In Seasons of Pain

“The Lord preserves the simple;
when I was brought low, he saved me.
Return, O my soul, to your rest;
for the Lord has dealt bountifully with you.”

– Psalm 116:6-7

Earthly life in Christ isn’t going to look like an unending series of successes and happy days. There will be hard times, seasons of pain, and long days of doubt and despair. But God is with you in those times! He hears your cries and knows when to strengthen you for the battle and when to rescue or restore your hope and your heart.

Whatever the backstory is to Psalm 116, the psalmist clearly went through a terrible trial. Nonetheless, God was faithful and never abandoned him. At the right time, God provided rescue and the psalmist could clearly see Him at work. This psalm provides a great example of how to suffer through and reflect on difficulties in a spirit of faith. Looking back, the psalmist can see God’s presence and sustaining power. He can see God’s hand at work in his rescue and know that God never abandoned or ignored his suffering. He is able to rest peacefully in the assurance of God’s steadfast love.

Likewise, you can be confident in God’s wisdom, presence, and power, even when you feel all alone. Don’t let your feelings fool you! If you are in Christ, God is with you. He hears you. He loves you. He is for you. Pray for your soul to find rest in Him during times of turmoil.

Spitting in the Face of God

“And they were striking his head with a reed and spitting on him and kneeling down in homage to him.” – Mark 15:19

Picture this being done to Jesus… The Roman soldiers gathered to have their fun with Him. The Son of God repeatedly hit on the head. Spit on over and over. Shown false respect to emphasize their complete lack of respect. Picture it. It’s completely outrageous. It’s horrible. How does it make you feel? Angry? Sad? Do you want to scream? Do you want to cry?

Now realize that this is what each of us does to God every time we sin. No, it isn’t visible like this, but every sin (whether we think it’s a big deal or not) rejects and mocks God’s authority to rule over our lives as our Creator. Every sin is our way of saying, “I’m in charge, not you.” Every sin spits in the face of God. Every sin claims we are smarter, better, wiser. Every sin claims we’re exempt from God’s will and plan for human flourishing. Every sin we choose to commit is like smacking God with our own self-importance.

When did you last mock God? Have you gone to Him to ask forgiveness for your sin? The good news is that despite our vile treatment of God, He remains ever-ready to forgive us through Jesus Christ. “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” (1 John 1:9)

Human Nature vs the Upright Life

“Light dawns in the darkness for the upright;
he is gracious, merciful, and righteous.
It is well with the man who deals generously and lends;
who conducts his affairs with justice.”

– Psalm 112:4-5

We’re invited, commanded, and blessed to live lives modeled after the character of God. Regardless of your earthly situation, God will honor and bless an upright life. God is gracious, merciful, and righteous and He wants you to be the same. Unlike God, you’ll never be perfect in these matters, but in Christ, God gives His Spirit to empower you to become like Him in character. Regardless of what you may be “by nature” (whatever that means), the Holy Spirit can transform you to be gracious (giving good things people don’t deserve), merciful (refusing to give bad things people actually deserve), and righteous (not practicing sin).

In Christ, God deals with us generously. He redeemed us though we didn’t earn it. He blesses us with new life though we don’t deserve that. He welcomes us into His family and loves us even though we’re often unlovable. He walks with us even when we try to flee from Him. God invites us, calls us, and expects us to likewise be abundantly generous toward others, especially when they don’t deserve that generosity. We are to care about justice and practice it in our daily lives because God is ultimately and perfectly just.

Walking in the attributes of God is never easy. It goes against human nature. The world certainly views it as naive and foolish. Oh well! May God bless you in abundance for your grace, mercy, righteousness, generosity, and justice!

Build Your Knowledge, But….

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom;
all those who practice it have a good understanding.
His praise endures forever!”

– Psalm 111:10

There’s great value in education and learning. We’re made in God’s image and gifted with wonderful minds equipped to learn from academic study, reading, observation, experimentation, and electronic content. We should always seek to learn and develop our God-given minds.

However, true wisdom – living life skillfully and well for the purpose for which it’s been given – is always grounded in “the fear of the Lord.” It’s only when we have a proper awe toward God, His nature and His work, a humility before His majesty, a reverence for His holiness, and deep love for Him that we’re truly on the path to wisdom. All our other knowledge becomes dramatically more valuable and relevant when directed by wisdom and aligned toward God and His purpose. Our understanding deepens without limit when our knowledge and wisdom converge on the awesome reality of the Living God. Build your knowledge, but pursue wisdom — fear the Lord!

In This Evil Age

“Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ, who gave himself for our sins to deliver us from the present evil age, according to the will of our God and Father” – Galatians 1:3-4

Take a few moments to meditate on this truth that you may have heard many times before… Jesus Christ “gave himself”. The eternal Son of God, the sinless Son of Man, the Anointed One of God gave Himself. He stepped out of the glory of heaven and into the ugliness of this world. He took on a human body and nature to experience the indignities and temptations of life firsthand. He lived and He died. He gave everything!

Jesus Christ “gave himself for our sins”. He sacrificed His life, dying in agony to deal with our sins. Not just the sins of people long ago – our sins, today, right now. Not just some sins, ALL of them. Jesus died so we could live. He suffered so we wouldn’t have to suffer eternally. He traded His life for ours, our punishment for His. And it was a gift, a choice of His to give as well as an expression of the perfect wisdom and will of God the Father.

Jesus Christ did this “to deliver us from the present evil age”. We should readily agree that this present age is evil! War, plague, injustice, economic distress, famine, religious persecution, tyranny, a flood tide of mental and physical illness… The list goes on and on. But this isn’t all there is or ever will be. Jesus gave Himself to deliver us out of this age. He gave Himself so that when we believe in Him, we’re immediately made new, transferred into His glorious Kingdom, and sealed by His Holy Spirit as a guarantee that our eternal future is wondrous and secure in God’s presence. Our life doesn’t end in this evil age, but in Christ we will live and rejoice forever in the age of Messiah!