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Daily Bible thoughts 1135: Friday 6th May 2016: Luke 18: 31-34: Total control.

 Luke 18: 31-34: Total control.(please click here for todays passage )

On a number of occasions, prior to His death, Jesus said things like this. He knew in detail what was ahead of Him; was fully aware of all that He would suffer. But in these short, meaningful paragraphs he appears as the Victor and not the victim. He was in total control. This was not about having something unwanted inflicted upon Him. Rather it was about accomplishing the will of God. Before ever wicked people thought to ill-treat the beautiful, innocent Son of God, the good Heavenly Father planned to save the world through the suffering of the Messiah, and foretold these events in the prophets. So although it looked like bad men were winning, the true story is that the good God is triumphant.

When we go through suffering, as we must at some point if we stay true to this Jesus, let us be encouraged and know all the same that we are on the winning team. God knows the beginning from the end, and whenever it is ‘Friday’ we can joyfully assert ‘but Sunday is coming.’ Keep your eye on ‘the third day’ (33).

Mind you, we can be slow to catch on.

Prayer: Thank you Lord that your death was no accident. You died purposefully to save me, and I am so thankful.

Daily Bible thoughts 1134: Thursday 5th May 2016: Luke 18:18-30: The ministry of making sad.

 Luke 18:18-30: The ministry of making sad.(please click here for todays passage)

It is good for us when Jesus makes us sad. It is for our benefit when He exposes our idols. Actually, Jesus wants to make people glad (23), but we experience sadness when we see that we need to dethrone a god and choose Christ, and we make the wrong choice. This ‘ruler…became very sad’ (23) when he realised that our Lord had forced the issue. He stood naked and exposed before Jesus, clinging to His wealth, but still wishing that he could have Jesus also.

It needs to be remembered that there were other wealthy people in the Bible who were not issued the same set of instructions regarding their goods. ‘Jesus does not tell everyone to sell their possessions. But he knew that love of possessions was preventing this young man from giving his life to God. Whenever we love anything more than God, we must give it up, we must ”sell it” Tom Hale: ‘The applied New Testament Commentary’, p.253.

‘The dearest idol I have known, whate’er that idol be,

Help me to tear it from thy throne, and worship only thee.’

But when we sacrifice at Jesus’ command, we are never the losers (29, 30).Earlier today I read these words written by Dallas Willard in ‘The spirit of the disciplines’, p.175:

‘…how nourishing to our faith are the tokens of God’s care in response to our sacrifice. The cautious faith that never saws off the limb on which it is sitting never learns that unattached limbs may find strange, unaccountable ways of not falling.

Once while in graduate school at the University of Wisconsin, my wife and I decided to give away what we had left after paying the bills at the first of the month. It was not much to give away, but we did it. And we told no one. How odd then that a twenty dollar bill was found pinned to the steering wheel of our car a week or so later! With hamburger at thirty-nine cents a pound, we lived like royalty until the next month, convinced we were enjoying the provisions of the King. With the discipline of sacrifice, we practice a different dimension of faith, and often we are surprised at its results.’

Prayer: Thank you Jesus that you will never let us down. Thank you too that in your great mercy and love, you put your finger on our idols so we may be rid of them.

Daily Bible thoughts 1133: Wednesday 4th May 2016: Luke 18:15-17: Who we should be like, and who we shouldn’t emulate.

Luke 18:15-17: Who we should be like, and who we shouldn’t emulate.(please click here for todays passage)

Let’s be like the people who brought the babies to Jesus. Pray for your children and grand-children, and your great-grandchildren (and any advances on that if you have any!!). Whatever else you do for them, bring them to God in prayer. It is the greatest gift you can give them. It’s the most priceless thing you can do for anyone. I knew a mother, and I was told that her grown up sons were really lovely boys. Somebody commented on this to her, and she replied that a lot of prayer had gone into those lads. If they were beautiful and special, as people thought, she gave the glory to God. She knew that He had felt her heart and heard a mother’s earnest cry. Let’s all pray fervently for the children who come to our churches, and for the many who don’t.

Let’s be like Jesus who loved to have the children around Him. He didn’t look down on them or consider them inferior to the grown ups. He wanted to speak to them, and listen to them, and have them in His Kingdom. He knew how very open they were to receive this gift.

Let’s be like the children – simple, uncomplicated and receptive to receive Jesus’ gifts. Children are very keen to have a gift. At times it may make them vulnerable to predators of course. So children in my generation were repeatedly told by grown ups, ‘Don’t take sweets from a stranger.’ Within that warning and command there lies embedded an implicit understanding of the psychological make-up of children. They are quick to receive a good thing offered. In that sense we should be like them in relation to the  things of God. ‘Mark this: Unless you accept God’s kingdom in the simplicity of a child, you’ll never get in.’ The Message.

‘How does a little child receive something? He holds out his hands.He asks. A little child is helpless. He cannot earn anything. He cannot pay money for what he wants. He cannot say, ”I have worked hard; I deserve to receive a reward.” The child just trusts that what he needs will be given to him. Whatever he asks for he asks in faith; he doesn’t doubt. This is how we must enter the kingdom of God.’ Tom Hale: ‘The applied New Testament commentary’, p.252.

Let’s not be like the disciples who chased the children away: ‘When the disciples saw it, they shooed them off.’ The Message. You learn a lot about people from their attitudes towards children. ‘Let us take care never to despise or mistreat children. Rather, let us remember how much Jesus loves them.’ Tom Hale: ‘The applied New Testament Commentary’, p.252.

Daily Bible thoughts 1132: Tuesday 3rd May 2016: Luke 18:9-14: The lowest branches.

 Luke 18:9-14: The lowest branches.(please click here for todays passage)

It is interesting and helpful to read this parable in a modern version of the Bible such as the ‘The Message’.

‘He told this story to some who were complacently pleased with themselves over their moral performance and looked down their noses at the common people.’

We see that the Pharisee was a religious poser: ‘The Pharisee posed and prayed like this…’ His prayer was full of self-righteous self-congratulation. He was slapping himself very warmly on the back as he prayed and assumed that God shared his viewpoint.  He thought the Lord was very lucky to have him on His team.Watch out for the slightest hint of self-righteousness. If you allow it living space in your heart it will blind you to truth about yourself you really need to see. Ultimately it will keep you out of heaven. The New International Version says that he ‘prayed about himself’ (and the margin suggests that it could mean that he prayed ‘to’ himself). God wasn’t interested in such a self-interested prayer. It is humility that cuts ice in the realms above.

”Meanwhile the tax man, slumped in the shadows, his face in his hands, not daring to look up, said, ‘God, give mercy. Forgive me, a sinner.’ 

Jesus commented, ”This tax man, not the other, went home made right with God. If you walk around with your nose in the air, you’re going to end up flat on your face, but if you’re content to be simply yourself, you will become more yourself.”

It remains true – and it always will be – that ‘everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted.’ (14; see James 4:10/1 Peter 5:6). Someone wrote that ‘in God’s garden, the branches that hang the lowest bear the most fruit.’

Without humility you will never face the fact you are a sinner; but it is imperative that you do if you are ever going to be made right with God.

Daily Bible thoughts 1131: Monday 2nd May 2016: Luke 18:1-8: Never give in!

 Luke 18:1-8: Never give in!(please click for todays passage)

Walter Wink said that ‘history belongs to the intercessors’. It truly does, and I think that is why the devil hates prayer so much. He knows full well the damage it will do to him and his kingdom, so he trains his big guns on it. ‘When we go to God by prayer, the devil knows we go to fetch strength against him, and therefore he opposeth us all he can.’ Richard Sibbes. That, for me, is the main reason why so many church prayer meetings are more than half empty.

Does your life line up with the teaching of Jesus in this wonderfully encouraging story? 

‘Then Jesus told his disciples a parable to show them that they should always pray and not give up.’ (1).

‘Jesus told them a story showing that it was necessary for them to pray consistently and never quit.’ (The Message).

Are you cultivating a heart which prays without ceasing? Have you given up praying for anyone or anything?

‘But how much of that persistent faith will the Son of Man find on the earth when he returns?’ (The Message).

Prayer is one of Luke’s big themes. We have already seem something similar about praying in a wonderful passage (11:1-13). It’s been said that you can take all the teaching of Jesus about prayer and boil it down to one word: persistence (or perseverance).

Notice the widow ‘kept coming to him’ (3). The judge said she ‘keeps bothering me’… (5). God wants us to be like the widow in our praying, and to know that He is not like the unjust judge. As someone said, prayer is laying hold of God’s willingness, not overcoming His reluctance.

It is said that Winston Churchill stood before his old school and delivered the shortest message of his political career. He just said, ‘Never give in, never give in, never give in!’ Let such a spirit fuel your prayers, and don’t allow Satan to mug you.

Prayer: Lord, I want to pray exactly in the way you say I should. Help me to keep going. I don’t want the devil to fulfill his prayer-preventing agenda in me.

Daily Bible thoughts 1130: Friday 29th April 2016: Luke 18:20-37: People, get ready!

Luke 18:20-37: People, get ready!(please click here)

Many people are asking, ‘What is this world coming to?’ The more important question is, ‘Who is coming to this world?’ The answer is ‘Jesus’, and we all need to get ready. Here are three important realities to come to terms with:

  1. ‘You can’t miss it!’ I think it was on my first trip to Birkenhead, as a child, that one of my parents stopped to ask for directions. The person asked kept saying, ‘You can’t miss it!’ In truth, when we follow such instructions we often find that we can miss it!! But these words truly do pertain to the second coming of Christ. It will not happen behind anyone’s back: ‘The arrival of the Son of Man is not something you go out to see. He simply comes. You know how the whole sky lights up in a single flash of lightning? That’s how it will be on the Day of the Son of Man.’ (The Message). You can’t miss it. But Jesus went on to say that ‘first he must suffer many things and be rejected by this generation.’ (25). He kept on saying things like that. He knew that the cross awaited Him. But beyond it there lay His resurrection, and, ultimately, His return. ‘CHRIST HAS DIED; CHRIST HAS RISEN; CHRIST WILL COME AGAIN.’ He has come through the cross; He has come our of the tomb; He will come back to the earth.
  2. Business as usual. Before Jesus returns it will be a case of ‘business as usual’ in the world, and to many people His appearing will come as a devastating shock. There are Biblical, historical precedents for this: ‘The time of the Son of Man will be just like the time of Noah – everyone carrying on as usual, having a good time right up to the day Noah boarded the ship. They suspected nothing until the flood hit and swept everything away. It was the same in the time of Lot – the people carrying on, having a good time, business as usual right up to the day Lot walked out of Sodom and a firestorm swept down and burned everything to a crisp. That’s how it will be – sudden, total – when the Son of Man is revealed.’ The Message.
  3. A day of division (34,35). For some, the day of Christ’s return will be one of great joy. It’s what they have been looking forward to for so long. They will see their Lord and be with Him forever. But for others it will be a day of bitter regret. They will find ‘the door of the ark’ is now closed and it is too late to repent.

‘People get ready, there’s a train a comin’; you don’t need no ticket, you just get on board.’

Will you board now, while you still can?

Prayer: Lord Jesus, I can get so earth-bound. Help me to live with eternity in view.

Daily Bible thoughts 1129: Thursday 28th April 2016: Luke 17:20, 21: Carriers of the Kingdom.

 Luke 17:20-21: Carriers of the Kingdom.(please click here for todays passage)

The Kingdom of God is much bigger than any one individual, but that Kingdom is ‘within’ everyone who submits to King Jesus. Therefore we should expect to have a Kingdom impact on the world as we come into contact with it. If there is new life within us there will also be new power at work through us. The truth that the Kingdom is within the believer is not the whole truth about Kingdom life. However it is an important truth that Jesus wanted to emphasise on this occasion.

These verses should also encourage us in times when there is nothing, or little, to show for our work. Although the Kingdom is in some mysterious sense ’embodied’ in the subjects of the Kingdom, its influence and growth is often invisible. You may feel that your church is not growing like the one down the road; or that you are not developing as you should be. But you can’t measure everything by the ‘visible’.

‘The best things are the quietest. The deepest work of God, in the individual and in the community, does not reveal itself to the newspaper reporter, but steals on the world like spring through garden and woodland.’ F.B. Meyer: Devotional Commentary, p.446.

Another possible rendering of the word ‘within’ is ‘among’. The Pharisees wanted to know when God’s Kingdom would come, not realising that it had already arrived in the Person of Jesus. It is possible to miss what you are looking for because you are blinkered in your expectations.

Prayer: Reign in me Sovereign Lord.

Daily Bible thoughts 1128: Wednesday 27th April 2016: Luke 17:11-19: Thanks missing?!

 Luke 17:11-19: Thanks missing?!(please click here for todays passage)

Once again a Samaritan is the ‘hero’ in a Jesus story. The commentators tell us that Luke has a ‘universal’ emphasis. He sees Jesus as the Saviour of the whole world.

I wonder, who you might meet today as you are on your way? Are you ready to serve them and be a blessing in their lives? What seems like an accidental encounter may turn out to be a divine appointment.

These lepers were used to life at a distance (12). Leprosy isolated people. It separated them from the rest of society. It provides a picture of sin which alienates us from God, and from each other. To be cleansed of our sin ‘leprosy’ we have to get to a place of desperation where we call on Jesus to have mercy (13).

In (14) you see a great example of how faith works. They stepped out on the bare Word of Jesus, and it held them up. It kept them afloat. They found it was like concrete beneath them. He told them to do what a person would normally do when they believed they were cured (i.e. show themselves to the priest). But it was as these men were on their way that they received healing. The acting ‘as if it were so’ came first, you might say. They ‘stepped out in faith’. If you are unwell, and praying for healing, it is important to be sensitive to the Lord’s voice and do as He says.

In and through (15-19) there surely comes a call to be a thankful people. In ‘the Message’ you read that this one leper who returned to show appreciation was ‘…so grateful. He couldn’t thank him enough…’ Let’s make sure we follow his example. Live a life of thanksgiving and not of thanks missing.’ Regularly thank people, and above all thank God.

Prayer: Lord, you have blessed me far more than I deserve. I want to express how deeply grateful I am.

Daily Bible thoughts 1127: Tuesday 26th April 2016: Luke 17:7-10: Remember who you are.

 Luke 17:7-10: Remember who you are.(please click here for todays passage)

Mike and I became good friends when we were in college. We were thrown together on the decorating team! Every Monday afternoon, for three hours, all the theological students were involved in some form of labour. It helped to keep the fees lower as we took responsibility to maintain the grand old mansion where our studies were based. So Mike and I painted rooms and talked Christian doctrine. After leaving college I regularly preached at a church where Mike was pastoring in Somerset. On the Saturday night, as we prepared for the Sunday services, Mike and I would go to an upstairs room in the house to pray. I vividly remember Mike praying the words found here (10), saying, ‘Lord, when we have done all, let us know that we are unprofitable servants and have only done our duty.’ His prayerfulness and humility left a great impression on me. Whenever you are complimented for any act of Christian ministry, think about these words and let them keep you in your place.

This short passage says to me, ‘Remember who you are and Whose you are. Remember what you are. Above all, keep in mind who Jesus is. He’s the Master, and you are here to serve Him, and not the other way round.’

Jesus may do many wonderful things for you. That’s His grace. It’s undeserved. He is not obligated to do anything. As a servant I need to keep my focus on doing for Him.

”Does the servant get special thanks for doing what’s expected of him? It’s the same with you. When you’ve done everything expected of you, be matter-of-fact and say, ‘The work is done. What we were told to do, we did.’ ” The Message.

Prayer: Help me, humble Lord Jesus, to keep my life in perspective, and to not think more highly of myself than I should.

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