1 Thessalonians 5:1-11

            The news is rarely filled with good wholesome edifying reporting; it is usually filled with the grit and grime of human depravity.  Whether it is terrible war and economic meltdowns half-way across the world, or child pornography, theft, and murder closer to home, we live in a time of both unprecedented communication and unparalleled evil.  So, where does God fit into all this?
 
            He is there, calling his people to a life of moral sobriety, spiritual holiness, and unflagging encouragement of one another.  In the midst of the sinful muck, the Apostle Paul made the astounding statement that “God has not destined us for wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.”  God is patiently and constantly working behind the scenes to overshadow the world with grace.  There will come a time when this present order of things will pass away and the fullness of God’s rule and reign will be established forever. 
 
            In the meantime, until that Day occurs, we are to be vigilant to “encourage one another and build one another up.”  While God works, we encourage.  We are to come alongside each other, speaking grace and helping one another become successful in our daily Christian walks.  That is no small task, considering the immense evil in the world.  Thus, no lone ranger Christianity will do.  Individual mavericks will not make it unless they accept the encouragement and help of God’s people.
 
            So, are you trying to live the Christian life in your own strength, on your own terms, in your own way?  “Private Christian” is an oxymoron.  Every believer needs the encouragement that God provides through his people, the church.  What will you do today to foster and/or deepen your bonds with other believers?
            Gracious God, thank you that I do not need to live the Christian life on my own.  Not only have you given me your Holy Spirit, but other believers to help and encourage me as I strive to walk in holiness each and every day.  Empower me to bless others, as well, through Jesus Christ my Lord.  Amen.

Vulnerability

 
 
            Most people aren’t crazy about the word “vulnerable.”  We might like to see it in others, but have no intention of being vulnerable ourselves to anyone.  If you have ever poured out your heart to someone or a group of people and only got blank stares in return; if you sincerely loved someone and they did not love you back; if you have ever shared your genuine thoughts on something important to you and received only criticism; then, we may think that being vulnerable is a bad thing and not worth the emotional effort.
 
            Yet, vulnerability is an important, even vital practice for Christians.  In the Gospel of John, Mary displayed vulnerability in pouring expensive perfume on Jesus’ feet and wiping them with her hair, all the while exposing her true feelings for her Lord.  In return Mary got pushback and criticism from Judas.  But Jesus upheld Mary’s actions and told Judas to leave her alone.  Mary was clearly not concerned with how she might appear to others, but was completely focused on Jesus (John 12:1-8).
 
            When we go to the book of Psalms, even a cursory reading reveals a psalmist who is not afraid to explore the depth of human emotion, misery, joy, and praise of God.  It would be weird to think of King David as a man who was self-conscious about what others thought about him.  Instead, we get a wealth of vulnerable statements:  “All my longings lie open before you, O Lord; my sighing is not hidden from you” (Psalm 38:9); “As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, O God.  My soul thirsts for God, for the living God.  When can I go and meet with God?  My tears have been my food day and night, while men say to me all day long, ‘Where is your God?’” (Psalm 42:1-3).  One does not get more real, raw, and vulnerable than this:  “My heart is in anguish within me; the terrors of death assail me.  Fear and trembling have beset me; horror has overwhelmed me.  I said, ‘Oh, that I had the wings of a dove! I would fly away and be at rest” (Psalm 55:4-6); “I am worn out calling for help; my throat is parched.  My eyes fail, looking for my God” (Psalm 69:3).
 
            This is all a far cry from many contemporary Christians who feel the need to wear plastic smiles and insist everything is “fine.”  Maybe we need the person who will stand up and say they are finally learning patience by being among a group of really annoying co-workers.  Perhaps instead of laboring so hard to keep a check on ourselves, church will become a place that lends itself to a person bawling their eyes out with a whole cadre of others who will just sit and cry with them.
 
            But this kind of vulnerability will not happen unless we are first real with God, who is never fooled by our deceitful hearts.  Our evil-radar might be carefully attuned to others’ sin, but we are woefully inept at identifying the blackness within ourselves.  This is what makes places like the Psalms such counter-cultural texts; the psalmist sees his sin in stark relief to the holiness of God, and it absolutely slays him to know that his sin has offended God (Psalm 51).
 
 
 
            What is so amazing about all this is that God himself became completely exposed, naked, abandoned, alone and vulnerable on a cruel cross.  Yet, instead of being shamed by the whole thing, Jesus scorned the shaming power of his crucifixion and embraced the suffering as the means of victory for our salvation.  Vulnerability might seem ugly, but it turns whatever it touches into beauty.  God can change our weakest, worst, and most shameful places into incredible strength and newfound love.
 
            Therefore, any ministry worth its Christian salt will not forsake the broken and despised, the struggling and the lost.  Whenever we are too afraid to walk into the mud of people’s lives, including our own, and are enamored instead with every spiritually shiny thing that comes along, we have lost sight of our Lord whom we are to imitate in his vulnerability.  When Christian leaders pretend like they have all the answers and know what always should be done, they have lost touch with the Scriptures and need to take a Sabbath hiatus to read the entirety of the Psalms and connect with God.
 

 

            So, where do you go from here?  Stop running long enough to listen well, read carefully, rest liberally, and feel passionately with emotions both good and bad.  Just maybe you will find solidarity with Mary of old and “waste” your resources on simply being with Jesus.

Psalm 101

            King David was one serious dude when it came to dealing with wickedness and injustice.  He had a zero tolerance policy toward people who were deceitful and proud.  “Whoever slanders his neighbor secretly I will destroy.  Whoever has a haughty look and an arrogant heart I will not endure.”  Those are some strong words.  But they arise from David’s own personal integrity and practice of being a king who seeks after what is right and just.
 
            David said, “I will not set before my eyes anything that is worthless” (Psalm 101:3 ESV).  When I was a kid, I watched hours of television every day.  Even today I still remember names of actors and all the theme songs of the shows.  Early in my Christian life, I wrote out this verse in large print and put it just below my TV set so that I would always see it.  Maybe we all need to think about putting up Scripture verses in appropriate places around our house, workplace, and car.  Maybe we would think twice about visiting certain websites if we prominently place beside our computer:  “I refuse to take a second look at corrupting people and degrading things” (The Message).
 
            Good intentions are just that.  Instead, we all need an unequivocal commitment to a zero tolerance policy toward evil.  It is simply unacceptable to flirt with it.  Whatever we must do to remind ourselves of righteousness and whatever boundaries we need to set in order to curb our wagging tongues and put spiritual blinders on our wandering eyes is most necessary because “no one who practices deceit shall dwell in my house; no one who utters lies shall continue before my eyes.”
            Holy God of justice, I will make a covenant with my eyes to set before my eys no vile thing.  Help me to be strong in your mighty power so that my daily walk of faith in Jesus is righteous, free of guilt, and simply enjoyable.  Amen.

Pursuing the Good Life

 
 
Everyone desires a good life.  No one wakes up in the morning and hopes they have a bad day.  A person might get up on the wrong side of the bed and grump his/her way through the first hours of the day, but nobody makes a conscious decision to deliberately have a bad life.  We all want a good life.  Students go to school hoping to have a good experience.  Marriages begin with the hope of having a good life together.  New employees start with the wish that there will be satisfaction in doing a job well-done.  Parents dream of their kids growing up to have a good life.  We want the kind of life that brings contentment, joy, and happiness.
 
            A good life comes through the fear of the Lord (Psalm 34:9-14).  Yes, that’s right, the fear of the Lord.  If we want to live a good life, it will have the fear of the Lord at the heart of it.  We need to make an important distinction between good fear and bad fear.  We as human beings are all too familiar with bad fear.  Bad fear is being too afraid to take the steps necessary to have a good life.  It is being insecure, risk-averse, and unwilling to take even a small step toward expanding my comfort zone.  Bad fear causes people to retreat in bubble of anxiety that keeps them stuck and imprisoned in a small world of protection, unable to engage God’s big world with any effectiveness.  Bad fear is to be afraid of what other people may or may not do or say.  Fear of man will prove to be a snare, but whoever trusts in the LORD is kept safe (Proverbs 29:25). 
 
The way to overcome the fear of others and the fear of the situations that might happen is to have the good kind of fear, the fear of the Lord.  The fear of the Lord means to honor and obey God, to be loyal and submissive.  It does not mean being afraid, like the bad fear of people.
 
            If you want to lack no good thing; if you desire to see many good days; if you do want to simply survive in life but to thrive in it and love the life you possess; then, the first thing that must happen is taking the posture of listening.
 
 
 
            The Hebrew word “listen” literally means to bend or to incline the ear.  It is to take a posture of listening in order to learn.  The prerequisite to any kind of good life is to have a teachable-spirit that gives focused attention to the wisdom God has for us.  A fool is a person who does not listen, but only mocks, complains, and is continually negative.  But a wise person is one who has learned to be attentive to the voice of God.  Whoever corrects a mocker invites insult; whoever rebukes a wicked man incurs abuse.  Do not rebuke a mocker or he will hate you; rebuke a wise man and he will love you.  Instruct a wise man and he will be wiser still; teach a righteous man and he will add to his learning (Proverbs 9:7-9).
 
            The fear of people is a death-dealing practice.  But the person who fears God through the posture of a teachable spirit discovers a life-giving practice that will serve him/her well.  The teachable spirit takes the posture of listening and learning from other people’s hard-won experiences.  It bends the ear to good advice.  It inclines toward acquiring knowledge and learning the skill set needed to live a good successful Christian life.  There cannot be a good life without having a teachable spirit, seeking after learning, discovering, and listening. 
 
            Therefore, Christians cannot learn if they will not read.  The Bible is a book.  If the Bible was a car I would tell us all to learn to be mechanics.  If the Bible were a fish or a deer I would tell us all to learn the best ways to hunt and fish.  If the Bible was a store I would tell us all to learn to be good shoppers and consumers.  But the Bible is a book, and so we all need to read it, memorize it, meditate on it, and learn from it.  Get in the Word of God!  Wise churches will find ways to immerse themselves in Scripture and have moldable teachable spirits. 
 

 

If we desire a good life we will fear God and keep his commandments; we will be readers of Scripture and take the posture of listening and learning.  If we want to experience the good life we will engage in personal reading, corporate reading, and bible studies.  We will find ways to get into the Word!