When we read the scriptures dealing with the Lord’s Prayer, we memorize them as a recitation. We repeat these words faithfully, and recognize the importance of their detailed instruction, but do we use them as a template for our own daily prayers? So many of us are accustomed to praying first for ourselves, and then secondly for the kingdom of God, but are our desires, which comprise our prayers, out of order? Are they wrong facing, and looking first towards our humanity, and then towards the divine?

Is there such a thing as spiritual jealousy that can get in the way of our personal pursuit of faith? Are we ever tempted to look at the walk of another and judge either ourselves, or that person? The answer is yes, and there is danger in this because of its effect on our ability to focus on the faith, and salvation, we are personally meant to seek. Faith is as individual as a fingerprint, and as intimately defining as our DNA. Every individual’s walk of faith is perfectly designed by God for he who walks it.

We are Christians because we believe in Jesus Christ, but we are called to believe in Him through our faith. The story of Thomas refusing to believe that Jesus had risen until he actually touched his wounds is the greatest example of the necessity of faith that we read in the Bible. Thomas sat at the feet of Jesus, and witnessed His life and miracles, yet when it came time to truly believe what he had heard and seen, he lacked the faith to do so. Is this our story too? Are we modern day versions of Thomas? Are we waiting on Jesus to present Himself to us before we can actually believe?

When your family is facing impending danger who is it that sounds the alarm? Every family seems to have someone who stands watch, and serves as our watchman. This is more than true in the Bible as both spiritual and physical warnings are issued. The two big questions are these… does the watchman honor his calling by sounding the alarm, and, do we pay attention once that the warning has been issued? If we are reluctant to sound the alarm, or upon hearing, we don’t react to the trumpets sounding in the night, then we are truly lost.

There are times in our lives of faith that we find ourselves sad. We feel like our spirits have faded and that our prayers are falling rather than rising from our lips. We continue on in our belief, but the joy in us has been diminished in some way. When this occurs we have lost sight of the fact that God is there with us, and that Jesus is abiding in us… we are saddened, perhaps disappointed, or mourning, even though we are standing in the very presence of God. Oh how incredulous we are, even while we are walking towards Emmaus with Jesus. In this glorious moment we are not seeing, or realizing, that He is speaking to us. This occurred on the road to Emmaus, and it happens to us today.

When we first witness to someone who has never heard the good news of Christ, or when we are having a gospel conversation with a person who is struggling on the verge of believing, one of their most pressing questions they ask is “if there is a God, and He is good, then why do bad things happen to good people? Why was His Son made to suffer and die for us?” It seems we are alright with the notion of bad people suffering, or being punished, but yet we stumble when those we see as good are allowed to face hardship, pain, or tribulation. So how do we speak to them about the nature of life in the world, sin vs righteousness, and the fact that without sickness there can be no healing, unless there is suffering, we can’t know joy, or… without having come face to face with bad, or worse yet, evil, then we can never truly know what is good.

When we hear the Lord speaking to us what does that sound like? What is it about His voice that convinces us that we are actually speaking with Him, and later, when He speaks again how is it that we recognize His voice as being the same? We read in scripture of God speaking, we imagine Him speaking before He talks to us the first time, and we know somehow that we will knowHim when he does, but how is that? Do I hear Him as you hear Him, as someone else hears Him? If He whispers, shouts, or speaks in a normal tone how do we recognize that it is the same person; is it just like how we know our earthly father’s voice? The voice of God… so mysterious… so indescribable, and yet so distinct and certain. How does our Father sound to us?

When we are in need of a miraculous healing, defense, or some other thing that is beyond our ability, we come to the Lord in prayer. We meet Jesus, and ask Him to step into our lives and provide what we need, but do we really believe He can do what we are asking? Jesus will ask us about our faith, and we will most likely say that we believe, but do we really? Are we ready to hand our problem to Him with absolute certainty that He is able to do this?

Are we prepared for the imminent return of Jesus Christ? Are we ready to rise from our homes, never to return, or have we been lulled to sleep by the spiritual complacency of the world, perhaps blinded by agents of darkness within the Christian Church itself? Maybe we have become like those who ignore the small problems until they finally break and and can’t be fixed, or will cost more to replace than they can afford to pay. It is imperative that we keep our faith at the ready, and watch second by second for the clouds to part, and for our savior to descend. Are our hearts, minds, and souls prepared, and waiting for Him in great anticipation? Do we earnestly pray “Come quickly Lord Jesus”, and honestly mean what we say?

There is nothing in the world that we should boast of because in Christ we are no longer its citizens; we are aliens in a strange and foreign country. We are like the thief who, crucified alongside Jesus, was made new by his faith, and dined thereafter in paradise. We are new creatures in Jesus, having been crucified to the world, even as it has been crucified to us. Today we are weary travelers in a distant land who long for the familiar sight of home, and the true joy, and comfort, that awaits us there.

Have you ever dreamed that you had done something, and your dream seemed so real that when you woke up you started your day fully convinced that whatever you had dreamed had actually occurred? Then, when you realized that it was just a dream you were shocked, and disappointed? Dreams are amazing, some are frightening, some enlightening, and others bizarre, but occasionally we receive one that we are convinced is from God, and dreams such as this, the ones we not only think are true, but are convinced have significance beyond a night’s fantasy, can be life altering. Some dreams bridge the ether of spiritual thought to become physical reality, and these are like an answered prayer or a divine directive. Dreams such as this are rare, but they can change the course of lives, and sometimes history’s.

God is with us always, and Jesus says He is with us “till the end of the age.” Can we comprehend the magnitude of this? Is the idea of omnipresence even something we are capable of fully understanding? When Jesus says that He abides in us, and we in Him, do we realize the extent to which He is with us? Do we grasp the fact that He is also telling us that we are with Him? In life, and even in death He is with us, and we are with Him. In believing we realize that we are never without His presence… even in death.

We serve the Lord and want to be a powerhouse of faith in doing so. As we go about our day praising Him, worshipping Him, witnessing to others, and living out our lives doing the will of God, how do we see ourselves? Do we fancy ourselves to be a mighty David, a brilliant Joseph, a tortured Paul, or maybe even a rock like Peter? Whoever we imagine ourselves to be as we follow Jesus, it requires great strength. Sometimes our strength must be physical, but more often it is in humility, leadership, preaching, teaching, endurance, or any of a variety of other gifts, but it is always in love, and faith. So, are we strong enough on our own? The answer is always, always, “NO!” But if that is true then are we lost? Is there an unseen well from which we can take a big drink of strength each day?

As Christmas Day approaches, and what should be a time of great joy, and restful peace draws near, let’s put down our daily burdens, and ask ourselves how long has it has been since we have taken a true rest on the Sabbath? Just as we say that the Sabbath is a day of rest, and yet continue to work during it, so it is with Advent. In a time when we should be at peace in the anticipation and contemplation of the birth of Christ, we are busily rushing about preparing for parties, decorating our homes, and stressing in shopping malls as we buy gifts. Have we lost the peaceful serenity of the shepherds in the pasture?

The law, and the covenant of Abraham are fulfilled in Christ, and for us only faith in God and Jesus Christ, founded in love, identifies us as God’s children. We have no mark, nor altering of our flesh, that sets us apart from one another, because in Christ all men, Jew and Gentile alike, are made one by our faith, and by God’s love that has been instilled in us. Are we loving God, Jesus Christ, and one another, as we should, and has our undying faith in God, and His Son, made us righteous… even holy?