Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 22 – Faithfulness (Psalm 89:1-8)

“O Lord God Almighty, who is like you? You are mighty, O Lord, and your faithfulness surrounds you.”(Psalm 89:8)

IN WORD:
If you were to do a biblical word study on “faithfulness,” you would find something mildly surprising: The vast majority of biblical references to faithfulness are about God, not about us. God’s faithfulness is an established fact in Scripture; man’s is not. We are encouraged to be faithful, but we are always found wanting. God, however, is constant. His faithfulness reaches to the skies (see Psalm 36:5; 57:10; 108:4), and His love and faithfulness are semantically paired so often that they are clearly intertwined. His love is unchanging; there is nothing fickle about it — not even from generation to generation (Psalm 100:5). True faithfulness endures forever (Psalm 117:2). It can do no other.
This is why faithfulness MUST be a fruit of the Spirit. It cannot be of the flesh. Humanity measures faithfulness in terms of months and years; God measures it in terms of eternity. We cannot maintain such commitment unless the power to do so is given from above. It simply is not within us to be covenant keepers for long. Nearly every biblical covenant originates in heaven and is maintained unilaterally by the covenant-keeping God. His faithfulness alone is everlasting.

IN DEED:
If you needed any sense of security about your salvation, there it is. God keeps you because He is faithful. He knows the fickleness of those He pursues, and He pursues us nonetheless. He knew how unstable we were before He committed to keep us.
But we cannot remain unstable, not if we’re filled with His Spirit. The flesh is weak, but we no longer live according to the flesh. Never use the excuse, “I’m only human.” You’re a human with the Spirit of the living God dwelling within. Faithfulness is possible for us when we are wholly dependent on Him. His faithfulness surrounds His throne. Enthrone Him in your heart, and it will surround you, too.

“The faithful person lives constantly with God.”
-Clement of Alexandria-

Ally Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 21 – Goodness (Psalm 23)

“Surely goodness and love will follow me all the days of my life.” (Psalm 23:6)

IN WORD:
For something to be worthwhile in our age, it must be amazing, outstanding, remarkable, or awesome. We are so overwhelmed with superlatives that we must keep coming up with more attention-grabbing adjectives with each new season of advertising. But God often advertises Himself in refreshing simplicity. He is good. Through and through, pure and simple, He is good. His attitude toward us is good, His will toward us is good, and His works on our behalf are good. We are unaccustomed to pure forms in our world — everything is tainted with corruption — but with God, no superlative is necessary. From any angle we look at Him, we see goodness.
There’s a remarkable transformation for us in His goodness. God blesses so that His people will become “blessers.” He gives so that we will give. He loves so that we will love. He forgives so that we will forgive. His demeanor toward us is to be reflected in our demeanor toward others. It isn’t just a responsibility to fulfill; it’s a natural reaction. When we’ve been treated so well, it’s natural to treat others well. His goodness takes root in us; we become good, like Him.

IN DEED:
Most of us are busy trying to impress others with a remarkable personality, amazing skills, or our outstanding achievements. God’s Spirit in us, however, will not make us flashy. He will make us good.
If others do not see in us a simple, uncorrupted goodness, they do not see the Spirit of God. We forget that behind every miracle, behind every teaching, behind every revelation and prophecy, there is the good will of God. Goodness underlies everything He does. He is a beneficent Creator, and a beneficent Creator births beneficent children. Do you bear His goodness? Demonstrate it to someone today. Show your world what God is like.

“Goodness is something so simple: always live for others, never to seek one’s own advantage.” -Dag Hammarskjold-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 20 – Kindness (Colossians 3:12)

“A kind man benefits himself, but a cruel man brings trouble on himself.”(Proverbs 11:17)

IN WORD:
Kindness is defined as an attitude or action that benefits others. It is directed toward others, enjoyed by others, and edifying for others. Cruelty, too, is defined as something directed toward others. But this proverb doesn’t focus on the effect of kindness (or lack thereof) on others. It skips the basic definitions and goes straight to the side effects. It focuses on the results on oneself.
Just as patience ironically promotes those who are most reluctant to promote themselves, so kindness builds up those who are most interested in building up others. Cruel people try to give themselves a boost by harming others, but the strategy backfires. Harming others will eventually cause trouble for the cruel person. Likewise, kindness will eventually be returned to the kind. People who help others also help themselves, and so does God.
But we must be careful how we define kindness. True kindness will prompt a person to speak the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15). No one would question Jesus’ kindness, but it could be a very confrontational kindness toward those who distorted truth and righteousness. A wise person will accept that: “Let a righteous man strike me — it is a kindness; let him rebuke me — it is oil on my head,” wrote David (Psalm 141:5). Kindness is an intentional effort to pursue what is good for another person.

IN DEED:
Have people been unkind to you? There’s a chance that the reason lies within yourself — not that you are unworthy of the kindness of others, but perhaps you have not made an effort to be kind. A person reaps what he sows, and if one has sown kindness, he will reap it as well.
Perhaps others take your kindness for granted. God will not. An unbiblical saying asserts that God helps those who help themselves. Biblical truth says that God helps those who help others. Do you qualify? Then they, and you, will benefit.

“Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes are truly endless.” -Mother Teresa-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 19 – Patience (Ecclesiastes 7:8-9)

“A man’s wisdom gives him patience; it is to his glory to overlook an offense.”(Proverbs 19:11)

IN WORD:
It is profoundly ironic that those who are most aggressive in asserting their rights and establishing themselves are least likely to earn a respectable reputation. There is something disturbing about those who are rash and overly assertive. They must have what they want now. They are ruled by their whims. They carry the defining marks of this world, and they are unimpressive to everyone but themselves.
By contrast, those who are patient — slow to anger, deliberate in their steps, reluctant to speak or to judge hastily — are those held in highest regard by others. They do not assert their reputation, they simply earn it. They lose the argument but win respect. The world takes notice because they are noticeably not like this world. They carry the marks of wisdom. In fact, whether they intend it or not, they are like Jesus.
Jesus could have won the kingdoms of this world at the Temptation, but He waited. He could have established His kingdom when He rode into Jerusalem, but He waited. He could have condemned those who crucified Him, but He waited. He could have called legions of angels to defend Him, but He waited. He could have returned yesterday, but He’s waiting.
Why is He so excruciatingly patient? Because the greater the investment in His people — in both time and spiritual maturity — the greater the benefit in the eternal scheme.

IN DEED:
Have you learned that principle for yourself? Sometimes the best answer is a slow one — or none at all. Sometimes there is no pressing need to defend yourself when you know your position will be established in the end. Sometimes the person who offends you will eventually come around — if you give him time. If you are patient in all things, you are like Jesus. Your wisdom will be to your own glory, and also to His.

“Be as patient with others as God has been with you.”
-Anonymous-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 18 – Peace (Colossians 3:15-17)

“Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts.” (Colossians 3:15)

IN WORD:
Peace is elusive. Not only is it elusive to governments in the world’s hot spots of conflict, it is elusive in public and private institutions. Unfortunately, it is also elusive in churches and families. And, most unsettling to us, it is elusive in our own hearts.
Ever since the Garden of Eden, the human heart is by nature unsettled. We are restless creatures because we have separated ourselves from our created purpose. The natural dependence our first parents felt for God has been lost on us. Insecurity reigns within; and where insecurity reigns, peace doesn’t.
The reason we live in a world that is in conflict is because we have hearts in conflict. We want to institute the rule of Christ in our hearts, but He must replace the reign of self — with all its fears, ambitions, passions, and false hopes — and that takes time. Human beings in such turmoil find it difficult to live in peace with others, whether it is on the job, in the church, or at home. Those who do not get along with others are invariably uncomfortable with themselves. Those who are at peace within are almost always at peace with others. Even when others rage against them — as they did with Jesus on the cross, Stephen before the Sanhedrin, and Paul from city to city — they do nothing to fuel the conflict. They have no need. They are at peace with themselves and at peace with god.

IN DEED:
Paul says we are to let the peace of Christ rule in our hearts. He doesn’t say peace is simply to exist in our hearts. He doesn’t say it is to influence our hearts periodically. It is to rule.
Take this diagnostic test: Are you in conflict with others? It is likely a reflection of the condition of your heart. Ask God to still your turbulent waters. Let Jesus rule in the deepest corners of your being. Know the depths of His peace.

“You have made us for Yourself, and our hearts are restless till they find their rest in You.” -St. Augustine-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 17 – Joy (Nehemiah 8:1-12)

“The joy of the Lord is your strength.”(Nehemiah 8:10)

IN WORD:
It was a day of grief and repentance, that day the scribe Ezra read “the Book of the Law of God” in the hearing of the assembly. A generation of Israelites suddenly realized what many previous generations had forsaken — a covenant of love with the great and mighty God. And, according to Nehemiah, they wept.
Have you ever wept over your failures? It’s a humbling experience, pouring out your heart over grievous sins that can’t be undone. The human heart never feels weaker than when it is faced with its undeniable shortcomings. Our humanity is shot through with sin, and there’s nothing we can do about it. We’re weak and helpless.
Believe it or not, that’s a great place to be. God meets us in our weakness and He exalts the humble. “Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted” (Matthew 5:4). It is a blessed frailty to have no claim before God, no words with which to justify ourselves, no bargaining power whatsoever. When we can accept that, we can accept His provision; and there is no greater joy than His provision. It is all we need. It takes us from weakness to strength because God’s power — His very presence — is greatest when we are most visibly vulnerable. We can lay down our stressful, painful attempts at self-sufficiency, and we can accept his sufficiency instead. What greater joy is there than to realize it all falls on His shoulders and not on ours?

IN DEED:
Do you know God’s joy? Have you ever heard him speak into your grief and say with Ezra, “This day is sacred to our Lord. Do not grieve, for the joy of the Lord is your strength?” The joyless Christian is bearing burdens no human is capable of bearing. The joyful Christian has come to grips with his weakness and accepted God’s strength by casting all burdens on Him. Learn the art of casting those burdens; be joyful and be strong.

“Joy is the experience of knowing that you are unconditionally loved.” -Henri Nouwen-

Daily Thoughts in Word. & Deed – 2018

June 16 – Love (Song of Solomon 2:1-4)

“His banner over me is love.” (Song of Solomon 2:4)

IN WORD:
The Song of Solomon is an amorous book because our God. Is an amorous God. Does. It seem irreverent to say so? It can’t be, not when we realize the most passionate kind of love could not have originated anywhere but in the passionate heart of God. It is certainly not Satan’s invention, nor that of a depraved human condition. It is experienced by emotional beings made in the image of an emotional God. Our love reflects His.
Like the bridegroom in the Song of Solomon, our Bridegroom, Jesus, has set His love over us as His declaration of victory. It is our identity. We know that He loves us, and because of that, we love Him (1 John 4:19). Not only do we love Him, we love each other. It is the identifying feature of a Spirit-filled Christian. Where love is absent, so is the Spirit. Where the Spirit is absent, so is love.
So important is this characteristic that Jesus spent the major part of His last words to His disciples on the subject. In John 13-16, He first demonstrates love and then preaches on it: love and obedience, love and the Spirit, love and prayer, love and His friendship, love and joy. Then in His parting prayer, He asks this of the Father: “May they be brought to complete unity to let the world know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me” (John 17:23). It is an intimate love — “I in them and you in me” — between a loving God, the beloved Son, and a love-hungry people. If there is any single mark of belief, it is love.

IN DEED:
Does your life bear the banner of love? Are you aware of God’s great love for you? Do you have great love for Him and for others? Do not be deceived: No matter how spiritually mature a believer is, it is a false spirituality if he or she is not thoroughly saturated in love. “God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in him” (1 John 4:16). There is no way around it. The Christian life is a loving life. An un-loving life is not Christian. Let love, above all else, define you.

“Love of man necessarily arises out of love of God.”
-John Hooper-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 15 – Fruit and the Spirit (Galatians 5:16-26)

“The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.”
(Galatians 5:22-23)

IN WORD:
All those who desire to live godly lives have prayed for these fruits. We want more love, so we pray for God to increase our love. We want more patience, so we pray for patience. We all know the routine. We’ve all sought the gifts of the Spirit with a shopping-list mentality.
But there is a better way. Instead of seeking more of the fruits, we must seek more of the Spirit. When we think we need more love, we really need more of Jesus in us. Or, perhaps more accurately, we need Jesus to have more of us. The same goes for our joy, our peace, our patience, and so on. These are not 9 individual characteristics that we can isolate and work on individually. They are integral parts of the mind of Christ. The more we abide in His Spirit, the more we will have them. When we lack certain fruits, we lack fellowship with the Spirit who gives them. The means to be more fruitful is to ask for closer fellowship with the Source. When we have that, the love, joy, peace, etc., will come.
This is God’s design for His people. His plan is not simply to improve us and make us better people. His plan is to inhabit us. The fruit of the Spirit is not about us and our deficiencies. It is about God and His presence in this world. If you find yourself lacking, the problem is not an isolated characteristic; it is fellowship with the personal, living God. He aims to live His life in you.

IN DEED:
Believe it or not, you — along with other believers — are the means to display God’s character in this world. If we don’t display Him, He won’t be seen. That’s an awesome responsibility. It’s also an awesome privilege. Do you lack His fruitfulness? Then you lack Him — not necessarily His salvation, but His lordship and His fellowship. Don’t just ask for love, joy, or anything else. Ask for Him.

“Work designed for eternity can only be done by the eternal Spirit.” -A.W. Tozer-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 14 – Unburdened (Philippians 4:6)

“An anxious heart weighs a man down, but a kind word cheers him up.”(Proverbs 12:25)

IN WORD:
One of the most persistent problems for Christians is anxiety. One of the most consistent exhortations in Scripture is for us to not be anxious. It’s a curious contradiction, isn’t it? Or perhaps it makes perfect sense. God’s command for us not to be afraid, not to be anxious, not to fear, and to be strong and courageous is so complete and frequent for a reason: He knows that fear will be one of our worst problems.
Why is God so concerned with our level of anxiety? Because, as this proverb says, an anxious heart weighs a person down. It is a heavy burden. It is the antithesis of the abundant life that Jesus has come to give us. It will cripple us from doing God’s will and enjoying His presence. When we are absorbed in the threat of difficult circumstances or difficult people, we are not absorbed in God. When we fear the things that seem to steal our lives away, we are placing them on a higher pedestal than the One who gives us life.
God emphatically does not want us to be weighed down. He may give us many responsibilities, but He does not burden us with them. His burden is light, because Jesus is the Burden Bearer. And as long as we are anxiously stressing over our burdens, we are not letting Jesus bear them. We simply cannot experience His strength while bearing the weight of life in our own strength. We must choose one or the other. We must choose the burden-bearing God.

IN DEED:
What is the solution to our anxiety? There are several, prayer ranking first among them. But the proverb gives us another: kind words. Let your life be full of them. Tell them to yourself. God’s truth is kind to you, after all; rehearse it often. Tell them to others. God’s primary vehicle for expressing Himself in this world is through people. Verbally demonstrate His kindness to others. And when others offer kind words to you, accept them. God has sent them to you. Accept them, and do not be anxious.

“Beware of anxiety. Next to sin, there is nothing that so troubles the mind, strains the heart, distresses the soul, and confuses the judgment.” -William Ullathorne-

Daily Thoughts in Word & Deed – 2018

June 13 – An Obligated God (Job 41:1-11)

“Who has a claim against me that I must pay? Everything under heaven belongs to me.”(Job 41:11)

IN WORD:
Imagine a father giving his daughter an extravagant Christmas gift every year: an expensive piece of jewelry. At first, she might squeal with delight and hug her father’s neck as tightly as she could. After a few years, her reaction to the annual gift might calm to a respectful “thank you.” Eventually, she might begin to expect the extravagance as her right. Suppose that one year the father didn’t have enough money for expensive jewelry and bought her something much more humble. How would she react?
We know human nature well enough to know that once we’re accustomed to generous grace, we expect it not as a gift but as a right. Perhaps we’ve noticed this dynamic in our spiritual lives as well: God gave us salvation, to which we rejoiced as undeserving recipients should; then we began to take His mercies for granted; now, we often expect them as our rightful inheritance. We might even complain when He doesn’t answer our prayers the way we want Him to, or when He doesn’t make life as easy for us as we think it should be. What happened to us? We made a dreadful mistake. We misunderstood the consistency of God’s mercy. Somewhere along the way, we decided that His extravagant promises entitled us not only to trust in them, but to demand them. Perhaps we’ve been spoiled.
Job’s many blessings may have led him to expect that God would always bless him in exactly the same ways. God didn’t. Job couldn’t understand that, and he even hinted that God might have dealt unfairly with him. Like us, he forgot that we were fallen, corrupt, and spiritually dead. We deserved nothing. Grace gave us everything.

IN DEED:
Be careful how you address God. Don’t be a spoiled child; be a grateful one. Remember that everything you have — even life itself — is a gift that springs from His fabulous, unfathomable mercy.

“Between here and heaven, every minute that the Christian lives will be a minute of grace.”-Charles Spurgeon-