QTVOTD: Pride and Self-Assurance…

“And I tell you, everyone who acknowledges me before men, the Son of Man also will acknowledge before the angels of God, but the one who denies me before men will be denied before the angels of God.  Luke 12:8-9 [ESV]

Continuing my reading of Luke’s account of this discussion with Jesus and His disciples has me both comforted and fearful at the same time. Comforted that when I stand at the judgement seat and stand in account for my life here on earth, I can rest assured if I have held the name of Christ up to those who are around me.

This week I was talking to one of my employees about several days they had taken off of be with their dad who had a stroke and was in intensive care. They talked about moments during their support of their dad where they had rested their hope in God. It was so great to be able to use this open door to tell them that I was praying for them and asking God to comfort them and give them peace through everything they were needing to manage.

At the same time, Jesus is saying that when we deny Him before men, we will be denied by Him before the angels of God…yikes. So what exactly does this look like? I think it is when we may deny the unique authority of His teaching, that on some points, we know better than He did, or that much of what Jesus said can be explained away. We may also deny his divinity and argue his claims. In either case it is the sin of pride and self-assurance, man’s ultimate denial of the supremacy of Christ and of God.

Application:

My confidence rests in eternity with my Lord and Savior. I have no one to fear here and so why would I not take every opportunity, when presented, to share the knowledge of Jesus and what He came to this earth to do for ever person who would believe.

BITE: Save Men and Fear God…

“I tell you, my friends, do not fear those who kill the body, and after that have nothing more that they can do. But I will warn you whom to fear: fear him who, after he has killed, has authority to cast into hell. Yes, I tell you, fear him! Luke 12:4-5 [ESV]

At first glance this passage looks super scary but this is Jesus speaking to His disciples about the Pharisees. We have been saved and justified by this same God. So, when I read this, I am comforted to know that the only One who can cast me into Hell is the same One Who has promised everlasting life with Him in Heaven.

When I look at my life here and think about what I have ahead, I have nothing to fear except one thing…the fear of disappointing my Father in Heaven. It is in His Son that I am redeemed but I still must inhabit this carcass here on earth that is susceptible to the evil ways of this world. Ergo, I must cling to the shins of my Father by immersing myself in His word and prayerful anticipation of His return!

BITE: Beware of Hypocrisy…

I got a little lazy with my posting so you are going to see a bunch of posts follow this one; to catch up. With the exception of a few, these will mostly be Bites as I have had a busy week leading up to school starting and Bella heading off on her Missions trip.

“Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.  Nothing is covered up that will not be revealed, or hidden that will not be known.  Therefore, whatever you have said in the dark shall be heard in the light, and what you have whispered in private rooms shall be proclaimed on the housetops. Luke 12:1-3 [ESV]

If there is one thing as human followers of Jesus, that can tear down the reputation of our witness, it is hypocrisy. What I have realized in my walk is that our ‘Old Man’ can show up and decimate an upright walk. This is why the ‘New Man’ (the new creature) must put death the ‘Old Man’ everyday. Some days I am better at this than others.

Being in God’s Word each day has a way of grounding your ‘faith perspective’ in a such a way that when the Holy Spirit inside of us speaks/warns/admonishes, we hear it.

QTVOTD: Inside Cleanliness…

Now while Jesus was speaking, a Pharisee invited Him to take dinner with him, so He entered and reclined at table.
  The Pharisee noticed and was astonished [to see] that Jesus did not first wash before dinner.
  But the Lord said to him, Now you Pharisees cleanse the outside of the cup and of the plate, but inside you yourselves are full of greed and robbery and extortion and malice and wickedness.
  You senseless (foolish, stupid) ones [acting without reflection or intelligence]! Did not He Who made the outside make the inside also?
  Luke 11:37-40 [AMP]

Today I finished Luke 11 which from 37 onward is this interaction with a Pharisee who invited Jesus to dinner (or lunch as it can be interpreted) and then follows with a list of “Woe’s” to both Pharisees and Lawyers of the day.

My main focus is this discussion before eating with the Pharisee. 1) Jesus once against discerns the thoughts of the Pharisee and confronts the man on the tradition of washing from one’s hands the sin of the world before eating. It was a process described in minute detail in the Mishnah of ceremonially cleansing oneself before eating a meal. Jesus adeptly calls out the irony in this action in that it does nothing for the thing that actually matters….the condition of a person’s heart in the sight of God.

We all know that the Pharisees were so infatuated with how they were perceived on the outside even though they, on the inside, were corrupt and evil. None of the inside condition was out of the sight of God…He sees it all. Jesus goes as far to say that they are foolish and senseless in their actions. With just a little bit of reflection, the Pharisee would see the craziness of operating this way.

Application:

I have been guilty of paying more attention to my behavior than the condition of my heart. I will say that the focus of my motives and ‘why I do what I do’ has been on the forefront of my mind lately. This is in all aspects of my life: as a dad, husband, manager, leader, friend, and son. Am I just washing my hands and outside of my cup/plate…or, am I looking for the grime that is on the inside that can taint and sour the goodness of what the Lord wants to do in me. It all has to flow from a place of being sold out to my Lord and Savior. That cannot be unless I am consistently cleaning house and leaving my sin nailed to that tree on Golgotha.

QTVOTD: Be a Light…

Yesterday my family treated me to an awesome Birthday full of memories and fun. They whisked me off to Leavenworth, WA where we did a toboggan roller coaster, had crepes, ziplining, and just wonderful time together. I am so very blessed to have the family I do.

My reading today is Luke 33-36 which follows in the Amplified.

No one after lighting a lamp puts it in a cellar or crypt or under a bushel measure, but on a lampstand, that those who are coming in may see the light.
 Your eye is the lamp of your body; when your eye (your conscience) is sound and fulfilling its office, your whole body is full of light; but when it is not sound and is not fulfilling its office, your body is full of darkness.
  Be careful, therefore, that the light that is in you is not darkness.
  If then your entire body is illuminated, having no part dark, it will be wholly bright [with light], as when a lamp with its bright rays gives you light. Luke 11:33-36 [AMP]

This is a very well-known passage of Jesus talking about the witness of those in the past of other prophets like Jonah and yet the One they have with them now is greater. When Jesus talks about the ‘eye’ being the lamp of the body, the amplified called this your conscience and I think ‘your perspective’ is another good definition. What you fill your eyes with impacts the whole body. The eyes have a job that is involved in almost everything the rest of the body does. When the eyes have a singlemindedness focused on good, then the whole body will do good. However, when the eyes are focused on evil then the ‘whole’ body is consumed with darkness.

Another point that I takeaway is what verse 33 says about hiding the light. It’s not that it can’t be seen if it is hidden, it also cannot fill the space with light. Meaning, its not just to be seen but to illuminate.

Application:

Are my eyes fixed on RIGHTEOUSNESS? Have I really taken the perspective that what I fill my eyes with is in direct relation to the state of the rest of my body. Do I allow myself to watch movies, ‘reels’, or any other content that is not filling my body with the light of uprightness? Am I allowing the light of my ‘Walk with Jesus’ to fill the spaces I occupy?

BITE: Not for Jesus? You’re Against Him…

Luke 11:23 [AMP]
He who is not with Me [siding and believing with Me] is against Me, and he who does not gather with Me [engage in My interest], scatters.

I’ve been continuing in Luke and reading about Jesus casting out the ‘dumb’ demon. Jesus was speaking against those who witnessed this casting out and accused Jesus of working with Beelzebub and was explaining how preposterous this accusation was.

This verse towards the end of the encounter was impactful to me. It essentially means that you can’t have one foot in the world and the other pointed toward Jesus. It just doesn’t work; you are in fact against Jesus if you operate this way.

He also says that if we are not working to gather those into His Kingdom we are in fact scattering. This is a big deal. That passive Christian who says, “You know, evangelism just isn’t may thing…” should be careful about what this verse is implying about that statement.

QTVOTD: God Always Answers When We Ask…

If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!” Luke 11:13 [ESV]

This passage starts out with -> “So I say to you, ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.”

In my opinion, this passage is commonly misunderstood. There are a lot of ‘Prosperity Gospel’ proponents that reference this portion of Gods Word.

Jesus tells his disciples to ask, to seek, and to knock. He assures them that in each case there will be the appropriate response. All three verbs are continuous: Jesus is not speaking of single activities, but of those that persist. He is speaking of an attitude similar to that taught by the parable that I discussed yesterday. The repetition in verse 10 underlines the certainty of the response. People should not to think of God as unwilling to give: He is always ready to give good gifts to His people. But it is important that they do their part by asking. Jesus does not say and does not mean that, if we pray, we will always get exactly what we ask for. After all, ‘No’ is just as definite an answer as ‘Yes’. He is saying that true prayer is neither unheard nor unheeded. It is always answered in the way God sees is best.

Finally, in verse 13, Luke is interested in the work of the Spirit and here he sees the gift of the Spirit as our highest good. There doesn’t seem to be a reason for understanding this in terms of the ‘charismatic’ gifts. The mention is rather to the Spirit’s work in the Christian life generally, as in Romans 8.

BITE: Persistence in Prayer…

I say to you, though he will not rise and give to him because he is his friend, yet because of his persistence he will rise and give him as many as he needs. Luke 11:8 [ESV]

Jesus was telling this little parable about a person who has a visitor come in the middle of the night but the host has no food for the weary traveler. So, the host goes to his friend’s house to ask for several loaves of bread to feed his guest. Jesus says that the answer from within the house is ‘no’, that the whole family is asleep.

Jesus then says that this friend will finally give the host what he wants and more…not because he is his friend but because the host is persistent. The whole context is persistence in prayer.

The lesson is clear. We must not play at prayer, but must show persistence if we do not receive the answer right away. It is not that God is unwilling and must be badgered to answer. The whole context makes it clear that He wants to give. But if we do not want what we are asking for enough to be persistent, we do not want it very much. It is not mild prayer that is answered.

QTVOTD: Not My Best Moments…

My reading today was the first 4 verses of Luke 11 which is Jesus answering one of the disciples’ questions about how to pray. Luke’s recollection of this moment is a little brief compared to Matthew’s.

The reason I have titled this QTVOTD the way I have is because I kind of got into it with my oldest daughter tonight. She is not in the best form right now and I don’t think anyone would disagree but nothing she could do or poor treatment she could throw my way, could remove any of the responsibility I have to honor the Lord in my response and character with her. I was raised in a generation where respect was something that was prevalent, and we were taught to treat others a certain way. This started with being responsible for your actions and behavior. When I interpret behavior coming from my daughter as disrespect, I get “triggered” (to use one of her words). So, when I look at the ‘triggering’…what the source of that triggering is; it is a deep-seated set of rights I feel for the way I should be treated and respected.

When I look at the Lord’s prayer today it becomes clear Who my focus should be on in fear of disappointing should be…

“Father, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come.
Give us each day our daily bread,
and forgive us our sins,
for we ourselves forgive everyone who is indebted to us.
And lead us not into temptation.”

Luke 11:2-4 [ESV]

“Father, hallowed be YOUR name” — Not Ben’s name.

“Your Kingdom come” — My thoughts should not be on a yearning to receive more respect from my daughter here on earth but an anticipation of the coming of the Lord’s rule over everything…including my life…which can start now.

“Give us each day our daily bread” — As a sinner and worthy of the wrath my sin deserves, bread is an awesome provision for someone who deserves death…but no, God in His Mercy sent my Savior to rescue me from that certainty.

“and forgive us our sins,” — This should be a prayer I am praying every 5 minutes.

“for we ourselves forgive everyone who is indebted to us” — Dog gone it!! Every part of this prayer is touching on very raw nerves…too soon Lord!

“and lead us not into temptation” — James 1:13 tells us that God does not tempt us, in that, I recognize my weakness and the ease with which I give way to the temptations of the world, the flesh, and the devil. So, I have to pray to be delivered from them all and being responsible for my actions when I see the temptation to burst out in anger coming, I must lean into the strength of God to resist…and forgive.

BITE: Communion…

Today I had the honor of leading all four services at Canyon Hills in communion. This activity we do as Christian’s is so special and important to our faith.

For this BITE I am going to post my notes that I used today. Kind of a cool way to record these in a way I can reference them later.

Opening:

  • As I prepared for leading us in communion this week, the Lord laid the significance of this ‘Physical’ action connected with the ‘Spiritual’ acknowledgement and remembrance of God’s Son and what has been completed for us on the cross.
  • As we prepare our hearts for this time, it is important to remember a few truths.

Truths:

  1. We remember who we were before the Lord called us to Himself; separated from Him and without Hope.  We realized that there was nothing we could do of our own power or might to earn our way into Eternity with Him.
  2. Now we sit here looking back to that surrender to Him knowing we have been justified through our faith in Christ.
  3. [Galatians 3:13-14] Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us
  4. BUT…We forget!  We walk out of church and into the hustle and bustle of life and all of its distractions.  The noise of our circumstances and situations pushes us into self-sufficiency and feeling the burden of life’s challenges.
  5. Even the apostle Paul says in [Romans 7:22 – 8:1]
    • 22 For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, 23 but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members.
  6. Communion is a break from the worldly onslaught on our flesh to remember who we are in Gospel story of Salvation.  Jesus asks us to remember what He ‘did’ on the cross…a once and for all payment of our sins.  We are to remember His body broken for our sin, His blood washing away EVERY sin. 
  7. This spiritual acknowledgement through taking of the bread and the cup reminds us that He is our HOPE, the price has been paid, He stands in the place of our sin as a Living Sacrifice.

What is our response?

  • Acknowledgement of WHO Jesus is…the resurrected Savior of our lives Who LIVES today at the right hand of the Father in Heaven.
  • Acknowledge who we are in our sin and flesh and therefore the value of the gift of grace we have received in Jesus Christ
  • A renewed commitment in this realization to move forward in deliberate service to our Savior within this life under the sun

A warning:

Communion is for believers and must be done with the right heart.

Paul tells us in [1 Corinthians 11:27-29] – Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty concerning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a person examine himself, then, and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself.

Time of personal prayer and reflection – allow congregation 50 – 60 seconds of personal prayer and heart preparation.

Take communion:

  • [1 Corinthians 11:23-25] …the Lord Jesus on the night when he was betrayed took bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it, and said, “This is my body, which is for you. Do this in remembrance of me.”
    • Let’s take the bread together now.
  • In the same way also he took the cup, after supper, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me.”
    • Let’s drink the cup together now.

Prayer:

  • Thank you Lord God for the beauty and gift of Communion.
  • We pray Lord that your Holy Spirit would be alive in us this week to stay afresh in this mindset and spiritual connection with You.
  • Lord be with us as we continue in worship to You; glorifying and praising you for all that You are.
  • We ask these things in the name of You Son the Lord Jesus Christ – AMEN