Who’s going to show up today?
Today’s devotion is based on Sunday’s message: SERVE with your gifts! To listen: CLICK HERE
Who’s showing up to work today?
Well…if you are feeling healthy, I’m assuming you will show up to your job.
If you are retired, you may think…”Not me!”
If you are a student, “I don’t have a job yet.”
But we all have some activities in front of us today. The question is, “Who will show up?”
When we think of serving with the gifts God has given to us wherever God places us to use them, God wants to show up. Consider 1 Peter 4:10 and especially verse 11:
1 Peter 4:10 Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of God’s grace in its various forms. 11 If anyone speaks, they should do so as one who speaks the very words of God. If anyone serves, they should do so with the strength God provides, so that in all things God may be praised through Jesus Christ. To him be the glory and the power for ever and ever. Amen.
The gifts God has given to you are his way of working in you and showing up through you. So as you step into your day today, be aware that God wants to show up at your work place, in your classroom, in your recreation, in every activity.
To be clear, we are not God and that is a good thing. But God gives us gifts to represent and present him to the world around us.
So as the Apostle Peter says, “If anyone speaks, they should do so as one who speaks the very words of God.”
That means that whatever conversations you have today, God wants to speak through you.
Last night was a proud dad moment because I saw Jesus show up so clearly in my daughter.
After the basketball games, she said, “Dad, I need a good argument.”
“For what?” I asked. Thinking she had an English assignment that needed a persuasive paragraph written.
“One of my friends is an atheist and I need to convince her God is real. I don’t want her to stay an atheist.”
For the ride home and the next hour at home we talked about different ways to listen, share, show care, and confidence in continuing the conversation. But as she related her conversation with her friend, God had shown up. She shared with truth and love her faith and while didn’t have every answer, spoke as one speaking the very words of God. God showed up in the stands of the basketball game as they watched the varsity game (which was a blowout 71-2…so lots of time for conversation…perhaps God’s way of allowing space for the topic to come up.)
So who’s going to show up today?
If your have conversations (which you will), speak with words that reflect God to people. As you go about your work, work with the strength that God provides. As you serve, serve with the heart of God motivating you.
Wherever life takes you today, know God is going with you and wants to show up through you!
Matthew 5:16 In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.
Apply: What is different about your day today as you keep in mind God wants to show up in you and through you today?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for the gifts you give and the opportunities to use them. I pray that in all I say and do today, you show up through me to others! AMEN.
SERVE…What’s your function?
Today’s devotion is based on Sunday’s message: SERVE with your gifts! To listen: CLICK HERE
“Take my life and let it be…consecrated Lord to thee.”
We sang these words on Sunday which were penned by Frances Ridely Havergal (1836-1879) in 1874. While her life was only 43 years long, she found pleasure in serving the Lord by serving others. As she was a home for women, she asked the Lord to bring the Gospel to those that didn’t know it and encourage and bring deeper joy to those that did. She found herself in prayer desiring for herself and others a deeper reality that all of her life was for the Lord. The hymn verses came as this deep, heart felt prayer.
I love this hymn because it reminds me that our life is not compartmentalized. We don’t have a “church life” and a “real life.” We don’t have “Sundays” and then the “rest of the week.” We have life. As a forgiven, saved, child of God we realize that God can and does capture every aspect of our life for him. Our change isn’t always in activity, although it certainly can be, but in our heart’s focus.
Service is a heart issue. As the Lord instills in us the true blessing and treasure that he gave his life for us, the response of giving our lives to him is the natural reaction to this gift of grace.
Yes, the Holy Spirit gives special gifts for service in God’s kingdom. Hopefully you took a few minutes to explore that. However, he also captures every aspect of our life to function as part of his body. Let me give an example.
At a previous church, a member had a love for remote control cars. He built and drove gas-powered cars, trucks, dune buggies, etc. If you could put a mini-motor in it, he loved to build it. One year he received a significant bonus from his work and asked if he could buy nicer electric car kits for the kids to put together and then race. The Lord led him in his gift of generosity to use his hobby to bring fun, fellowship and a focus on Christ to the youth of our congregation. Later that spring we had a fun afternoon racing the remote control cars and having our pinewood derby races. What a great use of his hobby combined with his love for the Lord.
So what are your hobbies? What do you love to do in your spare time? What gifts do you use at work? What interests do you explore? The question a heart of service leads us to ask is this, “Lord, how can you use all aspects of my life to glorify you and be a blessing to your people and expand your kingdom?” I am curious what he will show you!
A “Remote Control Car” Ministry was not on our strategic plan for that year. But it was on God’s. He worked in Walter’s heart. He arranged the financial blessing. He orchestrated the fellowship around the gift. He enlarged his kingdom through the heart of service his son in the faith had.
Romans 12:4 For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, 5 so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others. 6 We have different gifts, according to the grace given to each of us.
The cool thing is God has given you these gifts, passions, hobbies and interests. The amazing thing is he has put you in the place he wants you to use them. It’s time to get off the sidelines and engage…the body of Christ needs you!
Apply: What is one idea God puts in your mind to use your talents, hobbies, career, interests, or experiences to glorify him and serve the people in and with your local church?
Prayer: Lord thank you for taking my life and wrapping it up in your grace. Help me to live my life always as an expression of thanksgiving for that grace. AMEN.
SERVE: Gifts are personal!
Today’s devotion is based on Sunday’s message: SERVE with your gifts! To listen: CLICK HERE
A good gift is personal.
Christmas is a month in the past or 11 months away. If you reflect on your gift giving, there are times where you get everyone the same gift. Perhaps you have 15 co workers and you get them all the same ornament as a little token of appreciation. However, gifts are usually given specifically to the individual. These personal gifts take time and energy to understand the person, their likes, their interests and then give them a gift that matches who they are.
God gives both kinds of gifts.
His gift of salvation is the same for all people.
Romans 3:22-24: There is no difference between Jew and Gentile, 23 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, 24 and all are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus.
Every person has the same problem…they are sinners. Every person needs the same solution…forgiveness in Jesus. This gift of grace is the same for all.
However, once we have been given the common gift of salvation, God uniquely gives us gifts that are just the ones he wants us to have. Consider 1 Corinthians 12:11, “All these are the work of one and the same Spirit, and he gives them to each one, just as he determines.
In this chapter the Apostle Paul makes a list of just some of the spiritual gifts God gives to people. A single person is not given all of the gifts, just the one or ones that God has determined are for them uniquely and individually. The unifying factor is all the gifts come from the same source.
1 Corinthians 12:4 There are different kinds of gifts, but the same Spirit. 5 There are different kinds of service, but the same Lord. 6 There are different kinds of working, but the same God works all of them in all men.
Two challenges arise. First is sometimes I get “gift envy.” Like sitting around the Christmas tree looking at what someone else received and thinking, “I wish I got that gift!” we can look around the church, the body of Christ, and think, “I wish I had that gift…I wish I could lead like that person…I wish I could be such a positive encourager as that person…I wish I had time to serve like that person…and the “envy” goes on. In the process, Satan gets our gift to sit on the sidelines while we envy everyone else’s, minimizing the gift God has given to us.
The second challenge is knowing what those gifts are. While God can and does refocus or repurpose our talents, careers, hobbies, and interests for his glory, he also has given us spiritual gifts for use in his kingdom. There are various assessments that can give a starting point of reflection and experimentation to see what gifts God has given to you. This isn’t intended to be a cumbersome and challenging process, but simply taking time to reflect and use an assessment is helpful to see what gifts God has given to YOU for use in his kingdom.
God knows you better than you know yourself. Of all gift givers, God is the best and individually and uniquely has given you gifts to glorify him, bless others and build up his kingdom!
Apply: Need help determining what gifts God has given to you and how to use them? Here is an assessment tool which includes spiritual gifts, but also other inputs to best determine how God has uniquely gifted you. Click here: www.freeshapetest.com
If you would like help discerning the results and how to use them, at the end of the assessment, email the results to christygeiger@gmail.com. Christy serves as our member ministry coordinator at Crosspoint and whether a member here or not, she can help you plug into the body of Christ where God has you!
Prayer: Lord, thank you for knowing us so individually and uniquely that you give gifts to me that are best suited for me. Help me to use them for your glory, the blessing of people and the building up of your kingdom.
SERVE as a steward of God’s grace!
1 Peter 4:10 Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others, as faithful stewards of God’s grace in its various forms.
Have you ever thought of your life as a steward of “God’s grace?” Perhaps in the Christian realm, we think of being a steward (manager) of the wealth God has given us. We perhaps talk about stewarding our time and, yes, our talents. However, when’s the last time you have been encouraged to steward God’s grace…in its various forms?
The first reaction to grace is what God has done FOR us through the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Rightly so, we treasure God’s grace as his undeserved love that he shows to us by NOT treating us as our sins deserve, but by applying the perfect life and death of Jesus to our account so we are now seen as perfect and the punishment for our sin paid for.
But what are the “various forms” of grace that God is a) entrusting to us and b) asking us to steward them. Receiving the saving grace of God is a treasure in itself. However, when God gives us saving grace, he also gifts us with gifts of grace.
What are those gifts of grace?
All the ways that grace expresses itself in and through our lives is what God invites and encourages us to manage.
You see, grace changes our eternal destination, it also changes our life’s purpose. Really all of our lives becomes an opportunity to respond to the saving grace God has given to us.
Perhaps more specifically, we begin to see that God’s Spirit does give us spiritual gifts to use in the work of the kingdom. He can change the focus of our careers, hobbies, interests and experiences to now ask the question, “How can I use this experience, interest, or talent to the glory of God and the expansion of his kingdom?” When grace changes our heart, it changes how we steward life.
Life becomes about glorifying God and serving others…responding to the grace that has been shown to us and realizing everything with which I have been gifted is a gift of grace.
Apply: Make a list of your abilities, talents, spiritual gifts, hobbies and interests. Next to each of them write, “Gift of God.” Then in a third column answer, “I can use this to serve God and others by…”
Prayer: Lord, thank you for the gift of grace that saves me from sin and for service in your kingdom. Help me to faithfully steward every aspect of life to your glory. AMEN.
Why should I grow? (part 2)
Devotions this week based on Sunday’s Message: Compass: GROW in grace and knowledge! (LISTEN HERE)
Motivation is key to growth.
We need a Spirit-given desire to grow in our love for God’s grace and knowledge of his Word. Yesterday we indicated two good reasons to grow in knowledge…1) to know what is true and what is not and 2) to be ready for life with the wisdom that comes from God.
Today two more.
Reason 3) Be more fruitful.
January in Texas is a time to begin thinking about gardening and spring. With the last frost around the middle to end of February, now is the time to plan for “producing fruit” in the spring. In our backyard we have now eight fruit trees. In the next week or so it is time to prune some of the branches off to make the other branches more fruitful. When the blossoms start to open, it will be time to spray some fungicide to prevent rot of the fruit later on. To have a tree that produces fruit takes work.
The same is true for our walk with our Savior. He has saved us by his grace to be fruitful with his grace.
Ephesians 2:8-10 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God— 9 not by works, so that no one can boast. 10 For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
We want to produce the fruit that God has planned for us to do. Paul identifies some of that fruit in Galatians 5:22-23 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law.
But Jesus in his parable of the sower and the seed identified that there are threats to producing fruit such as the worries and concerns of life, the deceitfulness of wealth and the challenges that come because of my connection to Jesus. (Matthew 13). He also taught that pruning is necessary to get rid of the parts of life that make us ineffective
John 15 “I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener. 2 He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes[a] so that it will be even more fruitful. 3 You are already clean because of the word I have spoken to you. 4 Remain in me, as I also remain in you. No branch can bear fruit by itself; it must remain in the vine. Neither can you bear fruit unless you remain in me.
5 “I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing.
To be more fruitful means strengthening my connection to Jesus and his Word of Truth.
Reason 4) Be a teacher
Hebrews 5:11 We have much to say about this, but it is hard to make it clear to you because you no longer try to understand. 12 In fact, though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the elementary truths of God’s word all over again. You need milk, not solid food! 13 Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness.
The school system in central Texas is in need of teachers. With the growth in the area, districts are looking for individuals qualified to teach kids of all ages.
The Christian church and faith needs teachers. The Lord needs Christians to continue to mature in their faith so they can teach others. The writer to the Hebrews gently reprimands his readers and says, “By this time you ought to be teachers!” Perhaps its a time to reflect on the years perhaps you have been in the church and exposed to the teaching of God’s Word. Would you be comfortable teaching it to someone else? Maybe this is your challenge for 2023…be a teacher of God’s truth.
How? Perhaps it does mean going back and reviewing the basics. Take the new member course at your church. Review the basics in Luther’s Small Catechism. But then challenge yourself to teach some aspect of the Christian faith to someone else. Volunteer to teach in the kids ministry. Ask to be able to teach a lesson of the new member class or confirmation class. Practice in your home with your kids.
Be ready to be a teacher to take what God has given to you and give it to someone else.
And, in the level of learning retention, when you have to teach something to another person, YOU retain a large amount of that knowledge. So teaching is a great way to grow yourself AND help someone else grow!
Apply: What fruit of faith would you like to grow in becoming better at? What is a plan to do that? What topic of the Christian faith would you like to grow in to be able to teach someone?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for your grace and the depth of knowledge you reveal in your word. Motivate us by your Spirit to always grow to be more fruitful and ready when you need us to teach someone else. AMEN.