Friday, June 30, 2023

The Names of God - He That Formed You In the Womb

 

He That Formed You In the Womb

Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the nations. Jeremiah 1:5 (NIV)

I’ve spent a lot of time contemplating the word conception. We use this word to describe the moment which bring the egg and sperm together to begin the human life cycle. Why is this the word chosen? For those who believe in a higher power, it becomes apparent. If you attribute all life to be from God, then your beginning came from a “thought” in His mind.

When the mind is working to create, we conceive a thought which launches the creative process. We are “conceived” in the mind of God the moment the biological elements meet to form your DNA, something which has never existed before, and will never exist again.

Continuing with this thought, an inventor sees in their mind’s eye the creation before it is ever realized. Elon Musk “saw” the Tesla before the first one was ever driven. He “conceived” the electric car long before the production line began building them. In this same way I believe God conceived you. He saw you. There is purpose in you. There is great value in every double helix which makes up your very being.

The psalmist must have had one of these moments of contemplation when they penned these words:

For you created my inmost being;
    you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
    your works are wonderful,
    I know that full well.
My frame was not hidden from you
    when I was made in the secret place,
    when I was woven together in the depths of the earth.
Your eyes saw my unformed body;
    all the days ordained for me were written in your book
    before one of them came to be.
How precious to me are your thoughts, God!
    How vast is the sum of them!
Were I to count them,
    they would outnumber the grains of sand—
    when I awake, I am still with you.
Psalm 139:13-18 (NIV)

Fearfully and wonderfully made. What a freeing thought to realize you were created instead of just some random happenstance of nature. This eliminates the possibility of “accidents”, speaking of unplanned pregnancies. You are no accident. God intentionally “thought” you into existence in order to bring your gifts, your passion, your influence, your genuine care and concern, into humanity in order to bless them.

I say this often (I’m very sarcastic by nature), “We are all unique – in exactly the same way.” However, there is much truth in this statement. The things that make you unique are the same for everyone, your appearance, personality, capabilities, etc. There is only one you. He That Formed You In the Womb doesn’t cast you away once you are conceived. He then remains with you all the days of your life, to help, to guide, to heal, to console, to encourage, to celebrate, to bless.

Allow the Creator to continue His work in you by taking time to get to know Him the way He knows you. You may be surprised by how much He loves you.

Monday, June 26, 2023

2 Minutes

 2 Minutes

You never know when you’re two minutes from realizing the reality of what you desire. There’s a song by JJ Heller called, Don’t Give Up Too Soon, which speaks to this very thing. “Please keep waiting for the morning, don’t give up too soon.” Waiting is hard; mainly because of the unknown. What we do in the waiting makes all the difference.

A couple of thoughts on waiting:

For me, this is one of the hardest things.

Stay focused on the thing desired. When you feel you know the direction you want to go in life, keep visualizing the end result. Realize the value it will bring, or the good which will be accomplished.

Don’t waste the time spent waiting. Look around to see if there is something else productive which can be accomplished or someone else who can be helped. Stay aware of the moment while longing for something better.

Find others on the same, or similar journey, who can be an encouragement to you. Learn from others who have experienced reaching their destination.

Give yourself some space. A friend shared a song with me this past week which I have taken on as my theme song for these days. Amy Grant’s song, Don’t Try So Hard, has put into words something I’ve struggled with for a very long time.

Don't try so hard
God gives you grace and you can't earn it
Don't think that you're not worth it
Because you are
He gave you His love and He's not leaving
Gave you His Son so you'd believe it
You're lovely even with your scars
Don't try so hard

Delay does not mean defeat. Keep hoping, keep moving forward, and keep believing the dream in your heart.

Even if you do not fully achieve the thing desired, re-evaluate, reset, recalibrate, and see if that is still the target. If so, research the missing data, learn the needed knowledge, accumulate the needed resources, and get ready for another attempt.

You will never regret unfulfilled desires, only those you never attempt to achieve. Don’t live with regret. Go after your dreams and live a richer life, help more people, and go to bed at night fulfilled, knowing your purpose is intact, and dream about tomorrow.

If you want to read more about this, check out my book, Wonder in the Wilderness. Available on Amazon in paperback or Kindle.

Friday, June 23, 2023

Church and Christianity

 Church and Christianity

This is a difficult piece to write, mainly because I’m outside of my comfort zone in writing it. Three months ago, I would not have even thought of placing this is the public domain, primarily out of fear of what someone might think or say about me. Today, I’m a different person.

A number of years ago, quite frankly I don’t recall how long ago, a dear friend recommended a book which described his spiritual journey at that time. He had become frustrated by what he saw in the local church and was simply seeking answers. The title of the book is, “So You Don’t Want to Go to Church Anymore?” When I heard the title, I was a little hesitant to read it. I was in vocational ministry, “serving God” in the local church. Why would anyone not want to go to church?

The problem was, I too had some questions. There were things that didn’t seem to add up. The respect I had for those in church leadership had caused me to never question anything. In order to be a team player on a church staff, you did everything you could to support the ministry of the local church, and to promote its programs.

I read the book. When I finished it, I had bigger questions. These questions drove me to start looking for answers. I read other books, like “Pagan Christianity,” “100 Years from Now,” “The Divine Conspiracy,” “The Present Future,” “Misreading Scripture with Western Eyes,” “Beyond Evangelical,” and more recently, “Faith After Doubt,” “A Crazy Holy Grace,” “Twisted Scripture,” “Daring Greatly,” and “The Sin of Certainty.”

There is no common thread in these books, but each one brought an aspect of truth which has propelled me forward in forming, or reforming, my spiritual understanding of God, and how I relate to Him. Just so we are clear, I have never considered forsaking my faith, nor have I questioned God’s love for me. I feel both of these areas have only been strengthened in the past few years as I have struggled to understand the role of the local church compared to the Kingdom of God represented by The Church.

This thought came to me as I was working around the house today, mulching, trimming shrubs, demolishing a deck, painting, and a few other things. While working, I was listening to music. One of the songs on my playlist is called, “That’s What I Love About Sunday,” written by a local songwriter, Mark Narmore. I love this song. It was a big hit back in 2005, but I never heard it because I only listened to Christian worship music back in those days. Because that’s what you are supposed to do as a good Christian. I worked at a church, only hung out with Christian people, and only listened to Christian music.

This song is quite simple. It talks about what most people in the South do on Sundays: go to church, eat Sunday dinner, take a nap, go fishing, play football; “not too much of anything” as the song puts it. This has not been my experience of Sunday for close to 45 years. Far from it. I grew to hate Sundays. I was always physically drained by Sunday night, not to mention emotionally taxed by dealing with “church folks.” More times than not, I ended Sunday frustrated spiritually, always thinking there was something more, or guilt-ridden over all the ways in which I had failed God by not experiencing His “presence” in a more tangible way.

As I listen each time to the song, “That’s What I Love About Sunday,” I feel a sense of loss over the years I missed by not having a simplistic approach to the Christian life. Christianity is not hard. It’s no harder than being a son. Growing up I never considered how I could be a better son so my parents would love me. They loved me regardless. Yet, in the church, we try to make things so difficult that it winds up frustrating those who simply want to “glorify God and enjoy Him forever.” (The Shorter Catechism) We begin adding to the list all the things that makes up a “good” Christian. These rules and regulations suck the life right out of new converts who think they have finally found the answer they were seeking.

I entered into ministry out of a sense of guilt and obligation. When asking questions of church leaders in my early teen years, I was convinced there was a “call of God” on my life. I thought that made me special. I began to move in the direction of “fulfilling the call” so God would like me more. I attended college, I read books, I attended conferences, I developed friendships, all for the sake of the call. After spending my entire adult life in part-time or full-time vocational ministry, I wound up in the same place Solomon came to in his book, Ecclesiastes: all is vanity. I enjoyed much of the work I did during those years. Many happy times occurred, and I felt like important things were accomplished during those years. However, when my tenure ended, I was left with a very empty feeling that it had all been a ruse. I felt cheated somehow, mainly because I worked for a wage well below my earning potential. I ended my ministry career with very little to show for the 80+ hour workweeks.

I understand that is not why most people go into vocational ministry. Most approach it with an altruistic ideal that they are “serving God” and should not expect anything in return. And most local churches make sure that you don’t get much in return.

I’m not anti-local church. I would like to find one that seems more in tune with what I feel the mission of the local church should be. Right now, I’m content to fellowship with my Father, learn more of His character and His ways, and fellowship with other Believers when I can.

Maybe this will upset some people who think I am dead wrong, thinking only of myself. Maybe this will cause some to give pause and think about what I shared because they too have had similar experiences. And maybe this will evoke some real debate about what the New Testament Church is supposed to look like. Regardless of your response, I pray that you will either continue in a genuine relationship with the Father or begin to seek Him out and establish one. Don’t rely on a minister or other church leader to mandate what your relationship will look like. God loves you! He wants to have fellowship with you! 

Thursday, June 22, 2023

The Names of God - Saving Strength of His Anointed

 Saving Strength of His Anointed

The LORD is their strength, And he is the saving strength of his anointed. Psalm 28:8 (KJV)

What does it mean to be God’s anointed? If you take the definition of the word, it would imply those on whom God has poured or rubbed oil. Since this is not the case, where God literally rubbed or poured oil, there has to be another explanation. Acts 2:17 says, “And in the last days it shall be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh, …” The Holy Spirit is referred to as oil many times in scripture. Using this understanding, God’s anointed would be every person.

This makes sense if you read the whole psalm of David. He starts out talking about “they” in several different ways. “Them that go down into the pit” (vs. 1), “workers of iniquity” (vs. 3), and “they regard not the works of the Lord” (vs. 5). Then, in verse 6, David turns inward. “He heard by supplications” (vs. 6) and “my strength … my heart … my song” (vs. 7).

Then, David makes the statement used for today’s name for God: The Lord is their strength, and He is the saving strength of His anointed. To whom is David referring? It has to be those he mentioned earlier. I believe what David is trying to communicate is that God is the hope of every person. Each of us are alive because God gave us breath, just as He did Adam when He “breathed into him (Adam) the breath of life” in the Garden. From Adam until now, God has been the Saving Strength of His Anointed. 

Each of us is the anointed of God. The life you have in you is the Spirit of God. He is the force which animates these clay suits we call a body. We are not our body, but instead the spirit who lived inside. Our spirit is the part which connects with the Spirit of God. It’s the part of us which is recreated (2 Corinthians 5:17) when we are born again. This is the moment God becomes The Saving Strength of His Anointed. If you have never experienced this aspect of God, today is the day. Call out to Him. He has not changed, and will never change. He stands ready to act on your behalf to save you from whatever you may be facing. There is no pit too deep for His reach. There is no distant land to which you may have fled that God cannot find you. There is no offense too great which He cannot forgive. There is no wall you can construct which He cannot pull down.

If you need a rescue, God is waiting. All you have to do is ask.

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

The Names of God - I am the LORD Your God Who Leads You by the Way That You Should Go

 I am the LORD Your God Who Leads You by the Way That You Should Go

Thus says the LORD, your Redeemer, The Holy One of Israel: “I am the LORD your God, Who teaches you to profit, Who leads you by the way you should go. Isaiah 48:17 (NKJV)

From the time of man’s original sin in the Garden of Eden, God made a plan to redeem His creation and bring mankind back into an intimate relationship with Himself. We were created to “walk with Him in the cool of the day.” This was God’s plan at the start. Due to disobedience, man became disconnected with God, unable to fellowship with Him as “friend with friend.”

In spite of this “fall”, God set into motion a plan to undo the mistake of Adam by sending another “Adam” to gain forgiveness and pay the price for sin, which is death. When you read the Bible to see the measures taken by God to accomplish all which was needed to restore us back into right relationship, you see a majestic, orchestrated plan which spanned millennia.

One of the key pieces to this master plan was the nation of Israel, God’s Chosen People. Through Israel, God would bring a Savior, a Messiah, which would be the hope of Israel, and the rest of mankind.

While speaking through the prophet, Isaiah, God revealed another view of His nature and character by referring to Himself as “The Lord Your God Who Leads You by the Way That You Should Go.” For me, this demonstrates just how long-suffering and gracious God is to us. He has the ability to force us into a mold of His creation, and make us do exactly as He requires. He chose not to dictate our future and, instead, gives us a choice.

He promised He would “lead” us by the way we should go, but we would have to choose to take that path. He leads us by revealing the place of peace which, if we remain in it, will result in a life of fellowship with God, and the fulfillment of our God-given dreams. There is no better place.

There are some who believe in the strict interpretation of the word “predestined” found in scripture. These folks would have you think that every action you take, good or bad, is part of the “path” which you were born to fulfill. You have no choice in the matter.

I do believe we are predestined, but not to this degree. The word predestined simply means, “pre-horizoned,” which implies a beginning, but not necessarily an ending. Each of us are born into a specific time, location, and familial setting. Each one factors into the person we are, and the choices afforded us as we begin life. It does not, however, determine how we will live our life. That is dependent on our choices.

God’s “destiny” for every person born is to become conformed to the image of His Son, Jesus. However, that path is different for each one of us because we all start from different places. A female born into an Islamic family has a vastly different path than a male born into an affluent family. Race, ethnicity, economics, culture, and religion all play important roles in how we discover the truth about who God is, and the redemption available to us through Jesus Christ.

This is the path which will lead us to God, and He leads us down this path. We must choose to follow that leading. He accomplishes this by using people like you and me to share the Good News that God loves us, cares for us, and wants the best for each one of us. It is critical that we have a right understanding of who God is so that we can correctly and effectively communicate the abundant grace and mercy being extended to us, so others will be drawn to Him instead of repelled away from Him.

Take time to learn of the nature and character of God so you can enjoy the relationship available in Him, and so you can share this with others. Both of you will be better because of it.

Monday, June 19, 2023

The Names of God - God, Which Hath Not Turned Away My Prayer

 God, Which Hath Not Turned Away My Prayer

Blessed be God, which hath not turned away my prayer, Nor his mercy from me. 
Psalm 66:20 (KJV)

It has been said that God does not hear any prayer from a sinner except the prayer of repentance. This would go against everything that I have come to know about our Creator. How could He not hear? If He knows when a sparrow falls to the ground, or when a deer is born in the wilderness, He hears the prayer of a “sinner”.

This argument is disingenuous to me. Many Christians I’ve known over the years still refer to themselves as “sinners”, yet they profess to be saved. These same people also claim that God hears their prayers. You can’t have it both ways, in my opinion. Either God hears every prayer, or He hears none at all.

This line from Psalm 66 was written by someone who had experienced grace long before the new birth experience was ever provided through Jesus and His death, burial, resurrection, and ascension to the right hand of the Father. The psalmist received answers to the cries made to God, and knew it was only by God’s mercy that he was still alive.

By uniting answered prayer and mercy in the same statement shows true humility. The false humility demonstrated by many professing Christians is actually rooted in pride. This psalmist realized it was God who chose to hear and chose to show mercy. I believe if more of us would approach prayer with this attitude we would see more accomplished by our prayers.

I realize in this format of brief comments on such topics which have been the subject of doctoral theses and countless volumes of books like prayer, you cannot fully cover every nuance. However, if you can get the first premise established in your mind, the rest might come a little easier. God is good, and His mercy endures forever! He will always hear our cries. Give Him a chance to hear yours. I think you’ll be surprised by the outcome. He is truly the God Which Hath Not Turned Away My Prayer. For that, I am eternally grateful

Friday, June 16, 2023

Desire

 Desire

Humans do nothing outside of desire. Even when being asked, directed, or ordered to do something, we respond out of our desire to either please the one asking, respect the authority of the one directing, or avoid the pain or consequence of disobeying the order. When I was in high school, my friend and I use to have conversations like the following:

“There are only two things certain in life: death and taxes.”

“Actually, that is not accurate. You don’t have to pay taxes. You could choose, instead, to be imprisoned for lack of payment.”

“And it you believe in the second-coming of Christ, you may not actually see death.”

“So, is there anything absolutely mandatory which we have to do regardless of any desire?”

“Yes. You must be conceived; otherwise, you never existed.”

“And, you must face judgement.”

Outside of these two things, everything we do is driven by desire. Even as a small child, although unaware of the conscious thought, we cry because we are hungry, sleepy, messy, etc. Once we become aware or our existence, we begin to develop our desire to the point of planning or scheming ways to obtain the thing desired.

As we mature, we become capable of controlling our desire-driven behavior by making conscious choices. The goals behind these choices are determined by our mindset regarding our moral standard, economic goals, relationships, etc. The unhealthy side of this results in choices driven by desires fueled by vices, fear, lack of self-control, low self-esteem, etc.

The difference humans have over many of the other animals is the ability to reason. This word is even a misnomer. Reason is defined as, “think, understand, and form judgments by a process of logic.” Much of human behavior is illogical due to desire. It causes us to make short-sighted decisions or spur of the moment choices. Most of these are harmless, but some result in life-changing moments.

The most important activity we can engage in is the process of taking notice of our desires. Whether you want to or not, you will move in the direction of your desires. However, you have the ability inside you to choose your desires; or at least choose the ones you respond to. We also have the ability to change our thinking when we realize our current desire-driven habits are taking us in an unacceptable direction. Steven Covey described these moments of becoming self-aware as a “paradigm shift.” Some call it “having an epiphany.” Regardless of the label, when these “ta da” moments come, they become an intersection in our life-journey. We have to make a choice which, by default, will eliminate other possible courses for our journey.

It takes courage to choose, but even not choosing is a choice. It means you will continue on the current path. Don’t live your life on autopilot. Make intentional choices. Live life on purpose. Enjoy the journey.