Who is Responsible?

When a city is going to be attacked,  the people of that city choose a watchman to sound the alarm.  If those who hear the alarm choose to ignore it, it’s their own fault if they die.

But if the watchman sees the enemy coming and doesn’t sound the alarm, he is responsible for their captivity.  They will die and God tells us in Ezekiel 33, that he will hold the watchman responsible for their deaths.

Then God makes Ezekiel the watchman for the people of Israel.  God tells Ezekiel that he must warn the Israelites to repent and to turn from their wicked ways or they will die in their sins.   They are their own worst enemy.  They aren’t listening to God.  God says that, if Ezekiel doesn’t warn them, he will be responsible for their deaths.

Why? Because Ezekiel knew the truth.  God had told him the truth and had given him the responsibility to tell others.

Did we receive this same responsibility when Jesus gave us the great commission of going into all the world to make disciples and teach them everything that we have been taught?  Are we the watchmen for our generation because God has spoken to us and we know the truth?  

If so, how are we sounding the alarm?

Surrounded

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a huge crowd of witnesses to the life of faith, let us strip off every weight that slows us down, especially the sin that so easily trips us up.  And let us run with endurance the race God has set before us.  We do this by keeping our eyes on Jesus, the champion who initiates and perfects our faith.” Hebrews 12:1-2.

  I read this passage I think about the long line of my ancestors who were believers and are now are in heaven cheering me on as I run this race of faith.  I know they did a good job of passing along their faith to their children because I’m one of them.  I was given the best start possible for this race because I was brought up in a Christian home with 2 faithful parents.  They weren’t perfect but they were faithful all the way to the end of their lives.  They ran with endurance, passing their faith on to the next generation.

If you weren’t brought up in a Christian home, you have the opportunity to be the start of a legacy just like the one that was given to me.  We all have our place in the chain and we each just need to be faithful in passing it along.  With God’s spirit alive within us, there never has to be an end to the chain.

I plan to keep my eyes on Jesus as I run this race with endurance .  One day I will have the honor of  joining the cloud of witnesses to cheer on the generations that come after me.

Are you with me?

I Need An Anchor

Life can really be stormy sometimes.  The waves of issues and problems seem to grow larger and hit harder…….and all in a row.  They keep pounding on us.

The author of  Hebrews shares some very encouraging insights about God in chapter 6.   God has given us his promise of his love and eternal life and he never lies.  He can’t lie.

So we can run to him for refuge with great confidence because he has given his oath.  We know the truth and his name is Jesus.

Our faith in God is the anchor for our souls- keeping us steady as the waves of life tumble around us. The waves can tumble right on top of us and we may feel like we’re drowning.  But we’re not.

Because we’re anchored.

And the War Begins

In Ezekial 6, Ezekial is sharing with the Israelites words from the Sovereign Lord.

God tells Israel that he bring war upon them so that their pagan shrines will be smashed and their altars and places of worship for their idols will all be demolished.  Their people will be killed and laid out in front of their pagan gods who can do nothing to help them.  All of their religious objects will be destroyed and they will live in desolation.

Then they will know that he alone is  the LORD.

God had asked them over and over to get rid of their idols and to turn away from their pagan gods so they could worship him and him only.  They didn’t do it, so God took it all away amidst a lot of pain and sorrow.

What kind of idols do we have in our lives that God is asking us to turn away from?  What things distract us from our relationship with God and God’s purpose for us?  What are our priorities?  Where is God on that list?

What’s going on in our lives right now?  Is God trying to get our attention?

If God is not at the top of our list, today might be a great day for us to get our priorities straight…..before God has to do something drastic to reorganize our priorities for us.

He has done it before………………….

To Our Father

We shout to you with joy today, dear Father!

We worship you with gladness!

We sing to you with joy in our hearts as we acknowledge that you are our God!

You made us, we are yours.

We are your people, the sheep in your pasture.

We enter into your presence today filled with gratitude and praise!

We give thanks and praise to you today because you are so good!

Your love will never, ever fail us and your faithfulness will continue forever for all generations to you!

We are so grateful that we get to know you and love you and praise you today, dear God!

So Unreliable

One of the most unreliable things we trust in is money.

We think we can buy happiness with the bigger house or the new car or the new pair of shoes.  And when we buy them, we are happy….for a time.  And then we get something else on our mind that we think we have to have in order to be happy.

Paul is talking to Timothy about how unreliable money is and that our trust needs to be in God.  God gives us everything we need to make us happy.

Then Paul says that rich people need to use their money to do good, being generous with those in need and always being ready to share.  By doing this, they will experience true life!

We know that Americans are the richest people on the planet.  But how happy are we?  How many of us are experiencing true life?

What’s wrong with this picture?

Legacy=Choices=Legacy

Timothy was a fortunate young man who received a legacy of genuine faith from his mother and his grandmother.  He was obviously brought up in a home which had at least two very strong role-models for him.

He also clearly chose Christ for himself as he followed in his mother and grandmother’s footsteps.

Many of their prayers for Timothy were answered as he was mentored by Paul and began his own ministry.  He was young but he had courage because of the rock-solid faith that had nurtured him.

Paul also tells Timothy to ‘fan into flame’ of the spiritual gift that was given him.  Timothy was now responsible for his own growing faith.  He had been given a great start and now it was going to be his choices that determined the direction of the rest of his life.

This reminds me that, no matter what kind of start we were given on this path of faith, our choices today determine our direction for the rest of us lives.  We may not be as young as Timothy 🙂 but we still have choices.  And they determine how we spend our time and how we spend our money – and that’s where our hearts are.  And that’s the legacy that we will leave behind.

Dear Father, we ask that you guide us into making choices that bring us closer to you.  We want to leave a legacy of faith.

My Plans for You are…..

for you to wait.

We often quote the scripture in Jeremiah 29 where God tells us that his plans for us are good and not for disaster, to give us a future and a hope.  We love to claim this promise and all of the blessings it includes.

Have you read this in context?  In the sentence right before this, God is telling the Israelites that they would be in Babylon for seventy years and THEN he would come and do all that he had promised.

70 years!

Not 1 year, or even 10 years!  70 years!

We want it now, don’t we?  If not today, then tomorrow will have to do.  So often God asks for our obedience first and THEN he arrives with his blessing.  He was doing this with the Israelites in Jeremiah’s time and he’s doing this with us right now in our time.

First we obey and THEN we experience God’s pleasure with our lives.

Dear Father, please help us obey you today so that we might live in your blessing….we trust that your timing is always perfect.

Lip Service

The Israelites remembered that God was their rock in Psalm 78 and that he had redeemed them

But all they gave him was lip service.

Their hearts were not loyal to him.

Just giving God lip service………like-

Often telling people we’ll pray for them but rarely talking with God on their behalf?

Wanting to read the Bible more often but not making any significant changes in our calendar to make that happen?

Always ready to talk about God to other Christians but then regularly clamming up about him when we’re around people we aren’t so sure about?

Routinely going to church on Sunday but not letting God have room to really change our lives in between?

Dear Father, we desire to give you so much more than lip service! 

A Rich Message

Paul tells us in Colossians that since God has loves us, we must clothe ourselves in with tender-hearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience.

He asks us to make allowances for each other’s faults and forgive those who offend us.  When we remember how much the Lord has forgiven us, it’s easier to forgive others.

And we must clothe ourselves with love which gives us harmony.  Then the peace that comes from Christ will rule in our hearts.

Paul reminds us to always be thankful and to let the rich message of Christ fill our lives.

We need to use wisdom in talking with each  other.  With thankful hearts, we sing psalms and spiritual songs.

And all that we do reflects upon Jesus.  We are his representative.

Thank you, dear Father.  Will you please help make this passage true in our lives.