Monday, June 30, 2025

Constants in an Inconsistent World

“For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed, saith the LORD that hath mercy on thee.” (Isa 54:10 AV)

The promise is important to remember because of the context in which it is found.  This passage is considered a tribulation passage.  It is a promise to the people of Israel that no matter what they may be experiencing in the present, there is a promise of kindness and peace.  Mercy is there regardless of what they may perceive.  This is the promise that may be what Israel needs while the world wars against them.  This promise may be that promise that gets them through the years waiting for the return of Jesus Christ.  In principle, this promise applies to the New Testament saint as well.  Regardless of what we may perceive, the covenant of God’s peace and mercy has not ceased.  We are children of the most High.  We are brothers and sisters of Christ.  There is nothing that can separate us from the love of God. 

Life is full of trouble.  Just ask Job.  This can cause us to make assumptions that simply are not true.  We have a very warped sense of how life should be.  We think very black and white.  If we do everything right, then the LORD blesses.  If we do not, then the LORD punishes.  If there are blue skies and warm days, God must be pleased.  If there are storms about, then God must not be pleased.  That is actually a very pagan way of thinking.  This is how those who live in spiritual darkness perceive the world around them.  If bad things happen, their gods are angry.  If good things happen, their gods are pleased.  Life doesn’t work like that.  Jehovah God does not work like that.  Bad things can be a result of God’s displeasure, but not always.  There are steps of faith that are hard to endure.  There are circumstances that exist, like death, which are part of our human existence.  Adam and Eve brought death into the world and even if we were to do everything perfectly right, death would still occur.  Illness is a part of a fallen world.  Things breaking are part of the second law of thermodynamics.  God may cause or allow unsavory things to happen, but that does not mean we have to right to doubt His mercy and kindness.

The frailty of our hearts and minds requires us to be reminded of such a great truth.  This does not give us cause to continue in folly that may require correction.  A loving Father would do not different.  His mercy and kindness would demand such a response.  It is in these trying times when we begin to doubt God’s mercy and kindness where we need this reminder the most.  It takes several things to live in this truth.  Perception of what the kindness and mercy of God might look like must change.  What we consider being an unkindness may actually be just the opposite.  A sleepless night striving over circumstances we wish could be different might just be the mercy of God.  Giving God the benefit of the doubt and seeking a change in perception helps.  But more importantly, knowing that perfection is a promise held off until eternity.  God never promises a perfect and trouble-free life.  Nowhere in the Bible does God promise the human experience can be free from all trouble.  That is both unrealistic and presumptuous.  Living in this truth is a matter of spiritual maturity.  It is the willingness to take God at His word that He is kind and merciful, regardless of what our observations may indicate.  It is refusing to react to our trouble by fussing over it.  Rather, being content in the heart and mind resting in the kindness and mercy of God is the key to a life that blossoms unto God’s blessing.

Sunday, June 29, 2025

Well?

“Wherefore, when I came, [was there] no man? when I called, [was there] none to answer? Is my hand shortened at all, that it cannot redeem? or have I no power to deliver? behold, at my rebuke I dry up the sea, I make the rivers a wilderness: their fish stinketh, because [there is] no water, and dieth for thirst.” (Isa 50:2 AV)

The manifestation of their unbelief was the absence of men willing to trust Him.  Hence the four questions at the beginning of the verse.  Specifically, trust in God to deliver.  Isaiah is preaching to Israel and Judah.  The deliverance is from Assyria and Babylon.  The challenge is simple.  God promises to deliver if they will repent of their sin and walk with Him in obedience and faith.  Without them pleading for God’s help, God comes to them and offers it.  He promises to honor His covenant with the people and conquer Israel’s enemies for them.  All they need to do is trust Him and follow.  Yet, there is no man.  Why?  According to this verse, they simply did not trust Him.  They did not trust Him to deliver, or did not trust Him enough to follow.  Either way, taking God up on His offer was a matter of belief.  One cannot help but see the similarities in the context of salvation.

We knock on hundreds of doors a month.  We talk to several people living behind those doors.  Very rarely do we get the opportunity to share the entire gospel with those whom we speak.  The excuses are many and varied.  But they all have the same cause.  There is no faith to repent and trust Christ.  It doesn’t matter what the specific cause might be.  The underlying cause is always the same.  One cannot help but notice the method here as well.  Mankind, in his fallen nature, will not naturally seek after God.  The soul will not seek out to find God.  In our sin, we run from Him.  Not to Him.  Just as the LORD went to Israel and Judah with the offer of deliverance, the church must go to the world with the same.  It is the nature of mankind to reject the grace of God.  They want nothing of it.  In pride and rebellion, they seek to redeem themselves.  Yet, just like Israel and Judah to Assyria and Babylon, they will fail.  Only God can deliver from such a formidable enemy.

The lost are not the only ones who struggle with faith.  Israel and Judah are not the lone possessors of unbelief.  The saint can struggle here, too.  We may have enough faith to cry out to the LORD for deliverance from hell, but how often do we listen for and heed His call of deliverance from an unholy or unproductive life?  How often do we take God completely at His word and respond with unhesitating faith?  When was the last time we mused over the power of God being far greater than our strongest sin or biggest fear?  How often do we read the word of God and simply choose to trust it, regardless of what we think or how we feel?  God is very gracious to every human soul.  He owes no one anything.  He is God the Creator and we owe Him everything.  Yet, He reaches down from heaven and offers to help.  We, in our pride, think God is too small.  The questions above are rhetorical.  They are asked not for an answer.  Rather, they are asked for a reaction.  That reaction is to quit our fussing and trust God.

Saturday, June 28, 2025

Voices of Deliverance

“Go ye forth of Babylon, flee ye from the Chaldeans, with a voice of singing declare ye, tell this, utter it [even] to the end of the earth; say ye, The LORD hath redeemed his servant Jacob.” (Isa 48:20 AV)

What a verse!  Isaiah looks forward to the time when the 70 years of captivity to Babylon are over.  Cyrus the Persian declares Israel can return to Palestine and rebuild the temple.  Artaxerxes the Mede decrees that Nehemiah can return to repair the walls of Jerusalem.  It is actually a sad thing to learn how many returned compared to how many remained dispersed.  A fraction of those who gained their freedom returned with joy to fix what they had done wrong.  How like today’s churches, Israel was in the past.  Only a fraction who truly appreciate what God has done for them in deliverance from sin will go forth and praise the name of the LORD to a lost and dying world.  Having gained their freedom, Israel sings with joy.  They flee from their captors.  They want nothing to do with those who used an and abused them.  At least a few of them did.  The rest were content to remain in pagan lands under the influence of pagan people.  They abandoned their heritage and calling.  At least to the degree that they were not fully committed.  Sure, they still remained orthodox Jews while dispersed throughout the world.  But they never stood for God among a hate-filled world.  Only those who knew what God had done for them, appreciated it, and took advantage truly fled the influence of their captors for a chance to praise God and live according to His word!

Just about this time of year, there are students running from school buildings throwing papers, notebooks, or tests in the air.  Held captive for almost ten months, they have a few months of freedom to do as they please.  No teachers.  No homework.  No schedule.  No studying.  Nothing but warm summer days, bike rides, a day in the park, or a dip in the pool.  Free at last!  Just about this time of year, there is an auditorium filled with your people wearing square hats on their heads.  These hats have only one function.  They are a onetime use item.  Years of hard work point to this single day.  The student counts down the years.  He or she counts down the days.  Commencement day arrives.  Now the student is dressed in a robe.  He or she sits through an hour or two or four of educated people droning on about how important life-choices will be.  They give hope and dreams to the young men and women who will venture into adult life.  That is not where their mind resides.  Only one thing in on their minds.  It is not a career.  It is not marriage.  It is not a new place to live or an apartment of their own.  The only thing on their mind is when the announcement of the class of whatever year it is presented by the chancellor is made, hats will fly!  The celebration of accomplishment and freedom commences.

Jesus has delivered us from far worse than Babylon or a biology class.  Calvary has freed us from far worse than living in a foreign land or having to take finals.  The offering of Jesus Christ has delivered us from sin, hell, and the fear of death.  We are free indeed.  If that is the case, I think a celebration is in order!  There should be a natural reaction to the understanding of how free Calvary has made us.  Isaiah looked ahead.  He saw what would transpire when Israel was set free.  And here is another thought.  The fact that the extreme minority was the one rejoicing at their divinely sent deliverance did not take away from the degree of that celebration.  Yes, all Israel should have returned in rejoicing and praise.  But Isaiah saw a few.  And a few were so impressive in their gratitude and praise that it made all the difference.  So, if you are one of the few, keep it up.  You are making a difference.  The man of God notices.  God is pleased and grateful.  The world will take note.  God’s work will get done.  If you are in the majority and do not feel especially grateful for what God has done, why not?  Get excited.  Show your appreciation.  Tell others what God can do for them!  Praise be to God.

Friday, June 27, 2025

Drop The Water!

“For I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground: I will pour my spirit upon thy seed, and my blessing upon thine offspring:” (Isa 44:3 AV)

This promise is to believing Israel.  It is prophetical.  This prophecy regards redeemed Israel at the time of their Messiah.  It is a promise from God to His people that when the Messiah comes, they will be tenderly cared for.  God will fill their water basins, streams, rivers, and lakes.  He will water the land that it will bring forth abundantly.  But most of all, He will spiritual fill them like no one else can.  They will have learned through hard lessons of rejection that God is the best choice for them.  They will repent of the rebellion and place all their trust in the LORD Jesus Christ.  God will honor the covenant He made with them thousands of years prior and water the land both literally and spiritually.  Does that mean the New Testament saint has no application here?  Not at all.  Jesus says the same thing.  “In the last day, that great [day] of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink.” (Joh 7:37 AV) And again, “And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.” (Re 22:17 AV) The idea is simple.  Those who thirst after the presence, strength, blessings, etc. of God will be satisfied by the fountain He provides.

Where I live, the ground can get dry and cracked.  We are coming up on that season.  It rains and rains for several months.  It snows for four months.  When June through August come about, all it takes is a couple of hot weeks with no rain and the ground looks like the salt flats of the desert west.  It astounds me every time I see it.  My mind cannot compute the dryness of the ground compared to all the moisture it receives in the spring, fall, and winter.  How can the ground dry out so much?  How can it turn into a surface harder than a rock?  It doesn’t make sense.  I tried to grow a bush.  Failed twice.  Two times I tried to grow a bush that needed shade and plenty of water.  Both died.  I watered and watered it.  I tried to keep it alive.  But the nature of the soil meant that all that water was draining away.  The ground got dry and cracked, anyway.  Now I am on my third try with a different species.  This bush has tripled in size in just two short months.  I think we might have a keeper.  Watering is still essential.  Water is everything.  If that plant does not have water, it cannot survive.  Sound familiar?

When I read this verse, I could not help but internalize the truth.  There are times when my soul is dirt dry.  There are times when ministry, life, or the world sap almost everything I have.  I need a deep draw of water.  The picture I get in my head is a summer downpour.  Living close to Niagara Falls, the majority of my childhood, we have these awesome summer downpours.  The sky would be blue, littered with puff clouds.  Suddenly, we would have a downpour under a blue sky.  There would be one or two puff clouds from which this shower came.  It was really cool.  We would run around in the rain to cool off and the steam would rise from our blacktopped streets.  Soaking wet, we would cool off.  That is what the presence of God is like.  This is what He has promised.  Amid the troublous times of life, He sends His showers of strength, refreshing, and blessing.  God is good!  All the time!

Thursday, June 26, 2025

Self-inflicted Wounds of the Talebearer

“The words of a talebearer [are] as wounds, and they go down into the innermost parts of the belly.” (Pr 26:22 AV)

At first glance, we might assume the object of the tale is the one injured the most.  However, the Hebrew word used here suggests it is the teller and the hearer who suffer the innermost injury.  The suggestion is the object of gossip is not hurt nearly as much as the teller and hearer of such words.  Gossip has a way of causing deep rooted damage.  Gossip, often shaped by envy, malice, pride, and the such cause damage because it stirs up within the teller and hearer deeper sins of the heart.  They cause the teller or hearer to ruminate on information, true or false, that they believe harms the object of their gossip, but in reality, hurts themselves a whole lot worse.  Talebearing may feel satisfying at first.  Given time, the habit of gossip leads to very serious damage to the soul.

The thing about gossip is the expected end never comes to pass.  The one telling the gossip and the one entertaining it often expect injury to occur to the object of their gossip.  Gossip seeks to elevate self beyond a realistic view of oneself.  Its intent is to limit one while exalting self.  Gossip is the lazy man’s way of building value in himself.  The reason it causes so much harm to the teller and the hearer is that it gives a false sense of accomplishment.  When the object of that gossip goes on with life and is successful in spite of it, the teller and the hearer must entertain feelings of injustice, envy, and anger.  The telling of a tale was intended to inflict injury that never came.  It never does.  In fact, the object of gossip benefits from the gossip.  He or she learns who can and cannot be trusted.  He or she knows where true loyalties lie.  The subject of gossip benefits from clarity.  Those who are prone to believe the worst always will.  Hearing and believing gossip is a matter of the heart.  Not a matter of the facts.

Talebearing may feel satisfying in the short run.  But in the long run, it does great harm.  We have all been the victims of talebearing.  Over time, we have come to realize the damage that we thought was done was actually far less than we initially believed.  It is the damage done in the soul of the bearer and hearer that is long-lasting and deep.  Most have been a talebearer from time to time.  It is often shrouded in what we would consider ‘spiritual speak’.  Prayer requests, counsel, etc can often lead to talebearing.  We must be careful.  The damage to our own souls is serious.  It is long-lasting.  It goes very deep.  The tongue is a prominent member.  Often seen as injurious to others, it can be more so to self.  Loss of credibility, fellowship, and even one’s own peace are the casualties.  Talebearing is often seen as a one-way street when considering the damage it can do.  But it is not so.  The subject of gossip is hurt if only in the short run.  The revealer of secrets and the receiver of secrets are hurt far worse.

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

The Greatest Gift From God

“He shall receive the blessing from the LORD, and righteousness from the God of his salvation.” (Ps 24:5 AV)

If you could ask and receive anything from the LORD, what would it be?  Would it be enough riches to satisfy all needs and desires?  Would it be success in the goals of life?  Would it be a spouse or children?  Grandchildren?  Health?  Wisdom?  What would it be?  Verses three and four reveal the key to residing in the presence of God.  Our verse above reveals the cause for desiring that presence.  We key in on the first reason.  Blessing.  We all want the LORD to bless us.  We want all those things listed above.  But what if the LORD said you must prioritize blessing and righteousness?  Which would come first?  What if the absence of blessing, which would be a blessing in itself, brought righteousness?  Would we still desire righteousness more than blessing?  What is it we want most of all from a God who can give us the desires of our heart?

Note in particular that righteousness is received.  By nature, we are not righteous.  We are wicked.  Thanks to our first parents, we were born with a predisposition to sin.  That is our natural desire.  It is not that we are completely incapable of doing the right thing.  God holds all souls accountable for the choices they make.  Only if we were free to make those decisions would we then be made accountable.  It is just that we prefer, overwhelmingly, to choose the wrong thing.  Therefore, for righteousness to come, it must come from God.  By nature, it cannot come from us.  This is accomplished in different ways.  The first and most obvious is the offering of Jesus Christ.  When Jesus Christ died for our sins, and we accepted Him as our offering for that sin, the Father gave to us the righteousness of Jesus and gave to Jesus our wickedness.  When the Father looks upon those who have trusted Christ, He sees us as holy and as righteous as His own Son!

But we often forget that practical righteousness is given with equal grace as saving righteousness.  We participate in saving grace by forsaking (repenting) of our sin and trusting by faith that Jesus paid our debt.  It isn’t that much different once we are a child of God.  To live in divinely granted righteousness, we must forsake our sin and trust the LORD to lead us into righteousness.  Living righteously in our own strength and devices is just as impossible as saving ourselves from sin by living in righteousness.  We simply do not have the ability.  It is something God does for us and through us.  Righteousness is a gift given by grace.  Righteousness for salvation, and righteousness for living.  If that is the case, I will pose the question again.  What is the most important desire of your heart?  If we hate sin as we say we do, then righteousness should be at the top of the list.  The previous two verses mention the manner in which someone gains audience with God.  It is by righteousness.  If we want the presence of God, being right and living right is the highest standard.  Yet is there something higher than simply living right?  I believe so.

The child of God, if he truly does love God, seeks to please Him.  The motive for righteousness isn’t a sense of self-worth.  It is not to escape the guilt or embarrassment of failure.  The purest motive for seeking righteousness is that we might please the Father by being so.  Desiring righteousness should be the highest aspiration in the heart of God.  The greatest of all motives should be to who appreciation for the Father and express the deepest level of love.  Righteousness.  No greater possession can a soul have than the permanent state of perfect holiness.  All other blessings aside, Christlikeness is the greatest of all.  That is for what David wished.  It was not the kingdom.  It was not many wives.  It was not children.  It was not wealth or health.  What David wanted the most was to possess and live in the righteousness of almighty God.

Monday, June 23, 2025

Others

“O LORD, be gracious unto us; we have waited for thee: be thou their arm every morning, our salvation also in the time of trouble.” (Isa 33:2 AV)

The prayer of the prophet for the disobedient is both tender and appropriate.  Isaiah is the prophet to Judah and Israel.  He knows judgment is coming.  He witnesses the adversary inflict much harm. He preaches at the time of the fall of the northern kingdom.  In verse one of this chapter, the man of God could be referring to the downfall of Samaria and the ten northern tribes.  This would give explanation to the middle of the verse above.  The preacher seeks God’s arm to be the strength of someone, not himself.  He asks that God would be ‘their’ arm every morning.  The arm of the LORD is equated to strength.  It is applied in various ways.  It could be the arm of endurance.  It could be the arm of deliverance.  It could be the arm of vindication.  How the strength of God is applied can vary.  In our context, I believe the minister is seeking the strength of God to go with the northern ten tribes as they are carried away.  He seeks strength that they might endure their correction.  For the south, it could be the prophet seeks the strength of the LORD so that revival might come.  Perhaps he is asking that revival may come, so judgment does not.  The principal thing is the tenderness and concern the prophet has for others, even though he knows the likely outcome.

I also appreciate how Isaiah includes himself in this prayer.  He associates himself with the people whom he is trying to help.  He assumes responsibility for their condition because of what he can do for them.  Isaiah testifies that those to whom he ministers have waited.  They have had some kind of relationship with the LORD.  It may not have been what the LORD wanted, but it was something.  Isaiah also states the obvious in that when trouble comes, the only hope they have is in God.  The older I get, the more I reflect on just how good God has been to me.  And us.  God has forgiven more than I can even comprehend.  He has worked to my spiritual maturity even when I didn’t respond as I should.  Last night, I was meditating on a certain prayer request and whether I should bring it before the throne, and the Spirit encouraged me to ask such a thing using one name of God I had learned.  In doing so, the Spirit revealed the thing of which I sought the LORD made no sense when placed in the context of one of His names.  How good is God?

Every minister of the gospel, whether a called individual or a person desiring to reach others, needs to place him or herself in the place of the one they are trying to affect.  They must empathize regardless of circumstances.  It doesn’t matter how far from God a soul is, their need is still real and urgent.  The tender believer who can see the need should pray for them earnestly.  There should be weeping.  There should be fasting.  There should be a broken heart regardless how far from God that soul might be.  Isaiah was the prince of Prophets for a reason.  There is a reason he authored the largest book of the prophets.  He may have been more learned than most.  But he was also very tender towards those whom God sent him.  Perhaps we are missing a great deal in our aspirations to share the gospel.  Rather than condemnation, perhaps compassion might work a bit better.

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Better to Trust than to Fight

“Or let him take hold of my strength, [that] he may make peace with me; [and] he shall make peace with me.” (Isa 27:5 AV)

Verse four is revealing.  The LORD says that fury is not in Him.  Wrath, anger, and indignation, yes.  Revenge; most certainly.  But not fury.  Fury is a purely emotional, unrestrained, and unprincipled exercise of repercussions on others who have inflicted injury or offense.  God is not unprincipled.  He is methodical, measured, and appropriate.  Verse four is in response to those who hate Him, placing obstacles in His way intended to cause Him harm.  Really?  Almighty God?  Then we have this verse as an offer of alternate reaction.  Instead of fighting the omnipotence of God, why not come to trust in it?  I have in mind a toddler who throws a temper tantrum by striking his parent.  No actual damage is done and Dad or Mom will win the battle.  Better to trust the strength that seeks to lead you than fight against it!

Fighting a force greater than oneself is not wise.  There is always injury that follows.  It is better to submit to a just force than to risk losing everything just to prove a point.  I find an alarming trend in today’s generation.  They are rejecting God because they see God as unjust.  Their argument is sound to where it gives mankind no other reasonable choice.  God created you and I to know Him and love Him by obedience and faith.  If we refuse, we will be tormented in hell for all eternity.  The short-sighted rebel will see this choice as unjust.  If God knows all things and knows the sinner wants nothing to do with Him, why create him?  He creates only to turn around and destroy.  If the object He creates doesn’t respond to His will, it is destroyed.  So the faulty reasoning is that God is unjust if He knows this and does it, anyway.  The rebel will respond by a choice of hell over surrender to the God who created him.  What will that prove?  So, you go off into hell falsely thinking God is unjust and suffer an eternity of torment for what?  To prove you were right?  Talk about stupid!

Yet, this behavior is not limited to the rebel.  The child of God can do this, too.  We can fight God on things only to discover no matter how hard we fight Him, he always wins.  It reminds me of my earthly father.  He was a four-D chess player.  He saw the board in ways his children could not.  If we tried to counter him, it always ended in a checkmate.  He knew far more than we what we would do and what we would choose to do.  He put in place barriers from poor decisions that we didn’t even know were there until we came up against them.  The ultimate argument of a rebellious adolescent is when they blurt out, “I hate you, Dad.”  To which he would reply, “that is why I had eleven of you.  I got a back-up plan.”  There was no winning the battle with Dad.  Better to trust him than to fight him.  The same is true of the LORD.  Better to trust than to fight.

Friday, June 20, 2025

An Answer to Prayer We are Grateful Seldom Comes

“Grant thee according to thine own heart, and fulfil all thy counsel.” (Ps 20:4 AV)

That is a scary thought!  David, while He is praying, has an answer from the LORD.  The above verse is the beginning of God’s answer to him.  David is discouraged.  He is seeking help from the LORD as he ascends his throne.  He cries out to heaven for strength and asks the LORD to consider his faithfulness in worship.  The answer comes back from heaven that God has accepted his prayer and that all that David seeks will be honored.  Why is that a scary thought?  Sitting here this morning I am so grateful the LORD did not do such for me.  Why?  Because I cannot say all of my counsel was in God’s best interest or mine.  I am so grateful the LORD didn’t answer many of my prayers the way I had initially sought.  This meant the answer was not always immediately palatable.  His answers are always perfect.  But they are not always comfortable.  Upon meditation, I chuckled at the above verse and praised the LORD he did not always give me the desire of my heart.

Struggling to find one example, the Spirit reminded me that the LORD’s answer was so perfect, it is hard to remember an errant request.  Taking solace and joy in the perfection of God’s care, the futility of the initial request fades into oblivion.  What would it matter what I asked for?  It wasn’t God’s perfect plan, so why try to remember it?  I do remember as a young adult and parent wishing I would open the mailbox and all our money issues would be solved.  I was hoping for a onetime miracle to supply all our needs for the rest of our lives.  I never prayed for it because I knew it was silly.  I remember asking the LORD for perfect healing for Lisa’s cancer.  That didn’t come.  In the interim, there were lessons I needed to learn that only trials can teach.  I don’t want to see her suffer.  Yet, suffering is part of God’s plan.  Sometimes, suffering is the only way to learn certain truths.  There were things about my heart and mind that needed adjusting.  There were steps of maturity that I needed to experience.  Life goes on and marches to a conclusion.  That march is not an easy one.  It is, however, a necessary one.

David was in such a place that the immediate concerns of his heart would be totally resolved.  He was in such a place that his heart was totally correct and his plans to victory were perfect.  There wasn’t anything he sought to resolve his current situation to which God could object.  His will was perfectly aligned with the LORD’s.  That is a really good place to be.  This means David’s mind was completely exercised in the matter of his trouble.  He had thought it completely through.  He had mused on the promises and nature of God.  He could find no biblical reason to change his request.  He knew the love and care that his God would provide.  There was nothing of himself in the request.  It was all for the glory of God.  I am truly impressed with the LORD’s answer to His simple and humble servant.  I trust the older and wiser I get, the more and more God can say the same to me.

Thursday, June 19, 2025

As Simple As It Gets

“Who can understand [his] errors? cleanse thou me from secret [faults]. Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous [sins]; let them not have dominion over me: then shall I be upright, and I shall be innocent from the great transgression.” (Ps 19:12-13 AV)

What a refreshing prayer request!  The pure innocence and child-like spirit in our delightful psalmist is a breath of fresh air.  In a time when all we can think about is our troubles and needs, the child of God seeks to live his life free from that which offends a holy God!  The songwriter admits he cannot understand why or how he falls into sin.  This sin is presumptuous.  In other words, it is common and without restraint.  It is presumptuous because it assumes the LORD is not all that too concerned about it.  The reason it is common is that it is presumptuous.  Again, David does not understand why he is entangled in such a state.  But the plea shows his humility and sincerity.  David pours out his heart, not out of concern over circumstances.  Rather, he is concerned with offending God.  Again, how refreshing to note someone whose life is all about pleasing God by overcoming sin, rather than responding only when failure comes and consequences overwhelm.

Looking at David’s request reveals an even deeper truth.  He names two types of sins.  He names the secret faults.  Those are sins of commission or omission of which he is unaware.  Not until I read the Old Testament did I then fully appreciate the depth of our sin.  It is too numerous to recall.  The secret things are those things we have yet to learn of.  They are often the deeper sins of the heart and mind.  The second is presumptuous sin.  That is sin we are well aware of.  Sins that we know are offensive to God.  These sins are committed regardless of our knowledge of them.  We know what the word of God says, and we chose to disobey, anyway.  In short, what David is asking for is a complete overhaul.  He wants to know it all.  He wants the LORD to keep him from the sin he knows he is committing and show him the ones he does not know he is committing.  Again, not to be repetitive, but this is refreshing.

We try to make our walk with God far more mystical and complicated than it needs to be.  Having a relationship with my earthly father was not that complicated.  All I had to do was please him and take the time to know him.  That is all I needed to do.  The same is true with the Father.  We make our relationship with God something that it is not.  When we are disappointed, we walk away.  David shows us the way.  Having a relationship with the LORD is no more complicated or mystic than asking Him to guide you into spiritual maturity.  That means we learn to obey, follow, and trust.  It is no more complicated than that.  We have turned our churches into a science lab of more technique, programs, or pragmatic solutions to spiritual problems.   In reality, it is no more than seeking God in humility and sincerity, asking Him to show us how to make Him happy.  That is it!  Nothing more, nothing less.  David is called a man after God’s own heart.  The above request shows us why.  He had a great calling.  He was the greatest king to have ever sat on any throne.  He would be in the line of the Messiah.  But just like Paul of the New Testament, they both realized the greatest aspiration as a child of God is obedience and faith.

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Faith for Light in the Midst of Darkness

“For thou wilt light my candle: the LORD my God will enlighten my darkness.” (Ps 18:28 AV)

The title tells us much as to the meaning of this verse.  The title tells us the Psalm was written by David in response to the LORD delivering him from all his enemies as well as Saul.  It is important to note the emotional state of David here.  He shares that presently he is in darkness.  No doubt that would be the case! There is a wide range of opinions, but generally speaking, most agree that David fled from Saul from between seven and thirteen years.  That is a long time to be homeless and on the run.  That is a long time to wonder where your next meal or place to stay is going to come from.  That is a long time to be without a family, structure, or purpose.  No wonder David was in a place of darkness.  So, it is quite understandable how someone can feel he is in a state of emotional darkness.  Yet, not the tense of the promise.  God will light his candle.  God will enlighten his darkness.  This means that despite David being in a state of emotional darkness, he never gave up hope that eventually, that darkness will pass.

I am a fan of the Babylon Bee.  If you don’t know what it is, you should check it out.  It is a Christian based satire site and their humor is classic!  The reason why it is so popular is their entries are comedic takes on truths which often escape the common sense of today’s contemporary.  The Bee has a way of satirically exposing the root problem or issue with satire and humor.  Take, for instance, a recent offering entitled, Depressed Man Never Considered Just Not Being Depressed.  Now, we know that depression can be a bit more complicated than simply deciding not to be.  If we lose a spouse or our family suffers a tragic event, then sadness and depression are part and parcel of the experience.  Our beloved Job comes to mind.  But with the explosion of depression diagnoses and consequent anti-depression medications being prescribed, one has to ponder if the Bee isn’t on to something.  Yes, there are legitimate reasons to be sad or sullen.  But even Solomon tells us these are temporary periods.  There is a time to weep. And there is a time to laugh.  There is a time to mourn.  And there is a time to rejoice. 

David had his moment.  It is very understandable.  One can only imagine what it was like to care for a group of 600 men and their families as he ran from his father-in-law.  His own flesh and blood wanted him dead.  His wife left him.  She went and married his best friend.  The very last place David found himself before the death of Saul was in the land of the Philistines, with the families being taken captive and his men ready to hang him.  No wonder David is in a dark place.  Another very important point to be made here is David’s situation compared to his place.  God has given him deliverance from all his enemies and Saul.  Yet, he remained in a dark place.  Healing doesn’t come immediately.  But healing will and must come.  Faith is the key here.  Even though David felt like he was in a dark place, he gave God the benefit of the doubt and believed with all his heart a light was at the end of the tunnel.  He makes the empathic statement that God will light his candle.  God will lighten his darkness.  The sun will rise tomorrow.  Things will get better.  God is still on the throne.  God loves him with an everlasting love.  There is never a reason to give up hope.  By giving up, we testify to God’s inability to meet our deepest needs.  And that is simply a lie

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Prayer Is Not A One-way Conversation

“Thou hast proved mine heart; thou hast visited [me] in the night; thou hast tried me, [and] shalt find nothing; I am purposed [that] my mouth shall not transgress.” (Ps 17:3 AV)

This is an interesting and very profound verse.  The context is prayer.  Specifically, David is praying from relief from enemies.  Therefore, when he states he has purposed not to transgress with his mouth, he is speaking of prayer.  Not that it is ok to transgress with the mouth when conversing with people.  But the context is prayer.  The first part of the verse is what stuck out to me.  In the process of prayer, the LORD proves the intercessor.  In the process of prayer, the LORD visits the one praying.  In the process of prayer, God proves the heart and words of David to assure there is no sin, ill will, incorrect motivation, or anything else that would make his prayer ineffective. Or worse, offensive.  By nature, we do this when we converse with others.  We probe as to the accurate nature and even the motive for the conversation.  We listen.  We hear.  We ask questions and answer them.  We seek the purpose for the conversation and how the conversation can be productive.  Why would we think the LORD would do no less?  I, for one, am so thrilled when the LORD does this.  Prayer is not a one-way street.  Prayer is a dialogue.  It is a conversation between the saint and his Father.  Listening is just as much a part of prayer as speaking is.

Many years ago, when my sons when my sons were little, I spent a better part of two hours in conversation with one of them that, to him, was one of the most difficult conversations he had experienced to date.  There was nothing between us.  He is simply a quiet person who doesn’t open his heart up very easily.  He would rather keep it all inside.  As a little guy, it took about an hour of simply sitting there, patiently and in silence, waiting for him to open up.  Part of it was that he could not discern his feelings and what facts were involved.  He was feeling a certain way, but could not understand why.  So, any conversation would have been frustrating unless time, compassion, and patience were the ingredients.  It took about two hours before we figured it out together.  Much tossing back-and-forth emotions and facts.  Trying to get to the reality of it all.  Fast forward into his teen years, and we had another episode.  Having established a pattern, he knew what it meant when Dad said he wouldn’t leave the room until they figured it out together.  It didn’t take several hours this time.  But it did take a while.  There was much back-and-forth.  There were probing but respectful questions asked.  Questions design not to be critical, but to gather more understanding.  When dealing with emotions, sometimes they can be misleading.  These times were precious.  I wouldn’t trade them for the world.

Prayer can be merely asking for that which needs to be tended in the near future.  Like a blessing offered before a meal or an opening prayer to a church service.  But our private prayer should be far more intimate.  There should be pauses between our words long enough to hear the Father’s words in response.  One might ask if I hear an audible voice.  No, I don’t.  It is more of an awareness of truth or perspective that came from without rather than from within.  The Holy Spirit was given, in part, as that person of the trinity that brings to remembrance the things we have been taught.  He is that person of the trinity that bears witness with us that we are a child a God and He does care to fellowship with us.  Although His voice is not an audible one, it is no less real.  All this to say that when David met with God that night, God reflected David’s words back to him that he might examine the motives, purpose, and emotions involved in the prayer.  These times are more than precious.  These times are eternally special.  I trust that when you pray, you and the LORD have a give and take.  It is the greatest experience one can ever have!