6/29/2018 0 Comments Romans 13 - Wake up!Romans 13 Wake up! Do you know what time it is? There is no time for sleeping in; no time to sleepwalk through life. Not now. The return of Jesus is nearer today than any other day. There’s a battle waging for souls, and Jesus is coming soon! Arise! It’s time to get our priorities in order. Time for spiritual alertness and vigilance. It’s time to wake up and get ready! Awake! We are one day closer to Jesus coming back. No time to lay back down; no time to slumber! Time to get ready. Sleeping clothes won’t work. Throw them off. Cast off darkness and put on the armor of light. Put on Jesus! Covering won’t do. You’ll be able to see through. Remove the things of the world lurking in the dark and put on light; the righteousness of Jesus. But you can’t do it half awake. He must be IN us before He can be ON us. Lean into Him. Know Him. Befriend Him. Abide in Him. Be fully awake and aware. Eyes wide open! Put on your work clothes. There are so many who still don’t know Him. Fully awake, dress yourself in Jesus. His holiness, beauty, humility, purity, compassion, wisdom, forgiveness, righteousness, zeal, patience, and most of all LOVE. God, as I get out of bed today and every day, AWAKE MY SOUL! Empty me of me. Remove all the worldly things that creep in…selfishness, envy, pride, anger, entitlement, bitterness, complaining, self-pity, deceit. And FILL me with You. Your goodness and love and grace and mercy. Fill every space, making no room for me. Each day is one day closer to the return of Your Son, and there is much yet to do. Help me to be fully AWAKE, dressed in Jesus for the work you have called me to today.
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Romans 12 [name], present your body as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God. It is a treasure; a gift. Do not be conformed to this world, [name]…what culture says is pleasing and praise-worthy and desirable and acceptable. Instead, be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Soak in God’s word and let it transform you. Steep in it until it changes your composition to be more like Him. In doing so, you will be able to discern His will, what is good and acceptable and PERFECT. Able to be in sync with God. Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought to. Don’t think you are ever too good for anyone or that anyone is below you. Never be wise in your own sight. Remember, [name], you are but one body among many members. Created to work together; to complement one another. You are unique, with unique gifts for a distinct purpose. Don’t covet, despise, or envy the gifts of others. Use your gifts powerfully for the glory of God. The individual gifts of each of us combined poured out on the world can be a mighty & unstoppable force. Use them well. Hone them. Practice them. Give them away freely, [name]. Let your love be genuine and sincere. Use sober judgment. Hate what is evil and hold fast to what is good. Love one another in abundance. When others have success, celebrate with them. There is too much kingdom work to do and too many victories ahead to take any other posture than rejoicing with them. And when others are suffering and in pain, weep with them. Help share and carry their burdens. You know those who persecute you, [name]? Bless them. Never repay evil for evil. Always do the honorable thing. Strive to live peaceably and in harmony with all. Let God avenge wrongs. He’s got this. Be a living witness of another way. Overcome evil with good. [name], you have so much to offer. You are valuable and needed in the Kingdom. Do not be lazy in your zeal and passion. Be fervent in spirit. Serve the Lord. Be generous in contributing to the needs of others and showing hospitality. Rejoice in hope. Be patient in tribulation. Be constant in prayer. [name], image the impact we could make if we all lived in this manner. Let’s do this! 6/27/2018 0 Comments Romans 11 - GraftedRomans 11 Paul asks and answers the question he knows is on the mind of the Gentile believers: Has God rejected His people, the Israelites? “By no means!” Paul exclaims. And then he explains it in terms of pruning and grafting. Though I have heard the analogy of grafting in the Bible, I hadn’t previously given it much thought. Perhaps because I don't have a green thumb and am not agriculturally knowledgeable. But the more I have studied it, the more I am in awe overr how God’s creation proclaims His glory. How God tells us His story using people, circumstances, and creation. Grafting involves placing one branch onto a stem, root or branch of another in such a way that a union is formed and the two grow together as one. Branches that have dried up, died, or stopped producing fruit are cut off the tree. A part of the tree is cut, exposing its interior and combined with a cut and exposed part of a healthy branch. The two are joined where they have been exposed and fastened together tightly. Over time, they fuse together, grow together and become healthy and fruit-producing again. Us Gentile believers, the “wild olive branches,” Have been grafted into God’s family. We open our hearts and tightly fasten ourselves to God’s heart. And over time, in closeness and in soaking up the nutrients of His goodness and character, we become connected…so connected, you can’t see where one ends, and the other begins. Our source for living and producing fruit comes from the deeply planted roots. John Bunyan says, “Conversion is not the smooth, easy-going process some men seem to think... It is wounding work, this breaking of the hearts, but without wounding there is no saving... Where there is grafting there will always be a cutting, the graft must be let in with a wound; to stick it onto the outside or to tie it on with a string would be of no use. Heart must be set to heart and back to back or there will be no sap from root to branch. And this, I say, must be done by a wound, by a cut.” God inspects hearts. Branches of unbelief producing no fruit are rejected. But re-connection is always possible. God made way for grafting. A way to reconnect to life through the open wounds of Jesus’ sacrifice. We have to cut into our pride, control, stubborn and unbelieving hearts…to expose an opening and allow that connection, through faith, back to the open heart of God. To press in. To become so close. To become one. And to those of us grafted in, Paul reminds us to remain humble. To not look down on those branches cut off and put aside. Three is no room for arrogance when we too need the root. We were also once dead and produced nothing of value without our connection to the root, and God wants all to be a part of the family. For a time, there is a pause on the Israelites – a time for the Gentiles to be grafted in – but God has not forgotten them, and a time will come when the natural branches will be grafted back into their own olive tree. Paul is so overwhelmed by the depth of God’s riches, wisdom, knowledge, and ways; he breaks out into praise. Let us never take for granted the love and majesty of God. The way even creation displays His power and pursuit of us. The way creation plays a part in telling His story. “For from him and through him and to him are all things. To him be the glory forever. Amen.”
6/26/2018 0 Comments Romans 10 - Beautiful FeetRomans 10 Romans 9 is steeped in the sovereignty of God and Romans 10 speaks to our responsibility. Salvation is given to us by grace through faith in Jesus alone. There is NOTHING we can do to EARN our salvation. But we must accept it. We must believe. Paul says, “if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the heart one believes and is justified, and with the mouth one confesses and is saved.” Paul declares there is no distinction. The same Lord is Lord of all. Bestowing His riches on all who call on Him. For everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved! So, Paul poses a series of “how” questions and a statement… HOW then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? And HOW are they to believe in Him of whom they have never heard? And HOW are they to hear without someone preaching? And HOW are they to preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “HOW beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!” I love this visual of beautiful feet. Beautiful feet carrying the Gospel. Beautiful feet loving their neighbor. Beautiful feet of those who hunger and thirst for righteousness; who mourn for the lost. Beautiful feet worn out from making sure all hear the good news. Paul is quoting from Isaiah 52. Scriptures so beloved and familiar to the Jewish audience. Scriptures studied and taught and discussed for hundreds of years in the places of worship. And following this passage are the most descriptive passages of Jesus as the Messiah in Isaiah 52 and 53. Here’s a glimpse… He had no form or majesty that we should look at him. Despised and rejected by men. A man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. We esteemed him not. He has borne our griefs, carried our sorrows. He was pierced for our transgressions; crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his wounds, we are healed. The Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all. He was oppressed, afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth; like a lamb that is led to the slaughter. By oppression and judgment, he was taken away. Although he had done no violence, and there was no deceit in his mouth. Yet it was the will of God to crush him. Making many to be accounted righteous, bearing their iniquities. He poured out his soul to death and was numbered with the transgressors, yet he bore the sin of many and makes intercession for the transgressors. The beautiful feet of Jesus willingly walking to the cross in fulfillment of prophecy. And now we -- as believers; as the Church -- are the hands and feet of Jesus. Hands and feet to tell the story of the scars on His hands and feet; the blood shed; the sacrifice for our salvation; the GOOD NEWS. How are my feet looking? How are your feet looking? How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!
6/25/2018 0 Comments Romans 9 - Sovereign GodRomans 9 Sovereign. Possessing supreme or ultimate power. Absolute in authority and unrestricted in supremacy. Omniscient (knows all), omnipotent (can do all; all powerful), and omnipresent (everywhere at all times). God is sovereign, and I am not. And that is part of His mercy as well. Romans 9 is a tough chapter for many people, but in God’s sovereignty, we see His goodness, mercy, grace, pursuit, and patience. God raised up a people – the Israelites – to unveil His plan. Piece by piece. Story by story. Hint by hint. Their adoption, their history, the covenants, the Law, the worship, the promises, the patriarchs, the lineage of Jesus – the Christ; the Messiah. In God’s sovereignty, He chooses the line from which the Messiah would come. But in His love and grace, it isn’t lineage of the flesh that saves us; it is a lineage of the promise available to all who believe. In God’s sovereignty, He shows mercy, compassion, and even allows hardening. Paul references Moses and Pharaoh. And while the end result was destruction of so much of Egypt, God was patient and pursuing. Ten times Pharaoh and the Egyptians saw God’s power and authority on display with an opportunity to submit to Him. And ten times Pharaoh rebelled, choosing to cling to his personal power and position while watching those under his control suffer horrifically. We have a choice to say no to God, and God has a choice to say, “okay…have it your way…if this is what you want, let’s see how it works out for you.” But God continues to wait for us and pursue us. The prophets consistently preached both invitation to choose God, and consequences for saying, “not now” one too many times. God chose the exact perfect time the Messiah would enter earth in the flesh. God chose the exact perfect time the Messiah would shed blood for our sins. And God has chosen the exact perfect time for the Messiah to return one day and complete the restoration for those who put their faith in Him and to unleash His wrath on those who continued to say, “not now, I’ve got this. I’ll do this myself.” Paul begins Romans 9 with great sorrow and anguish that his Jewish family, given all their history with God, can’t see be past their religiosity and plant their eyes on the Messiah. He agonizes over what they are missing and the devastating results that will follow. Paul asks why Israel, who was pursuing a law that would lead to righteousness did not succeed in reaching that law, but the Gentiles who did not pursue righteousness attain it. He answers, “Because they did not pursue it by faith, but as if it were based on works. They have stumbled over the stumbling stone.” In other words, you will never attain it if you are counting on human works…only by grace, through faith in the work of Jesus. Instead of seeing Jesus as the answer to all they had been searching for, they stumbled over Him. Jesus fulfilled what we could not, and this is where we put our faith. I visualize Paul yelling, “WHY CAN’T YOU SEE? YOU HAVE BEEN GIVEN EVERY BENEFIT OF BEING ABLE TO SEE! THE SCRIPTURE YOU HAVE MEMORIZED SINCE CHILDHOOD POINTS TO IT. THIS IS IT. THIS WAS ALWAYS IT. JESUS IS IT. PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE BELIEVE.” This is a message for any of us who have had all the benefits of a Christian upbringing. We know the stories. We go to church. We volunteer to serve. We generously give. But do we have faith, or do we rely on our actions and religious routine? One will save us and the other will not. Do we know and believe in Jesus as Messiah, Savior, Lord? Do we stumble over the stumbling stone – our activities getting in the way of relationship and submission? Is our heart hardened by the culture around us full of posturing, striving, being independent, focusing inward, feeling entitled because of our good works…or is our heart positioned to believe that it isn’t us who saves us? You alone, Jesus.
Romans 8 Y’all! All. Of. Romans. Eight. Read it. Listen to it. Memorize it. I’ve included a link to a reading of Romans 8 at the end of this post. Up to this point in the letter, Paul has exposed our sinful nature and need for a Savior. A Savior that could only be the Son of God in the flesh nailing our sins between His bloody hands and the cross; a cross meant for condemnation and humiliation and a statement. And then Paul opens Romans 8 with this powerful truth, “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” (Romans 8:1) Paul goes on to contrast life in the flesh/world versus life in the Spirit/God and the importance of where we set our minds and actions. In the world, there is only death and an inability to please God. But in the Spirit, there is LIFE and PEACE. We are CHILDREN of God. We are ADOPTED as FAMILY. We are HEIRS. We have HELP when we are weak and INTERCESSION when we are at a loss for words. All things are worked together for GOOD; for God’s perfect will. God is for us…who can be against us? NOTHING can separate us from His LOVE. Nothing. We are more than CONQUERORS. Yes, and Amen! If you are like me, you get so fired up by all of this…but then you just aren’t feeling it. You still don’t feel at peace. You still feel conquered more often than a conqueror. You sometimes don’t feel close to God. You still feel weak. You still fight temptation. You still cry your eyes out at all the suffering. Because it is finished, but not yet final. The work of Jesus to fully satisfy the debt of sin is FINISHED. But the final battle has yet to be waged. For a time, sin and suffering still exist. Victory has been declared, but we don’t yet fully see it. Paul says, “Now hope that is seen is not hope. For who hopes for what he sees? But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience.” (Romans 8:24b-25) We groan. The creation groans. Because things are not the way they should be. We are not yet home, and things are not yet fully restored. “The whole creation has been groaning together in the pains of childbirth until now. And not only the creation, but we ourselves…groan inwardly as we wait eagerly for adoption as sons, the redemption of our bodies. For in this hope we are saved.” (Romans 8:23-24a) CS Lewis says, “If we find ourselves with a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that we were made for another world.” Indeed. Things will one day be beautiful and perfect and free of pain and tears. But for now, we not only endure but live out loud. This time of waiting is a time of demonstrating to others what they too can experience. It is a time to bring others in on this journey with us. “The sufferings of this present time are not worth comparing with the glory that is to be revealed in us.” (Romans 8:19) Because even in the suffering, God is there. God is working all things for good. Nothing can separate us from His love. And there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. Not on our best days and not on our very worst days. Our soul may be groaning for the day of full and final restoration, but while we are still here, there is still work to do. We live in freedom, full of hope, and with full assurance that He is a good good Father. That’s who He is. And we are loved by Him. That who we are. Click below to listen to a powerful reading of Romans 8... Romans 7 Has someone ever told you not to do something and although it had never crossed your mind before, you now want to do it? Or, has there ever been something you promised yourself – promised God – you would never do again, and you find yourself doing it over and over and over again? If so, you might have a lot more in common with Paul than you thought! Ever since Adam and Eve took that bite of the fruit way back in Genesis 3, the temptation of sin has slithered around making its way into all parts of our lives. Then comes the law, and as the pastors at @coe22 say, “the law is both a map and a mirror.” The law shows us how we should live, but also shows us how horribly short we fall in living it. Sin is something we don’t like to talk about or think about. Andy Stanley has an excellent sermon on sin versus mistakes (link here). He talks about how we all prefer to call our sin "mistakes"…an error, accident, poor judgment, carelessness, ignorance…we have no shortage explanations we have become adept at telling ourselves and others. But deep down, we know sin when we see it. We know when something is purposeful, willful, intentional. Sin is no mistake. The problem is mistakes can be fixed by trying harder, being a bit more diligent and disciplined. But sin can’t be remedied by us. It requires a savior. Trying harder never cuts it. Paul comes to this realization and says, “For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh. For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing.” Do you ever feel like that? I can certainly relate. C.S. Lewis says, “No man knows how bad he is until he has tried to do good.” #truth Paul says he delights in the law; in God’s Word – me too! He knows right from wrong – me too! He wants to do what is right – ME TOO! But he lacks the power in his own strength – me too! We can call it what we want, but the truth is, it is sin. We are all sinners. Stanley says, “Until you embrace the fact that you’re a sinner, you’re not open to embracing the fact that God sent you a savior… Mistakers are all about trusting in self to get it right. Sinners realize: ‘I can't. I don't need to do better. I don't need a motivational speaker or a cheerleader. I need a Savior.’” Paul cries out, “Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” Ever feel like that? He answers his question, “Thanks be to God through JESUS CHRIST our Lord!” PRAISE GOD! You won’t want to miss Romans 8 tomorrow!
6/20/2018 0 Comments Romans 6 - Be FreeRomans 6 Another Q&A in Paul’s great Gospel presentation to the Romans… Q: Are we to continue in sin so grace may show itself even more? Or keep sinning because we are not under a law but under grace? If we are forgiven over an over again by no act of our own, can we not just keep sinning…after all, God will continue to keep forgiving us? A: By no means! Once you have tasted freedom, why would you ever go back to slavery? God has so much more for you. Timothy Keller says, “God invites us to come as we are, not stay as we are.” We who are baptized in Christ were buried with Him in death…but also raised with Him in new life. Our old self, ruled by sin, was crucified with Him, so sin would no longer have control over us. We aren’t the same. We don’t have to do the things we used to do. We don’t have to say the things we used to say. We don’t have to think the way we used to think. We are free. But sometimes we don’t feel free, do we? Sometimes -- even in our belief -- sin still seems to have a strong grip on us. Temptation is still rearing its ugly head for now, but we are equipped to conquer it. Paul says, “let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, to make you obey its passions. Do not present your members to sin as instruments for unrighteousness…” Our “members” are the things in us we can control. Our thoughts, our words, our actions, what we see, what we listen to, what we read, who we spend time with, where we spend time…all of it. Instead of submitting our “members” as instruments for unrighteousness, we can strive to always present them in a way to draw closer to God. Think about how you spend your time. Think about what you scroll through. Think about what you read. Think about what you listen to in the car. Think about what you click on Netflix. Think about what you whisper to your friends. Are they things that feed that pull of temptation, or are they things that feed your soul, your faith, your love for the Lord? Paul asks us to think about the fruit that ever came from the slavery of our bodies to temptation. Shame, guilt, regret, physical consequences, broken relationships, skewed view of self. Conversely, what is the fruit that comes from freedom from sin and nearness to God? Sanctification – becoming more like our Creator, our will being more in sync with His, our eyes seeing the world as He does -- and ultimately eternal life. “For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.” If you have been set free…if you have tasted the good fruit…why would you ever go back? Instead, tap into that power inside you. Let’s use our “members” – all pieces of our heart, mind, body, and soul – to tap into God’s character, discernment, wisdom, peace. This is how we grow into people who are stronger against temptation and bearers of good good fruit.
6/19/2018 0 Comments Romans 5 - In the sufferingRomans 5 Paul says since we have been justified by faith…we get some pretty cool benefits: peace with God through Jesus, access into grace on which we can stand, and hope in the glory of God. And among these benefits, Paul adds, “Not only that, but we rejoice in our suffering.” Wait! What? Paul explains, “…suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame…” There are things God does for us because we can’t do them ourselves. We can’t save ourselves. So God did this for us. But there are some things we can do and need to do ourselves. And often suffering is our training ground. Endurance, character, hope…these are things we want; things we want those we love to grow in too. Not one ounce of suffering is wasted. I think much of the anxiety we feel about suffering has to do with the anticipation of what it will be like and how we will possibly survive it. God doesn’t give us a sneak peek into that piece, only that He will be with us; He will never leave us in it. Remember when the Israelites were leaving Egypt on their way to the promised land in the desert, and God provided daily manna from heaven? They each took different portions of it, depending on what they needed…and only enough for the day. If people took more to stash some away for later, it would rot. God only provided what they needed at the time. Their daily bread. I think that is how it is with suffering. God is there to provide the sustenance we need to get through it, but only what we need when we need it. No more, no less. So we can’t predict or plan how we will manage because we haven’t been given that portion of the manna yet…we haven’t needed it yet. Paul says, “For while we were still weak, AT THE RIGHT TIME Christ died for the ungodly.” God’s timing is always precisely the right time. God’s portion is always precisely the right portion. That can give us peace and hope, even when we are scared and in the middle of the fire. God, give us this day our daily bread, and let us rejoice in it. 6/18/2018 0 Comments Romans 4 - Believing GodRomans 4 It’s harder to unlearn something than to learn it. Paul’s consistent drum beat to the Jews in Rome is belief; faith in God and justification through Jesus. The Gospel…salvation via grace through faith, not works. When you have spent your entire life (and the lives of many generations before you) believing something, it is not easy to change. The Jewish people have spent their lives enslaved to a law they couldn’t keep but were convinced would save them and putting their hope in their heritage as God’s chosen people. Paul continues his case for the Gospel to the Romans coming from many different angles, trying to convince them it not only doesn’t go against what God has spoken, but it is the true essence of what God has spoken. In this part of the letter, Paul says, let’s chat for a bit about Abraham. Father Abraham, the most revered man among the Jewish people. The man upon whom God’s blessing of a nation set apart for Him was established. Paul brings it way back…all the way to Genesis 15:6 and reminds them of this truth they had been given long ago, “Abraham BELIEVED God, and it was COUNTED to him as righteousness.” Long before the law was even given to the Jewish people, Abraham was COUNTED – CREDITED – as righteous. Through FAITH, God put Abraham in the righteous column of His great ledger. Abraham wasn’t justified by his good works for God. Abraham wasn’t justified by his incredible acts of love. Abraham wasn’t justified by his maturing character. Abraham wasn’t justified by keeping the law that had not even yet been given. Abraham believed God. Period. What does it mean to believe God in this way? James tells us that even the Devil believes God. And in the Gospels, we saw the demons recognizing Jesus and fully believing He could destroy them. But this isn’t the belief or Abraham or the belief that will save us. True belief is faith, trust, submission, obedience, reliance on God above all. Abraham didn’t always know how or why what God said would happen, but he believed that it would happen just as God said. He believed God’s promises and believed God was willing and able to keep them. Despite a long time lapse from the promise, despite his circumstances that seemed impossible, despite any clear direction or plan…Abraham believed. In fact, his faith grew stronger. “NO UNBELIEF made him waver concerning the promise of God, but he GREW STRONG IN HIS FAITH as he GAVE GLORY to God, FULLY CONVINCED that God was ABLE TO DO what he had PROMISED.” (Romans 4:20-21). This. This, Paul is saying is what we should emulate. This is the legacy. This is the torch we should carry. Paul continues, “That is why his faith was ‘counted to him as righteousness.’ But the words ‘it was counted to him’ were not written for his sake alone, but FOR OURS ALSO.” So, what is the alternative? What is the downside of unbelief? It is us putting faith in something other than God – money, mentors, prestige, leisure, comfort, family, power, success – and it results in sin. John Piper says, “All the sinful states of our hearts are owing to unbelief in God’s super-abounding willingness and ability to work for us in every situation of life so that everything turns out for our good. Anxiety, misplaced shame, indifference, regret, covetousness, envy, lust, bitterness, impatience, dependency, pride – these are all sprouts from the root of unbelief in the promises of God.” And faith is both backward and forward-looking. It is believing that Jesus died on the cross, took upon Himself our sins, and gave us His righteousness. But it is also believing God’s promises for the present and future. Most of us will say we believe God. We trust God. We submit to God. The rich young ruler who approached Jesus thought the same. But when Jesus told him to sell all that he had, the basis for his true belief – his money – surfaced. And as part of that story – whether it be money or some other “god” that even subconsciously has first place – Jesus tells us we can’t sever two masters. We will only truly put our faith and belief in one when push comes to shove. Do we truly believe? Is our faith and trust truly in God alone? Fighting unbelief is a constant battle. This is why we need to stay in God’s Word and soak in His promises. We have to know Him to believe Him. We have to know His promises to believe His promises. “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief.” (Mark 9:24) I’ve included a list of 60 of God’s promises summarized in the first person below. Let’s be encouraged today and believe all that God has promised. When we believe and put our faith in Him, we are free. “Blessed is she who has believed that the Lord would do what he said.” (Luke 1:45)
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December 2018
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