A Preposterous Warning

By faith Noah, after he was warned about what was not yet seen and motivated by godly fear, built an ark to deliver his family.  Hebrews 11:7

How many warnings does scripture give a believer about the fallout of sin?  So many!  ‘If you do this, then this will be the outcome.’  Yet, despite their familiarity to me, I have chosen to sin anyway.  It wasn’t that I didn’t believe God, it was just that I lacked godly fear and respect. 

Imagine how steep the curve of faith was for Noah about God’s warning of a coming flood.  All he knew was an evil world.  All he knew was that the evil he witnessed seemed to go unchecked.  All he knew was a world without rain.  All he knew was that God’s judgement was under a restraint.  To hear that a judgement would come on the whole earth had to be a stretch in and of itself.  Then to hear that it would come in the form of water and a flood ~ that was an even bigger stretch.  What motivated Noah to believe such a tall tale?  Godly fear. 

“Where is God in a world of suffering?” is a question posed to Christians all the time.  We struggle to answer and know that, for many, it is a rabbit trail to keep them from considering their need for a Savior.  But it is also the cry of those under the burden of a fallen world; those who wonder how they will make it one more day.  The delay of God’s intervention can erode godly fear of His power and kingship.

God’s inactivity didn’t erase the urgency of Noah’s labor so it is no wonder that he is in this lineup of faith!

How does this impact me?  First, I take my sin seriously because it does have, and will have, the outcomes about which God warns.  Secondly, I am not lulled into complacency about the promise of Jesus’ return and the need to tell the lost about their end.  Their future is their coming flood and I should never take for granted that I am already inside my Ark of safety, Jesus.  He longs for people to know, to believe, and to be saved.  My heart should beat like his. 

Just as it started raining one day in Noah’s time, the trumpet will sound and You will appear in the clouds.  Increase my godly fear that results in urgent obedience.  Amen

Where Is God In This?

Now without faith it is impossible to please God, for the one who draws near to Him must believe that He exists and rewards those who seek Him.  Hebrews 1:6

Does this statement seem a bit redundant to you?  “The one who draws near to God must believe that He exists.”  I’ve been thinking about this for days now and asking God about this scripture. 

For me ~ this is how the Holy Spirit personalized it. 

With faith, which is believing that God will do the impossible, I move toward God and believe that He exists in my situation. 

Without faith, which is not believe that God will do the impossible, I move away from God and believing that God doesn’t exist, or is irrelevant, in my situation. 

The kindest thing we can ask each other is ~ “Where is God in this?”  It forces us to consider why we have gone to a place of despair and called something hopeless.  Is God no longer alive?  Is God suddenly someone who has broken His promises?  Does God no longer love me?  Will God no longer be a faithful Father?  Though we might never voice such admissions, lamenting utter despair voices them for us. 

What is it that sends you to a desperate place today?  Let me take your hands in mine, look into your face, and then ask you, “Where is God in this?”  It’s a loaded question even though a simple one.  It’s good for me to ask you to affirm, yet again, who God is and what He says He will do. 

Is this a guarantee that He will answer my prayer in just the way I’m praying He will answer?  The hard truth is ‘no’.  He might not – but then again, He might.  So where is my hope in this uncertainty?  That no matter the outcome, He promises many things regardless.  Companionship, peace in the uncertainty, joy in the sorrow, and complete restoration of what I’ve lost in the end.  Someday, you and I will get it ALL back and more.  Nothing is really lost – just deferred with interest. 

I stretch out my faith, I draw near, and I declare that ‘You are in this’.  Amen

Two Men ~ Two Plans ~ Two Ends

By faith Enoch was taken away so he did not experience death, and he was not to be found because God took him away.  For prior to his removal he was approved, since he had pleased God.  Hebrews 11:5

This chapter begins by telling the brief stories of two men from different, ancient civilizations.  Abel dates back to the time of Adam and Eve.  Enoch dates back to the time before Noah and the flood.  Each was commended for their faith yet one was brutally murdered while the other was miraculously taken out of this world without having to die.  It’s hard to understand the disparity.  One death was horrific, the other was spared of death completely.  Nowhere does it indicate that Enoch was more righteous than Abel. How did he get off so easily?

It’s a reminder that God’s plans are just God’s plans and cannot be reasoned out by mankind ~ even though we try.  We dissect other’s lives, and our own life, and compare the proportions of their joys and sorrows with our own.  When things are easier for us, we can feel guilty.  Why are things so much harder for people we love?  And when things appear harder for us than what others suffer, guilt is a common bedfellow.  We believe we must have done something wrong to be in this position. (What further reinforces this is when others feel you must have done something wrong, too.)

Back to Enoch and our assumption that he got off easy.  I’m sure it wasn’t a cakewalk for him to walk with God in the midst of pre-flood evil.  The world had fallen into debauchery the likes of which we’ve never seen.  One of the main reasons for this is that man lived many centuries as opposed to 60-70 years.  He had that much more time to feed his wayward appetite.  Think of an elderly person of today.  Unrighteous traits, without Jesus, only intensify with age. 

Many care for their parents and have an extremely difficult time managing unrighteous traits that have only magnified with age.  In the days of the flood, multiply this sowing and reaping phenomenon by 300-400 more years.  The imaginations that conceived evil were so much more debase.  In this time period, whatever evil thing man thought of in his heart, he went and did.  There was no pause, no restraint.  Nothing was off limits.  I try to imagine what it took for Enoch to walk with God and keep himself pure.  The loneliness. The jeering. The persecution.  We’ll never know but perhaps Enoch had it far more difficult than Abel. 

Without understanding any of this fully, I need to remind myself that God just chooses to entrust some people with more pain.  Period.  I may never know why.  It’s certainly not because he loves one person more than another.  And while some pain is experienced as consequences of earlier choices, that’s not always the case.  Jesus said, “In this world you will have tribulation.”    

Enoch is in the hall of faith.  So is Abel.  Whether I understand the reasons why is immaterial.  They were God’s possession and He knew all the things we don’t.  Scripture, His inspired and inerrant Word, captures their honor for all to read.  That is enough.

When things are hard, don’t let me forget any of this. Amen

Abel’s Personal Story

It was by faith that Abel brought a more acceptable offering to God than Cain did. Abel’s offering gave evidence that he was a righteous man, and God showed his approval of his gifts. Although Abel is long dead, he still speaks to us by his example of faith. Hebrews 11:4

What shapes a person’s view of God?  Much of it lies in their history. Abel’s worldview was largely defined by what transpired in the lives of his parents.  I can imagine his childhood.  He heard from his mom and dad (Adam and Eve) what it was like to walk with God in a place called paradise.  He heard the incredible stories of their assignments which had been joyful and wonderfully productive.  He knew the account of his parent’s sin and their expulsion from the garden.  The weight of their losses and their regrets had to have hung over their lives like a shroud.  He lived with the effects of their grief as well as their longings for how things used to be.

How far away did they move from the blocked entrance to the garden?  Perhaps not far.  Maybe they went to the perimeter of Eden often to lament their past choices and remember its former glory. We’re not told but if we read the story with our imagination, we feel the tragedy of their banishment and its ongoing effect on their lives.

I suspect that Abel grew up in an environment where sin was taken seriously as were the sacrifices that were needed to atone for those sins.  His respect and trust in God emerged out of the ashes of his parent’s choices. While he could have harbored a root of bitterness against God for His divine judgement on his parent’s sin, He didn’t.  What God required of him is exactly what Abel provided; the firstborn and healthiest of his flocks.  God was pleased with his offering. 

Cain grew up in the same family.  He heard the same stories.  Yet, what a reminder that children can respond so differently though they come from the same environment.  He chose to have issues with God.  Was there a root of bitterness against God for driving his parents out of the garden?  Did he think the curse was unfair?  Was he angry with his parents for ruining his life and future?  Did his older brother’s respect for God grate against his own misery?  Apparently.  Cain murdered Abel – making him the first martyr for the cause of Christ.

Abel’s faith was commended by God and though his remains, more than 60 centuries old, have long turned to dust, his voice still speaks.  So pleased was God by his sacrifice that he is recounted in this great lineup of faith heroes.  The reason for this is worth every moment I ponder it.  Such a short story. Such a poignant illustration of a God-honoring sacrifice.  Yet how large an impact!

Don’t let me miss what their lives beg to teach.  Amen

What Is Your Bent?

By faith we understand that the universe was created by the word of God, so that what is seen was not made out of things that are visible.  Hebrews 11:3

Some people are emotionally driven, others are intellectually driven.  In their extremes, neither prefers the company of the other. One believes that emotional people are too unstable while the other pigeonholes intellectuals as stoic and unfeeling.  In matters of faith, which side has the advantage? Neither.

Faith is birthed outside the mind and outside the heart completely.  Faith is the gift of spiritual sight bestowed by the Spirit of God. Unless God opens the spiritual eyes of unbelievers, their minds and their hearts will not naturally believe. The greatest mind cannot generate faith. Neither can the most genuine of hearts. Why? Because ~ The god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God. 2 Cor. 4:4   

But once God gives a person spiritual sight, how is their faith fed?  The good news for those who are intellectually bent is that faith is strengthened through Spirit-driven study. There is enough mental stimulation for a lifetime because the vastness of the mind of God has no beginning and no end.

And the good news for those who are emotionally bent is that faith is strengthened through engagement with the heart of God.  There is enough emotional stimulation for a lifetime because of the depth of the heart of God.  His love is beautifully layered and has no beginning and no end.

But here’s the thing ~ every believer is to become balanced with a well-informed mind and a massive heart of devotion.  Choosing to strengthen one over the other leaves a believer impaired.

Lord, my mind is engaged and I want to have a voracious appetite for learning.  My heart is engaged and I pray that it will always beat wildly in worship.  Amen

 

Who Showed Us How To Do It?

For by it [faith in what is unseen], the people of old received their commendation. Hebrews 11:2

How would you like to be remembered as a person of great faith?  Yet, I believe we idealize what that looks like and never picture our biblical heroes as having the kind of faith that had fragile overtones. We do not picture them begging Yahweh for the strength to trust and move forward. So much is missing in their stories.  We’re told, more often than not, about what they did rather than how they felt.  From one verse to the next, a decade might have passed, and we are not given a peak into what the years were like.

Hannah ~ She is at the temple. She is ridiculed by her family, she is distraught and she is barren.  She brings her broken soul to God and while praying, Eli, the priest, suspects that she is drunk.  She explains her plight and he announces the birth of her coming child.  It is not said that she doubted but how could she not!  All she knew was barrenness and the feelings of having been cursed by God. Yet, by faith, she dug deeply to rise up and immediately sing a version of the Magnificat.

David – He is small, still a boy.  Yet, he is outraged at the blasphemy and taunting coming from the camp of the Philistines.  By faith, he comes forward to challenge Goliath.  What were his thoughts after he volunteered, after some moments passed, as he picked up a series of small stones?  What did he think when he beheld the size of his opponent? Yet, he dug deeply and loaded his slingshot.

Joseph – He loves Mary. He knows her character but is presented with news of her pregnancy.  He knows the law and the expectations of those around him.  Put Mary away!  But he dreams and is told that Mary is pregnant by the Spirit of God.  Who has heard of such a thing!  Yet, He dug deeply to trust God in a way in which no one had trusted Him before.

John the Baptist – He is peculiar. He stands out and is misunderstood. He preaches a message given only to him but then his faith is shaken. He is imprisoned after taking a stand before an unrighteous king. In a weak moment, he sends word to Jesus to ask if He, indeed, is the one he has been waiting for or is Jesus someone else?  Yet, Jesus says that never has there been one like John, possessing a faith that burns and shines.

Jesus – Yes, Jesus had to learn obedience and had to learn to walk by faith too.  His life and ministry, all the way to the cross, meant moment-by-moment strengthening from God.  The night before His arrest, while agonizing in prayer, He asked for another way other than the cross.  God met Jesus in His despair and strengthened him. He dug deeply and offered up Himself.

Jesus said to Thomas ~ “Blessed are those who have NOT seen and yet believed.”  That’s for you. That’s for me.  Though he needed visible proof, he dug deeply in response to Jesus’ appearance.  He went on to India to shake the nation with the Gospel. He was martyred for it.  How will the rest of my story be told?

I dig deeply in my places of blindness. Give me grace this day to believe and act upon it outrageously.  Amen

Stepping Back Into Hebrews

Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen.  Hebrews 11:1

A little over three months ago, I felt like I should take a break from Hebrews.  I was facing the 11th chapter – the hallmark chapter on faith.  I stopped up short.  This chapter is a heavyweight.

When I stepped away from it, little did I know how intimately I would come to know the first two verses of this chapter.  For the entire summer, I have had Hebrews 11:1-2 on my desktop.  It is stunning the way it is paraphrased in THE MESSAGE.

The fundamental fact of existence is that this trust in God, this faith, is the firm foundation under everything that makes life worth living. It’s our handle on what we can’t see. The act of faith is what distinguished our ancestors, set them above the crowd.

This literally took my breath away and each day it’s challenged me to ask myself if this is true in my heart.  No matter what I’m facing, is my faith strong enough to be assured of things I cannot see?  Am I rock solid and confident in my Hope?

Faith is not blind ~ even though it is up against what is unseen.  The reason any child of God can have seeing eyes is because of the worthy foundation supporting the promise.  It is God-Himself.  This assurance is talked about in Hebrews 1:3 He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature, and he upholds the universe by the word of his power. Faith is built on the validity and power of the One who holds up the universe.  He doesn’t hold up just the earth, which in and of itself would qualify Him, but the deep heavens.  Since it is this God who has promised it, who asks me to trust Him, how could my faith ever be misplaced?  His power is uncontested, and He always uses it within the parameters of wisdom and sovereignty.  His Word stands.  He never changes it.  His Truth is always His Truth no matter the time in history and no matter the age and spiritual condition of the one who pursues it.

Let me speak personally.  I have faith in a God who is not taken by surprise by the worst of news.  I have faith in a God who already knows how to make something beautiful out of what has been made ugly by the Fall.  I have faith in a God who redeems all things for His children.  Even more than that, I have faith in a God who restores every single loss ~ if not here, then in the world to come.  I cannot lose what God will not give back in perfection.

There is no Redeemer and no Restorer other than You.  I declare my faith again, out loud, with praise.  Amen

Mourning and Comforters

Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted. Matthew 5:4

None of us is lacking for reasons to mourn. If we see the world the way it truly is, through the lens of the Gospel, it is enough to cause deep sadness. We are so far away from our Creator’s intentions. The fall in the Garden of Eden ushered in a curse so pervasive that there is no part of life that has not been affected. All around me, there is profound brokenness.

The best of relationships are tainted by sin natures. Everyone, without redemption and a new life built on the foundation of God’s Word, is fragile. Words shatter egos. Betrayals end a friendship. Careless accusations fracture a parent/child relationship. Disappointments usher in a grief that has no end. Then there is the mourning that grips a person on the other side of losses; death, health, vocation, friendships, loss of innocence.

It’s wonderful when God sends a comforter who speaks deeply into my soul. I am blessed to have a few around me that do that for me. And while the church should be full of comforters, they are sparse if the church is skin deep. If I am willing to mourn, or if I’m already mourning, where is the comfort Jesus speaks of with certainty?

  • If I mourn the past, I find comfort in God’s embrace. He says that no pain is wasted and nothing is outside of redemption.
  • If I mourn a betrayal, I find comfort in God’s embrace. Whatever I lack, He promises to provide. He fills me up so I can give and forgive.
  • If I mourn my limitations, I find comfort in God’s embrace. I know that one day I will enjoy eternal life on a new earth. Every single limitation will be eliminated.
  • If I mourn the deterioration of this world, I find comfort in God’s embrace. God’s plan is to restore paradise and make everything shiny and new.

The Comforter and comfort are one in the same. The Comforter speaks the Word and it means something because I have a relationship with the One who speaks it. If I only see comfort as words on a page, they will be hollow when the pain consumes my attention. They’ll be no more satisfying than a Chinese proverb. But if I have a relationship with the Comforter, the scripture He whispers into my soul bring joy, hope, and comfort even in the tears.

Brave children cry. Brave adults cry. You cried and Your Father sent you angels to comfort You. I will not fear that any abyss is too deep. Amen

 

A Takeover But Not Of The Hostile Kind

[Samuel said to Saul] The Spirit of the LORD will come upon you and you will prophesy with them and will be transformed into another man. And let it be when these signs come upon you that you do as occasion serves you, for God is with you. And it was so, that when he had turned his back to go from Samuel, God gave him another heart. All who knew him earlier saw that and said, “What is this that is come to the son of Kish? Is Saul also among the prophets?” I Samuel 10:6-9 

The Spirit of God came upon certain individuals in the Old Testament and as a result, they came under His influence. They were changed and equipped to fulfill their destiny as king, prophet, or servant. Is it possible that something so amazing and so rare can be taken for granted when it happens today? Yes. I can be so used to the vernacular of the ‘indwelling of the Spirit’ that I’m numb to the sheer wonder of it. The privilege of housing Glory can be tragically lost on me.

At the very moment I believed in Jesus and embraced Him as Lord, the Spirit of the LORD came upon me too. He didn’t make a visitation as He did under the old covenant. He made me His permanent dwelling place and transformed me into a new person. The same phenomenon that Saul experienced happened to me. At my spiritual birth, I was called to an eternal destiny and am fully equipped to accomplish it under the power of God’s anointing.

Those from Saul’s hometown couldn’t believe the change. They were incredulous and remarked to one another, “Who is this? Is Saul a prophet?” It was a takeover of the heavenly kind, producing the fruits and giftings of the Spirit of God. His new, unnatural abilities could only be explained by his encounter with God.

It is our privilege to walk out our calling. We are to be seen as weak, yet strong in Christ. Dull, yet brilliant in His wisdom. Unqualified, yet uniquely gifted in ways no one can explain. Anything done in the flesh will leave others quite bored. Our efforts will lack the power of that synergistic connection between God and His child.

Take me outside of what I can naturally accomplish so that Your signature is clearly legible. To You be all glory. Amen