Tuesday, December 27, 2016

IF you abide

God’s greatest conditional promise: “IF you abide in Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall be done for you. By this My Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit; so you will be My disciples.” ~ John 15:7-8,NKJV

This verse starts with a two letter word – “if.” If is a conjunction that ties one thing to another. In this verse, “if” is in conjunction with the verb “abide.” To abide is a choice “to remain, to continue, to stay constantly connected, to dwell on with expectation and patience.”

As we abide – as we remain connected to our Creator – something supernatural happens: the desires of our hearts change. It is in His dwelling place that our deepest thoughts and desires are revealed. As we grow in our relationship with Him, our worldly worldview perspective begins to dissipate. It is replaced with the mindset of our Heavenly Father.

Things that were hidden become illuminated by His Light. We receive clarity in the things He desires for us. We not only receive wisdom from above, but discernment – an understanding of what is right in His eyes. We hear His voice in the stillness of abiding. He speaks and we answer. He calls and we follow. He reveals and we trust. We abide and He gives us the desires of our hearts.

Our desires are no longer contaminated with impurities. They have been replaced with the longing to be more like HIM…to live a life in step with our Master.

It is when we connect the “if” with the “abide” that it all begins to make perfect sense. It is then that we find our sweet, secret dwelling place with our Papa God. It is then – and only then – that we can rest and trust. No matter the force of the storms that rage on the outside, they cannot penetrate the sanctuary of our soul…our resting place with Him. It is there that I rest in perfect peace. Being still…..

“Papa God, give us eyes to see! Give us courage to remain connected to Your heavenly guiding hand! Give us patience to stay the course no matter how strong the storms may rage. Quicken Your Spirit within us and let your sanctuary be a fortress so strong that nothing this world throws at us can penetrate or shake us loose from your mighty grip.  Protect us from the unnecessary and disrupt us when we slumber.  Your will be done, in and through us…In JESUS’ name”.

In HIS STRONG LOVE,

Rose

A Crash Course in Joy

Some of the most successful people I know have discovered that failure is an inevitable part of success. The only way you’re ever going to get from where you are to where you want to be is to leave where you’ve always been. And leaving the “familiar” is scary. Our fear of failure keeps us stuck. The sooner we get over our embarrassment of failure, the sooner we’ll be able to get on with life transformation.

You may remember the first time you got on a bicycle – without training wheels, of course – how scary it was. Everything felt so awkward. You got on, you rode a ways, and you fell. You got back on, you rode a ways, and you fell. But you didn’t quit. You stayed with it. Soon you were able to ride like the wind.

Failure didn’t stop us when we were kids. Why do we allow failure to stop us now?

“Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance. Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete, not lacking anything.” ~ James 1.2-4

I don’t know of anyone who lives this out in their day to day lives better than my friends Jerry and Gina. They’ve been through one of the most devastating things a couple can go through. They watched their business that had once been vibrant and profitable dwindle down to a trickle. For seven years they tried everything they knew to keep it afloat. They buried themselves in debt trying to keep their employees on the payroll. Nothing worked. They eventually filed bankruptcy.

Today Jerry & Gina are two of the most positive people I know. They’re at peace with their lives – and they’re at peace with God. Today they’ll tell you their lives have never been better. Things didn’t go at all the way they had hoped. But they’ve accepted the way things are. And they trust God in the trials.

And Jerry and Gina have learned one of the most powerful lessons on earth: God loves us and cares for us in ways we can never truly grasp as long as things are comfortable in our lives.

“Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, when you face trials of many kinds” – knowing that God’s got it. Get up. Keep going. We can embrace the trials – and failures – in life when we know that ultimately God is the One who’s going to take us from where we are to where he wants us to be.

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Has God's Grace and Love Really Run A-Muck

Grace and Love condemning condemners herald the accusation that graceful loving people have gone over the balance line when it comes to God grace and love. However, when it comes to God's grace and love there is no balance line, grace and love stands firm, you cannot go too far to the left or too far to the right because no matter how far you go God's GRACE is already there and His LOVE has already covered the multitude of wrongs.

Grace and Love as taught by "grace buting, love limiters" has reduced God's Amazing Grace and Unconditional Love to a means of being a fire escape from hell...if grace has run-a-muck...it is the muck-pile that the grace-condemners and love-limiters created by discrediting God's Grace and love. Grace that is reduced to being just a fire escape is a false gospel muck-pile of hog-wash and deception that renders God LOVELESS.

God's Grace and Love is clearly a transformative Gospel that goes far beyond being a fire escape from hell, according to Titus 2:11-14: For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men, Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world; Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Savior Jesus Christ; Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.

The slingers of the phrases "Grace is the lazy man's Gospel" and "people are better lovers than God" are so uninformed about Grace and Love that their ignorance far overrides the deception they are in. Their idea that "being under grace" and "not under law" is that we are free from moral obligation and can sin without any consequences, but no problem because God is love so there is nothing to worry about. The charge that grace people teach that you do not have to obey the law because we have gotten out of balance is indicative of their deceptional illusion...for not obeying the teachings of Jesus is not due to too much grace and love, rather, it shows a lack of grace and love living,  because to nullify God's commands means we have not understood His Grace or His Love. Grace and love is not only the means of forgiveness, it is also is the POWER for our OBEDIENCE...in fact, without the power of grace and love it is impossible to obey God's commands righteously. Doing it by self-effort is a result of self-righteousness in trying keep the Law as the measurement of obedience is a stench in the nostrils of God!

To preach the Law Keeping Gospel as a means of determining where we are spiritual is utter nonsense. A person cannot keep the Law of God without the Grace and Love of God. It is grace and love that sets you free to "walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit." The Spirit is not given by Law Keeping but to be graceful loving in living. Self-effort never produces righteousness no matter how well meaning it may be.

Live grace and love, speak grace and love, speak it correctly and the people who accept it will receive grace's love and power to live godly lives and fulfill its righteous requirements as they live the truth of what Grace and Love is in that their sin, past...present.and future is forgiven.

To be graceful loving costs me nothing and requires nothing of me. That’s the scandalous part that the law keepers can't get around it is an affront to "religious narrow-mindedness." Does that mean grace loving people have the right to continue to sin? Romans 6:1-2 is the answer; What shall we say then? Shall we continue in sin, that grace may abound? God forbid. How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?

This idea idea of ‘balance’ by the law keepers gives them the ability to keep God's people in the bondage of legalism.
God's grace and love does not need to be balanced with the Law, it needs to be experienced and lived for what it is! The true ‘Good News Gospel’ will not explain away morality and to live the moral commands, but enable their joyful and effortless fulfillment.

God created you and He loves you and because of His love for people He sent His Son to redeem you. God chose you because He loves you, He did not not choose you to damn you to an eternity of suffering! Don't take the condemnation and damnation of law-keepers as being from God, they are speaking out of ignorance and in need of your prayers for freedom from deception's deception.

Living Incarnationally

The Christian faith is centered on the belief that in Jesus Christ God became a human being. This is commonly referred to as the doctrine of the incarnation. It means that in Jesus, God became embodied. God left the blessed domain of heaven, was born in Bethlehem, and took on our humanity that we might share in the blessedness of heaven. He took on our sin so that we might share in his righteousness. He entered the domain of Satan’s oppressive reign to free us and transform the world into a domain of his loving reign. Jesus is God’s loving embodiment in the world.

As the embodiment of God, Jesus perfectly manifested what God is like. This is why the New Testament authors refer to Jesus as the Word of God (John 1:1), the image of God (Col 1:15), and the perfect expression of God’s very essence (Heb 1:3). It’s why Jesus could say, “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father” (John 14:9). Because Jesus is the embodiment of God, all of our thinking about God must be centered upon him.

But the earliest Christians understood that the incarnation wasn’t just about what God did once upon a time in Jesus. Because Jesus reveals who God really is, the incarnation tells us something about what God is always doing. It’s also about the incarnation of God today. While there’s only one incarnate Son of God, God is always embodying himself in the world. He does this primarily by identifying with those who submit their lives to him.

This is why Jesus followers are collectively referred to as “the Body of Christ.” We are, in a very real sense, an extension of Jesus’ earthly body. We are God’s hands, feet, and mouth in the world.

This is illustrated by the two volumes written by Luke. The gospel of Luke is about the ministry of Jesus, and Acts is about the early church. Luke opens Acts by noting that in his “former book” he wrote about “all that Jesus began to do and to teach” (Acts 1:1). The second book then is about all that Jesus continues to do and to teach. The Gospel was about what God did through Jesus’ incarnate body, while Acts is about what God continues to do through Jesus’ second, corporate body.

The followers of Jesus are called to imitate God in all things (Eph 5:1-2). This includes imitating his incarnational love in the ways we fully enter into the life of others. We are called to live incarnationally. Jesus reveals that God is a God who is willing to set aside the blessedness of his own domain and become fully present to others. So too, we are called to be a people who are willing to set aside the comforts and conveniences of our own lives and become fully present to others. This is part of what it means to “be imitators of God” and “live in love as Christ loved us and gave his life for us” (Eph 5:1-2). As we live incarnationally, God himself is continuing to be embodied in the world.

—Adapted from Present Perfect, pages 118-120

Your Not Your Own

'Do you not know that...you are not your own?'
1 Corinthians 6:19

'The first thing God does is get us grounded on
strong reality and truth. Why shouldn't we
experience heartbreak? Through those doorways
God is opening up ways of fellowship with His
Son. If God can accomplish His purposes in this
world through a broken heart, then why not
thank Him for breaking yours?'
(OC)

Friday, December 16, 2016

Trial of Faith

'If you have faith as a mustard seed...
nothing will be impossible for you.'
          Matthew 17:20

'Never confuse the trial of faith with the ordinary
discipline of life, because a great deal of what
we call the trial of faith is the inevitable result
of being alive. Faith, as the Bible teaches it, is
faith in God coming against everything that
contradicts Him--a faith that says, 'I will remain
true to God's character whatever He may do.'
(OC)

AMEN! So be it, Lord.

Did God Create Satan? Sin?

There was a man in the land of Uz whose name was Job; and that man was blameless, upright, fearing God, and turning away from evil. –Job 1:1

It is helpful to understand that pride comes before sin. Pride misuses the natural, as mentioned above, and sin is the result. Pride would dominate with no regard for that which it controls. This is where Satan reveals himself to be pure, unadulterated, unrefined pride. God did not create Satan; He created a heavenly being that chose pride, and this resulted in something called Satan.He is like the locust that devours without ever looking back and then moves on to the next living thing. The enemy has no regard for human life or things created above in the heavens or below on the earth. He destroys and takes no responsibility for it. Satan sought to totally destroy Job, and for what? For nothing! For his pride alone does Satan destroy! If Satan is destroying your family, know this: it is for nothing!

Sin is not a created thing, but something that comes as a result. Created things are formed from nothing and exist as though they always were. Sin is the result of two created things being misused. For example, men and women have a natural sex desire; that is not sin. But then pride comes bringing chaos with no consideration, and the two natural desires interact in an unnatural act--sex without marriage--and sin occurs. Sin is therefore a result of pride.

The mule--the outcome of the mating of a horse and a donkey that cannot reproduce itself--can be an example of something that is not a created being but is a result. Because the mule is a resultbeing, to be rid of it we would have to attack that from which it springs, its source; all mules would naturally disappear if every horse or donkey were killed. Sin is a result of two natural things doing the unnatural. Sin is the result of the inner and outer life of man saying no in pride to the Creator. Sin is a parasite on the back of creation, the unnatural living on the natural. This is why God did not attack the result (sin), but allowed the inner life (Adam life) to be killed on the cross with Christ, and thus sin’s source (Adam Life) was destroyed. The new inner life we receive, Christ's life, never agrees with the unnatural and brings the outer life under its subjection. Every person who becomes a believer brings a deathblow to sin and death. “For the flesh sets its desire against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; for these are in opposition to one another, so that you may not do the things that you please” (Galatians 5:17).

God’s Word has ample warning of two things man falls captive to over and over again: pride, then wrong choices.  Michael gives us 6 powerful statements to meditate on and ponder over and over…

1. pride comes before sin

2. even a heavenly being chose pride…who do we think we are?

3. sin is the result of the inner and outer life of man saying “no” in pride to the Creator.

4. but God did not attack the result (sin), but allowed the inner life (Adam life) to be killed on the cross with Christ…sin’s source in all Believers has been destroyed.

5. the new inner life (Christ’s life) all Believers have received never agrees with the unnatural and brings the outer life under its subjection.

6. every Believer has brought a deathblow to sin and death.

Monday, December 12, 2016

God Made Visible

During Advent, we celebrate and bring to the forefront of our imagination the God who was made visible. The Gospel of John sums up the advent of God with one sentence: “And the Word became flesh and lived among us, and we have seen his glory, the glory as of a father’s only son, full of grace and truth” (Jn 1:14).

“The Word” refers to God’s thinking and his self-expression. When God thinks, it is Jesus. When God expresses himself, it is Jesus. Notice the singularity of the claim. Jesus is not one Word among others, as though God had more than one mind and more than one mouth. Rather, wherever and whenever God thinks and expresses himself, it is Jesus Christ.

Moreover, it has been this way throughout eternity. The Word is not created. He was “in the beginning with God” and is himself God (Jn 1:2). He has been fellowshipping with the Father from all eternity (Jn 17:5, 24). This means that in knowing Jesus, we are not knowing someone “one step removed” from God. In knowing Jesus we are knowing God himself, God in his eternal essence. In seeing Jesus, we are seeing the very heart of God.

In fact, far from being created, the Word is actually the Creator. John tells us that everything was made by the Word, through the Word, and for the Word (Jn 1:1-3). Creation exists, in other words, as an expression of God and for the purpose of people knowing God. Creation’s purpose is found in Jesus Christ.

The Word is the life and the light of all people (Jn 1:4). God wants people to know him and share in his life (Jn 17:3). Whenever and wherever people experience true life and true light, it is Jesus Christ, whether they know it or not (Jn 1:4, 9). Whereas the enemy covered up the true God in a veil of deceptive darkness that brought death, Jesus turns the light on so we can see who God really is. In doing this, Jesus gives life.

In Christ, we see the glory, the beauty, the fullness, the truth of God. Even though no one previously had ever seen God’s eternal, transcendent nature, now in the Word of Jesus Christ God is made known (Jn 1:18). The invisible God is made visible. In Christ, the previously concealed God has been unambiguously revealed.

—Adapted from Is God to Blame? pages 26-28

Desire

'If I find in myself a desire which no experience in the world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world. If none of my earthly pleasures satisfy it, that does not prove that the universe is a fraud. Probably earthly pleasures were never meant to satisfy it, but only to arouse it, to suggest the real thing. If that be so, I must take care, on the one hand, never to despise, or to be unthankful for, these earthly blessings, on the other hand, never to mistake them for
something else of which they are only a kind of copy, or echo, or vestige. I must keep alive in myself the desire for my true country, which I shall not find till after death; I must never let it get snowed under or turned aside: I must make it the main focus of life to pass on to that country and to help others do the same.'

(CS Lewis Mere Christianity)

God's Love

Did you know you can cut short the time it takes for you to develop in the love of God? It's entirely possible. You can bypass all the ineffective, natural avenues people use to try to make themselves more loving. Instead, you can go after the love of God with the kind of tenacity that never gives up, even when it hurts! That's what the Apostle Paul is talking about in First Corinthians 12:31 when he says, But covet earnestly the best gifts: and yet shew I unto you a more excellent way.

Paul goes on to say in First Corinthians 13:1, Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity [love], I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal. What he is saying here is that a person can have the capacity to speak in tongues and yet still be a divider, a hater, or an envious person who causes a lot of trouble. What Paul is not saying is that a person who establishes a strong prayer life of edification by consistently praying in tongues can remain a sounding brass or a tinkling cymbal!

You see, when you consistently pray in tongues for your personal edification, God will purge the old brass out of you and give you gold. He will show you a more excellent and much quicker way to develop in love.

Now, it is admittedly very difficult to die to the flesh in order to walk in this kind of love. I've certainly learned that in my own personal experience. At times it seemed like my decisions not to defend myself against the criticism of others was really hard on my pride. But that's all right--I'm never going to stop pursuing love, and my roots will continue to grow big and deep. I can only imagine what the full-grown tree will look like! I'm determined that when I go home to be with the Lord, large, healthy fruit will be hanging off a bunch of large, healthy limbs!

That should be your goal as well. Sure, it is difficult to tell your emotions to be quiet. It's never easy to let other people rant and rave while you keep your mouth shut. Nevertheless, each time you choose to do the right thing, a death process goes into operation on your behalf and nothing is stronger than the power of love, for God's love operates according to His Spirit and His Word. So the "more excellent way" that is referred to in First Corinthians 12:31 is to go after the love of God with the same tenacity you go after the gifts of the Spirit. You are supposed to pursue the manifestation of God's love in your life as much and as hard as you go after anything else God has provided for you.

          According to Paul, choosing the path of love is what qualifies you to partake of the meat of the Word, whereas those who choose to remain carnal, envious, and full of strife can only bear the milk of the Word (First Corinthians 3:1-3).

As I fall more and more in love with God, it becomes increasingly clear to me that we have to reach a certain place in His love before we can begin to walk in higher levels of His peace. That is why when we hold onto things in our lives that have the capacity to hurt others, peace is still a long way from us. Whatever we hold onto in us that has a capacity to hurt people is what will keep us from living in the peace of God. The love of God cannot pour through our lives as long as we remain carnal and full of strife, stuck on the milk of the Word.

I've said this many times before, but covet love, forgiveness, and peace with the same fervency and tenacity you would covet the thought of God using you in His gifts and power. Why? Because the more you choose to walk in God's love, the more you put into operation the authority you have been given over all the power of the enemy who wants to dominate your circumstances and your life.
What are we really fighting for when we choose to walk in the love of God? We are contending for a high level of operation within the measure of our part in the Body of Christ. We are fighting for the increase of that measure so we can come into the fullness of our calling in obedience to Christ.
Knowing this truth makes it a little easier to die to self and pursue love, doesn't it? It helps to know you are fighting for an increase of your measure in the Body. With every decision you make to walk in love, you bring increase to the Body for the edifying of itself in love!

So when someone says something ugly or offensive to you, stop for a moment and let the anointing of the Holy Spirit clear your head and quiet your heart. I know it's hard to hold your tongue, but you can do it. God will help you every time you let Him.

Let the Lord take that soul of yours and submit it to His work of edification as you faithfully pray in tongues every day. Let Him help you see people in a new light when they do things to hurt or offend. Spend time thanking Him and praising Him continually for His love that He pours out liberally, and never stop coveting earnestly a life that is lived according to His love.

Especially this Christmas season and with a brand new year coming up, I encourage you to draw on God's strength like never before and to pursue the love that Jesus came to earth to bring. Choose to forgive others their offenses against you--the Holy Spirit will help make you willing to be mortified through His power--and then get ready to experience the pleasure of walking in a whole new level of God's peace and love!

Merry Christmas to you and to those around you whose lives you touch.

Love and blessings,

Dave Roberson

Friday, December 9, 2016

Substitution

'He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for
us, so that we might become the righteousness
of God.   (II Corinthians 5:21)

'Through identification with His death I can
be freed from sin, and have His very
righteousness imparted as a gift to me. The
teaching is not Christ for me unless I am
determined to have Christ formed in me.'
(OC)

Pleasing to Him

'Without faith it is impossible to please Him.
(Hebrews 11:6)

'Faith must be tested and tried before it becomes a
reality in your life so that no matter what happens,
the transforming power of God's providence
transforms perfect faith into reality. Faith is the
entire person in the right relationship with God
through the power of the Spirit of Jesus Christ.'
(OC)

How God is Glorified

Peter wrote, “[God] has given us … his precious and very great promises, so that through them … [we] may become participants of the divine nature” (2 Pet 1:4). With the coming of Christ, God has made a way for us to participate in the triune love that is the “divine nature.”

We see this fleshed out when Jesus prayed that his disciples

…may be one. As you Father, are in me and I am in you, may they also be in us. … I in them and you in me, that they may become completely one, so that the world may know that you have sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me. … I made your name known to them, and I will make it known, so that the love with which you have loved me may be in them, and I in them. (John 17:21, 23, 26)

What a fantastic prayer! When we place our trust in Christ, we are made one with Christ and thereby participate in the loving union of the Father and Son. (Other passages make it clear that the Spirit is also included in this loving union). This is our participation “in the divine nature,” and it includes the fact that the Father loves us with the very same love with which he loves Jesus. In fact, because we are “in Christ,” the Father loves us in the same process of loving the Christ. As the author of Ephesians put it, we are loved by God “in the Beloved” (Eph1:6). We are, in short, loved with the same love that unites the three Persons of the Trinity! (see post).

Jesus’ prayer is that our participation in God’s love would result in his followers glorifying God by reflecting the love of the Triune God in the way we are united with one another. Jesus says to the Father, “[t]he glory which you have given me I have given them, so that they may be one, as we are one” (Jn 17:22, emphasis added). Now, I’ve read and heard some people associate God’s glory with his control over everything. I will confess that I have never understood what is so glorious about someone exercising a power that they innately possess. By virtue of being an able-bodied human, for example, I have total control over how I move my little finger. But I seriously doubt anyone would call me “glorious” for this reason! So too, of course God could control every aspect of his creation if he wanted to. He’s God! He innately possesses that power. But what would be glorious if he decided to exercise that power?

Not only this, but if God’s glory was him exercising control over everything, he obviously could never share his glory with others. Yet, Jesus’ prayer makes it perfectly clear that God’s glory can be given away, for his glory is simply the radiance of his love. So, Jesus gives us the same glory he had been given when we empowers us to be united with one another in love, just as he and the Father are united in love. And what makes this glory truly glorious is that, far from being displayed in God’s control over things, this glory was most perfectly displayed when Christ gave up his innate power in order to lay his life down for us (see Jn 12:27-33).

So folks, know that you are, every moment, one with Christ and “loved in the Beloved.” And let this love empower you to glorify God by loving all others with this same, other-oriented, self-sacrificial love.

Monday, December 5, 2016

Q. Isn't the teaching, "once saved, always saved," arrogant?

A. At first glance, it may appear as though someone being totally assured of his or her salvation is prideful and arrogant. On the other hand, never knowing for sure whether you are saved seems humble and pious. But this is a deception.

A snippet from Philippians 1:6 of the Apostolic Bible Polyglot: Being persuaded in this same thing, that the one commencing in you a good work, will complete it as far as the day of Jesus Christ.
This Scripture teaches that it is God who works the perseverance of each saint.

"Once saved, always saved" is a way of expressing the doctrine of grace usually called the perseverance of the saints. The perseverance of the saints is the teaching that God is saving His people through His Son, and He will make sure they persevere or abide in that salvation to the end. Believing this doctrine is the opposite of arrogance. It teaches that there is nothing we can do to save ourselves; no matter what we do, we are sinful and unworthy of salvation. Our salvation, then, must be entirely the work of God. He saved us from start to finish. Nothing we do contributes to our salvation.

When we believers say our salvation is secure, we are not arrogantly saying that we are better than anyone else. We're saying that we're miserable sinners incapable of meriting even part of our salvation, but that we're resting entirely on God to save us. We believe that by dying on the Cross, Jesus died for our sins. If Jesus' atoning work has earned our salvation, how can we fail? If our salvation is entirely in God's hands, how can we lose it? There is nothing arrogant about that. It is an attitude of trusting in God instead of ourselves.

Notice Romans 8:29-30: "For whom he foreknew, he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. Whom he predestined, those he also called. Whom he called, those he also justified. Whom he justified, those he also glorified." From God's predestining us to His glorifying us, our salvation is all His work and absolutely sure to happen. There is nothing here about our sins possibly getting in the way. In fact, it is impossible for our sins to prevent our salvation because God has justified us from all sins. "Who could bring a charge against God's chosen ones? It is God who justifies. Who is he who condemns? It is Christ who died, yes rather, who was raised from the dead, who is at the right hand of God, who also makes intercession for us" (Romans 8:33-34).

Notice how clearly Jesus taught the same thing: "Most certainly I tell you, he who hears my word, and believes him who sent me, has eternal life, and doesn’t come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life" (John 5:24). Notice that the believer now has eternal life, will not be judged, has already passed from death to life, and is thus completely safe. He or she is saved and will remain so.

Although they likely don't realize it, those who reject "once saved, always saved" are very far from expressing true humility. They are implying that their salvation is ultimately up to what they do. They either make the grade by being good or they don't. Those who are saved are saved, not entirely by the grace of God, but because they are better than those who are not saved. Isn't that arrogance? Isn't that a cause for boasting? But the Bible says, "Where then is the boasting? It is excluded. By what manner of law? Of works? No, but by a law of faith. We maintain therefore that a man is justified by faith apart from the works of the law" (Romans 3:27-28).

The teaching of "once saved, always saved," or the perseverance of the saints, isn't arrogant. It is the acknowledgment that we can't save ourselves and the recognition that, since our salvation is in God's hands, he who has begun a good work in us will complete it (see Philippians 1:6). It cannot be arrogant to express our trust in God's ability to save us.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Great Exchanges

by Greg Albrecht

Your first thought at this time of the year might be those frenzied crowds in shopping malls and department stores on the days immediately following Christmas. People exchanging and returning gifts they received that were the wrong size, wrong color—or just plain wrong!

But there's another exchange we need to keep in mind. This great exchange is the reality of the cross of Christ. Jesus Christ took our sin and died for it, paying the debt that we could not pay. In exchange, God, because of his grace, gives us eternal life. Our sin for eternal life! The great spiritual exchange.

Great exchanges characterize the month of December for Christians —as gifts, greeting cards, worship, meals and social visits are exchanged and experienced in celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ. And while the cross was a great exchange, so was the manger in Bethlehem.

The miracle, mystery and majesty of Christmas is found in Immanuel, God with us (Matthew 1:23). God with us means that God is not distant, detached or disconnected. He didn't consider himself immune from our suffering and pain. God, in the person of Jesus, came to be one of us that he might save us. The Creator of the cosmos became a creature of his creation in order to set right all that has gone wrong on our tiny little planet.

Not only did God, in the person of Jesus, come to be one of us, he did so in a way that we would never have imagined or planned, had he asked our advice. He didn't arrive from the glory of eternity and heaven as a full grown adult. Even though the Bible calls him the second Adam, the King of kings started his earthly journey by being born as a baby. And not just any baby—but born to a virgin. And not just any place, but in a barnyard, as opposed to a palace more befitting the King of kings. The circumstances of his entrance on the world stage included a working class family, a young mother (a teenager who was unmarried when she conceived), an enslaved nation under military occupation and a small, out of the way place called Bethlehem.

In the play "Green Pastures," the angel Gabriel is depicted as approaching God while God is deep in thought. God is concerned that the people on earth do not seem to be listening to the prophets and messengers he sends. Gabriel becomes angry and offers to blow the final trumpet at once, ending human history as we know it. But God takes the trumpet away from Gabriel. Gabriel protests that humans never listen to the messengers God sends. God responds, "I am not going to send anybody this time. I am going myself." It was a great exchange.

Christmas is designed to worship, celebrate and proclaim this great event—this great exchange. Christmas is a time that should be Christ-centered. You may choose to put up lights, hang stockings, decorate a tree, wear red and green, send Christmas cards, attend a concert, have a party, spend time with your family and observe special family traditions. But all of those events are simply icing on the cake. The reason and the foundation of Christmas is Christ.

Don't forget what Christmas is all about. Frosty the Snowman, Santa Claus, shopping expeditions, wrapping presents, yule logs and sleigh rides can easily take our focus off the sacred and direct it to the secular. Christmas is all about God doing for us what we can never do for ourselves. Christmas is all about God's love for us. Don't get so caught up in physically oriented exchanges that you miss the great spiritual exchange.

A Christ-Centered Time Out - Brennan Manning h/t Greg Albrecht

In the midst of the hateful accusations of the now concluded election and all of its campaign rhetoric, and the violence and anger that has followed – in the midst of new and deep divides between family and friends, we can find healing in the gospel of Jesus Christ.  It’s time for a time out!  We can find peace and assurance – the Lord our Shepherd will lead us to green pastures and quiet waters, preparing a table for us so that we might dwell in his house forever.  

With our deep need of being still and waiting for God in mind, I was re-reading the introduction to Brennan Manning’s “The Relentless Tenderness of Jesus.”  His words are relevant and timely, almost as if they were written in the midst of the turmoil that rages around our world today. May Brennan Manning’s word that follow, from “A Word Before” – on pages 11-12, combine with Paul’s encouragement to each of us,  “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom, as you sing psalms, hymns and spiritual songs with gratitude in your hearts to God” (Colossians 3:16).  May these words help lift us out of the gutter of politics that we may focus on Jesus – Greg Albrecht

“On the eve of his death, Jesus prayed to the Father: ‘that you love them as you loved me… so that your love for me may live in them” (John 17:23,26 NAB).  The same verses in The Message read: “that you’ve sent me and loved them in the same way you’ve loved me… so that your love for me might be in them exactly as I am.”

This conjoined passage bends the mind, stuns the heart and beggars speech. It is the cause of ecstatic utterance among the saints, the source of spiritual intoxication among the mystics and, along with the incarnation, the most extraordinary demand ever made on Christian faith. It simply seems incredible.
God loves you just as much as he loves His Son, Jesus Christ.

This is what Scripture says without nuance and with utter precision.  Of course, the radical leftists and the right-wing extremists, with their one-note agendas, vociferously protest, because neither can live with biblical clarity.  On the right, words without nuance terrify; on the left, there must be nuance for nitpicking.  The mavens of the media on both sides are apoplectic, hurling accusations of fundamentalism from the left and lunatic liberalism from the right.

Neither side knows the God revealed by and in Jesus Christ. The divide between human beings and God is nowhere more apparent than here. You may like your spouse 90 percent, a colleague at work 50 percent and your attorney 20 percent.  If you assume that God divides his affection with 100 percent for Jesus, 70 percent for Mother Teresa and 2 percent for you, you are thinking not of God but of yourself.  As Peter von Breeman notes, “We have love, but God is love.”  Love is not one of many activities that God pursues. It is his entire being.

The psalmist writes, “Pause awhile, and know that I am God” (26:10 JB).  I favor the Jerusalem Bible translation because it takes time for me to be still, to come to that place of inner quiet.  Stillness is more than silence and it is beyond solitude.  Interior stillness is too deep for words.
Unhampered by self-consciousness, our attention is focused entirely on God and his love. In this sacred now, we immediately understand that God cannot measure his love, giving 100 percent to Jesus and a tiny fraction to us.   When Catherine of Siena, a dynamic contemplative in action, was asked to describe the God of her personal experience, she cried, “He is pazzo d’amore, ebro d’amore” – crazed with love, drunk with love. Yet her words are feeble and inadequate, because Mystery is spoiled by a word.

“Concepts create idols,” wrote Gregory of Nyssa. “Only wonder understands anything.” The eminent German theologian Karl Rahner, who died in 1985, wrote: “Some things are understood not by grasping but by allowing oneself to be grasped.”  As you read these pages, I pray that you allow yourself to be grasped, and that you “pause awhile” and let yourself be loved in your brokenness.

– Brennan Manning

Grace Quote

For some the temptation is to do nothing; for others the temptation is to pull the levers and make things happen. But you were born for greater things. The God who made you righteous and planted righteous desires within you has set you up for success. He has lined up the resources of heaven in anticipation of blessing all the work of your hands.

This isn’t about divining the Lord’s will in advance. This is about knowing and trusting the One who made you the way you are, who even now orders your steps and who swells your heart with God-sized dreams.

What are you waiting for? Be convinced of your righteousness, fan the gift of God into flame and go for it. Live deeply in Christ, and be the person he made you to be.

Shadows of Secrets Past


“Blessed is the man against whom the Lord counts no iniquity,
    and in whose spirit there is no deceit”
Psalm 32:2

A lie is a secret hidden behind a story. The story could be words, a shrug, an outburst, a lifestyle, or silence. It is the clothing we wear (or don’t), the product we hold in pride, the reaction we have when criticized, or the silent refusal of stepping out when called upon. Lying can both be proactive and reactive: we sell a bag of goods we are not or protect the real bag of goods from being seen. Lying can be both visible and hidden; we take some action (talking, acting, anger, distraction, behaving, mannerism, etc.) or we avoid some action (withdrawal, shutting off, ignoring, avoidance, etc). A lie is always meant to conceal, distract, or defend. Whatever it takes, the truth can not be seen.

Truthfully, we know we can never get away with a completely original untruth (no human is that creative) so we weigh and predict which bits of truth are worth exposing in order to protect the rest, like sacrificing a bishop to protect our queen. Over the years, we… I have become a master in this chess game. But even that is a lie. This game is unwinnable. It is not that the game is rigged but rather the goal is unachievable. Play after play, layer after layer, we keep constructing an imbalanced edifice behind which we hide. Each new addition supports and protects the layer before it. However, each new addition can’t support its own weight. Thus it requires its own additional layer of support. Eventually, the game will collapse in on itself, leaving the player scrambling to pick up his or her pieces as quickly as possible and find a new board to reconstruct a newly flawed game.

Lie Believing
Our true-self demands to live. We long for it. But to live means to be in the world. To be in the world means to be in the presence of people. The world itself is fine; it is the people that make it dangerous. We have two alternatives: embody a safe facade or completely withdrawal into nothingness. Some simply choose non-existence. Most embody the lie. Thus, we construct vales, vacuds, walls, and disguises. These then become the new us and around these we must construct a supporting narrative. This deception ultimately undermines our identity; we reject the true self in return for the assumed safe-self. This is the real destructive power of the lie – we start to confuse ourselves with the lie we have been telling. Of course, this is not what it means to be alive. This is death and death is what sin produces.

I have come to believe that one of the most practical ways of understanding sin is that of an reaction to a lie. To sin is believe a lie. To sin is to lie. To sin is to hide. For example, Adam and Eve are told a lie, they believe it, then they eat the fruit. They then hide. Another example: I believe that I am not good enough so I have to pretend to be something else other than what I am. This, of course, leads to me hiding my weaknesses and struggles because if people see those then I may not be accepted. This then becomes a feedback loop – a never ending and ever increasing set of deceits I become lost in.

One would hope that the Church would be the place that people could learn the truth and that the truth would set them free (John 8:32). One would hope… the painful and ugly truth is that it is not. What normally happens at a church is that there is this expectation of “holiness” (what we really mean is perfection) to which we compare each other against. If someone does not measure up well enough, it is time for an ultimatum. This fosters a run-away reaction where we compare ourselves against each other to make sure that we are the least likely to be disapproved of. If we are in the lucky half to be considered on the “right” side, we might be tempted into proving ourselves slightly better than most. If not, we might be tempted to maintain the status quo and squeak by without any criticism (or any attention).

Church
Churches are efficient in creating a culture of shame. In the church world, there is this expectation of measuring up. We speak of sin in such a way that when someone sins or is struggling with sin, there is no way they would willingly admit it. Sin is not “normal.” In fact, it is scandalous. We preach it as if it is normal, but we act as if it’s not. There’s this tongue-in-cheek way in which we publicly admit sin in general but never are willing to discuss it in particular. We find solidarity in all of us “acknowledging” our general imperfections but also in never discussing our specific messes. “Sin” becomes this commonality of us all being imperfect while our actual sins becomes a cacophony of scarlet letters. The shame of the act is not what scares us the most, it is the public labeling and silent gossip. It is the not-measuring-up and not-being-good-enough. We are worried about becoming second, or third, class citizens of the church community. Or worse, being pushed to the outside where my voice and my person no longer matter.

Church often becomes a place to maintain appearances and societal norms. It becomes simply a place to get our weekly fix of emotional significance without risking personal vulnerability. It becomes a delicately balanced system where we get just enough “vulnerability” and “acceptance” while not really being exposed to true vulnerability and acceptance. So, anyone who might threaten this is the scapegoat of all of our collective shame. This is a further extension of deceit where we protect ourselves by taking away from others. Such a culture is a culture where sin is not dealt with. Sin produces shame. If we shame, we reinforce (and one could say protect) sin. The only remedy is truth. The lie seems small and insignificant but is malicious.

Walk in Truth
A lie is often only identified when words are employed. It is the deceit that employs continual acting and avoidance that really sabatoge one’s life. We like to think that we are all the true version of ourselves, but we’re not. We lie because we must hide something, something we fear. This lying becomes so frequent that it blurs the line between us and our lies. Humanity is often at its most creative when there is something to hide. To truly experience true life rather than the fake veneer requires someone to risk all of the fake comforts they have built and go against the flow. It requires me being truthful.

The hardest part in this process is not being deceitful but in living truthfully. The shadows of secrets past weigh heavy on us, telling us to live in the falsehood rather than in the truth we now walk. We had become so good at walking in the dark that to walk in the light is overwhelming and terrifying. The littlest of moments beckon us to retort against truth. To walk in the light means to refuse to hide. And to hide is perhaps the greatest of temptations.

The Lion or the Lamb

By Andy Knight

I remember a story told by Dwight Edwards in his book Revolution Within. He said to imagine that you are at the zoo in the farm animal pavilion. You reach over to pet a soft wooly lamb, and it looks up at you and licks your hand. “Oh how nice,” you think.

As you leave, though, you walk down the path, and you hear someone frantically scream, “Look Out!” What you soon discover is the largest, most terrifying lion you have ever seen has just escaped. Not only that, but he’s coming your way. You see him getting closer, and you soon realize that you’re his next meal. You try to run for it, but there is no escape. With one bounding leap he lands on your back, drags you to the ground, opens his fierce jaws displaying his razor sharp teeth … and licks you.

Which lick would mean more? The lion or the lamb? The answer is obvious. Those who have felt the terror of standing on death row can attest to the overwhelming flood of freedom and release they felt when their pardon was granted. God’s grace is that profound. Our Father has the capacity and right to rip us apart for our rebellion and independent living, but He tenderly heals and forgives. The death sentence we justly deserved was carried out on his Son instead.

It is important to see the lamb-like qualities of our Father. Yet those who dance most freely at the thought of His grace, are those who never forget the trembling they felt while standing before a holy God owing an impossible debt.

Settle Down in Christ

By Donna Downs

“Cease striving and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.” – Psalms 46:10 NASB

I don’t know about you, but I can easily become overwhelmed with the burdens of life, the various responsibilities on my plate, and the sheer volume of activity on my schedule. I suspect everyone at one point or another struggles with similar feelings.

One cold January afternoon earlier this year, my mind was swirling with a flurry of demands, responsibilities, questions, pressures and doubts. In a moment of desperation, I decided to create a running list of everything weighing on my mind. I feverishly wrote it all out – everything from my annual business plan, an expensive medical situation, and upcoming client interviews to a poorly-timed overseas trip. There it all was in black and white. I had a complete catalog of all my worries, fears, questions and doubts, and now I had a choice to make. Would I continue to carry this on my own, or would I choose to lay these burdens at the feet of my heavenly father?

This crossroads is familiar territory. Will we carry our load in our own strength, or will we surrender our own efforts for a more excellent way? Thankfully that afternoon, I chose to remember and act on what I’ve learned about my heavenly father, and I sat quietly with him in sweet surrender.

Later that week, I came across the Message translation of a familiar scripture. “Your salvation requires you to turn back to me and stop your silly efforts to save yourselves. Your strength will come from settling down in complete dependence on me— The very thing you’ve been unwilling to do.” (Isaiah 30:15-18 MSG). I had never read that version of the passage and was blown away by how accurately it described my situation. Too often I rely on my own silly efforts to save myself, and only when I settle down and acknowledge my complete dependence on Christ, am I able to experience his saving grace in the midst of my earthly experience.

Just the other day, I went back to the list of worries in my journal. It was interesting to see how 99% of the items had been resolved – resolved without any effort or issue. It boosted my faith to review the tangible evidence of Christ’s life flowing through me as well as God’s faithfulness.

Funny thing is there was a handful of unresolved items on my list, but I decided to check them off with a footnote that says, “I don’t know, but God…” It’s such a sweet relief to live settled down in complete dependence on him! Come join me, won’t you?

The Proper Perspective

"Thanks be to God who always
leads us in triumph in Christ."
(2 Cor 2:14)

'The proper perspective to maintain is that
we are here for only one purpose--to be
captives marching in the procession of
Christ's triumphs. We are encompassed
with the sweet aroma of Jesus, and where-
ever we go we are a wonderful refreshment
to God.' (Oswald Chambers)

Death!

For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of {the} archangel, and with the trumpet of God; and the dead in Christ shall rise first. --I Thessalonians 4:16


I find it interesting that when humanism competes with any religion, it self-proclaims its superiority. It cannot compete with Jesus,who was, to say the least, unique and not of the world; He brought us the wisdom of heaven and teaching not heard in any religion. He is higher than all the man-inspired philosophies, systems, compassion, or love. The humanists are working hard to make Christianity out to be a hate religion. We know that true hate is to see a man being destroyed and to say nothing. If only for this reason, the humanists prove themselves to be full of hate, which does not exclude them from being wickedly wise. Since the believer has the hope of heaven, death on earth is not paramount in our thinking. It is here that the humanists believe they have found the chink in our armor. They are all about life on earth and want to appear to be very compassionate. They constantly cry, “See the suffering children, see how many have died from disease, see how easy it would be to alleviate suffering, and see how we have the answer?” The humanist has made death out to be the worst thing possible; it reveals his heart, for to him it will be the worst thing possible.However, we are not to be deceived into his way of thinking. Death is not the worst thing that can happen to a person, whose life on this earth was never meant to last forever. Christians are a unique group that does not fear death. Yet more and more believers are sacrificing integrity and effort to support the cause of doing anything and everything to see life on earth continue. Matthew 10:28, “And do not fear those who kill the body, but are unable to kill the soul; but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.”


I love this verse!  Almost every opportunity I have of presiding at graveside services, I read this verse and then state: “I think the two best places to be when Christ comes again would be, (1) with someone who has just placed their trust in the Lord Jesus Christ to be their very own personal Savior, or (2) at the graveside when the trumpet sounds, and the dead IN CHRIST rise first…”  Can you imagine what either would be like!?!


Michael unequivocally states the TRUTH…Humanism (or any religion) cannot compete with JESUS.  Period.  “He brought us the wisdom of heaven and teaching not heard in any religion. He is higher than all the man-inspired philosophies, systems, compassion, or love.”  Well, amen.


Michael also gives us a tremendous life lesson: “True hate is to see a man being destroyed and to say nothing.”  Michael’s surrounding statements show us what we DO  is relative to what is IN us: “The humanists are working hard to make Christianity out to be a hate religion…If only for this reason, the humanists prove themselves to be full of hate.”


Finally, Michael states the inevitable with timeless encouragement, then closes with Jesus’ comforting words: Matthew 10:28, “And do not fear those who kill the body, but are unable to kill the soul; but rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in hell.”


And as one who is now seeing His Savior face to face, Michael is experiencing the One which nothing can compete with!  And we can all hear Michael saying, “Well, amen!”


Try thinking of all this the next time you are at the graveside of a loved one, or close acquaintance…

- Mike Wells

Thursday, December 1, 2016

All Things Become New

A couple of days ago I went through eight scriptures
about the 'New YOU.' That was just the tip of the
iceberg...

Your old self was killed (crucified)
'We know that our old self was crucified with him
in order that the body of sin might be brought to
nothing, so that we would no longer be enslaved
to sin.' (Rom 6:6)

You are a new creation (even if you don't feel it
is so--or act like it)
'Therefore if anyone is in Christ, he is a new
creation.' (2 Cor 5:17)

You are justified and redeemed (already)
'And you are justified by his grace as a gift,
through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.'
(Rom 3:24)

You are accepted. (Have you not fought for this
all your life?)
'Therefore welcome one another as Christ has
welcomed you, for the glory of God.' (Rom 15:7)

You are a son and an heir.
'So you are no longer a slave, but a son, and if
a son, then an heir through God' (Gal 4:7)

You are chosen, holy, blameless before God.
'Even as he chose us before the foundation of
the world, that we should be holy and blameless
before him.' (Eph 1:4)