Treasures in Ink

Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grace. Show all posts

Saturday, July 30, 2016

You are Beautiful and Priceless


Too often the message we hear is one of disdain and disapproval. We hear words that imply we’re not good enough in beauty, intelligence, or behavior. We experience judgment instead of grace, condemnation instead of mercy, and anger instead of mercy and compassion. Beloved, the accusations against your heart are not God’s. His heart is so tender toward each one of us, filled with incredible love, joy, and forgiveness as well as delight in simply who we are: who He created us to be.

Psalm 139:14 says we are “fearfully and wonderfully made” by the same God who flung the stars into space and created the majesty of mountains and oceans.

Isaiah 62:3-4 declares, “You shall also be a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord and a royal diadem in the hand of your God. You shall no longer be termed Forsaken…for the Lord delights in you.”

Furthermore, Zephaniah 3:15, 17 radiates the passion of our Daddy God for us, “The Lord has taken away your judgments, He has cast out your enemy. The King of Israel, the Lord, is in your midst. You shall see disaster no more…The Lord your God in your midst, the Mighty One, will save; He will rejoice over you with gladness, He will quiet you with His love, He will rejoice over you with singing.”

For anyone struggling to believe God’s delight in you today, below are the lyrics to several powerful songs about your worth, value, and beauty. Don’t listen to the accusations and condemnation of the enemy. Saturate yourself in the joy of Jesus in who He made you today, Beloved. 

·         1GN - Guard Your Heart
·         From the album UNITE

In the middle of this crazy messed up world we live in
Surrounded by voices pressuring us to give in
Believe me, I get it
I know you wanna fit in
Everybody's telling you
What you're missing
But don't listen to anything but the truth

Know your worth ‘cause you are priceless
More than gold, more than diamonds
Be the light inside the dark
Keep your faith and guard your heart
It's where life, it's where love is
Every beat has a purpose
It holds everything you are
Above all else
Guard your heart
Your heart
Your heart
Your heart
Guard your heart

Maybe you feel all alone like something's missing
And all of your friends have found their prince charming
Believe me, I get it
You're so tempted
To settle or give up on love
But it's in God's timing
You can't rush it, don't believe you are not enough

I'm not saying to build a wall
Just to trust that God won't let you fall
I'm not saying to build a wall
Just to trust that God's in control of it all
·         FOR KING & COUNTRY - Priceless
From the album Run Wild. Live Free. Love Strong.

Mirror mirror
Mirror on the wall
Telling those lies
Pointing out your flaws
That isn't who you are
That isn't who you are
It might be hard to hear
But let me tell you dear
If you could see what I can see
I know you would believe
That isn't who you are
There's more to who you are

So when it's late
You're wide awake
Too much to take
Don't you dare forget
That in the pain
You can be brave
Hear me say

(Chorus)

I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
I see a rose in bloom
At the sight of you
Oh so priceless
Irreplaceable
Unmistakable
Incomparable
Darling it's beautiful
I see it all in you
Oh so priceless

No matter what you've heard
This is what you're worth
More than all the money all the diamonds & pearls
Oh this is who you are
Yeah this is who you are

So when it's late
You're wide awake
Too much to take
Don't you dare forget
That in the pain
You can be brave
Hear me say

(Chorus)

I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
I see a rose in bloom
At the sight of you
Oh so priceless
Irreplaceable
Unmistakable
Incomparable
Darling it's beautiful
I see it all in you
Oh so priceless

Sisters
We can start again
Give honor till the end
Love we can start again
Brothers
We can start again
Give honor till the end
Yeah we can start again

(Chorus)

I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
I see a rose in bloom
At the sight of you
Oh so priceless
Irreplaceable
Unmistakable
Incomparable
Darling it's beautiful
I see it all in you
Oh so priceless

I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
I see a rose in bloom
At the sight of you
I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
I see a rose in bloom
At the sight of you
We can start again

I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
I see a rose in bloom
At the sight of you
I see you dressed in white
Every wrong made right
Oh so priceless
VERIDIA - Furious Love
From the album Inseparable

He said that I would never be
A silhouette that he would want
I shifted shape and recreated me
The girl I was, I soon forgot
A love like that won't last long
So suddenly it all goes wrong
When beauty starts to fade

But you say I am beautiful
I don't need the world's approval
Only you madly pursue me
And jealously tell me
I am worthy of
Furious love

With all you have and all you are
Your universe was incomplete
In a sea of silver stars
Still the sky was dark
And so you dreamed of me
A love like that is all I want
I don't ever have to be what I am not
God, I love the way

You say I am beautiful
I don't need the world's approval
Only you madly pursue me
And jealously tell me
I am worthy of
Furious love

Your passion is a fire
An all consuming fire
I can't get enough
Furious love

You say I am beautiful
I don't need the world's approval
Only you madly pursue me
And jealously tell me
I am worthy of
Furious love

Your passion is a fire
An all consuming fire
I can't get enough
Furious love

Your passion is a fire
And all consuming fire
I can't get enough
Furious love

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Grace and Holiness in the Church

"When Your judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world will learn righteousness. Let grace be shown to the wicked, yet he will not learn righteousness." Isaiah 26:9-10


Holiness and grace are two sides to the same coin. Without grace, none of us can stand. Without holiness, love becomes tolerance and acceptance of every form of self-centered action humankind has every thought up. And self-centered equates with rebellion against God and His rules, which means our acceptance quickly evolves into embracing all kinds of gratuitous evil.


How horrible.


Grace and holiness must work together. Historically, we have gone through a holiness phase, followed sadly by a time when many people experienced abuse from self-righteous individuals. The Holy Spirit anointed the Church with powerful grace to minister to the hurting and broken, bringing them back to the fold. This movement, however, has dissolved into tolerance and now outright acceptance in numerous sins that we, the Church, have failed to confront.


In our church today, numerous believers engage in and justify sin, calling it something different. So now the Holy Spirit is calling us to radical restoration of the fullness of His beauty--grace, mercy, and holiness synchronized into pure hearts, righteousness living, and tender mercies for the broken repentant.


As God restores holiness to His church--discernible by the clarifying of Biblical boundaries--many church-goers scream accusations of judgment and unfairness. However, just because there has been and most likely still are some abusers of authority does not negate the clear warnings of Scripture that if we fall away from God's precepts, we have fall snare to the enemy of our souls who seeks only to steal, kill, and destroy.


God's proclaimers of righteousness cry out in grief and agony out of their deep compassion that mirrors the heart of God. Scripture shows clearly that not only church leaders but also believers have a responsibility to hold other believers accountable for ongoing, unrepentant sin. Paul states this concept clearly in I Corinthians 5:9-13: "I wrote to you in my epistle not to keep company with sexually immoral people. Yet I certainly did not mean with the sexually immoral people of this world, or with the covetous, or extortioners, or idolaters, since then you would need to go out of the world. But now I have written to you not to keep company with anyone named a brother who is sexually immoral, or covetous, or an idolater, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or an extortioner--not even to eat with such a person. For what have I to do with judging those also who are outside? Do you not judge those who are inside? But those who are outside God judges. Therefore 'put away from yourselves the evil person.'"


Wow! This instruction runs smack into our current grace-centered theology. However, it is exactly the same issue going on in our churches today. Paul warns us then and now: "It is actually reported that there is sexual immorality among you...and you are puffed up and have not rather mourned that he who has done this deed might be taken away from you. For I indeed, as absent in body but present in spirit, have already judged him who has so done this deed. In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when you are gathered together, along with my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, when you are gathered together, along with my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. Your glorying is not good. Do you not know that a little leaven leavens the whole lump? Therefore, purge out the old leaven." (I Corinthians 5:1-7)


Interestingly, the church of Corinth did as Paul directed and the sexually immoral man repented. Note that first the Church repented of their approval and tolerance of the man's sinful lifestyle. Then Paul wrote, "This punishment which was inflicted by the majority is sufficient for such a man, so that on the contrary, you ought rather to forgive and comfort him, lest perhaps such a one be swallowed up with too much sorrow. Therefore I urge you to reaffirm you love to him." (II Corinthians 2:6-8)


Are we, the American church, so afraid of hurting someone's feelings--especially a friend's--that we neglect to enforce Godly boundaries in our interactions that we have stifled and even prevented the convicting work of the Holy Spirit in their lives? Dear friends, I hate conflict. I pour out grace after grace and affirm the person's identity in Christ over and over, praying for their relationship with Jesus to be strengthened and their consciences sensitized to the boundaries and blessings He has for them as they surrender their vices and weaknesses to Him.


Yet, there also comes a point where sin has such a stronghold that the person rebels against gentle reminders and corrections. This rebellion is a demonic stronghold, as Scripture asserts, and no demon will bow the knee to Jesus or release its hold until the person must decide what side he/she is on and renounces the familiar spirit and the habitual sin (see II Corinthians 10:1-6, 12:19-21, 13:5).


As we seek to walk in accordance with holiness and grace, Scripture clearly states that God's grace is for the humble, broken, and repentant while dis-fellowship is for the proud, arrogant, and unrepentant. James states the matter clearly: "Adulterers and adulteresses! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God. Or do you think that the Scripture says in vain, 'The Spirit who dwells in us yearns jealously?' But He gives more grace. Therefore He says, 'God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble.' Therefore submit to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands, you sinners; and purify your hearts, you double-minded. Lament and mourn and weep! Let your laughter be turned to mourning and your joy to gloom. Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up." (4:4-10)


How wonderful Redemption is! For both believer and unbeliever, God promises complete cleansing and restoration of fellowship simply upon our cry of repentance and need. As the Holy Spirit resensitizes His church to the full message of grace and holiness, we who have tolerated sin in ourselves and others need to repent and fully embrace Biblical standards as we extend the awesome promise of Christ's redeeming power.


"If we say that we have fellowship with Him and walk in darkness, we lie and do not practice the truth. But if we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanses us from all sin. If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." I John 1:6, 8-9

Monday, July 6, 2015

Shifting Boundaries

"The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul.” Psalm 19:7
Confusion increases within the church as our culture continues seeking to redefine the concepts of love, hate, grace, and even Christianity. Numerous voices call out amid the crowd, asserting that love cannot be limited, that disapproval is hate, and that Christians must never condemn. In fact, the Law of God lurks as an enemy to modern thinking and even to the modern church where Grace triumphs over all.
Yet, Christianity without Holiness founded on the Word and Sovereignty of God is simply man’s sugar-coated acceptance of all sorts of sin. In the church, we long to show mercy so we refrain from gentle correction. However, without the law of God bringing conviction for sin, mercy is unnecessary. Jesus didn’t die to save the righteous (or self-righteous), remember. “I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance.” (Matthew 9:13) “He died to save sinners—of whom I am chief!” (I Timothy 1:15)
Yet, sin can only be recognized with the aid of a standard. “I would not have known sin except through the law…. Therefore, the law is holy and the commandment holy and just and good.” (Romans 7:7, 12) Without the conviction of sin, repentance cannot occur for Godly repentance means recognizing that we have been headed the wrong way and choosing to turn and run in the opposite direction.  “For godly sorrow produces repentance leading to salvation, not to be regretted.” (II Corinthians 7:10)
The Bible makes it clear, when read as a whole from cover to cover, that grace never contradicts or cancels true holiness. Mercy may remove the punishment for sin, but it never moves the BOUNDARY of right and wrong. If all God needed to do was change His standard to clear us of wrongdoing, Jesus would never have needed to suffer or die. Without a changeless boundary, the Cross means nothing. And Mercy cannot remove the punishment for sin unless that punishment has already been paid—the purpose of the Cross. “Without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sin.” (Hebrews 9:22)
Yet, in our modern church, we have an epidemic of ‘cheap grace’, even though a daily reading of Scripture would quickly bring conviction that we must not continue living in our sin just because we’ve said a prayer of salvation. “What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? Certainly not! How shall we who died to sin live any longer in it?” (Romans 6:1) “Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? Certainly not! Do you not know that to whom you present yourselves slaves to obey, you are that one’s slaves whom you obey, whether of sin leading to death or of obedience leading to righteousness?” (Romans 6:15-16)
In point of fact, the Bible makes it clear that a truly transformed heart will manifest through growth in holiness because the Holy Spirit is at work within us, causing us to become more and more like Christ Jesus. “We all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.” (II Corinthians 3:18)
Some people assert, however, that Old Testament boundaries no longer apply to us. Certainly, they are correct up to a point. Upon his conversion, the Pharisee Paul experienced the amazing freedom that grace brings when the Holy Spirit transformed his heart and revealed to him that he no longer needed to keep all the external rituals of the Mosaic Law. However, he warns clearly, “For you, brethren, have been called to liberty; only do not use liberty as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another…. Now the works of the flesh are evident, which are: adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lewdness, idolatry, sorcery, hatred, contentions, jealousies, outburst of wrath, selfish ambitions, dissensions, heresies, envy, murders, drunkenness, revelries, and the like.” (Galatians 5:13,19-21).
Jesus said, “What comes out of a man, that defiles a man. For from within, out of the heart of men, proceed evil thoughts, adulteries, fornications, murders, thefts, covetousness, wickedness, deceit, lewdness, an evil eye, blasphemy, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within and defile a man.” (Mark 7:20-23) Therefore, He gives us His Spirit living within who produces holiness and righteousness pleasing to God. perfect but now“The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control…. Those who are Christ’s have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.” (Galatians 5:22-24)
Holiness begins in a transformed heart and manifests in a pure lifestyle--perhaps not perfect but able to meet God’s Standard far more often because of the empowering presence of the Holy Spirit. Notice, Scripture makes clear that the standard has not—and never will be—removed. “Now the purpose of the commandment is love from a pure heart, from a good conscience, and from sincere faith…. The law is not made for a righteous person, but for the lawless and insubordinate, for the ungodly and for sinners, for the unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers, for manslayers, for fornicators, for sodomites, for kidnappers, for liars, for perjurers, and if there is any other thing that is contrary to sound doctrine.” (I Timothy 1:5, 8-10)
Now we can better understand why some rules don’t apply anymore while other boundaries reflect the Eternal Nature and Unchanging Holiness of our Creator. When Jesus rose from the grave after paying for our sins, the Holy Spirit showed His church that grace frees us from external rituals to produce holy fruit flowing from a transformed heart. The Apostle Paul wrote at length about the difference between external holiness and inner holiness. The former is abolished while the latter radiates the active residence of the Holy Spirit within a person’s heart.
“For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit, and to us, to lay upon you no greater burden than these necessary things: that you abstain from things offered to idols, from blood, from things strangled, and from sexual immorality. If you keep yourselves from these, you will do well.” Acts 15:28-29 The Apostle Paul addressed this statement to Jewish believers who had memorized the numerous requirements of Mosaic Law from their youth.
As Paul began to preach to the Gentiles, however, the Holy Spirit propelled him to explain the most basic elements of true holiness because the Roman society worshipped dozens of gods and engaged in every form of sexuality imaginable. Paul wrote to the Romans, “God also gave them up to uncleanness, in the lusts of their hearts, to dishonor their bodies among themselves, who exchanged the truth of God for the lie and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator who is blessed forever. Amen. For this reason God gave them up to vile passions. For even their women exchanged the natural use for what is against nature. Likewise also, the men, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust for one another, men with men committing what is shameful, and receiving in themselves the penalty of their error which is due. Even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a debased mind, to do those things which are not fitting.”  Romans 1:24-28
Scripture directly addresses many behaviors that God defines as immoral, rebellious, and in direct opposition to His unchanging holiness. Today’s culture wants the church to question and reject God’s boundaries. Movies, music, art, and now our laws pressure us to accept sexual standards as archaic and embrace our “freedom” to participate in sexual encounters with anyone and in any way that we want.   But Biblical standards are based on God’s Eternal Nature. He created us. He knows best.
 “To the law and to the testimony! If they do not speak according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.” Isaiah 8:20

Monday, April 6, 2015

Offerings


We all have something to offer.

I’m learning that offering what I have brings God glory regardless of how others look upon my offering or receive it. In God’s eyes, there is no offering too small, too scary, too transparent, too simple, or too extravagant to be viewed with disdain. People may look down upon the offering based on standards of this world, but heaven never will.

Think about what you have to offer then think about the little boy with the five loaves and two fishes. His lunch wasn’t enough to feed the 5000 or even a few. It was barely enough for just him. But it was more than enough for Jesus.

Our offering isn’t about the size or expense of it. When we give with all our heart, our Heavenly Father rejoices. Our offering may be intensely personal or a simple turn of phrase, but if we’re giving it as a blessing then it’s intensely beautiful.

A year ago, I offered my house as a place for a Bible study, and it hurt when other homes were accepted instead. I battled with pain. Was it because I’m divorced? A single mom whose kids are a bit rowdy? Living in a low-income neighborhood? Why wasn’t my home good enough? As I cried out to God, He healed my heart with His gentle love and showed me that as much as I wanted to host His Presence with other believers, it wasn’t the right timing. My trying to fit another activity and present a perfect home would have been overwhelming. The kids and I still needed time to be messy and focus on personal healing.

Now as I offer my second novel, His Cloak of Grace, to agents in the hope of gaining representation to Christian fiction publishers, I’m opening my heart for a series of rejections. But as I’ve learned more about God’s refining process and the worth of every offering, I’m finding that the moments of rejection are just moments on my journey—the journey God has for me. No one can ever take away the value of the message He gave me to share: He gave me the plot and characters to write and no one else has that story to share. His purpose for my writing will be accomplished as long as I’m willing to step out in faith and humbly accept the rejections that come as well as the timing of acceptance—even if that’s just one person at a time instead of thousands.

Think of an altar where offerings are often made. Some offerings are just like that…sacrifices. Sacrifices are the offerings that cost us to give. Maybe our time, our energy, our money. Or maybe like Jesus’ death on the cross, an offering may cost our reputation, our followers, our lives. Yet God says to give it—bring the offering and trust Him with both the cost and the result. After all, without death there is no resurrection power.

Offerings cost us when they’re rejected. They cost us our pride, our confidence, maybe our hope. That’s why Jesus allows the refining, so we learn to place our confidence, pride, and hope in Him. Maybe you’ve experienced rejection. Whether in large ways or small, rejection stings and presents us with a choice: to shut down, react in bitterness and anger, or forgive, let go of self-protection, and move on.

In my life, I’ve made offerings that I thought would be immediately accepted and approved only to feel stunned by rejection and quick dismissal. Does that make my offering of less worth or significance? No, nor does it yours.

The purifying process of God’s grace means sometimes our offerings have to go through fire so that our motives and character are refined. As we surrender to God’s timing and purposes for our lives, we discover a greater beauty in forgiveness, submission, and humility. As we gaze upon the face of Jesus, we see there the scars of a soul submitted to the will of Daddy God. “Not my will, but Yours be done.”

I’m still learning to trust God when an offering is rejected as much as when one is accepted. Both require the grace and strength of God in our lives to fulfill God’s plan and bring Him great glory. 

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Preparation and Learning

Irene Gleeson wrote before her death, "It's often said that to be a good teacher, one has to become a great learner. Although I was the white teacher with the western training and the alphabet charts, I had become a student of the Acholi traditions and culture."


She was referring to her early months in Uganda, adjusting to life on a harsh missionfield. As I read her statement, though, immediately I saw again the vision God gave me in 2010 as I sought guidance for the next phase of my life. I saw myself with my children sitting at elementary school desks. The Holy Spirit stood teaching at the front of the classroom, and He smiled as He gazed at us. Then unexpectedly, He came around the desks and sat at the child's desk next to me--a desk much too small for Him! As one of the children climbed into His lap, He said tenderly to me, "We'll learn together now."


I had no idea that the vision was preparing my heart for reaching my children at their level and also for the job God had for me--being a Family Support Assistant who sits every day next to a child at school in order to assist with learning and behavior. God is so consistently kind in His guidance--and sees so clearly into our futures, even when we don't understand!


I've learned that visions give us hope for the immediate present and also guidance for the future. They often puzzle us a little and always surprise us. I've learned that God gives accurate details in many visions, but other times He speaks in idioms and analogies just as Jesus spoke in parables to reach the heart. Always, the Lord is seeking to prepare and guide as He ministers hope and healing.


The Lord has shown me visions that obviously represented spiritual truth in order to give me both the desire and courage to do something completely out of my comfort zone.


During my three years at the University of Great Falls as I obtained my Bachelor's in Psychology, I had an overwhelming longing increase each semester for the staff and students on campus to come to know the incredible love of the Father's heart. One afternoon while at my parents' house, I saw myself stand up on a table in one of my classrooms and begin beseeching the people to see and accept Jesus' great love for them. The vision widened and as I preached from that table, people from all over the campus began to stream into the classroom. Then I saw the water of the Holy Spirit soak the lush lawns of the campus between the buildings, saturating like a reservoir every inch of University soil with the love and grace of God. I knew the vision represented what God could do and I told the Lord, "If You give me the opportunity, I will preach."


The opportunity came. Not as I expected, with me spontaneously jumping up before fellow students, but formerly at a service held yearly in honor of Martin King Luther Jr.  President McAllister, who has encouraged me countless times, called me personally and said how much he had been moved by my thank-you speech at the University's scholarship banquet. Since the motto of the University is Uncommon Courage and because I had been given the Courage Award, I had shared my testimony of God's grace and strength both in a closed-country and in standing up to abuse in my marriage. President McAllister asked for me to share my heart regarding the truth that we are all equal in God's sight. Jesus had given me a podium! That day I watched people stream across the campus to Trinity Chapel to attend this ceremony honoring everyone who live lives of kindness, respect, and courage.


I praised God for blessing me with this opportunity to share His heart and thanked Him for fulfilling the vision. But God wasn't done. Just four months later, the University asked me to speak again--this time at my graduation baccalaureate. Overwhelmed, I went to the Throne of Grace and asked for the Holy Spirit's words and wisdom. I wanted to encourage, strengthen, and spur closer to Jesus the staff and family members attending in honor of our 2013 graduating class.


Jesus did it. He gave me the words and gave people who had become very dear to my heart His message of hope, compassion, and right-standing with Him. He is amazing. Always, He prepares us then sends us, empowered with His strength, into a future we could never have imagined or created for ourselves.


Jesus--Our Beautiful Redeemer!

Saturday, November 22, 2014

When Divorce is Mercy


(All Scripture quotations are taken from the New King James except where indicated otherwise.)

Today, I’m going to approach a difficult topic, mostly because it’s been on my mind and heart for quite awhile and there are probably a lot of people who wrestle with the same questions I do regarding God’s perspective on an issue that affects a lot of people’s lives in this day and age. I’m talking about the subject of divorce.

I’m not digging into this topic in order to look at every reason divorce occurs. I think we can all accept the fact that none of us are perfect and failed relationships occur because of selfishness. After all, if we all loved like Jesus, divorce simply wouldn’t happen.

However, because of the Fall and mankind’s innate self-centeredness, God set up some guidelines for handling certain unacceptable behaviors within the marriage covenant. I call them the three A’s that equal the great “I”: adultery, addiction, abuse. And they all stem from “I”-centeredness, or in Scriptural terms: Idolatry of the heart.

Thank God, not everyone suffers from the 3 A’s, but all of us, to varying extents, suffer from the Big I. As believers in Christ, we are called to continually submit our attitudes, words, and behaviors to the refining work of the Holy Spirit through His personal touch, His written Word, and fellowship in His Church.

Since we have all hurt one another at times, I praise God that Jesus set an example for us when He said to the self-righteous religious leaders, “Let him who is without sin cast the first stone” (John 8:7). He reminded them of the Father’s heart when dealing with broken rules, “What God desires is mercy and not sacrifice” (Matthew 12:7).

Jesus set an example of mercy that we are commanded to follow, so when someone admits their failures and repents of how they’ve hurt another, we don’t hold their pasts against them. We recognize with gratitude that God’s mercies are new every morning, and we seek to extend the same grace He does (see Lamentations 3:22-23). We extend the second chances that Jesus, at the Cross, purchased for all of us. After all, if not for grace, who could stand? As believers, we recognize that our right-standing with God is through the righteousness of Christ alone.

But there is another question pressing on my heart, a question that a number of pastors will answer with a definite yes, but with which I painfully disagree. The question is this: Is divorce always a sin? And the question that automatically comes after it: Is remarriage after divorce to someone other than the original partner always sin?

I believe the heart of the Father as well as Scripture answers to both: Not always. It depends.

To make a judgment call on a behavior, one must know the reason behind the action. First, sin is anything that separates us from God. It’s rebellion and pleasing self above pleasing God. It’s the big “I”. Second, sin is always a matter of the heart, which may or may not be identifiable by behavior.

Let me give two examples among many in Scripture. First, consider Mary, the mother of Jesus. When she became pregnant by the power of the Holy Spirit, her neighbors and family judged her. Joseph, because he was a God-fearing man, felt he had no choice but to divorce her. But her heart was right with God (Matthew 1:18-20). Her pregnancy was not the result of sin but of complete surrender to God’s will (Luke 1:38). Second, consider Jesus healing on the Sabbath. The Pharisees were irate that He would break a “holiness” law by working on the Sabbath. Jesus declared that the Father was more concerned with setting captives of demonic bondage and human suffering free than in keeping traditions and the appearance of holiness. (see Luke 13:10-17, 14:1-6, 16:15)

These examples do not refute the fact that all too many divorces occur simply because couples are not willing to submit to the refining work of the Holy Spirit in their lives. Relationships, especially family ones, are the primary place where God teaches us to love sacrificially. He said to husbands, “Lay down your lives for your wives as Christ laid down His life for the Church” (see Ephesians 5:25-29). In a culture of instant gratification and give-me-my-rights mentality, too many people tell an unhappy wife or husband, “Sure, go ahead. You’re unhappy. Get a divorce and find someone better.” That’s not the Father’s heart. 

God will never advocate divorce as a quick out when a relationship gets costly, and godly leaders will be diligent to remind struggling couples of the verse in Malachi 2:16, “God hates divorce.” Then they quote Jesus in Matthew 19:6, “What God has joined together, let not man separate.” And if someone’s really intent on divorce, an even more humbling verse is applied: Jesus said, “Whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another, commits adultery; and whoever marries her who is divorced commits adultery” (Matthew 19:9).

At this point, couples can submit to the Word of God, fall to their knees and beg the Holy Spirit to give them the power to love even when it seems impossible. And God hears their prayers. Or they can harden themselves to the Word of God and say, “I’ll do what I want. God wants me happy.” And they don’t understand that a change in circumstance isn’t where joy lies. Joy rests in the bosom of the Father, doing His will, and heeding His voice.

But what about a third scenario? The scenario that occurs when any one of the 3 A’s is involved: adultery, addiction, or abuse. This is when one spouse cries out for God’s love to be able to endure the inexcusable and love the other spouse even in the midst of extreme pain and repeated offenses while the other spouse keeps right on doing their “A”, unbelieving or uncaring about how much their words, attitude, and actions are hurting others. In this scenario, after crying out for love that surpasses human love and receiving it yet still enduring great pain and torment, the spouse with the soft, gentle heart cries out, Oh, Lord, who can stand?

Ministers will point out that separation is permissible within Biblical guidelines. Separate in order to reconcile…which in some cases is sufficient to bring a spouse to recognition of his/her harmful behavior, words, and attitudes. But what if it isn’t?

Jesus said, “Moses allowed a man to write a divorce document because of the hardness of your hearts.” (Matthew 19:8) Whose hardness then? I think a lot of believers live with an abusive spouse because they are afraid of the condemnation of the church if they are the ones to initiate divorce.

Which leads me back to my initial question: Is divorce always sin?

To answer that, I have to ask a couple more questions. First, can God sin? No, of course not. Second, can God condemn something He Himself has done? No.

So let’s read Jeremiah 3:8-10. “She saw that I divorced faithless Israel because of her adultery. But that treacherous sister Judah had no fear, and now she, too, has left Me and given herself to prostitution. Israel treated it all so lightly—she thought nothing of committing adultery by worshipping idols made of wood and stone. So now the land has been polluted. But despite all this, her faithless sister Judah has never sincerely returned to Me. She has only pretended to be sorry. I, the Lord, have spoken!” (NLT)

This Scripture leads us to a dilemma. God says He hates divorce yet He declares that He divorced Israel. How can we reconcile these two seemingly contradictory statements? We know God isn’t hypocritical, so the answer lies in context. What is the context of God initiating a divorce?

Idolatry.

Not adultery. That is simply the metaphor used to explain why God hates idolatry so much. So what is idolatry? Not just the pagan idea of bowing before a statue. Ezekiel 14:2-5 tells us idolatry goes much deeper than that. It’s rooted in the heart. “These people have set up idols in their hearts.” In fact, in Jeremiah 8:9-12, God takes it a step further. He outright states to those in rebellion: “Behold, they have rejected the word of the Lord, so what wisdom do they have? Therefore I will give their wives to others, and their fields to those who will inherit them, because from the least even to the greatest everyone is given to covetousness, from the prophet even to the priest, everyone deals falsely…. Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? No! They were not at all ashamed, nor did they know how to blush.”

“I’ll give your fields and wives to others.” This statement is in the context of slaying the idolaters. Throughout the Old Testament, God brings this indictment: “You are covetous liars, pretending to love God but living for your own pleasures and covering your sins with religious jargon and rituals” (see Isaiah 58:1-4). Jesus brings the same indictment of those who serve in appearance, “They bind heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on men’s shoulders, but they themselves will not move them with one of their fingers. But all their works they do to be seen by men…. Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you devour widows’ houses and for a pretense make long prayers. Therefore you will receive greater condemnation” (Matthew 23:4-5, 14).

Religious, emotional, and psychological abuse within marriage are even more rampant than physical abuse. How do I know this? Because the statistics show it. Physical abuse never stands alone. It occurs after the stage has been set with verbal beatings and a destruction of the partner’s self-worth. Psychological abuse manipulates the mind, making the partner believe they are going crazy because the lies they recognize with their heart are always denied and rationalized and the abuser is always changing the “rules” of the relationship. Emotional abuse happens when a person is devalued, told they deserve to be hurt, and that they’ll never be good enough. Religious abuse occurs when the other forms of abuse are justified with religious verbiage, including Scripture. Religious abusers quote verses that highlight the spouse’s “sins” and put the abuser in charge. Both men and women can use Scripture as a cloak for vice.

How sad.

And God hates this abuse and pretense even more than He hates divorce.

He said to idolatrous Israel, “Because of your transgressions, I have written you a certificate of divorce” (see Isaiah 50:1). God was calling them out on their sins and refusing to be united with them anymore.

He still calls abuse out today, in any form that it occurs.

Idolatry sets “I” up as god. Ask anyone who has come out of the abused end of an abusive relationship. They’ll say immediately, “Yes, my spouse/partner wanted my total obedience I was to be completely subservient to his/her will or I was disciplined (punished). I had no voice.” In essence, an abuser wants worshipped.

When abuse occurs, the abused as well as the abuser always has a choice. The abuser has a choice to repent of following the pride of Lucifer and setting themselves up as god (see Isaiah 14:12-17). The abused has the choice: Do I obey (worship) God or man? (see Acts 5:29)

Remember the temptation in the desert? Lucifer, now Satan, said to Jesus, “Fall down and worship me.” Jesus rebuked him completely, “The Lord your God, Him only will you serve” (Matthew 4:8-10).

Pornography also is a sin of idolatry. And Jesus said to even look at someone with lust (sexual fantasy) is also adultery (Matthew 5:28). He wants to expose the heart. He also wants us to understand how intensely God feels about idolatry/sexual immorality. Idols/lusts of the heart are equal in God’s eyes to the outward action.

Remember what the Apostle Paul said? He said, “How can we eat at the Lord’s table and the table of demons?” (I Corinthians 10:20-22) He said the table of demons is a symbol of idolatry. And he said we have to choose: whose side are we on? Are we going to serve God with a pure heart, or worship demons?

Did you know that the call to “put away” foreign wives in Ezra 9-10 and Nehemiah 13:23-29 was the only way back to holiness that the priests offered? In Old King James’ English, to “put away” meant to divorce. It’s the same verbiage that prophets used in calling people to “put away” the foreign gods among them. In the Old Testament, the Israelites were commanded to put strange wives from them because their foreign wives had introduced foreign gods (idols) into their homes. These men wept in grief, but did as they were commanded because of their deep desire to be right with the Lord. At that time, the children from these unions were considered contaminated by sin and were also put away (Ezra 10:1-3). In the New Testament, Paul declares such an action is not needed if the unbelieving partner is willing to stay because the children are consecrated by the believer (see I Corinthians 7:14).

Paul further writes that if the unbeliever chooses to depart, the believing spouse is not under bondage to remain in the marriage or under bondage of the Law’s condemnation (I Corinthians 7:15). We are not responsible for someone else’s choices.

However, there are times when an abusive or idolatrous partner refuses to leave. An abuser’s mentality views the spouse and children as “property.”  The status and control they have the relationship is exactly what feeds their ego, so they will use anything—whether physical battery or religious condemnation—to keep the other spouse in submission.

Dear Ones, the Holy Spirit is continually calling His people to purity and full submission to HIS Lordship. He will call us as a couple if we will listen, but He will honor our free will and call us as individuals if He sees that one partner is willing to submit but the other spouse continually hardens his/her heart to the conviction of the Holy Spirit (see Hebrews 3:7-13).

He calls us to “Come out from among them and be separate, says the Lord. Do not touch what is unclean, and I will receive you” (II Corinthians 6:17). The Apostle Paul writes, “If the unbeliever is willing to stay, let him/her remain. Do not divorce them” (see I Corinthians 7:12-13). Why? Because God is drawing the hearts of the lost. But for those who “profess to know Christ but in works deny Him”, God has a stricter demand (see Titus 1:16 and Matthew 18:15-17). His convicting presence will confront that son or daughter until they repent or outright rebel. This rebellion will often escalate the religious abuse and any other abusive behavior against the people who dare bring accountability. In Jeremiah 44:15-27, Israelite men were confronted with allowing their wives to worship idols, but they refused to repent. They sided with their foreign wives, and Jeremiah told them that God would no longer speak to them.

Furthermore, the Apostle Paul states clearly in I Corinthians 5:11-13, “But now I have written to you not to keep company with anyone named a brother, who is sexually immoral, or covetous, or an idolater, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or an extortioner—not even to eat with such a person…. Therefore, put away from yourselves the evil person.”

Dear Friends, are there ever circumstances where God grants permission for divorce, declaring it is no longer sin but rather a pursuit of holiness? I am answering a definite Yes. In cases where the refining process has brought one spouse to the Cross while the other spirals into darker idolatry: The answer is Yes.

Even more than that, in such cases, His “Yes” to divorce is an act of mercy.

In the Old Testament, a man or woman who deliberately defied God through idolatry or adultery was to be taken out and stoned (see Deuteronomy 13:6-10 and 22:22). In certain cases, where the offense was subtle yet malicious, the Lord smote the offender Himself. Think of Abigail’s cruel husband, Nabal, whom the Lord killed. Abigail then accepted David’s proposal of marriage (I Samuel 25:37-39). Think of Tamar’s marriages, where God struck down the men for their refusal to fulfill their God-ordained duty to her (Genesis 38:6-10).

Today, suffering spouses are crying out in their heart for God to protect them, cause a radical change of heart in their spouses, or get them out of a relationship that only hurts them over and over. Yet, as they seek counsel, there are still church leaders today who heap on shame and condemnation, contributing to men and women staying in marriages that are not marriage at all because the abuser has turned the union into a master-slave relationship. And the abused goes along with the sham to keep the outward appearance and avoid being labeled with a scarlet letter.

So Jesus in His mercy peels off the label “Marriage” and exposes the slavery and idolatry it’s turned into. And He reminds us of that Scripture, which says if a brother (or sister) has sinned against you and refuses to repent after the church has confronted him gently on the error of his ways, to treat such a one as an unbeliever (Matthew 18:15-17). And I believe—no, I know—that Jesus gently whispers, “I know the truth, little one. Don’t be afraid anymore. I’ve come to set the captive free” (Isaiah 61:1).

When we dare to believe, the yoke of oppression lifts as the last vestiges of our union dissolves like mist. Because the Holy Spirit can never be one with the demonic spirit that an unrepentant heart has embraced (see I Corinthians 6:15-17 and 10:14-22). So we are set free while the Father whispers, “I’ll pursue my lost son or daughter. I’ll never relent. How can I give them up? My compassion and pity overwhelm me!” (Hosea 11:7-9)

 And in His great mercy, He says, “Divorce” and relents from decreeing “Death.”

He wants to set two captives free.

But I can only make the choice for me.

Yet this realization leads us to our second weighty question: Is remarriage after divorce to someone other than the original spouse sin?

After all, Paul the apostle says that a spouse who separates or divorces is to remain single or reconcile the marriage (I Corinthians 7:10-11). If a divorced spouse(s) repents and shows a genuine change in attitude, word, and behavior then reconciliation is possible.  Even when God divorced Israel, His ultimate intention was to bring them back into union with Himself (Jeremiah 3:12-14).

But HOW was He going to bring them back? Not as idolaters (adulterers, addicts, abusers), for holiness cannot embrace uncleanness and light cannot fellowship with darkness (II Corinthians 6:14-16). Instead, God declared, “I will make a new covenant with you. I will put a new heart in you and give you a new spirit. I will write my laws on your heart so you will obey me and know me as the Lord” (see Ezekiel 36:25-27) In other words, God’s plan throughout history has been to redeem us out of darkness, purify Himself His own special people, and fellowship intimately with us by giving us as a chaste, pure bride to Christ (Ephesians 1:4-6, II Corinthians 11:2).

When we trust in Jesus’ redemptive work on the Cross, we are united with Him. We become “one spirit with Him” (I Corinthians 6:17). In this way, marriage represents the beautiful intimacy and union that God has created us to have with Him. Reconciliation and remarriage, therefore, would only occur after trust has been reestablished that both partners will pursue the Lord’s will and heart for marriage together.

But what about remarriage when the other partner remains single?

In today’s society, this question is generally waived but for those of us who want to be remarried (or have remarried) a Godly person, when we read the Word and because we have a deep longing to walk in the will of God, the first-glance answer provokes an intense pain. It would seem that, except in cases of out-and-out adultery, Jesus is sentencing us to a life spent waiting either for the original spouse to repent and genuinely change (which may never happen) or being single, even when we have children to raise and a God-given desire to experience what marriage was meant to be.

First, is there any hope of reconciliation? Second, what does mercy for the abused say?

As shown above, divorce in many cases is the Lord’s mercy. In cases of the 3 A’s, it is meant to bring freedom to a captive and not punishment.

In Romans 7:2-6, Paul explains how grace in Christ Jesus swallows up the requirements of the law. He explains it in the context of marriage: “For the woman who has a husband is bound by the law to her husband as long as he lives. But if the husband dies, she is released from the law of her husband. So then if, while her husband lives, she marries another man, she will be called an adulteress. But if her husband dies, she is free from that law, so that she is no adulteress, though she has married another man. Therefore, my brethren, you also have become dead to the law through the body of Christ, that you may be married to another—to Him who was raised from the dead that we should bear fruit to God. For when we were in the flesh, the sinful passions which were aroused by the law were at work in our members to bear fruit to death. But now we have been delivered from the law, having died to what we were held by, so that we should serve in the newness of the Spirit and not in the oldness of the letter.”

In other words, our union with darkness has ended. In fact, we’re the ones who have died to that old way of life! We’ve been buried with Christ and raised with Him, so Paul is able to exclaim with joy, “Who shall bring a charge against God’s elect? It is God who justifies. Who is he who condemns? It is Christ who died, and furthermore is also risen, who is even at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession for us” (Romans 8:33-34).

So then God does not deal with us according to the past but according to our present identity in Christ. We are beloved children of God, and “If God be for us, who can be against us? He who did not withhold His only Son but delivered Him for us all, who shall He not with Him also freely give us all things?” (Romans 8:31-32)

 Proverbs 18:22 says, “He who finds a wife finds a good thing and obtains favor from the Lord.” The glory of the New Covenant is that blessings are given, not earned. In fact, Paul says we’re foolish if we believe after we’re saved that we have to now earn the goodness of God in our lives (Galatians 3:1-3). Our Heavenly Father delights to lavish His love upon us, and because our righteousness is in Christ (and not by keeping a law-code), we can be confident that He will work all things together for good and withhold no good thing (I John 3:1, Galatians 2:16, Romans 8:32, Psalm 84:11).

This means we can trust our Father’s heart. We don’t have to go out there looking for a new spouse, for God promises to be our Husband always (Isaiah 54:5-6, Hosea 2:19-20). Neither do we have to live under condemnation, believing that because we’re divorced God can no longer bless us with a beautiful marriage (Romans 8:1-4). Jesus is a personal God, and He deals with us on an individual, unique, and specific basis. He speaks to us as individuals and leads us along the path He has created for us into a future He created for us before time again (John 10:27).

Sunday, July 20, 2014

No Holding Back


Tonight while we worshiped during service at Faith Center, I saw a picture: a great dam, a strong dam, like the dam at Niagara Falls with a great big, beautiful, peaceful lake behind it. I felt in that picturesque moment, the power of the Spirit suddenly burst upon the lake.
As the power was released, I saw people in the water and the water felt like the souls of the people filled with such radical, absolute passion that they could no longer stand being held back. The people and the water rushed at the dam and broke through it, pulsating over the rubble fast and strong.
I felt in that moment that my heart wanted to burst. Yes, Lord! Let there be such intense breakthrough that nothing can hold the church back.
Then I felt, but I’m not sure, that the Lord said, “The dam is holding My church. It is built to create the lake, a quiet, peaceful place to learn and grow. But get ready! Get ready! The power of My Spirit is about to be released in a new way, a way unparalleled in history.
"It will seem as if the whole dam is breaking—the whole structure upon which you, My dearly beloved, lean. Upon which, you My dearly beloved Church, lean. Because I cannot be held back by anything man-made. I must have a glorious Bride—a Bride created for excellence, released by the Spirit to expect more than mind can see or heart can imagine.
"I’m coming again. I’m coming for a Bride washed, redeemed, and sanctified, wholly one in heart with Me. So I’m doing a new thing. I’m doing a radical thing. I’m taking the old and breaking it apart to allow an even greater impartation of grace by My Spirit.
"See, I’m doing this thing, here, now. And I’m letting you know so you can get ready! I want you ready so there’s no hindrance, no obstruction to grace. Don't fear, Beloved. Perfect love casts out fear and My love is perfect for you, My beautiful Bride, My beautiful Church.
"I say, 'Get ready!' Rush smooth and strong in perfect sync with the new wine I’m bringing, the passionate grace I’m imparting, not just to one or two but a dispensation of anointing upon everyone from the youngest to the oldest, from the wisest to the simplest so that everyone may see and know that I am the Lord your God.”

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Stewarding King's Gold

For this is the will of God, your sanctification… I Thessalonians 4:3
No matter where we are in our lives—young, old, married, divorced, widowed, single—there is one area that all of us must steward with care. The area of sexual/romantic passion.
For some of us this resource, a gift from God, exists in its potential, hidden underground like untouched reservoirs of petrol. Others of us who have participated in an intimate relationship have discovered the gushing, almost overwhelming power of sexual desire, like the force of a petrol spring. Like an unexpected strike while we are cultivating friendships, suddenly the oil gushes out with abandon, heedless of everything and everyone around.  For others among us, the oil has ceased to surge out with relentless force, yet the reserve still exists, deep under the surface.
For generations, men and women have built oil rigs—the institution called marriage—over these forceful springs. They recognized that the thick, murky substance, called black gold, was a bountiful resource upon their land, and they respected the truth that both petrol and sexual/romantic passion must be handled with care in order to benefit the owners. If handled carelessly, God's gift of passion, King's gold, creates great harm rather than great good, acting just like crude oil, coating land, animals, and people with its toxic, gooey texture, ruining the crops growing in the area, and forming a mirey bog.
Instead of respecting the reasons behind tradition, recent generations have been exhorted to exude a laissez-faire attitude toward sex and romance. They’ve been told by the leading gurus in human wisdom, “Go ahead! Frolic in it! Have fun! It’s natural—enjoy it!” Then they’re even handed matches to light a fire and dance in the flames. After all, passionate love is explosive. It’s amazing. It’s the black gold everybody says will make us rich and famous and above all—make us feel loved. It’s also black and ugly and deadly for those coated in the oil when the fire ignites.
Just like petrol, sexual passion requires special equipment to reap the benefits we all know it has. The Bible says clearly that the special equipment needed is marriage. Worldly gurus wave aside the significance of a legal ceremony, blithely declaring that a wedding certificate doesn’t make a difference. But God says with incredible clarity that marriage matters. When we enter into a marriage covenant, we bring God into the union—along with His oil rigging.
The oil rigging plunges into the oil well and brings up the natural resource for the benefit of all. The owners of that field can then use the oil to fuel their ovens, their cars, their lamps, and their homes. Petrol converts into many forms for many uses, all of which produce dividends for the couple who submit to God’s covering of marriage. The oil rigging also enables the couple to drill deeper and bring up the petrol sitting in reserve even when the first rushes of passion have subsided.
God’s oil rigging makes sure the passion doesn’t destroy the good seed He’s placed in our souls, the strong character He’s developing within us. However, those who refuse to enter into a marriage agreement are like farmers who refusesto invest in drilling equipment. They let the oil keep pumping out until the whole land is coated with black tar, unfit for man or beast to walk on. In the same way, sexual activity outside of marriage dumps toxic petrol all over the insides of our hearts, clogging our receptivity of Living Water.  When oil covers a land, water just runs right off. It can’t penetrate the earth or enable plants to grow.
Some of you may be like me, knowing that the force of a petrol spring exists and wondering how to contain it since the oil rigging is not in place. In these cases, the Lord has said to me, “The powerful force of this desire must be covered by a huge, heavy stone so that the oil does not contaminate the land.” I cried out to Him, “What stone is strong enough to withstand the force of desire when it hits?”
The Lord said, “I am the Rock. I am the One who covers you.”
Ah, Lord, how amazing and wonderful You are! Jesus is the Rock who covers our desires, reserving us for the union that will bring honor to Him. Until that day, He requires obedience and faithful trust. “For this is the will of God, your sanctification: that you should abstain from sexual immorality, that each of you should know how to possess his own vessel in sanctification and honor, not in passion of lust, like the Gentiles who do not know God…For God did not call us to uncleanness but in holiness. Therefore he who rejects this does not reject man, but God, who has also given us His Holy Spirit” (I Thessalonians 4:3-8).
Jesus doesn’t ask what can’t be done. He wouldn’t say to abstain and wait for marriage if we were unable to obey.
Nor can He protect our land if we keep edging the Rock off in order to please ourselves. The oil will seep up and contaminate our hearts, building into a toxic wasteland within our souls if we do not take a firm stand against all sexual activity while single. Once married, only sex for the sake of the marriage partner will please the Lord. Removing the Rock to gaze at pornography, masturbate, contemplate love-making scenes within the mind or on TV, or any other activity that pleases the flesh rather than the Lord, will all pump that black oil into the deepest crevices of our souls.
And eventually toxic exposure will destroy us. (Romans 6:15-23)
Praise God, though, that when we come to the point of repentance, the place where we’re sick of all the pretenses and self-gratifications, Jesus is there to wash us clean. Ephesians 5:26 says Jesus cleanses and sanctifies us by the washing of water by the word. What word? The word of truth. The word of righteousness.
Father, Spirit, and Son will never contradict the Scriptures that testify of them.  No one can say that God has authorized their unmarried or extra-marital sexual activity. If they seek to claim a special privilege, they have deceived themselves. Nor can we claim that since God is so forgiving, we’re allowed to wallow in the mire of unrestrained sexual passion anytime we want to then be washed clean. The toxicity of the land will testify to the Law of God: “What a man sows, that he will also reap. He who sows to the flesh will of the flesh reap corruption. He who sows to the Spirit, will of the Spirit reap everlasting life.” (Galatians 6:8)
That life is for today. Now. Abundant life.
Praise God for redemption! Praise God for repentance! Praise God for second and third and fourth chances! But let us also choose—choose—to walk in joyful obedience, knowing the great price He paid for our cleansing.
Lord Jesus, today cleanse us, wash us, sanctify us, and place the strong Rock of Your very Person—our relationship with You—over the desire for intimacy that exists within us. We choose this day to submit to You.
Make us a people ready and useful for the outpouring of Your splendor!
(For further Spirit-filled studies and counseling on the stewardship of Biblical sexuality, visit http://www.masteringlife.org.)

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Every Fire Needs Grace

In the natural, every fire must have two ingredients to keep burning: fuel and oxygen.
Firefighters pre-burn an area of land with smaller fires they can control so that when the raging wildfire arrives at that strip of land, it finds no more fuel. With no more trees or brush to consume, the fire turns back on itself and dies. In his book Welcoming a Visitation of the Holy Spirit, Wes Campbell, pastor of New Life Vineyard Fellowship in Kelowna, British Columbia, shares, “In the same way, the fire of the Spirit must be touching new people every day in order to keep blazing.” I would add that the fire within our souls must stay in continual connection with God to stay alive.
Isaiah 9:18-19 makes this same correlation, although in a negative sense. Remember, what is true spiritually applies both in the positive and negative. The prophet writes, “For wickedness burns as the fire; it shall devour the briers and thorns, and kindle in the thickets of the forest. They shall mount up like rising smoke. Through the wrath of the Lord of hosts the land is burned up, and the people shall be as fuel for the fire. No man shall spare his brother.” The emphasis of the passage is not on physical fire devouring natural trees but about how spiritual wickedness devours people.
Spiritual passion operates by the same principle. Love for the Lord ignites in our hearts when we offer our lives as fuel for the Lord’s flame, the flame of Yah. This fire then leaps forward, blown by the wind of the Spirit, to the next willing heart—the next person hungry for God’s love and personal Presence.
Jordan Fowler conveys this principle with beautiful and powerful imagery in the song Fuel:
“I have no silver and no gold to give.
No frankincense or precious myrrh.
But what I have to You I give: a heart that’s broken for the world.
Consume me for Your fire and use me for Your heart’s desire:
To spread Your flame to every tribe and nation.
I give up my life to You to burn as Your holy fuel.
Ignite my heart to burn up for the nations.
My life can be Your fuel—my hopes, my dreams, my wants, my all.
My life can be Your fuel.” 

Second, fire must have oxygen. We can have all the wood in the world, but if the atmosphere is sucked dry of oxygen, every fire will instantly extinguish. That’s why small fires can be suffocated with a heavy blanket or stomped out by a tough boot. The same truth applies to us as people. In the realm of spiritual analogy, oxygen represents grace. Robert Louis Stevenson once said, “There is nothing but God’s grace. We walk upon it; we breathe it; we live and die by it; it makes the nails and axles of the universe.” Ole Hallesby said, “The ‘air’ which our souls need also envelops all of us at all times and on all sides. God is round about us…on every hand, with many-sided and all-sufficient grace.”
Without grace, we perish. “For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God!” (Ephesians 2:8). Without grace, our passion for God suffocates. “Our sufficiency is from God…not of the letter, but of the Spirit, for the letter kills but the Spirit gives life” (II Corinthians 3:5-6). The fastest way to kill passion for Jesus is with legalism. Will we still love Him? Yes, but our strength to serve Him will be gone. Why? Because “The joy of the Lord is our strength” (Nehemiah 8:10) and “Desire gave you renewed strength” (Isaiah 57:10 NLT). This spiritual principle also applies in a positive and negative. We can be passionate for things that are not of God, pursuing them, such as Isaiah talks about, because desire spurs us on. Or we can crucify sinful passions and cultivate passion for Jesus. This passion becomes our strength to keep running after Him and keep pouring ourselves out to others. Proverbs 11:29 says, “The way of the Lord is strength for the upright.” Why? Because He is our delight and greatest pleasure (Psalm 16:11).
However, legalism kills desire. When we “ought” to do something and are critically judged by others around us, or even by ourselves, when we fail to get it right, our mistakes become a towering wall of perfectionism—an impassable barrier between us and the joy of the Lord. The Apostle Paul writes with rejoicing, “But now we have been delivered from the law, having died to what we were held by, so that we should serve in the newness of the Spirit and not in the oldness of the letter.” Why is he rejoicing so greatly? Because Christ paid the cost of all our mistakes! Every sin and failure and misunderstanding was laid upon His shoulders at Calvary. He hung upon that tree to make sure we’re never trapped behind the Wall of Perfectionism again!
Does His incredible grace mean we can sin and not be called to account? No, but grace means that when we realize how badly we’ve blown it and that we’re on the wrong side of the wall again, we can leap over it, back into the place of right fellowship with the Lord (Psalm 18:29, I John 1:9). The Holy Spirit declares to us with beautiful invitation, “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the Spirit” (Romans 8:1). The Spirit calls out again to us through the prophet Isaiah, “Ho! Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and you who have no money, come buy and eat. Yes come, buy wine and milk, without money and without price…. Let your soul delight itself in abundance! Incline your ear and come to Me. Hear, and your soul shall live!” (55:1-3)
We come to God through grace. There is no other way. Anyone who tries to live by the law must keep every part, but there has never been a man or woman who can (Galatians 6:13). Nor can the law make anyone perfect, even after salvation through faith (Galatians 3:3). Grace alone is God’s tool to form His Son in us. Grace is the oxygen of the soul.
When grace abounds in a life, a church, and a community, then the fire of the Spirit will blaze free and strong. Our hearts will be ignited with a holy thirst to partake freely of the waters of life (Revelation 22:17).
Then we will be the Bride who calls along with the Spirit in her, “Come! Everyone who thirsts, come to the River of Life!!!”

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Algebra 101

“That they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that they also may be one in Us, that the world may believe that You sent Me.” –Jesus  (John 17:21)

All of creation testifies to the glory of God—even mathematics! During my algebra class last semester, I was amazed to discover spiritual truths hidden within the natural order of numbers. And why not? God created the rules and application of algebra the same as He created the stars in space and the hairs on our heads. Certainly, He loves to use every opportunity to teach us more about Himself, and when we pay attention, these opportunities are limitless!

One lesson in particular stood out to me: it regarded “Unity” or “Oneness”.
In algebra, one of the primary goals of mathematicians is to reduce a complex fraction of factors and numbers to its simplest form. For instance, picture the fraction: 5a72b(33c) over 34x41y3z. This fraction has no common factors. It can’t be reduced within itself because two or three or four or thirteen cannot divide evenly into all the numbers. This fraction can only be simplified—or, put another way, brought to “oneness” –through an external manipulation of some sort.
I believe that God sees the diverseness of the human race and the distinct differences of each human being the same way. Certainly, He created us as beautifully unique, so our complexity is not a bad thing! However, I Corinthians 12:12 says, “For as the body is one and has many members, but all the members of that body, being many, are one body, so also is Christ.” Jesus desires a Church that is One with Him, yet the rifts and differences between Christians are often strong and sharp!
How then does the Lord bring “oneness” to His Church, His Bride? How does He make us one with Him and each other? In algebra, the Lord helped me to understand the work of the Holy Spirit in bringing about this transformation. Primarily, it is a covering of grace until we all reach the “perfect man” spoken of by Paul in Ephesians 4:13.
Using the algebraic example above, the Holy Spirit represents the mathematician who understands that numerator and denominator must develop common factors which make the differences insignificant. The fruit of the Spirit’s work is kindness, gentleness, faithfulness, and love, which create a reciprocation of grace when developed in the lives of believers. The Holy Spirit births within each of us a “new man” made in the image of Christ. This new man, spoken of by Paul in Ephesians 4:20-24, is the common factor we all possess. In algebra, this means that 5a72b(33c) willingly multiplies to 34x41y3z. This creates a big long number that seems even more complicated, but the work of the Spirit, our mathematician, isn’t done yet. At the same time He is at work in us, He is at work in others. The denominator also accepts the same bonding process: 34x41y3z is multiplied to 5a72b(33c).
Here’s the amazing truth hidden within this simple procedure: When the factors in the numerator exactly mirror the factors in the denominator, they reduce down to 1. One on top; one on bottom. And one over one is simply: 1. Ephesians  4:4-5 says, “There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.”
Jesus has created us equal in Him! He’s generated, by the power of His Spirit, a new man, which is our new nature, made like Him in us!!! (Romans 6:5, 8:29)
Galatians 3:28 says, “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” Does this Scripture mean we lose our uniqueness when the Holy Spirit performs His equalizing work in us? Not at all. Rather, our individuality no longer calls the shots. Through the power of the Spirit, we submit to His work of love in our lives, and we are able to lavish on others the kindness and grace which the Lord has given us.
Paul says in Philippians 2:1-3, “If there is any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any affection and mercy, fulfill my joy by being like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind. Let nothing be done through selfish ambition or conceit, but in lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than himself.”
For a long time, I believed that this debasement meant devaluing myself, saying I wasn’t special or worth much. But that’s not what Jesus says. He says we’re each precious, the apple of His eye, cherished and beloved in His sight. (Zechariah 2:8, Isaiah 43:1-4) No, the equalizing work of the Holy Spirit is not one of demeaning oneself but of lifting others up, treating them with the same incredible value we experience the Lord giving us so that they might experience and believe His great love for them too.

Do I feel beloved and precious to the Lord? Then may I see others the same way! Do I experience the passionate, personal love of the Lord poured upon me as His beloved? (Song of Songs 1:2) Then let me be the friend who stands next to the Bridegroom and rejoices to see His passion for others! (John 3:29)
Did Jesus allow others to debase Him, surrendering His privileges as God Most High? Yes, He did. Then may I also have the humility to walk past the insults of people who wound me, whether knowingly or not, without retaliating against them but continuing steadfastly to love them. “For to this you were called, because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that you should follow His steps…who when He was reviled, did not revile in return; when He suffered, He did not threaten, but committed Himself to Him who judges righteously; who Himself bore our sins in His own body on the tree, that we, having died to sins, might live for righteousness.” (I Peter 2:21-24)
The Lord has called us to unity, and the equalizing factors He has offered us are the fruits of His own Spirit at work in our lives: forgiveness, peace, and mercy as well as blessing, joy, and love.
May our lives radiate the fullness of His glorious grace!!!