July 31, 2007

Never Enough

The constant desire to prove something to Christ can bring such a death grip upon the satisfaction that God desires for us to have with being Sons and Daughters of the King.

It's hard growing up being told that you can be whatever you want to be, it's just left up to you. Your life is basically in your hands. What you do with it is your choice and your fault. Whatever the outcome was because your lack of effort or you were just screwed. The things we tell our young ones can shape the views for eternity if we are not careful. Oh thank you for a sovereign God. How he can take the mistakes of our parents and turn them into good. So this whole thing about being part of a savior who justifies me and finds no sin on my behalf because of the gift that He choose to give me by dieing on the cross. So what does that mean? It truly sounds to good to be true, even for a kid who grew up in the church and sat in the pew every sunday and heard the stories of this creator who came to save the lost. The Lord chose to reveal himself to me at a very young age.  I don' t remember much about it but I know something struck me that day at Vacations bible School. It was a real as the day, but what I learned afterwards has been the hardest thing for me to grasp. I was told that you can do anything you set your mind to. If you want to make it, then put in the work, keep working when everyone else is playing and enjoying and make yourself a slave to proving your good enough to make it. One thing this created in me was sense of pride. I was working while everyone else was playing. I was dedicated and desereved my success while everyone else didn't because they didn't work hard enough. I wasn't going to let anyone else out work me. I took Colosions 3:23 to heart. Whatever you are doing put your whole heart into it as if you were doing it for the Lord and not for man. It kind of okayed what I was doing. I was able to put a stamp of proof on my efforts and feel good about them. It aloud me to sin basically. After all that whole mess ended, then I was left with this incredible sense of pride and anger. No one worked as hard as me, but I realized it didn't matter. I put in the most work and was still treatly unjustly, and unfairly. I didn't desereve that to happen. I worked. I was dedicated, I was only thinking about myself. Not realizing this at the time, but it created such a sense of selfishness and self consciencenesss. All my days were focused on my path, my greatness, and my worthiness. Yes, I still considered myself a chrsitian at this time. Althought my theology was completely wrong and really lacking. What was is that took me so far away from what truly mattered. Oh how enticing the self is, the promotion, the pursuit of excellence is to a human. The worst part is yet to come. I took all this knowledge and started to put my works against the back drop of the Jesus' death on the cross. Oh yeah, I show you I'm worth it. I'll show you I deserve to be saved. I'll do my part to make. Sound like a modern day Pharisee to anyone? Oh, but it looked good on the outside. Nevermind the Holy Spirit. I'll do it my self through my own power. The crazy thing is that I knew that. I knew it was by my own power. I kept falling into this rut of I've got to be doing something. So an extreme type of personalitiy came about, cupled with pride and self-arogance and self-conscience. What an ugly sense of selfishness that is hidden to the outside world, yet is permeated with all your actions, thoughts, and decisions. I started to make decisios based on my duty to Christ. He died for me, I was realizing he called me to a different life, a selfless life, a life that wasn't about this world, a life that was about him. Okay. I have the knowledge. I'll do it. I 'll sell my car, I'll live on a budget, I'll read books and listen to sermons. But for what reason? To look good, to show God that I'm doing my part, that I'm worthy of his salvation. Hello, am I looking in the mirror at all. Do I know my sin at all. What sort of example is that. I always used to marvel at the fact that Christ was loved by the sinners yet hated by those that knew the laws. How in the world does that happen? Because my life looks nothing like that. I've become so critical of people and hard on others that it looks like I'm the judge. Looks like I'm the one in charge and perfect. Another part of my destructed view of Christ. Because I was always so entharalled with being the best, I wanted to be the best for God. I wanted to run through that brick wall for Christ. I tried to go to the extreme with everything about him, really doing, doing, doing. Sound like Martha and Mary to anyone. The standards I hold are so high for others. I wanted to go to the extremes for Christ. I'll not watch TV. I'll quit my job. I'll sell everything I own and go do missions somewhere where there is poverty.  But then what? I know that wouldn't be enough, that wouldn't be near as far as God would take me, I mean He is God. He would want me to go even further. And all in the back of my head having great pride in myself, looking at my friends and family saying how pitiful they are that they don't get it like I had something to do with it. God must be calling me to something bigger. How scary to think that I would only have a small part in the story. My part has to be bigger than that. Come on God, that's it. You mean you might just want me to be a school teacher and live in McKinney Texas all my life, with the commoners. Nah. there has to be more, your bigger than that. I can't be compeltly unncessasary to God can I. He needs me right, for a big part. sounds kind of like i'm deserving of this stuff or at least thhat is what I think I was trying to do. What guilt this brings about when you think this way. You are never satisfied, never resting, my burden is light and my yoke is easy, yeah right. Come on. This is hard, this sucks. Live through the holy spirit. Rely on Chirst, what in the world does that mean? How do you do that?  I've got to be doing something, right? I do the changing, right? Who in the world would ever want to follow a God like mine with this kind of view. Sounds like some of the other religions I know. How could that be, that is almost completely opposite of what Chirst came to do. No rest at all, never enough time in the day to do, do, do. My life doesn't look like it's saved, like the battle has been won. I'll tell you what this leads to. A life that eventually breaks down. A life that eventually falls into tiredness, sickness, and death. Slave to the law, slave to my worth in my own self. What a slap in the face to God. Oh forgive me father. Am I doing, choosing, speaking out of duty or out of love. What is my motive, for It won't be blessed by God if its wrong. More books, more sermons, more verses, your never doing enough. God is going to show you who you really are. If you want to be used he is going to break you until you realize what you really are. That you aren't capable. That you have to take a back seat to his journey. That even your good deeds are like fitlthy rags to him. Tired yet!

"The worst tragedy would be to turn the Sermon on the Mount into another form of legalism; it should rather put an end to all legalism. Legalism like the Pharisees' will always fail, not because it is too strict but because it is not strict enough. Thunderously, inarguably, the Sermon on the Mount proves that before God we all stand on level ground: murderers and temper-throwers, adulterers and lusters, theieves and coveters. We are all desperate, and that is the fact the only state appropriate to a human being who wants to know God. Having fallen from the absolute Ideal, we have nowwhere to land but in the safety net of absolute grace."--Philip Yancy, The Jesus I Never Knew


JTH

July 14, 2007

A Vapor


Jesus Christ is most glorified in you in your dying when you are most satisfied in him in your dying. -John Piper

I watched something happen last night that I never gave much thought to. I saw a man take his last breath as he escaped into eternity forever. It was a 74 year old man who had family and friends gathered around, with loud music, food fit for a king, free liquor, and a country band to dance the night away with. That is exactly what he was doing, as he took his last breath here on earth. Dancing with his daughter, living it up, having fun, then he hit the floor. What ensued next was something I will never forget. I got to watch life, real life happen right before my eyes. It is stuff like this that we don't get to see everyday here in America. We don't have to worry about bombs dropping on our heads as we get into our air conditioned cars and stroll on our merry way. We don't have to worry about the common cold taking a loved one. But when the Lord says it's over it is over. Yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. (James 4:14). Our life here on earth really is short. At the backdrop of eternity we last as long as the steam does that rises off the broccoli. This event reminded me of our world and the attention that we give to this short life. We invest so much of our efforts into this life and yet we forget to realize that eternity if forever. How much time do we give to thinking about what happens after the broccoli cools off and the steam vanishes? Then what? Do you think about death? Do I? We are encouraged to do so. It is better to spend more time at funerals than at festivals. For you are going to die and you should think about it while there is still time (Ecclesiastes 7:2). Death is something that we all must face. It is one thing we can not escape and and one of the curses of sin. We are fatal, breaking down, and we all will one day take our last breath. We don't have a choice. We will exist forever. The decisions we make in this life determine the life to come. Thought it is not by works that we are saved, it is by the grace of Christ and his risen son that we, wretched and sinful, are able to step into eternity, clean and spotless, because of what Jesus did on the cross, bearing our sins and our iniquities for us. Taking our punishment for us, so that we could live with him forever.

One thing is for sure. We as people and especially as Americans are very arrogant. We hardly ever think about the possibility that our last breath might be tomorrow or even today. We spend so much time thinking about the future as if we had a right to it. As if we deserved it. We talk with such assurance that this or that will or won't happen. Even in our very speech it pours out. But I'm reminded of what James says the verse before when he talks about our lives being a like a vapor. Come now, you who say, "Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit"-- yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. Instead you ought to say, "If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that." As it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil. (James 4:13-16 ESV).

Oh how precious life is. Life is not ours for the taking, we are just entrusted with one. It is God who directs our ways and gives us the breath that we take. We truly aren't in control, no matter how much society wants to tell us so. We must rely on God to give us all that we need. We must trust that our time to leave this earth is the right time. Even on the eve of a wedding for your granddaughter. As much as we may wish or even of been led to believe for that matter. God is not as interested in bringing glory to his children, as he is in bringing glory to himself. God is all about making much of himself. And as awkward as that may seem to us in our feeble human minds, it's true. That's why at the most awkward time God may move. He may change our plans, bless or harm, and even take a life at the most unpredictable times. Yet as believers we have the pleasure and comfort that God works all things out for our good. And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to his purpose. (Romans 8:28) How amazing is that!

One day It could be my family that is faced with an event like this. It will happen, we can't escape it. My wife and I will have to come to grips that that could be us. God may separate us by death earlier than we would have wanted. How will we react? Will we trust him then? Death must be talked about, thought about and eternally accepted. "For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways," declares the LORD. "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts. Isaiah 55:8-9 NIV. More than anything we must trust that his plan is the best plan. Our plan doesn't matter. We have to want what he wants. For we are only part of the story, not the story entirely. We were designed to bring glory to the maker, not glory to ourselves. This calling can bring about some radical events in our lives. Are we ready?

I love this excerpt from John Piper after two important people in his church were suddenly faced with death.

Dear friends, God is speaking to us all in these sudden, unexpected and painful departures. Are you listening? I said to my family tonight during devotions: it could as easily have been me. Or you. Are we ready? O Bethlehem, are we ready? Do we trust him? Do we love him? Do we live for him? Is he our Love above all loves? Pursue him and know him. Live with him as if tomorrow you might meet him face to face. One of the texts we lingered over was Psalm 116:15, "Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints." Another meaning of the Hebrew word behind "precious" is "costly." Both are true. To us, so costly. To God, so precious. Why so precious? One reason is that God gave his own Son to die for Muriel and Carl. When Christ died, their death was defeated. "O death, where is thy victory? O death, where is thy sting? The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Corinthians 15:55, KJV). In other words, because of Christ's suffering and the Father's sacrifice, the death of Muriel and Carl was robbed of its victory. This means that the death of every saint is a demonstration to all creation that Christ's atoning death was gloriously successful. It was not in vain. Therefore, the arrival of every saved saint in heaven is another trumpet-tribute to the preciousness of Christ's life and death on this earth. He must (it seems to me) take each one by the hand, as it were, and lead the saint to the Father, and say, "Look! Another trophy! Another 'fruit of my travail.' Another sinner saved and soul made perfect. O Father, look what we have wrought! Is this not precious!"

So how can we magnify God with our death? Peter was killed on an upside down cross to bring glory to the Father. What could God possibly have in store for me and my death? If I want my life to glorify God, then what might he have for me in my death? If we want the world to look at our life and see how much we love our God and truly taste and see him as far greater than anything earthly pleasure than may we echo what Paul says that "to live is Christ but to die is gain." For this to be true, Christ must be valued more than anything we leave behind. Oh what a statement we would be telling the world.

I'll close with these words from John Piper. How comforting to remember, how humbling to know.
The Son of God is not a vapor. He is solid reality, with no beginning and no ending. His name is Jesus Christ. He is the same yesterday and today and forever. He looked His disciples in the eye and said without irony or exaggeration, “Before Abraham was, I am.” But what about us? Once we were not, and now we exist? ...For how long? Forever. Either in heaven or in hell. There is no going out of existence. For that would not be joy for those who love God nor punishment for those who don’t.

July 01, 2007

The Valley of Vision

Lord, High and Holy, Meek and Lowly,

Thou hast brought me to the valley of vision,
where I live in the depths but see thee in the heights;
hemmed in by mountains of sin I behold thy glory.


Let me learn by paradox
that the way down is the way up,
that to be low is to be high,
that the broken heart is the healed heart,
that the contrite spirit is the rejoicing spirit,
that the repenting soul is the victorious soul,
that to have nothing is to possess all,
that to bear the cross is to wear the crown,
that to give is to receive,
that the valley is the place of vision.
Lord, in the daytime stars can be seen from the deepest wells,
and the deeper the wells the brighter thy stars shine;
Let me find thy light in my darkness,
thy life in my death,
thy joy in my sorrow,
thy grace in my sin,
thy riches in my poverty,
thy glory in my valley.