QTVOTD: Lumber Yard…

Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye?  How can you say to your brother, ‘Brother, let me take out the speck that is in your eye,’ when you yourself do not see the log that is in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take out the speck that is in your brother’s eye. Luke 6:41-42 [ESV]

As I read through Jesus’ teaching to the masses (this one likely the Sermon on the Mount – Luke calls it the ‘Sermon on the Plain’), I am constantly convicted by the instruction of Jesus to the people who wish to learn and follow Him. This passage I know so well but how little do I apply it to my own life. Essentially, I have a lumber lard in my eye…

When I look at my ministry as an Elder, a Life Group leader, counselor, husband, and father, I feel so short of achieving where I need to be in my walk with others when it comes to admonishing and encouraging those in the faith. I can’t go 4 steps without being able to point out my own short comings…yet, God still uses me. How much more effective might I be if I were walking even more upright? With what I just said there – we must tread carefully. That can quickly delve into a ‘works-based’ approach to our Christian walk.

Rather, our focus needs to be on the worship of our God and King. Through worship the ‘Lumber Yard’ will start to dissipate. Not that this frees us up to find and call out the specks in other believer’s eyes; no, it only grows our heart more fondly toward our Creator and makes us more aware of what He is laying in our path to grow His Kingdom. It also draws us closer to His Spirit that resides in us, to the point that our worship branches out into forms of service that become more effective, like being an Elder, a Life Group leader, counselor, husband, and father.

QTVOTD: Good Measure…

"give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.” Luke 6:38

I am taking my time in pouring over the sermon Jesus taught in Luke 6 and making sure I understand all the nuances of the examples and analogies He uses.

This one today is “Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap”. The analogy here is in regard to the grain sellers in the market. When you would go to the local market in New Testament times and want to buy grain for baking, you would buy by amount and not always by weight. In some cases, a shady or rushed seller would lightly fill a measuring container before dumping the contents into the storage container the buyer had brought to bring their grain home. I generous seller would fill the measuring container to the top, then tamp it down, tapping the container on a surface to settle the contents, and then add more to fill to heaping before pouring into the buyer’s container. This is how Jesus wants us to be with our giving…and He says that when we do so, we receive the same measure back to us.

There are many examples and analogies that Jesus uses to communicate this same set of points but this is the first time I have finally been able to wrap my brain around this specific one.

Application:

Am I giving of my time, energy, resources, and money in this way? Is it just enough to tick the box or am I considered a ‘Generous Giver”?

QTVOTD: Sons of the Most High…

…love your enemies, and do good, and lend, expecting nothing in return, and your reward will be great, and you will be sons of the Most High, for he is kind to the ungrateful and the evil. Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful. Luke 6:35-36[ESV]

Today was a day filled equally with stress, productivity, rest, and relaxation. I call that a good day. It ended with a trip to the Relaxation Station with Marianne for a 60 min massage. At $45 it is hit and miss but tonight for both of us it was a hit! All around a wonderful end to a good day.

This passage today felt very appropriate for not only me in this season but also for several dear sets of friends we have that are going through tough trials in their marriages or with their kiddos. The ending of the passage is the hardest to implement -> Be merciful, even as your Father is merciful.

Being merciful like the Lord has been merciful to me, is outrageous! He has given me so many chances, so many second starts, and even in the depth of my sin He sent His Son to die on a cross for me. When I look at how my internal dialog goes when I am faced with a situation where I have an opportunity to show mercy, I am mortified by my rigid alignment to my malformed justice. I find myself sometimes seething at someone’s choices or treatment of someone else…but I have been guilty of the SAME THING…but God has been merciful to me anyway.

When you look at all the things Jesus called out before the end of this passage, the call to be selfless is clear. Lord Jesus please lead me in my sanctification in this area of my husbandhood, fatherhood, and friendships.

QTVOTD: Do not Withhold, Bless Those Who Hate You…

I say to you who hear, Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you,  bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you.  To one who strikes you on the cheek, offer the other also, and from one who takes away your cloak do not withhold your tunic either.  Give to everyone who begs from you, and from one who takes away your goods do not demand them back.  And as you wish that others would do to you, do so to them. Luke 6:27-31 [ESV]

This is one of the hardest things for me to do. I am a regimented, right vs wrong, and very principled person. My tendency is to let a person get what they have coming to them. I am a heavy proponent of just law and order. Listing to this segment from the sermon from Jesus shows me how far I have come, yet at the same time reveals how much further I have to go.

At work I have really made good strides at loving on, praying for, and encouraging those I don’t get along with. Just recently (if you have been following me here), I had to eat crow by apologizing to a co-worker for getting angry with them. Since this episode, we have worked well together, and I have even been sending them prayers of mine over text for their mother who has brain cancer. I am so much more lenient with people who are crazy on the road. Thanks be to the Lord God Almighty, I am in much better control of my anger towards people who don’t like, abuse, or combat me.

However, I have so much more I can do. I need to open my hands more to those who are destitute or in need of help/assistance. More importantly I not only need to be listening to God’s direction toward these people….I need to be seeking them out. I want to increase my tolerance, grow my giving, and widen my forgiveness. Just as I have stated above, in moments where I extend grace to those who have come at me, I have found some of them seeking me out for advice and to work more closely with me on projects. To God be the Glory.

QTVOTD: Be Joyful When They Exclude You…

What blessings await you when people hate you and exclude you and mock you and curse you as evil because you follow the Son of Man. When that happens, be happy! Yes, leap for joy! For a great reward awaits you in heaven. And remember, their ancestors treated the ancient prophets that same way. Luke 6:22-23[NLT]

Wow, is the message appropriate for me in this stage in life and career. I have so many opportunities at work on a daily basis to represent and show my faith in how I present and handle myself. In the past several years, I have increasing confidence that the way I’ll be let go from my job is because people will learn that I am a devote follower of Jesus.

Our culture has developed a perception that Christians == homophobe, transphobe, and racist…which is the farthest from the truth for a genuine believer and follower of Jesus. When a person is living an obedient life to the teachings of Jesus, there is no greater lover of souls than those people.

I needed to be reminded today that living my life sold out to Jesus may impact my livelihood. When or if it does, I can walk with my head held high and with joy that I have been persecuted in His name.

QTVOTD: Blessed are the Poor…

And solemnly lifting up His eyes on His disciples, He said: Blessed (happy—with life-joy and satisfaction in God’s favor and salvation, apart from your outward condition—and to be envied) are you poor and lowly and afflicted (destitute of wealth, influence, position, and honor), for the kingdom of God is yours! Luke 6:20[AMP]

When I read this verse that comes out of my passage today, I find myself wanting what they (the poor) have. And what is it that they have? Well, the amplified version tells us -> “Destitute of wealth, influence, position, and honor“ Ok, none of us probably want that; but what does it mean that they have because they are in the situation that Jesus calls out here?

Quite simply, they don’t have earthly things, so they cling to spiritual things. I’m going to have to look up where, but there are other places in God’s word where it talks about the fact that when we seek to people please, the recognition that we get when we do (here on earth) is a receipt of the reward we are looking for (paid in full). So, like that reward, the security of money, influence, position, and honor fulfill a need that we… we are not looking for the spiritual comfort and peace that God can give us when we are destitute.

QUESTION: Am I living a life in my job security, worldly possessions, and comfort that have me leaning into the Lord like I need to? If I’m answering honestly, probably not. Do I need to lose all of these things in order to attain a closeness with the Lord that he desires for me? I don’t think so, but it means that I have to be prepared to lose everything, to give everything away if I don’t feel like I am getting as close to the Lord as I should, while having all of these things. This has kind of rocked me today… and I’m still processing.

QTVOTD: He Knows…

But He was aware all along of their thoughts, and He said to the man with the withered hand, Come and stand here in the midst. And he arose and stood there.
Then Jesus said to them, I ask you, is it lawful and right on the Sabbath to do good [so that someone derives advantage from it] or to do evil, to save a life [and make a soul safe] or to destroy it? Luke 6:8-9 [AMP]

As I was reading this passage today, the thing that jumped out to me the most was “He was aware all along of their thoughts.“ All too often I tend to focus too much on exhibiting the right behavior once I have thought about going in one direction or another. I forget that Jesus knows my thoughts. It’s my thoughts and my heart that Jesus is concerned with, not so much of my actions. In fact, the Bible says that obedience is better than sacrifice. Obedience starts in the heart.

The next verse concerns what Jesus had to say to these Pharisees, who were challenging Him about healing on the sabbath. “Is it lawful and right on the sabbath to do right or to do evil. To save a life or to destroy it?” Jesus already knew that in their heart they were leaning towards evil because they were already in fury debating within their own hearts/minds how to stop Him from doing what He was doing and saying.

What is super convicting is that my heart is often times just like the Pharisees’, but in the normal walk, situations, and circumstances of my life. Whether it’s how I’m feeling towards a coworker who is challenging me on a direction we should go, or that person who cut me off on the freeway, or the annoyance that I have with those in our world who are pushing social agendas that are against the word of God. It’s that evil condition in my heart that I feel so convicted by when I read my quiet time today. Lord God forgive me for the evil that is deep inside me. Help me in my sanctification to be more like You; to overcome and have victory over this aspect of my flesh.

QTVOTD: A Hint from Jesus on Fasting…

And Jesus said to them, "Can you make the wedding guests fast as long as the bridegroom is with them?
  But the days will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them; and then they will fast in those days." Luke 5:34-35 [AMP]

Have you ever fasted? If so, why did you do it? What is it about fasting that petitions God to act? I have fasted many times in my Christian walk and there are several reasons why you might do it. One of them is given right here. Jesus is pretty much telling the Pharisees that challenged Him, that fasting serves a purpose in the absence of the physical presence of Jesus. Jesus tells them that when He is taken from them (in this case ascended into Heaven) that they will fast then. Quite simply, in this instance, fasting is appropriate preparation for a special imparting of the Spirit.

When I fast, I am depraving myself of sustenance that makes me hungry; when I feel a hunger pang, I dive into prayer for the thing I am fasting for. Usually, it’s over a decision where I am beseeching the Lord for His wisdom and maybe even a confidence in the Spirit that I am moving in the right direction. Other times I am fasting in prayer for someone and asking for an imparting of the Spirit in their circumstance. Normally I fast from sundown to sundown and relegate myself to liquids only (Coffee, Tea, or Water).

Fasting is powerful and it is important to fast in private (as to not be tempted to boast). Additionally, fasting should cause joy and anticipation for what God is already doing to answer your prayers…no moping around because you are hungry. Using the hunger pangs as a instigator of prayer is super effective. If you have a big decision to make in your family, our you have someone in your life group who is going through a struggle and they need wisdom…think about fasting in those circumstances.

When we are caught up to Heaven, fasting will no longer be necessary for we will be united with the Bridegroom and fasting will once again lose its necessity.

QTVOTD: Without Hesitation…

Today was the first day back to work after a wonderful 4 days off. Things are super busy at work and it could be argued that I could not afford to take time off…but I did. One thing that made it easier was a blessing from God. I have a very large and involved contractual document I needed to turn into the Government by 24 MAY 2023. The morning I took off from work (THURS) I asked my counterparts on the government team whether they would allow me to extend the submission date a week and THEY AGREED! There is good reason from them to as they just had a new person start that is coming up to speed and it will provide he and I more time to align on some of the direction before submitting. I was soooo thankful and I know it was the Lord’s mercy and gift to allow me to focus on my wife and our church at the Pastor/Elder Retreat I attended with her.

And after this, Jesus went out and looked [attentively] at a tax collector named Levi sitting at the tax office; and He said to him, Join Me as a disciple and side with My party and accompany Me.  And he forsook everything and got up and followed Him [becoming His disciple and siding with His party].  Luke 5:27-28 [AMP]

I remember watching The Chosen and the writer’s depiction of Levi (Matthew) who they portrayed as a brainiac math wizard who had some ADHD/Autism aspects about him. They showed Levi having a lot more watching of Jesus and being familiar with Him than what I can find in God’s Word…however, I could totally see how Levi might have had some knowledge of Jesus before He called him to follow.

Under contract with either the tetrarch or more local officials, Galilee-based tax collectors collected sales taxes, real-estate taxes, and toll taxes imposed along travelling routes between cities. It was a role that lent itself all too well to extortionary practices. Given the high degree of contact between tax collectors and Gentiles in this profession, the stricter Jewish sects would have considered tax collectors inherently unclean, much like the man with leprosy we read about yesterday. Like the fisherman called in 5:11, Levi is led to leave everything behind and ‘follow Him’. For Luke, following Jesus means leaving everything behind, not for the sake of duty or for the sake of sacrifice itself, but simply because Jesus says, “Follow Me”.

So then, any of you who does not forsake (renounce, surrender claim to, give up, say good-bye to) all that he has cannot be My disciple.

Luke 14:33 [AMP]

Like what was said above, it would not be a trivial thing for Levi to just leave his post; being assigned to a local official would come with some lose ends as he just stepped away. In the ‘The Chosen’, they show that Levi has a centurion assigned to him; but more than likely the soldier was assigned to guard the money and keep an eye on the tax collector and maybe even being his ‘heavy’ in needed circumstances.

Application:

Levi (Matthew) had no hesitation in dropping everything and following Jesus…even when it meant likely earthly ramifications. Levi didn’t care about those things in the moment. Do I have this loose of a grasp of my worldly possessions, job, or standard of living? As a person who has been blessed with a measure more than most, I must constantly be asking myself whether I am doing everything I can to be a conduit for God’s Kingdom building work? I need to be listening for the voice of God in my time in prayer and in His word everyday if I am indeed ‘Following Him’. Clinging close to the Spirit within me and tuning my ear to the sound of the Shepherd is the only way to be sure that I am standing, walking, or even running the narrow road of obedience.

QTVOTD: Jesus Reinforces His Identity…

And when He saw [their confidence in Him, springing from] their faith, He said, Man, your sins are forgiven you!   And the scribes and the Pharisees began to reason and question and argue, saying, Who is this [Man] Who speaks blasphemies? Who can forgive sins but God alone?  But Jesus, knowing their thoughts and questionings, answered them, Why do you question in your hearts?
 Which is easier: to say, Your sins are forgiven you, or to say, Arise and walk [about]?  But that you may know that the Son of Man has the [power of] authority and right on earth to forgive sins, He said to the paralyzed man, I say to you, arise, pick up your litter (stretcher), and go to your own house! Luke 5:20-24 [AMP]

Feels like I have been away from my posting for longer than just 3 days. I am happy to be back sharing my time with the Lord in this form but my time away with the elders, pastors, and their wives at the CHCC Pastor/Elder retreat was amazing. We had Drs Nicholas and Vanesa Ellen with us to encourage and admonish us. It was a special time.

In my reading today I focused on the well-known story of Jesus healing the paralytic who was lowered down through the roof and set right in front of Jesus as He taught those there. There were many Pharisees and Teachers of the Law that were in attendance, who had come from all over to hear this Man who was having a meteoric rise in His visibility and following. As you likely remember, this paralyzed man had a set of friends who knew Jesus could heal the sick (as He had been doing this for the last several days/weeks and news had traveled). They were so bent on getting their friend in front of Jesus, that that took him up to the roof (no small feat), broke through the thatched roof and then lowered their friend down right in front of where Jesus was sitting.

Luke does not tell us anything about the paralyzed man and his belief, but Jesus addressed this man’s condition because of the faith of his friends. The condition Jesus addresses is not what we might think initially…He said “Friend, your sins are forgiven.” This immediately set off the Teachers of the Law and Pharisees that were in attendance. For them, Jesus’ assertion constitutes a blasphemous usurpation of authority, since declarations of forgiveness could only appropriately be made by either Yahweh (Exod. 34:7; Ps. 103:12) or Yahweh’s appointed agent. On the face of it, the teachers’ reaction is not entirely unreasonable, especially since Scripture clearly indicates that sin forgiveness is a strictly divine action. But Jesus then reinforces HIs identity by healing the paralytic, telling him to “Get up, pick up your mat, and go home!”. There must have been astonishment from everyone that was there. He is now trying to get their attention.

Application:

This repetition is one of the things I notice in my own walk when God is trying to get my attention. I have learned to stop in my tracks when I see this happening, and respond with obedience on what I feel Him calling me to do. My study of Romans 8 and Spiritual Warfare was one of these.