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Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Saturday, January 11, 2014
God's Great Reputation - Weekly Devotional
from Lenae, GEMS Training Manager
God’s
Great Reputation
I was
ashamed to ask the king for soldiers and horsemen to protect us from enemies on
the road, because we had told the king, “The gracious hand of our God is on
everyone who looks to him, but his great anger is against all who forsake him.”
Ezra was a man of God’s Word. He knew God’s
Word, believed God’s Word, and obeyed it. So when Ezra told the king of Persia
that God would provide all that they needed for their 900-mile trip back to
Jerusalem, he didn’t go back on his word. Ezra refused to compromise God’s
reputation by boasting about His gracious protection in the safety of
Artaxerxes’ palace and then running back for the King’s Cavalry when the trip
threatened to turn treacherous.
By the Ahava Canal he proclaimed a fast, so
that we might humble ourselves before our God and ask him for a safe journey
for us and our children, with all our possessions (Ezra
8:21). They fasted, they prayed, and in His great power and provision, God
answered.
At the beginning of our journey into a
new year do we have Ezra’s mindset to rightly live what we know and have
testified about God’s greatness? Over the past week I’ve wrestled that through
with ten questions posed by Don
Whitney. The list includes this: What’s the most humanly impossible thing
you will ask God to do this year?
I have to confess that up until that
question my goal setting was within the realm of the possible and practical. It
skewed toward my abilities, realistic timeframes, and available resources. If
God says that nothing is impossible for Him shouldn’t my prayers and plans
expand to His gracious promise?
Ezra was ashamed to do anything that
would diminish God’s reputation. As women of the Word, who believe it,
and obey it, do we share his shame at the thought of our testimony of God’s
greatness not lining up to our lives?
Who or what do you trust? Christ alone?
Or do you trust Christ plus your capabilities, or Christ plus your cash on
hand, or Christ plus your ____________? Do you say God is gracious, but then lie
awake at night worried that He won’t be enough for your need? Do you say that
God is good, but then constantly complain about your circumstances?
By the Ahava Canal, Ezra did not put his
trust in the king’s chariots or horses. He humbled himself and staked his life
on the reputation of God’s great name.
HE>i: What is your life telling others about
God?
Christians have God's reputation at the
forefront of their minds. It's always risky to live in a way that makes God
look great.
Phil Moore
Monday, December 30, 2013
from Lenae, GEMS Training Manager
Epic
Make it
your ambition to lead a quiet life: You should mind your own business and work
with your hands, just as we told you, so that your daily life may win the
respect of outsiders and so that you will not be dependent on anybody.
1
Thessalonians 4:11-12
ep·ic
- heroic; majestic; impressively great: the epic events of the war.
- of unusually great size or extent: a crime wave of epic proportions.
- Slang. spectacular; very impressive (from dictionary.com)
Our
culture is into epic. That word is used all over the place these days. It
describes everything from Ferraris to French Fries to Friday night. It’s the
promise of marketers, and the goal of planners. Don’t settle for ordinary. Live
epic!
In
this season of glitter and glamor, in this chasing after all that is big and
best, John 3:30 living can seem ordinary, even boring and blasé.
In his book, Boring: Finding an
Extraordinary God in an Ordinary Life, Michael Kelley urges readers to be
faithful to God’s call. Even if “everyone else is worshipping at the idols of
more and excitement” you stay faithful to what God is calling you to do in this
season of life.
Does your call involve diapers? Change
them for the glory of God. Does it include caring for an elderly parent? Be
kind, patient, and thoughtful. Care for her as if serving the Lord. Maybe it’s
washing dishes, carpooling, filling out mounds of paperwork, or being the first
and last person at GEMS Club each week. Do it quietly. Work hard. Be faithful.
Let your daily life, even the tiniest task and most laborious chore, point to
our extraordinary God.
Whatever you do–whether you eat or drink, whether you’re
backstage or center stage, whether the task is wallpapered in boring or abuzz
with epic–do all to the glory of God (1 Corinthians 10:31).
Kelley writes, “’Ordinary’ is a myth. The
only reason we think of something as ordinary is because we fail to look for
and then grasp the massive depth of the work and presence of God in our lives.”
Peter and John got that. When the people realized
they were unschooled, ordinary men, they were astonished and they took note
that these men had been with Jesus (Acts 4:13). When people met Peter and
John, they didn’t see ordinary. They saw Jesus. They saw the work and presence
of Jesus!
HE>i: Intentionally look for God’s
extraordinary work and presence in your most ordinary tasks today.
If Jesus became incarnate to live among the
ordinary, then what we call ordinary is really special to God.
Tim Keller
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Weekly Devotional - 'Great Grace'
from Lenae, GEMS training manger
Great
Grace
The Word
became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory
of the one and only Son, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.
John 1:14
There are many places where our sinful
nature turns ugly. The toy aisle is one of them. Ever seen or been part of an
ugly scene where a child is whining and wailing, “I want . . . I want . . . ”
Some parents cave in and cash out. Others grasp their child’s hand and pull her
out of there.
That’s exactly what happened to Lot when
God’s judgment was about to fall on Sodom and Gomorrah. Although Lot urged his
sons-in-law, who were pledged to marry his daughters, to hurry and get out of
there, the reality is that he was reluctant to leave himself. He was comfortable
there. So instead of hurrying, Lot hesitated. The men grasped his hand and the
hands of his wife and daughters and pulled them safely out of the city (Genesis
19:16).
They didn’t leave because they wanted to,
or even because it was the right thing to do. They expressed no gratitude for
the advance warning of coming destruction or the rescue team sent in just for
them. Only because God grasped their hands and pulled were they delivered.
This is our story, too. While we were
still sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:8). We weren’t looking for
saving or a Savior. There is no one who seeks God. All have turned
away (Romans 3:11-12). Because God first loved us He sent a Rescuer to
those who had no felt need or desire to be rescued. Jesus grasped our hand with
his nail-scarred one and pulled. He pulled us from the pit, and set us on the
Rock. He pulled us from the bondage of sin and death and set us free.
We would never choose God. All is grace.
His grace turns us to Him. His Spirit works within our will and desires and
stirs a love for God within. He opens eyes and ears and softens our hearts.
All
is grace.
Jesus is a gift of God’s grace. Scripture
says He was FULL of grace. This babe FULL of grace came to dwell among a people
who are FULL of self. What great grace!
When we see the FULLness of His grace and
experience the promise of its sufficiency, we will boast not in self, but in
Christ. He will become greater; we will become less (John 3:30).
HE>i: Is the grace of Jesus evident in the way
you’re preparing and celebrating Christmas?
Full. The Greek means not one grain more of truth or
one drop more of grace could be fit into Him. Everything He is, everything He
does, drips truth, exudes grace.
Mark Buchanan
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Weelky Devo - "God > self"
from Lenae - GEMS Training Manager
God>self
Then he
said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and
take up their cross daily and follow me.”
Luke 9:23
Life can be exhausting, especially for
those who can’t say “no”. They stretch themselves like rubber bands over
multiple ministry opportunities and life’s extra-curricular activities, and in
time they stretch thin and snap. Maybe you’re in a season of over commitment.
Maybe you’re in recovery and have even practiced saying, “No!” in the bathroom
mirror before stepping into the next volunteer meeting.
Whether you can identify with that kind
of breathless living or not, if we’re truly transparent we all have problems
saying no to people. And the people most difficult to say no to is . . . us!
Instead of saying no to self and all that
our sinful nature desires, we plop ourselves on the throne of our heart and use
the language of the Land of Me. I need . . . I want . . . I expect . . . I
deserve . . . It’s a mini-kingdom mentality centered on me, myself, and I. It
makes much of self and less of God.
Our Savior Jesus who left the throne room
of heaven and made Himself nothing teaches by example and words what it means
to live for His Kingdom. He said, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny
themselves and take up their cross and follow me” (Luke 9:23).
Deny yourself. This is foreign language in a culture of
entitlement. If we’re going to say yes to God’s greatness in our lives, it’s
means saying no to self. The throne of our heart isn’t built for two. Worship
Christ, adore Christ, fix your eyes on Christ until you find pleasing Him
abundantly more life giving and beautiful than pleasing self.
Take up your cross daily. The cross is a place of suffering and
sacrifice. Jesus humbled Himself to the point of death on a cross. He
sacrificed His very life so we could have life. As His disciples, we’re called
to do the same. What needs to be sacrificed to say yes to God and no to self?
What is the primary thing that distracts you and me from a Christ-centered
life? That’s where our sacrifice needs to begin.
Follow Jesus. Even the very youngest child knows how
to play Follow the Leader. With childlike faith we need to relinquish our
control issues, surrender, and stand behind Jesus. Follow His example. Trust
His lead.
HE>i: Who or what has reigned supreme in your
life in the past hour? Pray for God’s help to say yes to Him and no to
self.
We fail to uphold His glory because
we want it for ourselves. Our default mode is self-centeredness, not
God-centeredness.
Bob Bevington
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