Thursday, May 24, 2012    

Not My Way

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

“God in his wisdom saw to it that the world
would never know him through human wisdom…”
(1 Corinthians 1:21a, NLT)

This is the passage my devotions started with yesterday. We don’t get to know God through our wisdom. It doesn’t work that way…it’s not God’s plan. In fact, God ensures that we don’t get to know Him that way.

But why?

Because if He allowed us to get to know Him based on our own wisdom and knowledge, we would take the credit. Of course we would…that’s what we do. We don’t get to really pursue God—it’s the other way around. God pursues us.

Again…why?

God pursues us so that we will know that He loves us. There is no doubt. No question. God loves us. Period. He loves us so much that He wants to be sure that we don’t get in our own way and take the credit for His love (I’ve done this). He loves us so much that…

“…he gave his one and only Son,
so that everyone who believes in him
will not perish but have eternal life.”
(John 3:16, NLT)

Now, why would I want to go and mess that up? :wink:

Pursued…

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009

I have been reading through the life of David as part of my time with God lately. I am currently in 2 Samuel after David has been King for awhile. In fact, part of the story has shifted from David to his sons and daughters. What a mess!

Here’s a quick highlight from just 2 Samuel 13:

Tamar is raped by her half-brother Amnon.
Tamar’s brother, Absalom, plots revenge against Amnon and kills him (can’t honestly say that I blame him).
King David banishes Absalom from his kingdom.

That’s what I call a dysfunctional family. King David finishes mourning for Amnon’s death and wants to be reunited with Absalom, but he has a problem…he has banished Absalom. Enter Joab…one of the David’s friends, confidants and generals. He wants the king to be reconciled to his son so he sends a woman to seek David’s advice…really a ruse to get David to see how think-headed he is being (and it works).

As this woman is talking to David, she says something that lept off the page at me this morning. It’s a truth I know…but it never hurts to be reminded once in awhile. Here is what she said:

God does not just sweep life away;
instead, he devises ways to bring us back
when we have been separated from him.
2 Samuel 14:14b, NLT

She was using God as an example of why David should find a way to bring his son back, but the truth here is amazing.

:: God pursues us ::

He devises ways to bring us back to Himself. He does not want us living apart from Him…He want a relationship with us more than we want it with Him!

As I think back on my own life, this has been true. God has pursued me and He has devised some very clever ways to bring me back to Him. I wish I wasn’t always so stubborn and stupid, but He is patient and loving.

How is God pursuing you now? How has He pursued you in the past? Thank Him for it!

Brought Near

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

You lived in this world without God and without hope.
But now you have been united with Christ Jesus.
Once you were far away from God, but now you have
been brought near to him through the blood of Christ.
Ephesians 2:12b-13, NLT

I don’t know about you, but this verse describes me a “T”. I lived in this world without God and therefore without hope until God brought me near to Himself. Scripture is full of this idea that God has pursued us and done everything in His power to bring us to Himself. I don’t know why sometimes, but God wants a relationship with me and with you. It’s an awesome thought. I want to be near to God, but I can’t do that on my own. It took the ultimate sacrifice to make it happen.

I have been brought near to God by Christ. There’s a thought I needed for the day!

Here’s a video Nick sent me this week that drives this thought home another way…

The Power of Trials

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

The theme for this post came to me from two different magazines I was reading yesterday (Discipleship Journal and Marriage Partnership). Two very different sources with the same message (and from two very different article topics). Here’s the thing…I don’t think the message is for me. It’s not that it couldn’t be for me (and perhaps it will be sometime in the near future), but my heart is telling me that I am supposed to write about this topic for someone else—someone who might be reading this right now. So I will be obedient to His leading and trust Him with the results (and if it turns out it was meant for me…that’s OK too).

Here are the quotes from the magazines:

The thought never crossed my mind that God might want to use my pain to turn my heart toward him. (MP, Fall 2008, page 16).

Most Christians believe that God will never give them anything—any hardship—that they cannot bear. They rely on what they read in 1 Cor. 10:13…The context of that verse, however, is key. Paul is speaking about the temptation to sin…most of us don’t read the verse that way. We think the apostle is assuring us that God will never give us a trial we can’t bear. The fact is, God will allow hardships in your life that you simply cannot bear…Yet there’s purpose in the pain…You can go through almost anything if you know the Lord of the universe is going through it with you. (DJ, Sept/Oct 2008, page 34-35).

I am only giving you a small piece of each article. I highly recommend that you read the second one in its entirety. It is entitled Borrowing God’s Smileby Joni Eareckson Tada and it is a great article. But even in these small excerpts you get the point.

Trails will come into our lives. We will have pain. You’ve experienced it. I’ve experienced it. I see it every day. It breaks our hearts. It hurts. We don’t understand it. But it’s still there and we often question why God allows it. Certainly don’t be fooled into thinking God promises to protect us from all pain and trials. Very much the opposite:

 Dear friends, don’t be surprised at the fiery trials you are going through,
as if something strange were happening to you.
Instead, be very glad—for these trials make you partners with
Christ in his suffering, so that you will have the wonderful joy of seeing
his glory when it is revealed to all the world.
1 Peter 4:12-13, NLT

It is through our trials and our pain that we become more like Him. It is then that our hearts are turned toward God. It is then that God gets to shower you with His love and grace and mercy. Are you going through a tough time right now? Do you know someone else who is?

Take heart. God isn’t surprised by it and He wants to use it to shape you into His image, turn you toward Him, and show you just how much He loves you. Now that’s a great message…and I pray that God will use it to minister to those who need it (you know who you are). :smile:

 

Who Do I Turn To?

Thursday, June 12th, 2008

God has really been speaking to my heart over the past few weeks…and boy have I needed it. He’s been showing me areas in my spiritual journey where I need healing and restoration—and he has been providing both! It’s a great place to be and I am truly thankful for it.

One of the things He’s been working on with me is where I turn to when life gets tough or things aren’t going the way I expect them to. Too often I am turning to the wrong things when I should be turning to God. It’s not that the things I am turning to are necessarily wrong (although sometimes they are)…it’s just that my heart should be turning to God for strength and comfort. And with His help I’ve been doing that more and more.

So this morning I read this in my devotional time and it was yet another reminder for me on this topic:

Don’t put your confidence in powerful people;
there is no help for you there.
Psalm 146:3 NLT

Where is my confidence? Too often it is in other people…those I think are “powerful” in one way or another. Where should my confidence be? In God alone. I’m starting to get the picture. :smile:

He’s Watching

Monday, May 12th, 2008

It has been a rough week. And aside from a decent Mother’s Day, I can’t say the weekend was much better. Saturday was not my most shining moment as a father or a husband. And I continue to wrestle with God about my relationship with Him…it just isn’t what I think it should be (which very well may be the problem). I feel David did in Psalm 22:1-2: “My God, my God, why have you abandoned me? Why are you so far away when I groan for help? Every day I call to you, my God, but you do not answer. Every night you hear my voice, but I find no relief.”

This morning I poured it all out to God. I got brutally honest. With God, but mostly with myself. As I spent time in God’s Word (after asking Him to speak to me and help me listen better) this is the word I got:

The Lord keeps you from harm and watches over your life.
The Lord keeps watch over you as you come and go, both now and forever.
Psalm 121:7-8, NLT

He’s watching. And He cares. It doesn’t matter if I feel it (although it’s becoming a struggle)…He IS watching. And He DOES care. For today, that’s enough.