You had to be there

Easter Re:Verse reading–John 20:1-18 (day one)

“They still did not understand from Scripture that Jesus had to rise from the dead.”–v 9

It is something we say when our words are inadequate.  A story isn’t funny/or scary to people who only hear about it.  “You had to be there”, we tell them.

The Resurrection of Christ is the same.  Words aren’t enough.  Not for the disciples and not for us.  Until you experience the Savior alive you cannot know that He is.  A real encounter is required.   Sight or Spiritual power, conviction of the conscience–  We must experience His powerful presence.

Faith doesn’t mean that we believe without evidence.  It means that we allow the evidence to mean what God says it does.

“Our gospel did not come to you in word only, but in power and in the Holy Spirit and with full conviction.”–1 Thessalonians 1:5.

Happy Easter, my friends.  May we know the “power of His resurrection”–Philippians 3:10

Re:Verse reading – 1 Samuel 13:1-14

King of Kings

Re: Verse reading1 Samuel 9 & 10 (day seven)

1 Samuel 10:19 is ominous: But you have today rejected your God, who delivers you from all your calamities and your distresses; yet you have said, ‘No, but set a king over us!’ Now therefore, present yourselves before the Lord by your tribes and by your clans.”

Israel’s rejection of God allowed a move toward their own plans.  They desired a human king in God’s stead.  God delivered them from Egypt, but now they wanted distance between themselves and their creator.  On the surface it seems outlandish, but our tendency is to assume that we can handle life on our own when things are smooth.

A calm day gives us an illusion of personal strength we believe deep into the coming chaos.  Our only way out of self-inflicted free fall is Jesus Christ.  Jesus is the true king.   Jesus is God’s chosen one to give us the leadership we need to thrive in this life. Unlike Israel, Christians reject their own plans, and submit fully to the King of the Kingdom of God.

When God’s Yes Means Great Sorrow…and Longing

lightstock_63345_full_mikelThe Lord said to Samuel, “Obey their voice and make them a king.” 1 Samuel 8:22

Make no mistake, the people’s desire for a king was a rejection of God’s leadership, and yet God told Samuel to obey their voice. God did not acquiesce because having a sinful earthly king was a brilliant idea; it was not! God, allowed Samuel to obey their voice because providentially it would lead to great sorrow and ultimately a longing for a purely noble and righteous king. He said “yes” to their request because it would point to their desperate need for an infinitely better king that would be fulfilled in Jesus.

Sometimes when God says “yes” to our persistent requests, he does so only so he can show us what (or who) we really need, it’s just that sometimes we have to see it through great sorrow that leads to longing. (Kind of like the Prodigal Son.)

Touch

Re: Verse reading1 Samuel 9 & 10 (day five)

10:26 “Saul also went to his house at Gibeah; and the valiant men whose hearts God had touched went with him.”

Don’t overlook the miracle. God touched their human hearts. God touches human hearts. Remember the testimony of the disciples on the Emmaus road? “Were not our hearts burning within us while He was speaking to us?” It was not a holy persuasion. It was the Living Savior touching their hearts. He was that close.

Through His Holy Spirit, the Lord desires to touch us in that most personal, intimate and secret place- the core of our being, the location where values, priorities, and passions are formed- past all the layers to the center of our soul. He promises to be that close. We don’t need a just word or a glimpse. We need a touch! What if He did touch your heart? What would be the result? Will you pray, “God touch human hearts, beginning with mine”.

Called to Serve

Re:Verse reading–1 Samuel 9 & 10 (day four)

10:26 – “Saul also went to his house at Gibeah, and the valiant men whose hearts God had touched went with him.”

Saul had been called by God to serve…but he was not alone.  God touched the hearts of some valiant men.  They followed Saul to serve him and to serve God.  There was work to be done in Israel and God began to gather those who would work alongside Saul.  It is the same today.  God often calls a leader to a task, but He likewise calls those with open hearts to serve beside that leader.

This model is most often seen when God calls a new pastor to a church.  Valiant men and women…whose hearts God has touched…join the church and help shoulder the task of reaching a city and the world.  They may already be members of the church, but they renew their commitment to reach people and serve.  Sound familiar to anyone?  Are you ready to get to work?

Feign

Re: Verse reading1 Samuel 9 & 10 (day three)

Is not my clan the least of all the clans?

Self-abasement is not the same thing as humility.  The former stems from a deep-seated despair that one’s inner defectiveness relegates him to a status of low regard in the eyes of others.  The latter comes from a wisdom that knows that one’s inner beauty will arouse impulses in him to use that beauty as a manipulative tool or an excuse for self-seeking, and that those impulses will be checked only by a regard for the welfare of others.  Self-abasement masquerades as humility for a while.  But humility will always welcome others.  Self-abasement will eventually blame others for one’s own despair.  The more power a person has, the deadlier the blame becomes.  Witness the life of the son of Kish.  There is no substitute for humility.

 

Chosen

Re:Verse reading–1 Samuel 9 & 10 (day twoAs Saul turned to leave Samuel, God changed Saul’s heart, and all these signs were fulfilled that day. 10:9

You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed you so that you might go and bear fruit—fruit that will last—and so that whatever you ask in my name the Father will give you. John 15:16

Make no mistake when the Lord calls you, he changes you. There is never an indication that we get our hearts right, or that we initiate the act of redemption. When God calls, he equips. We are wise to recognize this so that we can return the glory due him as we see his will accomplished in our lives and in the lives of others. He can take you from wherever you may be and transform you into royalty.

 

Seeing myself through God’s eyes

Re:Verse reading–1 Samuel 9 & 10 (day one) 

“Samuel answered. . . ‘And for whom is all that is desirable in Israel?  Is it not for you and for your father’s household?’ Saul replied, ‘Am I not. . .of the smallest of the tribes of Israel, and my family the least of all the families in the tribe? Why do you speak to me this way?’ “– 9:20-21

It sounded like nonsense!  Samuel saw Saul as a leader for God’s people, a recipient of all resources and authority.  Saul saw himself as a member of an insignificant family and tribe.  Samuel saw big.  Saul saw small.

When I surrender to Christ, I give up the “me” I have known and receive by faith a new (true) identity.  Past sins no longer identify me.  (Forgiven).  Former weakness is not who I am anymore (Empowered)  I was Cephas.  Now I am Peter.

If I am a new person in Christ, I must see myself through God’s eyes.

5 Spiritual Disciplines

Re:Verse reading–1 Samuel 7 (day seven)

I count 5 spiritual disciplines utilized in our text this week that we rarely attempt:

v.2 the lament prayer –  We sometimes find it impolite to come before God emotionally, when the freedom of uninhibited prayer is exactly what we need.  There are numerous examples of lament psalms that are great guides for difficult prayer (e.g. Psalm 6 & Psalm 55)

v.3 Repent + _______  – we hear the call to repentance in Scripture.  The next step is to rid your life of that which you are repentant of.  You may need to physically destroy an item that is causing you to sin further or reminding you of your former ways.

v.5 & 9 intercessory prayer – when you are praying for yourself do not forget to pray for others.

v.6 fasting – this is a perfect uncomfortable reminder that we need God more than we need food.  Why not skip lunch occasionally, to pray, and let your hunger pangs point you to heaven?

v.12 commemorate – In the text Samuel marks God’s faithfulness with a stone. It is good to find a small item that will remind you of what God has done in a specific instance.  Some people like to pick out a small stone from an important spot and keep it in their pocket, others like to write a specific verse on a small sheet of paper and keep it on their dashboard, there is no limit to what you can find to remind you of what God has done.

I hope you can find the time this week to try one of these 1 Samuel 7 spiritual disciplines out in your personal walk with God.  I know they will increase your faith.  Be adventurous in your faith and try these kinds of new things.  These new things have worked for thousands of years.

Corporateness

lightstock_73340_medium_mikel“We have sinned against the Lord.” 1 Samuel 7:6

We tend to reinterpret everything individually. We ask, “what does it mean to me?” Rather than, “what does it mean to us?” Not so with the House of Israel. Repentance was not an individual thing, but a corporate thing. Even when the prophet Isaiah had his encounter with God, he declared, “Woe is me! For I am lost; I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips.” (Isaiah 6:5)

The truth is, we are far more connected than we realize. We have not only sinned individually, but corporately; we, all together, are a sinful people. We must not only ask the me questions, but also the us questions. We must not only be concerned with ourselves, but also our neighbor, and our church. And where required we must repent (repentance is real change; a genuine turning to God)…together.

In what ways do you think we (not you) need to repent? Ask the Holy Spirit to show us.