The Cost

In 2 Samuel 24, when presented with the opportunity to worship Yahweh by giving the very minimum effort (building an altar on King Araunah’s threshing floor on King Araunah’s land using King Araunah’s oxen and materials), King David resisted firmly. Instead, he bought the threshing floor on which to build the altar and the oxen to sacrifice. He said, “I will not offer anything to Yahweh, my God, which costs me nothing.

Follower of Jesus, when our maximum effort is to offer the bare minimum expected – whether to Yahweh, to our family, to our employer, to our team, or even to the stranger on the street – is that not a betrayal of what Jesus says makes us a disciple? What did Jesus say? “If anyone is to be my disciple, let him deny himself, take up his cross (the symbol of ultimate sacrifice), and follow me.”

Question to ponder before the Lord: What is the cost I’m paying toward the Kingdom of God?

Through the Lens of the Word

It is incredibly disheartening when churches and/or denominations view the Word of God through the lens of their culture. Scripture is the lens through which we should view, assess, and compare the culture in which we live —no matter what generation or century, no matter which part of the world or people group. Scripture is our standard, not our culture.

When the church adapts to the culture to accommodate its pewsitters’ preferences rather than being the vehicle through which culture discovers Jesus, is regenerated by His Holy Spirit, and through whom they are conformed to His Word and His Way, it is no longer the church. Therefore, the church must view the culture through the lens of the Word of God, not the other way around.

And he is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be preeminent. ~ Colossians 1:18

The Kingdom of God Has Arrived

Jesus Christ IS King…NOW. He reigns…NOW. His Kingdom is established…NOW. His Kingdom is being expanded…NOW.

He is a perfect King. He is a gracious and merciful King. He is a forgiving King. He is a welcoming King. He is a faithful King. He is a worthy King.

His subjects…oh goodness, we’re still learning and being transformed. We don’t always get His Word correct. We don’t always execute His decrees with accuracy. We ourselves do not love and obey Him with the same commitment that we expect from those who don’t even know Him. We don’t always represent HIM well.

I thank Yahweh today for the Spirit of the Most High God, the Holy Spirit. I’m thankful today that He dwells in and HELPS those who have come to King Jesus in repentance and faith, those who have been regenerated and are being conformed to His image.

His Kingdom come, His will be done on earth as it is in heaven. It IS happening.

I’m sorry to the watching world that it is taking some of us longer to learn to surrender, to deny self, and to take up our cross (our symbol of complete sacrifice) to follow Him.

We WILL do better. Keep watching. Keep learning. Keep your eyes on the King more than on me! I wait with Earnest Expectation and Blessed Hope to look just like Him!

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” ~ Matthew 3:2

Leveraging Who You Are

The best thing you can do to leverage who you are and what you’ve been given to make a difference in the world, your community, your church, and your family is to…
— stop making excuses.
— stop blaming others.
— stop playing the victim.
— stop assuming the worst of God, others, and yourself.
AND…
— start honoring Yahweh, your Creator and Designer.
— start believing in the work of Yahweh in and around you.
— start loving.
— start forgiving.
— start being PRESENT.
— start being generous with who you are, what you have, and what Yahweh has taught you and shown you.
— keep forgiving.
— keep learning.
— keep being.

And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him. ~ Colossians 3:17

You Can’t Out Give Yahweh

It is “religious” to ask, “What is the minimum I must give? What is the minimum I must share, do, serve, etc., in order to meet the ‘standard’?” It is religious to ask, “What does the law or the code require?”

From the heart and character of Yahweh, the example of Jesus Christ Himself, the apostle Paul, Peter, and the others, being a follower of Jesus INSPIRES just the opposite – “If anyone is to be my disciple, he must deny himself, take up his symbol of humble sacrifice (his cross), and follow me.”

It is the nature of Yahweh AND those conformed to the image of His Son to ask, “What is the most I CAN give and still live another day to serve my King?” To be Christian is to embody the Spirit of humility, sacrifice, compassion, hospitality, and generosity, to go the extra mile, to turn the other cheek, to leverage our strength, our earnings, our gifts and talents for the testimony of the King and for the good of His Kingdom.

The point is this: whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. ~ 2 Corinthians 9:6

Jesus Moves Us

Right, wrong, or indifferent – we are known by the company we keep.

If we hang out with crude people, we’ll be known by the same crudeness as those we hang out with.

If we hang out with those who have loose tongues, gossip, backbite, tell lies, and bare false witness, we’ll be known by the same traits as those we hang out with.

If we hang out with false teachers and wolves in sheep’s clothing, we’ll be known by the same falsehoods.

If we hang out with hypocrites and vipers, we’ll be known for the same.

One may argue or legitimize their relationship by pointing out that Jesus dined with publicans and sinners. Fair enough. But point me to a narrative where Jesus spent time with broken, corrupt, or morally decrepit people who:

  • did not immediately repent and follow Jesus;
  • did not lash out against Him;
  • did not regret having a conversation with Him;
  • or brought Jesus into their behaviors.

You’ll never find a situation in all of scripture where Jesus spent time with broken people and loving them meant joining them in their brokenness, corruption, or debauchery—not for a second.

Instead, in every situation, He loved them so much that He walked counter to them…He pointed them to a new life, a new heart, a new Kingdom. He reached over and pulled them out of their stink without getting any of it on Him. He died FOR their sin…not IN their sin.

From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” ~ Matthew 4:17

Growth is Healthy

Healthy things grow. If it’s not growing, it’s diminishing, dying, or dead. In the life of the follower of Jesus and in the church, the same is true.

Sometimes people stay stationary and the things around them grow, change, and transition. A solid, consistent, spiritually fit person might walk out all of Christ for all of life by teaching the same class or doing the same type of discipleship for years and years, but the people around them develop and grow and take on new ministry and relationships of pouring into others.

Sometimes people develop and grow out of one form of ministry into another as they themselves grow.

Sometimes a church grows and develops people in loving and obeying Jesus and then sends them out of the fold as workers in other communities, cities, and countries to teach them how to know, love and follow Jesus into His Kingdom.

Sometimes a church grows and develops people who grow and develop people who grow and develop people to know, love and follow Jesus into His Kingdom and the church body just grows and grows.

Sometimes a church does both. But the follower of Jesus and the church of followers of Jesus that is alive in the Spirit and healthy will ALWAYS grow.

He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will supply and multiply your seed for sowing and increase the harvest of your righteousness. ~ 2 Corinthians 9:10

Change is Inevitable

I’m one of those people who like change, for the most part. I love to rearrange and refresh things and practices just to keep them from becoming stale, boring, empty rituals, or sacred cows. I think one of the reasons I love change is that it demonstrates the way Jehovah is making all things new…changes of seasons, human growth, spiritual growth, regeneration, conforming us to the image of His Son, Jesus Christ, drawing the nations into His Kingdom. I love the occasional clean slate to re-open my eyes to God’s creative, restorative genius and endless possibilities when HE is doing the work.

I don’t necessarily invite change that is precipitated by tragedy or loss, but even then, if I’m attentive, I can see the hand of God at work. He is in constant care for and absolute rule over ALL of HIS creation, for HIS glory and the good of HIS people.

We can’t stop all forms of change…plants grow and change; children grow and change; relationships grow and change; we physically, emotionally, and spiritually grow and change. But even if we try to stop growth, change is inevitable. Our bodies, our minds, our plants, our homes, our cars, our relationships – if we don’t allow them to grow and develop, they will deteriorate and die. Deterioration and destruction is still change – we can’t avoid it.

Change is inevitable…growth is optional.

I get super excited about the change produced by growth, especially when I can see the hand of God in it.

But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be the glory both now and to the day of eternity. Amen. ~ 2 Peter 3:18

Sarcasm

Several years ago, Yahweh strongly convicted me to forsake my lifelong practices of sarcasm and passive-aggressive responses/behaviors. He used the faces of my children to help me understand the heartlessness and ugliness of those behaviors.

I often joked that sarcasm was one of my spiritual gifts. I was good at it, and I passed that “skill” on to my kids. I am now ashamed of both that statement and the behaviors that accompanied it.

Passive-aggressive responses and behaviors are simply masks for insecurity, arrogance, and a lack of warmth and compassion. The more distance God puts between my past and the Spirit of God, the more embarrassing those behaviors become. When I experience them from another, I feel sad and embarrassed for them — I know where it’s coming from. Truth should ALWAYS be spoken with love (Ephesians 4:15), no matter the personality type or gifting and no matter what behavior to which one is responding.

Irony stated through satire can be an acceptable and appropriate form of humor to make a point with clarity, expose foolishness, or simply to entertain. Sarcasm though, at its core, is insulting, derisive, mean, hurtful, and hateful and is never acceptable or appropriate.

There are several biblical examples of satire but no examples of sarcasm. GotQuestions.org said it this way about the subject: “We should speak the truth with loving intent (Ephesians 4:15), avoiding “foolish talk or coarse joking” (Ephesians 5:4). We should speak in such a way that the hearer will understand our motivation. And we should never be malicious or cruel. Carefully worded irony may be fitting, but malicious sarcasm is not.

Good word.

Therefore, laying aside falsehood, SPEAK TRUTH EACH ONE of you WITH HIS NEIGHBOR, for we are members of one another. BE ANGRY, AND yet DO NOT SIN; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and do not give the devil an opportunity. He who steals must steal no longer, but rather he must labor, performing with his own hands what is good, so that he will have something to share with one who has need. Let no unwholesome word proceed from your mouth, but only such a word as is good for building up what is needed, so that it will give grace to those who hear. And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. Let all bitterness and anger and wrath and shouting and slander be put away from you, along with all malice. Instead, be kind to one another, tender-hearted, graciously forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has graciously forgiven you. ~ Ephesians 4:25-32 LSB

Your Way or the Highway

Some of the most challenging people to connect with in the body of Christ are those who feel that they have an enlightened, private interpretation of their own about Scripture, the church, people, culture, practices, preferences, etc. They’re full of alternate ideas and suggestions of how things should be done, said, taught, etc. They’re right and everyone else is wrong, but you’re still expected to work with them and include them, despite their obstinance and “been there more often, done that better, and bought the superior t-shirt” attitude.

This is not to say that we can’t all learn from these personalities. None of us have a corner on the market of knowledge and experience and God DOES bring people into our lives and into our churches that can share new experiences with us, in the journey, along the way. But there’s a difference between bringing your “lessons learned the hard way”, growth and maturity into new relationships and entering new relationships with the goal of making them look like your old relationships that failed along the way.

“How can I help us better pursue God’s glory for His Kingdom” goes much farther than “Can you just do things the way I want you to?” The difference may be as subtle as authentic humility and self-important arrogance. It’s not about your way or my way. It’s about His way!

Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. ~ Matthew 6:10