Monday, November 24, 2008

God's Righteous Justice Displayed Through His Redemptive Justification


As a child I recall my mother saying, many times, "Steve, I'm not going to tell you wrong!" She didn't mean that she already had all things figured out, but she had been around the block enough times to have a much better grasp on things than I did ...whether I wanted to believe that or not. Growing up, I thought I had things figured out. Some of my friends and I were card-carrying members of the Craighead County Philosopher's Club! In all our "experience" as young men, we concluded, on a daily basis, that we could really make sense out of life. As I grew older, however, there was a bit of a paradox in my thinking. I realized that the more I learned ...the "less" I knew. Put that in your philosophy-box. You see, in just a few short years I went from the "path of enlightenment" right back to the "dirt road of discovery". As a result, as I continue to get older, it seems that I have less and less tolerance for vague idealism and self-appointed opportunism. STRAIGHT-TALK is a valuable commodity! In a world full of spin-doctor-ing and pointless-promise-making straight-talk is more than valuable. It is rare and priceless!

BACKGROUND:

Chapters 40-66 have often been called the New Testament section of the book. While the first half of Isaiah focusses on God's "judgment" on His people, the later half speaks of "redemption" ...and not vaguely! Isaiah 53 is considered the greatest OT prediction of Christ' death on the cross. This last half begins with prophecy of the ministry of John the Baptist. It was written to encourage the Jewish remnant that would be delievered from Babylonian captivity after 70 years. While the Pagan deities supposedly spoke from within caves, and with murmuring utterances, Jehovah God spoke from places like Mt. Sinai! Isaiah wrote this prophecy over 150 years before they (Jews) would need this encouragement. God means what He says, and says what He means!

Isaiah 45:19

I have not spoken in secret,

In a dark place of the earth;

I did not say to the seed of Jacob,

‘ Seek Me in vain’;

I, the LORD, speak righteousness,

I declare things that are right.


So, right here in this singular verse God, through the prophet Isaiah, reassures His chosen people that He is a God who says what He means, and means what He says! Just as God made this promise to the chosen people of Israel, He has made a promise to you and I ...and He means it!


Today, I want to show you at least four means, from Isaiah 45:19, by which God reminds His chosen that He is not only speaking to show His Righteous Justice, but to also display His Redemptive Justification!

1. He Is ,By No Means, Hidden

"I have not spoken in secret", says the Lord. God didn't spin the universe into existance, create all the beautiful things, which we've only scratched the surface of, and then plop us down in the middle of it all ...only hold out on us! Let me ask you something. When you tell someone a "secret" ....how many people do you want to know? Just that one person, right? Parents, if a child is misbehaving do you call your spouse off into another room and proceed to tell he / she that this behavior needs to stop, and that there will be consequences for the actions? No, of course not! You tell the misbehaving child that what he is doing is wrong, and that his behavior must change, and how it must change! When we are un-pleasing to the Lord, do you sense His righteous conviction? His redemptive mercy? He speaks, and he wants you and I to "hear"! 1 Cor. 2:12, the apostle Paul said, "Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might know the things that have been freely given to us by God." Friend, God is, by no means, "hidden"! It is not His will that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance! That's why He sent His only begotten Son, to die on a tree; that you and I might know of His redemptive justification!

2. He Is ,By No Means, Vague

"In a dark place on the earth" ;He has not spoken in secret, nor in a dark place! You've walked through your house with all the lights out before. When I was a teenager, just old enough to go "up town", as we used to call it, I was sneaking in late one night. Not terribly late, but late enough that I knew if I played it cool, kept quiet, and got stright to my room ...all things would be well. Well, "the best laid plans of mice and men often go awry." My brother, who is 6 years my senior, was sneaking "out" of the house at the same time. Now, he was old enough that he didn't have to sneak. He was just being quiet and didn't turn on every light in the house on his way out! Nor, was he even considering the fact that I might be sneaking "in". As you have already figured out .....we met in the hallway. While I was quiet as a mouse, going toward my bedroom, he jingled his keys while exiting his bedroom. I must've had flashbacks to Dickens Christmas Carol, or something, but that jingling sound scared the soup outta' me! I let out some gutteral yell / moan ...and my brother responded in kind. He then proceeded to mumble words, under his breath, which I"m sure weren't in the bible, and went on his way.

In my current house, there is a library just off the garage; farthest from our bedroom, at the opposite end of the house! Someone always leaves a light on in there, so it is a nightly ritual that I wander to the library to turn off the light. You'd think I'd have learned, by now, to leave some sort of illumination to find my way back! But night after night, I feel my way back up the path ....navigating through the smal foryer between the library and living room, hanging a right, anxious of the corner of a credenza which I've had confrontations with before, feeling my way around the sofa, in great anticipation of the long, but straight, stretch of road down the hallway, to safely arrive at our bedroom! A safe trip always assumes the absense of a skateboard or a hot-wheels car, upon which disaster would ensue! All that ...because I never turn on a light on my way to the library in the first place! God is not vague! He doesn't speak in dark places! We simply forget to turn the light on so that we can see where we're going ....which should be where God is going! The Psalmist said "thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path." (Ps. 119:105 NKJV) My God doesn't hang out in "dark places"! He is the light of the world! Whoever follows Him shall not abide in darkness, but have the light of life. (John 8:12 NKJV)

3. He Is, By No Means, Misleading

"I did not say to the seed of Jacob, 'Seek me in vain';" Why use Isreal, here, as "the seed of Jacob"? Isaiah frequently used this terminology for Israel. But it causes one to ponder ....why would God do what He did, through men such as Jacob, only to have no ultimate purpose or point? Well, the answer is ..He did have a purpose and a point! Jacob's life and surrender to the Lord was not in vain. It could have been! Jacob, remember, was "the deceiver". He deceived his brother (Esau), his father, for a birthright. Later on Jacob, himself, was cruely deceived, by Laban. But he knew that God had a purpose and a plan for his life! He wasn't crazy about the means of getting there, only because those ways didn't satisfy Jacob's fleshly desire! But God had a plan back in Jacob's day. That plan was to increase Jacob's seed, to establish Israel. God's plan, here, is to prepare Israel for freedom from their present bondage! God did not set things in motion only to fulfill half of His promise, or even only 99% of His promise. A touchdown is only a touchdown when you've crossed into the end-zone. That means "almost" isn't good enough. Arrival at the 1 yard line only means there is, potentially, another play to enact! God's promise for Jacob's seed was not in vain. His promise for you and I is not in vain. He told Jeremiah "...I know the plans I have for you", declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." (Jer. 29:11 NIV) The Lord has a plan for you. He is not vague or misleading. God also told Jeremiah that he would seek Him, and would find HIm, when he sought Him with all his heart! Are you seeking Him? I don't mean a casual, or passive, "God, here I am and I shall not be moved 'til You move me" type of "seeking". I mean, are you ACTIVELY SEEKING HIM? Are you searching for the Lord where He will be found?

4. He Is, By All Means, Righteous!

"I, the LORD, speak righteousness, I declare things that are right." Another thing my mom used to tell me is "mean what you say, and say what you mean!" There is only One who can claim perfect ownership of such a priceless commodity. It is the LORD God Himself!! He said "our righteousness is as filthy rags!" "There is none righteous, not even one!" But that is "our" problem, our "sin problem"! It is not God's nature to declare things that are not right! He is all that is good! And through the blood of His Son, Jesus Christ, we have been made "righteous" as well! We didn't earn it, and we don't deserve it! This is just an example of His Redemptive Justification! "God made Him, who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God." (2 Cor. 5:21 NIV) Friend, God doesn't break His promises. He doesn't speak loosely, or flippantly. He doesn't even have "good intentions" but fails to follow through. NO! He is the God of Abraham, the God of Jacob, the Father who led His Son, like a lamb to the slaughter, so that you and I might be made "righteous"!

Friday, November 14, 2008

Ouch! That Hurts!

My oldest brother, who is passed on now, was full of little nuggets of "wisdom". He sought them out, I guess, all his life. He had a good head on his shoulders. He mastered most everything he did; whether hunting, fishing, baseball, his trade, writing poetry and short stories. He never mastered guitar though ..which my other brother and I (both guitarists) often held over his head! His favorite nugget of wisdom, when I did something dumb, was "don't do that anymore." Whether it was physically hurting myself, or any sort of foolish mistake, he would always gently, yet directly, state.... "don't do that anymore." Simple enough, huh?

Many times, however, he chose not to use his own wisdom. In fact, I guess foolishness led to his death. Nonetheless, he was a "good man". He truly was. He loved people, his family, his friends, and his God. I wish he would have listened to much of his own "wisdom". There was plenty of it.

Haven't you often wondered why it is that we "know" the right thing to do, but we just don't do it. The Apostle Paul wrestled with this (read Hebrews 7:15-25). King Solomon wrestled with it too. Scriptures holds Solomon, the son of David (a man after God's own heart) as "the wisest man to ever live". WOW! That's a pretty tall glass to fill. Surely there were other very wise people. But did you know that toward the end of King Solomon's life (as he, too, became king) he strayed from God's will. I mean, he consistently and deliberately seemed to do so (read 1 Kings 11:4-8). Not a stumble, fall, and get back up sorta' scenario ...but he built "idols" to other, false, gods. I guess one could blame it on his 700 or so wives!!! However, he made the decision. I mean, he was the King! God is no respecter of men ....not even kings!

I wonder why we know what to do, and don't do it. I suppose it all goes back to sin, and our own sin-nature. But we are without excuse. There is no reason to turn away from God. We hold, in Scripture, too many examples of the outcome of that! Yet, on to foolishness we go.

So, what if we learn to recognize "discipline", and recognize it for what it is? Whether from our earthly parents, or our heavenly Father, discipline is intended to bring us back into a right relationship, ultimately and especially with God.

If you ever feel "throttled", or choked by those in authority over you, or held back by the world ...take heart in knowing that discipline is for your good. Yeah, right, you say! Paul had some wisdom of his own to share, about discipline.





Hebrews 12:7-13
7 As you endure this divine discipline, remember that God is treating you as his own children. Who ever heard of a child who is never disciplined by its father? 8 If God doesn’t discipline you as he does all of his children, it means that you are illegitimate and are not really his children at all. 9 Since we respected our earthly fathers who disciplined us, shouldn’t we submit even more to the discipline of the Father of our spirits, and live forever? 10 For our earthly fathers disciplined us for a few years, doing the best they knew how. But God’s discipline is always good for us, so that we might share in his holiness. 11 No discipline is enjoyable while it is happening—it’s painful! But afterward there will be a peaceful harvest of right living for those who are trained in this way. 12 So take a new grip with your tired hands and strengthen your weak knees. 13 Mark out a straight path for your feet so that those who are weak and lame will not fall but become strong.


So, what if.... what if we begin to just "get over it" when we can't have our way. What if we learn that life is not "fair", that it's not all about us, that God is even bigger than our expectations of Him? There must be a great, and wonderful peace in "letting go, and letting God" ...as we so often say.


Blessings,


Steve

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

crI-OUT

From an e-mail I sent to our youth group today:

"I wish I could tell you that your youth pastor just prayed fervently all the time; slowed down, sought God with my mouth closed and ears open. Fact is ...I just have to do it on purpose, like everything else. There's always some "busy-ness" in the day, and I'm tired of "meaning to" ...and never getting around to. I see soooo much indifference toward Christ' church, even among believers. Not a judgment, just a fact. I've been there. I was thinking of my own attitude when I "cry out" to God. Sometimes I feel like just because I "cry out" that God is obligated to open the heavens and POOF!!! ...make all things clear to me. Foolishness. That's thinking in "my" time-frame. I want to learn, and want others to learn with me, to indeed cry out ...but then to get the "I" out of the way ....and trust God, patiently, and faithfully. Today, I read Job 35:9-13, which says...
9 "People cry out when they are oppressed. They groan beneath the power of the mighty. 10 Yet they don't ask, 'Where is God my Creator, the one who gives songs in the night? 11 Where is the one who makes us smarter than the animals and wiser than the birds of the sky?' 12 And when they cry out, God does not answer because of their pride. 13 But it is wrong to say God doesn't listen, to say the Almighty isn't concerned.

I have much that I need to pray for in life! Plenty of concerns for myself, for others, longing for direction from the Lord, etc. The Scripture, above, reminds me of how faithless and thoughtless, and thank-less we can be. So ...let's crI-OUT! Then, let's get "I" out of the way and leave the results in God's hands. Let's lift petitions to God and then let's practice waiting patiently for Him to respond. Let's practice waiting faithfully as we trust Him to respond to our fervent prayers to "Him" to show us directions to move in our personal lives, our church lives, and in our every way lives.

Love you all,
Bro. Steve"

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Releasing The Rivers Within

I don't recommend many books. In fact, I guess this is the first I have recommended, other than the Bible. This is a must-read! Dwight Edwards (yes, there is a relation to Johnathan Edwards) shows us, through Scripture, how to keep the main thing the main thing, and how to unleash the power of our relationship with God, through Christ Jesus. You gotta' pick up this book.

Monday, September 29, 2008

A Psalm for the "Old & Gray"

Psalm 71:18....
"Now also when I am old and grayheaded, O God, do not forsake me, Until I declare Your strength to this generation, Your power to everyone who is to come. " (NKJV)

I was struck by a couple of words he (assuming David wrote this) said. "...do not forsake me until... "; as if God would ultimately "forsake" him! Now, I haven't performed a formal exegesis on this passage of Scripture, but I would argue that the psalmist meant ....don't take me out of this world until I've had a chance to leave a holy mark on it! Lord, make whatever days I have left COUNT!! That's Steve-egesis। In Psalm 71, David recognized his good education and instruction in the Lord, as a young man. While he was still in the world he craved the opportunity to "live for Christ"! I wonder if it is irony that, in my personal study bible, this is just across the page from Paul's passage, in Philippians, where he states ..."for to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain!" (Philippians 1:21)

Both the psalmist and the Apostle Paul recognized something as they got older. I think it is something you and I recognize, or at least are beginning to recognize, as we, too, get older. Our lives are less about "us" and should be more about the legacy we'll leave. Now, I don't believe that the focus of our living should be wrapped around "leaving a legacy", for the sake of legacy. That might border on idolatry, itself. Nonetheless, you and I will leave a legacy of some. At this point, I am less concerned about my post-mortem reputation as I am concerned about what mark we, as little Christ', leave in our circle of influence in the world! I'm no Billy Graham ....and unless the Lord truly performs a miracle, I probably never will be. I'm ok with that. There are, at the very least, 4 people whom I have immediate influence ...and maybe countless others that I may not even mean to.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Five Steps To A Powerful Prayer Life

Do you feel like you have a prayer-life that hits the ceiling, and falls right back to the ground? That is not God's design or desire! "The fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much!" The question is, what is the condition of your heart when you talk to, and listen for, God? Psalm 63 gives us five steps to a powerful prayer life.

Psalm 63:1-3
1O God, You are my God;
Early will I seek You;
My soul thirsts for You;
My flesh longs for You
In a dry and thirsty land
Where there is no water.
2So I have looked for You in the sanctuary,
To see Your power and Your glory.
3Because Your lovingkindness is better than life,
My lips shall praise You.
New King James Version (NKJV)
Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.

  1. LORD ;"You are my God; Early will I seek You"
    The word "early", in Hebrew refers to "dawn" ....seek diligently. Recognize that He is Lord. We don't come to a lifeless deity in our prayer, but to a "living" God!
  2. LONG ;"My soul thirsts ...my flesh longs" - used in KJV many times to "suffer thirst". Have you ever been really thirsty? I mean so thirsty that even the first drink of cool water still leaves your mouth parched. You're dehydrated! You must have more, to quench your thirst.
  3. LOOK ;"So I have looked for You in the sanctuary, To see Your power and Your glory." - Hebrew; to "pine" after. God will not be found near sin! Look for Him where "He" is; in His holy place!
  4. LOVE ;"Because Your lovingkindness is better than life." - Mercy, kindness, goodness, favour! Remember, He loved you first! You can't out-give Him, and you won't out-love Him! He sent His Son to die for you! Hold that thought while you pray!
  5. LAUD ;"My lips shall praise You." - or my language shall praise You! Let everything that has breath praise the Lord!!

Saturday, September 6, 2008

Heart-Seeking Missle

God's Love Through Christ' Grace
 
"For God so loved the world......." I wonder if we really get it? Clearly, not everyone gets it, or they'd have it; Christ' love, that is! God's love, through Jesus Christ, is like a "heat-seeking missle"; or maybe more aptly, "a heart-seeking missle". You've seen the war movies. These missles are launched, and seek out a heat signal. It knows no favorites. God's love, through His Son's sacrifice, is like that. God created all of us. It is not His will that "anyone" should perish (2 Peter 3:9).


The Apostle Paul said (in Romans 5:8) "But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us." Christ has, and is, doing everything possible to draw us to Him. He's made every door open, and made Himself available to us, even unto His own death. I've been asked, more than once, "why is it so hard?" In other words, why does God make it so difficult to "be saved"? I believe Scripture proves, over and over, that He does not make it hard. It is, in fact, very simple. Scripture makes it clear ..."That if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." There are no ifs, ands, or buts in that sentence.

The question really is ..are we willing. Are you willing? It's a step of faith. God is not going to push Himself on us. At the same time, He is a sovereign, sinless, God. That means He is all-powerful, and a just God; a Holy God. To allow "sin" in His presence would minimize His God-liness. Scripture says (Romans 3:23) "for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God". The prophet Isaiah made it clear, even long before Christ' birth "But your iniquities have separated you from your God; your sins have hidden his face from you, so that he will not hear." (Isaiah 59:2)

Don't expect a sin-less, perfect, loving, all-knowing, all-powerful, God to just wave off sin. He is a "just" God. Sin has a cost, and that price must be paid. That's what Jesus did for you, and for me, and for "all" who will believe and receive it.

God is seeking you. He told Jeremiah "You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart." (Jer. 29:13) Are you willing to surrender your pride, and entrust yourself to Him? Will you seek Him with all your heart? Just A.S.K.! Accept that you were born a sinner, and that you need a Savior to forgive that sin. Surrender to Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. Keep surrendering to Him each day.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Logos Blog

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