Saturday, September 15, 2012
Our Comforter: John 14:16
If you look up the word "Comforter" on Google, you will find a description of a puffy down-filled bed cover to keep you warm as you sleep. Now this is perhaps only in the English. The word "parakletos" has nothing to do with ducks or cozy beds. But this meaning is still something to be examined. The Holy Spirit, who is our Comforter, given us by the Father because Jesus will not leave us "comfortless," is like a warm blanket on a cold winter night. He keeps us tucked in if we stay beneath His warmth. Sometimes during the night time of our lives we get out from under the Comforter. We feel we must do something alone, and we go out into the night air. But what a joy when finally we get back into the bed underneath His warmth and care. Jesus said, "I will pray the Father, and He shall give you another Comforter, that He may abide with you forever." Just because we get out of bed, does not mean that the Comforter disappears. We are just wandering from our place, so we feel the coldness of the night. The analogy breaks down because sometimes at night we may need to get out of bed for a few minutes, but in life we should endeavor to always stay put under the protection and the safety of our Lord's presence. Nestle into his warmth, and you will find peace through the storms of the night. Shalom and Shana Tova.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Jews remember the Exodus, their freedom from
bondage in Egypt. We as Christians must remember our freedom from bondage
also. Egypt is a type of sin and bondage to the kingdom of Satan. We must look to our Passover
Lamb who initiates our release from slavery. It was that night 3500
years ago that the Passover lambs were slaughtered and the blood put on the
doorposts of the houses. It was 1500 years later that the eternal
Passover Lamb was sacrificed by crucifixion. He is the fulfillment of the
entire story of the Exodus. This is the greatest aspect of the
relationship between the Old and the New.
I can imagine that
to Jewish young people the story of the Exodus could become very stale very
fast, and yet, there are still Jews 3500 years later that are remembering that
night and the subsequent events of the crossing of the Red Sea and the
wandering in the desert. The key person in all of this is Moses,
rescued by the Pharoah’s daughter, trained in Egypt for 40 years, and then
exiled into the wilderness to learn the ways of Jethro and the unseen God of
the desert.
This God was not a new thought. He was not dreamed up by Moses or Jethro for that matter. He was not dreamed up by Melchizedek, priest of the Most High God several generations earlier. He was not dreamed up by Noah as he wondered why those rain clouds looked so ominous. He simply was and had always been, and people knew about Him from long ago, from ancient days. The pagan religions of the world came out of this primordial knowledge of God as mutations of the Truth. The Exodus is therefore not actually a coming out of something old into something new. Exodus is a returning to the ways of the eternal God. So leaving Mitsrayim is leaving a system that had been imagined by men because they had forgotten the Truth.
Some archeologists will say, “Oh, look here, a similarity to the sacrificial system of the Bible. That’s where Moses got it.” No, Mitsrayim, grandson of Noah, or one of his descendents brought these false concepts to the world because their hearts were cold. They did not believe in the Almighty God first hand, and so they invented other gods to suit there purposes. They took their knowledge of resurrection from past generations, and made it into fantastic accounts of Pharaohs walking through the depths of the earth and the rising of the sun each day. We do this today. We do not want to keep God in our minds, and so we imagine everything from Harry Potter to UFO's to amuse ourselves and keep our spirits busy rather than seeking the true God. Without Christ, man reverts to paganism in a very short time.
This God was not a new thought. He was not dreamed up by Moses or Jethro for that matter. He was not dreamed up by Melchizedek, priest of the Most High God several generations earlier. He was not dreamed up by Noah as he wondered why those rain clouds looked so ominous. He simply was and had always been, and people knew about Him from long ago, from ancient days. The pagan religions of the world came out of this primordial knowledge of God as mutations of the Truth. The Exodus is therefore not actually a coming out of something old into something new. Exodus is a returning to the ways of the eternal God. So leaving Mitsrayim is leaving a system that had been imagined by men because they had forgotten the Truth.
Some archeologists will say, “Oh, look here, a similarity to the sacrificial system of the Bible. That’s where Moses got it.” No, Mitsrayim, grandson of Noah, or one of his descendents brought these false concepts to the world because their hearts were cold. They did not believe in the Almighty God first hand, and so they invented other gods to suit there purposes. They took their knowledge of resurrection from past generations, and made it into fantastic accounts of Pharaohs walking through the depths of the earth and the rising of the sun each day. We do this today. We do not want to keep God in our minds, and so we imagine everything from Harry Potter to UFO's to amuse ourselves and keep our spirits busy rather than seeking the true God. Without Christ, man reverts to paganism in a very short time.
Monday, August 27, 2012
And God remembered Rachel... Genesis 30:22
I sometimes feel that God does not remember me, that He
would just as soon forget me, because so often I have forgotten Him. It took 16 years before I was aware that God
had remembered me. I had things that I
needed to go through. And now when I
think of those 16 years, I can sum them up with a few brief flashes of
memory. Jacob was angry with Rachel for
wanting her own children so badly. He
couldn’t fix it, and so he blamed her for being too emotional. She was so
desperate for children that she was willing to let Jacob go “in unto” her maid
so that she could have a surrogate.
Dan
and Naphtali were her “adopted” step-children.
But it did not satisfy. Perhaps
she tried to make it satisfy. Perhaps
she even loved them, but it was not enough.
She wanted her own. And then
when her own son was born she wanted another, because she wasn’t satisfied with
just one. I understand. I know Rachel’s heart. The second son killed her, but still she
wanted him. Rachel never knew her
grandchildren, Manasseh and Ephraim.
I’m sure she would have loved them so.
Little bald Manasseh and Ephraim with the weird little locks of hair
sticking out of the sides of their heads.
Would she have approved Asenath the daughter of Potipherah priest of
On? Not her God. But Joseph chose her after all. Rachel had gone from stealing idols and
pretending she was on her period to crying out to Jehovah for a child. She had some stuff to go through, and then
when it was all done, she died.
But Rachel is remembered. For what? For her cry and her grief for her children, In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not. Matthew 2:18
But Rachel is remembered. For what? For her cry and her grief for her children, In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not. Matthew 2:18
Saturday, August 11, 2012
But Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord. Genesis 6:8 But.... This word pervades scripture. Some terrible situation prevails, but...God does something else. We must always seek the "but" that God wants for us. So many people stop before the "but." They give up on faith. They commit suicide, or they despair and live a life of depression and sadness. How do we initiate this "but?" By seeking the Lord and His goodness. He is always wanting to give us a "but."
Before every "but" is a stop, a period or a comma. It's a pause before God makes a "but." A period seems to be an end, but given to God can be the beginning of an entirely different thought. A comma leaves us hanging, waiting for the "but." Still God is working.
Think of what was going on in Noah's life. The world was being destroyed on the scale of the movie "2012," but because Noah believed, he found grace and became one of the greatest "buts" in history. The thief on the cross was a "but." Mary Magdalene and Peter were "buts." Most of the saints of scripture were "buts." The Lord can make anyone a "but" if they just seek His face in their time of complaint.
Before every "but" is a stop, a period or a comma. It's a pause before God makes a "but." A period seems to be an end, but given to God can be the beginning of an entirely different thought. A comma leaves us hanging, waiting for the "but." Still God is working.
Think of what was going on in Noah's life. The world was being destroyed on the scale of the movie "2012," but because Noah believed, he found grace and became one of the greatest "buts" in history. The thief on the cross was a "but." Mary Magdalene and Peter were "buts." Most of the saints of scripture were "buts." The Lord can make anyone a "but" if they just seek His face in their time of complaint.
Friday, August 10, 2012
Obedience and Life vs. Despair and Death
Obedience vs. despair. Life vs. death. This is ultimately the lesson of our lives. When it's just too hard to go on, you must die to yourself and your own answers, your own paths, your own dreams and seek Him even in the darkness. I think this is part of what fasting is all about. You are setting aside a real felt desire to seek Him. Every time you feel that desire, you must seek Him to overcome the temptation.
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