Sunday 29 June 2008

Simply Excellent

For you were once darkness, but now you are in the Lord. Walk as children of light. - Ephesians 5:8.

Someone is diligently calling all Christians for love and partnership, she is simply excellent. Who is this ? "I love those who love me and those who seek me diligently will find me. Riches and honour are with me, enduring riches and righteousness. My fruits is better than gold, yes than fine gold, and my revenue than choice silver. I traverse the way of righteousness, in the midst of justice, that I may cause those who love me to inherit wealth, that I may fill their treasuries" (Proverbs 8:17-21)

Beloved saints of the living God, who is this making such excellent offer ? She gives riches, honours, desirable riches and righteousness. She speaks right things, excellent things and truth. Every Christian believer really needs to meet her. Much more than mere acquaintance, every working Christian should like to share board with her, so well as to say to her, "For wisdom is better than rubies and all the things one may desire cannot be compared with her." (Proverbs 8:11)

But what is her name if you know her ? Where can she be found ? She has such excellent qualities and adds good value to the labours of those that know her. She helps Christians be well-motivated and make timely decisive actions in order to become great achievers of good things.

There are only 24 hours in a day, but by her a godly Christian can accomplish in a day what an ordinary, slothful and pleasure seeking so called churchgoer may not get done in a year.

Beyond human appreciation, she has supernatural appeal. She says, "The Lord possesed me at the beginning of His way, before His works of old. When He prepared the heavens, I was there, when He drew a cricle on the face of the deep. " (Proverbs 8:22-27). No wonder the Scriptures say that everything that God made in Creation was very good (Genesis 1:31). She is a divine quality of God. Praise the Lord, but do you know her name ?

Yes! Her name is WISDOM and her twin partner is called UNDERSTANDING. Wisdom is calling on every Christian to make himself/herself a name among the precious of distinction. "Wisdom is the principle thing; therefore get wisdom, and in all your getting, get understanding" (Proverbs 4:7) "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and the knowledge of the Holy One is understanding" (Proverbs 9:10). "Buy the truth, and do not sell it, also wisdom and instruction and understanding" (Proverbs 23:23).

Faith is not founded on feelings but it stands firm on the Word of the Lord.

- Daniel O.C

Saturday 28 June 2008

SERVE ONE ANOTHER

by Max Lucado

Jesus “set aside the privileges of deity and took on the status of a slave, became human! Having become human, he stayed human. It was an incredibly humbling process. He didn’t claim special privileges. Instead, he lived a selfless, obedient life and then died a selfless, obedient death—and the worst kind of death at that: a crucifixion” (Phil. 2:7–8 MSG).

Let’s follow his example. Let’s “put on the apron of humility, to serve one another” (1 Pet. 5:5 TEV). Jesus entered the world to serve. We can enter our jobs, our homes, our churches. Servanthood requires no unique skill or seminary degree. Regardless of your strengths, training, or church tenure, you can …

Love the overlooked. Jesus sits in your classroom, wearing the thick glasses, outdated clothing, and a sad face. You’ve seen him. He’s Jesus.

Jesus works in your office. Pregnant again, she shows up to work late and tired. No one knows the father. According to water-cooler rumors, even she doesn’t know the father. You’ve seen her. She’s Jesus.

When you talk to the lonely student, befriend the weary mom, you love Jesus. He dresses in the garb of the overlooked and ignored. “Whenever you did one of these things to someone overlooked or ignored, that was me—you did it to me” (Matt. 25:40 MSG).

You can do that. Even if your sweet spot has nothing to do with encouraging others, the cure for the common life involves loving the overlooked. You can also …

Wave a white flag. We fight so much. “Where do you think all these appalling wars and quarrels come from?” asks the brother of Jesus. “Do you think they just happen? Think again. They come about because you want your own way, and fight for it deep inside yourselves” (James 4:1 MSG). Serve someone by swallowing your pride. One more aspect of servanthood…..

Every day do something you don’t want to do. Pick up someone else’s trash. Surrender your parking place. Call the long-winded relative. Carry the cooler. Doesn’t have to be a big thing. Helen Keller once told the Tennessee legislature that when she was young, she had longed to do great things and could not, so she decided to do small things in a great way. Don’t be too big to do something small. “Throw yourselves into the work of the Master, confident that nothing you do for him is a waste of time or effort” (1 Cor. 15:58 MSG).

A good action not only brings good fortune, it brings God’s attention. He notices the actions of servants. He sent his Son to be one.

When you and I crest Mount Zion and hear the applause of saints, we’ll realize this: hands pushed us up the mountain too. The pierced hands of Jesus Christ, the greatest servant who ever lived.

From

Cure for the Common Life:
Living in Your Sweet Spot
© (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2005) Max Lucado

Monday 23 June 2008

Spiritual Wisdom

Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, that we might know the things that have been freely given to us by God. - 1 Cor. 2:12

The Holy Spirit enables us to live, pleasing and delighting the heart of our Heavenly Father if we allow Him to control our lives in every situation, daily and moment by moment. But often we are busy satisfying the senses of the flesh by making choices with senses and reason and acting on them without the Holy Spirit.

We profess and want to believe that we are led by the Spirit in all things, but we allow fleshly desires, the lust of the flesh, the pride of the life and the world to overcome us. We make choices that will grieve the Spirit of God. We make compromises and instead of leading a life of holiness, led by the Spirit of God and prayerfulness, we deceive ourselves and live in a make-believe 'white-washed life of pretense holiness.".

Beloved child of God, do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God whose temple you are. Do not grieve the heart of the Lord Jesus Christ who loves you and who gave Himself for you without counting His own life that you might have eternal life.

Romans 8:8 says "So then those who are living the life o the flesh (catering to the appetites and impulses of their carnal nature) cannot please or satisfy God, or be acceptable to Him." Verse 13 says "For if you live according to (the dictates of) the flesh, you will surely die. But if through the power of the Holy Spirit you are (habitually) putting to death (making extinct, deadening) the (evil) deeds prompted by the body, you shall (really and genuinely) live forever". So if you want to please God and satisfy Him, dedicate yourself to live a life led and controlled by the Holy Spirit of God for only then we are truly 'the sons of God' (Romans 8:14)

Confess to the Lord whatever has been your life all your shortcomings. Let the cry of David be your cry from the depth of your heart, "Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right preserving and steadfast spirit within me. Cast me not away from Your Holy presence and take not Your Holy Spirit from me" (Psalm 51:10). In a world where everyone is dead to sin and corrupt them to be the very core let them see you as a vessel of holiness, a true son of God, one who is truly the temple of God in whom dwells the Holy Spirit of God.

Today come to the Lord asking Him to make you His dwelling place, give yourself to a life lead and controlled by the Spirit of God. Then the very remembrance of you in the minds of people would be associated with someone who walks daily by the power of the Holy Spirit of God.

If we put Him first in our lives, give to Him
the best of ourselves and serve Him
with our whole heat, soul and strength,
He will always have the best for us

- Daniel O.C

CHOOSING THE UNCOMMON LIFE

by Max Lucado

One can’t, at once, promote two reputations. Promote God’s and forget yours. Or promote yours and forget God’s. We must choose.

Joseph did. Matthew describes Jesus’s earthly father as a craftsman (Matt. 13:55). He lives in Nazareth: a single-camel map dot on the edge of boredom. Joseph never speaks in the New Testament. He does much. He sees an angel, marries a pregnant girl, and leads his family to Bethlehem and Egypt. He does much, but says nothing.

A small-town carpenter who never said a Scripture-worthy word. Is Joseph the right choice? Doesn’t God have better options? An eloquent priest from Jerusalem or a scholar from the Pharisees? Why Joseph? A major part of the answer lies in his reputation: he gives it up for Jesus. “Then Joseph [Mary’s] husband, being a just man, and not wanting to make her a public example, was minded to put her away secretly” (Matt. 1:19).

Mary’s parents, by this point, have signed a contract and sealed it with a dowry. Mary belongs to Joseph; Joseph belongs to Mary. Legally and matrimonially bound.

Now what? His fiancée is pregnant, blemished, tainted … he is righteous, godly. On one hand, he has the law. On the other, he has his love. The law says, stone her. Love says, forgive her. Joseph is caught in the middle. But Joseph is a kind man. “Not wanting to disgrace her, [he] planned to send her away secretly” (v. 19 NASB).

A quiet divorce. How long would it stay quiet? Likely not long. But for a time, this was the solution.

Then comes the angel. “While he thought about these things, behold, an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, saying, ‘Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take to you Mary your wife, for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit’ ” (v. 20).

Mary’s growing belly gives no cause for concern, but reason to rejoice. “She carries the Son of God in her womb,” the angel announces. But who would believe it? Who would buy this tale? Envision Joseph being questioned by the city leaders.

“Joseph,” they say, “we understand that Mary is with child.”

He nods.

“Is the child yours?”

He shakes his head.

“Do you know how she became pregnant?”

Gulp. A bead of sweat forms beneath Joseph’s beard. He faces a dilemma. He makes his decision. “Joseph … took to him his wife, and did not know her till she had brought forth her firstborn Son. And he called His name JESUS” (Matt. 1:24–25).

Joseph tanked his reputation. He swapped his reputation for a pregnant fiancée and an illegitimate son and made the big decision of discipleship. He placed God’s plan ahead of his own.

Would you be willing to do the same? God grants us an uncommon life to the degree we surrender our common one. “If you try to keep your life for yourself, you will lose it. But if you give up your life for me, you will find true life” (Matt. 16:25 NLT). Would you forfeit your reputation to see Jesus born into your world?


From
Cure for the Common Life:
Living in Your Sweet Spot
© (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2005) Max Lucado

Monday 16 June 2008

A Father's Love

Many poems have been written to explain
How a mother's love can soothe the pain
But little has been said about a Father's concern
So now I think it must be his turn.

A Father's love for his offspring
Is just like that of a solid gold ring,
No matter what, it is unending,
Never breaking; though .. sometimes bending.

His love is strong as a mother's, although..
Due to his personality, it sometimes doesn't show.
There is no question of how strong,
Or of its lasting, however long.

So no matter if his child is good or bad
There is no love stronger, than that of a Dad.

Happy Father's Day

Friday 13 June 2008

YOUR GOD IS A GOOD GOD

by Max Lucado

Use your uniqueness to take great risks for God!

The only mistake is not to risk making one.

Such was the error of the one-talent servant. Did the master notice him? Indeed, he did. And from the third servant we learn a sobering lesson. “Then he who had received the one talent came and said, ‘Lord, I knew you to be a hard man, reaping where you have not sown, and gathering where you have not scattered seed. And I was afraid, and went and hid your talent in the ground’ ” (Matt. 25: 24–25).

Contrast the reaction of the third servant with that of the first two.

The faithful servants “went and traded” (v. 16). The fearful one “went and dug” (v. 18).

The first two invested. The last one buried.

The first two went out on a limb. The third hugged the trunk.

The master wouldn’t stand for it. Brace yourself for the force of his response. “You wicked and lazy servant, you knew that I reap where I have not sown, and gather where I have not scattered seed. So you ought to have deposited my money with the bankers, and at my coming I would have received back my own with interest” (vv. 26–27).

Whoa. What just happened? Why the blowtorch? Find the answer in the missing phrase. The master repeated the assessment of the servant, word for word, with one exclusion. Did you note it? “I knew you to be a hard man” (v. 24). The master didn’t repeat the description he wouldn’t accept.

The servant levied a cruel judgment by calling the master a hard man. The servant used the exact word for “hard” that Christ used to describe stiff-necked and stubborn Pharisees (see Matt. 19:8; Acts 7:51). The writer of Hebrews employed the term to beg readers not to harden their hearts (3:8). The one-talent servant called his master stiff-necked, stubborn, and hard.

His sin was not mismanagement, but misunderstanding. Was his master hard? He gave multimillion-dollar gifts to undeserving servants; he honored the two-talent worker as much as the five; he stood face to face with both at homecoming and announced before the audiences of heaven and hell, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”

Was this a hard master? Infinitely good, graciously abundant, yes. But hard? No.

The one-talent servant never knew his master. He should have. He lived under his roof and shared his address. He knew his face, his name, but he never knew his master’s heart. And, as a result, he broke it.

Who is this unprofitable servant? If you never use your gifts for God, you are. If you think God is a hard God, you are.

For fear of doing the wrong thing for God, you’ll do nothing for God. For fear of making the wrong kingdom decision, you’ll make no kingdom decision. For fear of messing up, you’ll miss out. You will give what this servant gave and will hear what this servant heard: “You wicked and lazy servant” (v. 26).

But you don’t have to. It’s not too late to seek your Father’s heart. Your God is a good God.

From
Cure for the Common Life:
Living in Your Sweet Spot
© (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2005) Max Lucado

Monday 9 June 2008

Building God's House

For the Lord God is a sun and shield, the Lord will give grace and glory; no good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly. - Psalms 84:11

The promise here are unmistakable. The condition clearly states "walk uprightly with the Lord your God." This is why we preach holiness and emphasize on the total obedience to the Lord. This is the reason we encourage every Christian to walk in the narrow way and remain faithful to the Word of God in his public and private life.

It is understandable that the blessings of God are attached to the obedience of His word. There are several churchgoers who complain to be serving Him. They concede to their sinfulness but still affirm their devotion to the Almighty God. What hypocrisy! They can easily admit unfaithfully, "especially pride", through their words, actions and deeds. Yet they do not heed any godly sermon that leads them to repentance.

Beloved, repent and forsake your ungodly ways today and turn to the Lord with all your heart. Receive the word of God and obey it excitedly. Those who continue in their sins and expect to enjoy the promises of God would find their hopes dashed.

Sinners in church who are stagnant and unprogressive in their spiritual lives remain as the "tail," while new believers who have been sincerely born again, are forging ahead and becoming the "head". It is really painful to be the tail.

Beloved child of the living God! Why should you be "tail" when your Heavenly Father has set you to be a "head" ?

The word of God in Haggai 1:5,7 says, "Now therefore, thus says the Lord of Hosts, "Consider your ways."

Do mull over your habits and activities to ask whether your attitude is sensible before the Lord.

- Daniel O.C

Saturday 7 June 2008

HONOR GOD IN YOUR WORK

by Max Lucado

Heaven’s calendar has seven Sundays a week. God sanctifies each day. He conducts holy business at all hours and in all places. He uncommons the common by turning kitchen sinks into shrines, cafés into convents, and nine-to-five workdays into spiritual adventures.

Workdays? Yes, workdays. He ordained your work as something good. Before he gave Adam a wife or a child, even before he gave Adam britches, God gave Adam a job. “Then the LORD God took the man and put him into the garden of Eden to cultivate it and keep it” (Gen. 2:15 NASB). Innocence, not indolence, characterized the first family.

God views work worthy of its own engraved commandment: “You shall work six days, but on the seventh day you shall rest” (Exod. 34:21 NASB). We like the second half of that verse. But emphasis on the day of rest might cause us to miss the command to work: “You shall work six days.” Whether you work at home or in the marketplace, your work matters to God.

And your work matters to society. We need you! Cities need plumbers. Nations need soldiers. Stoplights break. Bones break. We need people to repair the first and set the second. Someone has to raise kids, raise cane, and manage the kids who raise Cain.

Whether you log on or lace up for the day, you imitate God. Jehovah himself worked for the first six days of creation. Jesus said, “My Father never stops working, and so I keep working, too” (John 5:17 NCV). Your career consumes half of your lifetime. Shouldn’t it broadcast God? Don’t those forty to sixty hours a week belong to him as well?

The Bible never promotes workaholism or an addiction to employment as pain medication. But God unilaterally calls all the physically able to till the gardens he gives. God honors work. So honor God in your work. “There is nothing better for a man than to eat and drink and tell himself that his labor is good” (Eccles. 2:24 NASB).

Here is the big idea:

Use your uniqueness (what you do)
to make a big deal out of God (why you do it)
every day of your life (where you do it).

At the convergence of all three, you’ll find the cure for the common life: your sweet spot.

From
Cure for the Common Life:
Living in Your Sweet Spot
© (Thomas Nelson Publishers, 2005) Max Lucado