There is no hope for a joyful life, no hope for friends and family, not even any hope for a national championship for MSU without Christ conquering death.  All hope flows out of this capstone event in all of history. 
So today as Reja and I prepare for a full day of work, followed by a stop at Blue Lake to set up for an Emmaus Walk, then a solemn journey to Hattiesburg late tonight, I actually look forward to the funeral tomorrow.  Not to dwell on the earthly departure of Johnny, but to celebrate his life with family.  A family who above all else loves God and loves each other and out of that love from God, has welcomed me as one of their own, demonstrating God's agape love.  The entire Beasley as well as the Wright family (Reja's mother's family) truly represent God's love and serve as outstanding examples of what God can do through committed Christians.  These families stand out as a living testimony that in spite of our own shortcomings, God's love can overcome even the worst of tragedies and provide hope in the very midst of what the world sees as a hopeless situation.  What a blessing to see God at work! 

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Deeper, Healing Love

Yesterday I heard a speaker talk about a "healing love".  But what I got from it was that there is a deeper love that I should be aspiring to reach and have as an integral part of my character.  He shared two stories.

He was at a gathering and was talking to a lady who lived in the community and had asked her what part of the chicken did she like to eat the best.  She answered "the back and the wings".  He thought that was unusual since those are considered the worst parts of the chicken by most people, so he asked her why.  She said that when she was raising her boys they didn't have much money.  So when she made chicken for them she would eat the backs and wings so they could have the best parts.

What struck me about this is not that fact that this lady would sacrifice eating the best parts of  the chicken, but that she would declare that her favorite parts are those parts she could eat that let others have the best parts.

This same man was eating at a restaurant with his friend when a waitress walking by got a little off balance carrying a bowl of soup and spilled it down his back.  He thought to himself, "oh man she is going to hear about this."  Instead the man turned to the waitress and said, "I'm so sorry this happened to you.  I know this has embarrassed you terribly.  I'm so sorry."

Here he is with a bowl of hot soup all down his back, running into his pants and his first instinctual response was about her.  That's a deeper love.

I can't help but believe that there is a depth to the character of love in God that we hardly ever witness, much less reach.  The world needs me to look for, search for, reach for, and to crave that kind of love in my character.  There is a healing that does happen for others when they witness such instinctive responses from people with such depth of love within them that others are truly first.

This is the kind of person I want to be and that example is an example I'd be happy to leave behind.

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Psalms 63 (Part II)

I have seen You in the sanctuary
    and beheld Your power and Your glory.

The Message says, "So here I am in the place of worship, eyes open, drinking in Your strength and glory."  Why is he in this sanctuary?  Because as he stated in verse 1, God is the only life in this desolate place.  The Lord is living water in a dry and parched land.

There are many dry and parched places.  This world is certainly full of them.  There are many things that seem to be living water but only take you to a dryer and more desolate place.  Sometimes our hearts are dry and parched.  The wise learn that there is no other possible life apart from the living God.  In Him a well spring of life flows abundantly.

Where is this sanctuary for David there in the wilderness?  A tent?  The desert?  Did he build an alter?  I suggest it is within David himself.  His heart became a sanctuary of praise and worship to his God.  Have you had those times when you were drawn to God and where you physically were was completely irrelevant.  Your heart was in a different world. 

The chorus to the song "Living Sanctuary" say:
"Lord, prepare me to be a sanctuary
Pure and holy, tried and true
With thanksgiving, I'll be a living
Sanctuary for You."

We can be sure that where God is, it is holy.  If God's Spirit is reigning in ours, we can be sure that there is a sacred and holy place inside where His presence can be found.  In a dry and parched land where there was no water to drink, he found a source of living water that filled and overflowed.

Another interpretation of the organization of these verses is "I earnestly seek You in a dry and weary land where there is no water to see Your power and might as I have beheld You in the sanctuary."  These lend to a past time when he was in a sanctuary and experienced God's holiness.  And now he thirst for that presence of God and longs for it.  He has been in the desert of God's distance and he wants a closeness with God, more than anything in life.

Do I crave God that way?  Am I way to easygoing about those times when God isn't close?  Is there an alarm sounding in my soul that I just keep hitting the "snooze" button on regarding God's calling to me to be close?  Is there an internal pull from every cell of my being that doesn't understand how it will go on one more minute without being close to Him?  Right now, YES.  I pray that I'll always have that.

Monday, November 10, 2014

Psalms 63 (Part I)

You, God, are my God,
    earnestly I seek you;
I thirst for you,
    my whole being longs for you,
in a dry and parched land
    where there is no water.

What an excellent way to start a prayer!  "You, God, are my God".  No one else, no other thing, nothing within me.  You and You alone are my God!  David proclaims it.  He takes ownership of his faith and stands on it declaring boldly to God that He is his God.  When is the last time I told God that He was my God?  Saying that I'm His child is different.  Saying "Lord I'm Yours" is a different matter.  Yes, it's great to say, but declaring that God is Your God to Him is faith building.  It is confidence in your faith.  It brings a well up from inside of your soul that just wants to explode.  "YOU, GOD, ARE MY  GOD!"  The whole world may claim a different god, the whole world may oppose me, the whole world may even hate me, but "You, God, are my God!"  Can you feel the strength that grows inside when you claim God as your own?  Do you notice the evaporation of your fears?

God answers, "Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God." (Isaiah 41:10a)  When we declare Who our God is and claim Him as our own, I am convinced that He answers.  "Do not doubt.  Do not fear.  Do not be discouraged.  I AM YOUR GOD!"  Glory to God!  Hallelujah!  Can I hear an AMEN!  Jump up and sing something! ... That's enough to make a puppy dog pull a freight train or make me want to charge hell with a cup of water.

Our heavenly Father hears us declare that He is our Father and He responds so loudly you can hear it throughout all of Creation, "I am your Father".  Wouldn't we do the same if our children proclaimed with confidence, assurance, and hearts overflowing with love that you are their father or mother?  There is no other father / mother ever that they want to claim.  You are theirs.  This is more than of course they are because I've got a birth certificate that proves it.  I was in the delivery room and watched it.  Sure, you're my son or daughter.  No, this is so very much more and we are foolish if we don't recognize its significance.

Further, "earnestly I seek You".  You are my God and I always look for You.  Jeremiah 29:13 says, "And you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart."  In Matthew 7:7 Jesus says, "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you."  David is obviously looking for God with his whole heart.  "Earnestly" the NKJV says it; "I can't get enough of You" the Message puts it; "eagerly" and "early" are other descriptions by other versions.  Pursuing God is a priority, not just a checklist item to be done.  It is something our hearts must crave.  We should have an appetite for God that isn't satisfied.

"My whole being longs for You."  Another psalmist would write "As the deer pants for the water brooks, so pants my soul for You, O God." (Psalm 42:1)  Can you feel in your soul and spirit a longing for God?  If not, why not?  I'd couple the answer 'no' to that question with this question.  When was the last time you were broken over your sin?  Once you have cried tears over your sin and accepted the Lord's love.  You will want to grab a hold of Him and pursue more of Him.  You will long for His constant touch.

There are many reasons why, but David says it is because there is no other God.  There is nothing else.  This world and all that is here is dry and parched, its empty, and there is no life (water).  Our God is our life.  There is nothing else that can flood our soul; there is nothing else that can complete our spirit; there is nothing else that fulfills our purpose and reason to live.  

You, God, are my God.  I seek You earnestly first.  My whole being aches with urgency at its desire to be near You.  You are the only life in this desolate place.

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Psalms 142 (Part II)

I cried out to You, O Lord:
I said, “You are my refuge,
My portion in the land of the living.
Attend to my cry,
For I am brought very low;
Deliver me from my persecutors,
For they are stronger than I.
Bring my soul out of prison,
That I may praise Your name;
The righteous shall surround me,
For You shall deal bountifully with me.”

In verse 5 the pity party ends.  Now there is praise, worship, and testifying to the glory of God.  God hears when we cry out; God is our security and safety; God is the all that is needed to live. 

(v6) "Attend to my cry."  Of all the people on the earth, Julie is the closest person to me and I would not ask her to "attend to my cry".  Is it pride that keeps me from wanting someone to be with me in my lowliness and brokenness of heart?  Most likely.  I think we hate to admit that we aren't strong enough to not be there.  David calls upon the most compassionate, most caring, most loving of all that is to "attend to his cry".  Can there be a wiser or more humble request?  As a loving Father, God most certainly moves right in.

David also readily admits his limitation, "they are stronger than I".  How often do I pray this when I am praying for protection from my enemies or from evil itself?  Am I humble enough to say this?  I should be willing to admit my weakness.

(v7)  Deliver me so I may praise Your name.  This seems to tie back again to Psalm 59.  Deliver me, or crush them, so everyone will know You are my God.  I will give all the praise of deliverance to the one and only living God.  Those who are faithful will surround me and we'll all praise Your name.

The last line of this Psalms is amazing to me.  David proclaims in faith "You shall deal bountifully with me."  I have a hard time reaching my faith out to this area.  David, who is lower than low, who is asking for deliverance from stronger enemies so he can praise the name of God, proclaims that God will deal well with him.  He says it confidently.  In our culture today, we'd say "he owns it".  And it's true.  God will deal bountifully with all those who call upon His name.  When do I ever proclaim such a truth in faith after I've asked God for something?  Why not?  I have a faith problem I think and am just beginning to see the depth faith can have.

Ugh.

I'm very tired this morning from a night of restless sleep.  I really don't feel like doing a devotion.  I wonder if this isn't an attack.  I'm sure God would never not want His son to not read His word and talk to Him.  Ugh.  I am reminded of the times when you just don't want to work out or run.  You are tired and the thought of exercising almost makes you want to throw up, but you do it anyway.  I often think that those times are the most critical.  That's where one of the major battle points is located.  There's the front lines and there's also the unconventional propaganda war.  Stay the fight!

God's Will

Mark 3: 35 Whoever does God’s will is my brother and sister and mother.”

I talked about God's will yesterday and it seems worth examining this subject a little deeper.  So much in the world can be ascribed to God that isn't correct.  Leslie D. Weatherhead wrote a book numerous years ago that helps me think through God's will.  He separates it into three categories: God's intentional will, God's circumstantial will, and God's ultimate will.  As I understand his view, God's intentional will is His overall plan for your life or what he intended for his creation writ large.  For instance, when he placed Adam in the garden, it wasn't God's will that Adam chose to sin, it was Adam's will to do so.  It was God's intentional will that Adam would choose to remain in close relationship with God.  When confronted by Satan to make a choice God had a will in that particular circumstance.  It was God's will that they choose against sin.  Once they chose sin and they found themselves in a lost and separated from God circumstance, God had to build a plan of reconciliation for mankind.  In the meantime, given the circumstances, God forced man out of the garden.  Revelation shows us that ultimately, in the end, God wins over the power of sin, darkness, and death.  In the meantime, God has a plan for us (Jer 29:11) and has the best intentions for us (John 10;10).  We must choose wisely, however.  Adam and Eve chose poorly and suffered inevitable consequences for their choice.  It wasn't God's intention to kick them out of the garden, but he knew before they made it what their choice would be and had already prepared the touch consequences of their decision as well as the ultimate plan of salvation. 
As you go about your thousands of decisions today, how will you choose?  Will you pray and submit your human logic (which Satan played on with the original sin - danger, danger!) and your own will to him or will we simply make our own choices and blame God when we're not happy?
I have a feeling that God is frustrated at least with me that I don't yield to him and take EVERYTHING to Him in prayer and seek his will before acting.  How about you?

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Psalms 142 (Part I)

I cry out to the Lord with my voice;
With my voice to the Lord I make my supplication.
I pour out my complaint before Him;
I declare before Him my trouble.

It is obvious when reading this Psalm by David that he was really low in his spirit.  Very likely depressed.  Notice how he prays to God.  He tells God that he cries out to Him with his own voice, it's his cry to God.  You are my God and I am calling out to You.  These are my calls for help, my requests.  I am telling You my troubles.  This is my call to You.  David has poured his heart out to His God.

It seems that we so often pray for others and their cries for help, but here David is telling his Lord that he is calling upon Him for himself, his condition.  Have you ever been there?  Have you been so desperate, so hopeless, so broken that you've prayed "God if you don't do something, there is no way."  My question is why do we have to get hopeless and broken before we pray a prayer like that.  If we are honest, everyday should begin with that prayer because that is the real truth.  "God if you don't do something, there is no way."  Our only hope is God.  If we do not have hope, then we do not have faith and we don't believe.

When my spirit was overwhelmed within me,
Then You knew my path.
In the way in which I walk
They have secretly set a snare for me.
Look on my right hand and see,
For there is no one who acknowledges me;
Refuge has failed me;
No one cares for my soul.

As he sank into depression and despair, he declares that God knew his way.  This is a testimony that says God never leaves us, even in our worst condition.  When we are all but gone and have no more fight within us, when we are all used up and can't find a single positive thing to rally around, when we don't know what else to do, God knows our path and is there.

The people around are setting traps and want you to fall further.  They want your total destruction.  There is nowhere for you to go.  No one around you cares or helps.  There is nowhere to hide and no one cares about your very life.  You are at the end of your rope and the thought of death is appetizing.  There is no place to go for security and safety.  David is calling out to God here and laying out plainly his desperation.  He is alone and the world is too heavy for him.

I don't know anyone who doesn't recognize this place.  No one likes being there, yet everyone knows where it is.  Where do we turn when this happens?  Where is our faith?

Newly Elected

2 Peter 1:10  10 Therefore, my brothers and sisters, make every effort to confirm your calling and election. For if you do these things, you will never stumble,

I always encourage those around me to never take a verse out of context, but today as I reflect on yesterday's mid-term election, I believe the message herein is applicable to those newly elected officials just as much as it is to you and me.  From my perspective America faces many troubling issues and while I believe a radical turn away from God is at the very core of these issues, some of them stem from our elected officials simply not doing their job.  If my facts are correct, the last time Congress actually passed a budget was in 1997.  That's one of their primary responsibilities, yet many argue that these omnibus spending bills etc are just as good.  I don't care how you slice it, failure to do your job is failure.  So to take a secular slant on this verse, I think our newly elected officials need to "confirm their calling" by doing their jobs for their constituents. 
Obviously these verses point to a higher calling - that which God has placed on our lives.  I can remember praying earnestly about college, my major, marriage, and so on.  I've always had a huge concern about answering a call from God.  I believe I've done so, although I confess that I often wonder if somehow I've missed my calling and should be elsewhere.  I believe that same earnestness needs to go into more mundane daily decisions such as how I deal with coworkers, how I interact with the people God puts in my life, how I treat my wife, etc, but I confess that so often I just get up and go about my routine asking God to bless me. 
I believe God wants to bless us, but like parents who only bless our children when they are obedient, our Heavenly Father can only bless us in consistency with His will.  We don't (or at least shouldn't) bless misbehavior, and God does not bless us when we stray outside His will.  So from my perspective, most of us have this relationship backwards.  WE decide what WE'RE going to do for God, WE make plans, WE seeks funding for our project, WE put programs into place, WE then pray that God will bless our plans.  Don't believe me?  Look up Acts ch. 1 wherein the Disciples set out to replace Judas and you'll see the modern church in action.  The Disciples decided the conditions of employment, nominated two eligible candidates, THEN they prayed.  We've never heard from Mathias since. 
How about us?  Do we make seeking and confirming God's call our first priority, or do we decide what we want to do and demand God bless our plans?  I think we need to be very careful about putting limits on God or defining what we're willing to do for him.  Getting things out of order puts us on the throne instead of God.  These verses tell us to confirm our calling.  What has God called you to do?  Are you seeking a call or making this stuff up as you go along and demanding the God of the universe to bless your plan?  I think this is a question we all need to address daily or we risk riding good intentions right out of God's will and right out of His ability to provide His blessing.  What do you think?

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Psalms 34 (Part VI)

19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous,
But the Lord delivers him out of them all.
20 He guards all his bones;
Not one of them is broken.
21 Evil shall slay the wicked,
And those who hate the righteous shall be condemned.
22 The Lord redeems the soul of His servants,
And none of those who trust in Him shall be condemned.

Verse 19 is hard come to grips with.  "Many are the afflictions".  The NIV says this verse in this way, "The righteous MAY have many troubles."  This changes the aspect significantly.  The Message says, "Disciples so often get into trouble".  The Jewish Bible says, "The righteous person suffers many evils".  The American Standard, New Living, and Revised Standard Bibles all seem to agree with the KJV and CJB.  Obviously there are two distinct interpretations.  One declares that the righteous will have many troubles, afflictions, evils.  The other indicates that they might have them or if they do it's because of their own actions.  I really would like to know the original text so I could translate it myself.  Either way, surely we all know that there are troubles, some self inflicted and some not.  The real emphasis on this verse deserves to be on the 2nd part, "the Lord delivers them out of them all", "the Lord rescues them from them all", "God is there every time", "the Lord delivers him from them all".  There is no other interpretation for this.  Of one aspect all agree, the Lord delivers, rescues, and is there for us in all our troubles.

Verse 20 is often associated with the life of Jesus.  Not one bone was broken in His suffering.  I find it amazing that David could be writing and reflect into the life of someone he would not know.  Certainly he was writing with the Spirit of God within him and God knew.  I wonder how he could write that except by the Spirit of God.  Verse 22 is written in a similar manner.  With my hindsight I can easily tie it to God's work through Jesus and our salvation, but David did not know Jesus. ... Or did he?  If the Spirit of God is working in his life and is with him as he worships, praises, prays, and writes about God, then Jesus was there.  David was shown that God redeems the soul of all who love Him and would forgive all of them. "And none of those who trust in Him shall be condemned."  This confirms to me that all who search for God will find Him, whether they've been taught about Jesus or not.  If you trust in God, then you have faith in Him.  That faith is the key to knowing God.  Jesus said "with God all things are possible" (Mark 10:27).

Verse 21 reflects David's prayer in Psalms 59 verses 11-13 where he prays for God to uproot his enemies and allow their own evil to destroy them so everyone will know there is a God protecting him.  It is written here very definitively, "Evil shall slay the wicked."   Their own deeds, their own practices will consume them; they will be eaten up by their evil actions.  God alone is life.  Everything else is death.  These who practice evil, and "who hate the righteous" will also be condemned.  I don't think I've ever really thought about the difference between those who do evil and those who do evil and hate the good.  Obviously there is a difference.  Those who hate the righteous are condemned.  My heart hurts thinking about the condition of a person in this position. 

Praise God that He pays the price for all of our sins through His Son Jesus and no one who believes in Him is condemned but has everlasting life with Him.  Thank God for your salvation today and His fulfillment of His own promises.  Thank God for loving you today!

Monday, November 3, 2014

Psalms 34 (Part V)

15 The eyes of the Lord are on the righteous,
And His ears are open to their cry.
16 The face of the Lord is against those who do evil,
To cut off the remembrance of them from the earth.

This is said as plainly as it can be stated.  The Lord looks upon His children and He listens for them.  The Lord is against those who do evil.  Do we have trouble believing this?  The Lord looks upon you and listens to you.  Can you walk confidently today knowing this as truth?  If not, examine your belief in Him.  Of this, we should have no doubt.

17 The righteous cry out, and the Lord hears,
And delivers them out of all their troubles.
18 The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart,
And saves such as have a contrite spirit.

First, we are told that the Lord looks upon His children and He listens for them.  Now, this is the action statement.  When His children cry out, He hears.  But He doesn't stop there, He delivers them "from all their troubles".  Notice that this does not discriminate about the type of trouble:  trouble from others or self-induced trouble; trouble out of our control or trouble from our control.  Either / or, the Lord hears our cry and delivers us.  He may not deliver us in the way we want, but He will deliver us in the way that is best for us.

The next verse is incredibly important.  This is back to the check your attitude as related in verse 12.  Is your heart broken over your condition (if your trouble is your own doing)?  Is your heart broken over someone else's condition (if your trouble isn't your own doing)?  Are you humble in your trouble?  Or are you humbled by your trouble?

In his book and small group study series AHA (Awakening, Honesty, Action), Kyle Idleman discusses this topic as a part of the Awakening and Honesty portion.  He puts it in the following matrix.
Compassion
Condemning
Honest


Dishonest



He teaches that we are in one of the following squares when we are "dealing" with ourselves or others.  He describes each of these well in his work and there isn't enough room to repeat it here.  But in essence, we are either realizing we have a problem, a fault, and it shouldn't be there or we're not and are in denial (honest vs dishonest).  And we are either believing God can and is willing to be with us to overcome anything, or we believe we aren't worthy to be helped (compassion vs condemning).

Again, are we humble in our trouble or humbled by it?  A humble person realizes they have a problem, a proud person is embarrassed by their situation.  A humble person accepts the love of God even in their filth and pleads for His interaction and grace.  A proud person wants to be left alone to their end and doesn't want anyone's "help".

"Turn your eyes upon Jesus,
Look full in His wonderful face,
And the things of earth will grow strangely dim,
In the light of His glory and grace."

Dry Bones

Ezekiel 37: This is what the Sovereign Lord says to these bones: I will make breath[a] enter you, and you will come to life.

Wow.  I just checked the date on my last entry and its been nearly a whole month.  My good friend and pastor Jimmy Whited says that sometimes we go through dry spells spiritually.  I'm not sure its as much a dry season as it is plain laziness, but the effect is the same - I'm not as close to God as I should be.  Having said that, I've enjoyed beginning Bobby Bowden's new book "The Wisdom of Faith," and have devoured the new Wednesday night bible study book by Gary Thomas entitled "Sacred Marriage: What if God Designed Marriage to make us Holy more than to Make us Happy?
"  Both are good reads, but I look forward to sharing Gary's insight into issues that affect all marriages including my own with Reja.  So, while on my trip and unable to discuss insights as they came up, I made copious notes, all with good intentions to discuss as soon as I got home.  So I've been home a week and to date, no discussions.  The tyranny of the urgent so often  and easily trumps the truly important things in life.  

This is but a small reflection of a life that is perhaps out of balance.  Diet, exercise, sleep, and daily quality time with God and family are all important, but so often yield to the urgency of work and other priorities.  Perhaps God is telling me to take stock of my priorities and examine my actions.  Are my daily actions truly in line with my stated priorities of God, family, self, then work, hobbies, etc?  If I polled others, what would they say my priorities are based on observation of my actions?  Perhaps as we enter this holiday season, I need to examine my daily routine.  Clearly interruption of my daily routine interrupted my daily time with God.  Are my priorities out of whack or am I just simply lazy?   Perhaps I need to adjust my daily routine to put more emphasis on quality time with God and family.  Or maybe I need to find time to exercise daily (im sure I do!), but I simply can't figure out where that time will be.  One thing I do know: God is faithful to answer prayer.  Perhaps the starting point is to simply make priorities and corresponding action a matter of prayer.  Seems simple enough, a very basic concept all Christians should know as well as they know how to breath.  Obviously, however, I've got some work to do.

Remembering the Original Cloud

Hebrews12 Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinners, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.

I enjoyed yesterday's communion celebrating All Saints Day.  I think it important to remember that "the cloud" originally referred to those who had gone on before us and had left their imprint upon us.  These verses remind us that death has been conquered and those who had been influential in our lives can actually continue to be so and not just because of the legacy of their life lesson, but because they are witnesses to our struggles and victories today.  They remind us that we have a cheering section encouraging us to persevere in the face of the trials and celebrate what we will all share in which is the ultimate reward of a life in the very presence of God.  I found this reminder profound and useful - much moreso than a bag full of candy that is the goal of the evening prior.   
I'm mindful, however, that not everyone is blessed with a great cloud of witnesses that pointed them towards Christ.  I don't think I fully appreciate the tremendous blessing of a father who in spite of his faults was keenly focused on living out his faith.  Yet as I look around my church, God is placing Godly people in so many people's lives.  I pray that of all the voices heard, may His be the one that leaves a lasting impression on us all.