16

Jump Start # 305

Jump Start # 305

Proverbs 8:13 “The fear of the LORD is to hate evil; Pride and arrogance and the evil way, and the perverted mouth, I hate.”

  One of the many themes in the book of Proverbs is “the fear of the Lord.” The book begins by telling us that ‘the fear of the Lord, is the beginning of knowledge’ (1:7). Fear as used in Proverbs is the idea of reverence, or respect. To care about what is important to someone else, and in this case, God. To fear God is not to be afraid of God, rather it is to respect, care for and honor what is important to God.

  Our passage brings out a negative. The fear of the Lord, we are told, is to hate evil. That statement troubles some of us.  We’ve gotten the idea that Christians are not supposed to hate at all. The word “hate” is almost a curse word and we would never use it. Here we find a positive way to do the negative—if that makes any sense. To care for God is to hate what God hates. The writer lists a series of wrong behaviors. These are all sinful. They wreck the soul, destroy our relationship with others, especially God and they cause us all kinds of trouble. Little good, if any could be said about these things. The list includes: evil; pride; arrogance; evil way; and the perverted mouth. Those items are very generic. Evil comes in many forms. Evil in motives, evil in heart, evil ways, evil plans, evil person. Pride and arrogance are twins. Where you find one you will always find the other. Pride is what is on the inside and arrogance is what is on the outside. We witness arrogance. The word “perverted” in our times has a sexual tone to it. The word actually means, “crooked,” or “bent.” It’s not straight like God, rather, it’s crooked. The perverted mouth would include lying, falsehoods, even false teaching. They are not straight. They are not true. They are perverted. They are crooked.

  The writer of this passage proclaims that he hates these things. I expect if I were to say that in a sermon, some dear sister would correct me on the side and remind me that we should never use the word ‘hate.’ But God does. The Bible does. Some things are just plain wrong. Don’t cover up the blackness of things by pretending they are white. Don’t fall for the idea that there is good in everything. No there’s not. There’s nothing good about evil. NOTHING. There’s nothing good about false things. NOTHING.

  It’s ok to say “I hate what God hates.” Evil destroys. Crooked ways confuse and lead people into error. They are not good, no matter who they come from. Now that’s where a lot of our problems are found with all of this. I hate what God hates. The crooked message from churches that do not teach the truth…family members that are evil…politicians that lie…superstars who mock God…I hate what God hates.

  Now, what do we do this this hatred? Do we bomb those that oppose God? No. Do we make offensive signs and march up and down streets, screaming at the top of our lungs? No. You don’t find the apostles doing those things. What do we do with this hatred?

  First, we do not let it turn into bitterness and destroy us. It didn’t Jesus. Bitterness leads to wrath and all kinds of unhealthy attitudes. The hatred cannot eat us up on the inside. That is never right. 

  Next, we pray. We pray for those we hate. Didn’t Jesus say to love your enemies? Pray that they will change. Pray for God to open the door of their hearts. Pray for them to follow Jesus Christ.

  Finally, we continue to cling to what is good and right. We defend God’s ways by being a part of them and opposing wrong. Don’t encourage wrong. Don’t support wrong. I’ve walked out of movie theatres before. I had enough. I’d say to myself, “If they say one more bad word, I’m leaving.” They did. So I did. I’ve written letters to the editor of newspapers before. I’ve called schools and talked to principles. Don’t ever be rude, obnoxious or threatening—never. But on the other hand, don’t try to make a friend out of the things God hates. Some things are just wrong—and that’s just the way it is. Those that do them need to be taught, encouraged to repent and behavior changed. When they won’t, we part ways. Light and darkness don’t mix. Those of darkness hate light, that what Jesus tells us. Remember, we are engaged in a spiritual combat and at stake is not the world, but your heart, your family and finally your soul.

Roger

15

Jump Start # 304

Jump Start # 304

Philippians 2:6-7 “who, although He existed in the form of God, did not regard equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied Himself, taking the form of a bond-servant, and being made in the likeness of men.”

  In our verses today, Paul helps us to understand Jesus. Just who is Jesus? Some claim He is made up. Others, even in the first century, saw Him as a prophet or rabbi, and nothing more. He was more than that, He was the Son of God. He was the chosen Messiah who came from Heaven and dwelled among man and offered His life for our sins. I think of the hymn we sing, “Do you know my Jesus?”

  Paul tells us that Jesus existed in the form of God. The apostle John begins his gospel by declaring that Jesus was with God and that Jesus is God. Paul further states that Jesus was equal with God. Equal, the same as, no difference. Now all of that gets fuzzy in our brains sometimes. How can Jesus be equal if He is called “the son of God?” I have three sons and they are not equal to me. I’m older than they are. There was a time when they weren’t and I was. When we think of Jesus that way, things get crossed up in our faith.

  Jesus has always been. There never was a time when He wasn’t. In Colossians we’re told that Jesus “made all things” and “is before all things.” We tend to limit Jesus to the thirty some years He was on earth. Not only did He exist forever, but He is equal with the Father. All-knowing? Yes. All-powerful? Absolutely. Everywhere? Yes. Eternal? Of course. All that the Father is, Jesus is.

  How then is Jesus “God’s son?” Paul in this Philippian passage goes on to say that Jesus “emptied Himself,” “took on the form of a bond servant,” “humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death.” Jesus subjected Himself to Jehovah. He put Himself in the role of a son, an obedient son. Jesus said, I came not to do my will, but the one who sent me. Remember the famous John 3:16 passage? “God so loved the world that He GAVE…” Jesus said I speak not my words but the words of Him who sent me. In the garden, before the cross, Jesus prayed, “Let this cup pass from Me…not my will, but Thy will be done.” Jesus was obedient to the Father as a son is to his dad. In 1 Corinthians Paul said that the God is the head of Christ.

  It is important to understand just who Jesus is. We see in Jesus the example of obedience and respect. He didn’t rebel. He didn’t fight the role He was to play. He didn’t complain. He didn’t come to earth kicking and screaming and saying, “Why me?” Not Jesus. What a wonderful example for us. None of us can say that we are equal with God, yet how many of us fuss and throw a fit about what God says in the Bible? May we learn from Jesus.

  • We learn from Jesus that it is not our will but the will of God that is most important. In the call to be disciples Jesus said a person must first, “Deny self.” Self gets in the way of things. Have you noticed that? It generally comes out in expressions such as, “I don’t feel like it…” or, “I don’t want to.” That’s self rising up. Jesus said, “deny self.” What is it that God wants? That’s what we’re after.

 

  • We learn from Jesus that God wants us to obey Him. He has said already what He desires from us, it is up to us to obey. Have you heard the old expression, “Close don’t count except in horseshoes and hand grenades?” Close doesn’t count. Obey God. Do what God says. Do it His way. Modern Christianity has gotten away from that. It excels in being cutting edge, not obedient to God. Different and unique is in and faithful to the word is out. Jesus was faithful. He was obedient. We need to be as well.

 

  • These two aspects please God. God spoke from the Heavens and declared that Jesus was His beloved Son in whom He was well pleased. Making God happy. How do you that? By putting God first and obeying Him…that’s how.

  Start today. Make God’s way your way!

Roger

14

Jump Start # 303

Jump Start # 303

Philippians 2:10-11 “so that at the name of Jesus every knee will bow of those who are in Heaven and on earth and under the earth, and that every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.”

  Every—Paul likes that word in this verse. He uses it twice—every knee and every tongue. Similar words are found in Romans fourteen where Paul talking about the judgment says, “As I live says the Lord, every knee shall bow to Me, and every tongue shall give praise to God’ (14:11).  Every knee…every tongue. Everybody!

  Let’s think about that for a moment. Never has everyone been together—never. Even in some families it is hard to get everyone gathered at meal time. We are spread out, busy and going many directions. More than that, the history of our lives do not allow us to all be together. We have never been with Abe Lincoln—impossible. He lived and died long before any of us were around. What about Napoleon? Nope. The Caesar’s? No. This will be the grandest gathering of all. Notice from our verse where they are coming from: Heaven (possibly the angels), the earth (those alive), those under the earth (those departed). God has not left anyone out. Every knee…every tongue—living and dead. What a once in history event this will be. And you won’t miss it, you’ll be there.

  Also notice, that everyone is doing the same thing. Every knee is bowed and every tongue is confessing that Jesus Christ is Lord. Have you ever had a group photo taken with a whole bunch of people? Was everyone smiling? No. Usually someone is looking off in space, someone has their eyes closed, some kid is pitching a fit. Can’t get the group to do the same thing. More than that, it is hard to get a group of people to all agree. Try to pick a place to go out to eat? That’s hard sometimes. Does everyone agree with the President? No. Has everyone ever agreed with any president? No. What about movies? No. What about sports teams? No. What about best song of all time? No. What about favorite vacation spot? No. Desert? No. Book of the Bible? No. The one thing we all agree upon is the fact that we don’t agree. But the day is coming where every knee will bow. That is a sign of reverence and respect. It shows that Jesus is the King of Kings. Does every knee bow for Jesus today? No. Some defy Jesus. Some deny Jesus. Some curse Jesus. Some if given the choice, would stand in rebellion. But a day is coming when every knee shall bow. Also, every tongue will confess. Paul is not giving us details such as, one by one we will confess, or all of us together. I tend to think it will be a united confession. Interesting, we all don’t speak the same language in the world, but every tongue shall confess.

  At that grand day there will be no doubters. No atheists will remain atheistic, even their knees shall bow and their tongues shall confess. This brings questions to our minds, such as, “How is God going to do this?” “Is He going to force us?” The Bible teaches that when Jesus comes, there will be a shout from an angel, Jesus will appear in the sky with all the angels, myriads and myriads of angels. This won’t be like a movie. This won’t be like anything else anyone has ever seen. This event will remove all doubt. Is Jesus real? We’ll know then. Is He God? We’ll know then. There will be no escaping, there will be nothing more important.

  Those who haven’t known Jesus or followed Him, will beg for mercy. Those that have loved and followed and longed for this day, tears will streak their faces as they see their Savior coming to take them home. There is an old hymn we sing that says, “There’s a great day coming, a great day coming…”

  Jesus Christ is Lord. God declared that. The Bible teaches that. And it is up to us to believe that. Accepting that is life changing. It alters the direction of your life. It puts God at the helm of your heart. Your focus becomes His focus. You realize that you were made on purpose for His purpose. You can bow your knee, your head and your heart now to Christ and follow His words, and imitate His ways and long for the joyous day when He comes, or, you can just keep on doing what you are doing. But know this, a day is coming in which every knee, that includes my knees and your knees and every tongue, including my tongue and your tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is the Lord. There is a great day coming.

  Won’t that be marvelous? Every knee and every tongue…It won’t be something in which I’ll think, “I wish my kids could have been here to see this.” They will be there. Parents, too. The goofy cousin. The neighbor. The boss. The mailman. The doctor. The news anchor on TV. The athlete. The superstar. The folks from church. The people from down home. There won’t be anyone who missed it. There won’t be anyone who was out of town or sick that day and couldn’t be a part of it. Everybody from everywhere—all bowing…all confessing. Jesus finally getting His honor for all creation!

  There is a great day coming!

Roger

08

Jump Start # 300

Jump Start # 300

  A personal note: We have now reached Jump Start # 300. Amazing. Who would have thought that we would have written 300 of these things. Several congregations are now using these and the number of people requesting our daily devotions continues to grow. We have will soon have a Jump Start website available. The domain name has been secured and the background work is being done. Once it is completed, all of our Jump Starts will be posted and available to read, print or pass on to others. Thank your for your encouragement, for sharing these with others, and above all, for reading these. May God be glorified by these things.

Luke 11:4b “Lead us not into temptation.”

  As we continue looking at the example of prayer given by Jesus, we come to a most interesting statement, “Lead us not into temptation.” Matthew adds to this, “but deliver us from the evil one.”

  Temptation is not wrong in of itself. We know that because Jesus was tempted, yet the Bible says that Jesus never sinned. Temptation is the opportunity to sin. It is Satan’s invitation or the knock on the door. Do we open that door and invite temptation in or do we flee from it?

  Temptation comes in many flavors. It is not a one size fits all. Paul told Timothy to “flee youthful lusts.” I don’t think a person ever out grows temptation nor gets to a point where temptation doesn’t bother him, but through the years temptations change. What tempts a younger person may not tempt a more mature person. Through the years, temptations become less fleshy and more internal. A young man may be tempted to drink. A older man may be tempted with pride and ego. Both have consequences. Both can wreck faith.

  Another aspect about temptation is that it is not the same for each of us. There are so many things that can tempt us. Some would never, ever think about stealing something that didn’t belong to them. Others, have tried that and must fight that temptation. Some are loyal to their mates and wouldn’t dream of being unfaithful, with their eyes, heart or body. Others fantasize and wonder what it would be like. We can be critical of the struggles of others because what they are facing isn’t a temptation for us. But if we looked in the mirror, we’d realize that we have our own struggles and battles.

  Paul told the Corinthians, “No temptation has overtaken you but such as is common to man; and God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will provide the way of escape also, that you may be able to endure it.”  Paul uses the word “temptation” three times in this one verse. He tells us many things.

  1. Temptation is common. We can never say, “No one has gone through what I have.” Temptation is common to man. John condensed temptation to “lust of the eyes, lust of the flesh and the pride of life.” Most temptations fall into one of those things.

  2. We are not tempted beyond what we are able. It may be 100% but it will never be 101%. We have the promise of the Scriptures for that. Someone might say, “I just couldn’t help it, I had to do it.” No, you really didn’t have to. God doesn’t give you more than you can handle.

3. With every temptation comes an escape hatch. God provides a way out. You have to look for it, but it’s there. Consider Kind David’s adultery with Bathsheba. When he saw her bathing and called for her, his servants said, “this is the wife of Uriah…” Uriah was one of David’s valiant and mighty warriors. Bathsheba was married. Warning signs. Red lights. Escape path opened. David ignored. Temptation led to sin—first in the heart and then in behavior. That is how sin happens. It is born in the heart by temptation. It grows and burns until we act upon it and we have sinned against God.

  Jesus wants us to pray about temptation. Interesting that this statement follows asking God for forgiveness. We wouldn’t need forgiveness if we didn’t sin. We wouldn’t sin if we weren’t tempted. Jesus is gong to the starting point. Temptation. Watch for it. It looms, it lurks, it invites, it knocks on the door of your heart. It reminds you that you deserve some fun and pleasure, even if it is wrong. It tells you that you’ll never get caught, and you usually do. It tells you that God won’t mind, but He does. It tells you that others do it all the time, but that doesn’t make it right. It knocks and knocks and knocks until finally we open the door, and temptation leads us to sin.

  There was a man who fell and broke his arm. He went to his doctor and stated, “Doc, I broke my arm in two different places.” The doctor said, “You ought to stay out of those places.” Good advice. We sing, “Yield not to temptation, for yielding is sin..” Pray before you go to work. Pray before you head out with friends. Pray to be strong, pure and remember that you want to go to Heaven more than anything else. Fight, resist, flee those are the words used in the NT to deal with temptation. Don’t discuss it, debate it, nor consider it. Jesus resisted by remembering what God’s word taught. Three times He told Satan, “It is written…”

  That will help you. Fill your heart with God’s word and that word will open doors of escape for you. Peter tells us to “Be holy, like He is holy.” We can. We shall. We must.

Roger

07

Jump Start # 299

Jump Start # 299

Luke 11:4 “And forgive us our sins, for we ourselves also forgive everyone who is indebted to us.”

  We continue our journey through the model prayer, the prayer that Jesus taught. The prayer began with praising God for who He is. He is hallowed. His name is hallowed. The prayer looked forward to the fulfilling of God’s promise of a kingdom. Then it moved to simple things like, asking God for daily bread.

  Now, the prayer quickly turns to the delicate, difficult and important spiritual concept—forgiveness of sins. As one asks God for the daily bread, he now asks God for forgiveness. To walk through this life with food in the body but with sins in the heart is a wretched way to journey. It is God who forgives.

  Jesus noted in this request that we are asking God to do what we have done—granted forgiveness. It is an interesting word that Luke uses, “everyone who is INDEBTED to us.” That has a financial sound to it. It is as if they owe us something—and they do. Jesus often defined sin like a debt (cf. Mt 18). When you sin, you owe. You owe much. Making things right comes to our mind. Owing an apology would help matters. The act of forgiveness is to “release” what is owed. The debt is forgiven. Nothing is owed. The balance has been paid by grace. Jesus expects us to forgive. How can we ask God to forgive when we haven’t forgiven?

  In Matthew’s account of this model prayer, we find Jesus adding some commentary to what He showed in the prayer. Of all the elements of the prayer, there is only one that He returns to and that is forgiveness. Matthew writes, “For if you forgive others for their transgressions, your Heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forgive your transgressions” (Mt 6:14-15). Not only does Jesus expect us to forgive others, but our forgiveness from God is conditioned upon how we treat others. Our failure to forgive will result in God’s refusing to forgive. How can we expect God to forgive if we won’t?

  When the crippled man was lowered down through the roof before Jesus as He was teaching, the first thing the Lord said was, “Friend, your sins are forgiven.” The friends brought the crippled man to Jesus to heal his legs. He left with more than that, a healed heart. Forgiveness is based upon grace. It is a second chance. It is generated by love and hope for the wrong person. God does not owe us forgiveness. He doesn’t have to forgive. This prayer reminds us that we are to “ask” for forgiveness.

  The result of forgiveness is a clean heart and a new start with God. It means God hasn’t turned His back and thrown in the towel on the guilty. When the prodigal headed home, His father saw him and raced toward him with love and acceptance. The Father had been looking. He’d longed for the day his son returned. He didn’t beat him, lecture him nor make him spend the night in the barn. He was forgiven. The son owed nothing.

  One thing about grace and forgiveness—they don’t make a lot of sense. We live by the motto of “if you do the crime, you do the time!” Or, we think, after you have paid everything back and made everything right, then I’ll forgive you. What is there to forgive after the debt has been paid back and made right? Is that how God treats us?

  Paul told the Ephesians to “forgive one another, just as God in Christ Jesus has also forgiven you” (Eph 4:32). We have been hurt by others and we have ourselves hurt other people. We need to forgive and we ourselves need to be forgiven. It seems that some forget that. They can be so critical and judgmental and harsh on those who have hurt them, but indifferent to their own sins.

  Can you forgive others? Can you let it go? Do you always have to remind them of what they did? Do you say things like, “I’ll never get over it,” or, “I’ll never forgive.” What then do you expect God to do to you? Are you so different?

  Forgiveness is something that we need to work on. The failure to forgive kills families, destroys churches and leaves our hearts bitter, sour and hateful. This is not the way God wants us to live.

  We need forgiveness and we need to forgive others. We are to ask God for our forgiveness and we are to extend forgiveness to those who owe us. This is God’s way. This is what God wants. Easy? Never. Possible? Always.

  Nothing is more Christ like than forgiveness. A person can be generous without being godly. A person can be kind to the hurting. But for the wounded to offer forgiveness, that’s a characteristic of God.

Roger