Flesh is Weak

www.bible.com/1713/mat.26.41.csb

Some of the strongest people I’ve ever met were dying. Her name was Virginia. She taught Sunday School at the church I pastored many years ago. She was a little lady who had fought many battles. I can still see her face. And I will be looking for her when I get to Heaven. While short in stature, she had great faith. She was kind and generous. I wish I’d spent more time talking to her. She and her husband attended the church, and she had been getting progressively more ill. After a long time of this, she finally went to the hospital for a bowel blockage. As we stood in her room before her surgery, I prayed with her. We prayed for her healing and quick recovery, and she prayed right along with us. After the prayer was over, we went to the waiting room to wait out what was going to be  a routine surgery.

A while later, one of the surgeons came out to us tell us how things were going. To our shock, they were not going well. She wasn’t going to survive surgery. When they opened her up he explained, they found the bowel blockage, and it was advanced cancer.

How could any of us had known that the last words we spoke to her were the words of prayer and encouragement at her bedside? How could we have known?

A few days later, I preached her funeral. It was the only funeral I’ve ever preached where I can honestly say we had live birds. I kid you not. I don’t really remember what I said that day, but I remember the birds. I remember where the cemetery is. I remember it was a sunny day. And from time to time, I remember her life and her faith.

Our flesh is weak and prone to failure. But God is good. And in Him we find our strength. If you find that your flesh is weak, take heart. God is strong, and He will lend freely all that you need. May you have a blessed day today. Be strong in the Lord.

Selah

www.bible.com/1713/psa.24.10.csb

You will see this word occasionally in the Psalms. I have heard it described variously as a pause, a dramatic interlude, or a guitar solo. I think it works best as a moment, a pause to reflect on what was just said. These are some pretty weighty words.

Any king of any age would crave this kind of laud and honor. To be the King of glory. Woah. All would wish to a glorious kings, but to be the King of glory, now that’s something else. But few would pursue the road that would take them to this kingdom. As pictured above, that road goes through the cross.

Jesus is the King of glory, the Lord of armies. Both before and after the cross He could command 12 legions of angels, the fiercest warriors you could ever hope to face. They make SEALs look amatuerish. One angel can kill over 100,000 by himself in one night. 12 legions, well, I’ll let you use your imagination.

On the one hand we would be right to experience fear from this Lord of hosts. He is a fearsome character, and One from whose throne we receive judgment. We ought to fear Him and respect that power and authority above all others. He is the one who commands this virus. He commands life and death. We are subject to Him always, alive or dead.

But this same Lord also came to live among us, to teach us a path of love, and demonstrate that love for us, His love for us, by His death on the cross. And He demonstrates His love by rising from the grave in resurrection. This is love. As powerful and fearsome His power, so is His love. And those 12 legions don’t stand against us, but to defend us from the hordes of Hell. We are His chosen, His brethren and His sisters. We are His if we choose His life over death.

As He rode into town 2000 years ago, He rode in to accolades and applause. Hosanna to the King, the Son of David! Hosanna to the King. May He be Your King today.

God, help me rise in faith to Your Kingdom. May I respond in faith to Your command, that I may be Yours. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

The King is Coming

www.bible.com/1713/isa.40.4-5.csb

As Isaiah describes for us the leveling of ground, he is referring to an old custom of preparing the way for a king to come into a city or village. The citizens would prepare the way by making the path or road more level. In this they show their devotion to their long so that he doesn’t have a bumpy ride on his way to town. Isaiah then bumps the image up a bit, instead of filling up potholes, they are filling up valleys. Instead of leveling dirt mounds, they are leveling mountains. Why? Because someone greater than any king is coming. This is the Lord!

Such a One arrived in Jerusalem 2000 years ago. He rode into town riding an donkey’s colt that had never been ridden before. People laid down their palm branches and their clothes before the colt, reducing the dust and improving the ride. The mountains and valleys were leveled in the heart, or they would have been, since many of the same voice shouting Hosanna! Also shouted Crucify Him! Just a few days later. Ironically the Romans filed in the valleys so to speak just a few years later in AD 72-3 when they built a ramp up to Masada, the last hold-out of Jewish revolutionaries who defied the authority of Caesar (remember, “we have no King but Caesar!”?) .

When looking at this verse, what kinds of things stand in the way between you and the Lord? What mountains of life’s pleasures and idolatries need to be leveled before you can see Him clearly? What valleys of despair and brokenness need to be filled with peace and God’s love before He can cross them to come to you?

Lord, help is clear the road for Your presence in us. There is a time coming when we will meet You face to face. Should there be anything in our lives that prevents us from seeing You clearly, may we gradually move the earth that makes Your path easier. Thank You Lord for loving me enough to make Your way into me. In Jesus’ Name, Amen.

What Have You Heard?

www.bible.com/1713/2sa.7.22.csb

What have you heard about the God we serve? This text comes from David’s prayer in 2 Samuel 7, a prayer that sounds apologetic in a way. David, as a King of Israel, knows his place in the grand scheme of things. He knows that God sits over Him in authority, and David, for all his faults, certainly rules Israel with this knowledge. It is something that I wish our current rulers had a notion of.

I think we have seen more self-awareness out of this president than we have had for some time. Whether it is piety or holiness is still subject to judgment. He certainly acts like someone who is seeking counsel from the Lord, as he is consulting men and women of faith. He invoked the name of God that to my ears doesn’t sound like pandering. But I also hear in his voice the someone who is still struggling with faith, but that’s just me.

No the rulers I am talking about reside in Congress. And while they are not rulers per se, they certainly believe they hold sway over the republic and live like kings. I would pray for some humility on the part of our representatives and senators. I would pray that the fear of God fall upon them as they construct their legislation and give place to God in their meetings. I know some do, for its impossible to make general statements like this without exceptions. But as I watch some legislators, it feels to me that God is only superficial, and only cited to pander to those who don’t pay attention.

Our Republic stands or falls on our faithfulness to God. This current epidemic is a reminder of this statement. And for many, their first reaction is to turn to science and medicine. If science is our religion of choice for our origin stories, it is only fitting. But science is not meeting this thing head-on. Science is making a poor match, as it has yet to discover the miracle cure people are seeking. It will take time, they say. Listen, science, properly so-called, is a human process. We cannot put our faith in science because it is merely a servant of man, not its master. When it didn’t matter, it was easy to ask science for the reason why we are here, and we got a story about evolution. But now when we turn to science to save our collective lives, science moves slowly. It may eventually get there, but it is also just as likely that the crisis will pass by then. I work in healthcare. I value science and medicine and its helpful work in healing. but I also know we didn’t come from science. We have a Maker and a Creator who knows our every cellular cluster, our every neuron, as well as every neutron star. If we are to receive healing, we must first stop at the door of the Creator. If the cure is to come from science, know first that it came from God. For every good and perfect gift is from above. Every medicine we possess came about through accident and experiment. Penicillin, the first antibiotic, came about because someone saw that bacteria didn’t grow near to mold. Was that an accidental discovery? Yes, but one that has saved countless lives. Was that God’s work? I believe so. I have no doubt many had seen the very thing, but it took the right mind in the right frame of mind to know what he was seeing at that moment to pursue it as the first antibiotic.

We must be in the right frame of mind to see what’s going on around us. That frame of mind begins with putting our mind in the service of the Master. Just as David did all those years ago as a King, so we need to do in our everyday lives.

Lord, guide me today in my walk. Guide me in humility to see the things I need to see, to be able to know the things I need to know that I may help others. Thank You Lord for being the King of renown, the One others have heard of, and who Name goes out into all the world. Lord grant me insight so that if I may be of value in this crisis, I may be prepared for my help when needed. Thank You, Lord, for You rule above all. In Your Name, we pray, Amen.

April Fool

www.bible.com/1713/1co.3.18.csb

Well, you learn something new every day, don’t you? It seems that during this Corona Virus outbreak, the rules change every day, what we can do, what we can’t do. There used to be a world we could count on, a world that was reasonably stable and in which the rules we all play by were well known. Now it changes every hour. Enough to cause a little stress? You bet.

April first is usually a day when I might have stressed about a prank, or to take everything with a grain of salt, because there are some elaborate pranksters out there. But today, I don’t think the pranksters can really do any worse than what has already been done. They have to stay home anyway.

Paul counsels foolishness for us this morning. He says we need to become fools to become wise. One command that occurs throughout the New Testament is “Be not deceived”, as if there is a danger that Christians could become deceived. I believe there is. which is why Paul counsels us in this way. Don’t consider yourself wise, or “too smart for that.” There are many Christian ministers and scholars who have gone down a rabbit hole only to repent later in life for their folly. As Christians, we are a peculiar people, but some take it a bit too far, whether its banning musical instruments, or banning the eating of certain foods, never wearing makeup, or women never wearing pants or cutting their hair. In every Christian denomination, you can find something odd, like the handling of snakes, that just seems foolish. More often than not, it is the taking of one verse out of context, or exaggerating the importance of a single verse over all others.

But what we find is that such exclusionary rules tend against love and tend toward judgment. I have found members in many of these sects to be unloving and judgmental. If you don’t abide by their standards of holiness, you are not welcome. You have to change your life to meet their criteria. My son explained it this way just last night. There is a difference between piety and holiness. Piety is an outward show of one’s devotion to a particular religion. Piety is showing up for church every Sunday, with or without a social distancing order, or despite of one. Piety is proclaiming you are more righteous than others because you do something others do not do, like eating only vegetables or never wearing fur. Piety goes forth and declares how holy it is. But not holiness.

Holiness may do all of those things, but it doesn’t declare them. You have to look for holiness because it will not announce itself. Holiness will attend services not to show that it can, but because it is devoted to the One who saved him from sin. Holiness looks above, not to its peers. Holiness will fast and will pray, but you may never know it.

So I have seen many pious people, looking down their nose at others who don’t practice the way they do, but not many holy, because the holy never announce themselves. The holy carry on with their faithful practice, not looking for separation, but that they might attract others with their quietness, simplicity, and genuineness.

So lest anyone think they are wise because they practice a particular thing, worship God in a particular way, or defy a social distancing order, let them consider themselves fools before God. Let us examine ourselves to see if our way is right. Am I doing this particular thing because I think it makes me look religious, or because it pleases God? Do I worship God in this way because I’m right and everyone else is wrong, or I’m wrong and need to be right with God? Maybe there is room enough for us all to be fools today.

Heavenly Father, help me unlearn those things which have made me look down my nose at my brothers and sisters. Help me see my own practices and pieties for what they are: pride. Help me to see Your path of holiness. Call me in quietness and joy. Call to me from Your Word and Your work. In this time of social isolation, quiet the voices that call me away from You. Help me to listen with better ears. For Your judgment alone matters in my life, not what others think of me. Thank You Lord for calling me Yours and calling me after the name of Your Son, Christ Jesus. In His Name I Pray, Amen.

Before I finish, I was looking for the origins of April Fools’ Day and found this snippet below from the following website. Have you ever heard of these “biblical” origins for April Fools’ Day?

https://www.timeanddate.com/holidays/world/april-fools-day

Biblical theories

Another belief on the April Fool’s Day origin points to the biblical character Noah as the first “April Fool”. It is said that on April 1, he mistakenly sent the dove out to find dry land before the waters subsided.

A second story tells that the day commemorates when Jesus was sent from Pontius Pilate to Herod and back again. “Sending a man from Pilate to Herod”, is an old term for sending someone on a fool’s errand.

New Project Coming Available

My son Daniel and I seem to have some free time on our hands, so we are working on a audio New Testament based on Henry T. Anderson’s translation of 1866. This may not be a familiar name to you, but it has special meaning to me as Anderson was a Kentucky scholar and preacher in the Restoration Movement. So far, I have a page up introducing the project and Daniel’s first recording of Philemon. I encourage you to take a look and a listen. Thanks!

Henry T. Anderson’s New Testament

Blessed Be the Lord!

www.bible.com/1713/psa.68.19.csb

Got something to live for today? I certainly hope so. Today is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it. For the Lord God has saved us from our sins and has not treated us as our sins deserve. He has sent His own blessed Son to die in our place, and though dead, did not stay in the grave, but rose on the third day into newness of life, inviting all of us away from the precipice of death to join Him, standing on His faithful and secure promises. Blessed be the Name of the Lord!

Now, if that doesn’t get your spiritual fires sparked, you need to go back and read it. 🙂

Love you all and stay safe today. If God is working some good through this viral pandemic, then we can be safely assured He knows what He is doing. God bless you all on this Monday.

Good Shepherd

www.bible.com/1713/jhn.10.11.csb

Where there is a shepherd, there are probably sheep. Sheep as you might have guessed are animals. Strangely they are some of God’s creatures which seem to have been made specifically for man. As early as Genesis 4 Abel is pictured as being a tender of sheep, so this is something that men have been doing essentially since the beginning. As such, sheep have been used as illustration to great extent throughout history. Even people who have not grown up around sheep probably know what a sheep is. “Mary had a little lamb” is something we pick up from early childhood. Christianity has been no small help to this idea, since Jesus Himself is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. Jesus is the “Good Shepherd” and we have been taught even as kids that “the Lord is my Shepherd.”

If Jesus is the good Shepherd, who or what does He shepherd? Is there some divine flock of sheep out there that Jesus keeps busy with? More than you know. Since Jesus is the Shepherd, there must be sheep. And we are it. If sheep have needed man from the beginning for their survival, then man has needed God and His Son Christ Jesus from the beginning too. Just as sheep cannot survive in the wild physical nature, so man will not survive the wild landscape of the spirit without Jesus. We need His leadership, direction and sometimes prompting to go where we need to go. The Bible does not err when Isaiah says that “we like sheep have gone astray.”

Lord Jesus, thank you for being my Shepherd. Thank you for leading me beside still waters and restoring my soul. I pray during this time that you would keep my heart in peace when there is turmoil and disruption around me. I need Your peace. I need Your absolute stability in my life, for it is the only thing that does not change from day to day. Thank you Jesus. Amen.