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21
Pentecost - Sunday B |
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First Posted October 25, 2009 |
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Amos
5:6-7, 10-15 -- Seek
the Lord and Live Psalm
90:12-17 -- Number
Your Days Hebrews
3:1-6 -- Our
Heavenly Calling Mark
10:17-27 (28-30) -- What
We Treasure
Amos was a
prophet of God’s Word to the Northern Kingdom of Israel in the period
of the
divided monarchy. The Amos
warned the people to seek good, and not evil, so that they would not be
destroyed, and that the Lord would be with them as they claimed. If
they
repented of their evil and injustice and started doing what is right
and just
in God’s judgment, the Lord would be gracious to the remnant of Joseph,
[referring to the Northern Kingdom; Joseph was the
eleventh of Jacob’s (Israel’s) twelve sons who became the patriarchs of
the twelve
tribes of Israel, ten of which, including Joseph, composed the Northern
Kingdom].
The
Psalmist warns his hearers to “number” (make the most of) our days, so
that we
can get (divine) wisdom in our “hearts” (rather than “heads” full of
what the
world falsely calls “wisdom;” 1 Corinthians 1:17-25; 2:1-8). Those who
have
received divine wisdom pray for the Lord’s return. We pray to
experience his
steadfast love in the morning (when we seek his daily guidance in his
Word and
prayer), and that we will rejoice in him all our days, which we will do
as we
trust and obey him. We can be confident that the Lord will bless us far
more
than day for day and year for year for the persecution we experience in
this
lifetime. Those who trust and obey the Lord will see the working of the
Lord
and his glorious power in this lifetime. We will receive the Lord’s
favor, and
he will secure a successful outcome of the work he calls and empowers
us to do.
Believers
share a heavenly calling, and we are to follow the example of
faithfulness in
God’s Word and in Jesus Christ. Jesus is the perfect example of an
Apostle
(messenger; of the Gospel) and the high priest of our “faith.” Moses
was also a
faithful messenger of God’s Word and a mediator between the people and
God, but
Moses was a foreshadowing of Christ (Messiah) who was fulfilled in
Jesus. Moses
was the mediator of an earthly covenant with God, but Jesus is the
mediator of
a spiritual covenant with God. Moses was a faithful servant over God’s
household, but Jesus is the faithful Son and heir.
A rich man
came to Jesus and addressed him as a “good” teacher, and asked Jesus
what the
man must do to receive eternal life. Jesus asked him why he had called
Jesus
“good,” since only God is truly “good.” Then Jesus reviewed those of
the Ten
Commandments dealing with one’s relationship to other people (and
omitting the
ones dealing with one’s relationship with God). The man replied that he
had
kept those commandments from his boyhood. Jesus looked upon the man
with love,
and told him that the man lacked one thing; he should sell his
possessions,
give to the poor, then come and follow Jesus, and then the man would
have
treasure in heaven. At this, the man became sad and went away in sorrow. Jesus
looked around at the crowd and declared that it is hard for the rich to
enter
God’s eternal kingdom. His disciples were astonished at this teaching,
but
Jesus said again that it would be easier for a camel to pass through
the eye of
a needle than for the rich to enter heaven. His disciples asked who
then could
be saved, and Jesus said that what is impossible for humans is not
impossible for
God, for whom nothing is impossible.
Peter said
that the disciples had left everything to follow Jesus, and Jesus
replied that
whatever his disciples give up to follow Jesus will be more than
repaid, in
this lifetime, although with suffering, and in eternal life in the age
to come. The
situation in the Northern Kingdom in Amos’ time is very similar to our
world
and our Church, particularly in The Word
of God warns that there is judgment coming upon the world for those who
do such
sins and disobey God’s Word. God’s Word is eternally true and is always
fulfilled, over and over, as the conditions for its fulfillment are
met. The
people of the Shalmeneser,
the King of Assyria, conquered the Northern Kingdom with the fall of The history
of God’s dealing with his people recorded in the Bible is also
deliberately
intended by God to be a parable and metaphor for life in this
world.
People who reject God’s prophets and refuse to hear God’s Word will
suffer
eternal destruction. This lifetime
has been intended by God to be our opportunity to seek and come to
know, trust
and obey God (Acts 17: 26-27). God has designed this world to allow for
sin
(disobedience of God’s Word) so that we can learn by trial and error
that God’s
Word is true, and that God’s will is our very best interest. God’s Word
declares that we have all sinned and fall short of God’s righteousness
(Romans
3:23; 1 John 1:5-8), and that the penalty for sin is (eternal) death
(Romans
6:23). Jesus is God’s only provision for the forgiveness of our sin,
restoration to fellowship with God, and eternal life in his heavenly
kingdom
(John 14:6; Acts 4:12; see God’s Plan of Salvation, sidebar, top right). The
Psalmist warns us to “number our days” and get a heart of (divine)
wisdom. The
Bible is God’s Word of divine wisdom, by which the world was created
and is
sustained (Genesis 1:3). Jesus is the fulfillment, embodiment and
example of
God’s Word applied in human life (John 1:1-5, 14). We are
called to seek divine wisdom, and the way to begin is to read and hear
God’s
Word, the Bible. As we read and heed the Bible we will come to know
Jesus
Christ, and as we begin to trust and obey Jesus we will receive the
gift of the
indwelling Holy Spirit. Jesus is the only one who gives the gift of the
Holy
Spirit (John 1:31-34), only to his disciples who trust and obey Jesus
(John
14:15-17). The Holy Spirit opens our minds to hear and recall God’s
Word (Luke
24:45; John 14:26), and through the Holy Spirit we come to know and
have
fellowship with Jesus and God the Father. Those who
have been “enlightened,” guided and empowered by the Holy Spirit will
work and
pray for the Lord’s return. We will seek to know, through daily Bible
study,
meditation and prayer, and do the work the Lord has prepared for us to
do (Ephesians
2:10), by the guidance and empowerment of the Holy Spirit. We will see
the
working of the Lord and his power, and we can be sure of the ultimate
success
of our work to proclaim his Word, to enlarge and strengthen his
kingdom, and to
complete his mission of forgiveness and salvation in a lost and dying
world. Believers
are called to be disciples of Jesus Christ. We are called to trust and
obey
Jesus, to be “born-again” (John 3:3, 5-8) by his indwelling Holy
Spirit, and
then to carry on Jesus’ mission and example. The rich
man had everything but eternal life. Without that he could only enjoy
his
wealth briefly. He came to Jesus to ask what it would cost him to have
eternal
life, and he found that it would cost him all his material possession.
He was
unwilling to pay the price. The rich
man called Jesus a “good teacher.” There are many people today who
regard Jesus
merely as a “good teacher.” Jesus asked the man why he called Jesus
“good,”
since only God is truly “good.” The man failed to realize that Jesus
was God in
human flesh (Colossians 2:8-9; John 20:28). Jesus
asked the man about the Commandments dealing with his relationship with
other
people, because the man’s wealth testified explicitly that the man had
not
loved others as much as himself. The rich man had no concern for the
poor;
otherwise he would have sold his riches and given to the poor. The
man’s
relationship and reaction to Jesus testified implicitly that the man
didn’t
know and love God. He loved material riches more than the Lord; worldly
treasure more than heavenly treasure. He believed that he had obeyed
the Ten
Commandments all his life, but he had failed to keep any of them. Jesus
warns us to seek first the Is Jesus
your Lord? Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus?
Have
you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed
(Acts
19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to
obey all
that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty
where you
will spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |
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21
Pentecost - Monday B |
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First Posted October 26, 2009 |
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Psalm
91:9-16 -- Our Refuge Those who
make the Lord their refuge need not fear any evil. The Lord will assign
his
angels to guard and protect us and keep us from stumbling. We will have
power
and authority even over wild beasts and poisonous snakes. The Lord
promises to
protect and deliver those who know the Lord’s “name” (the whole
character and
person of the Lord) and cling to him in love. When we call to him he
will
answer (see Conditions for Answered Prayer, sidebar, top right); he
will be
with us in trouble, and he will rescue and give us honor. He will give
us long
life and reveal his salvation to us.
When I
first turned to the Lord twenty five or more years ago, the Lord gave
me the
promises of this Psalm, and has fulfilled these promises over and over
(see
also v. 1-8). It’s a great reassurance that we and our families are
under his
protection, if we take refuge in him by faith (obedient trust), and
that
absolutely nothing, not even physical death, has the power to harm us
(see
Hebrews 2:14-15). I was just
starting to walk daily with the Lord, and I felt the Lord was leading
me to
invite an acquaintance, from work, to my home. This person had a bad
reputation, and I felt like Ananias, when the Lord asked him to go to
Paul
(Saul of Tarsus) and Ananias mentioned his misgivings to the Lord (Acts
9:11-16). I prayed back my misgivings, and the Lord told me to look up
Psalm
91. At that time I didn’t know any Psalms by reference except the 23rd
Psalm. I did as the Lord had told me, and I don’t really know if it had
or was
even intended to have any effect on the individual. But it did have an
effect
on me; I learned to know and trust the Lord’s guidance and his power
and
faithfulness to keep his promises. We
frequently hear of people doing evil things and claiming the Lord told
them to
do them. Remember that Satan quoted Psalm 91:11-12 to tempt Jesus in
the
wilderness (Matthew 4:6-7). We need to make sure it is the Lord we’re
listening
to (1 John 4:1-3); we need to know what the Bible says. The Lord will
never
tell us to do something contrary to the Bible, or anything that will
harm
ourselves or others. The Lord
wants to lead us and to show us that he is faithful and able to keep
his
promises. He wants to reveal himself and his salvation to us, if we
will come
to him in faith (obedient trust). I realize that I really can’t protect
myself
and my family from the “wild animals,” the evil people, diseases and
other
evils in society today, but when I entrust myself and my family to the
Lord’s care,
I have the assurance that absolutely nothing can happen that the Lord
can’t
handle. Only the things we give to the Lord are truly safe. The Spirit
of the Lord was beside me as I turned to the Lord and began to seek his
guidance daily in his Word, meditation and prayer. The Lord discipled
me over a
period of several years, and eventually led me to “re-birth” (John 3:3,
5-8) by
the gift of his indwelling Holy Spirit. The Lord
is near to us, and we can find him if we seek him (Acts 17:26-27;
Matthew 7:7-8).
I’m convinced that the meaning and purpose of life is to seek and come
to know
the Lord, our Creator and Savior. Jesus is the name of the Lord. This
lifetime
is our only opportunity to be “re-born” to spiritual, eternal life.
Only Jesus
gives the gift of the Holy Spirit (John 1:31-34), only to his disciples
who
trust and obey him. The Holy Spirit is the seal and guarantee that one
is in
Christ and has eternal life (2 Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians 1:13-14;
Romans
8:9b, 11, 15-16). Is Jesus
your Lord? Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus?
Have
you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed
(Acts
19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to
obey all
that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty
where you
will spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |
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21
Pentecost - Tuesday B |
| First Posted October 27, 2009 |
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Isaiah
53:10-12 -- The Suffering
Servant It was by God’s
will that his servant was bruised and suffered grief. God promised that
when
his servant had made himself (or his soul; Isaiah 53:10c RSV note a) an
offering for sin, that he would “see his offspring, he shall prolong
his days;
the will of the Lord shall prosper in his hand; he shall see the fruit
of the
travail of his soul and be satisfied; by his knowledge shall the
righteous one,
my servant, make many to be accounted righteous; and he shall bear
their
iniquities” (Isaiah 53:11). God
promised to give his righteous servant the reward of those who are
great, and
that Jesus would share the reward with those who are strong (in faith
and perseverance)
“because he poured out his soul to death, and was numbered with the
transgressors; Yet he bore the sin of many and made intercession for
the
transgressors” (Isaiah 53:12c).
This whole
chapter, written about five hundred years before Jesus’ birth, is
Messianic
prophecy, fulfilled by Jesus Christ. God has planned from the very
beginning of
Creation that we would need a Savior, and has “built” Jesus Christ into
the
very structure of Creation (John 1:1-5; 14). At the right time in
history Jesus
came into the world to be the one and only sacrifice acceptable to God
for the
forgiveness of our sins (disobedience of God’s Word). Jesus trusted
God’s Word and submitted to God’s will and purpose, and he received the
promise
of long life; he arose from the dead and lives eternally. Any
“born-again”
(John 3:3, 5-8) Christian will testify that Jesus is eternally alive
and
present among us (Matthew 18:20). Born-again believers are his
offspring and
the fruit of his travail. The will
of God has prospered and been accomplished through Jesus. Jesus is the
Word of
God, fulfilled, embodied, and exemplified in human flesh (John 1:1-5,
14). He teaches
his disciples saving knowledge of God’s Word, and his disciples are
accounted
righteous by God because we have come to know, trust and obey Jesus. Jesus was
numbered among transgressors (Isaiah 53:12d). He was condemned by the
religious
leaders and crucified between two thieves. Jesus bore, on the Cross,
the
penalty for our sin. His sacrifice of himself intercedes for us, and he
himself
intercedes for us as our eternal high priest (Hebrews 7:24-25). God
promised that he would reward his suffering servant with the reward of
those
who are truly great in God’s judgment, and he fulfilled that promise;
Jesus’
name is above every other name in heaven and on earth (Philippians
2:9-11). Jesus
has been given all authority, in heaven and on earth (Matthew 28:18). Believers
are called to be disciples of Jesus Christ. We’re called to be
righteous
servants of God, following Jesus’ teaching and example. We are to learn
to trust
and obey God’s Word. We are called to submit to God’s will and purpose.
The
promises in this text are also our promises, as we follow Jesus’
example, willing
to suffer for the sake of the Gospel and sacrificing our own will to
accomplish
God’s will (Romans 8:16-17; 2 Timothy 1:8-9). God demonstrated
in Jesus’ resurrection that there is life beyond this temporal world
and that
we need not fear even physical death (Hebrews 2:14-15). God
demonstrated in
Jesus that his word is always fulfilled, and that he rewards obedient
trust. Is Jesus
your Lord? Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus?
Have
you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed
(Acts
19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to
obey all
that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty
where you
will spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |
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21
Pentecost - Wednesday B |
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First Posted October 28, 2009 |
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Hebrews
4:9-16 -- Sabbath
Rest God has
designed Creation to provide a Sabbath rest for God’s people. God
rested on the
seventh day of Creation. We should follow his example and strive to
enter that
rest. The Israelites failed to enter that rest from their journey
because of
disobedience (Numbers 13:30-14:10). We should heed that warning, so
that no one
falls because of the same disobedience. “For the Word of God is living
and
active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of
soul and
spirit, of joints and marrow, and discerning the thoughts and
intentions of the
heart” (Hebrews 4:12). We are all bare before the Lord, and nothing his
hidden
from him to whom we are accountable. Jesus, the
Son of God, is our great high priest who has entered heaven, so let us
hold
fast to our faith (obedient trust in Jesus). Jesus is able to
sympathize with
us, because he has experienced the same temptations; yet he did not
yield to
them. So let us draw near to his throne of grace, so that we can
receive mercy
(forgiveness of our sins) and grace (unmerited favor; free gift) to
help us
resist temptation and sin in time of need.
God
designed a day of rest into Creation for our benefit, and he commanded
his
people to observe it (the third of the Ten Commandments), not to make
them
miserable but to bless them. The human
tendency is to pursue our goals and ambition twenty-four hours a day,
seven
days a week. When we think we are solely responsible for providing for
our
needs and our security, it is a full time job, and yet the goals are
never
accomplished. If we recognize that it is the Lord who provides for our
needs
and security, we can have peace and security, and time to thank, praise
and
worship the Lord, not just for an hour on Sunday morning, but with time
for
reflection and quiet. If we rest from our labors we will find that we
can
accomplish as much or more in six days than we can in seven. We are all
created with an eternal soul (John 5:28-29). We will all spend eternity
somewhere. The Sabbath rest is our opportunity to have our souls
nurtured, developed
and sustained. So many people are constantly trying to develop and
preserve
their physical bodies, and give no recognition or concern for their
eternal
souls. The
Israelites could have entered into a Sabbath rest in the Promised Land
right
away, if they had trusted and obeyed God’s Word (Numbers 13:30-14:10),
but
because they didn’t, they had to wander in the wilderness for forty
years.
Those who hadn’t trusted in the Lord died in the wilderness, instead of
entering the rest God provided. The
history of God’s dealing with Life is a
journey through the wilderness for Christian disciples. The Sabbath
rest
teaches us to trust and obey God and to discover that his commands are
for our
good. The Word
of God is living; Jesus is the Word of God fulfilled, embodied and
exemplified
in human flesh (John 1:1-5; 14). He is risen from physical death to
eternal
life and is present and active among us. Every “born-again” (John 3:3,
5-8) Christian
disciple will testify to a personal relationship with the risen Jesus.
Jesus
taught the Word of God by word and example (John 14:10, 24). The Word
of God is an active force. God spoke and the world was created (Genesis
1:3).
Jesus’ word has the same creative force; he spoke and even wind and
waves
obeyed him (Matthew 8:23-27). The Word
of God is the two-edged sword of the Spirit which gives his disciples
victory
over their enemies, including sin and death (Ephesians 6:11-17).
Christians must
first be “reborn” (John 3:3, 5-8; Luke 24:29; Acts 1: 4-5, 8) by the
gift of
the indwelling Holy Spirit and equipped with the knowledge of the Word
of God
(Jesus and the Bible) before going out into the world in the name of
Jesus. The Word
of God (the Bible and Jesus Christ) is the standard by which all will
be judged
on the Day of Jesus’ Second Coming. All, the living and the dead in
both the
physical and spiritual senses will be accountable for what we have done
with
God’s Word on the Day of Judgment John 5:28-29; Matthew 25:31-46).
Nothing will
be hidden from the Lord to whom we are accountable. Is Jesus
your Lord? Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus?
Have
you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed
(Acts
19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to
obey all
that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty
where you
will spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |
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21
Pentecost - Thursday B |
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First Posted October 29, 2009 |
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Mark
10:35-45 -- Servant
of All Jesus and
his disciples were on the road to Jesus told
them that they didn’t know what they were asking. He asked them if they
were
able to share the same, fate; the “cup” (destiny) and the same
“baptism” (commission)
as that of Jesus. They assured him that they were able. Jesus replied
that they
would share the same destiny and commission, but their request to be
Jesus’
seconds-in-command in heaven was not for Jesus to grant, but belonged
to those
who had been chosen and appointed. The other
disciples were indignant when they heard what James and John had asked
of Jesus.
Jesus called them together and told them that heavenly values are
unlike
worldly values. In this world, leaders exalt themselves over their
subjects and
their subjects serve their rulers, but in heaven greatness is
servanthood; the
greatest is the servant of all the others. Jesus is the example of
servanthood,
who came not to dominate others, but to serve and die for them, to
ransom them
(from slavery to sin and death). Jesus is
the Lord, the eternal King of Kings, who came to be our servant in
order to
free us from slavery to sin (disobedience of God’s Word) and eternal
death,
which is the penalty for sin. Jesus came to free us from slavery so
that we
could be free to trust, obey and serve the Lord. We have been called to
share
the same “cup” and the same “baptism,” following the example of Jesus
Christ. James and
John were still thinking in worldly ways; they were trying to
manipulate the
Lord to grant them special status. Being Jesus’ disciples didn’t
entitle them
to special favor from Jesus. Instead of trying to use their influence
with
Jesus to secure status for themselves, they needed to share in his
“cup” and
his “baptism” and become servants of the Lord, helping to complete the
mission
of Christ to bring eternal salvation and life to a lost and dying
world. How are we
doing? Do we think that because we go to church, sing in the choir or
teach
Sunday School that we’re entitled to special status and favor with the
Lord? Do
we want him to do for us whatever we ask? Do we want to wear the
“crown” of
glory, without bearing the “cross” of the suffering servant? Do we care
about
the “lost,” or do we only want to make sure that we’re going to heaven
ourselves? |
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21
Pentecost - Friday B |
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First Posted October 30, 2009 |
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2 Samuel
7:18-29 -- God’s
Promise to David John 4:46b-53 -- Healing
the Officer’s Son
David, the
great “shepherd-king”
of David
prayed to the
Lord acknowledging that his house (family status) was not worthy of the
blessing which the Lord had promised, or even the office of king which
he had
already received. David thanked the Lord for showing David the future
for
David’s house (dynasty) and future generations. David acknowledged the
goodness
of the Lord to bless David, the Lord’s servant, so greatly. David
declared that
there is none like the Lord God, and that no other nation on earth as
blessed
as David
prayed that
he Lord would do all that the Lord had promised concerning David and
his house,
so that the name of the Lord would be glorified among all the people of
earth.
David acknowledged that the Lord is God and that his words are true,
and that
his blessing would be on his servant David and David’s house forever.
In The
officer left,
but did not return directly to his home, because he had believed Jesus’
word. The
next day as he returned home his servants met him and told him that the
boy was
better. The officer asked when he began to recover, and the servants
told him
that he had started to improve the preceding day at the seventh hour
(1:00
P.M.). The officer thus realized that was the hour that Jesus had told
him his
son would live. As a result, the officer and his entire household
believed in
Jesus. This was the second miracle Jesus had done in Galilee since he
returned
from Judea (after his baptism by John; the first was the wedding at
David was
a
shepherd boy whom God had made King of Israel. God had declared that
David was
a man after God’s own heart, who would do all God’s will (Acts 13:22;
Psalm
89:20). David had a personal relationship with the Lord, which was rare
before
the coming of Jesus. Only a few prophets and leaders had personal
contact with
the Lord in that time. David was
a
forerunner and illustration of God’s servant and eternal king, Jesus
Christ.
David knew and believed the Word of God, and he foresaw the fulfillment
of
God’s promise. Jesus
Christ is the
fulfillment of God’s promise to David, of an eternal king from the
descendants
of David and an heir to the throne of David (Matthew 1:1-17; Luke
2:1-7;
Matthew 21:9-16). Jesus is the “Good Shepherd” (John 10:11, 14). The
Church is
the fulfillment of God’s promise to David of a house of God and a
dynasty of
God’s people. Individual “born-again” (John 3:3, 5-8) Christians are
the The
Gentile Roman
officer had heard of Jesus and he came to Jesus seeking healing for his
son.
When Jesus told him that his son would live the officer believed Jesus’
word, and
acted upon it. He didn’t continue to beg Jesus to come; instead he went
his
way, and he didn’t hurry home immediately to see if it were true. Note
that
there weren’t even many miracles done by Jesus since the beginning of
his
public ministry; only one. Instead the officer carried on with his
business,
believing that the child would be healed, without seeing “proof.” The
next day,
the “proof” came to him; his servants met him on his way home and
confirmed
that the time of healing coincided with Jesus’ word. Both the officer
and his
servants became believers in Jesus Christ. God’s Word
contains
great and precious promises which must be received by faith (obedient
trust).
We hear of Jesus through the Word of God, the Bible, and through the
testimony
of his apostles (messengers of the Gospel) who have a personal
relationship
with Jesus. The Lord wants us to hear and act upon his promises so that
we can
grow in faith to spiritual maturity as he reveals his faithful
fulfillment of
them to us. David had
been
following God’s Word in obedient trust and saw the Word of God
fulfilled in the
past so that he had come to a personal fellowship with the Lord and
could
believe the Lord’s promise for himself and his household far in the
future. We have
the
advantage of the New Testament, the Gospel (“good news”) of Jesus
Christ, the
eye-witness testimony of his disciples recorded in the New Testament,
and the
personal testimony of every truly “born-again” Christian disciple
today. For
those who demand “proof” that Jesus is the Christ, God’s Son, his
designated
Savior and eternal King, there is none; but for those who “believe,”
who trust
and obey Jesus, there is abundant “proof.” Seeing is not believing;
believing
is seeing. Jesus came
to make
it possible for all the people of God to have a personal relationship
with the
Lord as David and the Old Testament prophets did. Jesus is the only one
who
“baptizes” with the gift of the indwelling Holy Spirit (John 1:31-34),
only his
disciples who trust and obey Jesus (John 14:15-17). The Holy Spirit is
the seal
and guarantee that one is in Christ and has eternal life (2 Corinthians
1:22;
Ephesians 1:13-14; Romans 8:9b, 11, 15-16). This
lifetime is
our only opportunity to seek and find the Lord and to be “born-again”
through
the gift of the indwelling Holy Spirit. We are all “terminally ill”
with sin
(disobedience of God’s Word; Romans 3:23; 1 John 1:8-10). The penalty
for sin
is eternal death (Romans 6:23). Jesus is the only one who can heal our
spiritual illness and give us true eternal life (Acts 4:12, John 14:6;
see
God’s Plan of Salvation, sidebar, top right). Is Jesus
your Lord?
Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying Jesus? Have you
received
the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly believed (Acts 19:2)?
Are you
making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them to obey all that
Jesus
commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty where you will
spend
eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14). |
| 21
Pentecost - Saturday B |
| First Posted October 31, 2009 |
|
Ephesians 6:10-17 -- The Whole
Armor of God Paul was “discipling”
the Ephesian Christians. He urged them to rely not
on their own strength, but on the Lord’s. Believers must be equipped
with the
whole armor of God in order to stand against the deceitful assaults of
Satan. Believers
need to understand that we are engaged in a spiritual battle against
supernatural forces. Satan and his demons are
the rulers of the spiritual darkness of this
present world. So believers need to put on the whole armor of God so
that we
can stand against the forces of evil and prevail. The basic “garment”
is (divine)
truth, which is the foundation of the other elements of armor.
Righteousness
(doing what is right in God’s judgment) is our breastplate; our “shoes”
are the
Gospel of peace. Faith is our shield to ward off the flaming arrows of
Satan,
our spiritual enemy. Salvation is our helmet. Finally we must take the
sword of
the Holy Spirit, which is the Word of God.
Life in this world is a
spiritual battle between the forces of good and
evil. The outcome has already been determined by Jesus’ death and
resurrection.
But the battle goes on until the forces of evil are wiped out. We must
join
forces with the Lord or we will be wiped out with the evil ones. To withstand the battle,
we must begin with divine truth which is
revealed and imparted by God’s Word, the Bible. Divine truth is the
truth by
which the world was created and is sustained, and it is unlike what the
world
falsely calls “truth.” Righteousness is the
breastplate which preserves our life. It is not our
own righteousness, which is insufficient (Romans 3:23; 1 John 1: 8-10),
but the
righteousness of Jesus Christ, which we receive through faith (obedient
trust)
in him. Then we must be shod
with the Gospel of peace. Jesus Christ is the one
and only way to receive forgiveness and to have peace with God (Acts
4:12; John
14:6). Having the Gospel is the only way to stand against the spiritual
enemy
and prevail, and the only means to keep us from stumbling on our way. We need the shield of
faith to deflect the flaming arrows of doubt and
temptation. When we choose to join with Jesus, we are going to become
targets
of Satan’s weapons. Faith is not getting whatever we believe if we
believe “hard
enough.” Faith is trusting and obeying Jesus’ word, which is the Word
of God. Salvation is the helmet
which assures our survival and preserves us for
eternal life. Our salvation is provided by Jesus, but we need to
receive it and
put it on, by applying his teaching in our daily lives, in order to
have its
benefits. We have to come to Jesus, confess our need, and ask him for
our
salvation (from God’s eternal condemnation). Finally, our only weapon
is the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word
of God. Christians cannot go out into the spiritual battleground of
this world
until we have been fully armed. The battle is spiritual, and it is won,
not by
our own strength, but by God’s Spirit within us and working though us (Zechariah
4:6b). It
is the gift of the Holy Spirit, the Spirit of the risen Jesus, within
us, who
opens our minds to understand God’s Word (Luke 24:44-45), and to know
God’s
will. It is the Holy Spirit who calls to our minds God’s Word at the
time we
need it (John 14:25-26; Matthew 10:17-20), and he empowers us to do
what we are
called to do. It is God’s Word, spoken at the right moment that wins
the
spiritual battle. Paul
is the first “modern” (not having known Jesus during Jesus’ physical
lifetime),
“born-again” Christian disciple and apostle (messenger; of the Gospel),
as all
believers are called to be. He is teaching and demonstrating
“discipling.” Paul
has described the essence of discipleship in an analogy to battle
armor. We are
called to be disciples of Jesus Christ, to learn the divine truth,
which is God’s
Word and to learn to trust and obey God’s Word. Jesus is the
fulfillment,
embodiment, and illustration of God’s Word in human flesh (John 1:1-5,
14).
Jesus’ word is the Word of God (John 14:10, 24). Jesus is the way (to
forgiveness and salvation from eternal condemnation), the (divine,
eternal) truth,
and the (true, eternal) life (John 14:6). As we begin to trust and obey
God’s
Word, revealed through Jesus Christ, we will be “born-again” (John 3:3,
5-8) by
the gift of the indwelling Holy Spirit, which only Jesus gives (John
1:31-34),
only to his disciples who trust and obey Jesus (John 14:15-17). Believers
are called to be disciples and then to “make” disciples, after we have
received
the Holy Spirit (Luke 24:49; Acts 1:4-5, 8). One cannot be a “witness”
testifying about something one has not personally experienced.
Believers are to
stay within the Church, the “New Jerusalem,” being discipled by mature
“born-again”
disciples, until they have received rebirth by the Holy Spirit, and
then the
Holy Spirit will equip and direct them according to God’s will. The
Holy Spirit
is the seal and guarantee that one is in Christ and has eternal life (2
Corinthians 1:22; Ephesians 1:13-14; Romans 8:9b, 11, 15-16). Sadly,
discipleship and spiritual growth is not the norm in the Church today.
The
Church has too often settled for building “buildings” and making
“members,”
instead of making disciples and building and strengthening the body of
Christ
and the Is
Jesus your Lord? Are you Jesus’ disciple? Are you trusting and obeying
Jesus?
Have you received the indwelling Holy Spirit since you first truly
believed
(Acts 19:2)? Are you making disciples of Jesus Christ and teaching them
to obey
all that Jesus commands (Matthew 28:18-20)? Do you know with certainty
where
you will spend eternity (1 John 5:11-13; Ephesians 1:13-14)? |