I
love the Psalms; reading one a day is a good plan. David really shows his love,
fear of and heart for God in his poetry. In Psalm 139 verses 23 and 24 David
humbles himself before his God and cries out that his heavenly Father would
search his heart for any wickedness and show him how to walk in godliness.
As
with David, we cannot do this and walk the walk on our own; o how we need God
in our lives. In Romans chapter 2 and verse 15 we learn that our born-again
spirits, hearts or consciences will show us if we are right or wrong, if we
allow the Holy Spirit to illuminate and strengthen our spirits with the word of
God. “But the Comforter, which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my
name, he shall teach you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance,
whatsoever I have said unto you” (John 14:26; KJV).
Get
in the word, ask God to make the word come alive to you (what we call
revelation) by the Holy Spirit as you read and meditate. Allow the spotlight of
God’s word to show you where you need to change so you can draw ever closer to
God. Remember it is not in our own strength but it is God who shows us the way
and empowers us to change and be more like him (Phil 1:6). “Being confident of this
very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until
the day of Jesus Christ” (Phil 1:6). Lord, flood us with your presence, your
Holy Spirit today and have your way in our lives. Be blessed today.
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“Trust
in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In
all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths.” (Prov 3:5-6; KJV)
God
has a plan for each of our lives (Ps 139:14-16) and he wants to guide and
direct us. In the apostle John’s gospel, chapter 10 and verse 27, we read that
God’s sheep (us) hear his voice. God does not speak to our minds but our
spirits (our consciences or spiritual hearts) by way of the Holy Spirit (Rom
8:14; Rom 8:16). The Holy Spirit can do this by bringing our attention to
scriptures (John 16:13-14) but also by simply dropping thoughts into our spirit
(Rom 9:1). How do we know this is God? Well, in the word we read that God’s
wisdom is peaceable (James 3:17). The thoughts God brings us will come with a
sense of peace and assurance, so that we know that it is God.
Now
for most of us our minds are often so busy it is difficult to hear from God.
Much like the football quarter back trying to get instructions to his team when
the crowd watching the game are yelling. We need to still our minds and we can
do this by renewing them in God’s word (Rom 12:2); reading it, speaking it and meditating
it, so that our minds are focused on God and at peace. This takes time and
effort and it is an ongoing process. We can hear from God.
Jean
and I had a very major decision to make some time ago and we set ourselves to
hear from God. We spent several months praying, each on our own, then we
compared what God had given each of us and we had heard the same in every
detail; praise God. God also speaks to us in other ways but the approaches we
have discussed today are the most important ones. Sit and rest with God today and let him talk
to you. It’s wonderful.
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I
encourage you to read Ephesians chapter 4 and verses 11 through 16 today. In
this section of the Bible Paul describes the ministry gifts that Jesus gave to
the Church: “And he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists;
and some, pastors and teachers” (v11). These giftings were provided to equip us
all for ministry and to help us grow and mature in our Christian walk. Notice
we are all to be ministers of the gospel; have you ministered God’s love and
light to anyone today? Verses 12, 13 and 16 emphasize growing in unity and
building up the Body of Christ, the Church. We are the Body of Christ and in verse
16 we note that we are to be properly joined together, in unity, all doing our
part so that the Church grows and is effective. Unity in the early Church
brought thousands of converts and great power for signs wonders and miracles
(Acts 4:32-33). In our passage in Ephesians, God directs us to grow up (v14 and
15), so we don’t stay as spiritual, children tossed about by the things people
say and do that are not of God.
Please
do notice that Paul tells us to speak the truth in love (v15). Love permeates
the Bible so it must be important. Finally, verse 13 always blows me away. Paul
tells us we can grow to be perfect and to have all the fullness of Christ in us.
Don’t be discouraged, I don’t know about you, but I am not there yet and Paul
did not claim to be either (Phil 3:12). However, let’s keep allowing the word
and the Holy Spirit to enable us to grow. Just think what God has for us, how he
wants to use you. Press in today, be built up, seek unity.
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“For
God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever
believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life” (John 3:16; KJV).
We
associate this scripture with Christ’s sacrifice on the cross, paying the
penalty for our sins. But it is also important to remember that Jesus came to
this earth born of a woman under the power of the Holy Spirit (Luke 1:35). He
is not a distant deity that cannot identify with our earthly, fleshly,
struggles. He surrendered his deity to become a man on earth with flesh and
blood just like us (Heb 2:14). The word says he had to made like us so that he
could minister to us in our earthly state (Heb 2:17). He was tempted in every
way but without sin (Heb 2:18; Heb 4:15). To minister on this earth, he had to
be filled with Holy Spirit, just like us (Luke 3:22).
Isn’t
it encouraging that Jesus knows what we go though in our lives; He knows our
struggles, God is quick to forgive (1 John 1:9) and is always there to help. He
calls us to be holy, godly and perfect as God is perfect (1 Peter 1:16; 1 Tim 6:11;
Matt 5:48). This may seem a tall order to keep. However, he gave us his word to
guide and enable us and the power of the Holy Spirit to reveal his word to us
and to achieve that perfection (John 14:26). He never left us alone, he is
always with us and in us and nothing will ever separate us from his love (Rom
8:39). Remember, not even Paul the apostle claimed perfection (Phil 3:12); it
is a process of growth that we will still be involved in to the day we depart
this earth. Be encouraged today, we can do all things though Christ who
strengthens us (Phil 4:13).
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I
was reading in the book of Numbers, chapters 22-24 about Balaam. Balak, king of
Moab, wanted Balaam to curse Israel for him so Balak could defeat Israel in
battle. Balaam was allowed to go with Balak’s emissaries but God was not
pleased as Balaam’s motives were suspect; Balaam probably had his eye on a
reward from Balak. As Balaam was riding his donkey an angel of the Lord opposed
them but only the donkey saw the angel at first. The angel warned Balaam that
his ways were perverse and told him only to speak what the Lord required.
Balaam
went on to obey God and bless Israel as directed by God and prophesied against Moab
and its allies. Balaam’s motives and character were suspect initially, he was
spiritually less perceptive than his donkey. Once admonished, he acted as God’s
prophet, rejected the bribe offered him and delivered God’s word in obedience
to the Father (“All that the Lord speaketh, that I must do”; Deut 23:26; KJV).
So,
what does this say to us today? We must walk in fear of God, in obedience and
with pure motives. Even though we may displease people, we must only allow what
God approves to come out of our mouths. Wow, Balaam got a talking to but he
came through in the end. When we read these stories, we should always take away
with us the message God is trying to convey to us today.
Be
Obedient, It's as Simple as that.