How long?
Today’s devotion is based on Week 3 of “Tough Love”: Delays Gratification! (WATCH HERE)
How long is this going to last?
We often ask this question when we are in the middle of a situation that is no fun. Severe illnesses lead us to ask, “How long?” Conflict at work leads us to wonder, “How long?” Challenges in our marriages make us think, “How long?” The pain of losing a loved one makes us contemplate, “How long?”
The challenging situations in life are not ones we enjoy. They are hard on our heart and bring tears to our eyes. We lie awake at night and are disrupted during the day. We think of ways out of the pain but no answer suffices.
We just don’t know how long we can last.
Jesus speaks to us another statement of blessing in Luke 6:
Blessed are you who weep now, for you will laugh.
At first reading it might seem like Jesus is just telling you, “Get over it, this will pass.” But Jesus wouldn’t dismiss our sufferings. He wouldn’t make light of our challenges. He doesn’t dismiss them, but rather invites us to be in them with the hope and certainty that they will end.
Psalm 6 of King David is an example of a faithful follower of the Lord asking this very same question, “How long?” The situation is difficult, the pain real…but his confidence is also rock solid. Read it slowly and see if you can relate:
1 Lord, do not rebuke me in your anger or discipline me in your wrath.
2 Have mercy on me, Lord, for I am faint;heal me, Lord, for my bones are in agony.
3 My soul is in deep anguish. How long, Lord, how long?
4 Turn, Lord, and deliver me; save me because of your unfailing love.
5 Among the dead no one proclaims your name. Who praises you from the grave?
6 I am worn out from my groaning. All night long I flood my bed with weeping and drench my couch with tears.
7 My eyes grow weak with sorrow; they fail because of all my foes.
8 Away from me, all you who do evil, for the Lord has heard my weeping.
9 The Lord has heard my cry for mercy; the Lord accepts my prayer.
10 All my enemies will be overwhelmed with shame and anguish; they will turn back and suddenly be put to shame.
David was certain that his weeping and groaning would turn into laughing when the Lord overcame his enemies and those that stood opposed to him.
We can have the same confidence in the Lord. We live in a broken world, decimated by sin and the realities of evil. Suffering is real. Death is real. Hardship is real. But we navigate it not with hearts of hopelessness or answers found in addictions, but rather the calm confidence that our season of weeping will turn into an eternity of joy and laughter.
The Apostle John shares the glimpse he was given in Revelation 21:3-4 And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. 4 ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.”
Blessed are those who weep now…for they will laugh.
How long? We don’t know when, but it will end in joy!
Apply: What challenge are you facing today that doesn’t seem to have an endpoint? Reread the statement of blessing Jesus gives. Face the challenge today, not with hopelessness, but with confidence that your Savior is with you and will ultimately bring laughter from this season of challenge.
Prayer: Lord, in your mercy turn our weeping into laughter. Give us hope in our discouragements and trust in our challenges. Keep our eyes focused on the eternal joys of heaven, even as we navigate the temporal challenges in our life. AMEN.
I’m hungry!
Today’s devotion is based on Week 3 of “Tough Love”: Delays Gratification! (WATCH HERE)
How many times do you go to the refrigerator or pantry in a given day between meals? Perhaps your time at work curtails this, but you may have your stash in your desk or cubicle. When we get hungry, we want something to eat. It’s hard to even wait until meal time to satisfy that hunger.
Hunger is your body telling you that you have a need. Your body is signalling that some level of nutrition is needed to keep going. As a result it moves you to satisfy that hunger.
The second statement of blessing in Luke 6 is this:
“Blessed are you who hunger now, for you will be satisfied.”
In Matthew 5, Jesus stated it this way:
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.
The tension between satisfying physical needs and spiritual needs is perhaps best described when Jesus met Satan in the dessert and Satan tempted him this way after 40 days and nights without something to eat.
Matthew 4:2 After fasting forty days and forty nights,he was hungry. 3 The tempter came to him and said, “If you are the Son of God, tell these stones to become bread.”
The temptation would have been to use his power to satisfy an earthly craving. However, it would not just have been providing bread like he did when he fed the 5000, but falling to Satan’s test to prove he was the Son of God by saying that earthly things are the most important. Rather, Jesus responded:
4 Jesus answered, “It is written: ‘Man shall not live on bread alone, but on every word that comes from the mouth of God.’”
Jesus’ “hunger and thirst” were for the things of God, the Word of God. He knew that while food is important in the short term, spiritual nourishment is what truly satisfies in the long term.
What would your spiritual life be like if you craved the word of God as often as you felt the urge to get a snack? What would happen if you drank from the Water of Life, the words of your Savior as often as you were thirsty and took a drink.
Perhaps the point isn’t to have a “feeding frenzy” of the Word of God, but simply a daily desire to seek after and find the satisfaction of the Lord in your life rather than the temporal things.
It’s easy to simply seek God when we have a temporal issue. Laid off? God provide me a job. Sick? God heal me. Lost a loved one? God comfort me. Relationship struggle? God fix it.
To be sure we want to invite God into these situations, however if we just crave the Lord to fix our earthly issues, we will always be wanting.
When we seek the Lord and his word of truth to fill our souls with his love, joy, peace, forgiveness, and hope, it gives a settled foundation for every situation in life we could encounter. Jesus says, “Blessed are you who hunger now, for you will be satisfied.” We may not have every earthly desire and luxury, and may be even short on some of what we would call necessities, but blessing comes when we find satisfaction and contentment in our Savior, not our stuff.
So follow Jesus’ direction to blessing, Delay earthly gratification for eternal satisfaction.
Apply: Try today to read a Scripture every time you get hungry and want to grab a snack. See what happens in your day when you taste the truth and goodness of God on a regular basis.
Prayer: Lord, help me always hunger and thirst after the righteousness you give, the truth you proclaim and the hope with which you fill me. AMEN.
Bless your heart?
Today’s devotion is based on Week 2 of “Tough Love”: Challenges Perspective! (WATCH HERE)
Here in the south, you can often times hear people use the phrase, “Bless their heart!” As I reflect on the use of the phrase, it seems to be used in a situation where something not so good has happened or someone has done something understandably dumb. So in the midst of a not so good situation or a somewhat dumb move, a person says “Bless their heart!” I think what is implied is this, “I hope something good comes to you out of this” or “They were so well intentioned that they deserve favor at least for the good intentions that got them in a sticky situation.” If any devotion readers are more educated in southern phrases, please correct my understanding.
What’s the point in bringing it up? We all want blessings…even in situations that seem antithetical to being blessed. We want good things in our lives and to affect those whom we love. If given the choice between blessing and curses, we would choose blessing every time.
The challenge as our heart yearns to be blessed, is sometimes our heart is misguided to seek blessing (sometimes equated with “happiness”) in things that are only a quick fix but not a long term sense of contentment, peace, and spiritual sufficiency.
As Jesus likes to do, he reverses our natural thinking to point us to where blessings for our heart and life can truly be found.
The most famous list of blessings is the Beatitudes found in Matthew 5. A second listing of four statements of blessing is in Luke 6, another of Jesus’ sermons. Jesus doesn’t just look at the crowd and say a pithy, “Bless their hearts” but rather indicates where true blessing is to be found. The first is this:
“Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the kingdom of God.
The world around us wants us to believe that blessing is merely wrapped up in the material things around us. It’s easy to drive by a large house with expensive cars and think, “They are blessed” and look at our lesser house and 15 year old cars and wonder how do we get that kind of blessing. The “quick fix” to blessing we think is to have a successful job and career in which we earn a lot of money and are able to enjoy the nicer things this life has to offer. However, the danger is this: We try to fill the void in our hearts with the material things of this world. We seek to fill our spirit with a feeling that we are successful, have arrived, or have status in this world.
Jesus changes our focus from the material to the eternal. He directs our hearts to be filled with these two things: First, you have the status of a child of God and heir of the kingdom of God. This is something way beyond any material blessings the Lord may allow you to have. Second he reminds us that true value and worth is found in the treasures of heaven, not the treasures of the earth. Things on this earth can be swept away, burned up, and given away when you die. Your membership in God’s kingdom as a gift of grace is what is worth far more than anything this world could offer.
Want true and lasting blessings? Detach your heart from the material things of this world. Let your love and life’s mission be focused on following Jesus and enjoying the spiritual blessings of his kingdom…forgiveness, grace, eternal life and more. These are the realities that leave our spirit filled, satisfied, and completely blessed.
Apply: Is there something in your life that you are looking to fill your soul other than the love of Jesus? Write it down and ask the Lord to replace the void with the truths of his kingdom.
Prayer: Lord, thank you for making me your child through baptism and including me in your kingdom. Help me to always fill my spirit with the truths and grace of your kingdom. AMEN.
It’s Hard to Wait!
Today’s devotion is based on Week 2 of “Tough Love”: Challenges Perspective! (WATCH HERE)
It’s hard to wait.
It’s hard to believe that something better is coming when you are in the middle of something hard.
It’s hard to keep working at something when the outcome seems uncertain.
It’s hard to avoid short term satisfaction for long term happiness.
Our culture around us thrives on quick fixes, fast remedies, and immediate gratification. Fast food, medications, instant access and more make waiting difficult and delaying gratification even harder.
We can carry this “fast food mentality” into our spiritual lives. We want God to act now. We want him to give us what we want now. We want a life free of hardship and full of blessing now.
It’s hard to wait.
If you think its hard for you, imagine some of the situations where people in the Bible had to wait.
Noah…100 years for the Lord to send the flood.
Abraham…25 years for the Lord to give him a son with Sarai.
Joseph…years in prison waiting to be released.
People of Israel…40 years waiting to enter the promised land.
David…waiting from his anointing until assuming the throne in Israel.
All Old Testament believers…waiting for hundreds and thousands of years for Jesus to come into the world.
In all of these situations, the Lord brought great blessing to the one who waited on the Lord.
However, the sinful nature led some to get impatient and want an immediate gratification. Abraham had a child with Hagar. That created and still creates tension between the offspring of Isaac and the descendents of Ishmael.
The people of Israel got tired of waiting on Moses and had Aaron build a golden calf to replace God himself.
David got himself into trouble when his lust and desire for sexual gratification turned into adultery and murder.
If we consider the root cause of impatience and the lack of ability to wait on the Lord, it is caused by our sinful nature When we are unwilling to wait on the Lord and take matters into our own hands, we often sin and create problems for ourselves.
It is really a gift of God’s Spirit to be able to have a heart willing to wait on the Lord. It is a gift of grace to have a faith that trusts that God’s timing is best.
Use Psalm 130:5-6 as your prayer this week. Ask the Lord to develop in you a willingness and ability to confidently wait for the Lord to act.
I wait for the Lord, my whole being waits,
and in his word I put my hope.
6 I wait for the Lord
more than watchmen wait for the morning,
more than watchmen wait for the morning.
Apply: What situatio
n are you having a hard time waiting for God to act? Pray to the Lord to help you with your heart first that it may drive a calm content that the Lord is always faithful and his timing is best.
Prayer: Lord, thank you for your eternal plan which you systematically worked in time for me to be included in. Help me to always be patient and seek your direction and step forward in every situation. AMEN.
God’s Valentine for you!
Happy Valentine’s Day! Jesus loves you!