06 Sep 2024
To see God and His ways clearly, we must seek Him earnestly and trust in Him fully. This will help us enter auto pilot mode and allow Him to lead us. Letting go and letting God is a journey of faith. Ceeding control is uncomfortable, but has great benefits. 2 Chronicles 26:3-5 & Proverbs 3:5-6.
Today’s Verse – Nehemiah 9:5
And the Levites … said: “Stand up and praise the LORD your God, who is from everlasting to everlasting.” —Nehemiah 9:5 Thoughts on Today’s Verse… “Stand up and shout it if you love my Jesus!” That’s a song our children love to sing! But what happens to our youthful exuberance and joy at worshiping the LORD? God doesn’t want us to lose it. Read through the Bible and highlight all the physical acts used to reverence and praise our awesome and eternal God — standing, bowing, kneeling, prostrating, lifting hands, clapping, shouting… and on and on we could go. In a world that regularly uses God’s name in vain, isn’t it time we stood up as believers and praised him for all he has done, is doing, and will do in the future? Shouldn’t we do this not only in church buildings (our private worship) but also in our daily devotional times (our personal worship) and in the way we live daily (our public worship)? Yes! Let’s “Stand up and praise the LORD [our] God, who is from everlasting to everlasting.” My Prayer… You alone are God and are worthy of all of my praise. Please receive my praise in my worship, whether I offer it in private with other Christians, in my daily personal worship times, or in my public worship, as I live as an example before my family, friends, and coworkers. Please receive the praise I seek to offer you in my life and through my words. In the name of Jesus, I praise you. Amen. All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION. © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
Miserable or Relieved?
Note from Jesus Dear Faithful Follower, Today’s verses are different selections from chapter 7 of Paul’s letter to Christians in Rome. In previous parts of the letter, he had written about grace being made available through: My sin-offering on the cross (Romans 3). Your faith in My sacrifice for your sins being credited to you as righteousness (Romans 4)., My sacrifice given for you out of the Father’s loving grace, not because you deserved it (Romans 5). My saving death, burial, and resurrection where you died to sin through your baptism into My death because of your faith (Romans 6). Paul wanted you to know that as a baptized believer saved by grace you are dead to sin and alive to live for God as His righteous child. But how? How will you live for God righteously? How will you live up to the Father’s demands to be righteous as His child? Will you use law-keeping to try to be considered righteous? That was the easy answer for those who grew up living under the Mosaic law. So in today’s verses, Paul explained that any attempt to be considered righteous by living under a law — any law, but especially the Mosaic law — is ineffective to obtain righteousness before God. While the Law was a precious gift and it points out the righteousness the Father demands, it has no power to change you and make you holy without My sacrifice. Paul wanted to help you understand that law-keeping cannot make you righteous. The problem is not the law — it is holy and just; the problem is the deceptive power of sin that takes the law and uses it to lead you to sin. Your fleshly nature — “living in the flesh,” also called “the fallen human realm, owned by sin” — “awakened [y]our lust for more” sin. While My sacrifice saves you from sin and death, if you try to be righteous by law-keeping, you end up “absolutely miserable” and in bondage to sin once again! You do what you do not want to do — you fall back into sin again and again. Sin “owns you” and “has taken up residence in” you. The only relief is to remember that you died to sin and to the whole law-keeping way of trying to be righteous and that you can rely on the Holy Spirit to lead you to righteous living. Paul said it this way: But now that we have died to those chains that imprisoned us, we have been released from the law to serve in a new Spirit-empowered life, not the old written code. (The Spirit’s power will be the focus in tomorrow’s verses.) The Father’s grace brings you salvation and righteousness by providing the sin offering (My death on the cross) that atoned for your sin and by giving you the Holy Spirit to empower you to righteous living. Everything about your salvation is a gift, so don’t try to earn your salvation or think yourself superior because you obey the law, any law. Recognize that the Father’s grace is the only way you stand before Him as His righteous child! Verses to Live Pay attention as you read these verses. They remind you that you are dead to the whole law-keeping principle because obeying the law cannot save you. Your fleshly nature and sin’s deceptive power to use the law to trip you up lead you back to the principles of sin and death. Your faith in My sacrifice for your sins and the indwelling Spirit’s power to help you become the person you want to be, provide your only way to live righteously as the Father’s child. My brothers and sisters who are well versed in the law, don’t you realize that a person is subject to the law only as long as he is alive? So, for example, a wife is obligated by the law to her husband until his death; if the husband dies, she is freed from the parts of the law that relate to her marriage. … My brothers and sisters, in the same way, you have died when it comes to the law because of your connection with the body of the Anointed One. His death — and your death with Him — frees you to belong to the One Who was raised from the dead so we can bear fruit for God. As we were living in the flesh, the law could not solve the problem of sin; it only awakened our lust for more and cultivated the fruit of death in our bodily members. But now that we have died to those chains that imprisoned us, we have been released from the law to serve in a new Spirit-empowered life, not the old written code. So what is the story? Is the law itself sin? Absolutely not! It is the exact opposite. I would never have known what sin is if it were not for the law. … There was a time when I was living without the law, but the commandment came and changed everything: sin came to life, and I died. This commandment was supposed to bring life; but in my experience, it brought death. Sin took advantage of the commandment, tricked me, and exploited it in order to kill me. So hear me out: the law is holy; and its commandments are holy, right, and good. … This is what we know: the law comes from the spiritual realm. My problem is that I am of the fallen human realm, owned by sin, which tries to keep me in its service. … I know that in me, that is, in my fallen human nature, there is nothing good. I can will myself to do something good, but that does not help me carry it out. I can determine that I am going to do good, but I don’t do it; instead, I end up living out the evil that I decided
05 Sep 2024
Seeing and understanding beyond what is considered the norm is special. There are things that are plain and there are those that are seen with the help of God. May the Lord help us see what He wants us to see and to understand as well. May nothing distract us. Luke 8:5-15.
Daily Prayer for September 5
I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day – and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing. 2 Timothy 4:7–8, NIV We thank you, Father in heaven, that you concern yourself with us and that you bind us to yourself through all your deeds and all your help. We thank you for showing us a way of hope, a way that becomes always clearer, always firmer under our feet. On this way we can defy every evil of this world and time, knowing for sure that everything will come out right and we will all be brought to the great, eternal goal, even though we have to deny ourselves and go through much suffering. Your kingdom must come to the glory of your name, so that all people may live on a higher plane and follow you, the only true help and true life. Amen. Recent articles on Plough The Word within the World James Matthew Wilson Poetry, the oldest and most universal of arts, is increasingly underappreciated. These four poets hope to reverse that. Read now Arvo Pärt’s Journey Joonas Sildre In this excerpt from Between Two Sounds, we see the moment when the Estonian composer begins to run afoul of the Soviet regime. Read now How Do You Know a Christian? Cody Cook Here’s a quick test from the early church. Read now A Deft Poet of Grief Nick Ripatrazone A review of Stephen Sexton’s melancholy and gentle book of poems, If All the World and Love Were Young. Read now The Joy of Watching Football Annie J. E. Reed Does watching sports together fulfill a deep and significant longing? Or is it just plain fun? Read now
Today’s Verse – Acts 9:4-5
[When the light from heaven flashed around him, Saul] fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” “Who are you, Lord?” Saul asked. “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,” he replied. —Acts 9:4-5 Thoughts on Today’s Verse… When Paul later teaches in his letters that the Church is the Body of Christ (Romans 12:3-4; 1 Corinthians 10:10-16-17; Ephesians 5:23, 29; Colossians 1:18, 24), he isn’t being theoretical. The Church IS Jesus’ presence, his Body alive and at work in the world. What is done to the Church as a collective group of people is done to Jesus. What is done to individual Christians is done to their Savior. Jesus made this clear to Paul, then known as Saul, by emphasizing that Saul’s persecution of believers was also persecution of Jesus — “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?” Jesus is present in the world today through his people! The saying is true: the only Jesus many will see today is the Jesus they see through you and me. My Prayer… Dear Father, please “Let the beauty of Jesus be seen in me, all His wonderful passion and purity; May His Spirit divine, all my being refine; Let the beauty of Jesus be seen in me.” In the name of my Savior, I pray. Amen. (From the song by Albert W.T. Orsbom.) All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION. © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
United with Me!
Note from Jesus Dear Disciple, You have received grace. I died for you when you were “far from God… powerless… weak… wasting [y]our lives in sin” and “in the heat of combat [as enemies]“ in your hearts toward the Father (Romans 5:6-10). (See yesterday’s note also.) Because of My sacrificial death, the Father’s love welled up into this great flood of grace. So what do you do with that grace? Do you keep sinning so that grace covers more and more sins? That was the kind of reasoning some in Paul’s day had about grace. What Paul wrote the Romans in today’s verses reminded them that something transformational happened in their lives when they were baptized because of their faith. In today’s verses, Paul reminds you that in baptism you were “joined with” Me and “united with” Me in My death; you were “buried with” Me after your “old sinful selves were crucified with” Me. Because you have been “united with” Me in My death and burial through baptism, you “will also be raised to live as” I now live to honor the Father. Your faith in My death, burial, and resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:1-5) empowers your baptism to be a participation in these saving events from My life. You died with Me and “were set free from the power of sin” and now you are “alive to God through” My power over sin and death. Not only have you received grace to be forgiven and cleansed from your sinful past, but you have also received grace to help you overcome the power of sin in your life. You are motivated not to sin because you recognize My sacrificial love and the cost of your redemption. But in addition to motivation, you have the power to “put to death” the sin in your life through the Holy Spirit. In a few days, you will read what Paul says about the Holy Spirit’s power. I want you to know that the Holy Spirit’s presence gives you the power to overcome the pull of sin and the allure of your selfish and sinful desires: For if your life is just about satisfying the impulses of your sinful nature, then prepare to die. But if you have invited the Spirit to destroy these selfish desires, you will experience life. (Romans 8:13) The Holy Spirit’s power helps you do what no law could ever do: to be transformed to be like Me (2 Corinthians 3:18) as the Spirit’s fruit of “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Galatians 5:22-23 NLT) is formed into your new holy life. This new life is yours because of grace. This grace gives you forgiveness and cleansing from past sin. It also gives you the power through the Holy Spirit to live this new life. So Paul closes this powerful chapter on grace with these incredible words of promise: The payoff for a life of sin is death, but God is offering us a free gift — eternal life through our Lord Jesus, the Anointed One, the Liberating King. Verses to Live I want you to notice as you read these powerful words from My servant, the apostle Paul, that your baptism joins you to Me and unites you with Me and My saving work because of your faith. By faith, you are united with Me in your baptism. My life is now yours. My power over sin is available to you. My future is now your shared future. Paul later writes about this future with Me in his letter to the Colossians: For you died to this life, and your real life is hidden with Christ in God. And when Christ, Who is your life, is revealed to the whole world, you will share in all his glory. (Colossians 3:3-4 NLT) So don’t try to earn your salvation — something Paul talks about in the next chapter of Romans — because you have already received salvation by grace through faith. But as Paul emphasizes here, don’t disregard grace or the commitment you made when you were saved. In baptism, you died to sin, so don’t go and give yourself to that cruel task master. Live for your Father because you have tasted the sweetness of His grace! Well then, should we keep on sinning so that God can show us more and more of his wonderful grace? Of course not! Since we have died to sin, how can we continue to live in it? Or have you forgotten that when we were joined with Christ Jesus in baptism, we joined him in his death? For we died and were buried with Christ by baptism. And just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glorious power of the Father, now we also may live new lives. Since we have been united with him in his death, we will also be raised to life as he was. We know that our old sinful selves were crucified with Christ so that sin might lose its power in our lives. We are no longer slaves to sin. For when we died with Christ we were set free from the power of sin. And since we died with Christ, we know we will also live with him. We are sure of this because Christ was raised from the dead, and he will never die again. Death no longer has any power over him. When he died, he died once to break the power of sin. But now that he lives, he lives for the glory of God. So you also should consider yourselves to be dead to the power of sin and alive to God through Christ Jesus. Do not let sin control the way you live; do not give in to sinful desires. Do not let any part of your body become an instrument of evil to serve sin. Instead, give yourselves completely to God, for you were dead, but now you have new life. So
04 Sep 2024
Not everyone has the privilege of seeing the Lord at work. May He reveal what He is doing to us. May we gain insight into His ways and understand what He is doing and what He expects of us. Luke 10:22-24.
Daily Prayer for September 4
He saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy. He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that, having been justified by his grace, we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life. Titus 3:5–7, NIV Lord our God, let your light shine in our hearts, the light that can gladden us and lead us until all our longing is stilled. May the higher nature born in us become ever stronger so that the lower and perishable nature does not rule over us. Grant that we may overcome and that our hearts may rejoice in being allowed to strive for the highest good because we are your children who can share in what is eternal. Amen. Recent articles on Plough Arvo Pärt’s Journey Joonas Sildre In this excerpt from Between Two Sounds, we see the moment when the Estonian composer begins to run afoul of the Soviet regime. Read now How Do You Know a Christian? Cody Cook Here’s a quick test from the early church. Read now A Deft Poet of Grief Nick Ripatrazone A review of Stephen Sexton’s melancholy and gentle book of poems, If All the World and Love Were Young. Read now The Joy of Watching Football Annie J. E. Reed Does watching sports together fulfill a deep and significant longing? Or is it just plain fun? Read now Jesus Is Coming – Plant a Tree! N. T. Wright In the new creation, the ancient human mandate to look after the garden is dramatically reaffirmed. Read now
Today’s Verse – John 9:3
“Neither this man nor his parents sinned,” said Jesus, “but this happened so that the work of God might be displayed in his life.” —John 9:3 Thoughts on Today’s Verse… Let’s ask God to help us view people through the eyes of Jesus so that we will see them as someone in whom the work of God needs to be displayed. When Jesus and his followers approached a man who was blind from birth, the disciples assumed that this misfortune had happened because someone had sinned. Jesus saw their labeling of the man as dehumanizing to the man and a dismissal of his value as a person because they thought he had sinned or his parents had. So, Jesus taught them, and if we pay attention, he teaches us to see a person’s hurt as our opportunity and responsibility to bring God’s grace to someone in need. So, what is this work of God we are to help display in people’s lives? Jesus had answered that question earlier in his ministry: “The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent” (John 6:28-29) — Jesus! My Prayer… Father, please help me see the people around me as Jesus does. I want to ensure that your work is done in their lives. Please give me patience with rude people, tenderness with hurting people, and boldness with those who are ready to hear the Good News of Jesus. Use me to help others display your work in their lives! In the name of Christ Jesus, I pray. Amen. All scripture quotations, unless otherwise indicated, are taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION. © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.