Look To Christ Not Self-Discipline

The default position of the human heart is set towards earning. We assume that we must work and work and work to achieve absolutely everything, including God’s praise. 

“We all automatically gravitate toward the assumption that we are justified by our level of sanctification…We start each day with our personal security resting not on the accepting love of God and the sacrifice of Christ but on our present feelings or recent achievements in [religion]. Since these arguments will not quiet the human conscience, we are inevitably moved…to a self-righteousness which falsifies the record to achieve a sense of peace.” —Richard Lovelace, Dynamics of Spiritual Life

Hit pause for a moment before heading out the door to worship or whatever it is on your calendar this day. Look at your heart and life. Consider its defaults position and ask yourself examining questions. Questions like, “Do I place too much stock in my own self-discipline?” Or, “Have I come to believe that I am saved by my own efforts and will?” Better still, “If someone were to look at my life, would they conclude the same?” 

I struggle and fall into this trap far too often. I can allow how I am doing and how disciplined I am to become the measure of my relationship with God. I feel close and pleasing to Him when I am doing well; and distant and displeasing when I fall short. 

Neither of those things is true. My standing before God does not change regardless of how early I get up, how much time I spend reading the Bible, or how I pray. It also does not shift or change when I choose to sin. 

Right behavior and discipline are not the foundation of our relationship with God. Christ’s is. He measured up in every way we fall short and more.  

Look to Christ for security instead of at your subjective performance. It’s a far more stable foundation. It will not fail. 

Christmas 2016

Merry Christmas! It is my sincere hope that you have a marvelous Christmas weekend celebrating the birth of Christ with family and friends. As I was looking through notes and searching for some nugget of truth to share with you today, I came across the beautifully written prayer from Robert Louis Stevenson below. May your heart be encouraged with these words. 

"O God our loving Father, help us rightly to remember the birth of Jesus, that we may share in the song of the angels, the gladness of the shepherds, and the worship of the wise men.  May Christmas morning make us happy to be Thy children and Christmas evening bring us to our beds with grateful thoughts, forgiving and forgiven, for Jesus’ sake, amen." 

4 Great 2016 Advent Guides

We are two weeks removed from Thanksgiving. I’m sure each of us has undertaken the hunt for the perfect Christmas tree, and come home victorious. Whether you braved the ice and the snow, galavanting all over a tree farm or climbed the heights of the attic stairs to retrieve a box tree, your mission to decorate and prepare your home for the most cheerful of seasons is complete. But, what about your heart? We spend so much time, money and energy on every aspect of the Christmas season, but how often do we pause to reflect on exactly why this time of year is different from the other eleven months?

One of the most popular and oft sung songs this time of year is Joy To The World. Written by Isaac Watts in 1719 few hymns fill our hearts with such exuberance as this one.

Joy to the world! The Lord is come.
Let earth receive her King
Let every heart
Prepare Him room
And heaven and nature sing

Closing our eyes, we can picture Christ’s coming. What a wondrous sight to behold! We sing of joy entering the world in Christ, and indeed it has. But that’s not entirely what Watts had in view when he pinned this classic. Watts had not just the first advent of Christ in mind, but His second as well. Reflect on Christ’s first coming is imperative before we can ever be ready for His second. Watt’s hymn serves as an admonition to do just that.

“Let every heart,” Watts says, “Prepare Him room.” Below I’ve collected four advent guides to help you do just that. You’ll find a guide for men, one for women, one for families and one for everyone. It doesn’t matter much which of the guides below you grab, but it does matter a great deal if you’ve prepared room in your heart for Christ. Throw open the doors and welcome Him in. In Christ God made provision for you and for me. That is after all what Christmas is all about.

Advent 2016: Christ Was Born For This via He Reads Truth

Advent 2016: Christ Was Born For This via She Reads Truth

Seeds of Christmas: A 2016 Family Advent Guide via Watermark Community Church

The Dawning of Indestructible Joy via Desiring God

Marriage Is Super, Duper, Yuugely Important To The Bible

 

For the past month or so I've been reading through the book of Matthew with hundreds of my closest friends, and it couldn't be better! If you're looking to grow in your understanding of God's word this year Join The Journey just might be right for you. Check it out here.

Matthew has been challenging me at every turn and expanding my view of Jesus. New things are jumping off the page daily. Things I haven't noticed before and things that stand out in new ways because of the way my life and the world have changed since I last swam through Matthew's gospel. Some of these things are small details and some are big, concepts that rock my world like the fact that Jesus is a freaking B.A. in so many ways! I mean, that guy had it going on in a real way!

Before I let this thing go off the rails too much, let's get back to last week because its important.

Marriage is a really, really big, super important, huge, special, amazing, part of the story of the Bible, and thus God's plan.

Don't let the crazy extravagant Trump like use of superlatives throw you. The concept and understanding of marriage is vitally important. 

Case in point, Matthew 9:15. On the surface this is a crazy place to go if you're going to set forth the argument I just suggested above but as we dig a little deeper, perhaps it's a great place for us to go.

"And Jesus said to them, “Can the wedding guests mourn as long as the bridegroom is with them? The days will come when the bridegroom is taken away from them, and then they will fast." (Matthew 9:15)

See what I mean? Crazy place to go right?

As with any passage of scripture, it is helpful to read more than one verse and maybe mix in a little context. You know, so we don't take verses some place they weren't intended to go.

So what's going on in Matthew 9?

So far in Matthew 9 we've seen Jesus completely blow people's minds by healing a paralyzed guy in dramatic fashion. For more detail on this miracle see Luke 5:17-24. Then we see Jesus calling Matthew and putting the Pharisees in their place again. Which brings us to 9:14, where the disciples of John the Baptist are criticizing the disciples of Jesus for not observing several fasts that were not required by the Mosaic Law but had been added in addition by the religious rulers of the day. Jesus uses some great illustrations in reply.

Which brings us back to verse 15.

Jesus refers to himself as "the bridegroom", which is the concept I want to sit in today.

What does this phrase mean / represent?

Here's what Dr. Tom Constable has to say:

The Old Testament used the groom figure to describe God (Ps. 45; Isa. 54:5- 6; 62:4- 5; Hos. 2:16- 20). The Jews also used it of Messiah's coming and the messianic banquet (Matt 22:2; 25:1; 2 Cor. 11:2; Eph. 5:23- 32; Rev. 19:7, 9; 21:2). When Jesus applied this figure to Himself, He was claiming to be the Messiah, and He was claiming that the kingdom banquet was imminent.

So this idea of God (Christ) as the groom is not unique to Matthew 9 but is part of the larger story of scripture. That's pretty remarkable when you stop to think about it. God calls himself the groom and his people the bride.

Another way to look at this is that marriage is the primary analogy / picture God uses to tell us about Himself and our relationship to Him. (Ephesians 5:32)

If this is the case, then the entire concept of marriage must be a BIG deal.

God gave us marriage so that we would have a means by which to understand and grasp what He is up to. He created marriage so that we could later understand the gospel.

That simply blows my mind!

All the more reason to hold marriage in high regard.

Marriage is serious business and shouldn't be treated lightly. If I'm honest, I treat my own marriage lightly far more often that I'd like. Reflecting on truths like this one, help me get back on track and love my wife the way I should and I hope it does the same for you as well.