Saturday, May 2, 2015

How to Study the Bible (Part 8)



Hello Friends!

Welcome Back! Today we will conclude this 8-part series titled How to Study the Biblefor our Christian walk with our Lord Jesus Christ…

How to Study the Bible (Part 8)

Teaching the Bible

In leading a life devoted to Jesus Christ and His Word, I have discovered that the best way to retain something is to freely give it away!

That's because the only way we can effectively explain a subject is if we thoroughly understand it ourselves. Although we will never fullyunderstand” this side of glory, as Bible teachers, we must “master” our subject...

For example, find someone with a true desire to learn from the Word of God who knows less than you do – and pass on to them what you are learning in a systematic way! By “feeding” someone else, you will “feed” your own heart and mind! In fact, the motivation for studying Scripture largely comes from one's own responsibility in this area. In other words, if I didn't have someone to teach, I might not produce the necessarygood fruitfor the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ!

The reverse is also true...

For example, find someone with a greater understanding of the Word of God who knows more than you do – and learn from them in a systematic way! By learning from someone else who has truly studied God’s Word, has experienced more of the trails and blessings of life and is living in obedience to the Word of God, you'll feed your own heart, mind and spirit with God’s Truth. And the Bible promises that you will experience God’s blessings in your life according to His perfect will.

As obedient children of God, we mustwalkin good worksfor our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!

For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them – Ephesians 2:10

Now that we've learned some practical steps to the study of God’s Word…

Reading
Interpreting
Meditating
Teaching

…Put them into practice for His glory and honor and for the benefit of other Christians!

A FINAL ENCOURAGEMENT: My charge to you is to make each one of these important points of Bible study discipline a lifelong Christian habit In Jesus’ Name!

Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season; reprove, rebuke, exhort with
all long suffering and doctrine – 2 Timothy 4:2

In closing:

However, should we ever begin thinking we know it all… We must remember what the Lord has said:

The secret things belong to the Lord our God Deuteronomy 29:29

We can only begin to scratch the surface of the infinite mind of God! But that is indeed a worthy pursuit because He has given us His Word so we might know Him. Our purpose in reading the Word of God, interpreting the Word of God, meditating upon the Word of God and teaching the Word of God is not to have “knowledge” for its own sake. Because as the Apostle Paul rightly said:

Now concerning things sacrificed to idols, we know that we all have knowledge. Knowledge makes arrogant, but love edifies – 1 Corinthians 8:1

The Prophet Isaiah also reminds us concerning the mind of God:

For My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways My ways, declares the Lord. For 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

Here the beloved prophet is saying is that God has an incomprehensible mind. No man however astute, intellectual or spiritual can fully plumb the depths of the infinite mind of God – He indeed works in ways which are mysterious to man! Even when God does reveal Himself – Hisdepth,” “riches,” “wisdomandknowledge– all we know is howunsearchablethemind of the Lordreally is… Which often leaves us with more questions than we had before He revealed anything to us in the first place!

So, in purposeful pursuit of a godly life, here are a few final thoughts from the timeless Old Testament Scriptures concerning the Word of God and the Holy Spirit:

Who has directed the Spirit of the Lord, or as His counselor has taught Him?Isaiah 40:13

For who has stood in the counsel of the Lord, and has perceived and heard His word? Who has marked His word and heard it? – Jeremiah 23:18

Who has preceded Me, that I should pay him? Everything under heaven is MineJob 41:11

The wonder in our minds should be the inconceivable andunsearchableeternal gloryrevealed in the Lord Jesus Christ! Our passion and purpose as Christians is to “know“ God through His Word. And to “know“ God is to learn “humility“ through a life of “obedience“ to Him – Praise the Lord!

Thank you for reading! It is my hope that you enjoyed our time together through this series and have been encouraged in your walk with the Lord!

As you study the Scriptures and grow in the “grace” and “knowledge” of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, I pray that you will have a better understanding of God's precious precepts found in His perfect Word – lived out in faith and obedience to Him!

May the Lord Jesus Christ continue to bless you with His perfect “love” “mercy” and “peace!

Keep looking up and sharing the Gospel while there is still time… Hallelujah and Maranatha – come quickly Lord Jesus!

Blessings!
Shane <><

Friday, May 1, 2015

Intro to Ezekiel

1 He said to me, “Son of man, stand up on your feet and I will speak to you. As he spoke, the Spirit came into me and raised me to my feet, and I heard him speaking to me.  Ezekiel 2

On to a new book from me!  I'm starting Ezekiel which is another long book (48 chapters) and at my pace at mostly one chapter per week, it's going to be nearly a year before finishing.  So just what are we getting into here?

Let's start out and say that this book is strange!  It's a lot of imagery in Ezekiel's prophetic visions.  Read the description of Ezekiel's first vision in the very first chapter if you don't believe the strange-ness.  However, no matter how strange, this all came from God!  God spoke to Ezekiel, and Ezekiel is relaying that information.

God is not happy with Jerusalem.  They're constantly referred to as a rebellious people.  This book is the prophecy of the fall of Jerusalem - in quite spectacular fashion.  It then leads into the destruction of other nations.  But, it finishes with God promising to restore the people again.  Hooray for happy endings!

Look at it this way, the book mirrors the entire Bible.  The fall of man, the destruction of other nations, and then the promise of restoration.  Jesus died for our sins, and through him, we are restored and our sins are wiped away.  We have promises of his ultimate return one day, and just as God fulfilled the promises that the people in Ezekiel would be restored, God will fulfill his promises to us.

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Thurs Devo - Compassion through Consequences

Last week we saw how God stepped in and personally confronted Miriam and Aaron on their prideful opposition against Moses. God was rightfully angry with them, asked them thought provoking questions and then left them with a consequence.
Numbers 12:9-12        The anger of the Lord burned against them, and he left them.
10 When the cloud lifted from above the tent, Miriam’s skin was leprous—it became as white as snow. Aaron turned toward her and saw that she had a defiling skin disease, 11 and he said to Moses, “Please, my lord, I ask you not to hold against us the sin we have so foolishly committed. 12 Do not let her be like a stillborn infant coming from its mother’s womb with its flesh half eaten away.”
God doesn’t take sin lightly. He punishes sin. The consequences aren’t to get even, though. If He got even with us every time we sinned, we would all be dead! God shows compassion through His consequences. The consequences are to help train us so that we recognize our sins, repent, turn back to God and ask for His help. That’s exactly what happened here. Aaron immediately repented of his sin, acknowledged it as foolish, and asked for mercy (instead of making excuses and passing the blame, as he did in the golden calf incident in Exodus 32).
When you and I experience consequences for our sins, do we get mad at God? Do we make excuses? Do we blame others? How will you and I fully acknowledge and confess our sin and turn back to God with a sincere desire to love and serve Him with His help? Then, we can view our consequences as God’s compassion!

Yesterday, Kent also talked about compassion and focused on how we are to be compassionate with others. When we realize how compassionate God is with us, then we can be compassionate with others. Next week we will see a great example of that in Moses as he responds to Aaron’s plea for mercy…
Alice

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Tougher Love

You have heard the law that says the punishment must match the injury: ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say, do not resist an evil person! If someone slaps you on the right cheek, offer the other cheek also.  Matthew 5:38-39

(This is Pt 3 of 8 – Turning the Tide – Representing God to a World that Misrepresents Him)

The other day, I was upset because someone decided to go into my container of soup.  I looked for my  lunch, and half of my soup was gone! Then, something hit me.  What if that person was starving?  What if they had no money, resources, or anyone else to turn to, and because they were too embarrassed to ask, they simply thought, “Here’s some soup.  There’s plenty there and I only need some of it.”  I know what many of you are thinking.  That person stole from you.  They have  committed a crime, and they must be held accountable!  I get that, and have very sternly dealt with my daughter over this very same issue (Ok, so it was ice cream with her . . . not soup :) ).  However in my daughter’s case, my wife and I know she is well fed and taken care of.  I don’t know the situation of the so called ‘soup bandit,’ and unless you really know that person, neither do you.  So rather than look for justice, maybe it is best to look toward being compassionate.  In a world that seeks the right of each wrongdoing, how can we as Christians show them another path?

Showing others compassion is a true form of tough love.  In Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, He spoke very clearly about the world’s view on wrongdoing in verse 38 of today’s verses.  Furthermore, He challenges all of us to do what we typically would not do in the very next verse; walk away.  The lesson He is trying to teach is not simply about letting someone slap you around.  Keep in mind Jesus was not someone who would sit idle and just take punishment.  He challenged the existing authority, and as such, no one could ever say He took to being slapped around.  He is saying that we are to be compassionate about the plight of others.  The world at times will say we are too nice.  However, we should respond both passionately and without hesitation that it takes greater strength to be compassionate to the one who wronged you than to write them off for what they had done.

Being compassionate is much harder than any of us would give it credit.  Disagree?  Ask if you would love the world so much that you would give your only son for their sins (John 3:16).  What Jesus is trying to say in today’s verses is don’t take the easy way out.  Get messy.  Ask yourself why that person would wrong you, and if you have a chance to talk with them, ask them why.  Then, show God’s love in your heart and be compassionate toward them.  Show the world that someone cares even when they themselves might not feel worthy of it.  Is there someone who could use compassion in their life?  Can you show God’s grace to someone who knows nothing but His wrath in the world?  My prayer is that we realize showing compassion is not easy, and to do so requires more than just tough love.  It’s tougher love.  Amen.

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Tues Devo: Keep fighting...

Hello,

I am sure you have been there. Things are not quite going right, and at the same time things are happening fast all around. You feel like if you could just stop time for 2 hours you could reset a little bit, figure a couple things out, get back on track with your prayer time and then hit the ground running again. But you can’t stop time…so you keep paddling, but it feels up stream, so you stop paddling and just float. It feels silly because on the outside things look ok to everyone else…but you know on the inside you aren’t where you are supposed to be. But if you stop for some time, then things may fall apart on the outside too – so you keep up the outside appearance at the cost of rectifying what needs to happen on the inside.

I encourage you if this is you today to not do that! Don’t let the inside suffer. Start to find small wins as you move. Take things one bit at a time and get them where they need to be. If the outside isn’t reality, it is just more stress to make that seem real than to actually stop and get real. Take that time. Start with prayer and ask God to help you prioritize where to make adjustments. It won’t happen overnight, but listening to Him for His priorities of change will get you there!

Have a blessed day,

1 Timothy 1:18-19 “This command I entrust to you, Timothy, my son, in accordance with the prophecies previously made concerning you, that by them you fight the good fight, keeping faith and a good conscience, which some have rejected and suffered shipwreck in regard to their faith.” (NASB)
Luke 6:12-13 “It was at this time that He went off to the mountain to pray, and He spent the whole night in prayer to God. And when day came, He called His disciples to Him and chose twelve of them whom He named as apostles.” (NASB)