When sharing the gospel, who you are matters much more than what you say.
Unforgiveness is idolatry.
When sharing the gospel, who you are matters much more than what you say.
Unforgiveness is idolatry.
Tea and a sweet, anyone?
I don't usually think in terms of choosing a "word of the year," but the word beauty has been repeating strongly in my mind and spirit. I'd like to make this a year of beauty.
"Let the king be enthralled by your beauty; honor Him, for He is the Lord (Psalm 45:11)
"He has made everything beautiful in its time" (Ecclesiastes 3:11)
"You are altogether beautiful, my darling; there is no flaw in you" (Song of Songs 4:7)
"From Zion, perfect in beauty, God shines forth" (Psalm 50:2)
"One thing I ask from the Lord, this only do I see: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze on the beauty of the Lord and to seek Him in His temple" (Psalm 27:4)
"How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring good news..." (Isaiah 52:7a)
"And your fame spread among the nations on account of your beauty, because the splendor I had given you made your beauty perfect, declares the Sovereign Lord" (Ezekiel 16:14)
It's the beauty all around us that testifies and convinces us of God (Romans 1:20). I pray the beauty He created will convince many, many more this year.
We know this saying is Scripture; in fact, it's the words of Jesus (Matthew 17:20; Luke 17:6). Yet struggling with faith is common, struggling to believe small faith has any value is common, and Mark 9:24 records the father of a demon-possessed boy crying, "I do believe; help my unbelief!" We are like that. Even when we believe, we don't believe perfectly. (I think because deep down we tend to a "too good to be true" stance toward God and His plans and promises, for several reasons: we know we deserve hell in our fallen state, we've never experienced pure goodness in our fallen world, and God simply is "too good"--good to the absolute max, though not too good to be true.)
Hebrews 11 is often called the faith chapter, as it describes what faith does and then lists a number of Old Testament saints who displayed amazing faith and won great victories because of it. Notice this, though: none of these were people who did it perfectly. Abraham is commended for following God's call to a new land, even though he didn't know where he was going, and for offering up Isaac as a sacrifice on God's command. He is not, however, downgraded in this chapter for lacking the faith to be honest that Sarah was his wife when he faced King Abimelech (Genesis 20). Sarah is credited with faith to believe she'd conceive a child (Hebrews 11:11), but there's no mention here that her first reaction had been to laugh at the very idea. By faith, verse 29 says, the Israelites crossed the Red Sea, but we know from the very same book of the Bible (Hebrews 3:19) that they didn't enter God's rest because of their unbelief! What does all this mean? It means we can do it too. These were people like us. In our wavering, mustard-seed, growing, but imperfect faith, we can do it, too.
How? Well, there's a very good hint in verse 1. I'll quote it from the Amplified:
"Now faith is the assurance (title deed, confirmation) of things hoped for (divinely guaranteed), and the evidence of things not seen [the conviction of their reality--faith comprehends as fact what cannot be experienced by the physical senses]"
The King James uses the word "substance" instead of "assurance," and I like this word as well. That faith can turn a future hope into a present substance, even more, IS that present substance, is an exciting and powerful idea. And faith as evidence means faith comprehends as fact the hoped-for things that are yet future.
Hope, though.
Our ability to grasp this verse depends on our understanding of what hope is. The world perceives hope as a wishing or desiring for something to happen that may or may not in fact happen. If we carry that meaning of the word "hope" into our reading of this verse, we will decide faith is much harder than it actually is--perhaps even unreachable or senseless. But then what are "hoped-for things," according to the amplified meaning of the verse? They're not things we wish would come to pass but can't be sure of. They are divinely guaranteed things. I mean, what is a surer thing than a divinely guaranteed thing? These hoped-for things are the promises of God. When we, in response, extend our faith to say, "Yes, God, I believe You are Who You say You are, and Your promises are true," then His promises become our reality. Just as when we put our faith in Christ, He becomes ours.
Faith grows in confidence when we realize true hopes are divinely guaranteed things.
Let these, and many other, divinely guaranteed things help build your faith today.
"...Satan himself masquerades as an angel of light. It is not surprising, then, if his servants masquerade as servants of righteousness. Their end will be what their actions deserve" (NIV).
Satan has a good past; he was an archangel. So, though he's no longer an angel of light, he can "play one on TV," so to speak. His servants (and v. 13 reveals that the reference is to false teachers, i.e., human beings), then, won't find it much of a stretch to pose as servants of another kind--servants of righteousness. Of the Lord, in other words.
This means that people who are actively or unknowingly (being deceived themselves) working for the enemy's dominion are among the church, disguised as servants of the Kingdom. And we're believing most of them. Some will be uncovered, and others we'll see through, but not all will be detected. Who some of them are would astound us. This has always been so, will always be so until the end, and is the reason why exposures in the church shouldn't shake us. Disappoint, yes. Sadden, yes. But not shake the faith of believers or discourage unbelievers away from Jesus. Those who are only pretending to belong to Christ do not lessen the trustworthiness of Christ or the sincerity of those who are truly His. They are being purged, and at times the purging is necessary.
If they are actual believers who have fallen, then restore them, if they are truly repentant and not prematurely bounced back into ministry. Other Scripture passages address this scenario. But I don't believe these are the people Paul is discussing here. He ends verse 15 with the words, "Their end will be what their actions deserve." These are not believers, in other words. And though they may fool some for a lifetime, or their own lifetime, in the end God is not mocked. We can trust Him on that.
The other day, I noticed something interesting in 2 Corinthians, which was maybe especially noticeable to me because I am a writer. Let me quote verses 9-11 here:
"I do not want to seem to be trying to frighten you with my letters. For some say, 'His letters are weighty and forceful, but in person he is unimpressive and his speaking amounts to nothing.' Such people should realize that what we are in our letters when we are absent, we will be in our actions when we are present" (NIV).
The people who were criticizing Paul because his person didn't match his writing didn't understand that a gift of writing is a discrete thing from a gift of speaking or an imposing presence, and vice versa. Why should it be unnatural to be gifted in one of these areas and not the other(s)? If Paul's writing was stronger and more authoritative than his some of his in-person interactions and presentations, it doesn't mean he was hiding behind his writing or using it to inflate himself. It's actually more likely that a gifted writer might be less impressive or articulate in person than their audience might wish. This is because the better one is at public presentation in its broadest sense, the less patience or desire they may have for the amount of sitting alone in a room that writing requires.
Paul has it right when he adds, "What we are in our letters when we are absent, we will be in our actions when we are present" (v. 11b NIV, emphasis mine). If what Paul does agrees with his letters, this is his demonstration of integrity. Our writing and our speech, even if unequally skilled, are extensions of each other, so when we say that our words and actions should line up, the words referred to are both written and spoken. Paul is saying, "Never mind what I look or sound like; rather, look to my integrity." Just as God performs His word, and we are to be doers of the word, Paul reminds us here, in writing, to become those doers more and more as we walk with the Lord.
You're reading your Bible and have come across something that makes you go, "What? This must mean something other than what it sounds like." To be fair, that may be true. When we run into such passages, it's a good idea to pray for enlightenment from the Holy Spirit, compare several translations, find the meaning of key Greek or Hebrew words in Strong's concordance, and look at a variety of commentaries and study notes. Online teachings can help, too, but be careful here. Anything they teach should harmonize with the Scripture as a whole, and we need to always be aware that there are people willing and waiting to tell us just what we want to hear about any particular passage. Casting around until we find someone to tickle our ears (2 Timothy 4:3) on the subject isn't the wise way to go.
Okay, you've done all that and you still don't like a certain difficult or troublesome passage. The first thing to realize is this is normal. Why is it normal? Because until we go to heaven, some aspects of our fleshly nature are still going to be operating. Walking with Jesus and allowing Him to change us into His likeness is a lifelong process. We never reach perfection, in the sense of flawlessness, on this side of eternity. It's what's left of our flesh, even if only scraps, that won't like the pure word of God. So if you don't like something in the Scripture, don't beat yourself up. This is actually useful information. It shows you where you still need to grow and adjust to full truth. The Holy Spirit is merciful and will help.
Another point to consider is that not liking certain truths may be part of the cost of discipleship. "But people will cancel me if I say..." Friend of the world, are you? James 4:4 says friendship with the world is enmity with God. Jesus said, as recorded in Luke 14, that family, possessions, and life itself cannot come before Him in the disciple's life. So how can something as piddling as our opinions come before Him? In America, we mostly don't pay the cost of discipleship in the form of beheadings, but unless we aren't disciples after all, we do pay it. Maybe, for example, in the form of acknowledging and adhering to Scripture that doesn't please the aspects of ourselves that aren't conformed to Him.
We can perhaps accept that liking a passage or principle and bowing to it are not the same. For the sake of our Lord, we can do the latter without the former, meanwhile praying to truly receive the former as another way of drawing closer to Him.