Saturday, September 2, 2017

Why is God Worthy of My Love?


Have you ever thought about what makes God so great? I have heard people praying and recognizing so many wonderful and powerful things about God.  Their prayers talk about how powerful God is.  He is the King of the Universe, all-powerful and mighty.  By simply speaking He is able to create all things.  Nothing can exist without Him.

He is also all knowing, even to the point of knowing how many hairs there are on our heads.  He is omnipresent so that we cannot  hide from Him and there is nothing we can do which He would not know about.  There is nothing new to Him.  All our greatest technology is simplistic to Him.  Our greatest minds are as preschoolers compared to His most elementary thoughts.

He owns everything.  Forget about the richest men in the world.  God owns the universe and could make many more universes if He wanted to.  He rules from a city where the foundations are of precious gems, and the streets are of gold.  He has servants whose only desire is to serve Him and they wait patiently around His throne just to hear what His next words are.

He lives outside of time.  He was before time began, and He will be after time ends.  There is nothing which has ever happened where He was not there and had an intricate knowledge of.  He is more wonderful, awesome and powerful then we can even imagine.

All I have said above is true, but I don’t care about all that.  It is not meaningless but it is not what is truly important about God.  You can take all that away and God would still be more wonderful than anything or anyone living.

What makes God worthy of my love?  It is not because of all I have written here.  Those things are simply abilities and states of His status.  The real reason to love God is found in 1 John 4:19 “We love him, because he first loved us.”

God loves you so much that He actually gave up all the wonderful and powerful things I mentioned the first part of this post.  Jesus gave up all of Heaven’s riches and glory to be born in a barn and live in a primitive world full of sin, sorrow and death.  He had no power of his own except what The Father sent through Him.  Jesus loved us so much that he gave up everything, including his earthly life so that we can know God and live eternally with Him.

Forget about power and riches.  I want to know Jesus and be with him because of his heart’s love for me.  How can I deny such love?  Even if Heaven and eternal life were not promised to me, I would still have to love Him.

Photo by Nathan Anderson on Unsplash

Friday, September 1, 2017

The Lesson of the Two Seas


In Israel there are two seas.  To the north is the Sea of Galilee, and to the south is the Dead Sea. The Sea of Galilee is rich with fish and life, while the Dead Sea is empty of life.  There are no fish or vegetation in its waters because of the salt and minerals which prevent life from inhabiting it.

The Sea of Galilee has the freshwater of the Jordan River entering it from the north.  The waters of the Jordan then exit the sea on the south and flow down to the Dead Sea.  The Sea of Galilee doesn't just take in the waters, but it gives what it has received.

The Dead Sea takes and takes, but never gives.  This allow the waters to become saturated with the salts and minerals.  Not passing on what was given to it only brings death.

God gives blessings to us all and what we do with those blessings determines if we will bring forth life to others or only death.  When we do not share the blessing of salvation to others, we leave them to die in their sins.  When we do not share our food with those in need, we show our hearts to be hard, dark and selfishly hording what others need to live.

God gives to us endlessly so that we might give endlessly, just as the Sea of Galilee does.  To take and never give will only make us like the Dead Sea with nothing to show in the end but emptiness.

Photo Credit: The Dead Sea, Israel by tsaiproject

Thursday, August 31, 2017

Was Jonah a False Prophet?


We have heard the story of Jonah and the whale since we were children.  Jonah was to go to the city of Nineveh and proclaim that in forty days Nineveh would be overthrown ( Jonah 3 ).  After running as far as he could, and an encounter with a large fish, Jonah finally gave God's message to the Ninevites.

So after 40 days what happened to Nineveh?  Was the king overthrown?  Were the people destroyed? No! Doesn't that make Jonah a false prophet?  Was God wrong to say that Nineveh would be overthrown?

God is a God of mercy and love.  People point to this event to say "See, God was wrong!" instead of pointing to the fact that out of God's mercy 120,000 people had repented and were saved.  Those men, women and children would live because they had turned from the wickedness they had committed.

Was God still wrong to say that Nineveh would be overthrown when after 40 days the city still stood? The Hebrew word for overthrown is hafak.  Hafak means overthrown, but it also means overturned, changed and converted.  The wickedness of the city was overthrown by the Spirit of God.  The people changed their lives and were converted to follow God instead of the evil that had been in their hearts.

God desires to be merciful more than He desires judgement.  He is willing to appear wrong if it means the salvation of a person. When you have a choice to believe God or believe man's logic, always choose God.

Photo Credit: the Story of Nineveh by Joe More

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

The Smallness of the Universe


The Hebrew word olam is the universe, this world and all that you see.  When we look at our world it seems so great and powerful in our lives.  We see the stars above and wonder at how vast the universe is.  The olam dwarfs us in so many ways.  Hurricane Harvey is an example of just how powerful a small bit of the olam is and how great it can affect our lives.  Could there be anything in all of existence greater than the olam?  Can anything have more impact to our lives than the olam?

Before the olam came into existence there was nothing.  No, not even space or time.  The olam came into being when God spoke.  Such a small thing as a word from God created all of olam.  The Earth, the solar system and all of the universe came into existence because of the word of God.  The Hebrew word for word is Davar.  Davar gave olam the power, the vastness, and the beauty we see today.

Which than is more powerful, the olam or the davar?  Which can have more of an impact on your life. the olam or the davar?  Which one should you be led by, the olam or the davar?

The word came first and was spoken.  The world followed and obeyed the word.  The world and all of the universe is nothing compared to the word.  We must never follow the world or our circumstances.  The word of God is where the true power is.  Even if all that is occurring in the world and in our lives seems overpowering, we must still follow the word.  It can be tough at times, but trusting God and following His word is the surest place to stand when the world comes against us.

You will find the davar filling the Bible.  The Bible is the most powerful force in the Universe.  It is the Word of God.

Photo by Wil Stewart on Unsplash

Monday, August 28, 2017

What Road of Life do you Travel?


Looking at your life, what road are you traveling?  I am sure that many people had planned to be on the Road of Success.  Perhaps you made it, but perhaps you ended up on the Road of
Failure or the Road of Mediocrity.  Everyone wants to be on the Road of Happiness and I hope you are.  Sadly many people find themselves on the Road of Misery and Sadness.

There are many roads in life that we want to be on and many roads we never planned to be on but find ourselves traveling down or perhaps we have even broken down on.  The roads we travel on are ones where we look at what the situation is like now and determine if it is a good road or a bad one. Is it a rocky road, or a smooth road?  Is this road a pleasant drive or one through a desolate desert?

In The Holy Land it is different.  Roads are named for their destination.  They have names such as, the Road to Bethlehem, the Damascus Road, or the Emmaus Road.  The roads were not name for the terrain or how difficult they might be, but for where the road would take you.

We must never judge a road by where we are now, but by where that road takes us.  Perhaps you are on a pleasant road today, but if it ends up at a cliff it is not the road you really wanted to take.  If the road is rocky but delivers you to a happy and fulfilling destination, you will forget about the rocky road and rejoice at where it brought you.

What is the destination you desire to travel to?  If it is a destination of this world such as riches, job success, power, possession or any other short term desire, then you are aiming too low.  The only destinations worth striving for are those that are eternal.  Everything else is worthless in the end.
Short term goals are important, but remember where your life's road ends up is much more important.

There are only two roads of eternity.  The Road to Heaven with eternal blessings and the Road to Hell with eternal damnation.  If your eyes are not set on Heaven you will walk the Road to Hell.  What type of road your life is on does not matter as much as where that road is headed.  We must look up the road and keep our eyes on the destination.  Never let the the terrain stop you, but press on. Never give up.  Keep your eyes fixed on the prize.

Photo by Tegan Mierle on Unsplash  

Friday, August 25, 2017

The Feast of First Fruits Mystery



The Jewish feast and holidays were placed by God on certain days as a sign of His work. The Feast of First Fruits took place the first day after the Passover Sabbath.  This was the beginning of the spring harvest.   The farmer would take the first sheaves of his crop and consecrate it to the LORD.  The first grain from his fields represented all the grain that was to follow.  By consecrating the first fruit of his crop to God, the whole harvest therefore was consecrated to God.

This grain sacrifice was a new day showing that winter and its hardships were past.  The death which winter brings was now turning to life.  Spring had arrived.  Rebirth and life would now rule the day. This feast was the beginning of a new and bright season where God blessed His people and gave hope.

Jesus Christ was crucified on Passover and the day after the Passover Sabbath was the day he arose from the dead.  He was resurrected on the Day of the Feast of First Fruits.  Jesus Christ was our first fruits.  He was the first fruit which was lifted up to the LORD as a representative of the all mankind. He is the one who turns our winters into spring.  Our lives can now be reborn into a new and bright hope, because of Jesus.  He died and rose again as our representative.

Because Christ overcame death and this world, so can we.

"But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep. For since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man. For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive. But each in turn: Christ, the firstfruits; then, when he comes, those who belong to him." 1 Corinthians 15: 20-23

Photo by Jordan McQueen on Unsplash

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Where is the Mantle of Christ?


A mantle is a cloak worn over indoor clothing.  In the Scriptures it represents God's calling to a ministry.  It shows the anointing of God upon the person.  As Elijah ascended up into Heaven, his mantle fell to Elisha for him to carry on Elijah's prophetic ministry. When Elisha picked it up the spirit of Elijah fell upon him.

Moses laid the mantle of leadership upon Joshua.  He laid his hands upon Joshua who had been his disciple during the wanderings and God's Spirit fell upon him.  The authority of Moses now belonged to Joshua.

When Jesus walked upon this earth with his disciples, he commanded great authority and a very heavy mantle upon his shoulders.  When he ascended into Heaven, who took that mantle which he had carried?

The Mantle of Christ was too heavy to fall on just one person or even upon twelve.  On the day of Pentecost the Mantle of Christ came down from heaven and fell upon all who believed in Jesus as the Messiah.  The Spirit of God is given to everyone who comes to Christ for salvation.  His ministry is carried on not by one person, but by the Christian Body of Christ.

If you follow Christ, than part of His mantle has fallen on you.  You are called to continue the ministry of Christ.  You are called to to walk as Jesus walked, in His Spirit.   God has anointed you to step into the footprints of Christ and fulfill your calling.

Photo Credit: Behind the cloak is the transformation by Mount Saint Mary's Abbey