Sunday, October 25, 2015

But We Will Boast in the Name of the Lord

On a summer morning more than eight years ago, I sat with my Bible in a friend’s living room. My husband and I were taking my son to his university orientation and we had spent the night with friends. Worry and fear woke me early and I found a quiet place for prayer and time in God’s Word. I worried about this new phase in the life of my family. What if the university refused to accept the home school transcripts I had prepared? What if they refused to grant my son his promised scholarships or even his diploma after four years of study due to his lack of an official public high school diploma? What if my son’s home school experience did not adequately prepare him for the rigors of university? The “what if’s” flooded my mind and led me to the Lord.

In the quiet of the living room, I prayed and then opened my Bible to the next reading, Psalm 20. Today I know that Psalm well, but on that morning, even though I had probably read it before, its thoughts were new to me. They gave me fresh hope. They gave me courage to face this giant called university after a homeschooling experience. They reminded me that the victory belonged to the Lord. Some boast in chariots, and some in horses; but we will boast in the name of the Lord, our God. They have fallen; but we have risen and stand upright. Our boast was in the Lord and I knew that we would rise and stand upright, not because my son had a public high school education and diploma, but because our trust was in the Lord. We had prepared for the battle, but the final victory belonged to the Lord and that gave me the faith to go forward with confidence.

I have prayed this prayer from Psalm 20 for my children many times since that morning eight years ago. As they have gone forward on their own journeys, as they have faced challenges and obstacles, as they have struggled with conflicts and battles, I have prayed – May the Lord answer you in the day of trouble! May He send you help from the sanctuary, and support from Zion! May He grant you your heart’s desire, and fulfill all your counsel! May the Lord fulfill all your petitions. I have entrusted my children to His loving care. I have rested the full weight of my confidence in Him. I have depended on Him alone to deliver them in their time of need.

And He has been more than faithful. He has heard in the time of trouble. He has protected and sent help. He has strengthened and given them their heart’s desire. He has answered and made their plans succeed. I have sung the psalmist’s song of praise on many occasions – We will sing for joy over your victory, and in the name of our God we will set up our banners. Now I know that the Lord saves His anointed; He will answer from His holy heaven. He will answer in the day we call. As Lawrence O. Richards states, “When God can surely do all this for us, we would be foolish not to trust Him.” May we continue to put our full confidence and trust in the One who lifts us to stand upright.    

Sunday, October 11, 2015

What is a Staunch Christian?

Not long ago, Why I Converted to Islam appeared on the internet. The article, written by a female journalist, explains the author’s conversion to Islam. Her story began in Malaysia where she went for a student exchange program. Her curiosity into Islam began with the pretty South-East Asian Muslim girls with colorful hijabs and clothes. Later, as she researched for an article on Muslim women’s rights, she found her mind suddenly bursting with knowledge about Islam and the fact that women had many rights in Islam. The first time she stepped into a mosque she experienced an immediate sense of calm and peace. Over a year later, she converted to Islam.

I do not question the author’s experiences in Malaysia. I am sure that the Muslim girls were beautiful and that they seemed to have many rights in their Muslim faith. I can understand that she somehow found a calm and peace when she entered a mosque. However, I do wonder at some of the claims that she makes in her story.  She writes that her life as a staunch Christian was a focal point of her faith journey. She also shares that her love for Jesus actually led her to Islam and that she read her Bible inside out. Because I am a Christian who loves Jesus and has read the Bible extensively, I question these claims.      

By definition, a staunch Christian is a devoted follower of Christ, one who has fully accepted Jesus’ claims of Himself. A Christian is one who steadfastly loves the Lord Jesus Christ and believes that the Bible is a book that declares Him on every page. In John 14 Jesus told His disciples, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but by Me.” In the same encounter He told them, “If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also. Do you not believe that I am in the Father and the Father is in Me?” A true Christian fully accepts these truths and believes that the Lord Jesus is God and that He is to be worshipped as God. Christianity cannot be the focal point of a religion that denies the deity of Christ nor can love for Jesus lead one to acceptance of a faith that refers to Him as a prophet who is not to be worshipped as God.

As I consider the claims of this author and the definition of a staunch Christian who loves Jesus, I wonder how many miss the truth of what it means to be a devoted follower of Christ. I wonder how many enter our churches, maybe even every Sunday, and miss the true meaning of why we worship the Lord Jesus as we do. I wonder how many mistakenly see themselves as staunch Christians only to be led to another religion that denies the claims of Christ. I wonder how many love a Jesus that they do not really know or how many read God’s Word without really understanding the truths they encounter in its pages. I pray that God’s Word would be clearly spoken in our churches and by those who believe. I pray that hearts would be open to the truths that are read or heard and that Christianity would teach us to love and understand God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ more fully so that we might worship Him as we ought. As Christians, we do learn compassion, mercy, and love, but most importantly we grow to know Him more fully because He is the focal point of Christianity.       

Sunday, October 4, 2015

Abundant Life

In this life we have two ways before us. Some would choose to believe that a middle ground exists between the two extremes, but Jesus makes it clear in Matthew 7 that our choice is between two ways only. One way is broad and leads to destruction. The other is narrow and leads to life. In Psalm 1 the Psalmist illustrates these two ways. He compares and contrasts the lifestyle choices of the ungodly man with those of the righteous man. C.H. Spurgeon tells us that the desire of the Psalmist was to teach us the way to blessedness and to warn us of the sure destruction of sinners. It is, therefore, an important Psalm on which to meditate.                          

The ungodly man walks according to the counsel of the wicked, according to the advice of those who live in sin, of those who do not seek God, but rather challenge Him. He is first influenced by their ways, but then becomes committed as he accepts their choices and stands with them in the path of sinners. He falls further when he fully identifies with them and finally sits among them in the seat of scoffers. As Jeremiah 17:5 says, he trusts in mankind and makes flesh his strength. He turns away from the Lord.

His godless lifestyle will result in his destruction. Before the Lord, his life will be completely worthless, like chaff that is driven away by the wind. He will not stand in the judgment to receive a crown of reward. Because his choice in life was to sit in the seat of scoffers, he will not be invited to seat among God’s people in the assembly of the righteous. He will not be known by God, nor will his way be known. Instead, he will perish and his way with him.

In contrast, the lifestyle of the righteous man is built on the foundation of God’s Word. The righteous man delights and finds pleasure in the Word of God. Indeed, he meditates on it day and night. It is his desire to ponder and speak God’s Words throughout his day. When he falls, he will not be hurled headlong, because the Lord is the One who holds his hand (Psalm 37:24). As Jeremiah 17:7 states, he puts his trust in the Lord and therefore he need not be anxious in the year of drought. He is blessed by God with a spiritual and emotional joy and contentment that will not be taken away.

The righteous man receives this joy and contentment because he has chosen to live a God-centered life. He will be like a tree planted by streams of water, a tree that extends its roots and drinks in the living Word of God. He will yield his fruit in season and his leaves will be full and green. He will be prosperous in all that he does, not because he is so very capable, but because he trusts in the Lord and His promises. He will be known by God because he has lived his life to know God and to walk in His ways. The righteous man illustrates for us the abundant life worth living, the life that leads to blessedness.

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Distractions

These first weeks of school have, at times, left me distracted with all my preparations.  My to-do list seems endless.  One task completed reminds me of a forgotten task that must be added.  It is easy to become worried and bothered about so many things.  It is easy to fret and scurry from job to job.  It is easy to allow my priorities to get turned upside down and to foolishly add details that are unnecessary, details that cause me to feel overworked and unappreciated.  Then, as Martha did in Luke 10:38-42, I try to force these same expectations on others.  I demand and scold and insist on help so that I am not left to do the work alone.

Martha’s meal preparations differ from my school preparations.  However, I do identify with her tumult and frustration.  Her movement from task to task as Mary rests at the feet of Jesus may have caused many furtive glances in the direction of the teacher.  Does He not see the work that must be completed?  Does He not care that I am left to serve alone?  Should He not tell her to help me?  The thoughts may have festered for some time until she was unable to hold them to herself any longer.  She took her complaint to Jesus expectant that He would take her side in the matter.  Instead He answered, “Martha, Martha, you are worried and bothered about so many things; but only one thing is necessary, for Mary has chosen the good part, which shall not be taken away from her.”

Because God has chosen to add this little story in His word, I am led to believe that I may not be the only woman who worries and bothers about so many things.  In Gods at War, Kyle Idleman asks, “How many times have we been so distracted that we’ve missed a divine moment?”   How many times have I allowed my worries about so many things distract me from the one thing necessary, the one thing that will not be taken away?  Martha is to be commended for the required work that she did to entertain the Lord and those with Him.  However, she allowed her work to become a burden.  She put too much stress on things that didn’t really matter and allowed them to distract her from the one thing that did matter. 


The one thing that matters is our relationship with the Lord.  Our focus must first be on Him and on the divine moments He so graciously offers us.  We must sit at His feet and learn from Him and His word.  The peace and guidance that we find there will enable us to complete our required work and service with joy and satisfaction.  That joy and satisfaction will spill over into our relationships.  We will no longer demand and scold.  We will no longer expect others to help with the work load.  Instead, we will find rest for our souls for His yoke is easy and His burden is light.  

Sunday, September 13, 2015

How Do I Measure Up?

Mothers; wives; women:  We can all fall into the habit of sinful comparison.  We compare our children, and our husbands, and our choice of careers.  We compare the ways we discipline, and the ways we keep house, and the ways we dress.  As I have considered this topic of comparison throughout this past week, I have come to discover that really nothing escapes this habit of sinful comparison.  In fact, I noticed in my own life that comparison happens much more than I would like to admit – it almost seems constant at times.  It is a way to measure my own success against the life of another woman.  As John Piper writes, “That’s the way we sinners are wired.  Compare.  Compare.  Compare.  We crave to know how we stack up in comparison to others.  There is some kind of high if we can just find someone less effective than we are.  Ouch.” 

Ouch is right.  The problem is:  we don’t always find someone less effective than we are.  Sometimes, when we calculate our worth against the life of another woman, we can easily be left with the realization that we just don’t measure up.  Her kids may sit in perfect obedience when they are out in public or they may be offered scholarships at prestigious universities.  Her husband may take her on elaborate vacations or he may buy her diamonds to celebrate their years together.  Her house and garden may be showcased in a major magazine or she may be promoted to a high position at work.  These comparisons can leave us depressed and defeated with no confidence for the future.

However, other comparisons leave us with the prideful attitude that we are indeed more effective than the woman with whom we compare ourselves.  It may be that our children have achieved more, or our husbands are more attentive.  Or maybe our lives are filled with accomplishments that we can be, well, proud of.  Nancy Leigh DeMoss points out that these comparisons cause us to feel worthy of honor.  They give us a high and often self-important view of ourselves.  They tempt us to gossip so that others are aware of our superior measure.  These comparisons may give us reason to strut in pride, but they are just as, and possibly more, destructive as those comparisons that reveal our weaknesses.  After all we know that the boastful pride of life is not from the Father but rather from the world. 


It is right to rejoice with those who rejoice and to weep with those who weep.  It is good to learn from others and to seek counsel from those with more wisdom and experience.  But it is destructive to measure our worth by comparison.  It is, in fact, sinful.  As John Piper reminds us, “Jesus will not judge me according to my superiority or inferiority over anybody.  Jesus has a work for me to do (and a different one for you).  It is not what he has given anyone else to do.”  May we then compare ourselves to His standard for our individual lives and the work He has for us to do.  Let us look to Him and allow Him to measure our lives by His measure.  As He said to Peter in John 21:23, “What is that to you?  You follow Me!”