One track mind…
Today’s devotion is based on Sunday’s message: Signs – Beyond Superstition (CLICK HERE TO LISTEN)
Do any of these apply to you?
- Once I’ve determined a way to do something, I am extremely resistant to trying a new way.
- “There’s no other way” is often a fixation in my mind which leads to a problem never being solved.
- Things we wish would happen, we see no way that they ever will happen.
I can carry these thoughts myself. Perhaps not always and in ever situation, but it is not difficult to get fixated on one way of doing things which leads to our determining if something is possible or not based on what we determine the probability is.
Ok that sounds a bit philosophical. So let’s put a biblical example to it.
Jesus was in Jerusalem near the pool of Bethsaida. The thinking was that periodically “angels” stirred the waters and whoever was the first to get into the water would be healed. So around the pool were those with infirmities and illnesses that the medical knowledge of the day could not fix.
So the people lying there were fixated on one thing: Get in the water as soon as it moved.
Unless you couldn’t.
And this was true for an invalid of 38 years…38 years. How long had he been lying at the pool just trying, hoping he could somehow be the first one in. It’s not too much of a stretch to think that it was a life-long dream to get in first, but a dream that had very little hope of ever being realized.
He had a one-track mind.
John 5:6 When Jesus saw him lying there and learned that he had been in this condition for a long time, he asked him, “Do you want to get well?”
7 “Sir,” the invalid replied, “I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred. While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me.”
Did the man want to get well? Of course he did. However, he had a one track mind and the pathway to healing was blocked by his inability to get into the pool. He wanted to get well, but his response indicated it would probably never happen. He didn’t even ask Jesus if he would help him to the pool (maybe it is implied, but not directly asked).RememberR
Can we get like this?
I will never get well because there is no medicine to help me.
I will never get a job because I am not good at anything.
I will never…
You fill in the blank. When we operate on our human limitations, we run up against our human limitations.
But when we run up against our limitations, we miss out on God’s solutions.
8 Then Jesus said to him, “Get up! Pick up your mat and walk.” 9 At once the man was cured; he picked up his mat and walked.
Remember, God is not limited by human limitations.
Apply: What seems impossible to you to accomplish, navigate or solve today in your life? Is it possible that God might have a solution you haven’t even thought of? Pray for your problem to be solved by His solution!
Prayer: Lord, forgive me for having a one track mind that is limited by my abilities and my perspective. Give me a heart of faith to believe and live knowing that you are not limited by human limitations. AMEN.
I Can’t Believe It!
Good morning! Let me first apologize to all my devotion readers for a two-week absence from posting daily devotions. We have been on vacation the last two weeks to see family and attend a relative’s wedding in the midwest. It was an enjoyable time away…but now back to a more regular rhythm again!
Can you believe it?
We often use this phrase when we see or witness something that is seemingly beyond the normal. Perhaps we believe it because we witness it, but the person to whom we relate the event is a bit skeptical. We may even qualify these events with the phrase, “I wouldn’t have believed it unless I saw it!”
Stories that fit these categories perhaps an account of the fish that “got away.” Or perhaps a sports team come back late in the game that defied the odds of coming out with a win. Perhaps it’s an unexpected promotion or job offer. These events may be hard to believe, but because we experienced or trust the source. We believe it.
The Apostle John witnessed many things that the disciples looked at each other and said in Aramaic, “Can you believe it?” Perhaps one would respond, “I wouldn’t believe it except I saw it.”
This attitude is easy to transfer to more important things…matters of life and death…eternal life and death.
In discussions of heaven or hell, people ask, “Do you believe they are real?”
In matters of Jesus and being the only way to heaven, people surmise, “Do you really believe he is the only way to heaven?”
In asking about the Bible as the inspired word of God, “Really, do you believe that?”
Many aspects of faith challenge our hearts and minds because we weren’t there to see everything the Bible talks about…in fact we were not first-hand witness of any of the events that are recorded in the Bible.
So can you believe it?
The Apostle John was challenged by people asking the same question. Can you believe it? Can you believe Jesus is the Messiah? Can you believe he is real? Can you believe he is the Son of God? Can you believe he accomplished all for eternal life?
The Apostle John didn’t give a dissertation on the doctrine of Christ, although he could have. Rather he simply shared what convinced him that Jesus was the Christ, that he was the Son of God and eternal life came through him.
What was that? Signs.
Miracles. Things that only Jesus as the Son of God could do. Change water into wine. Heal from a distance. Make the lame walk. Feed 5000 with minimal food. Raise the dead.
John chose seven miracles to record in his Gospel with one key purpose:
To answer the question, “Can you believe it?” The Apostle John wrote:
John 20:30 Jesus, in the presence of his disciples, did many other miraculous signs that are not written in this book. 31 But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.
Apply: What questions about Jesus do you have? Begin reading the Gospel of John. See and hear the things John records as if you were there first-hand. Do they build confidence and trust that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, your Savior.
Prayer: Lord, thank you for revealing who you are and what you’ve done to John and the other Apostles so that we too might have certainty that you are the Christ, the Son of God and by believing, we may have life in his name. AMEN.
Stay focused on what matters!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Grace for All…Grace Upsets- LISTEN HERE)
Jonah 4:10 But the Lord said, “You have been concerned about this plant, though you did not tend it or make it grow. It sprang up overnight and died overnight. 11 And should I not have concern for the great city of Nineveh, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand people who cannot tell their right hand from their left—and also many animals?”
Should the Lord have concern?
The book of Jonah ends with this question the Lord poses to Jonah.
Jonah was concerned about the vine that he neither planted nor made it grow, but was upset when it died.
The Lord was concerned with the salvation of Nineveh…all of them.
What’s the point?
It’s easy to get concerned about the blessings the Lord chooses to give and fail to give attention to the thing that really matters…the salvation of souls.
What are the vines or blessings in disguise that have popped up in your life over even the first six months of this year?
I will let you answer that question, because the next question perhaps is more important. Have those blessings taken your attention away from what is most important…your relationship and your family’s relationship with the Lord? Have those blessings prevented you from engaging in spiritual activities that strengthen your faith or that of those around you?
Would you be upset if those blessings were gone? Probably, right? Blessed with a promotion and raise…that’s great…only to have a few weeks later the company downsize and find yourself unemployed. Blessed with health and vitality that allows you to run a marathon or play hard with your grandchildren…only to have a few weeks later a diagnosis of a terminal illness. Blessed with a friendship that came out of nowhere and enjoying time with that person…only to have a job transfer separate you from them.
It’s easy to get upset at God when the blessings he allows in our life drift away.
But God hasn’t forgotten you or cursed you. Perhaps…perhaps…like Jonah he removes the blessing of the “vine” to get Jonah to focus on the bigger purpose and plan of the Lord: The salvation of souls.
Jonah was mad that the Lord spared Nineveh. The Lord was overjoyed that the people of Nineveh responded to the message of Jonah. The angels were partying in heaven because people were turning from sin to their Savior.
The vine was temporary. The conversion of hearts was eternal.
Jonah was focused on the temporary. The Lord was focused on the eternal.
The Lord removed the temporary to help JOnah focus on what was eternal.
The Lord can do the same in our lives today.
So when the vine withers in your life, don’t get angry like Jonah. Be glad that while the little things in life are also a concern for the Lord (after all he allowed the vine to grow), he is much more interested in the things that impact lives for eternity: the salvation of souls.
So enjoy the little blessings. But don’t get upset when they are gone because the Lord is simply reminding you that the biggest blessing he gives is not one that is temporary, but that which is eternal.
Apply: What temporary blessing do you have and enjoy that perhaps is distracting you from nurturing the eternal relationship you have with Jesus?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for your gifts of grace that bring blessing to my earthly life. When you choose to remove them, forgive me for getting upset and rather point my heart to what truly matters and lasts forever: the salvation of my soul. AMEN.
Crave grace!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Grace for All…Grace Upsets- LISTEN HERE)
I crave grace.
I am not perfect. I fail. I don’t meet expectations. I have a lot of opportunities to grow as a person and as a Christian. I repeat activities or lack of activities that I should stop or start doing…and wish I could always get it right.
I crave grace.
I crave the forgiveness of people to recognize my human weakness and my sinful nature. I crave forgiveness when I fail, even when it’s the 100th time. I crave grace that is freely given and not deserved or earned.
Because living without grace is living in fear of the next mistake, in fear of failing, in fear of ruining relationships.
I crave grace.
Grace is not an excuse to continue in the sin that plagues you. It’s not the cover for complacency or lack of learning and growing and getting better. Grace is not a license to be selfish and demand others adapt and adjust and then forgive your intentional and willful sin. Grace is not a pass to cash in when you want to give in to your sinful nature.
I crave grace not only to cover my failures but to motivate the improvement and change that is desired. Grace communicates confidence that change can take place. Grace communicates that failing forward is an option. Grace communicates the relationship is what is most important.
Not only do I crave grace…but my guess is you do too.
The blessings and benefits of God’s grace are exactly what we need and exactly what he gives. But I don’t want to just receive them from God, I want to freely give the same grace I have received to the people in my life.
Your spouse…needs God’s grace AND your grace. Your kids need God’s grace AND your grace. Your coworkers, friends and classmates need God’s grace AND your grace. Your church family needs God’s grace AND your grace. Even the person who is mean on social media, cuts you off in traffic or acts rude at a kids sporting event needs God’s grace and your grace.
Grace comes from a heart of love. It is God’s kind of love. It is God’s love that sent Jesus into the world as the epitome of grace and the greatest gift of grace. God’s grace looks like what the Apostle Paul wrote of in 1 Corinthians 13:
4 Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. 5 It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. 6 Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. 7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.
Without grace, we become just the opposite…impatient, unkind, jealous, rude, prideful, demeaning to others, self-centered, quick to anger, keep a record of wrongs, deceitful, skeptical, hopeless and feeling like giving up.
I don’t want any of that.
It’s why I crave grace.
Apply: Why do you crave grace? What can you do to show grace more to others?
Prayer: Lord thank you for freely giving the grace I crave. Spirit of God, empower me to show the same grace to the people in my life. AMEN.
I DESERVE grace!
(This week’s devotions are based on Sunday’s message: Grace for All…Grace Upsets- LISTEN HERE)
Grace is upsetting when someone receives it that we don’t think deserves it.
Grace is also upsetting when WE don’t receive it when we think we deserve it.
I remember a member of a previous congregation who also delivered FedEx to our home. After not seeing him for a while at church I happened to be home when he delivered a package. As we briefly interacted he shared some of the life and relationship challenges he was going through and said, “I think God needs to throw me a bone. I don’t deserve all this.”
He was upset because he felt deserved a blessing of grace from God in his life and was upset that God, in his opinion and perspective, was withholding it.
Have you ever felt the same? We love when the Lord allows blessing to come in our lives. We love when life is without conflict. We love when finances are plentiful. We love when our health is great.
But when it goes away? We get upset. We get depressed. We get angry at God.
We wouldn’t be the first. The prophet Jonah, while upset that God had shown grace to Nineveh, he was hoping that God would change his mind and allow the judgment to come on Nineveh. So…
5 Jonah went out and sat down at a place east of the city. There he made himself a shelter, sat in its shade and waited to see what would happen to the city. 6 Then the LORD God provided a vine and made it grow up over Jonah to give shade for his head to ease his discomfort, and Jonah was very happy about the vine. 7 But at dawn the next day God provided a worm, which chewed the vine so that it withered. 8 When the sun rose, God provided a scorching east wind, and the sun blazed on Jonah’s head so that he grew faint. He wanted to die, and said, “It would be better for me to die than to live.”
9 But God said to Jonah, “Do you have a right to be angry about the vine?”
“I do,” he said. “I am angry enough to die.”
Jonah was happy when the Lord blessed him with the vine and upset when it was taken away. We don’t know Jonah’s thoughts exactly, but when the vine withered, he was upset. He was upset when the blessing was taken away…angry enough to die.
The blessing of the Lord is the grace of the Lord. These blessings, as we want to define them, are gifts from God. When and how he chooses to give them are his prerogative. While we think we deserve them, we don’t. While we think we have the right to dictate the blessings God should give us, we don’t.
The reality is that any blessing we receive is a gift of grace and even the situation God allows that we don’t like can be a way that the Lord gives us blessings.
Romans 8:28 And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.
Admittedly it is hard to receive what God allows and see it as a blessing, when we don’t like or enjoy what is happening. But here’s the truth.
God will always give what is best for his children and this is a result of his grace.
We must repent of feeling we deserve God’s blessing and getting upset when the blessing we want is withheld.
Do we have any right to be angry about the vine?
Nope. We don’t.
Apply: When have you felt upset about God withdrawing or not giving a blessing? Afterwards did you see a blessing in what you received?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for all the blessings you give, even the ones I don’t always perceive as blessings. AMEN.