It’s Under-rated

Consistency – sounds boring, doesn’t it?  Perseverance – doesn’t sound like fun, does it? 

When Paul talks to us about running the race to win in 1 Corinthians 9, I think about the consistency and perseverance that it will take to run this race of faith successfully all the way to the end……..the end of my life here on earth.

Paul tells us that we need to run to win!  If I thought I had to do it on my strength alone, the outcome would be looking bleak at this point.  But I know in whom I believe and I’m persuaded that he will help me with every step.  Through him, I will have the perseverance and the consistency needed to be successful all the way to the end.

Consistency is important, I think, in order to make progress down this path of faith.   Do I know God more personally now that I did last month? Am I more Christ-like today than I was a year ago?  I think it’s a big challenge for  more ‘experienced’ people to grow more Christ-like rather than more crabby 🙂

Perseverance – life throws us a lot of curve balls.  And a lot of mud balls.  To run the long race of faith without fear….without faltering…..without worrying…….without loosing site of our number one priority…….all the way to the end.

We’re counting on your help, dear Father!

Surrounded

Reading Nehemiah is a breeze so far compared to Chronicles, isn’t it?

It’s a great story.  Nehemiah has a cushy job drinking wine for the king (some would say it’s a dream job except he did it because the wine might be poisoned 🙂  And then he is called away by God to help his people rebuild the wall around Jerusalem.

Nehemiah is really clear about the fact that there were people around who didn’t want this to happen.  These people conspired against him and wrote letters filled with lies to the authorities trying to get them to stop the building.  There was conflict from outside his project.

Reading the story this time, I became more aware of the conflict from within.  The beginning of Nehemiah 3 tells us that the people from Tekoa helped with the wall “even though their leaders refused to work with the construction supervisors.”

Oh, yeah.  “Who are they to tell us what to do?” “We’re volunteering here – they should just be happy with that and stop trying to boss us around.”, “We don’t need to listen to anyone, we want to do this our way.”  Can you hear it?

Nehemiah had conflict everywhere he looked but it didn’t stop him from following God’s directions and, as long as Nehemiah was faithful, he knew God would help him complete his assignment.

What a great example for us – especially when we’re facing adversity on every side!

Thank you, God, for being our strength when we face conflict.

Stirred Up Hearts

Yeah!  We’re through Chronicles!  The bad kings definitely outnumbered the good kings and I’m sure I don’t want to read any of those other books that have even more details about their reigns.  Onto Ezra!

God is stirring up hearts everywhere!

First he stirs up the heart of King Cyrus of Persia.  God fulfills a prophecy had given to Jeremiah when King Cyrus decides to let the Israelites go back to Jerusalem and leave their exile in Persia.  Not only did he let them go, he also have them silver, gold, supplies for the journey and an offering for the Temple.

Then God stirs up the hearts of the people to go to Jerusalem to rebuild the temple of the Lord.  Their neighbors have them silver and gold and supplies for their journey.

God is getting what he wants done through people by stirring up their hearts.  Exactly what he does today!

Has God stirred your heart lately?  Given you a new passion?  Stirred up an old passion?  Given you a new thought about how you can contribute to his kingdom’s work?

If so, get started!  God is on the move and he’s inviting you to be a part of what’s happening!

Thank you, God!

Against the Rules

King Hezekiah knew all of the rules about the purification that people needed to go through before celebrating the Passover.  There were a lot of preparations that needed to done and conditions to be met.

But in 2 Chronicles 30  he was in the process of bringing his people back to God and he knew this was a critical time.  People wanted to get right with God now – during this special time of the Passover.  Still- they weren’t purified.

According to the rules, only the people who had gone through the process of purification could participate and it wasn’t a quick process.  So, according to the rules, most of the people were going to miss this opportunity to celebrate the Passover.

King Hezekiah prayed for them and then told them to go ahead and eat the Passover meal anyway.  He said that he knew the Lord is good and would forgive them for the past if the people would decide to follow him now.  God listened and healed the people.

This was a pretty gutsy move – to go against the laws that God himself had given his people.  Yet, Hezekiah knew God well enough to know that God was always good.  He also knew that God would want his people to turn back to him.  Knowing that he was in step with God, Hezekiah was willing to take the risk.  And he was right.

Hezekiah’s actions are a role-model for us.  If we know God and we know we were in step with his will, we need to step out and take the risk when it comes to goodness and forgiveness. 

Dear Father, we want to know you well enough to take a risk when it comes to breaking the rules and sharing in your goodness.

Be Honest

Paul asks us to honest with ourselves in Romans 12.  He tells us not to think that we are better than we are.  And he tells us to measure ourselves by the faith God has given us.

Measure ourselves by the amount of faith we have in God.  Not by how many places we are serving God?   Not by how much money over our tithe we are giving God?  Not by how many years we’ve been going to church?  Not by how much time we spend in prayer and Bible study?

Paul clearly tells us here that what’s important to God – what he measures – is our trust in him and the depth of our relationship with him.  

Talk about clearing up any questions we have about our priorities!

All of the rest of the things I mentioned are good – they can be products of a deep and trusting faith.  Or not.  They can also just be responsibilities checked off a list or window-dressing of a life not wholly committed to God.

The question is – when God measures our faith, what does he find?

May you be pleased with the measure our faith, dear Father.

Sinking Ships

King Jehosaphat was a good king gone bad.  He chose to make an alliance with King Ahaziah of Israel who was very wicked and this was a very bad choice. 

As a consequence, we read in 2 Chronicles 20 that God decided to destroy their work.  So the fleet of ships they had bought met with disaster and never even got out to sea.

Do we ever have sinking ships?  Do we ever have big plans that don’t work out?

Maybe it didn’t work out because we were partnering up with people we shouldn’t be.  Or maybe it failed because we made a different bad choice along the way.  I think the secret is to learn from our mistakes.  We made the bad choice once – lets just not do it again.  Makes sense, right?

Then I have to ask the question – why do we often do it again?  The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different outcome.

One sunken ship is even, don’t you think?

Dear Father, please help us learn from our sunken ships.

Where God Lives

What do you pray toward? 

In 2 Chronicles Solomon spends years building a temple for God so that God can have a place to ‘live’ – the Holy of Holies.  When it’s all built, Solomon prays that God will hear their prayers when they pray toward the temple. He was now very happy to have a place where God ‘lived’ so his people could go there to worship him and pray toward that place.

When Jesus came, he changed all that.  Remember when he was talking to the woman at well who made the excuse that she couldn’t worship God because she couldn’t go to the temple?  Jesus replied that we can worship God everywhere because God is a spirit.

And his spirit lives inside of us as believers.  The power of God lives within us.  The truth of God lives within us.  The peace of God lives within us.

God lives within us.  So this got me asking myself  – what do I pray towards?  I’ve always loved the verse in Revelation where the prayers of the believers float up to heaven like incense.  I often talk to God on my commute to work and I’ve talked with a number of Christ-followers who do this since it’s one of the few times of relative ‘alone-ness’ in our lives.  So I regularly imagine the freeways with incense floating up out of the cars on its way to heaven.

But now I think I’m going to try ‘praying towards’ God as he lives inside of me.  Maybe that will help to remind me that I he is here – his power, his truth, his wisdom, his strength and his love live in me. 

I have the indwelling of the Holy Spirit and I want to live like it!

Please renew your spirit within us, dear God!

It’s All Yours

David is standing in the middle of more than 300 tons of gold and 638 tons of silver along with 675 tons of bronze and he praises the Lord saying ‘It all yours’!  This is one of my favorite passages as it relates to our money and our ‘stuff’.

It’s all yours, dear Father.  Yours is the greatness, the power, the glory, the victory and the majesty.  Everything in the heavens and on earth is yours.

Wealth and honor come from you alone for you rule over everything.

Power and might are in your hand and you decide who is made great and given strength.

David goes on to say how we can’t really give God anything because it’s all his.  Everything we have comes from him.   We give back to him in gratitude for what he has already given us.

Our days on earth are like a passing shadow, gone soon without a trace.  But you, dear God, give us significance.  You call us your sons and daughters and you delight in us.

We join David today as we praise you and thank you, dear God!

Problems Anyone?

God tells us several times throughout the Bible that we should rejoice when we have problems and trials.

That’s a real tough one.  We don’t want problems and trials.  They’re hard, it’s no fun. 

Those of us that have a little more ‘experience’ under our belts can look back and find this a little easier to understand.  Because it’s true.  Romans 5 tells us that problems help us develop endurance.  Endurance develops strength of character and character strengthens our confident hope of salvation.

Endurance is a basic part of doing anything well for a long time.  Do we want to have a long marraige?  Do we want to have great kids who grow up to be great young adults?  Do we want to run our race of faith well all the way to the end?  It all takes endurance so it’s good to learn this early.

And we learn endurance by practicing it during problems and trials.  No one has to ‘endure’ through the good times.  When the going gets tough, we learn to endure by the things we do correctly and by our failures.  If we learn from our mistakes we get to call it a ‘life lesson’ and move on.  And hopefully we become more wise as we depend more and more on God,….as we endure.

Thank you, dear Father, for loving us enough to teach us endurance which strengthens our character and draws us closer to you.

Satan Rose Up

Interesting – 1 Chronicles 21 tells us that Satan rose up and caused David to take a census of the people of Israel.

How could a census be the work of Satan?

Joab pleads with David to stop – he know that David was leading the Israelites into sin.

But David doesn’t listen, the census is taken and 70,000 people die as punishment for it.  David now is repentant and he builds an altar to God on the threshing floor of Araunah.  This is the site where David’s son, Solomon, will build the temple for God.

What was Satan doing?  Romans 2 points out to us that a person with a heart that is changed by God seeks praise from God, not by people.  When David wanted a census taken, God could see his heart and he could tell David was not doing this to glorify God.  David was doing this to glorify himself  – he wanted to know exactly how big his kingdom had become.  He lost focus on who had given him everything he had and it started to be all about ‘me’.

This is the work of Satan.  He’s happy anytime he can get us to change our focus away from God to anything else – especially ourselves.   Because we’re easy prey for that one, aren’t we?

Thank you, dear Father, for all  you are and all you have given us.  Please help us keep our focus on you.