Is judgment a blessing?
This week’s devotions are based on Week 2 of Rooted – Grounded in Grace (CLICK HERE)
Who are you to judge me?
In our culture today, there is a strong resistance to anyone telling anyone what is right and what is wrong. Even our justice system can fail to arrest and impose a punishment on someone who has committed a crime. Our cultural tendency is to not judge someone. It is perceived as the loving thing to do to allow any behavior and if you speak against it, you are the problem not the person with the problem.
I find this hard to navigate because I see two underlying assumptions about this:
- There are no absolutes to which one is accountable.
- I want the personal independence to act as I feel is best for me. Any imposition on this is charged as judgmental.
Perhaps this is a bigger topic for another day, but these realities keep people from joining a church and practicing their faith “just between me and Jesus.” We don’t want to be accountable to any body of truth and people who uphold it or we simply want the independence to create our own version of Christianity that works for us.
But is this really the best for relationships and especially my relationship with the Lord?
To be sure, we are not to judge in a way that simply feeds my ego and self perception that I am better than someone else. However, at stake in our lives is our eternity with the Lord. Satan is working overtime to subtly deceive and distract us from the truth that is God’s Word and the message of grace through Jesus. He wants us to think we can craft our own religious beliefs without consequence and that God will accept that. It’s just not true.
Which is why we need a Christian community that is willing to bring accountability to my faith and align it with the Word of God.
The Apostle Paul confronted Peter when Peter was succumbing to the culture pressure to make circumcision a requirement for salvation. Galatians 2:11 records, “When Peter came to Antioch, I opposed him to his face, because he was clearly in the wrong.”
What if Paul never would have confronted Peter? The Gospel would have been clouded over not only for Peter, but for all he influenced.
We are not good personal judges. We like to think of ourselves more perfect than we are and that too can be detrimental. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 11:31 “But if we judged ourselves, we would not come under judgment.” True. Right? If you set your own standards, you never do wrong.
But Christians love the standard of God’s Word and love people who love them enough to ensure they are believing and living the word and ways of the Lord.
Is it easy? No. Is it needed?
Yes. We need Christian relationships and a bible beliving church to be an aid in our path through life to eternity with the Lord. As Jesus said in Matthew 7:1-2, “Do not judge, or you too will be judged. 2 For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.
Yes, don’t judge to build your ego, but surround yourself with people who will judge you measured by the Word of God with genuine love and concern for your soul. And I pray I can be the same for you.
Apply: Perhaps today is a good day to evaluate the reaction of your heart when someone who loves and cares for you points out a behavior that is detrimental. Do you resist it, make excuses for it, or receive it with gratitude and thankfulness that someone cares to help you on your journey with the Lord to heaven?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for my Christian relationships at church that love your Word and help me and others stay close to you and follow you and the objective truth you give and the forgiveness you share. AMEN.
Are you ready for relationships?
This week’s devotions are based on Week 2 of Rooted – Grounded in Grace (CLICK HERE)
When I played basketball, there were various phases of practice. The first often was an explanation of the game, play or strategy we were going to employ. Another phase was then walking through the offensive play to make sure everyone knew where they were to go. Then we ran the offense with no defense and then we inserted other teammates as defensive players. Finally the true test of whether you understood the offense and could make it work, was taking it to the court in a live game. Here is where all you learned and practiced would be tested. The difference though is the defense didn’t always react the same as your teammates did in practice. The pace of the game may be more intense. In some ways it was much easier to run the offense in practice than in a real game. But it’s the real game that was the objective of the practice!
If you have been part of the Christian faith for awhile, I am sure you have experienced a similar rhythm to aspects of your faith life. We spend time reading about God’s love, grace and forgiveness. We perhaps study it with some intensity to know what God says about various aspects of life like finances, relationships, work, etc. But when it comes to game day and putting these things into practice, we may find it easier to do Christianity on our own. Why?
Learning about love is easier than putting love into practice with someone who is really hard to love. Forgiving someone in actuality so that the wrong no longer affects your relationship is really difficult. Going out of your way and expending your time or money to help someone in need is an imposition on what you want to do with your day. Putting your faith into practice with other people in the game of life is hard…so it’s easier to avoid those situations altogether.
But we shouldn’t. Because it is only in the context of the relationships around us that we get to grow as God’s people and put God’s truth into practice, into real life situations. To be sure, it is not always easy. It is not always comfortable. The situation may change unexpectedly and we may feel it’s not worth it. But the Christian faith is not to be practiced and lived in isolation. Faith in the Lord is not just for us personally, but us to live out relationally.
The Apostle Paul encourages us: Colossians 3:12 Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience. 13 Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. 14 And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity.
None of this can we do independently. All of this is done in the context of relationships. The study, the practice is all beneficial. But it is all necessary to be ready for faith “gameday” which is every day!
Apply: What relationship will you encounter today that you are struggling with. What aspect of your Christian faith is being called on to put into practice? Ask the Lord for the ability not just to know what to do, but to actually put it into practice!
Prayer: Lord, thank you not just for the training and practice, but the real life situations in which I get to put your love, grace and forgiveness into action! AMEN.
Algorithms vs. Church
This week’s devotions are based on Week 2 of Rooted – Grounded in Grace (CLICK HERE)
The purpose of this devotion this morning isn’t to unduly bash social media or tech companies that run them. I am not professing to be an expert in the algorithms and how they work, however, here’s what I have discovered.
Social media algorithms very quickly and readily feed you information that supports your search record, your viewing record and yes, even the conversations you have around your phone. These meme’s, reels, and posts suggest more content that follows what you were viewing and listening to. The result? You have more inputs that solidify an idea or thought you were already having.
And if you don’t like the content of a post? You can tell your feed to snooze it for 30 days or to eliminate the content altogether.
To be sure, social media is not intended to be the end source of all your information, let alone the sole guide to your spiritual life and growth in faith. But without other inputs, the feed on your phone can give you information, teaching and thoughts that mold your beliefs and eliminate anything that would challenge that.
Is that healthy?
It might “work for you” but with eternal life in the balance and the will and Word of God so important, do you really want Mark Zuckerberg and others feeding your faith?
The value of being part of a sound, Bible-teaching church is that you provide yourself the accountability of other Christian friends and a pastor who, God-willing, are also grounding themselves in the Word of God and allowing the Spirit of God through that Word to challenge, mold, and solidify the teaching that truly is the path to eternal life.
The challenge of surrounding ourselves with only things that we want to hear is not new to the 21st Century Christian. Consider what Paul encouraged Pastor Timothy to be aware of in 2 Timothy 4:1- In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge: 2 Preach the Word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage—with great patience and careful instruction. 3 For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. 4 They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths.
We need to be part of a church, a gathering of biblical Christians to protect us from surrounding ourselves with teacher that just say what we want them to say. We need the sound teaching of biblical truth to address the sin in our life and point us to Jesus for forgiveness and salvation. We need the community of believers to provide godly accountability so all of our faith and life is molded by the Word of God.
Why do we need Christian relationships? We need Christian relationships to provide biblical soundboards to counter secular soundbites.
Apply: We all get comfortable in our beliefs. When is the last time you were actively part of a Bible Study at your church? If recently…great, do it more. If it’s been a long time, let me encourage you to join one and let your beliefs be molded by the Word of God!
Prayer: Lord, thank you for Christian relationships and the accountability they bring to keep me close to you and your truth. Lead me to be actively engaged in your church and always allow my beliefs to be molded by you and your word through the people you put around me. AMEN.
Do I have to go to church?
This week’s devotions are based on Week 2 of Rooted – Grounded in Grace (CLICK HERE)
How would you respond to this statement?
“I don’t have to go to church to go to heaven. My faith is between me and God.”
At face value, both statements are true. There is no mandate from God that says a qualification of heaven is church membership. It is reality that one’s faith is very personal and their connection point to God.
However, my experience has been when these two phrases come up that it is really a deflection from wanting to be part of a church. The combination of these statements can easily come across as, “I really don’t want to belong to a church and I can do faith on my own.” In an age of digital media and the ability to customize all your experiences to your personal preference, it is easy to stay away from church, let alone commit to a church and be an active member in that church. Current trends would indicate that more and more people are acting on the belief that “my faith is between me and God and I don’t need to belong to a church.”
With this mindset, we can understand the vicious cycle of beliefs that is lessoning the need and the value for church.
However, we must challenge this premise and ask, “Is this true?”
The BIble is clear that God’s church, even its local manifestation, is made up of people. From the first iteration of the first century church in Acts 2 after Pentecost, people got together.
Acts 2:44-47 All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45 They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. 46 Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, 47 praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people.
Later the writer to the Hebrews encouraged getting together when the tendency was to stay home alone:
Acts 10:24 And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, 25 not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.
So do we need to belong to a church to be in heaven? Technically no. However, if the Bible encourages and promotes getting together and having interaction and relationships with other Christians, should we ask, “Why?” Absolutely!
The truth is that God never invites us to do something that is going to be for our spiritual harm. Rather, he is constantly encouraging and promoting those activities and behaviors that will bring us the greatest blessing.
So, relationships with other Christians MUST be a good thing. If God has determined it is a good thing, it is natural to ask, “What are the reasons God wants me to be part of a Christian church and in relationship with other Christians?”
This week we will unpack the blessings that come from working at and being in relationship with other Christians. It may not be the reasons you think, but I will tip my hand and say there are other reasons than the ones we will cover this week.
Apply: Even if you aren’t currently attending a church, what reasons come to mind that would indicate having Christian relationships is a positive thing?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for creating your church as a gathering point to hear your Word and foster Christian relationships. Lead me to treasure the gift of relationships just like I treasure all the other blessings you give. AMEN.
Happy Friday the 13th!
This week’s devotions are based on Week 1 of Rooted – Grounded in Grace (CLICK HERE)
So I was curious.
Today is Friday the thirteenth.
In some ways, it’s just another day on the September calendar, but when the thirteenth day of the month ends up on Friday, somehow folklore identifies it as “unlucky.” Even if you are not superstitious, somehow Friday the thirteenth is a day you pause and think, “oh it’s Friday the 13th. I hope nothing bad happens today.” (Yes, you are welcome for now making you think about it!)
So I was curious.
How in the world did Friday the 13th become an unlucky day when every month has a thirteenth day. Why not Monday the 13th or Wednesday the 13th?
So I poked around the internet and found this on the History.com website:
According to biblical tradition, 13 guests attended the Last Supper, held on Maundy Thursday, including Jesus and his 12 apostles (one of whom, Judas, betrayed him). The next day, of course, was Good Friday, the day of Jesus’ crucifixion.
The seating arrangement at the Last Supper is believed to have given rise to a longstanding Christian superstition that having 13 guests at a table was a bad omen—specifically, that it was courting death.
Though Friday’s negative associations are weaker, some have suggested they also have roots in Christian tradition: Just as Jesus was crucified on a Friday, Friday was also said to be the day Eve gave Adam the fateful apple from the Tree of Knowledge, as well as the day Cain killed his brother, Abel.
There were some other possible explanations (the link is at the end of the devotion), but I got to thinking. If Friday the 13th is about sin entering the world and sin being defeated…actually it’s a pretty good day! I don’t think the Apostle Paul had “Friday the 13th” at all in mind, but he did have in mind what happened in the garden of Eden reversed on the cross of Calvary.
Romans 5:12 Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned—
13 To be sure, sin was in the world before the law was given, but sin is not charged against anyone’s account where there is no law. 14 Nevertheless, death reigned from the time of Adam to the time of Moses, even over those who did not sin by breaking a command, as did Adam, who is a pattern of the one to come.
15 But the gift is not like the trespass. For if the many died by the trespass of the one man, how much more did God’s grace and the gift that came by the grace of the one man, Jesus Christ, overflow to the many! 16 Nor can the gift of God be compared with the result of one man’s sin: The judgment followed one sin and brought condemnation, but the gift followed many trespasses and brought justification. 17 For if, by the trespass of the one man, death reigned through that one man, how much more will those who receive God’s abundant provision of grace and of the gift of righteousness reign in life through the one man, Jesus Christ!
Without the grace of God, every Friday and every 13th would be bad days. But if somehow Friday the 13th is about the 13 people who were with Jesus at the Passover meal and the day he died on the cross for all sin…including yours and mine…then what a great day today is.
Happy Friday the 13th…it’s as good as Good Friday!
Apply: The message of God’s grace applies every day. What is happening today in your life for which you are grateful for God’s grace?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, every day is the fortunate, blessed reality that you love me and are my Savior. Thank you for overcoming my sin with your death on the cross. Thank you for allowing me to have and experience every day your grace. AMEN.