A Showdown

“This town ain’t big enough for the two us.” So comes to mind this well worn cliché of the old western movie (and Toy Story) as I continue to read in James. I read that in the dynamics of the kingdom of God, it’s either friendship with the world or it’s friendship with God . . . not enough room for both . . . to embrace one is to in effect tell the other to “get outta’ town by sundown.” And James calls for a showdown.

“You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God.” (James 4:4 ESV)

Doesn’t get much more black and white than that . . . the “town” of God’s kingdom can’t accommodate both friendships . . . friendship with the world and friendship with God are mutually exclusive . . . no working both sides of the fence . . . if we choose to embrace and live for with the world system around us then we set ourselves up in opposition to God. Which is it gonna be?

So, it’s high noon . . . the streets are empty . . . friendship with God has been chosen . . . the time has come to drive the dirty rotten scoundrel outta’ town. And the love of the world takes on form . . . the one who seeks to lure us into friendship with the world comes more clearly into view . . . recognized as a once beautiful, but prideful, and now fallen angel. You’re looking down the dusty street at the devil . . . the prince of the power of the air (Eph. 2:2) . . . the god of this age (2Cor. 4:4). And it’s time to pull the six-shooter out of it’s holster . . . time to draw . . .

“Therefore [because God gives more grace and He gives that grace to the humble] submit to God. Resist the devil and he will flee from you. Draw near to God and He will draw near to you . . . Humble yourselves in the sight of the Lord, and He will lift you up.” (James 4:6-10)

There it is . . . the push and pull of our showdown at high noon. We push, or resist, the devil and he will flee . . . we pull, or draw near, to God and He promises to draw near to us and lift us up. It doesn’t come down to how well we handle a “Colt 45” but that we determine to pull the trigger . . . deciding to resist the devil and draw near to God. The power is not in how good our aim is, but how effective His “more grace” is . . . that grace which He bestows when we humble ourselves before Him and willingly submit to Him . . . and in so doing, say “no” to the devil’s sales pitch on all that the world has to offer.

We determine to stand firm against the enemy of our souls . . . and he high tails it outta’ town. We willingly bow down before the Savior of our souls . . we cry out to Him who has loved us with a costly, everlasting love . . . we desire and long for Him . . . wanting friendship with Him over friendship with this world . . . and He pours out grace . . . and He descends to envelope us . . . and lift us . . . and seat us with His Son in the heavenlies.

Resist the devil and he will flee . . . draw near to God and He will draw near . . .

Seems like a promise worth claiming . . . a promise worth pursuing . . . for my benefit . . . for His glory . . . amen?

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Zeal for His House

It must have been quite the scene. The young upstart Rabbi had come to Jerusalem for His first Passover celebration since “going public.” He had started to gather a following . . . He had called some disciples . . . stories were starting to be told . . . but no one expected Him to turn things upside down (literally) when he arrived at the temple . . . no one could have predicted what was to happen when He arrived that day . . .

“And He found in the temple those who sold oxen and sheep and doves, and the moneychangers doing business. When He had made a whip of cords, He drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep and the oxen, and poured out the changers’ money and overturned the tables. And He said to those who sold doves, ‘Take these things away! Do not make My Father’s house a house of merchandise!’ ” (John 2:14-16)

Imagine what that must have looked like! The chaos . . . the uproar . . . the look on the faces of those those who witnessed such a spectacle. But for a small group of men . . . those who had spent some time with Jesus . . . who had been instructed by Him concerning Himself . . . for them, this was the opportunity for the Holy Spirit to cause a light bulb to go on as He connected the dots between what they were witnessing and Psalm 69:9 . . .

“Then His disciples remembered that it was written, “Zeal for Your house has eaten Me up.’ ” (John 2:17)

The Psalmist prophesied that Messiah would be characterized by a consuming passion for purity of worship . . . and Jesus was Messiah . . . and now it was time for that to be known. As a boy, a teen, and a young man, He had come many times before to Jerusalem for Passover. This visit was not the first time He witnessed the hypocrisy of turning the holy ground of the temple into a market place where people were ripped off under the pretense of ensuring they had an acceptable offering to bring before the Lord. So while He had seen it before, now was the time to act . . . now He was openly going about His Father’s business . . . now His full character as Messiah would be known. And part of that character was a fiery determination to contend for authentic worship before God. And this would not be the only time that Jesus would cause such a scene and seek to cleanse the temple of such corruption . . . He would do it again on what would be His last visit to Jerusalem before His crucifixion (Mark 11:12-18). I wonder if He did the same thing at Passover during His second year of ministry, as well.

Jesus was consumed with a passion for His Father’s house. The temple was intended to be so much more than just going through the motions. It was never intended to be a pretense for corrupt merchandising of “certified, acceptable offerings”. The focus had shifted from the heart of worship to the “how of worship” . . . from the God who was to receive the offering to the “quality” of the offering being given to God. Instead of sacrifice it had become about merchandise. And Jesus just wouldn’t stand for it.

And it strikes me, that if Jesus so cared about authenticity at the place of worship, shouldn’t I?

And I guess I’m not thinking so much about walking into a church and overturning every inconsistency I perceive. Rather, I’m thinking I need to check my own heart when it comes to how hot or cold I am about entering the house of God and bringing before Him my sacrifices of praise. That I need to test my own “jazz factor” concerning gathering with God’s people in God’s presence for God’s glory. That I need to be reminded that mindlessly going through the motions probably upsets the One who is consumed by zeal for His Father’s house. That I need to beware of “packaging and presenting” my cold worship as the real thing. That I need to avoid doing anything that would stumble someone else from worshipping in truth and spirit. That by His grace and through His Spirit I too would have a zeal for His house.

Oh, to be consumed with a passion for true worship before God . . . to be more like Son . . . for the Father’s glory . . . amen.

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The Best of Lines, The Worst of Lines

You know, there are some passages of Scripture that I probably would just as soon avoid. Those passages that seem to put you in a corner . . . don’t leave any wiggle room . . . verses that you can’t just dismiss as being for someone else. They are those admonitions that just nail you. James’ teaching on the tongue in the third chapter of his letter is one such passage.

“For we all stumble in many things. If anyone does not stumble in word, he is a perfect man, able also to bridle the whole body.” – James 3:2

Busted! We all stumble . . . trip up . . . literally “descend from a higher place to a lower” . . . aka fall, fail, err, blow it. Uh, yeah, that would be me. Not liking this so far. And then James focuses on one particular “descent” . . . the “descent in word.” Only a perfect man never stumbles with his tongue . . . and, I’m no perfect man . . . I know what he’s talking about . . . been there, done that . . . way too often . . . way too recently . . . this is getting way to close for comfort.

The taming of the tongue is a hard undertaking. Massive horses can be controlled with a small piece of metal in their mouths . . . huge ships can be directed by a very small rudder (3:4) . . . but the tongue? . . . now that’s gonna take some help to master. It’s a spark that can set a great forest ablaze . . . it has the potential to be a world of iniquity defiling the whole body . . . an unruly evil, full of deadly poison. And James says, “No man can tame the tongue.” (3:5-6,8)

Heavy sigh.

This “little member”, which I so delight to direct to bless God . . . to speak words of honor to the Creator . . . to articulate thoughts of praise to the Father of Lights . . . it is same tongue that can get away from me and “curse men” . . . to utter desires of doom upon those who have been created by the God I bless . . . to invoke evil upon those for whom the blood of Jesus was shed. Talk about your two ends of the spectrum!

The best of lines . . . the worst of lines . . . both sourced from the same tongue. “Out of the same mouth proceed blessing and cursing. My brethren, these things ought not to be so. Does a spring send forth fresh water and bitter from the same opening? Can a fig tree, my brethren, bear olives, or a grapevine bear figs? Thus no spring yields both salt water and fresh.” (3:10-12)

So what do I do with this? First, I agree with God . . . these things ought not to be so. And while I can’t tame the tongue on my own, I know One who can . . . the Perfect Man . . . the One who never lost control of His speech . . . Who always picked His words carefully . . . Who, even when He did have harsh words, spoke them in truth and accuracy and without malice . . . desiring that even a “brood of vipers” would repent (Matt. 3:7-8). It is this Perfect Man, who had power over His own tongue, who has begun a good work in me through the new birth. A work of regeneration . . . of reformation . . . of transformation . . . that, in my life, He might increase and I might decrease . . . that, through the sanctifying work of His Spirit, I would take on more the characteristics of the Perfect Man and shed, more and more, the behaviors of my old man . . . that I use my tongue more like Him and less like the world around me.

Mastering the tongue will be an on-going battle . . . but my desire is that my words would increase as a source of fresh water and decrease as a dispenser of bitter salt water . . . that I might be known, more and more, as a conveyor of the best of lines and not the worst of lines . . . for His glory . . . amen.

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I Saw You

Philip was pretty sure Jesus was Messiah. Nathanael . . . not so much. Philip had met Jesus and encountered Him . . . Nathanael hadn’t . . . and his skepticism was fueled by the facts that that, one, he could not recall anything in Scripture indicating that Messiah would be from Nazareth . . . and two, as far as cities go, Nazareth wasn’t anything to write home about . . . definitely the “other side of the tracks”. Thus his objection, “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” . . . and thus Philip’s charge to Nathanael, “Come and see” . . . check Him out . . . judge for yourself. (John 1:43-46)

But who had really checked out who?

As Nathanael nears the Carpenter from Nazareth, Jesus says to him, “Behold, an Israelite indeed, in whom is no deceit!” And I’m thinking it isn’t just what Jesus said but how He said it that set Nathanael a bit back on his heels. There was an authority . . . a conveyance of knowledge . . . a sense that not only did Jesus know this to be true . . . but that He knew a lot more about Nathanael than He was revealing at the moment. And Nathanael asks, “How do You know me?” Jesus responds, “Before Philip called you, when you were under the fig tree, I saw you.” (John 1:47-48)

And that sealed it for Nathanael . . . Jesus of Nazareth had seen him when no one but God could . . . Jesus the son of Joseph had spoken words that indicated that He knew Nathanael from the inside out. And this skeptic’s response, “You are the Son of God! You are the King of Israel!” (4:49)

And the three words that capture my thoughts this morning are Messiah’s declaration, “I saw you.”

Seen by the Son . . . known by the Father . . . searched through by the Spirit . . . no place to hide . . . no secrets buried . . . “I saw you.”

And while I think this can be a pretty frightening concept to grasp . . . total transparency before a holy, holy, holy God . . . yet, I find a measure of comfort in receiving these words to Nathanael as directed towards me. Comfort, not because I’m “squeaky clean” and my house is all in order. The encouragement is not found in me thinking that there’s nothing I wouldn’t rather He didn’t see . . . but in the fact that it is Jesus who’s looking. The Author of my salvation is the One who knows my situation. The only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth (John 1:14) is He who knows my groanings and trip ups. He whose blood was shed to cover all my sin knows my failures. It is God’s blessed Servant, He who “will not crush the weakest reed or put out a flickering candle” (Isa. 42:3) who knows my compromised state and the things I would just as soon keep hidden.

And so, there’s a sense in which I marvel that He would see me “under the fig tree.” That He would care enough to know my goings and comings. That He would be interested in my walk . . . would take note of my talk . . . and would search and know the motives behind both. For, in so doing, it is not to judge and condemn, but that it would direct His on-going work of sanctification within me. It’s part of the transformation process . . . that Jesus would see me . . . and know me . . . and, as a Potter, uniquely shape me based on what He has determined for me to become.

The words of the Psalmist come to mind, “O LORD, You have searched me and known me. You know my sitting down and my rising up; You understand my thought afar off. You comprehend my path and my lying down, and are acquainted with all my ways . . . How precious also are Your thoughts to me, O God! How great is the sum of them! . . . Search me, O God, and know my heart; Try me, and know my anxieties; and see if there is any wicked way in me, And lead me in the way everlasting.” (Ps. 139:1-3,17, 23-24)

To know that Jesus sees me . . . how incredible is that?

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The Undisputed Champion

Welcome to the main event . . . let’s get ready to rumble! Ladies and gentlemen may I present to you the combatants . . . waging war throughout the ages . . . opposed to one another at the core . . . battling over the souls of men. In this corner, weighing in as greatly over-rated and over-valued and over-used . . . judgment. And in the far corner, not looking necessarily very impressive . . . not loud . . . not flashy . . . not the stuff of macho men . . . but oh, so effective . . . having won every prior meeting between these two . . . weighing in through the power of God and the sacrifice of Christ . . . may I introduce to you . . . mercy! . . . the undisputed champion!

In judgment’s corner . . . supporting him in a losing battle . . . is his manager, the law . . . supported by his corner men, pride and partiality. Doing battle based on the works of men, his tactics are simple . . . set a standard that sounds holy but is really based on what he can attain and then challenge others to live up to it. Set before them a checklist to be completed in order to measure up . . . whether it be the 10 commandments . . . or 1st century “principles and practices” . . . or just a self-formed view of righteousness . . . and require those who would seek to measure up to check off the right number of “to do’s” and “to don’ts” in order to get a passing grade and then measure on a bell curve . . . and, through arrogance and favoritism, start judging them in their failure. The essence of his strength? His secret weapon? The fact that, for those who try to attain righteousness through the law, or any other measure of works, stumbling in one point renders them guilty of all . . . thus giving judgment the upper hand.

The upper hand? . . . at times, perhaps. Victory? . . . absolutely not! Enter into the ring . . . mercy!

Mercy . . . “kindness or good will towards the miserable and the afflicted, joined with a desire to help them” . . . the determination to withhold the punishment deserved for sin . . . the set of eyes that look upon those who fail and identify with their stumbling and, rather than take judgment’s destructive approach, seek to lift up . . . and restore. Yes, the wages of sin is death . . . so what allows mercy to do battle in such a way? Backing him in his corner is the grace of God and the blood of Christ. The heart of the Father that not only longs to forgive but to rebuild . . . that seeks not only to withhold punishment but to lavish upon the sinner the spiritual riches of heaven itself . . . that seeks not only to save a man or woman from hell, but to transform them into the image of His blessed Son . . . receiving them as children . . . accepting them as His own Beloved. And grace is fueled by the blood of Christ . . . the atoning flow for men’s sins . . . the knock out blow for judgment’s attacks . . . the submission hold on the accuser of the brethren . . . the basis for eternal victory . . . the ultimate triumph.

Judgment vs. mercy . . . a battle as old as time. And I read in James this morning that “Mercy triumphs over judgment.” (James 1:13b)

And the warning from James is to be careful whose corner I migrate to. Certainly I have been a benefactor of mercy . . . I have known grace . . . my sins . . . past, present, and future . . . forgiven in full, tossed as far away as east is from west . . . but pride and partiality have a way of taking recipients of mercy . . . trophies of grace . . . and having them participate in judgment’s losing fight. Instead, as one who has known mercy and experienced grace, I should be a dispenser of the same . . . “So speak and so do as those who will be judged by the law of liberty” (James 1:12). Putting down pride and seeking the mind of Christ, through the Spirit of Christ, mine is to view others without partiality . . . to not judge based on some set of rules I think others need to step up to . . . but to show mercy . . . to exhibit grace . . . to align myself with the all-time, undisputed champion in the fight for men’s souls.

Oh, that I would be marked by mercy and grace . . . for His glory . . . amen.

Do you have another 3 1/2 minutes?  Click here to check out Gordon Mote’s take on “the fight”.

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The Engrafted Word

There are those who somehow would separate theory from reality . . . who would talk of being “street smart” rather than “book smart” . . . who would see the two as being somewhat mutually exclusive. There are those in the church who would see it the same way . . . somehow distancing the relationship of Bible knowledge from “practical Christianity” . . . minimizing the need to know the word . . . claiming that “just doing it” is what’s important. But, if I’m reading James correctly this morning, I don’t know that you can separate the two. James’ letter is intensely practical . . . it deals with being doers . . . it concerns “pure and undefiled religion.” But as I hover over the first chapter of James the basis for “doing” is hearing . . . the genesis for true religion is right doctrine . . . and, it seems to me, James establishes that in order to get to the works, you need to start with the Word.

“Of His own will He (i.e. the Father of lights) brought us forth by the word of truth, that we might be a kind of firstfruits of His creatures . . . Therefore lay aside all filthiness and overflow of wickedness, and receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls.” (James 1:18, 21)

Begotten by the word of truth . . . set forth as an initial “harvest” of firstfruits . . . so were those first century Christians. They were the prototype . . . the first examples of the gospel’s impact . . . the first members of the body . . . the first stones in the living building . . . the first kings and priests of Messiah’s “not of this world” kingdom. And there’s a degree to which I think all believers can claim some of this . . . maybe not firstfruits exactly . . . but part of that harvest . . . more “produce” intended to speak of a different way, a different land, a different motivation for life. But it doesn’t end with the initial harvest . . . in fact, that was to be just the beginning.

Born of the word . . . yes . . . but then they were to be shaped by the word . . . the implanted word . . . or, as the old KJV says, “the engrafted word.”

The idea here seems to be more than that of just a seed being sown . . . but of a shoot from one type of plant being implanted or grafted to another so that the second might take on more the characteristics of the first . . . that it might bear fruit in accordance with the shoot’s plant of origin. And ours is to receive that shoot . . . the image of Christ via the word of God . . . with meekness. We’re to take it in submissively and obediently . . . to allow it to become part of us . . . to let it define us more and more . . . to give it the nurture needed to bring forth much fruit. In so doing, we “save our souls”. More than this referring to the initial act of salvation which saves us from the “penalty of sin” . . . the engrafted or implanted word can take over and choke out the weeds of wickedness as it saves our soul from the “power of sin.”

And I’m a bit in wonder at the spiritual dynamic associated with the implanted word . . . or as James refers to it a little later, “the perfect law of liberty” (1:25). I think I’m just doing my devotional readings . . . or just working through some Bible study . . . but God sees it as divine horticulture . . . the grafting of the heavenly within the earthbound . . . the insertion of the nature of God within the redeemed nature of man . . . a series of organ transplants, beginning with a new heart . . . all through the implanted word . . . all through the word of truth.

What folly to think we can be like Christ apart from the word. He is the Word . . . check out the opening verses of John’s gospel. He is the Living Word . . . and His written word is the key to living for Him and like Him. When we put away the junk that defiles the ground . . . when we cultivate the ground so that it is supple and filled with the nutrients of humility and teachabilty . . . then the implanted shoot of the word starts to takeover . . . and the reality of “the theory” becomes evident in the living out of “the practical.”

Oh, that God’s people would determine to be people of the Book . . . that they would not cede to the enemy’s deception that somehow we can do Christianity apart from the implanted word . . . that they would seek the Vinedresser to graft more and more of His living word into our souls . . . that we might be doers . . . doers of the word growing in us . . . for His glory . . . amen!

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The Before and After

I bought Ricky Scaggs’ latest CD a couple of weeks ago on iTunes. I bought it thinking it would be more of his classic bluegrass style of music . . . but it wasn’t . . . it was very different . . . very good . . . and, very engaging. There isn’t a track I don’t enjoy listening to . . . again and again. A line from one of the songs came to mind this morning as I was reading in the first chapter of John’s gospel . . . “Take a second, and make God first” . . .

The Pharisees had sent some priests and Levites to the wilderness to check out the “John baptizing in the Jordan” movement (John 1:19). Their questions were pretty simple, “Who are you? What are you doing?” They knew he was John the desert-dwelling, animal skin wearing, locust eating eccentric. They knew he preached repentance. They knew he baptized. But what they wanted to know was if he was Elijah incarnate . . . a new prophet come on the scene after 400 years of no prophets. John said he wasn’t Elijah but that he was a voice crying in the wilderness . . . preparing  for Messiah’s coming on the scene . . . as Isaiah had foretold (John 1:23, Isa. 40:3).

John went before Jesus . . . Jesus came after John . . . and John took a second to make Him first . . .

“It is He who, coming after me, is preferred before me, whose sandal strap I am not worthy to loose.” (John 1:27 NKJV)

Or, as Peterson paraphrases it in the MESSAGE, “He comes after me, but He is not in second place to me. I’m not even worthy to hold His coat for Him.”

And I’m struck by the humility of this one of whom Jesus said, “”Assuredly, I say to you, among those born of women there has not risen one greater than John the Baptist.” (Matt. 11:11). John’s calling was an unmistakable one . . . ask his dad . . . talk to his mom . . . check out Luke 1. His calling was a huge calling . . . breaking 400 years of silence by God to usher in Messiah’s entrance . . . to be a voice where there had not been a voice for so long. And the response from the masses was favorable . . . they were ready for a word from God . . . they came . . . they heeded . . . they repented . . . they were baptized. John was amassing quite the following . . . his ministry was realizing a measure of “success” . . . this one who had lived so long alone in the desert now had a number of disciples who sought to follow him . . . and now, he even had emissaries from the big cheeses in Jerusalem coming to check him out. Pretty heady stuff . . . they wanted to know about him . . . and he, true to his calling, took a second and made Jesus first. He may have been the “before” but it was all about Him who would come after.

John was about Jesus. The life he lived, the message he preached, the ministry he performed . . . all of it intended to open the way for the one worthy to be owned as Master. John’s presence and power may have been impressive to those whose hearts were ready to repent, but John never lost sight that he was but a servant . . . and the lowliest of servants . . . not even worthy to untie the straps on the Master’s dust covered sandals. In a couple of chapters I’m going to be reading another great John-ism, “He must increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30) . . . it was Jesus who John wanted to be seen . . . and encountered . . . and known. John, the before, never wanted to detract from the One who came after.

And I’m challenged to check myself. Am I maintaining an attitude that continually puts Him first . . . do I verbalize regularly that I’m but a sinner saved by grace seeking to live for the Author of my salvation (Heb. 5:9) . . . am I battling the hydra of pride that tempts me to think of myself more highly than I ought and instead rejoice that I am but a servant, content to be a doorkeeper in His courts that I might be near Him (Psalm 84:10) . . . do I regularly take a second and make God first? Oh, that I might model John . . . who though he went before . . . knew it was all about the One to come after . . . for His glory alone . . . amen.

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When Wisdom Goes Bad

Kind of an interesting transition going from reading in Proverbs for almost the past two months to starting up in Ecclesiastes. Same author . . . but something’s not quite right. For the past 7 or 8 weeks I have been encouraged to pursue wisdom . . . to call out to her . . . to seek her . . . to add her voice to my toolkit for life. Wisdom’s voice has told me not to play with the fire of sin and temptation . . . has to me to be a friend . . . to not be loose-lipped and to choose my words carefully . . . to work hard . . . to watch my heart . . . and to love knowledge and store it up.. But I start in on Ecclesiastes and I read this, “But in much wisdom is much grief, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow” (Eccl. 1:18) . . . huh?

In Proverbs Solomon wrote that “happy is the man who finds wisdom, and the man who gains understanding” . . . that wisdom is better than silver and gold . . . that she is “a tree of life to those who take hold of her, and happy are all who retain her” (Prov. 3:13-18). He says that we are to “Get wisdom! Get understanding!” . . . not to forsake her but to love her . . . and she will preserve and keep us . . . that she will “place on your head an ornament of grace; a crown of glory she will deliver to you” (Prov. 4:5-9).

And then, this same Solomon, says that with lots of wisdom comes great vexation and frustration . . . that the more knowledge you acquire the greater the sorrow experienced.

So what’s the deal? What happened? Have I come across one of those “contradictions” that many would claim are found in the Bible? I’m thinking no. I’m thinking that a hint to what causes wisdom to “go bad” is found in the set up to Solomon’s conclusion. Check it out . . .

“I communed with my heart, saying, ‘Look, I have attained greatness, and have gained more wisdom than all who were before me in Jerusalem. My heart has understood great wisdom and knowledge.’ – Ecclesiastes 1:16

Rather than communing with the God of wisdom concerning wisdom, Solomon talked to himself . . . communed with his heart . . . made it about him . . . how great his understanding had become . . . how wise he was . . . how smart he had made himself. He had lost contact with Wisdom’s voice . . . of it’s source . . . instead taking credit for how he had come to understand great wisdom and knowledge. Solomon received the mind of God and then claimed it as His own . . . how miserable for mortal man to deal with the high and lofty things of God apart the God who is high and lofty.

His focused had shifted to that which was “under the sun” . . . no profit from labor . . . nothing new to get jazzed about . . . everything a vanity and grasping for the wind . . . “under the sun” (1:3, 9, 14). You take heavenly thinking and confine it to “under the sun” and it sounds like you get vexation . . . and frustration . . . and sorrow. Solomon, it seems, lost sight of the fact that the beginning of wisdom is the fear of the Lord (Prov. 1:7) . . . that it isn’t us who “noodle” our way to wisdom but the LORD who gives wisdom (Prov. 2:6). And, to take a lesson from Moses & Co., when you take bread from heaven and try and use it according to your own wisdom and not according to the Master’s instruction, it starts to stink (Exodus 16:19-20). When you start thinking you contain the manna, it goes bad. Instead we’re to gather it every morning . . . we’re to continually go back to the Source for more rather than commune with our own hearts on how smart we’ve become under the sun. Apart from the fear of the Lord . . . apart from a fresh pursuit of His mind and ways on a daily basis . . . wisdom can go bad . . . understanding can be a curse.

Oh, that I might continue to pursue wisdom . . . and the Wisdom-Giver . . . the One who dwells “above the sun” . . . the One who delights to give fresh food every morning to those who will receive it and consume it . . . the One to whom all glory is due . . . amen!

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A One-Way Trip

For the better part of 13 chapters he has contended for their faith. The writer of the letter to the Hebrews addresses those who thought that they had seen in Jesus the prophesied Messiah and had put their hope and trust in Him . . . most likely they had publicly declared their faith through baptism . . . identifying themselves with this new movement that preached a salvation apart from works. The Mosaic law, the temple, the Levitical practices, while all still very important and meaningful had become “the old way of life” . . . no longer viewed as the means of acceptance with God, but now seen as but a shadow of that which was accomplished by Jesus through His death and resurrection. But with this new Way came new troubles. Rejected by family, friends, and the Hebrew community at large, they wavered . . . was Jesus really Messiah? . . . is this truly the way? . . . is it worth the trial and struggle? And so, he contends for their faith.

And as he concludes his letter with a number of final exhortations, one in particular has me thinking . . .

“Therefore let us go forth to Him, outside the camp, bearing His reproach.” – Hebrews 13:13

Just as the carcasses of the animal offerings of old, whose blood was shed for temporary atonement, were taken and burned outside the tent city of Moses’ time, so Jesus was taken outside the walls of Jerusalem to suffer and die. He, being the better sacrifice of a better covenant, was taken outside the gates of Jerusalem and there, that He might sanctify the people, He shed His own blood . . . securing once for all atonement . . . opening forever a way into the presence of God and into relationship with God. This way being made available to all who believe . . . apart from works . . . by grace alone. Free . . . but, as these believers were experiencing, not without cost. And thus, says the writer, we need to be prepared to go to outside the camp and bear His reproach.

I guess there are a few camps that I have had to leave in order to pursue this new life in Christ. The camp of the “faith of my fathers” or, in my case, the lack thereof . . . not popular initially, still not understood now, by many of my blood relatives. There was also the camp of the dance band and the world that it had brought me into — a world I was led to leave. And the camp of “normal college activities” which I felt I needed to sit out and take an outsider’s posture toward thus not quite fitting in. And as I think on it, I can probably come up with other camps that I have had to leave or decide to forego participating in because of a Spirit fueled desire to try and follow Jesus . . . to try and walk the talk . . . to be consistent . . . to be obedient. The reproach hasn’t been severe . . . the price doesn’t even compare to what others, in different parts of the world, are suffering for the sake of following Christ. But regardless of the degree of reproach, there was a trip to be taken . . . a one-way trip . . . a trip that I think all believers have to, at some point or another, decide to make . . . a trip to “outside the camp.”

But it’s not going outside just for the sake of being different . . . not just leaving something . . . not just “not doing” something . . . but we “go forth to Him. ” We step out in pursuit of something better . . . Jesus. We go outside because being with Him and living for Him is so superior to staying inside. We exit the gates of that place because “here we have no continuing city, but we seek the one to come” (Heb. 13:14). It’s not about looking back at what we’ve left, but looking forward to what lies ahead . . . considering “that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us” (Rom. 8:18).

Oh, that God, through the Spirit living inside believers, would enable us to go outside the camp . . . whatever that might be . . . to leave the constraints of the old man and the old ways . . . to not be trapped by what others might think or not think of us . . . but, to go outside the camp in pursuit of the Giver of Life . . . to fix our eyes on that city to come . . . to set our feet upon pilgrimage to the place where He is the glory and the Light and the All-in-All. That He would lead us on this one-way trip . . . for our blessing . . . and for His glory . . . amen.

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Solid Ground

This morning I was reminded of one my anchors. You know, those truths . . . those people . . . those things that you can count on and be sure of. I really don’t know how people keep on keepin’ on without some solid ground in their life. Sure, riding a roller coaster can be kind of fun and exhilarating (I say in theory, ’cause I don’t get on things), but I’m guessing that after awhile, even if you think you desire to (or are required to) get back on the ride, that it’s kind of nice to stand on solid ground every once in awhile. And it doesn’t do you much good to get off a boat after an extended time in stormy seas and try and get your “land legs” back if you end up walking into an earthquake . . . it’s not just getting back on ground . . . but it’s got to be stable ground. A simple, but profound verse, in Hebrews 13 is such solid ground . . .

“Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.” — Hebrews 13:8

How’s that for an anchor? How’s that for some stability? Looks like some solid ground to me.

It reminds me that Jesus is God. To be the same always . . . or immutable . . . aka unchanging . . . is an attribute owned by God alone. “For I am the LORD, I do not change” (Malachi 3:6) . . . “Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning” (James 1:17) . . . “Thus says the LORD, the King of Israel, And his Redeemer, the LORD of hosts: ‘I am the First and I am the Last; Besides Me there is no God.’ ” (Isaiah 44:6) There is no variation with God . . . Jesus is the same always . . . Jesus is God, very God . . . one with the Father . . . and my solid rock.

And I’m also reminded that this unchanging Jesus lives in me . . . for “I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me” (Gal. 2:20a). Chew on that one again . . . the same yesterday, today, and forever Jesus lives in me . . . He has taken up residence within this redeemed soul. How, if we believe it and continually remind ourselves of it, does it not provide some stability in what may be for many of us a pretty unstable world? How solid is this simple truth about our Lord?

Throughout this book of Hebrews, the writer has seemed to address a group of Jewish believers who are wavering concerning their faith in Christ . . . the honeymoon’s over and they’re being shaken as the impacts and implications of owning Jesus unsettles their lives. No longer accepted within the community of their heritage . . . perhaps persecuted for following this One rejected by their religious leaders . . . they seem to be having second thoughts. And so Jesus has been presented, again and again, as better . . . a better high priest . . . a better sacrifice . . . a better way into the holy of holies . . . the Mediator of a better covenant. And in presenting Him as such, these rollercoaster riding believers are reminded of those who have gone before them by faith . . . and being surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses they’re encouraged to look unto Jesus, the author and finisher of their faith . . . to consider Him . . . to put their suffering in the context of His suffering . . . and, to put their unsuitability in the context of the His unchanging nature.

Sometimes I just need to be reminded that He is my anchor and grab on for dear life. Even when my current situation seems to be stable and solid, I need to be reminded that the only true solid ground is Jesus and Him alone.

Praise God for such an anchor . . .

“My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus’ blood and righteousness; I dare not trust the sweetest frame, but wholly lean on Jesus’ name. When darkness veils His lovely face, I rest on His unchanging grace; In ev’ry high and stormy gale, my anchor holds within the veil. His oath, His covenant, His blood, support me in the whelming flood; When all around my soul gives way, He then is all my hope and stay. When He shall come with trumpet sound, O may I then in Him be found; Dressed in His righteousness alone, faultless to stand before the throne. On Christ the solid Rock I stand — All other ground is sinking sand . . . ” — The Solid Rock, Edward Mote

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