Friday, December 4, 2015

Patches

Mark 2:21-22 NASB
21 “No one sews a patch of unshrunk cloth on an old garment; otherwise the patch pulls away from it, the new from the old, and a worse tear results. 22 No one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the wine will burst the skins, and the wine is lost and the skins as well; but one puts new wine into fresh wineskins.”
Jesus Christ came to re-establish God's Kingdom here on earth, based on grace and the desire to have a relationship with man, not a religion. This new covenant will not fit into the "old" framework of religion (wine skin) without bursting it, but must be a "fresh" relationship (wine skin) so it has room to expand.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Pruning

Everyone has events in their lives that shape us into who we are.  Some are minor, other are major and life altering, but they all make us learn.  Whether it's is washing a red t-shirt in a load of whites, or the loss of job, birth of your first child, or a life threatening disease they all will teach you something.  How we react to that teaching often determines the outcome of the lesson as bad or good. 

God's allowance of both good and bad events is often how He chooses to teach you and me.  Is it pleasant?  Some times...but sometimes (and often) it is not.  Even in the bad, or even evil events we face God is present and using these events to make you grow. We see this in John 15;1-6

 I am the true vine, and My Father is the vinedresser. Every branch in Me that does not bear fruit, He takes away; and every branch that bears fruit, He prunes it so that it may bear more fruit. You are already clean because of the word which I have spoken to you. Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself unless it abides in the vine, so neither can you unless you abide in Me. I am the vine, you are the branches; he who abides in Me and I in him, he bears much fruit, for apart from Me you can do nothing. If anyone does not abide in Me, he is thrown away as a branch and dries up; and they gather them, and cast them into the fire and they are burned. 

Pruning is how a plant is made healthy, allowing it to grow to be bigger and more fruitful.  Now I know plants can't talk but what if they could.  Would they tell us it felt good being pruned? I thinking no, it hurt, but what about one, two or three months later at Harvest time? Hey vine now that you have an abundance of big, juicy and sweet grapes as a result of that pruning back then, was it worth it? YES.

God it that way with us!  Trimming not only the dead but also the good "branches" to make us better fruit bearers.  We as Christian know that the dead (evil, non-producing, sin...) branches need to be cut but what about some of the good branches.  Sometimes the "good branches" things like a job, health, money, and family cause us to not grow the "fruit" we are intended to produce.

As I have been reading a book "Jesus in the Present Tense: The I AM Statements of Christ" by Warren W. Wiersbe.  This morning I was reading his words on this chapter in John.  Here is what he said about pruning;

"Fruitless branches prove they have no living connection with the vine and they must be cut off, and fruitful branches must be pruned so they produce more and better fruit (15:1-2.  Please note that when the vinedressers prune the fruitful branches, they cut away living wood, not dead wood, so the branches will produce better grapes.  The vinedresser must know what wood to cut, how much to cut, and at what angle." 

Another passage from Mr. Wiersbe..."As your read Scripture, note how the Father had to prune away good things from some of His servants so their ministries would be more fruitful and glorify the Lord in a greater way."   And God does this to us, sometimes cutting things that are, or seem to be good in order to bring us back to full fruitfulness in Him.  I know I'm being pruned during this time of my life!!

So hang in there during these times, It hurts, but I know the outcome will be great!!!

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Listening



Have you ever read something several, maybe even five, six (or in this case least 20) times and all of sudden a different viewpoint or realization of what is said just come seeping into the old noggin?  This happened to me a couple of days ago while having my quiet time.  I was reading in Mark 4 and verses 21 through 25, and God showed me something new.

In this chapter Christ had just finished telling the parable of the sower/seeds and followed it up by explaining this passage to His disciples.  At the end of explaining the parable, Jesus told them the following:

 24 And He was saying to them, “Take care what you listen to. By your standard of measure it will be measured to you; and more will be given you besides. 25 For whoever has, to him more shall be given; and whoever does not have, even what he has shall be taken away from him.     

As Christ told this parable to the crowd and He begins with "Listen to this"  and ends with  “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.”  He later tells the disciples of the lamp and basket/bed ending with the same statement, “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.”, and now in versed 24-25 we see “Take care what you listen to." Hear, Listen...Take care what you listen to!  Am I listening to God as I need to be?  Or am I listening to myself or the world?  If I am listening to God and what He is telling me then the more that will be revealed.  The more God wants to talk to me and the more I will benefit!  Other similar verses (Matt. 25:14-30) deal with using your talents, money, skills and abilities for work in God's kingdom. However these verses in Mark deal with listening to God and His words. The more time I spend in prayer and meditation allowing God to talk to me, the more I want to delve into the Bible and my prayer life.  If I don't listen to God then I lose out. 


Don't misunderstand me, studying and meditating on the Word of God is paramount to our growth as a Christian, but as I worked through these verses I discovered there are many more verses in the Bible that tells us to listen/hear vs study/read.  Are we too absorbed in reading (Christian books, study guides, devotionals etc..) to hear Gods voice as He speaks to us? To me these two verses are telling me the more I apply myself to prayer and listening, combined with a daily walk in His Word, the more He is going to say.  If I stray and pursue false or misleading teachings then God's blessing, and if I understand properly, even His word "...shall be taken away.".  

Also tied into this is the warning to "Take care what you listen to".  I believe Christ was warning His disciples to be careful to what and who they listened to.  The religious leaders of Christ day were willing to "bend" God's word for their benefit, and later in the 1st century church many heresies were being introduced. I see the same thing spreading like a cancer through the church today. Jesus was warning His followers to listen to His truth, not the world's.  Jesus wants us to listen to Him!


 

Monday, September 21, 2015

His Quietness



While reading Zephaniah 3:17 this morning, my attention was caught by the middle of the verse.  In the NASB it is:

17 “The Lord your God is in your midst, A victorious warrior.  He will exult over you with joy, He will be quiet in His love, He will rejoice over you with shouts of joy. 

Nestled in between the two dynamic statements “He will exult over you with joy” and “He will rejoice over you with shouts of joy”, you have a passive “He will be quiet in His love”.  Some older manuscripts have “He will renew you in His love”, while other translations say “He will bring you quietness with His love” (HCSB), or “he will quiet you by his love;” (ESV), but the phrase “He will be quiet” in the NASB intrigued me. 

I am NOT a very good student of English grammar much less a Hebrew scholar, but these four words, at least to me, imply that God is going to do something to me, not do something for me as other translations elude.  So I looked up this verse on the Blue Letter Bible app (Sandra found this phone app and it is awesome.  Within it are several translations of the bible and even options to see the original Hebrew and Greek along with the definitions of what a word or phrase means in those languages) and discovered that the phrase “He will be quiet” is the Hebrew word חָרַשׁ charash (khä·rash') and it means to cut in (as in a stone tablet), plough, engrave, devise.
 
And it hit me like a 2x4 upside the head!!  God is in my life (midst), He is victorious in whatever He does. He rejoices, is glad (exults) over me. He cuts in, engraves His love on my heart and He will rejoice over me with His shouts.  God wrote His love on my heart! 


I am a valued possession of the King and He etched His name on my heart and on yours as well!!

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Building Walls

What purpose does a wall serve?  They support the roof/ceiling of a structure. They keep the elements out. They protect us.  Without walls we would be at the mercy of nature and those that intend to cause us harm.  In ancient times the walls of a city was what determined the survival of that city and it's inhabitants.  Many cities of olden time were famous for their walls.  Constantinople (Turkey), York (England), Carcassonne (France), Xi'an (China), and the ancient city of Jerusalem.


Every one of the these cities have, in their histories, been subject to attack by those bent upon conquering. In most cases these cities have been protected by their walls, but at one time or another each has fallen to an attacking army.

Such was the case of Jerusalem, which fell to Nebuchadnezzar, to Rome two times, and to countless other invaders over the centuries.  The wall did not keep the city from harm, due to treachery, weakness or just sheer might of the attacker.

As I have been reading during my devotional time the last week or so, I finished up with Ezra (the rebuilding of the Temple) and decided to go right into Nehemiah which deals with the rebuilding of Jerusalem's walls. This morning I began chapter 3.  In this chapter a list of men and their families is given outlining what section of wall each was family group was responsible for.  As I read of Eliashib (the High Priest), the men of Jericho, the sons of Hassenaah, and many, many more that were rebuilding the wall and gates of the city, my mind began to wonder, much like it does when going through Leviticus or Deuteronomy, one verse stood out.  It was one of those versed that jumped off the page because of one word.  Nehemiah chapter 3 and verse 20 says (I will include vs 19 for continuity)...

"19 Next to him Ezer the son of Jeshua, the official of Mizpah, repaired [i]another section in front of the ascent of the armory at the Angle. 20 After him Baruch the son of Zabbai zealously repaired another section, from the Angle to the doorway of the house of Eliashib the high priest."

Did you catch the word in verse 20?? (emphasized)  Zealously!! Zealously means "full of, characterized by, or due to zeal, ardently active, devoted or diligent".  In other words, Baruch kicked into high speed and got the job done. He built his section of the wall zealously!! Why?  To protect himself, his family and the rest of the Jews that had come back to their holy city, from an attacking enemy.

With this one verse, God got my attention!  Am I building the right kind of walls to protect me and my family?  Am I repairing/building walls to fend off Satan and his attacks?  Do I pray for and ask God to help me "build walls" around that and those that I love so they will survive attacks? And most importantly am I doing it "zealously"?  Having a vibrant, daily relationship with my God is the only way I, or anyone else, will be able to accomplish building walls, and I pray God will help me become a master stonemason!