Archive for Devotional

Are You God or Not?

When John, while imprisoned, heard of the works of Christ, he sent word by his disciples and said to Him, “Are You the Expected One, or shall we look for someone else?” 

Jesus answered and said to them, “Go and report to John what you hear and see: the blind receive sight and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them. And blessed is he who does not take offense at Me.” (Matthew 11:2-6, NASB)

I read this passage of scripture and identify with John the Baptist. Often I’ve sat imprisoned by need, wondering if You were going to be the Savior I needed right then.

Jesus, You surprise us at times. You do not work as we expect or as we hope. You perplex and disturb us.

But when we stand back and watch what You do, it is always love. It is always redemption and healing and restoration.

Thank You, Lord. Help us to keep trusting You through our ignorance and pain.

Always Working for Good

We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him.
(Romans 8:28, NIV)

I’ve come through a long ordeal.
The result: I feel I’ve been wronged.
Anger wants to boil up inside me.

But, Lord, I look to You.
I accept this decision as from Your hand,
as Your perfect and merciful will for me.
I thank You for the wisdom and love that
even now is using this pain for my good.

And that person, Lord—
I accept them as Your servant.
If they were mistaken or insensitive,
I forgive them.

Most of all, help me think and act as Your servant,
trusting You,
rejoicing in You.
Anger and self-protection are burdens too heavy to bear.
I cannot serve You and continue to carry them.
I give them to You.

Thank You, Lord! You are always good!

All the Life of God

John 3:22-36

Near the end of the ministry of John the Baptist, the spotlight that had been on him was shifting to Jesus Christ. John accepted his fading role joyfully:

“He must increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30, NASB).

Earlier John had introduced Jesus as “The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29, NASB) and “The One who baptizes in the Holy Spirit” (John 1:33, NASB)

Now John gives us three more snapshots of the Messiah, raising our eyes to show us all that Christ will be for God’s people:

Jesus is the Bridegroom.
He came to bring about a joyful, loving, eternal union
between God and His people.

Jesus is from heaven,
from the unseen Father.
He came to show us wonderful realities
that we cannot know or experience any other way.

Jesus is the fullness of God.
He speaks and lives all the truth about God.
If we simply trust Him,
all the life of God is ours forever.

A Musician’s Prayer

“Speak, for Your servant is listening.”
(1 Samuel 3:10, NASB)

Father, when I am asked to serve,
I will be willing.
When I am not asked,
I will accept it joyfully
as Your decision, my Lord.

You are always good,
and I am simply Your servant.
I will not crave a place of service
You have given to another.

Thank you for Your generous and wise love.

Faith: The Greatest Bargain in the Universe

I don’t normally post to this blog on Saturday. But all my blog entries are scheduled for the coming months, and I just had to share this little extra with you.

In preparation for a project I’m working on, I went through all the New Testament passages on faith. Wow—what a picture! What an incredible list of promises God makes to those who simply trust Him! And there are probably some I missed.

To help me digest it all, I quickly compiled the following list of blessings promised to those who trust God. As I got into it, I knew I just had to share it with you!

It may be too much to digest in one sitting. If so, come back to it and reflect on it a little at a time:

As we believe God,
as we believe that He is and that He rewards those who seek Him,
as we believe that Jesus is His Son and that God raised Him from the dead,
as we unite God’s word with faith,
as we entrust ourselves to Him:

  • We have eternal life: God’s boundless, timeless, endless life, here and now and forever. (numerous references)
  • We enter into God’s deep and endless rest. (Hebrews 4:3)
  • We can draw near to our Father God in full confidence. (Hebrews 10:22)
  • We are in the hands of the Great Healer. (numerous references)
  • We are children of God. (John 1:12 et al)
  • We will never hunger or thirst. (John 6:35-36)
  • We have the living water of the Spirit flowing within us. (John 7:38-39)
  • We know the truth, and the truth sets us free. (John 8:30-32)
  • We do the works of Christ and together, we do even greater works than He did. (John 14:10-12)
  • We will not be judged by Him. (numerous references)
  • We can move mountains (Matthew 17:20). All things are possible to us (Mark 9:33 et al).
  • All we have is His and thus is the common property of His people. (Acts 4:32 et al)
  • We are justified—declared by God to be completely innocent. (numerous references)
  • We have God’s own righteousness. (numerous references)
  • God cleanses our hearts. (Acts 15:9)
  • God enables us to obey Him. (Romans 1:5; 16:26)
  • He fills us with all joy and peace, and we abound in hope. (Romans 15:13)
  • We are sealed in Christ—marked as God’s very own and put under His protection. This sealing is by the Holy Spirit, who is our downpayment on our full redemption to come. (Ephesians 1:13-14)
  • The power of God that raised Christ from the dead is at work in us. (Ephesians 1:18-20)
  • We have been granted the great privilege of suffering for Christ’s sake. (Philippians 1:29)
  • The all-creating, all-powerful Word of God is doing its work within us. (1 Thessalonians 2:13)
  • We have an unchanging, unshakable hope for the future that is unthreatened even by death. (1 Thessalonians 4:14; 2 Timothy 1:12; et al)
  • We rejoice with joy inexpressible and full of glory. (1 Peter 1:8)
  • We are being built into a spiritual house for a holy priesthood, with Jesus Christ as the cornerstone. (1 Peter 2:4-7)
  • We know God’s love for us. (1 John 4:16)
  • Though surrounded by an evil world, we overcome. (1 John 5:4-5)
  • If we lack wisdom, all we have to do is ask God, and He supplies it gladly. (James 1:5-6)
  • We can remain confident and calm through the storms of life. (Mark 4:40; Luke 8:25)
  • We have the joy and privilege of encouraging our fellow believers. (Romans 1:12 et al)
  • We are children of Abraham and thus heir to all God promised him. (Romans 4; Galatians 3; Genesis 12:1-3)
  • We have peace with God and full access to His boundless grace. (Romans 5:1-2)
  • Jesus Christ Himself lives in us. (Galatians 2:20; Ephesians 3:17)
  • God is perfecting us by faith. (Galatians 3:2, 5)
  • We are given beautiful, life-giving spiritual gifts to share with other believers. (Romans 12:3, 6)
  • Our life foundation is not human wisdom but the power of God Himself. (1 Corinthians 2:4-5)
  • We can stand firm, no matter what problems or opposition we meet. (1 Corinthians 16:13 et al)
  • We are protected by a shield (Ephesians 6:16) and a breastplate (1 Thessalonians 5:8) that can deflect and extinguish anything Satan throws at us.
  • We can walk safely and confidently, even when we can’t see the path ahead. (2 Corinthians 5:7)
  • We can grow in faith (2 Corinthians 10:15 et al) and pursue more and more faith  throughout your lives (1 Timothy 6:11). Faith continues to grow as a natural fruit of God’s Spirit within us. (Galatians 5:22)
  • We become members of God’s family. In Christ we are one with all other believers of every time and place. (Galatians 6:10; Ephesians 4:5; et al)
  • God grows within us the precious quality of patient endurance (2 Thessalonians 1:4; James 1:2-3; 1 Peter 1:6-7, 9).
  • No matter how difficult life becomes, we fight the good fight and grab hold of eternal life. (1 Timothy 6:11-12; 2 Timothy 2:22; 4:7-8)
  • The words of faith nourish us. (1 Timothy 4:6)
  • Our example of faith is a heritage that we pass on to our children and grandchildren. (2 Timothy 1:5)
  • We are fabulously rich, even when we are poor. (James 2:5)

A Single Step

My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.
(Exodus 33:14, NIV)

Lord, sometimes I’m scared to follow You.
What You ask–or what I’m afraid You’re asking—
seems overwhelming.
It seems beyond my ability and
beyond where I feel safe.

But I’m learning that You don’t ask the impossible.
Your demands aren’t complicated.
Each time You lead, all You ask is a single step of faith.
You ask for only one step at a time.

Right now, as You speak, Lord,
I look into Your face.
Jesus, I take that single step of faith.

A Present God

The Lord Almighty is with us.
(Psalm 46:7, NIV)

Sunday morning worship.
As we are singing glorious hymns of exaltation and praise,
I realize that I’m not thinking about Him,
but about me.
My thoughts are self-centered.

Forgive me, Lord.

How shameful such thoughts will be
when I stand before You face-to-face.
How foolish and abhorrent all pride will seem
in the blazing light of Your presence.

But Almighty God, You are here now.
I stand before You now.
You see my heart.
You hear my thoughts.
And I am ashamed.

Transform me, Lord.
Teach me.
Help me live and think and walk in the light of Your beauty and presence.
Fill every thought, every prayer, and every song of praise
with an active trust in a present God.

A Love Letter

Oh, how I love your law!
I meditate on it all day long.
(Psalm 119:97, NIV)

Why do I find the Bible so intriguing?
Why do I never tire of reading it,
though many see it only as so much history and poetry—
dry, strange, and irrelevant?

Because I read it as a love letter from You to me, Lord God.
It speaks to me about You in all Your mystery.
It shows me how You work and react.
It expresses Your love for me on every page.
It tells me how my life can be blessed by You.

Thus I find Your Word encouraging, enlightening, and heartwarming.
I find it satisfying mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.

Every time I read it, I hear more of Your passion.
I grasp more of Your amazing plan for us.

Lord, how wonderful it is to learn of You!

What Could You Do If Nothing Else Mattered? cont.

For years I had felt that I was simply one of the church’s mechanics. I helped keep the church’s machinery running, but my life and work had little impact on the needy world around me. I knew Christ could give a totally satisfying life to all the people I passed every day, but I had no way to tell them. Finally, one day in the middle of this frustration, God confronted me with the question, “What could you do if nothing else mattered?”

His question started me on a search. I came across 1 John 2:6: Whoever claims to live in him must walk as Jesus did. (NIV)

So I started a study of the gospels, looking for answers to these questions: How did Christ walk? And therefore, how should I walk?

I noticed in the gospels that to reach people, Jesus didn’t build a church and invite people to come. He ministered among them. He took whatever opportunities afforded Him to speak to people where they were: in the marketplace, in the streets, over meals, in homes, in chance personal encounters.

I began to think how I might communicate with people. I looked at the major means of communication in our society. We have a large, well-developed Christian media, but secular society generally ignores it. And we have a large, well-developed secular media, but they usually want little to do with the gospel.

So I thought about “underground” ways of communicating. A newsletter? Tracts left in restaurants, doctors’ offices, etc.?

About that time our local church put out a call for people interested in joining a task force—a task force with the job of reaching the community around our church for Christ. To make a long story short, my wife, Gloria, and I became part of Neighbor to Neighbor Ministries, a systematic, non-invasive way of drawing people, not necessarily to our local church, but to Christ Himself.

I became the writer for the ministry. I wrote a series of 12 monthly mailers that went out to each home in our community under the non-threatening name, For Your Consideration. As a sequel to that, I wrote another 12-month series titled Living the Natural Way, dealing with life issues from a Christian perspective.

Those pieces became the starting point for Living the Natural Way, our own publishing ministry. We began with 12 pocketsize books, and that soon expanded to include the publication of my hymns through our website, LNWhymns.com. How the Lord worked out all that is another story.

But the point is this: It’s easy for us to continue to talk just to evangelical believers because we’re comfortable with them. We share a common viewpoint and a common language. We tend to forget about the rest of the world. But God doesn’t forget.

We can let the walls of the church circumscribe our efforts at drawing people to Christ. But that’s not the way Jesus worked, and it’s not the way God continues to work.

We cannot make the same mistake that ancient Israel did, forgetting that our calling and our chosen-ness is not to the privileges of a small, elite group. It’s a calling to be His light to the entire world.

During His earthly ministry, Jesus often answered a question with a question, drawing people into a discovery of faith. That’s what He did with me. I was asking, “What can I do?” He turned the question back on me: “What could you do if nothing else mattered?”

His question led me to realize that my inability to impact my world with the truth about Christ resulted from my own lack of commitment and faith.

My journey of faith continues to lead me in new directions, with many unexpected twists and turns. But He continues to inflame me with the desire to glorify Him, to help everyone realize just how great and good He is.

What Could You Do If Nothing Else Mattered?

I had worked for a denominational publisher for many years. The work was challenging, and the Lord was blessing it.

But in my worst moments, I saw the denomination as a big machine that was more concerned with itself than it was with the massive world outside. And I saw myself as a mechanic that spent my life just servicing the machine, keeping it running. I didn’t feel I was doing all I should do or wanted to do or needed to do in the human world in which I lived.

The more meaningful and satisfying my own relationship with Christ became on a moment-by-moment basis, the more I realized that Christ could bring a perfectly satisfying life to absolutely everyone around me. Age didn’t matter. Intelligence and educational level didn’t matter. Personality didn’t matter. Culture, financial status, none of that mattered. Christ could be personally, completely fulfilling to each and every individual around me.

I would go out in public, to shopping malls, sporting events, and craft shows, and realize that Christ could bring peace and meaning to absolutely everyone there. Yet I had no way to tell them, and I was repeatedly frustrated.

Then one Saturday in February, 1995, my wife, Gloria, and I went shopping on Metcalf, a main thoroughfare in Johnson County, Kansas, one of the wealthier areas in the Kansas City metro. I left her at a home decorating show. It was crammed wall-to-wall, elbow-to-elbow with people shopping for nothing but ways to make their homes more pleasing.

As I drove out, I passed a huge store on the right—nothing but sporting goods; people seeking leisure for the physical body.

On the left was an electronics super-store; nothing but electronic entertainment.

I drove north to a large bookstore, overflowing with people looking for intellectual stimulation.

And the road in-between was crowded with people as well, all looking, all shopping, all willing to spend their living for things to make their lives better. The frustration returned, but on this day, something happened.

I’ve never heard God speak audibly. Usually He speaks to me through impressions on my mind and heart. But on this occasion, as I pulled into a parking lot, it seemed like God was speaking to me in my mind, using these very words: “What could you do if nothing else mattered?”

That question stopped me short. I didn’t know the answer. Still, I felt that because God asked the question, He was getting ready to do something. A seed of anticipation was planted.

More next time.