Thursday, June 2, 2011

Rescued From Above

Rescued From Above
Matt 6:13, Zech 3:2, Acts 5:31, Matt 7:11
If you are in a burning house, would you rather be saved in the fire or saved from the fire? If the fireman merely came in and stood with you while the fire consumed you both, are you even saved? Of course not! Thank God that Christ doesn’t save us “in” our sins, but snatches us up out of the fire the moment we repent and turn from iniquity. He saves us “from” the fire. He then pardons or forgives our sins. But whom He Pardons, He first makes penitent. And repentance is a gift from God. We don’t need to struggle with sin. You know the routine, one day we’re strong and the next day we fall. All we have to do is pray for the gift of repentance and our heavenly father is more willing to give good gifts to us than our earthly fathers.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Confession, Repentance, Intercession, Accusation, Acceptance, Pardon, Covering

1 John 1:9, Acts 3:19, Hebrews 7:25, Rev 12:10, Acts 10:35, Isaiah 55:7, Zech 3:2-5
What do the above words have in common? They are all steps in the process of obtaining Christ’s robe of righteousness. When we sin, in order to obtain acceptance with God, we have to confess that sin and repent of it or turn away from it. Confession without repentance is null and void and merely serves to alleviate feelings of guilt.  However, once we repent and turn away from that sin, Jesus begins to intercede in the heavenly courts in our behalf. He represents us and pleads our case to the Father. But while Jesus is defending and arguing for us, Satan is acting as prosecutor and is accusing us and arguing against us to the Father. He is pointing out why we aren’t entitled to pardon.  At the close of all of the evidence, if we have confessed and repented, the Father denies the claims of Satan and accepts the arguments of Jesus and pardons our iniquity. Jesus then removes our filthy garments from us and places his spotless robe of righteousness upon us, covering us. It is this robe of righteousness that enables us to walk in newness of life!

Friday, May 20, 2011

The Man In The Pit

The Man In The Pit
Ezekiel 12:2, Isaiah 32:3
There was a man sitting in a pit. He wasn’t sure how he got there but he had been there a long time. He mourned and wailed day in and day out because of his isolation, loneliness and depravation. He wailed so loudly that his friends at the top of the pit heard him. They gathered round the top and yelled down to him. They wanted to help him so they told him how to get out of the pit. But the man in the pit never responded. He just continued to moan and wail day in and day out. Finally his friends climbed down into the pit with him to help him.  They took ropes and a map and a light to show their friend how to get out of the pit. But their friend continued to moan and wail day in and day out. The friends showed him their map, and assured him the rope would hold him on the journey to the top. They cast the beam of light onto the pathway to the top to show him the way of escape. But the man continued to moan and wail day in and day out. Finally, his friends in exasperation, fearing they would become accustomed to the darkness, decided they could no longer delay their return to the top so they bid their friend goodbye and began their assent back to the top. And the man continued to moan and wail over his condition day in and day out. The moral of the story is: no matter how much light is cast onto our paths, a man who has become so accustomed to the darkness that he has become blind will never comprehend the light. But even a blind man can be safely led by his friends if he allows himself to be led.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Boomerang Prayers

1 Timothy 5:17, Isaiah 59:2, Matt 6:7, 1Peter 3:7,  James 4:3, 2 Chronicles 7:14
“Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. If I should die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take”. That is a prayer many of us learned in childhood. We may have even taught it to our children. Prayer changes things. In fact the word tells us to pray without ceasing. But will our prayers be heard? It is terrible to think that a wise and loving God who loves us with an everlasting love, would turn His ear away from us. But the reality is, if we do not hear (and obey) God, He will not hear us. Our sins and iniquities separate us from Him. The help that we need to obtain the victory over temptation when the devil is walking about like a roaring lion is not available to us when we choose not to listen to God. Husbands, your prayers are not heard if you are not treating your wife right i.e. with love, tenderness, care and preference, loving her as Christ loved the church. Vain, repetitious prayers are not heard. Prayers that are outside of God’s express will are not heard. I once knew a woman who prayed for God to return her live in boyfriend to her that had married someone else—while he was living with her! Mercy! Such prayers go no higher than the ceiling, but return to us unmet.   If you want others to pray for you (intercessory prayer), seek counsel from the Lord as to who He will hear, because not everyone that prays, obeys. If you want to offer earnest prayer for someone else (healing, victory over sin, job, finances etc), be sure that YOU are hearing and obeying God.  It is when we humble ourselves first, then pray and seek His face (i.e. study his word), and turn from and forsake  evil ways, that He hears us, forgives us and blesses us (which includes answering our intercessory prayers for others)!

Friday, April 1, 2011

Hot Pursuit

Matt 6:33, 2 Tim 2:15, Phil 2:5, John 5:39
There are only 24 hours in a day, 6-8 hours of which we spend sleeping, 8-12 of which we spend working, 2-3 of which we spend eating and getting dressed, 1-2 of which we spend going to and from work. That leaves about 4 hours of free time each day. How do we spend that free time? Is any of it devoted to the development of the mind of Christ? Or do we spend it on things that will burn up? Like for instance…..EVERYTHING ELSE!!?? Even more telling, how do we spend our day of worship when we have 12 hours to devote to developing the mind of Christ? Do we even keep it holy or do we spend it gossiping about others, going to the movies, going to sporting events, shopping, or getting our hair done/cut, and doing our own thing?  How is it that we can still sing the songs from back in the day but we can’t recall exactly how that scripture reads or where it’s found? There is only one thing that the redeemed will take to heaven with them, that is their purified and holy minds.  Reaching this perfection of Christian character is not a haphazard occurrence.  It requires determined effort, planning, and cooperation on our part. If we spend our days in pursuit of everything else, the thing that we will need most in the end will be outside of our grasp. Rethink your agenda and schedule each day and include time with Jesus for by beholding you will become changed!

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Missing The Point

Missing The Point
Acts 4:10-12, 2Tim 3:2-5
 I walked into an office and there was a sign that read "Life without Jesus is pointless". And to
drive the message home, pictured was a pencil with an eraser on both ends. Simple yet effective.
You see some of us ARE missing the point. We have a form of godliness but deny the power thereof. Our religion is our culture rather than our faith. We don’t know anything else, so we do what we know. We know how to profess Christianity. We know what to do and when to do it, so that we fit into our particular religious circles quite well.  So well, in fact,  it looks to others like we are the whole meal and the desert too.  But we are missing the point because our religion is faithless. We have not recognized our need for a “Savior”.   And if we have not recognized our need for a Savior, we cannot by definition be “saved”.  No matter how “good” we think we are, we cannot be saved unless His spotless life is credited to us. But we don’t believe in His merits. We don’t receive Him as the way, the truth and the life. We believe it has to be harder than that. We don’t take Him at His word that He is ABLE to save us, if we just simply believed.  Faith requires a personal relationship with Jesus, not merely a learned response. Faith is  Finally Admitting I Trust Him.