"Now flee from youthful lusts, and pursue righteousness, faith, love, and peace, with those who call on the Lord from a pure heart" (2 Timothy 2:22)
It seems that the nation is divided...again. People seem torn between what is and is not a "right," what should or should not be provided free of charge. You've heard the news report, I'm quite sure. A young lady in law school feels that her health insurance coverage should include free prescriptions for contraceptives because she cannot afford to pay - what was it - $3,000 to cover her needs during her years in school? So the nation is divided...again: those for yet another government entitlement and those for personal responsibility.
I was just thinking...
Has anyone yet given any thought to the very obvious spiritual needs of this young lady's heart, not to mention the reported 40% of her fellow female students who according to her testimony before Congress are facing the same situation? Has anyone yet stepped forward to say that to be involved in extra-marital sexual relationships not only offends the holiness of God but grieves His tender heart because of His love for the offender?
So I was just thinking...
This young lady is, of course, only an indication of the moral breakdown that is happening across the length and breadth of the United States. From a president who declares publicly that we are "no longer a Christian nation" to a society that believes not only that nothing is off-limits but that the government should pay for it, we are facing perilous times here in the land that we love. Freedom of religion and worship are under attack from the very source that swore an oath to protect it and anyone at all can see that things are not likely to improve much in the foreseeable future.
But I was just thinking...
What's a Christian to do today? Is it as hopeless as it appears? Will the forces of evil and the powers of darkness prevail? The good news is that the answer to each of those questions is a resounding "No!" It is not hopeless and Satan will not prevail. But what is a Christian to do? Paul in writing to Timothy has answered that question beautifully for us. We are first of all to flee youthful lusts and pursue righteousness. In case you didn't get that, it means to run away from the first and chase after the second. Can you imagine the impact of every true believer in the United States of America all at the same time deciding to pursue daily a lifestyle of personal righteousness? Paul also urged Timothy to pursue "faith, love, and peace" and that is something that we can all do together. We can show this misguided world of ours what life can be like when we live by God's standards and not those of man.
And I was just thinking...
Doesn't this seem to you to be a wonderful time to renew our zeal for sharing the gospel of Jesus Christ? I know a young lady in law school who needs to hear that Jesus loves her and gave His life to forgive her and to transform her. And she needs that gospel as surely as you and I need it today! What we must realize, beloved, is that the gospel of Jesus Christ is the only real hope that the United States of America has. No president, political party, or member of Congress can fix what is wrong with us. But God can and He will if we are willing to be His instruments.
So what do you think?
Ron
Friday, March 2, 2012
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Chihuahua Contentment
"But godliness actually is a means of great gain, when accompanied by contentment" (1 Timothy 6:6)
The inspiration for these devotional thoughts came to me a short while ago, beloved, as I sat in the living room with my wife and watched as she cuddled her "baby" - our 4 year old, 4 pound bundle of joy named Cocoa. Those two have bonded like nothing I have ever seen! As I watched her so gently scratching Cocoa's head as she lay in her arms, the picture on that tiny face was one of sheer contentment - Chihuahua contentment.
The Apostle Paul was instructing and encouraging Timothy about the misplaced emphasis on gaining great wealth that seemed to abound even in the church and how it adversely affected even one's relationships. As he did so, he made the amazing statement that you see printed above concerning the vital role of "contentment" in our lives as Christians and what that contentment has to do with genuine godliness.
First of all, "godliness" in the original language of the New Testament means "piety" or "reverence" in the sense of a personal likeness to God. The false teachers who abounded in the church of Paul's day taught that godliness was related to one's religiosity or external form of religious practice. The apostle taught instead that true godliness is one's inward genuine likeness to and relationship with God.
But what does the concept of "contentment" have to do with such godliness? Those same false teachers in the 1st century church carried out their religiosity in the hope of personal financial gain and its accompanying prestige within the religious community. Actually the word "contentment" in the original language means "self-sufficiency" and points to the person who is unmovable and who responds successfully to his circumstances in life. To be content, then, is to know a sense of sufficiency and its satisfaction with life, not needing to always seek more than what you have.
The key, however, is that genuine contentment comes from God. No greater description of the nature of spiritual contentment has ever been penned than that written by this same Paul to the believers in the city of Philippi.
"Not that I speak from want; for I have learned to be content in whatever circumstances I am. I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need. I can do all things through Him who strengthens me" (Philippians 4:11-13)
When a person is right with God, beloved, and demonstrates genuine godliness by accepting from His gracious hand all that comes his way in life, seeking always God's perfect will and seizing every opportunity to serve His cause, then that person knows the meaning of true contentment! How truly content are you today?
Come to think of it, I think I'll go and share in some of that "Chihuahua contentment" going on in the living room...
Ron
The inspiration for these devotional thoughts came to me a short while ago, beloved, as I sat in the living room with my wife and watched as she cuddled her "baby" - our 4 year old, 4 pound bundle of joy named Cocoa. Those two have bonded like nothing I have ever seen! As I watched her so gently scratching Cocoa's head as she lay in her arms, the picture on that tiny face was one of sheer contentment - Chihuahua contentment.
The Apostle Paul was instructing and encouraging Timothy about the misplaced emphasis on gaining great wealth that seemed to abound even in the church and how it adversely affected even one's relationships. As he did so, he made the amazing statement that you see printed above concerning the vital role of "contentment" in our lives as Christians and what that contentment has to do with genuine godliness.
First of all, "godliness" in the original language of the New Testament means "piety" or "reverence" in the sense of a personal likeness to God. The false teachers who abounded in the church of Paul's day taught that godliness was related to one's religiosity or external form of religious practice. The apostle taught instead that true godliness is one's inward genuine likeness to and relationship with God.
But what does the concept of "contentment" have to do with such godliness? Those same false teachers in the 1st century church carried out their religiosity in the hope of personal financial gain and its accompanying prestige within the religious community. Actually the word "contentment" in the original language means "self-sufficiency" and points to the person who is unmovable and who responds successfully to his circumstances in life. To be content, then, is to know a sense of sufficiency and its satisfaction with life, not needing to always seek more than what you have.
The key, however, is that genuine contentment comes from God. No greater description of the nature of spiritual contentment has ever been penned than that written by this same Paul to the believers in the city of Philippi.
"Not that I speak from want; for I have learned to be content in whatever circumstances I am. I know how to get along with humble means, and I also know how to live in prosperity; in any and every circumstance I have learned the secret of being filled and going hungry, both of having abundance and suffering need. I can do all things through Him who strengthens me" (Philippians 4:11-13)
When a person is right with God, beloved, and demonstrates genuine godliness by accepting from His gracious hand all that comes his way in life, seeking always God's perfect will and seizing every opportunity to serve His cause, then that person knows the meaning of true contentment! How truly content are you today?
Come to think of it, I think I'll go and share in some of that "Chihuahua contentment" going on in the living room...
Ron
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Dad's Wedding Band
"But sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts, always being ready to make a defense to everyone who asks you to give an account for the hope that is in you, yet with gentleness and reverence" (1 Peter 3:15)
Valentine's Day was very special for us this year, beloved, because I had the opportunity finally to give to my wife a new engagement ring, the one I wish that I could have given to her when first I proposed to her more than forty-six years ago. In getting the ring sized our jeweler-friend soldered three rings together: her wedding band, her new ring, and my mother's wedding band that my wife has worn since my sisters gave it to her following my mother's home-going. Seeing my mother's band reminded me that I now have my father's wedding band as well and what a treasure that is for me!
As I thought about the wedding bands of two such precious people, now both together with the Lord, I thought about the word "commitment." Having performed many wedding ceremonies over the years, I made it my custom to always hold up one of the wedding bands and show to those present how it is a complete circle. There is no stopping point! And that is the way that our love for and commitment to Jesus Christ is to be - unbroken, unending, unrelenting.
The Apostle Peter urged his readers to "sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts" and went on to challenge them to be "apologists" - those who defend their faith in Christ by demonstrating and explaining the eternal assurance that we each as Christians have surging within our hearts because of the presence of the blessed Holy Spirit of God. That is the essence, then, of our commitment to Jesus Christ, our covenant with Him. It is as if when we received Him by faith as Savior and Lord that He put a ring of gold on our finger to let us know that ours would be an eternal covenant, a lasting relationship - unbroken, unending, unrelenting. And to that end our living for Him every day must be just as unrelenting and unbroken.
It is certainly appropriate, given the symbolism of wedding bands upon which we are focused here, that Scripture refers to Jesus as the Bridegroom and to us as believers His Bride, the church. If you are wearing a ring at this moment, beloved, look closely at it. Note how it has no end. It just goes on and on and on. That is the way that you and I are to be living for Jesus Christ today! Are we?
You'll have to excuse me. I think I will go take another look at my dad's wedding band. Not only was he a great father, but he was also one whose relationship with Jesus Christ was unbroken, unending, and unrelenting for all to see.
Ron
Valentine's Day was very special for us this year, beloved, because I had the opportunity finally to give to my wife a new engagement ring, the one I wish that I could have given to her when first I proposed to her more than forty-six years ago. In getting the ring sized our jeweler-friend soldered three rings together: her wedding band, her new ring, and my mother's wedding band that my wife has worn since my sisters gave it to her following my mother's home-going. Seeing my mother's band reminded me that I now have my father's wedding band as well and what a treasure that is for me!
As I thought about the wedding bands of two such precious people, now both together with the Lord, I thought about the word "commitment." Having performed many wedding ceremonies over the years, I made it my custom to always hold up one of the wedding bands and show to those present how it is a complete circle. There is no stopping point! And that is the way that our love for and commitment to Jesus Christ is to be - unbroken, unending, unrelenting.
The Apostle Peter urged his readers to "sanctify Christ as Lord in your hearts" and went on to challenge them to be "apologists" - those who defend their faith in Christ by demonstrating and explaining the eternal assurance that we each as Christians have surging within our hearts because of the presence of the blessed Holy Spirit of God. That is the essence, then, of our commitment to Jesus Christ, our covenant with Him. It is as if when we received Him by faith as Savior and Lord that He put a ring of gold on our finger to let us know that ours would be an eternal covenant, a lasting relationship - unbroken, unending, unrelenting. And to that end our living for Him every day must be just as unrelenting and unbroken.
It is certainly appropriate, given the symbolism of wedding bands upon which we are focused here, that Scripture refers to Jesus as the Bridegroom and to us as believers His Bride, the church. If you are wearing a ring at this moment, beloved, look closely at it. Note how it has no end. It just goes on and on and on. That is the way that you and I are to be living for Jesus Christ today! Are we?
You'll have to excuse me. I think I will go take another look at my dad's wedding band. Not only was he a great father, but he was also one whose relationship with Jesus Christ was unbroken, unending, and unrelenting for all to see.
Ron
Friday, February 10, 2012
The Final Lamb
"He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the chastisement for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His scourging we are healed" (Isaiah 53:5)
When John the Baptist first saw Jesus approaching and said to his followers standing nearby, "Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!" (John 1:29), he sure said a mouthful, beloved! Not only was and is Jesus Christ "the Lamb of God" but He is further the final lamb God will ever require to be sacrificed for the sins of mankind. When Jesus went to the cross outside Jerusalem and laid down His life for our sins, He completely and forever fulfilled the sacrificial requirements of the Law of Moses. And no statement in Scripture, none about which I am aware anyway, declares this truth more clearly than these words of the prophet Isaiah.
Pierced through for our transgressions - Without going into a detailed exegesis of this term, what the Scriptures reveal is that Jesus suffered physically for our acts of sinfulness. The nails and the sword were instruments of death because of our failure to live up to the glory of God.
Crushed for our iniquities - Again without a detailed explanation of these words, what the Scriptures also reveal is that Jesus suffered mentally and emotionally for our sinful nature. Not only did He die, then, for the things we have done but He died as well for what we are. And no image of His mental and emotional anguish is anywhere more graphically displayed than in the passage dealing with the hours spent in Gethsemane prior to going to the cross.
The chastisement for our well-being - Having seen what our sins have done to Him, we discover from the words of Isaiah next what He has in love done for us. Here the word "chastisement" refers more to that parental discipline that every good parent uses to shape and mold his child's life, revealing to us beautifully the Fatherhood of God in welcoming us into His family and in dealing with us as His children. And the word "well-being" refers to our overall sense of personal contentment and peace that comes from being placed in right standing with God through what Jesus accomplished on the cross.
By His scourging we are healed - A close look at the overall context of the surrounding verses in Isaiah 53, beloved, reveals to us clearly that the kind of "healing" promised is not that of physical healing from our diseases but rather of the healing of the soul from the disease of sin. The Scriptures do promise physical healing and miraculous healing occurs every day. But that is not the primary focus in this verse of Scripture.
So this, then, is what the final Lamb has done for you and me! How could we ever look into the truths revealed here by Isaiah the prophet and still want to live our lives selfishly for ourselves? How could we not fall at His feet in conviction and repentance and declare to Him anew our allegiance to Him and to His cause? What does God's final Lamb mean to you, beloved?
Ron
When John the Baptist first saw Jesus approaching and said to his followers standing nearby, "Behold, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!" (John 1:29), he sure said a mouthful, beloved! Not only was and is Jesus Christ "the Lamb of God" but He is further the final lamb God will ever require to be sacrificed for the sins of mankind. When Jesus went to the cross outside Jerusalem and laid down His life for our sins, He completely and forever fulfilled the sacrificial requirements of the Law of Moses. And no statement in Scripture, none about which I am aware anyway, declares this truth more clearly than these words of the prophet Isaiah.
Pierced through for our transgressions - Without going into a detailed exegesis of this term, what the Scriptures reveal is that Jesus suffered physically for our acts of sinfulness. The nails and the sword were instruments of death because of our failure to live up to the glory of God.
Crushed for our iniquities - Again without a detailed explanation of these words, what the Scriptures also reveal is that Jesus suffered mentally and emotionally for our sinful nature. Not only did He die, then, for the things we have done but He died as well for what we are. And no image of His mental and emotional anguish is anywhere more graphically displayed than in the passage dealing with the hours spent in Gethsemane prior to going to the cross.
The chastisement for our well-being - Having seen what our sins have done to Him, we discover from the words of Isaiah next what He has in love done for us. Here the word "chastisement" refers more to that parental discipline that every good parent uses to shape and mold his child's life, revealing to us beautifully the Fatherhood of God in welcoming us into His family and in dealing with us as His children. And the word "well-being" refers to our overall sense of personal contentment and peace that comes from being placed in right standing with God through what Jesus accomplished on the cross.
By His scourging we are healed - A close look at the overall context of the surrounding verses in Isaiah 53, beloved, reveals to us clearly that the kind of "healing" promised is not that of physical healing from our diseases but rather of the healing of the soul from the disease of sin. The Scriptures do promise physical healing and miraculous healing occurs every day. But that is not the primary focus in this verse of Scripture.
So this, then, is what the final Lamb has done for you and me! How could we ever look into the truths revealed here by Isaiah the prophet and still want to live our lives selfishly for ourselves? How could we not fall at His feet in conviction and repentance and declare to Him anew our allegiance to Him and to His cause? What does God's final Lamb mean to you, beloved?
Ron
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
Death and Nanorobots
"And inasmuch as it is appointed for men to die once and after this comes judgment" (1 Corinthians 9:27)
According to experts, beloved, the field of nanotechnology is booming! In fact, I saw on my favorite news channel just this morning the following headlines proudly displayed:
IMMORTALITY: Breakthrough in Genetics Defeats Death
The report went on to claim that the introduction of a new level of nanorobots into the human body can so affect genetics that physical death is virtually eliminated. Certainly such news as this will grab the attention of every human being worldwide!
But what about what the Apostle Paul wrote to the saints in the city of Corinth so many years ago? Did God not say to us through him that it has been divinely appointed for us to each "die once," to taste of the separation of the soul from the body? Has the ingenuity of man, then, overridden the authority and power of the Creator?
Medical technology has proven to be overall a tremendous blessing to mankind, beloved, even enabling us to enjoy a longer lifespan because of freedom from the diseases that have historically shortened it. But to lay claim to actually having defeated death? Now that, as they say, is "a horse of a different color"!
I think that we all know full well that God's judgment that each man shall taste of death is completely safe from any army of tiny robots that may or may not ever be introduced into the human body. But is that the end of it, then, for us? Is death always to win in the end? Is there no power that can ever conquer the ultimate enemy of man?
The good news is that, not only is there such a hope for us, but that we need not wait for genetic scientists to engineer and perfect it on our behalf. Such power is readily available to us and has been ever since Jesus Christ in love went to the cross and paid that ultimate price for your sins and mine.
"But when this perishable will have put on the imperishable, and this mortal will have put on immortality, then will come about the saying that is written, 'Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?' The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law; but thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 15:54-57)
Nanorobotics? NO! But the victory of Jesus Christ over sin and death and hell? YES! Death has been conquered, beloved, not by the ingenuity of man but rather by the grace and mercy of God in the person of Jesus Christ. Because He lives we shall live also!
Ron
According to experts, beloved, the field of nanotechnology is booming! In fact, I saw on my favorite news channel just this morning the following headlines proudly displayed:
IMMORTALITY: Breakthrough in Genetics Defeats Death
The report went on to claim that the introduction of a new level of nanorobots into the human body can so affect genetics that physical death is virtually eliminated. Certainly such news as this will grab the attention of every human being worldwide!
But what about what the Apostle Paul wrote to the saints in the city of Corinth so many years ago? Did God not say to us through him that it has been divinely appointed for us to each "die once," to taste of the separation of the soul from the body? Has the ingenuity of man, then, overridden the authority and power of the Creator?
Medical technology has proven to be overall a tremendous blessing to mankind, beloved, even enabling us to enjoy a longer lifespan because of freedom from the diseases that have historically shortened it. But to lay claim to actually having defeated death? Now that, as they say, is "a horse of a different color"!
I think that we all know full well that God's judgment that each man shall taste of death is completely safe from any army of tiny robots that may or may not ever be introduced into the human body. But is that the end of it, then, for us? Is death always to win in the end? Is there no power that can ever conquer the ultimate enemy of man?
The good news is that, not only is there such a hope for us, but that we need not wait for genetic scientists to engineer and perfect it on our behalf. Such power is readily available to us and has been ever since Jesus Christ in love went to the cross and paid that ultimate price for your sins and mine.
"But when this perishable will have put on the imperishable, and this mortal will have put on immortality, then will come about the saying that is written, 'Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your victory? O death, where is your sting?' The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law; but thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 15:54-57)
Nanorobotics? NO! But the victory of Jesus Christ over sin and death and hell? YES! Death has been conquered, beloved, not by the ingenuity of man but rather by the grace and mercy of God in the person of Jesus Christ. Because He lives we shall live also!
Ron
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