We are having a wonderful winter storm. The wind is blowing the snow against the windows and making groaning sounds in the trees. We knew it was coming. For days the weather people were telling us almost to the minute when it would arrive. So yesterday afternoon the supermarkets were packed with people stocking up on milk and bread. One interviewed lady said she stood in the checkout lane for over 40 minutes. I don’t understand. First of all, the storm will be gone tomorrow and the roads will be plowed. Are cupboards so bare people can’t live until tomorrow morning? When they shop do they only get enough for one day? Secondly, they have known about this for five days.
I’m reminded of Noah’s ark. No one but Noah and his immediate family were saved. But people had 120 years to show up. Instead they pounded on the door when it started to rain. In Matthew 24 Jesus speaks of a time of trouble climaxing in His second coming. If the human pattern continues that means millions of people will try at the last moment to get ready. When we consider how important this is, why do we wait? Maybe we want to see more of the signs spoken of by Jesus. But considering our hearts can stop at any second we might not be around to see the signs of the end. We might not make it to the end of today.
This is a bit frightening and the last thing I want to do is to scare someone into accepting Jesus. It is so much better to come to Him by responding to His wooing call of love. But the truth is He loves us so much He will take us for any reason. Scary or not He wants us.
Love Rarely Makes Sense
When my older son was three we parked by a meter. I reached into my pocket for a dime but inadvertently dropped it and watched it fall into a storm drain. It wasn’t very deep and I could see the dime. I thought I could pick up the drain cover and lower my son in to pick up my shiny dime. But it looked very dirty and who knew what else was down there. There was no way I would lower my son into a sewer for any amount of money.
But that is exactly what God did with His Son. He lowered Him into this sewer of sin not with a chance He would be harmed, but with the sure knowledge the rats would attack and kill Him. There is no way He would have done that for any amount of silver or gold. God owns all the silver and gold in the universe. He did it for something far more precious – YOU. You, the apple of His eye, are worth every pain, every lash of the whip, each nail, each thorn, each slap and each mocking insult.
I cannot begin to think I am worth that. Sorry, but I cannot think you are worth that. But God’s love is so vast and so broad and so much deeper than I can imagine. If He tells me I am worth it. If He tells me you are worth it. I will take Him at His word and believe His promise that He will return to take us to our eternal home. When we first enter His throne room and see the splendid glory of Jesus we will thrill to think He left that for earth and the cross. How can it be? It doesn’t make sense. But then love rarely does.
The Wonderful Advantage
The current world record for the fastest time running and winning a marathon is 2 hours and 2 minutes and 57 seconds. The four men who last broke the marathon record were wearing Adidas shoes. However, Nike has just unveiled a new shoe designed to aid runners in breaking the two hour barrier. The question has arisen, “Will these new shoes give a runner an unfair advantage?”
I certainly wouldn’t know, but I know I love having an advantage when facing any challenge. Diligently studying before a major exam is definitely an advantage over a casual student. Having a GPS in one’s pocket when in a forest is surely an advantage over someone wandering in circles. Here is my favorite. “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me.” Galatians 2:20.
When we are determined to be more Christ-like, when we are struggling with a major temptation, when we long for victory over self, when we want to show God how grateful we are for the gift of salvation, when we want to be a better person and aren’t doing so well, – then it’s time to take advantage of the advantage offered us. Real victory happens when Jesus lives in us. The victory that follows isn’t because we are so determined, disciplined and stoic; it’s because we have an advantage. Is it an unfair advantage? Not in the least. Jesus earned the right to live within us by His sacrifice on the cross. He waits for an invitation. He said, “I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in.” Revelation 3:20. Now that’s what I call having a wonderful advantage.
“Daddy Watch Me”
When my older son was very small he loved collecting stamps. He, literally, spent hours sorting and resorting by changing categories. My wife’s father also had a significant collection, especially concentrating on the stamps of the Caribbean and Central America. One year for Christmas he gave them to my son. It was a huge box with thousands of stamps. My son never played with his stamps again. It was no longer the fruit of his efforts it was the fruit of his grandfather’s.
When we are small we often say to our parents, “Let me.” We want to do it. There is little joy in someone doing it for us. We love to master something and then say, “Daddy, watch me.” Perhaps this is part of the reason most religions of the world are focused on works. And Christianity, the only religion not relying on works, is often polluted by manmade rules of don’t eat this or drink that. We are instructed to make some manner of atonement to show our sorrow for our sins.
Paul addressed this to the church of Colossi. It was obvious someone was perverting the pure Gospel Paul had taught and so Paul wrote, “Therefore do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.”
Contrary to our desire to do it ourselves, salvation is not a do it yourself project. It is the one thing, the most valuable thing, we cannot do ourselves. We must acknowledge our inability and let Jesus do it for us.
The Road Most Taken
Robert Frost’s famous poem The Road Not Taken ends with the classic lines, “Two roads diverged in a wood, and I took the one less traveled by and that has made all the difference.” I cannot tell how many times through the years I have heard people reference this passage to themselves. I have never heard anyone say they took the road most traveled. We love ourselves and think we are very unique from all others. And while that is true in a limited sense but the larger truth is we are all alike. If this were not true there could not be medical science. We need to be like each other so doctors can diagnose our problems because we have symptoms that digress from the norm. Without norms it would be impossible to help the ill.
The same is true psychologically. Without norms we couldn’t know when and how someone was maladjusted and what to do to help them. It is an extremely rare person who does not automatically use Freud’s ego-defense mechanisms. But it seems that our love for ourselves deceives us into thinking we are outliers several standard deviations above the norm. We are the protagonist of our life story and therefore we think we took the road less traveled. It blinds us to the reality of the millions of others crowding the same road as we. Yes – it is true each of us is a unique one of a kind being and the irony is that very uniqueness is what makes us the same as others.
When God made us He said, “Let us make man in our image.” Man was a distinctly new creature different from angels and other heavenly beings described in the book of Revelation. We must accept the gift of eternal life so we can meet those others. It will be an eternity of discovery.
Friendly’s
It’s 7:00 PM and I haven’t eaten for several hours. I’m working on getting my best suit to fit again. The network evening news is finished and before I can find the remote I am under attack by Friendly’s restaurant. Right there in front of me in glorious hi-definition color are three scrumptious slices of French toast layered in whipped cream. Heaps of bright red strawberries dripping with vivid red syrup slowly dripping down the side of the toast are sensually placed in front of me. Where is this company’s moral code? Have they no sense of honor? Can I not be safe in the sanctuary of my own home without being enticed beyond my mortal strength? I am reacting like one of Pavlov’s dogs.
I will be the master of my own destiny. The spirit is willing but the flesh is so weak. Psalm 1:1 is playing itself out. I am sitting in the seat of the hungry and I will not yield. Not only will I not go to Friendly’s (only 2 miles away) I will not go to my fridge and stare inside. There is some fantastic left-over coleslaw and I shall not look. Well, maybe just a taste. And there it is – “Just a taste.” One bite leads to a second bite and the game is over and I have lost.
One would think my advanced years would have diminished my appetite. Not so. I don’t want to be the master of self for that reason. I want to with Paul, “offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship.” But I can’t. And so I return to the only solution possible – rely on the inner working of the Holy Spirit. It’s the only way.
Luther and Romans
Five hundred and one years ago Martin Luther, then a professor at Wittenberg, began to explain to his students Paul’s letter to the Romans. It was Romans 1:17 that ignited Luther’s quest to reform Christianity, “For in the gospel the righteousness of God is revealed–a righteousness that is by faith from first to last, just as it is written: ‘The righteous will live by faith.’” Luther’s commentary on Romans was the fruit of those lectures.
He begins his introduction with the following challenge. “This Epistle is really the chief part of the New Testament and the very purest Gospel, and is worthy not only that every Christian should know it word for word, by heart, but occupy himself with it every day, as the daily bread of the soul. It can never be read or pondered too much, and the more it is dealt with the more precious it becomes, and the better it tastes.”
At times I fear we are all a bit like Peter, who declared that Paul could be quite difficult to understand. See II Peter 3:16. For those of us who are not as brilliant as Paul, we might want to begin by concentrating on some of the more familiar passages in Romans and then expand out from them. The end of chapter 8 is a great passage. “No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
I know that is a very familiar text so that makes it a great place to start. That’s good pedagogy.
God and David
I have to confess that sometimes David fills me with frustration. I read Psalm 17 and wonder if this man lived in denial. Please note. “Hear me, LORD, my plea is just; listen to my cry. Hear my prayer— it does not rise from deceitful lips. Let my vindication come from you; may your eyes see what is right. Though you probe my heart, though you examine me at night and test me, you will find that I have planned no evil; my mouth has not transgressed. Though people tried to bribe me, I have kept myself from the ways of the violent through what your lips have commanded. My steps have held to your paths; my feet have not stumbled.”
He must have had a selective memory. What about the lies he told to Achish when he was robbing surrounding cities and killing everyone so they couldn’t tell on him? See I Samuel 27. In Psalm 51 he is repenting for the sin of having Uriah the Hittite, killed to cover up his affair with Uriah’s wife. In his confession he says, “I know my wrong-doing, and my sin is always in front of me. I have sinned against You, and You only. I have done what is sinful in Your eyes.” Really? “You only.” What about Uriah? Didn’t he sin against him?
What was he thinking? We cannot lie to God. He knows everything about us. Psalm 17 doesn’t say as much about David as it does about God. God is gracious. God is merciful. God is wonderful to tolerate us. If you are ever discouraged about your sinful past, just remember God’s care for David and I promise you, you are going to be taken care of. God doesn’t play favorites. You have it made.
Hymns as Scripture
It is fascinating that we consider the Psalms to be Scripture. The Psalms were authored by quite an assembly of people. Normally we think of David, but there was a nameless afflicted man (102), Moses (90), Ethan (89), the Sons of Korah (several), someone named Asaph (83) and others. Most of Psalms were written for use by musical groups. They were a Hebrew hymnbook.
I was thinking about this while browsing through a modern hymnbook. Once again there is quite a variety of writers from the Wesley brothers to Martin Luther and Fanny Crosby. How many centuries have to pass before they will be looked upon as inspired enough to be Scripture? Some of them have incredibly inspiring theology. My Hope Is Built on Nothing Less by Edward Mote is excellent. “My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus’ blood and righteousness; I dare not trust the sweetest frame, But wholly lean on Jesus name. On Christ the solid Rock, I stand; All other ground is sinking sand.”
Some of the more familiar hymns become such a part of our thinking we often sing them without thinking about the words. Our brain goes into automatic drive and the words mindlessly pop out of our mouths. I have discovered it is a real blessing to sometimes not sing the hymn but just read the words. Our brains are forced to use a different area other than the music area. Edward Mote’s hymn could remind us that salvation is only possible via the blood and righteousness of Jesus. We would be reminded not to think so highly of ourselves and instead be “Clad in His righteousness alone, Faultless to stand before the throne.”
The Always Answered Prayer
For Christmas my son gave us an Amazon Echo with light bulbs for the kitchen. We have been able to turn on the kitchen lights with a voice command. It has been very cool. But tonight it stopped working. The Echo tells me there is no connection. I am into almost two hours of frustration and still don’t have it. In the setup process I need user names and passwords.
I am so glad prayer doesn’t work this way. The Echo hears me and God hears me. The Echo says I’m not connected and God never ever says such a thing. We are always connected and we don’t need a password or a user name. He not only knows our names he knows how many hairs are growing out of our ears. One of my favorite quotations from a book entitled Desire of Ages (a biography of Jesus) is found on page 335. Jesus was sleeping in the bow of a fishing boat when a horrendous storm overwhelmed the sailor skills of the disciples. Remembering that He was with them they cried out above the roar of the storm, “Lord, save us: we perish.” Now comes the really good sentence. “Never did a soul utter that cry unheeded.”
That is overwhelming to me because of the word “never”. There is no ritualized language, no addressing Him by some secret name, no password or secret handshake. All that is needed is our fervent need. The faintest prayer of the weakest soul receives an immediate audience in the hallowed halls of heaven. We might not get an immediate physical rescue on earth but we can be guaranteed the best answer ever. There will be an instant forgiveness of sin and we will step from death to eternal life. See John 5:24. It doesn’t get any better than that.