Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Accepting and Clinging to Forgiveness

Matthew 1:21
She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.
Mary, a young woman, probably around 14-16 years old, becomes pregnant without ever having sex. She had been visited by an angel of God (Luke 1:26-38) telling her that she would be the mother of God incarnate (God in flesh). She was told that she would serve a great purpose for the furtherance of God’s Kingdom. She was destined by God to be the mother of His Son, the savior of the world. However I will address this in more detail in Luke. I want to focus on the second half of this passage stating that He (Jesus) would save His people from their sins. Immediately as I read this, I asked myself, “have I completely accepted this freedom from my sin? Have I turned from it and given it all over to Him and taken that passion that I had for sin and turned it into passion for Him? Have I given it up?” I think that these questions need to be asked in our lives frequently, especially for our generation. Our world raises us up to be impulsive, passionate, and ill-informed people. We give into our desires the second that they arise often. We get hungry and immediately search for a fast food joint. We want something and we seek how we can get it and the faster the better. We have the ability to find any information we want, but don’t access hardly any of it. Our greatest master has become our misplaced passion. We have a desire for Facebook, for food, for drink, for meaning, for acceptance, for ignorance of who we are at times, for love, for intimacy, for money, for maintaining a busy lifestyle. However, most of these are not inherently wrong. Facebook can be a great tool for Christians to spread the word of God and to be representatives of Him, however when we take time away from devotions and prayer in order to check our statuses and Facebook stalk people is when it becomes an idol. Nothing is wrong with being physically hungry, nor is there anything wrong with eating, but do we do it for God’s glory first of all, and has our hunger for physical food brought us more pain than our spiritual hunger that we continually ignore? We seek meaning, but where better to find meaning than the One who made us with a purpose? Why would a pencil ask another item that has no idea what it is, what the pencil’s purpose is? We do the same thing. We seek meaning from people that often don’t even know their own meaning in life. God created us with a purpose that we are to live out, but do we are we willing to give ourselves up in order to find it in Him? The list for these things goes on, but the purpose of it all is to say “what do you live for more, God or anyone or anything else?” If you live for God, you will cling to the freedom from sin because you will be freed from sin. I could not imagine what God’s reaction to people will be that rejected Him but I know He will be frank with them. I can picture that He will look at them in the eyes and say that He gave His beloved son for them, but to them, that was not good enough and now they should depart from Him.  That would be devastating to hear. I pray no one reading this hears that in the final day. I pray that none of us hear that we did not seek to embrace the forgiveness that God made avail to us because we were unwilling to give up our sin. A lightbulb cannot be partly darkness and partly lit (yes, I know there are dimmers, but a basic switch is my reference here) it is either lit or not. Which are you? We are called to be a light on a hill, demonstrating God and His love to the world (Matt 6:14). It starts with embracing His forgiveness.
May we take off our clothes of sinfulness and evil and heinous acts towards God and replace them with His grace each and every day. May we take our plans and wills and lay them aside for His. May we be His people.
-Ryan

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Core Examination

Psalms 53:2-3
God looks down from heaven
on the children of man
to see if there are any who understand,
who seek after God.
They have all fallen away;
together they have become corrupt;
there is none who does good,
not even one.
I read this passage today and my heart turned. I was distraught by the words that haunted my sight. The thought invaded my mind, is this true today or could God say this today? Though the world is corrupt and man is defiled, I wondered what God thinks of us. Is He pleased with our lives or is He disappointed? Do we strive to know Him a fraction of how well He knows us or are we content with a distant relationship at best? For those who are doing well in their walks and getting to know God in a real and passionate relationship, good job. If it is real, and I pray it is, then you are making your King proud because, though sin disappoints God greatly and breaks His heart, you are seeking Him and getting to know Him and that blesses His soul as it blesses yours. To you I say, keep up the work, cling to Him and become the man/woman He desires you to be. To others, is God proud of how you live? Do you put Him first? I will be the first to say that it’s tough. Life throws everything imaginable in your way so that God is not first in your life. Do you cling to the bait or to God? Can the last half of this verse be said about you? If you are abiding in Christ, your soul has been redeemed and you are pure in His sight. However, to abide in Christ, you must constantly and consistently be in His word and before His throne, you must love Him, you must put Him first in your life and live as He calls you to. This is no small calling. This is no calling to mediocrity. This is a radical calling for the Christian. There is no mediocre Christian. May we be a people that seek after God first and foremost with no limits and no hinderances, and seek to understanding from His word. May we abide in Christ and experience Him as we ought. May we live the John 15, Luke 14:25-33, 1 Cor 10:31, Deut 6:5, Exodus 20 (just to name a few) lifestyle to please our Lord. 
Theodoulos (servant of God)
-Ryan

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Total Worship

Revelation 22:9b
Worship God
While reading this chapter, the closing passages of the Bible, these two words caught my eye more than anything else. One of the last messages of the Bible is not some grandiose theological theory. It is our mission statement. Do we worship God? Does our life bring Him glory in ALL the areas of our life? Or are we withholding parts of our life from God’s penetrating light? It is easy to say “I am giving God so much of my life, I can keep some for myself,” but God calls us to give Him all of it. He does not call us to give Him most of us, He calls us to give all of us like He gave Himself for us. Worship is a lifestyle, not solely a song. Worship is seeking to please God by coming before His throne, by following Him full-heartedly. Do we worship God or is our worship found elsewhere? Does something come before God in our life? Does our love or search for something come close to our love and search for God? Do we seek God with all of our life? It is what we are called to do. Nothing can be hidden from God. There can not be our own little corner of sin and hell in heaven and we cannot continue to seek that sin until we are in heaven without changing or doing our best to change. If we begin to refuse to desire to change from our sin, we are placing that sin between us and God, whether we want to admit to it or not. Do we truly worship God? 
Worship is a consuming lifestyle that must invade every aspect of our life. Live it out from the core of who you are. Worship is an essential concept and practice in the life of a Christian.
-Ryan
PS- This concludes our study through the New Testament. However, I plan on going back through it again soon to have fresh devotions. Now onto the Old testament and revisiting the gospels.