It's colossal, it's stupendous, it's amazing, but just not what the Lord wants you to do. Do we think we are million-dollar men and women of God who are too good to be doing the minimum wage work of the kingdom? Maybe we need to think twice.
All in Daily Devotional
It's colossal, it's stupendous, it's amazing, but just not what the Lord wants you to do. Do we think we are million-dollar men and women of God who are too good to be doing the minimum wage work of the kingdom? Maybe we need to think twice.
Do I have the serenity in my life that Jesus had in His? Is my life spent settling into constant comfort and peace, and if not... why isn't it? Perhaps I am not truly abiding in Christ. These thoughts were provoked in me by my devotional reading this morning.
Where do I make my abode? Where is my place of residence? This morning, I am trying to determine whether I claim my earthly home as my permanent residence, or whether I list my heavenly home as such. Then there are the times in my travels that home becomes the temporary place where I lay my head.
Coming to Jesus; this is my contemplation this morning. Do we come to Him in the physical act of circumcision, baptism, and communion, or something far deeper and more spiritual? What does He mean by these three simple words... "Come unto me."
Am I seeking the Lord as I should? Am I asking Jesus for the things that are right in the eyes of God? This morning, I am asking myself these questions among others and seeking to place Him foremost in my thought-life as I pray and walk this world. How can we pray right if we don’t think right, and how can we think right if we don’t focus right on God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit?
Are we too ashamed to speak to God, much less ask Him for something? Are we too embarrassed by our condition or too ashamed of our sin to reach out to Him for help? When should we bring our needs or our contrition before Him in prayer? When should we ask for forgiveness?
Are we running the race that God has laid out before us, or are we like the horse that never left the gate when the gun sounded? Is the call of the Lord fading into the distance, or are we following His call into an exciting adventure? These are the questions I would like us to ponder today.
Jesus said that He would do anything we asked in His name. What do we think that means? Are we the type people who will get an offer for a free dinner and then place an order for the most expensive thing on the menu? Is the offer that Jesus has extended to us an open invitation to ask for the moon, or something quite different? Why is Jesus making us this promise, and do we really understand its terms?
God’s will and working out our own salvation; this is our contemplation today. What is our role in our redemption and salvation, and has God been working within us willfully to do His good pleasure? Have we conformed ourselves to His will?
Repeat this after me: “I will not be afraid today. My God stands with me, and in trusting this, I fear nothing.” Are we facing the world courageously with Yahweh, our God, or are we fearfully alone? Do we come up against trouble and then begin seeking God and Jesus Christ out of our desperation? Well, try walking with Them before hardship arrives! As human beings, our personal will saddles us with the desire to do things on our own. We find that we are plagued by the desire to face everything ourselves. Does this describe you and how you place your will first as you travel through life? In certain circumstances you might find worldly success on your own, but in the long run you will not… it will become a death sentence.
““Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.”
Matthew 7:21 ESV
God never forsakes us, but this morning we will contemplate the fear of His abandonment that can drive us. We will think about a particular time of doubt, and the routine nature of our lives that made us feel alone. When we are saved by our Lord Jesus, and God begins to move powerfully in our lives, we feel their grandeur and know intuitively that God has a great plan for us. In times such as this, times of excitement, challenge, and interspersed with suffering, we feel the Lord’s presence in a mighty way. This makes it easy to know God is with us because we feel Him, and are working with Him, but can we handle those times when God desires for us to be still, and why does He ask us to do this? Why is this so important?
Today let’s mull over what it means to really know God. What should a life be like that is fully emersed in and engaged with the will of God? Let’s consider that place in our faith where we struggle less and the comfort of walking in God’s presence has settled peacefully over us.
So many times I have felt the hands of Jesus as He washed my feet. I have come to Him for forgiveness only to find that His response would be “Sit down Rich.”, and He would proceed to wash my feet as He spoke with me. In my most unworthy moments He washes me clean. Not as a nurse, or a parent would do for a child, but rather, as a servant would bathe his master, a host would wash the feet of an honored guest, or a wife would wash her husband’s hands and feet before bed. He would approach me in servitude, humility, and love when I deserved none of these. Jesus washes my feet… the feet of a sinner. Have you wept during confession of your sins, and as you delivered a gut-wrenching plea for forgiveness? Have you felt the hands of Jesus on your feet during those moments of total humiliation and debasement?
If left to our own devices, what would we Who Are We Without God?be like? If God was withdrawn from the equation of our life what would the solution of our lives be? I don't know if I really want to contemplate this or not because something tells me I won't like what I see. As I read Pastor Oswald Chambers this morning, he made some interesting observations regarding how we would rather do works for God than with Him. Listen to what he wrote:
Trusting solely in God is my contemplation this morning. There is none but Him who is true and always dependable. He is worthy of our trust and His Word never wavers. And yet, we have a tendency to place our trust in each other and in this we are disappointed over and over again. We are fallible, and in being such we have the propensity to let others down that have put their trust in us, but God never fails, and His Word is forever true. Even Jesus acknowledged the inability of man to be trusted: