Exodus 3:1-15 Do the Work God Assigns to You-No Excuses Accepted

An old Native American story tells of a young boy who was sent into the woods alone on an autumn night to prove his courage. Soon the sky darkened and the sounds of night filled the air. Trees creaked and groaned, an owl screeched, and a coyote howled. Even though he was frightened, the boy remained in the woods all night, as the test of courage required. Finally, morning came, and he saw a solitary figure nearby. It was his grandfather, who had been watching over him all night long.

It’s often in wilderness experiences that we really see God at work, and the events Exodus 3:1-15 are a good example. Moses grew up in a position of privilege in Pharaoh’s palace, but because he killed an Egyptian, he fled into the wilderness. Forty years later, we see him tending his father-in-law’s flock when God gets his attention. God appeared in an ordinary way that was extraordinary at the same time. In Moses’ time, it was common to see a burning bush, but in this case the bush did not burn up-and that got Moses’ attention.

God had to get Moses’ attention before He could present Himself to Moses. Similarly, God must get our attention before He can present Himself to us. God uses various methods to get our attention. He is always looking for ways to present Himself, and those opportunities come when we give Him our attention.

God often speaks to us through unusual circumstances. When we are amid confusing times that we can’t understand, or when we face life’s trials, we should slow down and listen. God might be trying to get our attention.

In what ways do we expect God to speak to us today? In what ways has God spoken to us unexpectedly? How might we more intentionally turn aside to see in those instances in which God seeks to speak to us?

The appearance of God was the first instance of direct revelation to Moses. After 80 years, Moses was now ready to fulfill the Lord’s calling. No other leader in biblical times had such a lengthy training period. Times of preparation are never wasted; God knows that, properly prepared, His servants can do more in 40 years than they could do in 120 unprepared.

For these divine moments, the area near the bush was the Lord’s house because of the Lord’s presence. The resulting command to “take your sandals off your feet” reflects this. Moses’ sandals had dust and dirt on them, and the place and presence of God are not to be defiled. The symbolic act points to the powerful reality of God’s presence. When we are in God’s presence, the ground on which we stand is holy, so we must not defile it.

What does a holy God do? A holy God hates injustice, oppression and sin. A holy God works to undo wrong. A holy God puts humanity to work.

If God is all powerful, good and holy, why doesn’t God make sure evil is eliminated from the universe? Isn’t that within God’s ability? Yes, but there is a good reason. God is love, and love is by necessity non-coercive, so God needs a partner. That’s where Moses came in, and that’s where we come in. God invited Moses to join Him in the work of redeeming the people of Israel, and He invites us to join him in doing His work in our world.

When God spoke through the burning bush, He put his tent amid Moses’ world. When He pitches His tent our midst, He is present with us and identifies Himself with us. In return, He demands something from us. If He is to identify with us, we are to identify with Him, so He commands us to be holy because He is holy.

The burning bush represents God’s presence. Because the bush was not consumed, we can know God’s presence eternally. God identified Himself so that Moses would know that he was not meeting an unknown God. Similarly, we need to know that God is holy, mighty and lifted up. He is a God who is slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love and who always keeps His covenant with us.

God did not forget his covenant with Abraham, and He won’t forget His covenant with us. The phrase “I have come to deliver them” were words for Israel, but they also point to the future incarnation of Jesus. God always hears the cries of His people. God hears our cries and sees our troubles. In His own time and in His own way, He will move to deliver us from our difficulties. God has always promised to be present with those who believe in Him. No matter how dark the night is or how dire our circumstances are, the unseen God is ready to respond appropriately to our need.

There is a connection between Moses and Jesus besides their encounter at the Transfiguration. Moses was the primary actor in the Exodus drama. The word “Jesus” comes from the Greek form of Jesus’ name-Joshua, which means “God saves.” In the name of Jesus, we are taken back to the tradition of Moses and Exodus, but we have the completion of all that Exodus was all about. The picture of redemption in Exodus is now complete in Jesus.

Moses typified human response when God calls someone to do what seems beyond them, but the success of any divine mission is never dependent on human abilities. The Lord’s words- “I will certainly be with you”-were intended to focus Moses on the true source of his future success.

Like Moses, sometimes we feel inadequate or unqualified for the tasks God gives us, so we tend to make excuses. For example. Moses argued that he could not do the task. The confidence Moses had in his younger years was gone. The task God called him to do was overwhelming. Was Moses’ confidence gone because of genuine humility or a lack of faith in God’s ability and wisdom, even though God promised that He would be with Moses?

Moses also gave the excuse that He didn’t know God’s name. At that time, every god had his own personal name. People believed it was necessary to know his name to approach him in prayer or ask for his help. Also, the name revealed something of the god’s character. To know the name of the god was to enjoy a privileged relationship with that god. Moses felt that he needed to give God’s name to the Israelites.

Isn’t that the same with us? We often think that we don’t know enough or that we haven’t experienced enough or that we don’t feel deeply enough. We don’t think that we will have anything to say. At times like this, God tells us what to say just as He told Moses what to say.

When God said, “I AM WHO I AM,” He declared his eternal, unchanging, uncreated self-existence. The identification of the Lord as “God of your fathers” is enormously important. Moses said the people needed to know that this was no new god. He is the Deliverer of Israel.

The Lord’s plan was to deliver His children from bondage so they could worship Him and be established as His chosen people. He gave Moses the responsibility for the task. In a similar way, God always clarifies our responsibility so we can respond in obedience. He uses various events and circumstances to prepare us for increasing levels of spiritual responsibility. He always equips us for the responsibilities He gives us. We are qualified to do God’s work not because of our knowledge or skills but because God is with us. If He is not with us, no amount of skill or experience will make us qualified. As the saying goes, God does not call the equipped. He equips the called. In return, we must wait on God’s timing in every situation. God gives us limitless opportunities but we must assume responsibility and obey His call. When we choose to cooperate with God and submit to His way, He will do amazing things in and through us.

If you wonder where God is, or if He is going to use you to do something, ask Him to use you right where you stand. You’ll find that in Him you have the power of the Holy Spirit to change the world if you ask. For example, look around your local church or community. Are you the missing piece needed to reflect God’s compassion and mercy in a broken world? Which of Moses’ excuses are you hiding behind? What gift, token or resource are you hiding from the world? God is looking for people who will slow down long enough to check out the burning bush. In God’s calling, He has a plan, but He never expects us to carry out the plan. He’s going to pull it off. He simply wants us to be the instrument of action.

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, p. 78)
  2. Dunnam, M.D> & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 2: Exodus “Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1987; pp. 54-70)
  3. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible, New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  4. Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible, New King James Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles, 2005)
  5. Lucado, M.: The Lucado Life Lessons Study Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson; 2010)
  6. Dr. Charles Stanley, “The Effectiveness of God’s Way.” Retrieved from www.crosswalk.com/devotionals/intouch/
  7. Sheri Rose Shepherd, “Standing on Holy Ground.” Retrieved from Biblegateway@e.BibleGateway.com
  8. David Egner, “Burning Questions.” Retrieved from donotreply@email.rbc.org
  9. Richard Niell Donovan, “Exegesis for Exodus 3:1-15.” Retrieved from www.lectionary.org
  10. Dr. Chuck Betters, “Are You the Missing Piece?” retrieved from Christianity.com@crosswalkmail.com
  11. Charles R. Swindoll, “Moses: I’m Here.” Retrieved from eministries@insightforliving.ca
  12. Alexizendria Link, “Bible Study, Lent 3©, February 28, 2016.” Retrieved from www.episcopaldigitalnetwork.com
  13. Charles R. Swindoll, “Moses: Hard of Hearing.” Retrieved from eministries@insightforliving.ca
  14. “Bible Study, 13th Sunday After Pentecost (A)-September 3, 2017”. Retrieved from www.episcopaldigitalnetwork.com

 

Acts 27:27-44 How to Survive the Storms of Life

The story of Paul’s voyage to Rome, part of which we heard in Acts 27:27-44, with its trials and triumphs, is an example of the way of faith all through the story of human life. Its remarkable feature is the hard and narrow places which we find intermingled with God’s most extraordinary plans and providences. It’s full of examples of night and day experiences.

The word “night” is symbolic of the times when all seems dark and foreboding for us. Like the people of the ship, we pray, but that prayer is also our time to let down our anchors. What are our anchors? What keeps the ship of our lives off the rocks of life? Do we believe the words of the old hymn, “Will Your Anchor Hold?” Some of these anchors should be faith, surrender to God, hope and thanksgiving.

Because God promised that everyone would be saved, the sailors who were trying to save themselves were fleeing from the promise of their own protection. Paul recognized what they were doing, and the sailors’ plan was thwarted-for their own benefit. A belief that God has purpose (that He designs and has always designed to save some) will prompt the use of all proper means to secure it. Paul believed that God offers mercy. Paul believed that God would save the passengers and crew because Paul was part of God’s plan.

Men can be cruel even when experiencing God’s mercy. God’s goodness will not ease the natural anger and cruelty of those who delight in blood. Roman policy was that if a prisoner escaped, the man who guarded him would be killed. So rather than run the risk of any of the prisoners (Paul and others) escaping, the soldiers wanted to kill them before abandoning ship. But Julius, the centurion, ordered the soldiers not to touch the prisoners. Paul escaped yet another attempt on his life.

For Paul’s sake, the lives of all the prisoners were spared. A pious, God-fearing person can earn the favour of man. God often confers blessings on the wicked for the sake of their believing friends, relatives and neighbours. God can defend people in all dangers and can accomplish all His purposes. We are safe in His keeping. He has a plan that can fulfill all His purposes and protect His people from danger. God promised that everyone on board the ship would be saved, and they were saved. When we take God at His word, we will never go wrong.

Paul modeled not only a life of faith but a life of wisdom and gratitude. Life presents us with a splendid succession of opportunities-both good and bad-to put our faith in action. Often the best chances we have to share our faith result from involvement and caring in ordinary ways for the people we long to introduce to God.

Sometimes God will use the strangest of circumstances to do His greatest works. He used the storm, so He can use any event. Even when life’s voyages are stormy, there will be a time when these storms will be minor compared to what God was able to accomplish because of them.

The worst time to “jump ship” is when times are tough. If we make decisions when times are tough, it’s hard to make clear choices. Isn’t that when we often make life changing decisions, only to look back later, and discover we made the wrong one? We should be more like Jesus and Paul-men who did not turn and run in the face of crisis, offense or opportunity. The storms of life are opportunities to grow as people, believers and followers of Jesus. All we have to do is find them.

When we go through difficult times, what happens to us is not nearly as important as what happens in us. The passage from Acts teaches us three ways we shouldn’t respond:

 

  1. Don’t drift. The problem with coasting is that we’re heading downhill. Life is not a coast. Life is tough. When life is tough, we must not lose our ambition or our dream.
  2. Don’t discard. When times are tough, we tend to abandon values and relationships we would not let go of in better times. God can change situations and personalities. He can change us, but He won’t change us if we’re always abandoning ship!
  3. Don’t despair. Even in a storm, God is in control. He hasn’t left us. You may not feel Him, but if we feel far from Him, it’s because we have moved. God is with us in the storm, and He will help us through it. He uses the storms of life to test us to see if we will trust Him. Will we pass the test?   

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, p. 1533)
  2. Ogilvie, L.J. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 28: Acts (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1983; pp. 341-347)
  3. Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible: New King James Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)
  4. Lucado, M.: The Lucado Life Lessons Study Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson; 2010)
  5. L.B. Cowman, “Streams in the Desert-August 22, 2016” Retrieved from Christianity.com@crosswalkmail.com
  6. Pastor David McGee, “Rough Waters.” Retrieved from www.crossthebridge.com
  7. Pastor Rick Warren, “How Difficulty Can Make You Better, Not Bitter.” Retrieved from connect@newsletter.purposedriven.com
  8. Dr. Harold Sala, “Anchors.” Retrieved from info@guidelines.org.

Exodus 1:8-2:10 Faith Makes the Impossible Possible

Have you ever noticed that some people are threatened by the prosperity and success of other people? If you’re looking for a good example of this, you don’t have to look any further than the passage from Exodus 1:8-2:10.

The Israelites experienced safety, security, sanctuary and success in Egypt. Their prosperity was a threat to the new king, and he set out to subdue them, make them slaves and remove them as a threat. What the Israelites did not know or had forgotten until the new king arrived was that they were in bondage and became comfortable and complacent in a place that was not their true home.

It was only after the new king came to power that the Israelites found out where they were and later who they were and where they were meant to be. The new king was the occasion for the heartache, misery, destruction and death that also gave birth to a Moses who started the struggle of liberation and who took the first step toward the sea and through the wilderness and toward the river on the other side of which they will meet themselves.

The essence of our faith is not certainty, but trial. Kings who don’t “know Joseph” are always rising in the world. Change is certain. It calls us to trust the Lord of the covenant with Abraham. He is constant in His love and in His self-giving during change, even though He may seem to be silent. When God does act, it is depicted in ironic ways. It was through God’s providence that the Israelites were fruitful and prolific, something that He promised to Abraham and Sarah. This same blessing became the source of Pharaoh’s fear and the Hebrews’ oppression. The more God multiplied the Israelites, the more Pharaoh opposed them with abuse and death.

We are often in situations where “a king who did not know Joseph” comes to power. Death leaves us without a father, mother, sibling, husband, wife, child or friend. That means a whole new way of doing things. Divorce can leave people feeling devastated or defeated. The diagnosis of a terminal illness can leave us without the ability to talk about it or express our fears. Change can bring despair, defeat and devastation, but there is another alternative-trust God.

The population of Israelites multiplied during long years of ease. Three unsuccessful methods were used to limit the exploding population growth of the Hebrews:

  1. Working the Hebrews to exhaustion.
  2. Commanding the Hebrew midwives to commit infanticide.
  3. Selective annihilation, with baby boys being cast into the River Nile while baby girls were spared. 

The oppression by the new Pharaoh stirred them out of their comfort zone and made them willing to leave Egypt. Sometimes we need to be removed from everything we trust so we can depend on God. As long as we are happy where we are, we won’t long for God

In the history of the church, when has it made its greatest number of adherents? When its pulpits were filled with eloquent preachers and the aisles crowded with fashion and wealth? No. It happened when the church was driven to the dens and caves of the earth and its members were persecuted and described as outcasts. Christians who are suffering hardships that are as great or greater that the hardships suffered by the Israelites at the time of the passage of Exodus must not lose sight of the awesomeness of the God of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob and Moses. God allows impossible situations to develop our faith

Shiprah and Puah-possibly leaders of the guild of midwives-refused to obey Pharaoh’s orders, fearing the real King more than their earthly ruler. These women were likely Egyptians who came to faith in God and were included in Israel. The midwives were willing to let go of what they trusted so they could serve and obey God. They were willing to risk their lives to disobey Pharaoh. When governments at any level and by any means try to require us to disobey God’s Law, they have overstepped their bounds and must not be obeyed on the specific point of issue.

When we make a commitment to obey God, the world may be against us, but God will sustain us in that commitment. The midwives depended on God’s power-a power that nothing can prevail against. When we fear God more than we fear anything else, God can do great things through us. God blessed the midwives for their courageous actions. He always blesses wholehearted obedience.

The call to obey God means walking with Him not by sight, but by faith. We do this by spending time alone with God and asking three questions

  1. What have I done during the past months that will make a difference in my life or the life of someone else?

2. If I died tonight, what would those who know me best remember most about me?

3. If I knew I was going to die soon, what would I want to do in the time I have left?

Being preoccupied with death is morbid, but to take death seriously is a mark of wisdom and faith. Life is precious, and something that is ours forever is never precious. What we do between living today and dying tomorrow is the big question. We have a choice.

For Moses’ parents to hide him for three months until he was in safe hands was an act of faith lauded in Hebrews 11:23. Moses’ mother did what she had to do to save Moses’ life. At this time in Israel’s history, hope and despair were in conflict. Israel was oppressed and pessimistic. At that moment in time, God’s providence took human shape. Moses was born. Moses’ mother made an ark and put Moses in it. Pharaoh’s daughter saw Moses, had compassion and adopted him as her own son. She unknowingly hired Moses’ own mother to take care of him. The midwives defied Pharaoh, and Moses’ mother also defied Pharaoh by determining that her son would live. From the moment Moses was born, the struggle between good and evil surrounded him.

The word “ark” (in this case, a floating basket) refers to Noah and, as in his day, served as a vessel of divine deliverance. The basket was placed securely among the reeds by the bank of the Nile where the current was slight, so it would not wash out to sea. It was also placed where the women of the palace would see it when they came to dip in the waters of the Nile as part of their religious ritual.

The daughter of Pharaoh knew immediately that this child was a Hebrew because he was circumcised. Her adoption of Moses as her son, along with the selection of Moses’ own mother as his wet nurse, are two ways that God preserved the infant. The word “Moses” in Egyptian most likely means “born,” but the Hebrew meaning is “to be drawn out.” God would later use him to draw His people from the water. Moses typified Christ as a prophet, advocate, intercessor and leader or king while, in relation to God, he is in contrast with Christ. Moses was a faithful servant over God’s house. Christ was a Son over His own house.

God was the primary actor in this scenario. That’s why Moses’ parents and siblings weren’t named in this passage from Exodus. It emphasized God’s role. All other players were anonymous, but that doesn’t mean that they were unimportant. They had roles to play, and that gives us hope. No matter how anonymous we may feel, we are part of God’s covenant and plan of redemption. We never know how God may use our obedience and faithfulness for His purposes. My own ministry is an example. God has used it to fulfill His plan by spreading the Good News to people in this community and beyond.

When we face challenges that judge our faint faith yet stir us to life in the confidence that God is there for us, what can we do? We can rely completely on God. We can trust God and wait on Him to do His work.

When Pharaoh’s daughter saw Moses, she showed compassion. Compassion comes from identifying with another person. It enables us to see things as Pharaoh’s daughter saw them and feel things as she felt them. God seeks to bring all of us to this place just as He brought Pharaoh’s daughter to this place.

The story of the midwives’ courage and Moses’ infancy is part of the broader story of the relationship between God and Israel that is presented in the book of Exodus. Israel will learn who God is, and they will learn that their identity is rooted in belonging to God. As we will see in the story of Moses and the burning bush, God will reveal His name to Moses and declare that God is the God of Moses’ ancestors: Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.

This story has a lesson for us. We are to place our lives in God’s hands, but at the same time we must do all we can to prepare ourselves for the battle between good and evil, even though the final victory will rest with God. Wisdom tells us to do all we can within our strength, then trust God to do what we can’t do, to accomplish what we can’t accomplish. Faith and careful planning go hand in hand. They always have.

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, pp. 71-72)
  2. Schofield’s Notes. Part of Wordsearch 11 Bible software package.
  3. Dunnam, M.D. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 2: Exodus (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1987; pp. 27-42)
  4. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible: New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  5. Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible: New King James Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)
  6. T.M. Moore, “Whom to Fear.” Retrieved from www.ailbe.org
  7. Richard Niell Donovan, “Exegesis for Exodus 1:8-2:10.” Retrieved from www.lectionary.org
  8. Charles R. Swindoll, “Have Faith, Have a Plan.” Retrieved from www.insightforliving.com
  9. The Rev. Dr. William L. Dols, “An Invitation to Find Ourselves.” Retrieved from www.day1.org
  10. Amy Merrill Willis, “Commentary on Exodus 1:8-2:10.” Retrieved from www.workingpreacher.org
  11. Cameron R.B. Howard, “Commentary on Exodus 1:8-2:10.” Retrieved from www.workingpreacher.org

 

Romans 11:1-2,29-32 Faithful Remnants

Have you ever felt that God has abandoned you? Have you ever wondered if God has abandoned humanity? If so, you’re not alone. Throughout history there have been times when the people of God wondered if God had abandoned them. Paul answers this question in Romans 11:1-2,29-32.

In Romans 11, Paul presents a panoramic view of God’s plan for Israel, past, present and future. God has reserved a remnant of His people, and His election is by grace, not works. The grace of God and works for salvation are mutually exclusive.

The concept of a remnant has always been a part of God’s redemptive plan, so it’s no surprise to see it is in effect today. Paul uses his own experience to illustrate this concept. Paul’s experience was that of a man running away from God’s plan for his life. Christ redeemed him on the road to Damascus. Paul returned to his people and proclaimed the good news. He was one man among a remnant. He proved that God is faithful to preserve those that He foreknew.

Paul was part of God’s plan to bring another remnant-the Gentiles-into the fold. God knows the number and the identities of the Gentiles, and in due time they were brought into the Christian family. Before that could happen, the Jews were hardened in terms of their strict interpretation of God’s Law and their belief that they were God’s chosen people. The Gentiles were hardened because they didn’t know God’s righteousness. Neither group had the right to think that they were better than anyone else. Despite their attitudes, God honoured them and loved them.

At the end of Romans 10, it almost seems that Israel has hopelessly and eternally rejected Christ, effectively ending God’s plan and purpose for Israel. But Paul himself is proof that God is not through with Israel. He was from the tribe of Benjamin and a Jew who believed in the Messiah. Paul discussed how some of the branches of the tree (unfaithful Jews) were broken off so that the Gentiles could be grafted into the tree of faith. Just as God reserved a remnant of His people in Elijah’s day, even when Elijah thought he was the only faithful person left, so in Paul’s day and beyond, God has preserved a remnant according to the election of grace.

Despite every advantage in the moral law of the covenant with Abraham, the Jews had failed in their moral obligations. They, like everyone else, were dependent on God’s grace for their salvation. The result is a wonderful vision: God wants to have compassion for all people, and he will have compassion for all people. God will be faithful to us despite our sinful ways. God won’t give up on us. His promise of life is centered in Christ’s death and resurrection. He delivers both Jews and Gentiles from sin, death and the power of the devil.

God worked to show the Jews and Gentiles that both groups were under the dominion of sin. God did not give up on the world, but provided a system of salvation. He did not want to condemn the world, but He needed to do it so that everyone might see his sin, and then God could show His mercy upon all.

God has not rejected Israel, even though Israel rejected God. Similarly, God doesn’t reject us even when we turn away from Him. He was always there for Israel, and he is always there for us. For example, at a time when Israel turned away from God, the prophet Elijah became discouraged and engaged in a pity party. He thought he was the only believer left, and having seen what happened to the other prophets, he didn’t hold out much hope for his own survival. As the only one left, he had a feeling of high visibility and peculiar vulnerability! God pointed out to Elijah that he was not alone; in fact, there were seven hundred thousand others who had not betrayed the Lord. God claimed to have reserved these people for Himself. They were part of the unfailing remnant which runs like a thread through the tapestry of Israel’s history. At times, they were highly visible as the children of faith, and at other times they were hidden from sight by the sins of Israel. They survived because God is committed to the covenant He made with Abraham. God is committed to seeing that His people are saved.

God’s choice of Israel and individual believers is unconditional and unchangeable. It’s rooted in His unchanging nature and the covenant He made with Abraham. He extends his grace to everyone, because His grace flows from His mercy. God has allowed His people to sin so that He could receive glory by demonstrating His grace and mercy to disobedient sinners.

Israel was eager to lay claim to its special status as a nation with God, but was reluctant to accept the responsibility of faithful obedience to Him. As Christians, sometimes we feel superior to other groups. We sometimes feel that we have done something great to earn our acceptance before God. Instead, God’s gift of salvation should make us humble and grateful. God has given an unconditional promise to His people, and He is not going to renege on His promise.

Israel’s condition was partial because there are genuine believers. It was temporary in that there was a restoration of the fortunes of the Israelites. God chose to use the rejection of Christ by His people as a means of reaching the Gentiles so that through His demonstration of grace to them the Israelites might realize the grace of God in Christ. Israel’s unbelief was used by God to evangelize the Gentiles, and in turn that led to the restoration of Israel. Gentiles should not criticize God because of His plan to bless Israel in the future. God chose Israel so Gentiles could receive and enjoy salvation.

God has a plan for our lives. That plan may have some detours, shortcuts and bypasses in store for us. He has laid out the entire route for our lives. He knows that we will take our own detours, bypasses and shortcuts. He has arranged a comeback for every setback. He doesn’t change His mind or His plan. He will work with us to fulfill His plans for our lives.

Once we have placed our faith in God, He will never cast us away. He will never abandon us, reject us or turn us away. He will discipline us, but He will never cast us away. God’s mercy is a gift, no matter what. Mercy is kind or forgiving treatment of someone who could be treated harshly. We know that we could be treated harshly, and our sin would indicate that we should be treated harshly. But by God’s grace, we are loved anyway. We are forgiven anyway.

Those who have been called and responded to the gospel in faith have become not only the remnant of Israel who were God’s elect in ancient times, but the new Israel God has now created in Christ. There’s a “wideness in God’s mercy” that will never abandon the original covenant people. By grace it’s a mercy that is extended to us, too!

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, pp. 1559, 1561)
  2. Amanda Schultz, “Romans 11:1-2,29-32.” Retrieved from communic@luthersem.edu.
  3. Briscoe, D.S. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 29: Romans (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1982; pp. 202-205,209-210)
  4. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible: New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  5. Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible: New King Janes Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)
  6. Lucado, M.: The Lucado Life Lessons Study Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson; 2010; pp. 1575-1577)
  7. Joel Osteen, “God’s Gifts.” Retrieved from www.joelosteen.com
  8. Pastor Jack Hibbs, “God Wants to Use You.” Retrieved from wttw@calvarycch.org
  9. Bobby Schuller, “Leading the Way…” Retrieved from www.hourofpower.org
  10. Joel Osteen, “His Call Remains.” Retrieved from www.joelosteen.com
  11. Swindoll, Charles R.: Swindoll’s New Testament Insights on Romans (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan; 2010; pp. 214-218-231-237)
  12. Paul D. Opsahl, “God Pause for Wednesday, 08/16/2017.” Retrieved from communic@luthersem.edu

Genesis 37:1-4,12-28 Not Even Jealousy Can Stop God

Have you ever been so jealous of someone that you couldn’t speak to them or perhaps you even hated them? This envy comes from deep insecurity and has led to the downfall of many people. The passage from Genesis 37:1-4,12-28 reveals the dangers of playing favourites. God constantly uses the lives of Bible characters to teach us, encourage us and warn us.

While nowhere is it stated that Joseph was a type of Christ, the similarities are too numerous to be accidental. Both were objects of a father’s love. Both were hated by their brethren. Their superior claims were rejected by their brethren. The brethren of both conspired against them to have them killed. Joseph was, in effect, slain by his brethren as was Christ. Both became a blessing to the Gentiles and gained a Gentile bride. As Joseph reconciled his brothers to him, and afterward exalted them, so will it be with Christ and His Jewish brethren.

Joseph’s commitment to the truth was stronger than his hesitation to tell his father about his brothers. Perhaps he learned that “honesty is the best policy” from hearing about how his father Jacob got into trouble with Laban and Esau. Joseph’s life story tells us that we need to do what is right regardless of the circumstances in which we find ourselves or how other people will respond.

Joseph was given to dreams through which he believed that God was speaking to him. The principle of faith was nurtured in his young life but might have been underlined when his father took the whole family back to Bethel after telling everyone to do away with foreign gods.

There are people in our lives who do not want our dreams to come true, but dreams do come true! We need to have dreams and we can have dreams because dreams come from God. He is the creative genius of the universe. He is constantly dropping creative thoughts into our minds. We have to receive dreams. We have to love them, nurture them, respect them, resource them. It’s one thing to have dreams, it’s another to do something with them. Dreams have a way of attracting the support that is needed from all kinds of people: the right people, the right resources, the right timing. God brings them together. That is how dreams get fulfilled.

Our dreams may shake up other people like Joseph’s dream did to his brothers. They may challenge their complacency and ruffle their feathers. Our dreams may cause others to be jealous. Our dreams may seem outrageous and unrealistic to people who know us. It is highly unlikely anyone will try to kill us or physically harm us but they may try to kill our dreams. They may be critical of our dreams and tell us why they can’t happen. They will discourage us from pursuing our dreams and tell us why they can’t be done.

We must protect the dreams God has given us. Dreams provide us with a purpose. They give our lives direction. They keep us focused. Dreams are pictures of our potential and blueprints of our vision. We must feed our dreams and find people who will encourage us to pursue them.

Some people don’t want to admit wrongdoing. Others say they do not want to become involved. Joseph possessed spiritual integrity and was willing to face abuse from his brothers for exposing their evil ways. We see an example of these evil ways in Genesis 38, which tells the story of Joseph’s brother Judah. God always tests our loyalty to Him by bringing circumstances into our lives that we may not understand or that may seem unfair and undeserved. This is His means of testing our attitude; of perfecting our patience as well as our faith in Him.

Commitment to the principles of truth, good, right, faith and work were key parts of Joseph’s life by the time he was seventeen. These principles served him well during traumatic events of his life. Joseph’s story shows how the mysterious ways of the Lord are threaded through all of mankind’s plans. God will ultimately triumph and His purposes will prevail. Joseph understood this, and he had the strength to endure.

It would be reasonable to expect that Jacob would have learned from his own family background that favoritism is not only out of place in a family, but it is also fatal to family harmony and well-being. But he had not learned, so Joseph was required to walk around wearing a magnificent tunic which spoke of favoritism and led to hostility. When parents insist on spoiling their children they make it difficult for those same children to grow up mature and complete. Joseph had to deal with negative peer pressure as well as unhelpful parental pressure.

The Hebrew phrase for “a coat of many colours” describes a robe with “long sleeves and skirts” rather than varied hues. Although Joseph’s coat was an ornamental, distinctive garment, the coat was significant for its symbolism, not its beauty: Joseph would be the heir of his father. Joseph’s 11 brothers had coats too. Their tunics were short-sleeved and short-waisted, making it easier for them to do their work.

Jacob’s preferential treatment of Joseph does not condone the actions of Joseph’s brothers. It points out to us as Christians that we should love everyone as Christ would. When people feel that love, it makes it easier for them to love each other in return.

Because it was the dry season, Jacob’s 10 older sons traveled from Hebron to find grasslands and water for their flocks. Joseph’s obedience to his father was courageous (considering the hostility of his siblings) and complete. When he did not find his brothers near Sechem as expected, he continued to Dothan, about 12 miles away by the roads of the day.

The brothers plotted to kill Joseph and throw him into a pit. Reuben, the oldest brother, convinced them to cast Joseph into the pit alive instead, with the secret hope that he might rescue Joseph later. This move saved Joseph’s life. Cisterns were dug as reservoirs for water, sloping downward and outward with a narrow opening at the top. A person thrown into one would be unable to escape because there were no handholds or footholds.

Judah, seeing a way to profit from their crime, recommended they sell Joseph as a slave. The sale was the same as death, but the brothers believed it would relieve them of direct responsibility. The price of twenty shekels of silver marks the integrity of this account; later in Israel’s history, a slave would be sold for 30 shekels of silver. Ironically, the traveling merchants were Ishmaelites, descendants of Ishmael, the first son of Abraham.

There are three lessons that we can learn from Jacob’s family and Joseph’s adversity:

 

  1. No enemy is subtler than passivity. When parents are passive like Jacob was with his other sons, they may eventually discipline, but by then the delayed reaction is often carried out in anger.
  2. No response is crueler than jealousy. If jealousy can grow and fester, it leads to devastating consequences. The jealousy Joseph’s brothers had toward him is a good example.
  3. No action is more powerful than prayer. The Bible doesn’t say so, but Jacob likely turned to God in prayer. How else could he have gone on with his life? Where else could he have turned for hope? Prayer brings power to endure.

How would we have faith if we were in Joseph’s place walking on the long road to Egypt? What long, lonely journeys have we made in our lives that have challenged our hearts or tired our bodies? God has filled the Bible with the experiences of real people with real problems. The Bible is our spiritual guidebook. If it is studied prayerfully and carefully, it will help us live in the 21st century. It will help us navigate the long journeys and rocky roads that we will face. God loves and wants to use us despite our faults and mistakes.

In times of questioning say:

FIRST: God brought me here; it is by His will I am in this place; in that I will rest

NEXT: God will keep me here in His love, and give me grace in this trial to behave as His child.

THEN: God will make the trial a blessing, teaching me the lessons He intends me to learn, and working in me the grace He means to bestow.

LAST: In God’s good timing He can bring me out again-how and when He knows.

What we have in this passage from Genesis is the beginning of an account of God’s providence. Through Joseph, a young and flawed man, God chose to save Jacob and his family and thereby set the stage for the founding of the nation of Israel. It is also a story of God redeeming His people-a story that must have given the Israelites comfort during their many trials-and a story that should give us comfort when things are going badly for us. It tells us that God is at work behind the scenes shaping the lives of his people-and thereby shaping history. When the night is darkest, this story holds out the promise of the dawn.

In the grand scheme of things, the story of the brothers’ sale of Joseph to traders heading to Egypt, traders who were descendants of outcastes, who ultimately serve to rescue an outcaste, is understood to be a sign of divine providence. Despite its messiness, this is the way things are supposed to be. Such things are not easy to understand. They’re not the same as God making lemonade out of life’s lemons. What it does suggest, however, is that God’s purpose can be resisted but not stopped. Not even family dysfunction can stop it.

Thanks be to God, AMEN

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, pp. 52-53)
  2. Schofield’s Notes. Part of Wordsearch 11 Bible software package.
  3. Briscoe, D.S. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 1: Genesis (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1987, pp. 290-297)
  4. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible: New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  5. Allison Herrin, “So Long Insecurity.” Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
  6. “Playing Favorites.” Retrieved from Christianity.com@crosswalkmail.com
  7. “The Long Road to Egypt.” Retrieved from Christianity.com@crosswalkmail.com
  8. “When We Ask ‘Why?’” Retrieved from Christianity.com@crosswalkmail.com
  9. Charles R. Swindoll, “Joseph: Lessons in Adversity.” Retrieved from www.insightforliving.ca
  10. Charles R. Swindoll, “Joseph: God’s Training Manual.” Retrieved from www.insightforliving.ca
  11. Pastor Rick McDaniel, “Dreams Come True.” Retrieved from Oneplace@crosswalkmail.com
  12. Richard Niell Donovan, “Exegesis for Genesis 37:1-4,12-18.” Retrieved from www.lectionary.org

Acts 19:11-20 False Healers versus Jesus, the True Healer

Have you ever wondered if people who claim to heal in Jesus’ name are true healers or fake healers? If so, you’re not alone. People have had the same question throughout history, and we see that in the passage from Acts 19:11-20.

In Paul’s time, there was a belief in the spiritual power of articles fashioned in the image of a god or blessed in its shrine. God blessed the prayers of people who held these articles of Paul’s clothing because He knew of the apostle’s faithfulness to point away from himself to God as the true source of his healing power.

The fact that the miracles occurred in the manner of garments that had touched Paul’s body was a sign to the people concerned that the miracle was performed by Paul. Similarly, in Mark 7:33, when Jesus put his fingers in the ears of the deaf man and spit and touched his tongue, it was a sign that the healing came from Jesus. The bearing of these pieces of material to the sick was evidence that Paul had the same miraculous healing power.

Paul served as God’s conduit of power much like Peter and John did in Jerusalem. At the time of these miracles, Paul was in Ephesus. Exorcists and magicians were forces of evil. Evil held the city of Ephesus so tightly that God had to exercise even greater and more unusual divine power to break its grip.

There were Jews who wandered from place to place and practiced exorcisms. They used either an oath or the name of God to convince the demons to leave the bodies of the people they possessed. God does not like it when people use His name for purposes that are not in accordance with faith. Demons know Jesus and God, and God used this knowledge when He punished these false healers. The demons resisted because they knew the people who were performing exorcisms were not believers.

There are still fortune tellers, astrologers and palm readers today, and many of them take advantage of people. For example, someone once wrote to Billy Graham. She said, “I’m facing some hard decisions, so recently I went to a woman who claimed she could tell the future and give me some guidance by reading my palm. But what she said was kind of vague and not very helpful. Did I waste my money?”

Billy Graham replied:

“Yes, you did, and I hope you won’t seek out anything like this again. Most of those who claim they can foretell someone’s future are only taking advantage of them, and their advice (as you’ve discovered) is vague and unhelpful—and sometimes worse. …Although such things are often fraudulent, you could also find yourself coming into contact with occult powers and demonic spiritual forces that are dangerous and opposed to God. That is why the Bible commands us not to have anything to do with occult practices of any kind.”

When the gospel was unleashed with genuine spiritual reality, there was power. The people at the church in Ephesus were genuinely repentant, and their changed lives led to revival. The change did not happen overnight. It took two years for Paul to see signs of hope. Those who were practicing witchcraft or performing exorcisms saw that what they were doing was wrong after they came to God in faith. They showed true repentance with outward signs of turning away from sin when they burned their books and tools publicly. This sacrifice was an expensive one money-wise. Extraordinary things happen when faith meets God. God loves to honour His word so that it will grow mightily and prevail. If we want to relate to such a name of God, we must faithfully proclaim His word through the power of the Holy Spirit.

The Ephesians who repented and burned their tools are a good example for us. God takes people where they are. Christianity has the power to encourage people to turn from their evil ways. Those who have been engaged in sinful practices will abandon them when they become Christians. Their hatred of their former, sinful lives will be, and should be, expressed as publicly as their sin was. Their sinful lives will be abandoned at any sacrifice, no matter how great.

Jesus still has power today. What Jesus did in Paul’s time, He’ll do on earth now through the power of the Holy Spirit-the Spirit who lives in all believers. When we are in Christ and He is in us, we are the most powerful people in the world.

What happened in Ephesus can happen to an individual today. The hardening of the heart occurs gradually and silently. Meanwhile, God continues to point out secret faults. The truth confronts us daily but it glances off our hard hearts. Becoming pliable means that we must surrender and abandon everything we’ve used as a substitute for a personal relationship with Jesus.

God challenges us to think about what this means in our lives today. What are the things that we put our trust in even after we are saved? Money? Possessions? People? Human capabilities? Those who came to faith in Christ through Paul’s ministry participated in moral reform. Sometimes ministers preach reform today before people have received the power to make necessary changes. Often, we preach our standards of behavior so loudly that people can’t hear what we are saying about Christ. When that happens, they are put off and miss the only power that can help them change. Behavior change follows belief in Christ.

When we receive the Holy Spirit, He confronts the false gods in our lives. In the context of His love we can wrestle with the Bible’s guide for giving to God. Our offerings are released for the work of ministry through Christian congregations. When the message and the mission agree, the total life of the congregation becomes authentic.

Preaching and teaching in the power of the Holy Spirit will produce results. We will be changed. Then we will be ready to be introduced to the adventure called a life with God. When Christ rules in all areas of our lives, attitudes and values that are contrary to the Gospel will be exposed. Only then can we who are changed band together to claim the power of the Holy Spirit to change our homes, places of work and communities.

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, pp. 1520)
  2. Barnes’ Notes on the New Testament. Part of Wordsearch 11 Bible software package.
  3. Ogilvie, L.J. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 28: Acts (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1983; pp.276-279)
  4. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible: New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  5. Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible: New King James Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)
  6. Joni Eareckson Tada, “Empowerment.” Retrieved from www.joniandfriends.org
  7. Billy Graham, “Should I Have Seen a Palm Reader?” Retrieved from www.arcamax.com
  8. Pete Briscoe, “Experiencing Life Today.” Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com

 

Genesis 32:22-31 Wrestling with God

Have you ever watched a wrestling match? Wrestling is a very popular sport all over the world. Amateur wrestling is popular in schools, colleges, and in the Olympics. There is also professional wrestling like we see on television. I think most of that kind of wrestling is fake, but people still enjoy watching it. Wrestling is one of the oldest sports in the world dating back thousands of years.

How many of you have wrestled with God and ended up being changed by the experience? If you have, you know what happened to Jacob in Genesis 32:22-31.

Jacob was preparing to return to his homeland. He did not have to go near his brother Esau’s territory, but he knew that it was only a matter of time until they met. He sent messengers to Esau to announce his return, but the messengers returned with the news that Esau and 400 men were on their way to meet him.

Jacob was scared. He sent gifts to Esau to appease Esau’s potential anger. Then he sent his wives, maidservants and children. Jacob was left alone with his fears and thoughts, so he did a wise thing. He prayed to God.

Jacob was vulnerable. He was ashamed of the way he had lived despite God’s grace. He was afraid for his life and the lives of his family. He was alone, just like others who have suddenly felt inadequate to deal with life’s trials.

All of us have said or done things in the past that we regret. At some point these things come to the surface and confront us. How can we apply Jacob’s wrestling with God to our lives when this happens?

Jacob did not initiate the contest. God wanted to separate the self-willed Jacob from all supports until he was left alone before Him-something the Lord still does with some of His followers. The fact that Jacob wrestled with God shows that there was still a part of him that resisted God’s rule in his life. Jacob’s prayer showed an element of reliance, but the underlying attitude was one of resistance. Jacob’s language was the language of dependence, but there was evidence of a latent defiance in the way he fought God’s grip on his life.

The Hebrew word for “touched” may indicate any type of touch, from a gentle caress to an affecting strike. Apparently, Jacob experienced the latter. Jacob proved strong as the pair wrestled through the night. Yet one outcome was a lifelong weakness in Jacob’s hip. The man was apparently the Lord himself.

When God touched Jacob’s hip, He showed that there is a limit beyond which He is not prepared to go in His dealings with mankind. At that moment Jacob realized that his wrestling with God was puny. When God chose to reveal the true nature and extent of His power, Jacob was powerless to withstand it. Jacob was powerless to move. The moment of truth concerning the true nature of Jacob’s finiteness occurred to him. Jacob’s defiance turned to reliance. Jacob decided to come clean about himself the same way he decided to admit having arrived at the end of his own resources. God dealt graciously with Jacob. Despite his many failings, weaknesses and sorrows, Jacob was chosen and loved by God. Through his wrestling match, he became the model of effort required for effective prayer.

Like Jacob, we sometimes fight with God. God says, “I want you to do this,” but we’ll refuse. He will let us have our wrestling matches with Him, and eventually we’ll realize that we’re tired of fighting with God. What we need to do is honour God and do what He tells us to do. When we do, God will open doors for us.

Strange as it may seem, we often win over our enemies only after we have been soundly defeated by God. God defeats our enemies by defeating us. When God foresees that we must meet a deadly opponent, he assures that we will win by bringing us down in humbleness at His own feet.

Jacob was missing God’s will for his life because he was always winning. God put him in a holding pattern. Sometimes on our journey of faith God puts us in a holding pattern, especially when we are always running. Sometimes what God does in our lives while we’re waiting can be more important than what we’re waiting for. God might want us to put our priorities, our vision statement, mission objective and other issues on hold as we experience His will for our lives.

We celebrate wealth, power, strength, bravado, confidence, prestige and victory. This celebrating starts with Little League baseball for our children and continues on through their college admissions, first job and first address. We are afraid of weakness, failure, struggle and doubt. Even though we know that a measure of vulnerability, fear, discouragement and depression are a part of our lives, we see these signs as signs of failure or even a lack of faith. In real life, naïve optimism and rosy rhetoric are a recipe for disappointment and discouragement. Sooner or later reality catches up with us.

What does God have to do in our lives to remove the controlling and manipulative nature that is so often a part of our lives? It might require a time of immobilizing, loss of a job, loss of income, loss of health or loss of a close relationship. Our new nature won’t be complete until we stop relying on ourselves and start relying on God. If God is taking us through this process, we can be encouraged because of the inheritance He has for us-an inheritance that can only be received when we become totally dependent on God.

The toughest bout we will face is not saying “no” to a profitable career, but saying “yes” to God’s prompting. It is not saying “no” to happiness, but saying “yes” to holiness. It is not saying “no” to temptation, but saying “yes” to righteousness. God does not want us to be miserable and unhappy. He wants to give us the desires of our hearts, but saying “yes” to God’s leadership can be a struggle, if not a downright battle.

The phrase, “no longer called Jacob,” is evidence of a remarkable transformation. Jacob’s birth name described the heel of his brother, Esau. The nightlong wrestling match, however, made him Israel, a positive name meaning “God Prevails.” Going forward, Scripture uses the names interchangeably.

After the encounter, Jacob limped on his hip, each step reminding him that he no longer operated in his own strength but in God’s. Jacob was changed for the better—from cunning to clinging, from resisting to resting, from the crafty one to the conquered one.

Jacob’s battle scar was a limp. All of us have battle scars. What are yours? Have you accepted them for what they are and for the person they have made you? Have you allowed the pain of your wrestling match with God to turn you into a better, more compassionate person? Whether we need time to wrestle with God or simply talk something out with God, finding time when we can encounter God alone is important.

There are many of us who are wrestling with God now, hanging on with the hope of finding new meaning and new power for our lives. Even more of us are on a journey to another moment in which we can find renewal and refreshment to a life tattered and tainted with our compromises and failures. To each of us, God calls with this promise that we hear in the Communion liturgy in the Book of Common Prayer: “Come unto me all who labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”

 

Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, pp. 47-48)
  2. Briscoe, D.S. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 1: Genesis (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1987; pp. 259-264)
  3. Stanley, C.F.: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible: New King James Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)
  4. Pastor Greg Laurie, “Fighting with God.” Retrieved from www.harvest.org
  5. Pastor Dick Woodward, “The Tenth Step: Learn to Wait on the Lord.” Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
  6. Os Hillman, “Wrestling with God.” Retrieved from tgif@marketplaceleaders.org
  7. A.W. Tozer, “Spiritual Warfare and Sin: Victory Assured.” Retrieved from Biblegateway@e.biblegateway.com
  8. Daniel B. Clendenin, Ph.D., “Dark Struggles, Divine Blessings: Jacob at the River Jabbock.” Retrieved from www.journeywithjesus.net
  9. The Rev. Dr. Jimmy Allen, CBF, “Life’s Turning Points.” Retrieved from www.day1.org
  10. Jacob Wrestles with God.” Retrieved from www.Sermons4Kids.com

2 Peter 1:16-19 Eyewitnesses to the Christian Faith

In this passage from 2 Peter 1:16-19, Peter addresses the problem of false teachers who are denying Christ’s Second Coming and are accusing the apostles of making stories up. This heresy would remove an important incentive for Christians to live moral and ethical lives. If Christ isn’t coming again-if there is nothing beyond this life-people will be less motivated to live the kind of life that Christ would have them live. Peter calls these Christians to look forward to the return of Christ. In 2 Peter 3:10-11, Peter says that Christ’s return will come as a thief in the night, in which the heavens will pass away with a great noise, and the elements will be dissolved with extreme heat, and the earth and the works that are in it will be burned up. Peter calls on them to prepare for that day by living lives that are holy and godly.

The doctrines the disciples held about Jesus were not defended by weak reasoning, but were based on solid eyewitness testimony. Peter, James and John were eyewitnesses to the Transfiguration. When the coming of the Saviour was referred to by the disciples in their preaching, it was always accompanied by a declaration that it would be accompanied by a show of great power and glory.

Peter wrote these verses to counter accusations that he made up stories about Jesus to obtain followers, wealth, power and prestige. Peter provided evidence that the truth of God is inspired. Peter did not boast in the knowledge Jesus provided. He shared it. Peter didn’t gloat-he gave. Peter revealed the secrets of eternity.

Peter did not promote a list of religious rules. He did not push any ideology. He didn’t try to gain power. He talked about a person who was unique in all human history. He was talking about someone he saw with his own eyes-Jesus Christ, the Son of God. That’s the story of the Christian faith. It’s a relationship with Jesus Christ. Being a Christian is first and foremost about receiving God’s life for us as a gift by grace. Just think about how that good news can change our lives!

Today, the Christian faith is still subject to plenty of false rumours. The worst false rumour is that Christianity is a system of rules, regulations and negativity formed by humans to restrain people’s lives, drain the joy out of people’s lives and turn out haters. The rumour makes the Christian life about politics, prejudice, power and profit.

The Christian faith is not the result of cunningly devised fables, as the false teachers claimed. Peter knew that Jesus was God’s Son, because as an eyewitness to His transfiguration, Peter had seen and heard God the Father bestow glory on Him.

The transfiguration was a brief glimpse of the future glory we will see when Christ returns and sets up His kingdom here on earth. The prophecies about Jesus shed some light on a topic that would otherwise be dark. These prophecies shed a light that is so valuable that we should avail ourselves of it by any means possible that are moral, ethical and legal.

We need God to reveal the truth to us through the prophets in the same way in which He revealed truth to them originally when He inspired and motivated them to write the words of prophecy. We can rely on the Word of God because the prophecies of Scripture have come from God. The Holy Spirit reveals the truth to us from God’s Word in the same way the Holy Spirt revealed the prophecy of Scripture to the prophets. Prophecy is the light that cuts through the darkness with the hope of Christ’s return.

When we are tempted to worry about the decline of the church, we would be wise to remember the light of prophecy in Scripture that still shines today. The same word that captured the attention of first century people is still relevant today.

If anyone denies the teachings and historical record of the New Testament, they must attack the credibility of the apostles as witnesses. That can’t be done successfully. The apostles saw and heard God bless Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration.

The morning star is Jesus. Until He returns, Christians have the Bible as a witness to His divinity and as their guide in this dark world. Those of us who doubt our faith or are losing confidence have hope. Peter is our ally. He spoke up to explain that the myth is false. He went on record to separate truth from fiction, no matter the cost.

Jesus sacrificed everything for us. His gift of life and salvation changed everything for everyone. He sacrificed everything for us, including His life. He loves us. He formed new lives for us when He died for us and rose from the dead. In return, we will do well to heed Scripture, especially Scripture passages that speak of Christ’s return. These promises are like a lamp shining in a dark place. They make it possible to walk with Jesus without stumbling.

The expectation of Christ’s return makes a difference in our everyday lives, especially if we are expecting His return. That difference is in how we run our lives. Our lives should be characterized by faith, goodness, knowledge, self-control, endurance, godliness, mutual affection and love. The expectation of judgment should provoke us to live lives that are characterized by godliness and holiness.

 Bibliography

 

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible, New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, pp. 52-53)
  2. Cedar, P.A. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 34: James/1&2 Peter/Jude (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1984; pp. 214-217)
  3. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible, New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  4. Lucado, M.: The Lucado Life Lessons Study Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson; 2010)
  5. Dr. David Jeremiah, “Be Very Sure.” Retrieved from turningpoint@davidjeremiah.org
  6. Dr. David Jeremiah, “God’s Work, Today’s World: Prophecy.” Retrieved from turningpoint@davidjeremiah.org
  7. Rev. Gregory Seltz, “God’s Reality Check.” Retrieved from lh_min@lhm.org
  8. Richard Niell Donovan, “Exegesis for 2 Peter 1:16-21.” Retrieved from www.lectionary.org
  9. Dwight Peterson, “Commentary on 2 Peter 1:16-21.” Retrieved from www.workingpreacher.org

Genesis 29:15-28

 

 

 

How many of you have heard the sayings, “What goes around comes around,” or “You reap what you sow?” Either saying would apply to the passage from Genesis 29:15-28. Jacob was born grasping his brother Esau’s heel, and that’s how he lived his life-grasping for all he could get by his own ingenuity and power.

Who among us has, after wanting something so badly that we would do anything to get it, woken up one day and realized that what we got wasn’t what we asked for? Jacob is a good example. Jacob met Rachel at a well and loved her, but he arrived without possessions or lavish gifts-a great disadvantage in securing a wife in those times. He served his uncle Laban seven years for Rachel in place of a dowry.

Weddings in Biblical times featured a huge feast. Afterward, the bridegroom was escorted to the tent of the bride where the marriage was consummated. Jacob probably drank too much at the feast and did not realize Laban gave him Leah rather than Rachel. Laban deceived Jacob, just as Jacob had deceived both Esau and Isaac.

Polygamy was practiced in ancient times but often produced family struggles. That Jacob “fulfilled her week” probably refers to the expectation that a newly married couple would “honeymoon” for a week. With his obligation to Leah complete, Jacob finally married Rachel.

Jacob deceived his father by obtaining the blessing that should have been given to Esau. Jacob tricked Esau into selling his birthright for a bowl of stew. Laban deceived Jacob just like Jacob deceived his father and his brother. Laban took advantage of the custom that a bride was always brought to her husband veiled. He substituted Leah for Rachel.

As it turned out, Leah was the one whom God intended for Jacob. One of Leah’s sons was Judah, and it was through Judah’s line that God’s promise to Abraham was fulfilled. Leah served and feared God, as we will see in subsequent passages from Genesis. Rachel was attracted to the superstitions of Laban’s house. Leah’s character fitted her better for her new calling than Rachel’s character did.

Jacob’s sinful weakness appeared in his married life. God blessed the hated wife Leah with children, but He withheld children from Rachel. In the birth of at least three of her children, Leah recognized God and acknowledged Him as her God.

Jacob longed for a child for Rachel. That child was a long time in coming. Jacob was used to getting his own way. He was only interested in winning. He learned another lesson the hard way. There is a limit to man’s resources, and the same lesson is hard for us to learn today. We tend to rely on our own inadequacies only to discover our shortcomings after much pain-and sometimes it is too late.

Far too many of us are like Jacob. We tend to love things and use people. Most of the problems in our world are caused by our tendency to love things and use people. We love our things. We love money. We lust for it; we have a passion for it. We tend to use people to get things, and that tendency leads to problems. It leads to the death of that part of us that is most like the image of God. God created us to use things and love people. Get that turned backwards and all hell breaks loose. When we orient our lives around loving others and using things, all the power of heaven is released in our lives.

There is little point in resisting what God is telling us. The sooner we learn the lesson, the sooner we can get on to other lessons. The longer it takes for us to come to grips with God’s gracious, firm, guiding hand, the longer it takes for us to mature. As long as we are on this side of eternity, there is no graduation from the school of hard knocks, and there are many opportunities for those who really want to grow.

How does God’s love abide in everyone who has the world’s goods and sees a fellow Christian in need and yet refuses to help? The redeeming power of the gospel creates in us a desire to serve others, to give of ourselves. That’s the only way for any of us to be released from the addiction to our own selfishness. How does this happen in practical terms? Here are three suggestions:

  1. We should look for opportunities to step outside ourselves. How long has it been since we intentionally looked for an opportunity to step outside our ordinary experience and into the experience of someone else?
  2. We should listen to people.
  3. We should put something we want on hold.

In other words, we are to stick around for a while longer. We are to trust that It was God who led us to where we are, trust that God knows what He is doing. We must be faithful to where God has led us, to what we have been called to, to the vows we took and the promises we made. We must trust that the place we are in right now could be exactly where God wants us or has been leading us all along. We must trust that God is working right here, to bring about things we don’t even know about that are yet to come!

Sometimes we realize that the ideal comes because of working things through and not leaving the table when we get disappointed, or when things aren’t turning out as we expected, or when things get ugly…the day we wake up and decided to make excuses about how it was too dark, or she was too veiled, or we were too drunk…that is the day we realize that everything in life starts to fail. There is no perfect person, no perfect relationship, no perfect team, or school, or job, or church. When we recognize it, we must not run away. We must stay and persist. We’ll get what we want in the end.

Bibliography

  1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible: New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, p. 42-43)
  2. Bible History Old Testament. Part of Wordsearch 11 Bible software package.
  3. Briscoe, D.S. & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 1: Genesis (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 1987; pp. 237-237)
  4. James A. Harnish, “Finding the ‘New’ You: The Things We Do for Love.” Retrieved from www.preaching.com

 

 

Psalm 105:1-11,45 Remembering Our Faith

Emma lay in bed listening to her parents’ voices on the other side of the wall. “How are we going to pay this bill, Ben?” Mom asked with a worried tone.

Emma huddled deeper under her blankets. She knew her parents didn’t want her to worry, but her stomach hurt. Everything was different. First Dad lost his job, then Mom worked longer hours. Emma packed her own school lunches and helped Dad with chores and simple meals. Dad searched for a new job every day, yet Emma had overheard her parents say they might need to move. “God, can’t you give my Dad back his job?” Emma prayed as she drifted to sleep.

Mom poked her head into Emma’s room the next morning. “Time to get ready for church, sleepyhead.”

“Why?” Emma said. “If God can do the things we learn about in church, why doesn’t He give Dad back his job?”

“Get ready,” Mom told her. “We’ll talk some more after breakfast.”

After Emma rinsed her cereal bowl, Mom led Emma outside. “Look at the bird feeder.”

“Mom, we haven’t filled it since Dad lost his job,” Emma objected.

“Are the birds worried about the empty feeder?” Mom asked. Emma looked around. She saw sparrows nibbling in the trees. Others roosted in the gutter, and still more perched on their neighbor’s feeder.

“No,” Emma answered.

“For years, God provided for our family through Dad’s job,” Mom explained. “God is still providing, but in different ways.”

“Like how the birds that used to come to our feeder now go other places?” Emma asked.

“Yes,” said Mom. “The Bible stories we learn in church remind us how God has helped many people through many hard times in many different ways. Church is also where we can connect with other Christians and hear them thank God for what He’s done to help them. Their words remind us that God is with us and cares for us even though our situation may be different from theirs.”

“And thanking God at church for providing for us might help someone else,” said Emma as she headed for the car.

Memories are an important part of our relationships. Memories forge our future. We celebrate important national holidays so we can remember moments of triumph and be bound together by them once again. A good example is the recent celebrations for Canada’s 150th birthday.

Psalm 105 is filled with the memory of what God has done for his people. His deeds are based on His covenant with Abraham-a covenant that He never forgets. The covenant promised Canaan as Israel’s inheritance. He protected His prophets. He sent Moses to bring His people out of bondage. He judged the Egyptians with plagues. He provided for the Israelites in the wilderness. He gave the Israelites their land.

People can remember God by calling out His name, or calling upon Him in prayer. Speaking His name invokes His presence and His authority. Knowing His name also assures us that we have a personal relationship with Him. To seek Him is an occasion for joy. We are called to praise God because He has intervened on our behalf. He intervenes on our behalf today. He will intervene on our behalf in the future. God has given us a covenant in His Son. In Jesus’ death and resurrection, He has intervened on our behalf. We can now look toward a future that includes eternal life with Him.

We need to search our spiritual memories from time to time. We need to remember what God has done throughout history. That’s one reason why we hear passages from Scripture read in church each Sunday. When we remember God’s work in history, we can be encouraged to praise God because we can trust Him. We need to remember what Jesus did for us on the cross. We need to remember what He does for us in our lives today. Only then can we praise Him properly. Only then will our worship and witness come from hearts made new.

The psalmist drives home his point. After calling God’s people to thank and praise Him, He gives ample reason for obeying-namely, “that they might observe His statues and keep His laws.” We are on a lifelong adventure of seeking God. Because He is infinite, we will never run out of new and exciting territory to explore regarding His character and nature.

When we remember and give thanks to God for what He has done and continues to do, we are encouraged to share the Good News. Some time ago I attended an information and training seminar for an organization named Community Chaplains Canada. This organization recruits and trains volunteer people who have received the Holy Spirit to minister to residents of nursing homes and special care facilities. These volunteers spend quality time individually with residents and act like true friends. These volunteers offer to pray with the resident and read Scripture. The residents can also receive literature. Most important is the opportunity the volunteers give for the residents to think about and receive Christ as their Saviour. In summary, these volunteers spread the Good News.

Our attitude of gratitude will pave the way to a life full of blessings that God has for us. It will also help us defeat Satan. It drives back the enemy. Praising God will change us. It will drive out old, negative, sinful thoughts and fill us with His strength and power.

When we praise God, we show our joy, which is the second fruit of the Spirit. It is true that there is a lot of suffering in our world today, but beneath the suffering (especially for Christians who suffer because of their faith), there is a joy that will burst upward if we allow it. Praise is both a spiritual and practical experience. It forms deep within the soul and comes forth in song or proclamation, and shows itself just as real as delivering a meal to a family in need. How can we make known to others what God has done? How can we practically tell of his wonderful acts? We can do things such as:

  1. Visiting people in a nursing home.
  2. Taking a meal to a person who is unable to come to church. Encourage them with the ministry of your presence and God’s Word.
  3. Shoveling the snow from a neighbour’s driveway or mowing their grass when they’re gone on vacation.
  4. Driving a person to medical appointments and staying with them.
  5. Volunteering in a ministry of your church.
  6. Using your spiritual gift up front or behind the scenes.

God will often work in unexpected ways. He has the power to turn defeats and hopeless situations into pivotal moments that bring new life. Where do we see the hand of God in the events of our past, present and future with the same clear vision of Psalm 105? We are invited to look for God in everything we do and in every person we meet. If we do, we will find God’s strength, loyalty and love. Even if we forget to look for Him, He is always mindful of us. Our faith must not be experienced in silence. We must always talk to God, and we must always tell others about how God is active in our lives.

Do we spend much time glorifying in all that the Lord has done for us, or do we lament over what has yet to occur? So often we can find ourselves blaming God when things don’t go right. The Hebrew people did it. Kings did it. Even early Christians did it. We should be careful to learn from their mistakes and fill our hearts and mouths with the praise that God surely deserves.

 

When life gets us down, our first reaction may be to hide under a blanket, stick our heads in the sand or dive deep into denial. We think, incorrectly, that by doing so we’ll never be hurt again. Unfortunately, hiding from the truth only delays growth and our ability to embrace new possibilities. God wants us to seek Him and depend on His strength to get us through.

 

When life changes, do you think about how God has cared for you in the past? Do you spend time with people God has helped? Have you thanked Him for how He is caring for you now? Remember that God can care for you and your family in many different ways. No matter what your situation is, God is always with you. His love never fails.

 

Thanks be to God, AMEN

 Bibliography

    1. Jeremiah, David: The Jeremiah Study Bible: New King James Version (Brentwood, TN: Worthy Publishing; 2013, p. 1533)
    2. Williams, D., & Ogilvie, L.J.: The Preacher’s Commentary Series, Vol. 14: Psalms 73-150 (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Inc.; 184; pp. 240-246,250-251)
    3. MacArthur, J.F. Jr.: The MacArthur Study Bible: New American Standard Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers; 2006)
  • Stanley, C.F: The Charles F. Stanley Life Principles Bible: New King James Version (Nashville, TN: Nelson Bibles; 2005)

 

  1. Lucado, M.: The Lucado Life Lessons Study Bible (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson; 2010; pp. 805-807)
  2. Joni Eareckson Tada, “Amongst the Nations.” Retrieved from www.joniandfriends.org
  3. Joel Osteen, “Remember What He Has Done.” Retrieved from www.joelosteen.com
  4. Os Hillman, “Listening to the Father’s Heart-May 6, 2017.” Retrieved from tgif@marketplaceleaders.org
  5. Selwyn Hughes, “Always Reason to Rejoice.” Retrieved from Crosswalk@crosswalkmail.com
  6. Ron Moore, “Practical Praise.” Retrieved from www.ronmoore.org
  7. Brian Pinter, “Bible Study, 12 Pentecost, Proper 17(A).” Retrieved from www.episcopaldigitalnetwork.com
  8. Jessie Gutgsell, “Bible Study, 12 Pentecost, Proper 17(A).” Retrieved from www.episcopaldigitalnetwork.com
  9. “Solitude.” Retrieved from www.leadllikejesus.org
  10. Bobby Schuller, “God’s Shining Face.” Retrieved from www.hourofpower.org