Saturday, January 27, 2018

More... Praying Often Looks More Like Listening

 So now we can rejoice in our wonderful new relationship 
with God because our Lord Jesus Christ has 
made us friends of God.  Romans 5:11 NLT

If someone were to say the word "prayer" right now, what is the first thing that comes to your mind?  I have to admit that the photograph known as Grace by Eric Enstrom is the image that comes to mind.  I'm sure you've seen it.  It's an image of an older, wizened man, white bearded face, head bowed in prayer sitting at a table with a loaf of bread, a bowl and what appears to be a Bible.  A copy of this photograph hung in my childhood home, in the dining room to be exact.  I'm not sure how or why this picture came to be there, but it resided on the wall above a music stand for decades.  The photograph, of course, is posed.  It wasn't a candid which caught a man deeply devoted in prayer.  The subject was actually a peddler who happened to stop by the home of a photographer preparing for a photographer's convention and was hired to pose for the now iconic portrait.

I remember as a child when asked to bow my head in prayer, obediently bowing and clasping my hands (as I'd observed in the photograph) but often not engaging with what the  pray-er was actually saying.  I may have had the posture of prayer but I was not praying.  I also remember times of putting myself in a posture of prayer before a meal only to really be thinking of what was coming for dessert.  Sometimes, like that old photograph, what we are calling prayer is really nothing more than going through the motions.

If I am to have more of God, going through the motions is unacceptable with prayer.  Shallow prayers with no depth or substance are not going to draw me deep into God's heart.  I am reminded of the story Jesus told of two men who prayed, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector.  (Luke 18:9-12)  Jesus describes one man whose "prayer" (and I use that term loosely!) is completely centered on himself.  Because of that story I think that we sometimes do an old pendulum swing and pray for anything but ourselves.  That is not biblical either as the story Jesus tells just prior to the "two men" story is about a woman who seeks justice from a judge constantly as a lesson about persistence in prayer...and she asks for justice from her adversaries.  

It's okay to get personal.  As a matter of fact, I think it's mandatory that we get personal in prayer.  If we don't we will never relate to God as anything but a distant notion, a far off authority who has no real relevance to our lives.  As a child I had the privilege of studying cello with a cellist who had studied with the famed cellist Pablo Casals.  He used to tell me that he would rather see me spend five minutes rehearsing well than an hour pretending to be practicing.  Whatever we happen to be doing, pretending doesn't  do anything to advance us in skill or ability.  Pretending at prayer doesn't fill our relational need for more of God either.

I've been thinking about prayer as part of my More series for awhile, but when I'd sit down to write I couldn't connect to my topic, until last week.  You see, last week my husband Alan and I went to dinner with a couple whom we've recently become acquainted.  Dinner was the setting in which we anticipated getting to know each other better.  As I thought over last week's meal, it came to me; prayer is a lot like having dinner with friends!  I recalled that we laughed and enjoyed good food.  We shared stories about ourselves.  These two beautiful people went from being virtual strangers to being friends whom I care about a great deal.  I learned where they had come from, how they'd come to be together, how they had handled a number of difficulties through the years, how they traveled with Jesus, just to name a few topics.  I discovered that they have some of the same passions that I share with Alan!  And here's the thing...I think they'd say the same about us.

What does that story have to do with prayer, you ask?  Let me tell you.  Prayer is not an intellectual exercise, an oratory or a set of lists to check off.  It is organic and personal and interactive.  It should be approached with enjoyment and desire and longing.  If we were to engage God through prayer similar to the manner we might engage with a friend over dinner, I think prayer would take on a new dimension in our lives.  What might that look like?

I think approaching prayer as a friendship communal would be just that, an interaction with a friend.  It would feel much less restrained and somber, a little more free and light-hearted.  I don't mean to insinuate that we forget that God is holy and righteous.  But when did holiness become synonymous with seriousness and inaccessibility? Why don't we approach God with laughter in our mouths and on our hearts?  Why do we insist on treating Him like a royal killjoy?  Do you recall the phrase "laughter is the best medicine?"  It turns out, it really is.  And because we are made in God's image, I think this tells us something of God as well.  I remember going to a women's prayer meeting when I lived in Flagstaff, Arizona and having a young woman start her prayer with "Hi God!  It's Brandi again!"  Her soul lightening heart attitude was fresh and free of arrogance and full of enjoyment.  It brought joy to my heart as well and spoke a truth deep into my soul; formality doesn't necessarily make us better at prayer, just perhaps a bit more reticent.  She spoke with God as though He were right there with her.  And why not?  He was.  He is.

We also forget, I think, that God is relational.  He doesn't need us, but He wants us.  He made us for relationship with Him.  I think, therefore, it's imperative that when we come to God in prayer we view Him with an eye to relationship.  We speak.  We listen.  Then we listen some more.  He already knows what's in my heart.  I don't need to tell Him.  The reason that I do is that it engages me in the conversation.  But if all I do is talk I've dramatically missed the point.  Listening is the larger part of prayer.  It's the part that changes us.

Well then, how do you do that?  It's certainly a fair question, but not an easy one to answer, I'm afraid.  I think that's because listening comes in such a variety of forms.  It can look a whole lot like reading the Bible (and this is certainly a key component to hearing God).  Have you ever been reading a passage only to have something jump out at you?  Remember my story about lectio divina and the word "be?"  That story gives a pretty good example of what I'm trying to convey here.

It can be words coming out of the mouth of another person that strike deep in my heart.  I recall an impassioned, but totally inappropriate conversation I was having with a friend of mine.  She very calmly told me that she was going to hang up and wait for the person who was her friend to call her back.  It shocked me back into reality!  And later when I called her back she could not recall making that statement!  

Sometimes it is a still, small voice reassuring me.  Last fall, after I'd gotten done with an hour in the prayer tent we had set up outside our church, I left feeling a bit skeptical that God would actually do what I was asking Him to do - bring revival.  I continued to struggle with Him as I drove down the hill from the church.  As I turned onto the highway I happened to look and saw a woman I had been praying for walking up the highway.  I turned around to pick her up.  As it turns out, she was heading to the prayer tent!  As we drove back up the hill she told me about how excited she was to spend an hour in prayer with other believers.  I'd been praying for her salvation.  And as I drove away after dropping her at the tent I heard God's sweet reassurance in my spirit, "Ruth, she is my deposit on your request."  That firmed my faith in a real hurry!

There are other ways God speaks as well, if we're willing to listen.  Sometimes he speaks through our surroundings.  I am reminded of another story I told in an earlier post.  In the section where I talk about prayer I tell the story of taking a walk, when in fact, God had been calling me to just be quiet with Him in my garden.  Recall that when the Pharisees try to rebuke Jesus for not correcting His disciples who were openly worshiping Him, He tells them, "I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry out."  (Luke 19:40)  

God is able to speak through anything He wants.  We just need to be able to listen.  And that takes practice.  Don't be discouraged if you feel you're not hearing anything at first.  Recognizing God's voice is crucial to our relationship with Him, and He's very patient with us.  Ask Him to speak to you.  Keep on practicing.  Keep on going to Him.  Keep on enjoying the relationship.  The hearing will come.  


Monday, January 22, 2018

More... Exercising with the Word

In the beginning was the Word...
John 1:1

I have in my possession several pairs of shorts, a number of T-shirts, a couple pair of yoga pants and a sturdy pair of running shoes.  I even have a gym membership.  But what if I never put on my exercise gear?  Would having that gear benefit me?  Yesterday I got all dressed up to go to the gym for a workout, the first in quite some time as I've had injuries that have prevented me from feeling free to go.  I felt great about my decision, anticipation swelling in my mind.  But before I had opportunity to depart for the gym, the pain in my side that I've suffered from for a number of weeks came rushing back upon me.  It is quite likely that it was all in my mind, but it did have its effect; I didn't go.

Any medical practitioner will tell you that if all you ever do is dress for a workout but never go you will never receive any health benefit.  I could dress for a workout every day of my life, feeling quite comfy in my gear, but I won't get one ounce healthier if I never take the step of actually exercising. 

I own quite a number of Bibles, several Bible dictionaries/concordances and a couple of Bible handbooks; I have no fewer than three Bible apps on my phone plus a Bible concordance.  What would happen if I never once used these Bible resources?  Just as with my exercise gear, if I don't use it, it doesn't bring me any benefit.

May I remind you of the goal here?  Aren't we looking into how we "find" more of God?  I submit to you that God has given us His Word as a means of growing deeper into Him, getting "more" of Him.  Paul is emphatic when he describes to Timothy the character and purpose of God's word:


Every part of Scripture is God-breathed and useful one 
way or another—showing us truth, exposing our rebellion, 
correcting our mistakes, training us to live God’s way. 
Through the Word we are put together and shaped up 
for the tasks God has for us.  2 Timothy 3:16-17 MSG

There are numerous other passages that give us understanding about God's Word and it's work in our lives but perhaps the most poignant I can think of is found at the beginning of John's gospel.


In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was with God,
and the Word was God.

He was with God in the beginning.

All things were created through Him,
and apart from Him not one thing was created
that has been created.

Life was in Him,
and that life was the light of men.

That light shines in the darkness,
yet the darkness did not overcome it.
 The Word became flesh
and took up residence among us.

We observed His glory,

the glory as the One and Only Son from the Father,

full of grace and truth. 

This passage gives us a variety of important characteristics of God's Word, several which I would like to spend a little time touching on because they are key, I believe, to finding ourselves with "More" of God.

Jesus is the Word.  


I find it very helpful when I sit down to read or study God's Word to think of that time as relating to a Person.  And John is very clear...the Word is a Person.  In fact, He is a very important Person!  

Have you ever been given an audience with a very important person?  I have on a few occasions.  Once I was introduced to Steve Camp, who was a pretty big deal as far as Christian artists were when I was in college.  I was pretty giddy with excitement as my friend, Kris, introduced me.  Shouldn't this be how we approach Jesus?  Isn't He, after all, the creator of the entire universe?  There is none more important.  Steve Camp is a splash in the bucket next to Jesus.  Every person on this earth is a mere shadow, an image if you will, of the real deal, Jesus Christ.  When we are in God's word, reading or studying, we are exercising relationship as long as we understand this.


The Word is Life

Have you ever worked in a very hot environment?  You can work up a mighty thirst if the conditions are just right.  I remember, on a mission trip my church organized, helping to move quite a number of plywood sheets about 50 feet from an outdoor location to an indoor one.  Not too difficult, right?  Only I was doing this in the sweltering sun beating down on Southern Mississippi in August.  It was hot and humid and it was a nearly cloudless day.  The homeowner we were helping watched us toil and brought some ice cold Gatorades to us in a gesture of great care.  I remember slaking my thirst, more thankful for that bottle of Gatorade than I had been for anything in awhile.  In my dehydrated condition that Gatorade was life to me.

When I've been too full of myself or just plain ignorant and haven't seen God's Word as Life, I haven't typically approached reading it and engaging it with fervency of any kind.  I don't crave it or cherish it as a person suffering from dehydration might crave water.  I don't cling to its life-giving words.  That's why I always go to the Author and ask Him to readjust my thinking so that I might cherish what I read and learn more of Him, connecting to Him as my life.  This builds relationship.  And that is really what Bible reading and studying should be primarily about.

Awhile back I found myself in the position of leading a Bible study with a small group of women.  I had one student who might have been the star pupil in a classroom of philosophy students.  She loved to study, often going beyond what was obvious and looking for all sorts of extra information she deemed relevant to the study.  But that seemed to be all that the Bible was for her - information.  Her merely academic chatter quenched the Spirit's moving in that Bible study.  It appeared that the Bible to her was for growing her intellect, not bringing life to her depleted heart.  We all need the life that God imparts through His Word.


As a deer pants for flowing streams,
    so pants my soul for you, O God.
 My soul thirsts for God,
    for the living God.  (Psalm 42:1-2)


The Word is Light

When I was a child I lived in a home that didn't have a "normal" basement; it had a root cellar.  It felt like a very creepy place to me.  The uneven floors and walls were just packed dirt.  It was cold and full of spider webs, which presumes that there were likely plenty of nasty creatures living there.  I would never have gone down there except that is where my mother stored the food that she canned in jars and the potatoes we dug from the garden for the long winter.  I was quite literally afraid of that "basement" and am still uneasy in unfinished basements today!  I was frequently asked to retrieve things from the root cellar.  Fortunately for me there were lights hanging from the ceiling that would expose the dark, shadowy places or I'm not sure I could have dared venture there at all.
   
Spiritually speaking, we all have dark places in our lives we wish we could just forget and would prefer not to venture.  And that is precisely why we need The Word so badly.  We need the light that God's Word will shine into our lives, exposing not just our sin but also the wounds that hold us back from experiencing the kingdom of God fully.  

And not only does it expose, it also guides.  We can know how to proceed when the light is before us.  
Your word is a lamp to my feet
and a light to my path.  Psalm 119:105

Your testimonies are wonderful;
    therefore my soul keeps them.
The unfolding of your words gives light;
    it imparts understanding to the simple.

It is crucial we grasp that God's Word, yes, and even God Himself in the Person of Jesus Christ, is the Light that has the ability to expose, guide, heal and  impart understanding in every part of lives.

The Word is Grace and Truth

My witty husband likes to refer to us as "Grace" and "Truth."  He is "Grace" and I am "Truth."
This doesn't bother me for I find that without truth in my life I am not grounded.  But if I am not careful my truthfulness seeking takes me perilously close to life-damaging behaviors that have no consideration for others.  My husband, on the other hand, almost always thinks the best of people unless he is given a reason to not trust them.  He is like-able if not somewhat prone to be gullible. And he is sometimes taken advantage of in the process.

Jesus, the Word, is not like either of us.  He is balanced in both truth and grace.  He always speaks truth into those around Him but the grace that He consistently administers to people  is purely stunning!  I am reminded of His encounter with the adulterous woman.  (John 8:2-11)  It was a test, really!  The scribes and Pharisees who were constantly trying to find fault with Jesus brought Him what they considered to be an impossible challenge.  They brought Him a woman they had caught in the act of adultery.  If you think about that picture a minute numerous problems arise.  But the real issue here is Jesus' response to the conundrum with which these wily religious fanatics try to pin Him.  They figure that no matter what response Jesus gives them they will be able to accuse Him of being a law breaker.  But what Jesus does instead is beathtaking.  He turns to the accusers, sinners themselves and states simply, "Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone at her." (John 8:7)  Then He stoops and starts drawing in the sand.  He hurls no accusations.  He makes no threats.  We don't know what He wrote but the effect is profound.  Every single last accuser leaves.  I suspect that Jesus has shown them the real truth about who they are and by throwing any stones at all they recognize they would condemn themselves as well.  Jesus then turns to the woman and asks, "Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?"  The woman must have been astounded, "No one, Lord."  Jesus does not release her without acknowledging her sin, yet He does not rub her nose it but rather frees her to live in both truth and grace.  "Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more.(John 8:8-11)  Jesus operates in both truth and grace; sin is acknowledged but a way out is given.

Living with more of God means living with more of Jesus, immersing ourselves in His Word, hanging on every word He has said.  He will meet us there.  It may not feel like the earth moves under our feet each time we open the Bible, but mark my words, consistent consumption of the Word will move our hearts and transform our minds.  It will deepen our relationship with our Heavenly Dad and give us hope for each new day. 



Friday, January 19, 2018

More... And Less

He must increase, but I must decrease.
John 3:30


A couple weeks back I decided to give up playing games on my phone, at least for a period of time.  I discovered that I was much more aware of things in the spiritual dimension when I did that.  And yet early on I was also aware of how much angst that gave me.  It seemed weird at first because the biggest reason I played those games was to have something mindless to do as a break.  What I think I've discovered though, is that those "mindless games" were actually preventing me from deepening my relationships and accomplishing every day tasks that I needed to complete.  They took much more time than I intended.  They kept me from God  They had become an idol to me. 

Let me be clear,  when I devote myself to anything that takes my time and energy away from my relationship with God, I have an idol.  Idols come in all forms.  They can come in the tangible forms of prized cars or works of art or even people I hold dear.  In Wisconsin, where I am from, the waiting list to obtain Green Bay Packer season tickets exceeds 100,000 people.  It is not uncommon for individuals to leave their ability to purchase season tickets as part of their will or to place a child's name on a wait-list as soon as a birth certificate is obtained.  That is not to say that every Green Bay Packer season ticket holder is an idolater in this regard but I know from talking to people that some clearly fit that mold.  If you've ever been to any form of sporting event there is a form of worship that is practiced, often more fervently than you'll see from those same individuals in a church setting!  When it's been my son playing I know that I've been guilty of that.  And I'm a passionate worshipper!!!  When those things become more important than God's place in my life, I have an idol to contend with. 

Often, however, idols are even more subtle.  They might come in the form of a "harmless" fantasy we allow ours minds to play with (even if we never act on it!) or an education or good deeds that we regularly engage in.  Surprisingly idols can be "good" things and "good" endeavors, those things which we feel build us up.  But ask yourself - Does this distract me from the real Treasure?  Do I find myself caught up with things that aren't really all that valuable?  (I know I have replayed game moves over and over in my head in order to get a higher score the next time.)  I like how John Piper describes it in his book A Hunger for God:  

If you don't feel strong desires for the manifestation of the 
glory of God, it is not because you have drunk deeply 
and are satisfied. It is because you have nibbled so long 
at the table of the world. Your soul is stuffed with small 
things, and there is no room for the great.  


If you're like me you may find that idols pop up all the time, usually slithering in slowly and taking captive our hearts and minds before we realize what is happening.  I think this may have been in Paul's mind when he instructed the Corinthian church (I like how The VOICE translation puts it):

For though we walk in the world, we do not fight according 
to this world’s rules of warfare. The weapons of the war we’re 
fighting are not of this world but are powered by God and 
effective at tearing down the strongholds erected against 
His truth. We are demolishing arguments and ideas, every 
high-and-mighty philosophy that pits itself against the 
knowledge of the one true God. We are taking prisoners 
of every thought, every emotion, and subduing them into 
obedience to the Anointed One.  (2 Corinthians 10:3-5)


I think Paul wants to remind us that this desire for "more" of God is a battle!  But it cannot be won on our own.  "Our weapons...are powered by God."  And oh how I need those weapons!  I often find myself struggling with selfishness.  I'm not talking about taking time for "myself" as a form of self care, but when I start to use that as an excuse for letting things like digital games eat up my time, it has become an idol for me.  Notice the recurring theme here?  As I've been writing, God has been convicting me and I have deleted those games that have engrossed me.  And it's been quite freeing!!!  You see, when we let go of our idols we become free to pursue God unencumbered.  The author of Hebrews knew this.  He encourages his readers:

Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of 
witnesses [who by faith have testified to the truth of God’s 
absolute faithfulness], stripping off every unnecessary 
weight and the sin which so easily and cleverly 
entangles us, let us run with endurance and active persistence
 the race that is set before us, [looking away from all 
that will distract us and] focusing our eyes on Jesus, 
who is the Author and Perfecter of faith [the first incentive 
for our belief and the One who brings our faith to 
maturity]...  (Hebrews 12:1-2a AMP)

This is a common theme in Scripture.  For example, Paul reminds the Corinthians in his first letter to them:

 We all know that when there’s a race, all the runners bolt for 
the finish line, but only one will take the prize. When you run, 
run for the prize! Athletes in training are very strict with 
themselves, exercising self-control over desires, and for 
what? For a wreath that soon withers or is crushed or simply 
forgotten. That is not our race. We run for the crown that 
we will wear for eternity.  
1 Corinthians 9:24-25 (VOICE translation)

I love John the Baptist's single-minded craving for "more" of God.  He lets go of material things, the "stuff" we can get so bogged down with, choosing instead to live a simple albeit radical lifestyle. He releases any jealousy (this is pretty much always a symptom of the presence of an idol!) that could have gripped him when Jesus burst onto the scene, taking the wind out of his sails, so to speak.  And when given the opportunity he describes what joy this gives him.

 John answered, “A person cannot receive even one thing 
unless it is given him from heaven. You yourselves bear me 
witness, that I said, ‘I am not the Christ, but I have been sent 
before him.’ The one who has the bride is the bridegroom. 
The friend of the bridegroom, who stands and hears him, 
rejoices greatly at the bridegroom's voice. Therefore this joy 
of mine is now complete. He must increase, 
but I must decrease.”  John 3:27-30

John has heard the voice of the bridegroom, Jesus.  In John's mind there is nothing greater than having "more" of Jesus.  In my own experience I've discovered that when I root out the idols that grip my heart and I'm open to receive more of God I find joy too.  So I concur with John.  Being in relationship with Jesus, gaining "more" of God is what brings lasting joy.  And that always takes us down the path of releasing idols, the things that hold us back.  It means less.  But the reward is MORE!  Oh, so much more!!!

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

More... We All Need a Hero

Jesus said to him, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. 
No one comes to the Father except through me.  John 14:6

It is my contention that every epic story must have a hero.  Without a hero stories have no hope.  Think about it.  Imagine Darth Vader without Luke Skywalker.  Or the Wicked Witch without Dorothy.  Or the Joker without Batman.  Bleak.  

Aren't these stories a picture of the bigger Story though?  We need more of God, more of His forgiveness and grace, more of His saving power.  More.  We are compelled to hold out for hope.  It is written into our DNA. 

This past week my son, Andrew had the opportunity to visit Auschwitz with a team of students from Taylor University.  He hasn't talked at all about that visit.  I'm sure he's still processing.  But I did have opportunity to read about their experience from the eyes of another team member.  It was sobering, to say the least!  These are young people whose lives are before them, who love Jesus and have followed Him to serve in the Czech Republic this January.  Yet they came face to face with the evidence of death and it shook them to their core.  It's a formidable reminder that pure evil loves death.  Jesus, well aware of this told His followers, "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy." (John 10:10a)

Fortunately for us when God wrote His story death didn't get the final say when Adam and Eve fell.  Oh, hear me well!  We live in the consequences of their actions today but God didn't leave us alone in those consequences.  In the midst of handing out the curse to the serpent God laid out a beautiful promise to His children.  A war?  Yes, but a Savior too!  "I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your headand you shall bruise his heel.(Genesis 3:15)  Bible scholars believe that Eve took this promise to heart for when she gave birth to her first son she named him Cain, which means possession.  In the name given to her son she basically declares to God "I believe you've given me what you promised!"  Now if you remember your Sunday school stories from Genesis you know that Cain wasn't the fulfillment of that promise.  No, instead he murders his brother Abel.  There is still room for a hero!

Just as God promised, a hero does arrive on the scene...in the most unlikely of places - a manger.  And not just any manger!!!!  His birth signifies that He will become the ultimate sacrifice, reconciling humanity back to God.  He lives His life, His public ministry demonstrating His ability to restore all things to God.  And then, much to the surprise of those who believed Him to be the promised Messiah, He is sentenced to die the cruelest and most torturous of all deaths...crucifixion.  Jesus does not run from it.  In fact he addresses his betrayer, Judas, in friendly terms when the crowd comes to arrest Him. "Friend, do what you came to do." (Matthew 26:50)   He is not afraid to die; it's what He came to do.  This is no accident.  God made legal provision for this sacrificial death generations before this moment. Moses writes in Deuteronomy 21:22-23:  
And if a man has committed a crime punishable by death 
and he is put to death, and you hang him on a tree, his body 
shall not remain all night on the tree, but you shall bury him 
the same day, for a hanged man is cursed by God.
Don't miss this!!!  This is extraordinary as there is no provision in the Law for crucifixion or hanging...except this one passage.  Yet here is the phrase that makes it possible for Jesus to be for us the hero of all time - a hanged man is cursed by God.  There is no other way that Jesus could legally incur the wrath of God except to be hanged on a tree - crucifixion!  Stunning!  And through that death God the Father allowed Jesus to take our place in the spot of condemnation!  We've been saved!!  Paul, a scholar of the Law, recognizes this.  He tells the Galatians,  "Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us—for it is written, 'Cursed is everyone who is hanged on a tree'— so that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so that we might receive the promised Spirit through faith."  (Galatians 3:13-14)

We can't have more of God unless we accept that Jesus is the hero we all need.  In the hours before His arrest and crucifixion Jesus imparted a number of significant truths to His closest disciples, one which is absolutely crucial to our understanding.  He told them "I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me."  (John 14:6)  No one.  No exceptions.  Jesus is the only way to the Father.  If you have never accepted this reality, know that More isn't available until you do.  If you have accepted this reality, don't ever forget.  It is the heart of the gospel.  It is central to having More.

Today I leave you with the lyrics to a modern day hymn, In Christ Alone written by Keith Getty and Stuart Townsend that summarizes today's blog with complete clarity.


In Christ alone my hope is found;
He is my light, my strength, my song;
This cornerstone, this solid ground,
Firm through the fiercest drought and storm.
What heights of love, what depths of peace,
When fears are stilled, when strivings cease!
My comforter, my all in all—
Here in the love of Christ I stand.


In Christ alone, Who took on flesh,
Fullness of God in helpless babe!
This gift of love and righteousness,
Scorned by the ones He came to save.
Till on that cross as Jesus died,
The wrath of God was satisfied;
For ev’ry sin on Him was laid—
Here in the death of Christ I live.



There in the ground His body lay,
Light of the world by darkness slain;
Then bursting forth in glorious day,
Up from the grave He rose again!
And as He stands in victory,
Sin’s curse has lost its grip on me;
For I am His and He is mine—
Bought with the precious blood of Christ.



No guilt in life, no fear in death—
This is the pow’r of Christ in me;
From life’s first cry to final breath,
Jesus commands my destiny.
No pow’r of hell, no scheme of man,
Can ever pluck me from His hand;
Till He returns or calls me home—
Here in the pow’r of Christ I’ll stand.




 IN CHRIST ALONE" WORDS AND MUSIC BY KEITH GETTY & STUART TOWNEND COPYRIGHT © 2002 

When It Feels Like God Isn't Good

No one can deny it—God is really good to Israel and to all those with pure hearts. But I nearly missed seeing it for myself. Psal...