3 INCHES OF WEAKNESS
A single viewpoint, a conjecture, a surmise, or a notion is able to turn a disciple into a drop out. Never underestimate the power of suggestibility. A solitary idea or opinion, if rehashed, reworked, and recited, will overtime come to be considered by the mind a hard fact. Your opinions are not fact but the Word of God is.
“Anyone who hears these words of mine
and puts them into practice is like
a wise man who built his house
on the rock.” Matthew 7:24
From this day forward consider your Achilles Heel. Achilles: the mighty Greek hero. Achilles: the semi immortal. Achilles: the invulnerable who took his revenge on Hector during the siege of Troy. Achilles: handsome, brave, but with three inches of weakness.
In Greek legend Achilles’ mother wished to cover her young son with immortality by dipping him in the river Styx. By the heel she held her young son upside down while she dipped him tenderly in the magic that she believed was vested in the waters of Styx. The madness of magic obeyed according to the ritual she observed. But no madness of magic touched the boy’s heel. Her hand was in the way. On the battlefield of Troy, a lucky arrow struck Achilles in the exact spot where his mother’s hand griped him the many years before. Three inches, on the young warrior’s heel, was his only weakness. No much really, a mere three inches, but three inches was enough to be a target for the killer arrow’s tip to find.
Today is a new lesson for you. The lesson asks you to consider your Achilles Heel? Where is your weak spot? Where is your three inch target? Are you safeguarding yourself against the attack of the wrong repetitious thought?
“Take up the shield of faith,
with which you can extinguish
all the flaming arrows of the evil one.”
Ephesians 6:16
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
WHERE IS YOUR SECURITY?
Everyone who travels by air goes through airport security checkpoints. It’s not quite a full body check but dropping your shoes, stripping your belt and watching a complete stranger X-ray your undies can’t but not pinch a flyer’s sense of privacy. These TSA checkpoints are there for a reason. A good reason all agree. But there is a bit of irony in the pursuit of security when it demands the one seeking that security must first oblige by surrendering over the security that the flyer feels when they can keep their privates, private.
Privacy is the ability of secluding information about yourself from others. The more “personal” the information is felt to be, then the greater the gain to keep it under control.
Before God, we have no privacy. Ironically, in the Kingdom of God, the loss of privacy actually promotes a sense of security.
It is human nature to build walls and lock locks. It is God’s nature to tear down walls and unlock locks.
Jesus Christ taught that the Christian life is entered by the new birth. Jesus referred to the nature of children when describing the new birth. "Except you be converted, and become as little children," said the Lord Jesus, "you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 18:3).
Do you think that children have a developed sense of privacy? Or might they acquire their sense of it through watching their parents?
How invested are you in controlling your personal information? Do you give out your Social Security number? Do you order online? How has the wave of identity theft incidents changed the way you do business?
Your assignment this week is to scan your sense of privacy. You should prayerfully rethink the issue of privacy. Think of privacy issues along more spiritual lines rather than just using financial concerns as the only criteria.
The Apostle Paul was friendly to images of “childhood” as a meaty metaphor. The word “child and children” are guests on more than just one occasion in his first letter to the Corinthians. Paul liked the particular Greek term translated as “pre-talker.” Paul likened a child’s struggle to grow up as a parallel for a Christian seeking to “grow up in Christ. “
At the conclusion of First Corinthians chapter thirteen, he depicts that struggle with artistic persuasion. A small child looks out at a world that rarely makes enough sense. It’s a big world. It’s far too big to make a whole lot of sense. “Now, we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face.” 1 Corinthians 13:12
The thought of imperfect seeing is Paul’s first point. Paul refers to the mirrors of his day. Ancient mirrors were often just polished metal and required constant polishing. The city of Corinth was famous for its production of mirrors; considered to be some of the finest. For the upper crust, metal mirrors weren’t sufficient. They could afford mirrors made out of agate. Nero the Roman Emperor was said to own a mirror made of polished emerald.
The figure of the mirror illustrated the struggle for maturity. How does one respond to a world where the laws and principles of God seem to be so easily subverted?
The word for “poor reflection” is the word for riddle. A riddle is a puzzle in the form of a question. Life’s big questions are “who are you?” “What do you want?” “Why are you here?” “Where are you going?” The path to maturity means you must try your best to answer these enigmas within the context of the world you live. If you rely only on your physical sight, you will be confused and perplexed.
In a world of sin and chaos, the Christian seldom finds the world outside them to be very cooperative.
Paul concludes with a key that unlocks the enigma. He directs the reader’s mind to look beyond the physical world and see a spiritual truth that is unchanging. “Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.”
What is Paul saying? He is offering you a promise of ongoing security. Paul is persuading the Christian from seeking too much security from this world. How can one find a satisfactory level of security from something that is far too confusing to comprehend? But security can be found in “even as I am fully known.”
Remember the TSA scanner? They peer into your private sanctuary made by Samsonite? Remember feeling the uncomfortable pinch when you lost your sense of privacy at the terminal? Well, God has fully scanned you. He knows all. He knows you in ways that you could never know yourself. Standing in the presence of God, you lose your sense of privacy but the loss comes without being overcome with fear or embarrassment.
Paul is saying something about Christian maturity. The mature Christian finds their security in some other venue besides physical reality. In Christ, the individual stands naked – without walls or locks – before the eye of God. He knows all. He sees all. He embraces ALL of you with His embrace of grace and love. God’s loving embrace provides the security we crave in a world turned upside down.
Everyone who travels by air goes through airport security checkpoints. It’s not quite a full body check but dropping your shoes, stripping your belt and watching a complete stranger X-ray your undies can’t but not pinch a flyer’s sense of privacy. These TSA checkpoints are there for a reason. A good reason all agree. But there is a bit of irony in the pursuit of security when it demands the one seeking that security must first oblige by surrendering over the security that the flyer feels when they can keep their privates, private.
Privacy is the ability of secluding information about yourself from others. The more “personal” the information is felt to be, then the greater the gain to keep it under control.
Before God, we have no privacy. Ironically, in the Kingdom of God, the loss of privacy actually promotes a sense of security.
It is human nature to build walls and lock locks. It is God’s nature to tear down walls and unlock locks.
Jesus Christ taught that the Christian life is entered by the new birth. Jesus referred to the nature of children when describing the new birth. "Except you be converted, and become as little children," said the Lord Jesus, "you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 18:3).
Do you think that children have a developed sense of privacy? Or might they acquire their sense of it through watching their parents?
How invested are you in controlling your personal information? Do you give out your Social Security number? Do you order online? How has the wave of identity theft incidents changed the way you do business?
Your assignment this week is to scan your sense of privacy. You should prayerfully rethink the issue of privacy. Think of privacy issues along more spiritual lines rather than just using financial concerns as the only criteria.
The Apostle Paul was friendly to images of “childhood” as a meaty metaphor. The word “child and children” are guests on more than just one occasion in his first letter to the Corinthians. Paul liked the particular Greek term translated as “pre-talker.” Paul likened a child’s struggle to grow up as a parallel for a Christian seeking to “grow up in Christ. “
At the conclusion of First Corinthians chapter thirteen, he depicts that struggle with artistic persuasion. A small child looks out at a world that rarely makes enough sense. It’s a big world. It’s far too big to make a whole lot of sense. “Now, we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face.” 1 Corinthians 13:12
The thought of imperfect seeing is Paul’s first point. Paul refers to the mirrors of his day. Ancient mirrors were often just polished metal and required constant polishing. The city of Corinth was famous for its production of mirrors; considered to be some of the finest. For the upper crust, metal mirrors weren’t sufficient. They could afford mirrors made out of agate. Nero the Roman Emperor was said to own a mirror made of polished emerald.
The figure of the mirror illustrated the struggle for maturity. How does one respond to a world where the laws and principles of God seem to be so easily subverted?
The word for “poor reflection” is the word for riddle. A riddle is a puzzle in the form of a question. Life’s big questions are “who are you?” “What do you want?” “Why are you here?” “Where are you going?” The path to maturity means you must try your best to answer these enigmas within the context of the world you live. If you rely only on your physical sight, you will be confused and perplexed.
In a world of sin and chaos, the Christian seldom finds the world outside them to be very cooperative.
Paul concludes with a key that unlocks the enigma. He directs the reader’s mind to look beyond the physical world and see a spiritual truth that is unchanging. “Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known.”
What is Paul saying? He is offering you a promise of ongoing security. Paul is persuading the Christian from seeking too much security from this world. How can one find a satisfactory level of security from something that is far too confusing to comprehend? But security can be found in “even as I am fully known.”
Remember the TSA scanner? They peer into your private sanctuary made by Samsonite? Remember feeling the uncomfortable pinch when you lost your sense of privacy at the terminal? Well, God has fully scanned you. He knows all. He knows you in ways that you could never know yourself. Standing in the presence of God, you lose your sense of privacy but the loss comes without being overcome with fear or embarrassment.
Paul is saying something about Christian maturity. The mature Christian finds their security in some other venue besides physical reality. In Christ, the individual stands naked – without walls or locks – before the eye of God. He knows all. He sees all. He embraces ALL of you with His embrace of grace and love. God’s loving embrace provides the security we crave in a world turned upside down.
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Can you make an idol out of God? The message of the "get rich" gospel teaches its adherents some principles whereby they can use God for thier ends. The traditional New Testament message is just the opposite. "How can God use me?" is the heartfelt prayer of the sinner who has been set free to serve others. This world and the things of this world are passing away. What you hold in your hand today will someday in the future be lost or given away. But what you hold in your heart will last forever. Today, you can surrender your day to God and ask Him to use you. That simple prayer of surrender is the shortest path to find lasting riches.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
DON’T CONFUSE YOUR MENTAL IQ WITH YOUR SPIRITUAL IQ
A recent article in a business journal listed the top 20 qualities an employer looks for in a job applicant. The top three were: follows directions, completes projects and good communication skills.
Surprisingly, mental intelligence didn’t even make the top ten. Mental IQ was listed at number thirteen in the list of twenty.
IQ is an early twentieth century concept. It measures a thing called “smartness.” Your IQ score isn’t limited to your intellect. Did you know that you also have a spiritual IQ?
Your goal this week is to consciously expand your awareness about your spiritual IQ.
Algebra can give you fits but flunking Algebra doesn’t measure your spiritual IQ. The same is true for any of your other school subjects. Intellectual smartness and spiritual smartness are separate.
How do you measure your smartness?
Where does your spiritual IQ come from? Jesus gives it to you through the indwelling Holy Spirit. Read John 7:37-39 & Ephesians 1:13
What is spiritual IQ? Your spiritual IQ score is determined by the size and nearness of your spiritual inheritance. How aware you are of it and how much of it you are using.
You will expand your spiritual IQ by creating a compelling picture of your inheritance. The picture must be vivid and Biblical. The more vividly defined the picture, the easier it is to recall. And faster, too.
The Apostle Paul tells us that the Christian’s spiritual inheritance is based strictly on their relationship with Christ. Paul says in Galatians 3, “for you are all sons of God through faith in Jesus Christ…and if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” In the Old Testament God offered His love and goodness to His people by giving them the Land of Canaan as their inheritance. In the New Testament, God gives His son to the heirs of faith.
If you’re last name were Weber, Heinz, Hilton, or Gates, you would be rich, privileged, powerful and famous from birth. How influenced would your life be by the single idea that you possessed such great wealth that it would be mathematically impossible for you to spend it in one lifetime?
The roots of your spiritual IQ will tap into the Biblical fact that you possess a world famous inheritance. The Bible says that the God of the universe adopted you. You were living in an orphanage called sin and God walked in through the front door. He personally produced and handed over the adoption papers. They were written in blood. On that day He made you His child and you were made His heir to an ever present spiritual inheritance.
Paul says that “having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise, who is the guarantee of our inheritance.” (Ephesians 1:13,14)
Ice cream is rated America’s number one dessert. Americans consume it at the rate of 15 quarts a year for every man, woman and child in the USA. I bet that you’ve got a stash of cookies and cream stowed away in the freezer section of your kitchen? I bet that at this very minute, just the mention of the word “ice cream” can be felt and seen in your mind. Taste the cool sweetness of the sugar and cream. See the waxed container, the colors of the logo, and the container’s shape. Probably you can even visualize exactly where it sitting in your freezer.
You can expand your awareness of your spiritual inheritance by finding a way to picture a container of some sorts. Is it wood or is it made out of a precious metal? Where is it? Under your bed or on top the dresser? Can you hold it in your hand or is it too large for that?
Think it. See it. Make it close. Grab it.
Your spiritual IQ is your Holy Spirit inspired ability to open your inheritance. Before you kick off a new project, go to your inheritance box. When you feel rejected, open up your inheritance. When tempted or tested, when you feel lonely and feel the need for communion with Christ and His presence, go to your box.
“But what’s inside?” you ask.
Inside your box is whatever you need or desire from God in the present moment. Before you were born, God already knew that He would adopt you. Before you were born, He filled your inheritance box with everything that His foreknowledge saw that you would someday need. Read Romans 8:28 and 1 Corinthians 10:13.
Spiritual IQ says, “blessed BEFORE the test.”
When Jesus ascended into Heaven, He gave His disciples their inheritance. The gifts of Christ’s victory over sin are to be used and enjoyed today. When God adopted you into His family, He made you His heir. Are you using your inheritance?
A recent article in a business journal listed the top 20 qualities an employer looks for in a job applicant. The top three were: follows directions, completes projects and good communication skills.
Surprisingly, mental intelligence didn’t even make the top ten. Mental IQ was listed at number thirteen in the list of twenty.
IQ is an early twentieth century concept. It measures a thing called “smartness.” Your IQ score isn’t limited to your intellect. Did you know that you also have a spiritual IQ?
Your goal this week is to consciously expand your awareness about your spiritual IQ.
Algebra can give you fits but flunking Algebra doesn’t measure your spiritual IQ. The same is true for any of your other school subjects. Intellectual smartness and spiritual smartness are separate.
How do you measure your smartness?
Where does your spiritual IQ come from? Jesus gives it to you through the indwelling Holy Spirit. Read John 7:37-39 & Ephesians 1:13
What is spiritual IQ? Your spiritual IQ score is determined by the size and nearness of your spiritual inheritance. How aware you are of it and how much of it you are using.
You will expand your spiritual IQ by creating a compelling picture of your inheritance. The picture must be vivid and Biblical. The more vividly defined the picture, the easier it is to recall. And faster, too.
The Apostle Paul tells us that the Christian’s spiritual inheritance is based strictly on their relationship with Christ. Paul says in Galatians 3, “for you are all sons of God through faith in Jesus Christ…and if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.” In the Old Testament God offered His love and goodness to His people by giving them the Land of Canaan as their inheritance. In the New Testament, God gives His son to the heirs of faith.
If you’re last name were Weber, Heinz, Hilton, or Gates, you would be rich, privileged, powerful and famous from birth. How influenced would your life be by the single idea that you possessed such great wealth that it would be mathematically impossible for you to spend it in one lifetime?
The roots of your spiritual IQ will tap into the Biblical fact that you possess a world famous inheritance. The Bible says that the God of the universe adopted you. You were living in an orphanage called sin and God walked in through the front door. He personally produced and handed over the adoption papers. They were written in blood. On that day He made you His child and you were made His heir to an ever present spiritual inheritance.
Paul says that “having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise, who is the guarantee of our inheritance.” (Ephesians 1:13,14)
Ice cream is rated America’s number one dessert. Americans consume it at the rate of 15 quarts a year for every man, woman and child in the USA. I bet that you’ve got a stash of cookies and cream stowed away in the freezer section of your kitchen? I bet that at this very minute, just the mention of the word “ice cream” can be felt and seen in your mind. Taste the cool sweetness of the sugar and cream. See the waxed container, the colors of the logo, and the container’s shape. Probably you can even visualize exactly where it sitting in your freezer.
You can expand your awareness of your spiritual inheritance by finding a way to picture a container of some sorts. Is it wood or is it made out of a precious metal? Where is it? Under your bed or on top the dresser? Can you hold it in your hand or is it too large for that?
Think it. See it. Make it close. Grab it.
Your spiritual IQ is your Holy Spirit inspired ability to open your inheritance. Before you kick off a new project, go to your inheritance box. When you feel rejected, open up your inheritance. When tempted or tested, when you feel lonely and feel the need for communion with Christ and His presence, go to your box.
“But what’s inside?” you ask.
Inside your box is whatever you need or desire from God in the present moment. Before you were born, God already knew that He would adopt you. Before you were born, He filled your inheritance box with everything that His foreknowledge saw that you would someday need. Read Romans 8:28 and 1 Corinthians 10:13.
Spiritual IQ says, “blessed BEFORE the test.”
When Jesus ascended into Heaven, He gave His disciples their inheritance. The gifts of Christ’s victory over sin are to be used and enjoyed today. When God adopted you into His family, He made you His heir. Are you using your inheritance?
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Spiritual Surrender; resting your oars.
Drifting is not always bad. You can rest while you drift. Your muscles can recharge. A friendly breeze can cool the sweat in your shirt.
Drifting results when you surrender direction. No matter how hard you row, the tide still seems against you. At the point of spiritual surrender you yield your course to the unseen current pulsing beneath the water's surface.
Drifting needn't imply that you are straying off course. Drifting can mean that you are surrendering to an unseen force.
Where are you struggling agaisnt the tide? Arms can fatigue and get cramps. Where is your soul cramping? Maybe God is trying to change your direction. Maybe He wants you to give up? Maybe you're fighting against a "teacher" sent from God with a life lesson? Sometimes, God asks you to change a situation. Sometimes, God commissions a situations to change you.
Today, rest your oars. Enjoy the breeze. Recharge. Drift a little. Pray and reflect.
"The King's heart is in the hand of the Lord. He directs it like a watercourse whevever He pleases." Proverbs 21:1
Drifting is not always bad. You can rest while you drift. Your muscles can recharge. A friendly breeze can cool the sweat in your shirt.
Drifting results when you surrender direction. No matter how hard you row, the tide still seems against you. At the point of spiritual surrender you yield your course to the unseen current pulsing beneath the water's surface.
Drifting needn't imply that you are straying off course. Drifting can mean that you are surrendering to an unseen force.
Where are you struggling agaisnt the tide? Arms can fatigue and get cramps. Where is your soul cramping? Maybe God is trying to change your direction. Maybe He wants you to give up? Maybe you're fighting against a "teacher" sent from God with a life lesson? Sometimes, God asks you to change a situation. Sometimes, God commissions a situations to change you.
Today, rest your oars. Enjoy the breeze. Recharge. Drift a little. Pray and reflect.
"The King's heart is in the hand of the Lord. He directs it like a watercourse whevever He pleases." Proverbs 21:1
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
MONDAY MORNING MOTIVATOR ON TUESDAY
Spiritual surrender is the high art of soul-making.
Yet the very thought of spiritual surrender is grounds for war, a spiritual war. The exact second you use your will to choose a spiritual surrender; it is an act of war. Surrender is that powerful. It aligns your will with God’s will. This alignment unleashes mighty forces to go to work in the spiritual realm. Having surrendered, God now steps forth to fight your battles for you. Satan fears it much.
Don’t be surprised should spiritual surrender feel too much like a personal defeat. That negative feeling is the language of your prideful ego. In the spiritual realm, surrender is the shortest path to victory.
How much do you know about the art of spiritual surrender?
Spiritual surrender is to give control over to the Lord Jesus. There are two types of issues that need surrendering. One is called a burden. The other is called a baby.
A burden is a matter that isn’t welcomed in your life. A baby is something that you do want, but you realize that God is asking you to sacrifice it to Him. Have you never read the story of Abraham and Isaac?
A burden can be mental, like fear or bitterness. A burden can be physical, like an illness, unemployment or a rebellious son or daughter. A baby likewise can be mental and it can be physical. The chief difference between a burden and a baby is that with one, you are more than happy to give it away. But with the other, there is no natural desire within to let go.
This week, your spiritual exercise goal is to talk with Jesus either about one of your burdens or a personal “baby” that you’re struggling with. Your private prayer sanctuary with Jesus should be seen as a first step. With prayer you surrender your heart to God for inspection. “Lord, tell me what You think. How well am I perfecting the practice of the art of spiritual surrender?’
The first chapter of John’s first epistle reads “God is light; in Him there is no darkness at all.” The kind of darkness and light John speaks of in chapter one are descriptions of the heart. In this context, the heart John describes is God’s. To touch the heart of God is to find the source from which springs forth the purest essence of love and wisdom.
The believer seeks not the heart of God in order to be saved. In the Gospel of John the words are read, “You did not choose me. I choose you.” The Apostle Paul also reminded his church that “God sought us when we sought Him not.” The heart of God is easily found in the person of Jesus Christ. The Son of God is the heart of God clothed in flesh. And the Bible clearly shows that Jesus is the Good Shepherd. He is the heart of God that seeks and finds the sheep that are wandering and lost.
To be found by Christ is to be touched by the heart of God. It is a moment in time that will forever change you. It is unforgettable. It is indescribable. To touch the heart of God makes you a prisoner of a single life encompassing desire. The day you were touched is the day you began your journey to return, again and again to re-experience that touch.
Burdens and “baby’s” provide you with a compelling reason to make the journey.
The journey back depicts the life of Christian sanctification. The sanctification is progressive and continual.
The journey is required. You may refuse the call for many years but finally the emptiness inside that you feel will force you to rethink what you have done. If you are a Christian, then you are a prisoner of grace. In the Biblical, humankind is viewed as either prisoners of grace or prisoners of sin. Once touched by the heart of God, the memory of God’s love and grace will solicit you to accept the Biblical meanings to your heart’s deepest longings.
The prisoner of grace is sanctified in the journey but not saved. The prisoner of God’s heart is already saved.
John’s epistle goes on with these words, “if we claim to have fellowship with Him yet walk in darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth, but if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, His Son, purifies us from all sin.”
John’s words describe the progress of your journey. He uses the term “walk.” It is a metaphor that describes your fellowship with God. From John’s word you discover that fellowship is found only in the light and while standing in the light, your soul is continually sanctified by the light.
Sanctification is a heart-word. It is a Biblical Word that depicts the union and reunion of your heart with God’s.
When you surrender your burden to God, you are standing in the light. When you sacrifice your baby to God, you experience the fellowship of God. The experience of surrender is a teacher of wisdom. It teaches you different ways to identify with the heart of God. Didn’t God sacrifice His one of a kind son? Wasn’t God’s sacrifice His way of sending His love out into a fallen world?
The art of soul-making is the ancient path to Christ-likeness. The art of soul-making shifts your attention away from “how you look” and sets your focus on your heart, your soul, your spirit, or whichever word you choose to use that describes the inner you that is only seen by you and God.
The more you give yourself away to God, the more your life will begin to make sense to you. The less there is of you, the less of you there is to get in God’s way.
How much of your life have you surrendered to God? How self-willed are you yet?
The art of spiritual surrender does not come naturally. Human pride is so inflated with an air of self-importance that the idea of surrender is viewed with disgust. Surrender is seen by pride as a type of defeat. Pride is too embarrassed by the idea because the concept of surrender is clear evidence that contradicts the vaunted boastings of the ego pride.
This week may hold a huge new breakthrough for you. Speaking with Jesus about your struggle to make a spiritual surrender may bring a huge spiritual insight.
Spiritual surrender is a high art of soul-making.
Surrender is powerful. It aligns your will with God’s will. This alignment unleashes mighty forces to go to work in the spiritual realm. Having surrendered, God now steps forth to fight your battles for you.
Spiritual surrender is the high art of soul-making.
Yet the very thought of spiritual surrender is grounds for war, a spiritual war. The exact second you use your will to choose a spiritual surrender; it is an act of war. Surrender is that powerful. It aligns your will with God’s will. This alignment unleashes mighty forces to go to work in the spiritual realm. Having surrendered, God now steps forth to fight your battles for you. Satan fears it much.
Don’t be surprised should spiritual surrender feel too much like a personal defeat. That negative feeling is the language of your prideful ego. In the spiritual realm, surrender is the shortest path to victory.
How much do you know about the art of spiritual surrender?
Spiritual surrender is to give control over to the Lord Jesus. There are two types of issues that need surrendering. One is called a burden. The other is called a baby.
A burden is a matter that isn’t welcomed in your life. A baby is something that you do want, but you realize that God is asking you to sacrifice it to Him. Have you never read the story of Abraham and Isaac?
A burden can be mental, like fear or bitterness. A burden can be physical, like an illness, unemployment or a rebellious son or daughter. A baby likewise can be mental and it can be physical. The chief difference between a burden and a baby is that with one, you are more than happy to give it away. But with the other, there is no natural desire within to let go.
This week, your spiritual exercise goal is to talk with Jesus either about one of your burdens or a personal “baby” that you’re struggling with. Your private prayer sanctuary with Jesus should be seen as a first step. With prayer you surrender your heart to God for inspection. “Lord, tell me what You think. How well am I perfecting the practice of the art of spiritual surrender?’
The first chapter of John’s first epistle reads “God is light; in Him there is no darkness at all.” The kind of darkness and light John speaks of in chapter one are descriptions of the heart. In this context, the heart John describes is God’s. To touch the heart of God is to find the source from which springs forth the purest essence of love and wisdom.
The believer seeks not the heart of God in order to be saved. In the Gospel of John the words are read, “You did not choose me. I choose you.” The Apostle Paul also reminded his church that “God sought us when we sought Him not.” The heart of God is easily found in the person of Jesus Christ. The Son of God is the heart of God clothed in flesh. And the Bible clearly shows that Jesus is the Good Shepherd. He is the heart of God that seeks and finds the sheep that are wandering and lost.
To be found by Christ is to be touched by the heart of God. It is a moment in time that will forever change you. It is unforgettable. It is indescribable. To touch the heart of God makes you a prisoner of a single life encompassing desire. The day you were touched is the day you began your journey to return, again and again to re-experience that touch.
Burdens and “baby’s” provide you with a compelling reason to make the journey.
The journey back depicts the life of Christian sanctification. The sanctification is progressive and continual.
The journey is required. You may refuse the call for many years but finally the emptiness inside that you feel will force you to rethink what you have done. If you are a Christian, then you are a prisoner of grace. In the Biblical, humankind is viewed as either prisoners of grace or prisoners of sin. Once touched by the heart of God, the memory of God’s love and grace will solicit you to accept the Biblical meanings to your heart’s deepest longings.
The prisoner of grace is sanctified in the journey but not saved. The prisoner of God’s heart is already saved.
John’s epistle goes on with these words, “if we claim to have fellowship with Him yet walk in darkness, we lie and do not live by the truth, but if we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, His Son, purifies us from all sin.”
John’s words describe the progress of your journey. He uses the term “walk.” It is a metaphor that describes your fellowship with God. From John’s word you discover that fellowship is found only in the light and while standing in the light, your soul is continually sanctified by the light.
Sanctification is a heart-word. It is a Biblical Word that depicts the union and reunion of your heart with God’s.
When you surrender your burden to God, you are standing in the light. When you sacrifice your baby to God, you experience the fellowship of God. The experience of surrender is a teacher of wisdom. It teaches you different ways to identify with the heart of God. Didn’t God sacrifice His one of a kind son? Wasn’t God’s sacrifice His way of sending His love out into a fallen world?
The art of soul-making is the ancient path to Christ-likeness. The art of soul-making shifts your attention away from “how you look” and sets your focus on your heart, your soul, your spirit, or whichever word you choose to use that describes the inner you that is only seen by you and God.
The more you give yourself away to God, the more your life will begin to make sense to you. The less there is of you, the less of you there is to get in God’s way.
How much of your life have you surrendered to God? How self-willed are you yet?
The art of spiritual surrender does not come naturally. Human pride is so inflated with an air of self-importance that the idea of surrender is viewed with disgust. Surrender is seen by pride as a type of defeat. Pride is too embarrassed by the idea because the concept of surrender is clear evidence that contradicts the vaunted boastings of the ego pride.
This week may hold a huge new breakthrough for you. Speaking with Jesus about your struggle to make a spiritual surrender may bring a huge spiritual insight.
Spiritual surrender is a high art of soul-making.
Surrender is powerful. It aligns your will with God’s will. This alignment unleashes mighty forces to go to work in the spiritual realm. Having surrendered, God now steps forth to fight your battles for you.
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