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Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Romans 8:18 1/30/2018*

I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us.”

Paul had been imprisoned, beaten, and shipwrecked but that is not what he is talking about. The suffering he is referencing is the inner turmoil of his own spirit, battling against his own flesh.

When we talk about suffering today, too often it involves someone saying something unkind to us, or calling our faith a fairy tale, or excluding us because of what we believe. These are not sufferings, they are opportunities.

However, our battle against sin, the inner struggle of not doing what we want, but doing what we hate can be devastating, and that is what Paul is referring to  in this verse. 

This is the suffering that caused him to cry out “What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body that is infected by death?” (Romans 7:24)

Scripture has two pieces of advice for us when we face this kind of suffering: 

1. Know who your liberator is. “Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans 7:25)

2. See the fight in context.  It is painful, it is frustrating, but it is over…the battle was won on the cross and these clashes are nothing compared to the glory that awaits us.

So, when you stumble, get up. Confess, repent, accept the forgiveness Christ gives, and keep going …

Learn from the suffering but don’t dwell on it… keep your eyes on the finish line and remember that this present suffering will fade away when compared to the splendor and glory that God will reveal in us when we finally get home.


"I groan daily under a body of sin and corruption. Oh, for the time when I shall drop this flesh, and be free from sin!"  - Charles Spurgeon

Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Revelation 2:4 1/23/2018*

“Yet I hold this against you: You have forsaken the love you had at first. Consider how far you have fallen! Repent and do the things you did at first. If you do not repent, I will come to you and remove your lampstand from its place.”
This passage is from the letter to the church at Ephesus in the book of Revelation. According to the letter, the church worked hard, persevered, had solid doctrine, and endured hardship.

Yet God said if they didn’t correct this one flaw their ministry would be removed. What makes this one thing so important?  Why is it so critical to remember our first love?

Maybe it is the fact that love is the difference between religion and relationship.  Simply following a creed or acting out a system, is powerless. 

You lose your first love by forgetting where you came from.  Forgetting who you were when Christ found you.  When that happens, gratefulness is replaced by pride, and acts of love are replaced by responsibilities.

Whereas we used to worship because we couldn’t help it, we now grudgingly fulfill our obligations of church attendance and service.  

Have you lost your first love? 

Are you following a religious system, or are you overwhelmed with love for Jesus? 

Stop and recall your history.  Remember what Christ did for you even though you were in rebellion. Consider how you felt when you were first redeemed.  Then love like that again. Feel and act like you did when He first saved you.

God doesn’t need your help, He wants your devotion.  Wake up from your stale, legalistic existence and fall back in love with Him.  iHHHHBe so full of Love for Jesus that it permeates everything you do…the rest will take care of itself.

“We should be astonished at the goodness of God, stunned that He should bother to call us by name, our mouths wide open at His love, bewildered that at this very moment we are standing on holy ground.”
- Brennan Manning

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

Hebrews 6:19 1/16/2018*

“We have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure…”
An anchor has two jobs. Hold the boat in place, and keep it facing the right direction.
The anchor of hope in this scripture is not our deeds, or good works.  It is the promise God made to those who run to Him. 
His promise is what gives us hope, and that anchors our souls.
No matter what storm you face, God’s promise can hold you. 
The promise is deliverance based on the Cross, not our deeds.   I am not a “good person”, I am a “redeemed person” and that anchor will hold firm based on His work not mine.
As the hurricanes of life approach, I face the storm and drop anchor.  Secure and unmoved knowing the power that guards my soul is greater than the storm that threatens it.   
As your storm hits, hold on to your hope.  Be focused and determined, but not afraid.  Don’t run from it.  Your soul is tethered to the Cross and it is immovable. 
Turn and face the waves, trust your anchor, and wait on God. 
There are calm seas just outside of this squall, and when the storm has passed the clear skies will reveal that your anchor held.  Rest in the fact that His promise is stronger than your problem.  

“I hear both the violent turbulence of the storm, and the quiet promises of God in the storm. And what I must remember is that something is not stronger simply because it’s louder.”
― Craig D. Lounsbrough





Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Philippians 4:13 1/9/2018*

“I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”

One of the most misapplied verses in the bible.

We usually quote this as a statement insuring our achievement of a goal.

But in context the passage has a different meaning.  Immediately before this verse Paul says, “I have learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need”. 

So, the proper application of this verse is not to insure accomplishment, but to remove fear and self-pity, and eliminate comfort as a requirement for contentment.

We desperately need that today.  We have become a nation of victims.  Easily offended with a myriad of reasons for our failures… none of which are our fault.  Any offense or disappointment sends us into the fetal position overcome with unhappiness and defeatism.

Paul refutes that and says he can handle any circumstance through Christ.  He can face success or loss, he can be hungry or full.  His circumstances do not determine his victories, those are guaranteed by the Cross.

All of us have issues in our lives that can hold us back.  And no problem is big until it is yours. But you can do anything through Christ.  It is your choice.  You can let a circumstance break you, or build you… and this verse affirms that it cannot break you without your permission.

Apply this passage as it is written.  Look adversity in the face and don’t flinch.  You can do this through Jesus, and that is guaranteed in writing. 

We are more than conquerors, and the enemy’s greatest fear is that we will lose ours.

"Listen to what you know instead of what you fear."
- Richard Bach

Tuesday, January 2, 2018

Proverbs 11:3 1/2/2018*


"The integrity of the upright guides them, but the unfaithful are destroyed by their duplicity."

If you want to make a change in the new year, here’s a good place to start. When is the last time you made an expensive decision because it was the right thing to do?  When did you last sacrifice what you wanted simply because of honor?

Integrity is a lost art, because it calls for absolutes. There is nothing about integrity that is fluid.  It is not relative.  There is no room to negotiate. It is permanent and unyielding. 

If integrity is just one of your options, you won’t take it…it must be your only choice.  It is not a popular choice either, and at times it is called radical, intolerant, unyielding, and other names that illustrate the absence of a societal moral compass.

So, you must choose. 

Either you live out truthfulness, honesty, righteousness and unselfishness as established by God. Or you determine your actions relative to situations and your assessment of risk and reward.

It is your choice, but the verse is clear.  Either your integrity will guide you, or your duplicity will destroy you.

Whether it is your taxes, your marriage, your job, or your personal life … live with integrity.  It is easier to work hard to do things right, than to live with the results of doing them wrong.

Set God’s standard as your True North, and start walking.


"Beware of no man more than of yourself; we carry our worst enemies within us." - Charles Spurgeon