Monday, August 30, 2021

Disgustingly Distasteful

 

[Photo of woman reacting to bad coffee]


“I know you inside and out, and find
little to my liking. You’re not
cold, you’re not hot—far better to
be either cold or hot! You’re stale.
You’re stagnant. You make me want to vomit.”
—Revelation 3:15-16 MSG

Imagine someone in her car arriving at the coffee shop’s drive-thru window and purposely ordering lukewarm coffee. She’s missing some of the great comfort of a well-brewed, piping hot cup of “joe,” or an ice cold cup on a very hot summer day. (Personally, I prefer tea, but only if it’s very hot or very cold.)

Can you imagine your church having the kind of evaluation that you read in the Scripture at the top of this devotional? Can you imagine reading that your church is stale, stagnant—lukewarm—when God made your church, and those who belong to it, with the purpose of being present in order to refresh and to revive others, as well as to please Him?

Not only that, but this ancient church of Laodicea—located in a region of Greece that is now a part of modern day Turkey—received even more accusations from God. In the passage from The Message, found in Revelation 3:17, God says:

“You brag, I’m rich, I’ve got it made, I need nothing from anyone, oblivious that in fact you’re a pitiful, blind beggar, threadbare and homeless.”

This sentence reminds me of the twisted American mentality that has crept into our churches. We have readily accepted God’s blessings, believing that through our hard work and wisdom we have created the riches to which we have grown so accustomed. Have we gotten to the point where we no longer hear the warnings of Scripture? Do we really intend to ignore the calls to put God and His Kingdom first? Does God have to vomit us out of His mouth, or can we become useful and thirst-quenching again?

Laodicea had much to brag about. The region was known for its industries in banking, black wool making, and manufacturing of eye salve for tired eyes. And, this geographic region contained followers of Christ that God greatly valued. So, He warns them in Revelation 3:18:

“Here’s what I want you to do: Buy your gold from me, gold that’s been through the refiner’s fire. Then you’ll be rich. Buy your [white] clothes from me, clothes designed in Heaven. You’ve gone around half-naked long enough. And buy medicine for your eyes from me so you can see, really see.”

Do you hear the urgency in this passage of Scripture? Just as He spoke to the church at Laodicea, I think that God calls us and our church to change our ways.

Have the COVID-19 Pandemic and the tragedies in leaving Afghanistan caused us to hear our Lord’s voice? Will we heed the warning He gives us? Will we seriously repent of our uselessness and our pride? Will we plead with Him to send the Holy Spirit to empower us?

We need divine power in order to get busy supplying the Water of Life to this world. We need holy power in order to display the gold that shows the richness of His glory. We need God to give us white clothing to replace the clothing of those still wearing worldly rags. We need God’s holy medicine to heal the spiritual blindness of our world.

Spread the word! Hurry! The coffee is getting cold!

 

 

Monday, August 23, 2021

Sober or Silly?

 

[Photo of young boys making silly faces]


The end of all things is at
hand; therefore be
self-controlled and sober-minded
for the sake of your prayers.
—1 Peter 4:7

As a teacher, I identified second graders as “seven, social, and silly.” They had discovered that school gave them a chance to giggle and have fun with others their own age. It didn’t take much to get them concentrating on silly things at the expense of the reasons they should have come to school. I remember some lessons that I toiled over and even included learning games. But, some crazy stunt by one of their classmates took everyone off task.

Sometimes, I look at God’s people and wonder if they have taken “silly pills,” too. The prophet Jeremiah had a sobering message for God’s ancient people, whom he saw headed for exile. In his frustration he stated the following, as recorded in Lamentations 1:12:

“Is it nothing to you, all you who pass by? Look around and see. Is any suffering like my suffering that was inflicted on me, that the Lord brought on me in the day of his fierce anger?”

The people who had the Holy Scriptures, the Law and the Prophets, were, so to speak, “fiddling while Rome burned.” In these days of collapsing countries, tyrannical leaders, weather disasters, moral decay, pride, and complete neglect of truth, what is God calling His people to do?

In another passage of Scripture, 1 Thessalonians 5:4-6, the Apostle Paul admonishes us:

But you are not in darkness, brothers, for that day to surprise you like a thief. For you are all children of light, children of the day. We are not of the night or of the darkness. So then let us not sleep, as others do, but let us keep awake and be sober.

I have no way of knowing when Christ will come back for His church. But, when things go awry all over the world, it begins to look like the “growing pains” leading to the Second Coming that the Bible talks about. Along with the society in which we live, we can be tempted to “eat, drink and be merry,” to enjoy life, and to try to forget the terrors experienced by Christians in other places of the world.

Instead, God calls us to live sober-minded lives. He calls us to live in this way, so that we can pray, so that we can live urgently to serve Him and, as best we can, to call others to know Him and prepare for His coming.

Let us not disappoint our Heavenly Teacher with our giggling and silly distractions. Instead, let us face Him soberly and live seriously, as He has instructed. The days call for a spiritual work force, clear minded and ready to serve, relying upon Christ’s power and wisdom.

 

 

Monday, August 16, 2021

Inky Blackness

 

[Drawing of the big fish vomiting Jonah up on shore]


“You hurled me into the deep, into the very heart
of the seas, and the currents swirled about me;
all your waves and breakers swept over me.”
—Jonah 2:3

Have you ever been in complete darkness? The closest most of us come to that is a tour of an underground cavern or walking in an unlighted tunnel at night. We might grasp for the wall to keep our equilibrium, but we do not know where we’ve been or where we’re going.

Jonah had a most unique experience with darkness. After disobeying God and being tossed into the sea by a boatload of reluctant sailors, a great fish swallowed him alive and he stayed in the belly of this fish for three days and three nights. What’s the difference in night and day in a place like that anyway?

God had Jonah where he could not escape. God must have known that was the only place where Jonah would wake up to the requests his God was making of him and recognize his responsibility to Him. In Jonah’s astounding prayer from the fish’s belly, as recorded in Jonah 2:9, he finally cried:

But I, with a song of thanksgiving, will sacrifice to you. What I have vowed I will make good. Salvation comes from the Lord.

Does God also have you in a place where He waits for you to “cry Uncle”? We know from this story that God takes advantage of the places and circumstances that will turn us to Him. I don’t believe God willingly creates circumstances like this, for Jeremiah said in Lamentations 3:33:

He does not willingly bring affliction or grief to the children of men.

You know the famous line parents often give when punishing a child: “This will hurt me more than it hurts you.” God sees your plight if you have found yourself in a dark place with no way out and not a clue what to do. He understands and has compassion on you. Be reminded of Jonah. Though he went through utter distress, God knew all along the circumstances He would use to get Jonah back on track with His plan.

God wants us to trust Him in the dark. He alone has the means to rescue us. He wants us to believe in His power and in His will to do just that!

 

 

Monday, August 9, 2021

I Like Sog

 

[Photo of a man walking in fog]


I will lead the blind by ways they have
not known, along unfamiliar paths I will
guide them; I will turn the darkness
into light before them and make the
rough places smooth. These are the
things I will do; I will not forsake them.
—Isaiah 42:16

My parents used to remind me of the statement I made as a toddler, when I sat next to my dad as we drove through the foggy landscape: “Daddy, I like sog.” I don’t quite know what made me say that. Although, I guess a picture of the world in the mist can appeal to us at times.

However, as an adult, I know now that driving in thick fog no longer holds the fascination it did for me at age three. Fog makes us slow down and sometimes hinders us from our travel. When we drive where we cannot see, danger can lurk. Sometimes having a car ahead of us with good strong rear lights helps—as long as that driver stays on the road!

Life can sometimes seem like we’re walking through a thick fog. We become easily confused and lost. We wonder where we are going. If we look around, we cannot clearly see from where we came. Looking off to the left, or off to the right, doesn’t help us in any way. We are surrounded by confusion. Each step seems treacherous to us.

When surrounded by the “fog” of life’s confusion, we should be heartened by the knowledge that our God guides us in the paths of life and leads us to places we can trust. But what of the days when we feel that we can neither see nor hear Him? What do we do then?

Do we keep walking in the fog anyway? Do we slow our pace? Do we look carefully before we take each step? Do we peer out into the darkness? Do we whisper a prayer for help?

Perhaps, if we can just catch a glimmer of God’s will for us, we will be able to move very cautiously ahead. But, if that glimmer eludes us, if some days we cannot see even our spiritual hand in front of our face, then we must just stop and wait until God lifts the soupy haze that obstructs our view.

Have you ever had to pull to the side of the road until the fog lifted? When a spiritual fog descends into our lives, perhaps we should just pull over and wait for God to lift that spiritual fog? Making this frustrating choice actually develops our trust in Him. We must believe that He wills us to rest in His loving omniscience. We must believe that the spiritual fog will eventually lift and we will see clearly again to follow our God and move along the pathway He is providing.

One of my favorite allegories, Hinds’ Feet On High Places,¹ written by the author Hannah Hurnard, tells the story of little “Much-Afraid” on the journey she set out upon after meeting the “Shepherd.” While He assigned to her some companions to go along, she encountered many other characters that did all they could to hinder her on the way.

At one point in the story, little “Much-Afraid” found herself in a thick mist:

Now there was nothing but tameness, just a trudge, trudge forward, day after day, able to see nothing except for white, clinging mist which hung about the mountains without a gleam of sunshine breaking through. At last she burst out impatiently, “Will this dull, dreary mist never lift, I wonder?”

Little “Much-Afraid” then heard the voices of “Resentment,” “Self-Pity,” and “Bitterness,” who said to her:

“Trudge, trudge, day after day, nothing to show for it, and you ought to be getting up onto the High Places.”

One afternoon, she walked along all muddy, wet, and bedraggled. She decided to sing a little song. As she sang, the “Shepherd” appeared and sang along. As they talked together, she told Him all about the wanderings in the mist and how the voices suggested she had wandered from the path and lost her way. It was then that He said to her:

“Did you really think that I would let you stray from the right path to the High Places without doing anything to warn you or to prevent it? … You had better become a singer,” He said smiling. “Then you won’t hear what they say to you.”

Finally, He said to her, “Do you love me enough to be able to trust me completely, Much-Afraid?” … She faltered, “You know that I love you and that I long to trust you as much as I love you, that I long both to love and trust you still more.”

We can learn from this little episode in Hannah Hurnard’s book. Our Lord commonly takes care of all those who love Him and long to climb nearer to Him, as they travel through the fog and mist of the sinfulness of our dark world. He sees us wherever we are.

God finds us when we feel we are lost. He directs us, even while we struggle. He longs to hear us sing to Him, despite our doubts and fears. Through our puzzling paths ahead, may we learn to trust the God who loves us with His unfailing love and not be afraid.

______________________
1 Hurnard, Hannah. Hinds’ Feet On High Places. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1977. Pp.156-169.

 

 

Monday, August 2, 2021

Teacher's Pet

 

[Photo of a daydreaming student]


Peter turned and saw that the disciple
whom Jesus loved was following them.
—John 20:21

Ricky always thought he was chosen as the teacher’s pet. After the first or second day of school, the teacher pulled his desk up close to hers. He loved it there. He often had her attention with his interruptions and hijinks. “Why,” he thought, “if I had been a ‘problem student,’ she would have long ago sent me to the Principal’s Office. Right?” Not necessarily so.

Talker and all-around class clown, the other students liked Ricky. And, wherever he sat, he made friends. His teacher, Mrs. Allen, saw potential in him and sat him in the front next to her desk for reasons far beyond a mutual admiration.

In the Gospel of John, this close friend and devoted follower of Jesus referred to himself as the “disciple whom Jesus loved.” It seems quite possible that John might have considered himself the “teacher’s pet,” too. Yes, he did share the spotlight with James and Peter. But, Jesus often chose John for special, close-up teaching.

After all, the title “disciple” has within it the same root as the word “discipline.” Ricky didn’t perceive that the teacher actually found his behavior abhorrent. She brought him close to her, so that she could more easily control and guide him to learn self-discipline, to prevent him from interfering with the learning of the other students, and to help him through individualized teaching. Indeed, individualized teaching was the key, just as Jesus used individualized teaching with Peter, James, and John.

As a result, when the first leaders of the New Testament Church were assigned, we find that Peter, James, and John came out above all the others. They had stayed close to Jesus. His nearness gave them an unforgettable glimpse into His character and His person. Part of His discipline of them involved bringing them so close to Himself that they had to see and learn from Him.

When his classmates played outside on the playground, sometimes Ricky even got the chance to sit next to the teacher during recess! I doubt that Ricky was happy with that arrangement. Yet, in the end, we know he benefitted from this special kind of love and care given by someone more wise than he.

Proverbs 3:11-12 tells us:

My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline and do not resent his rebuke, because the Lord disciplines those he loves, as a father the son he delights in.

Just as we would probably find Ricky’s name at the top of Mrs. Allen’s “worry list”—forcing her to stretch her human resources of creativity and care—God has each of us at the top of His special list, too. We are, all of us, this divine Teacher’s Pet. And, He know just how to draw us close and keep us in the place where He can teach us to live as His disciples.