A God of My Own Creation (Part 2)

“Christ is the visible image of the invisible God. He existed before anything was created and is supreme over all creation, for through Him God created everything in the heavenly realms and on earth. He made the things we can see and the things we can’t see- such as thrones, kingdoms, rulers, and authorities in the unseen world. Everything was created through Him and for Him.” (Colossians 1:15-16 NLT)

Paul continues his description of Jesus in the verses following those above in Colossians 1, but the point for us is, we’d better make sure we’re following the God of the Bible. The god of too many professing believers in Christ or a christ, is far too small.

Fruitfulness, as I understand it from Scripture, is, on some levels, a two-way street. What, for example, is the fruit, the evidence, of the god you and I serve? If I’m following a God that claims to be the Author of heaven and earth and promises me a home in heaven, doesn’t it make sense to “check His credentials?”

Photo by Jacub Gomez on Pexels.com

The God I serve, and I pray and trust you also serve, is the pre-eminent force of all existence. My God is pre-existent, which means He has no beginning and will have no end. He IS the reason behind everything that now exists. And be careful, I’m hearing some “murmurings!”

“Yep, see, I told you. God’s responsible for evil! He’s behind it all, just like the guy just wrote!” First, that’s NOT what the guy just wrote. Yes, of course, God created the earth and all it contains, but evil was man’s idea, not God’s. He gave us free will, knowing we’d mess up ourselves and our world, but even before He started the world spinning, He had a plan in place to free us from sin and from ourselves. His name is Jesus!

But, in all fairness, what we believe about God is all based on faith. We can choose to believe He is who He claims to be or not, but that’s for another post. For our purpose’s today, we’re looking at those who profess faith in God or a god but haven’t adequately researched the “god” they are following.

Because I’ve read about, thoroughly studied, and researched the God of the Bible, I’ve come to see Him as exactly who He claimed to be. But because I’ve come to see Him clearly it doesn’t necessarily mean that those who have been following another “god” or no god at all for many years, perhaps generations, will all of a sudden see the light and put their faith in Jesus. Imagine if you were the spouse in yesterday’s story, would you immediately open your arms and heart to this “stranger” that has knocked on your door?

Similarly, a person of faith in another explanation of God isn’t likely to immediately change their whole system of belief based on one conversation, and rightfully so. As I’ve written many times, don’t take my word or anyone else’s, research the Scriptures for yourself, on the basis of their own merit. Let the Lord reveal Himself to you, personally, giving you confidence He isn’t only what I say about Him, but what you, hopefully, will come to believe He is to you as well. But most importantly, He is what He says about Himself.

The ”fruit” of God’s life He has allowed to be revealed in and through my life is undeniable to me and, I pray, to others. He’s given me insight and understanding of things that have revolutionized the way I see and understand Him and many things about my own life. But He’s also revealed Himself in and through the “fruit” He’s bearing in my life. How so? Through His “love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control,” and in many other ways.

Let’s wrap this up in tomorrow’s post.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed 😊

A God of My Own Creation?

“Then the way you live will always honor and please the Lord, and your lives will produce every kind of good fruit. All the while, you will grow as you learn to know God better and better.” (Colossians 1:10 NLT)

Imagine you’ve been married five years. You have one child and another on the way. You’re happy, content, and anticipating living the rest of your life with your spouse and kids. Then you get a knock on the door, you open the door, and to your surprise, there stands your spouse (or so you thought). “Why did you knock on the door? Why didn’t you just come in like you always do?”

A conversation begins and the truth is finally revealed, this person isn’t your spouse at all. The truth is the person to whom you are married is an impostor. The person you intended to marry, who now stands before you, was in an accident and has been hospitalized and unable to communicate for the last five years, and only now has had the opportunity to contact you to explain why they weren’t able to come to the wedding.

Photo by Heiner on Pexels.com

They know nothing of your present situation, only that they still love you and can’t imagine life without you. So many unanswered questions. What do you do? Who is the person to whom you’re married, the person with whom you’ve built a life, whom you’ve grown to love and respect.

What’s the issue in this situation, the basis upon which a decision must be made? Your mind is racing: “But they look exactly like you! I thought it was you!”

What’s the point? Many professing believers in Jesus have “married” the wrong god! They sound the same! They “look” the same, at least as we imagined they’d “look!” They use some of the same terms to describe themselves! You’ve followed them for years, but they’re not the God of the Bible.

The Lord first gave me this idea as I prayed for a dear Mormon family I’ve grown to love very much but can’t seem to find a way to get them to consider for themselves they’re “married” to the wrong god. To hear them speak, they genuinely believe they are loving and serving the Jesus of the Bible, when in reality, they’ve been duped and are living a lie. Their “Jesus” isn’t God, he’s half-man and half-god, not the God-man of the Bible.

Then the Lord prompted me to look further. How many in the churches of America and across our world, are following a god of their own creation. A god of prosperity, or a gentle, white-haired old gentleman rocking away in heaven wringing his hands wondering how to get the world under control. Or a vicious, violent, mean-spirited god who can’t wait to take revenge on the worthless minions who take up space on planet earth.

Why is that even important? Because if we have a wrong view of God, we can never see the God of the Bible or ourselves correctly. To misunderstand who God is, is to misunderstand the purpose of our own life, the reason God allows us to have breath in the first place.

Many have built very comfortable “Christian” lives on a lie, believing they’re running their own lives, they just need “god” to help them out when they get in a jam; otherwise, their attitude is: “I’ve got this! I just need ‘god’ to give me respectability and help me smooth out the rough spots.”

The fruit of our lives, ultimately, will bear the truth of who we’re really following, the God or god to whom we’ve really pledged our life. Who is it for me? For you? Let’s look at this more closely in tomorrow’s post.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed 😊

What Does It Mean to Remain?

“Yes, I am the vine; you are the branches. Those who remain in Me and I in them, will produce much fruit. For apart from Me you can do nothing. Anyone who does not remain in Me is thrown away like a useless branch and withers. Such branches are gathered into a pile to be burned.” (John 15:5-6 NLT)

Too often we jump to the conclusion that what Jesus is addressing in these verses is salvation, but that would be a mistake. The issue here is fruitfulness, which of course is, arguably, the single most important indicator of life. But remember the context.

In the next verse Jesus points directly to the point of remaining (abiding) in Him: “But if you remain in Me and My words remain in you, you may ask for anything you want, and it will be granted! When you produce much fruit, you are My true disciples. This brings great glory to My Father.”

Photo by Kai-Chieh Chan on Pexels.com

Jesus’ point is clear: His “true disciples” will bear much fruit, but what does that look like? It will look like rendering much glory to the Father. But how? By abiding (remaining) in constant and close communion with the Lord Jesus, illustrated by how we pray – that for which we ask Him in prayer.

The real question here is “What is the focus of most of my prayers?” For whose glory am I asking? Who will stand to benefit from my prayer? What “fruit” will grow as a result of my seeking the Father in Jesus’ Name? Realizing we’re not the fruit producers, only the fruit bearers. Remember, the point of prayer isn’t so much what’s being asked, but what’s behind the asking? Not only content, but motive.

Ideally, for someone who professes faith in Jesus, we’re not following Jesus simply to receive, but to give. Yes, of course, we must receive. Jesus IS our life, so we receive our sustenance from Him. He is our Sustainer, in the sense that apart from Him we are nothing and can do nothing. So, we MUST receive from Him. So, prayer is our lifeline.

The context of our asking is to give evidence of our allegiance to Him, our dependence upon Him, but also to give glory, honor, adoration, and worship to our Father. So, the bottom line here is, why do we pray? Are we seeking to use God to get our way, or humbly acknowledging that He IS our all in all and apart from Him we are nothing and can do nothing.

Fruitfulness grows out of intimacy. No intimacy, no fruit. No fruit, no relationship. No relationship, no heaven. And, yes, I know I said it wasn’t about salvation, but in a sense it is. Notice in the above verse Jesus mentions “My true disciples.” What is that? A disciple is a pupil, a learner, but more specifically, Jesus says they are “My” true disciples.

Does it make sense that Jesus knows those who are His and those who are not? And what is the measure of that knowledge? Intimacy! Closeness! Relationship! Anyone can say anything, but it doesn’t make it true. Do you think everyone who believes they are a “disciple” actually is one? Even among the twelve to whom Jesus was speaking, one was a devil, not a disciple – even after walking with Him for three years.

We’re in this relationship with Jesus, not for what we can get out of it, but what we can learn, how we can become more invested in the One who gave His all for us. Reading the Bible, going to church, serving, or saying prayers doesn’t qualify us to be a disciple. So, what does? Bearing fruit! How? By allowing our life – everything we’re becoming and every desire of our heart, all that motivates us from the opening of our eyes in the morning until they close in sleep at night – glorifying and honoring our King, not ourselves.

Our asking in prayer grows out of our hunger for Him, not out of our need for things that will feed our own selfishness.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed 😊

Never Stop Praying (Part 2)

“And remember, when you are being tempted, do not say, ‘God is tempting me.’ God is never tempted to do wrong, and He never tempts anyone else. Temptation comes from our own desires, which entice us and drag us away. These desires give birth to sinful actions. And when sin is allowed to grow, it gives birth to death.” (James 1:13-15 NLT)

Perhaps the single most important “prompt” to never stop praying is temptation. While temptation in and of itself is not sin, it quickly leads to sin if not kept in check. Charles Spurgeon wrote: “Since you are tempted without ceasing, pray without ceasing.

When my wife and I first met I literally wanted to be with her every waking second. We both worked, so, it put a cramp in my “full-time” desires to be with her, but she was always on my mind. We don’t usually think of thinking about someone as “prayer,” but that’s essentially what it is. The focus of our thoughts guides our life. We are the products of our thoughts.

Photo by Hassan OUAJBIR on Pexels.com

What we think about comes about, so, if Jesus is at the center of our thoughts, our every desire, ideally, is to please Him, honor Him, share Him, (all I could talk about was Kathy when we were dating), and be with Him. The plot thickens because, at least for now, He’s invisible to us, so we can only “speak” to Him by a “spiritual” phone we often refer to as prayer.

Kathy and I would spend hours on the phone, sometimes literally falling asleep while trying to carry on a conversation. Similarly, sin, at least in the beginning stages of our relationship with the Lord, is our constant companion. We can’t expect Satan to sit back and do nothing as we seek to walk faithfully with Jesus, but the longer we walk with Him, on many levels, temptation loses its attraction.

As when Kath and I were dating she was always on my mind, so, when our love for Jesus begins to blossom, He’s constantly on our mind. We often have this “honeymoon” experience with the Lord, and we’re tempted to believe: “Whoa, this is going to be a breeze!”

Then reality sets in and Satan begins to draw more and more of our attention. “That new secretary at work is a babe!” Or “That new guy in the apartment near me is a looker!” Or we pass by the car dealership, shoe store, or __________ and think: “I deserve that! (whatever “that” looks like for you). The point is Satan’s goal is to turn your thoughts from Jesus back to him, and his primary means of doing that is the person looking back at you from the mirror.

Before we met Jesus, we were the center of our own universe, then after we found in Him everything we’d ever hoped He would be, Satan begins to draw our thoughts back to the “freedoms” we had before all of those “Biblical restrictions.” What we too quickly forget is the bondage in which those “freedoms” had us. We so foolishly believe: “Oh, I can quit ‘this’ (whatever has you in its devilish grasp) anytime I want to!” Yeh, and I can walk on water or fly to the moon without assistance.

Over time it gets easier to not only have ongoing conversations with the Lord, but long for them, depend on them as a drowning man clings to his life preserver. In this season of my life, Jesus is nearly always on my mind. In every circumstance, every conversation, every task, every aspect of my life I’m realizing that He IS my all-in-all, and that’s the way I want it.

How about you? Are you there yet? If not, keep focusing on Him, because over time Satan will lose His grip on you. That’s our goal. That’s why we never stop praying.

Hallelujah! What a Savior!

Blessings, Ed 😊

Pray Without Ceasing

“Never stop praying.” (1 Thessalonians 5:17 NLT)

Early in my walk with the Lord I read a lot of books on prayer, but among the most helpful were written by George Müller. Why? Because he wrote from what he lived every day. Life is the classroom in which we learn, not only to pray, but to learn the “art” of prayer. If you want to learn to pray you have to be willing to do 2 things: (1) Focus every day on getting closer to Jesus. And (2) Learn to desire His voice as you listen to Him every waking moment.

“But how do I do that? I work, have kids, cook meals, and on and on! I have a life, I don’t have time to pray every moment!” See (1) above! Prayer grows out of relationship. As the relationship deepens, the desire for prayer will deepen. Brother Müller wrote: “I pray as I walk about, when I lie down and when I rise up. And the answers are always coming.”

Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko on Pexels.com

By God’s grace I’m finally beginning to understand how to “Never stop praying.” But how? First, by understanding that prayer isn’t only speaking, but listening. God is always speaking, but we are so easily distracted by life and all that entails, it’s very easy for us to not “hear” His voice. The most prominent way the Lord speaks is through His Word, the Bible, but it’s far from the only way.

Why is that so critical? Because He will never tell us anything or instruct us to do anything that isn’t verifiable in the Bible. Even as I write He’s speaking, correcting, giving me ideas, sending me to Scriptures that illustrate what I’m writing.

Think about the Apostle Paul. Over and over in his writings he’s highlighting things the Lord has taught him or is teaching him. His letters are filled with very practical instruction about daily issues regarding life, sin, holiness, where he should go or shouldn’t go, receiving on the spot guidance on a ship on his way to Rome. The Lord sent an angel to give Paul instructions for that moment that saved the lives of everyone on the ship.

In the closing verses of 1 Corinthians 6 Paul is essentially defining what holiness looks like as he paints a sharp contrast between those who walk in the ways of the world and those who walk with God. Then in 1 Corinthians 7:1 he writes: “Because we have these promises, dear friends, let us cleanse ourselves from everything that can defile our body, or spirit. And let us work toward complete holiness because we fear God.”

If our hearts aren’t focused on reverencing God in every dimension of our being, we won’t even desire to hear God’s voice. We’ll settle for going to church, listening to the entertaining music and letting someone else tell us what to believe about God. We’ll dupe ourselves into believing “that’s what I believe,” when we rarely, if ever read God’s Word or take the time to get to know God better. Truth be told, many professing believers don’t have a clue what they believe.

God becomes a means to an end, not an end in and of Himself. Unless and until the Lord is our everything, what we read about, think about, long to be like, long to discover new ways to express our love for Him, serve Him, magnify Him with every fiber of our being, we won’t know Him, let alone hear His voice.

To never stop praying is essentially an ongoing adventure with God, learning who He is, what He desires of us, and deciding whatever He wants for us, that’s what we want, then we talk about it – He speaks, we listen, we speak, He listens – throughout the whole day regardless of what else is going on. By the way, He often speaks most clearly THROUGH what we’re doing or through what’s going on.

Let’s look at another vital aspect of why we should “never stop praying,” tomorrow.

Blessings, Ed 😊

What About Physical Healing?

“Is anyone among your suffering? Let him pray. Is anyone cheerful? Let him sing praise. Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer of faith will save the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up. And if he has committed sins, he will be forgiven.” (James 5:13-15 ESV)

The same principle we looked at in yesterday’s post applies to praying for health. Praying for an 80-year-old with a cold to have perfect health isn’t realistic. And yes, I know there are those who believe as long as you’re breathing you should have perfect health, that it’s “God’s will.” Call me a doubter, but I don’t believe that’s what the Bible teaches.

We’re all going to die of something, so, understanding that nothing enters my life except it passes through the filter of God’s permission helps me to understand that, not in spite of, but because of my disease, God’s intention in allowing me to have Alzheimer’s may be the devil’s attempt to push me away from God, but God’s design is to draw me nearer to Him. It’s in our weakness that He’s exalted, not, as a rule, in our strength.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

He’s teaching me things in this season of my life I’ve never seen in Scripture before. That’s what has prompted this article. I’ve never seen prayer as I see it now, not as a tool in my hands to get more out of God, but a tool in God’s hands to give us more of Himself. It’s all a matter of perspective. If I’m on the throne of my own life, then it makes perfect sense that I should seek to use God to get whatever I want. Wow! That’s a win-win if there ever was one! And then throw in heaven on top of that! Who wouldn’t go for a deal like that?

There’s just one problem – it’s not backed by Scripture. The purpose of prayer isn’t to get our way, or even to get things from God, it’s to help us see what the Lord is seeking to accomplish in, through, and on our behalf, so that He can have His way, letting us be helped and blessed, and His Father glorified.

The emphasis isn’t on us, but the Father. He is the goal of our asking, so, to the extent what we ask Jesus to give us exalts, honors, and magnifies the Father, to that extent we are blessed and the Father is glorified. We cannot forget the purpose of prayer: “So the Son can bring glory to the Father.” That’s why Jesus said to ask in His name.

We pray, not simply for answers, but for intimacy with the Father, which can only happen through the sacrifice of prayer. And answers won’t come, whether material or spiritual if our focus is on us. The irony is, God will open the floodgates of heaven to give us anything we ask when our heart is fixed on Him. Intimacy, closeness to God, grows out of devotion, trust, faithfulness, and love.

When our top priority is knowing the Lord, the most prominent desire of our heart is more of Him – to see Him more clearly, to hear Him as we listen more intently, and to walk with Him more nearly. That for which we ask for ourselves will always grow out of our desire to experience those three things, because they are the reason for our prayers.

Al Mohler wrote: “There is no true intimacy with God without prayer.” And the focus of our prayers must be the Father’s glory, not ours.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed 😊

More Thoughts on Prayer

“I tell you the truth, anyone who believes in Me will do the same works I have done, and even greater works, because I am going to be with the Father. You can ask for anything in My name, and I will do it, so that the Son can bring glory to the Father. Yes, ask Me for anything in My name, and I will do it!” (John 14:12-14 NLT)

Nobody prayed more in line with God’s will than Jesus. He knew better than anyone how to get things accomplished that pleased His Father. His miraculous feats weren’t to render glory to Himself, but to reveal to the world the God behind the miracles.

The verse above that urges us to ask for anything in His name is prefaced by the unbelievable claim that we can do “even greater works, because I am going to be with the Father.” What does that mean? Jesus is the embodiment of all Truth; therefore, He is incapable of telling a lie. That means that what He said is exactly what He meant.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

Think about it. Jesus lived for only 33 years. I’m soon to turn 77. Shouldn’t my prayers render more glory to the Father with 44 extra years? “Yeh, but what about all the miracles He performed? Where are YOUR miracles?” That’s a great question, but it misses the point. Miracles reveal who God the Father is so people who see them can have a clearer picture of Him.

The miracle of new birth in Jesus and the resultant transformation that can only come from the Spirit’s activity is the greatest miracle known to man. Jesus explained that in Matthew 19. To think Jesus’ invitation is for us to have God lavish wealth and possessions on us isn’t only wrong, it’s blasphemous.

If that’s disappointing to you, you may not be a Jesus follower. Why would I say that? Because a Jesus follower’s heart beats with desire to please Jesus, and the single most important way to accomplish that is to bring glory to His Father. If your heart’s desire is a better job, a vacation home, a new car, or anything else material that will make your life easier, you’ve probably missed the point of prayer.

And please don’t hear what I’m not saying. There’s nothing necessarily wrong with wanting any of those things, but when you’re pounding heaven’s door wanting the Lord to provide you with money to buy a new car when all you can afford is a used car, who’s wanting to receive glory? YOU, but God the Father likely won’t receive any glory! There’s nothing wrong with praying for necessities, which, of course, a car may be, but the point isn’t that for which we pray, it’s ultimately who will get the glory?

Let’s pick this up in tomorrow’s post.

Blessings, Ed 😊

Thoughts on Prayer

“But if you remain in Me and My words remain in you, you may ask for anything you want, and it will be granted! When you produce much fruit, you are My true disciples. This brings great glory to My Father.” (John 15:7-8 NLT)

It would seem the verses above are an open invitation to ask for the desires of our heart to be met, and on some levels, they are, but let’s dig deeper. The broader context is a conversation Jesus is having with His disciples shortly before He’s betrayed and murdered. If we turn back to John 14:13-14, we’ll get a broader sense as to exactly what He’s saying.

“You can ask for anything in My name, and I will do it…” Yes, but notice His next words: “…so that the Son can bring glory to the Father.”  The foundational purpose of prayer isn’t to get something, it’s ultimately to give something. Our requests should prompt Jesus to answer in such a way that His Father is glorified, blessed, pleased, and magnified.

Photo by Inzmam Khan on Pexels.com

What might that look like? Let’s say the end of the money comes before the end of the month and I have no way to pay my ____________ (and you can fill in the blank). So, what do I do? I pray, but how? “Oh Lord Jesus, You see my empty bank account. I realize now I should have waited on that vacation, but…” And on and on it goes. Is the Lord going to answer your prayer for money when you’ve painted yourself into that corner? He may, if you’re a brand-new believer, but He doesn’t as a rule, reward irresponsibility, He rewards faith.

So, in another context, let’s say someone prays like this: “Father, my love for You grows stronger every day, so I know You hear me when I pray. I’ve done all I can with the little I have coming in, but my kids are hungry, and I have no resources to adequately care for them. I’m so grateful for Your care of me since my husband died, and I want You to be glorified through Your provision of me and my family. I’m not begging, because You are a good, good Father, I’m just thanking You in advance for how You will meet this need. In Jesus’ holy name.”

Prayer is an avenue of learning and growing in our love for and dependence upon the Lord, which has nothing to do with where we are socially, economically, or in any other way. Trust in God grows out of our hunger for Him, not hunger for provisions to live better materially, but to grow closer to the Lord spiritually.

When I literally didn’t have two pennies to rub together and could have papered my wall with eviction notices, I was never evicted, not because I was a smooth talker or was resourceful, but because, by God’s grace, I understood that the Lord was my provider, and He ALWAYS provided. Sometimes it was close (😊), but He NEVER failed.

God wasn’t my “sugar daddy,” He was my loving Father who used my limited resources to teach me things about myself and about Himself that I desperately needed to learn. He humbled me when I wasn’t ready and/or willing to humble myself. I’ve never forgotten the lessons I learned in that season.

So, today, if you see me pick up a penny, it’s not because I need the penny now, it’s to remind me in whom I’ve placed my trust. In this season I have need of nothing material. My Father cares for every detail of my life and I will continue to bless His holy Name for His faithfulness and provision.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed 😊

With Nothing Left

“As for me, my life has already been poured out as an offering to God. The time of my death is near. I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, and I have remained faithful. And now the prize awaits me – the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give me on the day of His return. And the prize is not just for me but for all who eagerly look forward to His appearing.” (2 Timothy 4:6-8 NLT)

There’s a scene in the movie “Chariots of Fire,” where Eric Liddell is deliberately tripped and knocked down early in a race. A lesser man wouldn’t have gotten up, but with leg bleeding, ignoring the pain, he not only finished the race, he won it! He then collapsed, gasping for air. He had nothing left. That’s what I want to be like when my life ends – poured out for God, having given all to His honor and fame.

That’s the way Paul felt as he faced the end of his life. The word “poured” used in the verse above has reference to “a drink offering, a libation made to God.” It’s also used figuratively in reference to a martyr’s death, “poured out” to God’s honor, which, of course, Paul’s life was. But what about me? What about you? Are our lives being poured out as an offering to the Lord, to ourselves, or to something else?

The picture Paul paints is of a person on their death bed – spent, no energy, gasping for breath, not able to speak, just waiting for the last bit of air to pass from their lungs and their heart to stop. What do you envision people will say when that day comes for you?

“They were a great person, they squeezed out every ounce of life – on the golf course! At their job! On their spouse/family! For the church! Through the local shelter! ___________. Or a thousand other things, but if our/their motive isn’t to honor Jesus and increase His fame, for all intent and purpose, we’ve wasted our lives. Remember, it’s not what you do that builds favor with God, it’s why you do it. So, if what you’re doing is for your glory, honor and praise, you might as well stay on the golf course or at work, it’s doing you no eternal good.

Jesus gave EVERYTHING for us, how can we give Him less? And yes, of course, we honor Him by doing a great job at our work, loving our families well, serving the church and other organizations, spending enjoyable time doing things with our friends, but if Jesus isn’t the motivation and explanation for our love for those things, we’ve missed it.  

Paul said: “I have remained faithful.” The word he used here means “to attend to carefully, take care of.” It’s like if a family member or friend entrusts me with their mint 1969 Ford Mustang Mach I. And I say, “Sure, no problem.” Then I drive it carelessly, park it places it gets scratched and bumped, never wash or clean it, and leave the gas tank on empty. Then when they return and ask the reason I didn’t care for their car as I said I would: “Oh, I just thought you meant treat it like I treat my own old car.” I’ve lied!

That’s what we do to God when we make promises we never intend to keep. We promise to guard our purity, love, and serve Him faithfully, but we’re so busy caring for our own concerns we seldom give His concerns a thought. Then when we die or He returns and we give an account of our lives, we discover we’ve lied and it’s too late to do anything about it.

TODAY is the day to be faithful and to keep our promises, not only to God, but our spouse, our kids, the church and everyone else to whom we’ve made promises. We need to daily be pouring our lives out to the Lord’s honor, and make no mistake, how we treat and serve others is, or should be, as unto the Lord.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed 😊

What’s the Big Deal?

“But to all who believed Him and accepted Him, He gave the right to become children of God. ” (John 1:12 NLT)

It baffles me why people who don’t even believe in God use an argument against His existence that He “sends” people to hell. First, God “sends” no one to hell, we make that choice on our own. If you think about it, on some levels they should thank God that He doesn’t force them to go to heaven, that He allows them to spend all eternity away, not only from His Holy presence, but from even any influence of His presence.

Think about that for a minute. Think of the attributes of God and how they influence the world in which we live. He’s the fullness of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, gentleness, compassion, and many other positive attributes of which the world is now filled and of which hell will be devoid.

Photo by Crypto Crow on Pexels.com

A vengeful, angry, unloving god wouldn’t have given ANYONE an opportunity to be in a peaceful, joy-filled, place of unending bliss, though, presumably, that would be exactly what they would long for. A loving, kind, and caring Father God anticipates the needs we don’t even know we have, then meets them and offers them to us as a free gift.

What we do with that gift is up to us, but at least He clearly informs us of the consequences of our decision – OUR decision, not His. Which leads us to the crux of the whole matter: What’s YOUR decision? What is YOUR choice in this matter? Where will YOU spend eternity?

The decision is YOURS alone. At the end of the day, if you miss heaven, it will be NO ONE’S fault but yours. You can blame God for not being or doing what you wanted Him to be or do, or you can fall at His feet and thank Him for providing a way to Himself and to His eternal home, where, if not for His grace, one would not exist.

However, if you don’t even believe He exists, what’s the fuss. In the end you only get what you’ve always claimed to want – a place where God does not exist! And just to be clear, IF that’s your decision and you end up in hell, you can blame God if it makes you feel better, but my guess is, it won’t. You’re there by your own choice, not His, and the torment of that regret will literally haunt you for all eternity. PLEASE DON’T LET THAT HAPPEN TO YOU! God takes no pleasure in you or anyone else going to hell and neither do I.

Food for thought.

Blessings, Ed