Friday, May 29, 2020

The Double-Edged Sword of Adoption

 
Friday, May 29, 2020
Romans 8:14-17

For all who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God.  So you have not received a spirit that makes you fearful slaves.  Instead, you received God’s Spirit when he adopted you as his own children.  Now we call him, “Abba, Father.”  For his Spirit joins with our spirit to affirm that we are God’s children.  And since we are his children, we are his heirs.  In fact, together with Christ we are heirs of God’s glory.  But if we are to share his glory, we must also share his suffering.

I learned many years ago that, when it comes to parenting, there is nothing stronger than adoption.  A natural birth carries with it parental rights and responsibilities, for both the parent and (eventually) the child.  This is also true in adoption.  However, as we have seen the move to allow children the right to emancipate from parents, and the rights of parents to disown children, there is a marked and different finality to adoption that makes it nearly impossible for adoptive parents to disassociate themselves from the child they received. 
This concept is immeasurably magnified in the spiritual realm.  When God adopts you as His own, it is enternal and unbreakable.  And it is on a much deeper level than legality.  God’s own Spirit takes up residence within his adopted family to knit together the divine and human.  God’s word declares this to be true, and reminds us it takes a sharp sword to slice that thinly, the distance between what separates us from God as simply His created beings, loaded with free will…dangerously so…and the life that has been surrendered to the adoptive process, as accepted in the beloved family of Jesus Christ.  Yet, that is exactly what God’s Word promises:

For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. Hebrews 4:12 (KJV)

And, as we are on the matter of God’s adoptive ways, and the issue of God as parent of us all creative-wise, and God as parent adoption-wise, shall we not also consider the twoedged sword of privilege and responsibility sharpness-wise?
The privileges are well-known, God’s promises for today, and eternal life to boot.  But the responsibilities are just as well known, and just on the other side of the sharp blade.  To be a child, accepted, never disowned, and beloved, is a rare gift, and to be greatly treasured.  To honor that gift is the other side of the sharp sword, namely, responsibility.  For those who take lightly that for which God has shed His own blood, is to tread in dangerous paths.  Yet, today we see so much of that. 
      ·       Commitment has become as vile a word as change
      ·       Discipleship sinks into channel surfing on a Sunday to satisfy itchy ears
      ·       Tithe is a word relegated to all other antiquated, outdated ideas
      ·       …and the list continues, ad nauseum.
And so, a word to those who have truly been adopted.  Accept the Father like He accepted you.  And the best way to demonstrate that is with a life that is lived in honor of the name you claim.
Let’s Pray Together

Lord, we can think of nothing more offensive to the gift you have given of your holy child, Jesus’ death and resurrection, than for those of us who claim to be His followers to live like the world teaches.  Help us keep pushing on to perfecting our living in love, and so honor You in all we do.

For You Today
Here’s a new tattoo for those hands – Will what I do with these honor God?
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road today.  Have a blessed day!

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Title Image:  Pixabay.com  Unless noted, Scripture quoted from The New Living Translation©
For another post on Romans 8:14 see A Little More Light and for “Adoption” as a theme see Nearly Abandoned

Thursday, May 28, 2020

Misplaced Trust

 
Thursday, May 28, 2020
Psalm 33:12-22

What joy for the nation whose God is the Lord, whose people he has chosen as his inheritance.  The Lord looks down from heaven and sees the whole human race.  From his throne he observes all who live on the earth.  He made their hearts, so he understands everything they do.  The best-equipped army cannot save a king, nor is great strength enough to save a warrior.  Don’t count on your warhorse to give you victory—for all its strength, it cannot save you.  But the Lord watches over those who fear him, those who rely on his unfailing love.  He rescues them from death and keeps them alive in times of famine.  We put our hope in the Lord.  He is our help and our shield.  In him our hearts rejoice, for we trust in his holy name.  Let your unfailing love surround us, Lord, for our hope is in you alone.

One of the (generally) misunderstood issues of the relationship of Christian faith to military prowess is assigning naïveté to the former, and complete trust in the later.  The Psalmist, probably King David, is no stranger to military ventures.  His remarkable career started in a tussle with a giant, and David was celebrated for victories aplenty…so much so, it drove King Saul crazy.  David understood battle, and he understood the value of military might.  But, even with the start of the skirmish with Goliath, David trusted God much more than any earthly strength:

David replied to the Philistine, “You come to me with sword, spear, and javelin, but I come to you in the name of the Lord of Heaven’s Armies—the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. Today the Lord will conquer you, and I will kill you and cut off your head.   1 Samuel 17:45-46

We know David wasn’t perfect; later his mistakes with his family and his fidelity proved that he was an imperfect man, capable of messing up more than most.  But, at least at this point, David had it together, using strength, but trusting in God.
Fast forward several millennia and you have the world’s population on its knees, not necessarily praying.  We’ve been knocked to our knees by a bug so small we cannot see it without a microscope.  COVID19 has taken over the economy, our activity, and news cycles unending.  The debate rages about how to act, what to do, and whom to avoid.  And our trust may be misplaced.
I say that because some advocate throwing caution to the winds, simply, and naively trusting that they don’t have to use common sense.  They act as if being a person of faith guarantees them an immunity from biological attack.  On the other hand, there are those who imagine the entire effort rests with the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), and all the technology man has marshalled against the demonic bug.
It’s time to remember that David took a big risk fighting Goliath, but he also packed more than one stone.  And the boy who took down a 9-foot battle-hardened enemy, was fighting with faith and a plan.  There was nothing naïve in a kid accustomed to facing “hairy” nightmares.  As a shepherd, David knew how to go up against the odds.  When King Saul questioned him about his chances against the giant Philistine, David replied:

“I have been taking care of my father’s sheep and goats,” he said.  “When a lion or a bear comes to steal a lamb from the flock, I go after it with a club and rescue the lamb from its mouth.  If the animal turns on me, I catch it by the jaw and club it to death.  1 Samuel 17:34-35

Let’s Pra y
Father, God, we know our trust is to be entirely placed in You, alone.  You have also given us common sense and strength.  Help us to keep enough common sense to use our strength, and place our trust in You, and not the other way around, placing our trust in strength, and using Your promises like a vending machine.
For You Today
Whether our enemies are armies or viruses, our trust is misplaced to think we can handle it in our own strength; we must always come to the battle in the name of He who is the Lord of Heaven’s armies.
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road today.  Have a blessed day!

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Title Image:  Pixabay.com  Unless noted, Scripture quoted from The New Living Translation©
For another post on Psalm 33 see Total Trust and Meeting With God and Broken Pieces

Wednesday, May 27, 2020

The History of Mankind (slightly abridged version)

 
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
Psalm 99:1-9

The Lord is king!  Let the nations tremble!  He sits on his throne between the cherubim.  Let the whole earth quake!  The Lord sits in majesty in Jerusalem, exalted above all the nations.  Let them praise your great and awesome name.  Your name is holy!  Mighty King, lover of justice, you have established fairness.  You have acted with justice and righteousness throughout Israel.  Exalt the Lord our God!  Bow low before his feet, for he is holy!  Moses and Aaron were among his priests; Samuel also called on his name.  They cried to the Lord for help, and he answered them.  He spoke to Israel from the pillar of cloud, and they followed the laws and decrees he gave them.  O Lord our God, you answered them.  You were a forgiving God to them, but you punished them when they went wrong.  Exalt the Lord our God, and worship at his holy mountain in Jerusalem, for the Lord our God is holy!

What is wrong with the title of this devotion?  Short answer – everything!  From the title you would expect the focus to be on humanity; that is certainly not the Psalmists’ perspective.  Everything about Psalm 99 points to the character of God; hardly are man’s exploits in view.  Just look at the wording:
·       The LORD is king…HE sits on his throne…in majesty…exalted
·       YOUR name is holy…YOU have established justice
·       HE answered…HE spoke…HE gave
·       YOU were a forgiving God…YOU punished them when they went wrong.
·       EXALT and WORSHIP GODfor the LORD our God is holy!
Notwithstanding my own criticism of the title, I stand by it as appropriate, because the real (unabridged) version of the history of man is all about the loving God who created us.  You cannot, with any kind of claim to integrity, separate God’s loving character from any mention of humanity; we are entirely connected, entwined in an infinite number of ways, and in a way that includes everything eternal.  And so, our history is rightly connected to His nature; we belong to Him.
The Psalmist’s reference to the wilderness wanderings of God’s children, how God gave them their marching orders, and how they went wrong, after having agreed to do right, and how God handed out justice, punishing their wrong…it is all a microcosm of the unabridged version of humankind’s history. 
Of course, it all started in the mind of God in eternal ages past.  However, our memory begins in the Garden of Eden.  God created Adam and Eve perfectly, placed them in a perfect environment, gave them perfect instructions how to live, and offered a perfect relationship, based upon perfect lovingkindness and providence unbound by strings of any kind.  We get it that there was no racism, murder, or COVID19 in God’s plan.
Then, freedom became too much of a temptation, and Adam and Eve left the reservation.  It began with questioned faith about God’s love and care for them; the enemy whispered questions about God’s character and ways; the couple reached for what wasn’t good for them in an effort to quiet the doubt within, and, believing Lucifer’s lies, in an attempt at fixing what they sensed to be broken, they found fear at the prospect of God knowing what they’d done[1].  Man’s fixing produced fear, and the fall has been repeating itself ever since.  And so has the forgiveness of God for the fallen, sinful children of the first couple! 
This is the slightly abridged version of the history of man.  For the rest of the story, in all of it’s sordid and splendid detail, buy the book….THE Book

Let’s Pray

Father, we understand wilderness…we spend so much of our time there…time better spent with you.  Help us change history…that which lies ahead of us.  Help us to place our heart’s and mind’s focus on you, the place and face where we find faith and peace.

For You Today
The best thing about history is when we focus more on HIS-story, and learn from our messy failings where true peace and meaning lie waiting for those hungering and thirsting for it[2].
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road today.  Have a blessed day!


Go to VIDEO 

Title Image:  Pixabay.com  Unless noted, Scripture quoted from The New Living Translation©
For another post on Psalm 99 see The Case for Worship and When Mercy Outweighs Justice


[2] God blesses those who hunger and thirst for justice, for they will be satisfied.  Matthew 5:6

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

When Mercy Outweighs Justice

 
Tuesday, May 26, 2020
Psalm 99:6-9

Moses and Aaron were among his priests; Samuel also called on his name.  They cried to the Lord for help, and he answered them.  He spoke to Israel from the pillar of cloud, and they followed the laws and decrees he gave them.  O Lord our God, you answered them.  You were a forgiving God to them, but you punished them when they went wrong.  Exalt the Lord our God, and worship at his holy mountain in Jerusalem, for the Lord our God is holy!

The seed of arrogance grows best in the darkness of unbelief.  When a person closes eyes to the truth of God’s sovereignty there springs a limitless list of possibilities to ignorance and chaos.  In short, there’s dumb; there’s also dumber.
In the 1994 movie Dumb and Dumber[1] Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels take the character of “dumb” to new levels.  One scene’s focus shows Carrey attempting to blot out whatever his dumb partner (played by Jeff Daniels) is saying.  He sticks his fingers in his ears and loudly debates, na, na, na, na, na, na, Naaaaah!  That he blots out what Daniels is saying is true, he can’t hear it; that he makes what is real unreal, is, contrarywise, only what a fool would believe.
It is that way with fools shaking a clenched fist at the sky to proclaim (as the mind of fools is want to believe) that no God has the right to meddle in human’s lives; it says so right in our 244 year old Declaration of Independence.  A rather older source (by a mere 4,000 years) refutes that thinking.

Only fools say in their hearts, “There is no God.” They are corrupt, and their actions are evil; not one of them does good!  Psalm 14:1[2]

There are so many moving parts to living as a human being.  Just breathing in and out, although we do it without thinking, would take a city of libraries to do even the slightest bit of justice to how magnificently the respiratory system conducts the orchestra of life’s miracle.  The fool somehow imagines he evolved into that because of some innate strength for which he or she alone can take credit.  Eyeroll intended!
If breathing is that incredible, yet everyone does it over 21,000 a day, what if we tried to fathom such things as reproduction, DNA, and human relationships?  Well, then you get really mind-boggled.
And, so, let me get to the point (before I don’t) – when life falls apart because of bad choices, like ingesting nicotine into really pink, healthy lungs, or eating yourself into a stupor, or imagining in any of 6 billion ways you can thumb your nose at how God designed life to be joyful, non-anxious, purposeful, and filled with joy, thinking you can do a better job…you’re sitting in the front seat of the pickup truck with Lloyd Christmas and Harry Dunne, sticking your fingers in your ear and blotting out truth.
The Good News is that, for anyone who will unstop their ears from hearing, repent of unbelief, and trust in God’s mercy – that mercy far outweighs the justice that can lead to a fool’s demise.
Let’s Pray
Father, forgive us each for taking our turns with blotting out the truth; your voice calls in soft whispers; help us to be still, open the ears of our hearts, and listen.

For You Today

It helps to remember that it IS possible to blot-out truth; that doesn’t mean you’ve won the debate; God’s truth is eternal and unbreakable[3].
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road today.  Have a blessed day!
Title Image:  Pixabay.com  Unless noted, Scripture quoted from The New Living Translation©
For another post on Psalm 99 see The Case for Worship


[2] A search for the connection between fools and the human heart shows how strongly God feels about this