Today we are exploring our obedience to Jesus without questioning His instruction. We are looking at obeying Him without the need for us to weigh His guidance against our own desires. We are exploring faith and wonder.

Yesterday we spoke of being the friend of Jesus in the context of placing him before us in all things, but today we look at what kind of friend the groom has chosen for His best man. What kind of friend should we truly be?

 

Do you move along in your life of faith and feel like you are making great strides in sanctity only to have some trivial thing reawaken the old sinful person you used to be? Well, we all do, and our lives of faith are a constant struggle against our natural selves... so what can we do to overcome this? 

I really love the story of Jesus appearing to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus. This morning I am concentrating on what those disciples said after they finally realized that the man they had been traveling with was actually Jesus; "did not our heart burn within us."

This morning I am dwelling on a single phrase in the King James... it is written by Paul to the Galatians, and in Galatians 2:20 it reads..."by the faith of the son of God." This is opposed to modern translations which record it as "by the faith in the Son of God." So the question boils down to one word and two different translations... "in" or "of". The implications are great. 

We are going to contemplate an interesting topic this morning, by exploring two questions that are wonderful in their implication. Are we friends of God? Do we believe that is possible, and if so what does that mean in terms of our faith? 

Does God lead you in the way you should go, and if so, what awaits at the end of your journey? This is what I ponder this morning. Do we know the Person of the one who leads us and if so, do we need to fully understand where He is leading us to? 

How do we reconcile our physical and spiritual selves so that they both mirror Jesus? Sometimes we are so wrapped up in conforming our physical selves that we forget the spiritual side of who we are... or vice versa. 

When we perform our works of faith or even kneel to pray, who are we attempting to please? Are our eyes on Jesus and our hearts longing for God, or is there something or someone else who has taken the glory of our efforts? I am exploring the motivation behind our acts of faith this morning, and how we can keep them directed towards the glory of God.

Do we know the sins we commit? Are there things we do, or thoughts we have, that are sinful without our recognition? This morning I am considering my life and the possibility that there are indeed sins in it that I am yet to realize. To remove sin requires that we face it, and then, as Jesus said, "go, and sin no more."

Although we know Jesus for His love and mercy, and are overcome by the thought of His suffering and death for us, there was a time in which He was preparing to do battle with the sins of the world, and at that time even His disciples were amazed and afraid. At that moment Jesus was like us... struggling with a determination to defeat sin.

In the time of Jesus, not all slaves were taken in war, or against their will; some sold themselves into slavery for one reason or another. I am not talking about indentured servitude here, but slaves for the rest of their lives. Have you sold yourself as a slave to something or somebody? Before you answer no, are you sure? Do you have an addiction or some sin you keep hidden?