How George Muller Used His Bible

Preachers have been using stories from the life of Rev. George Muller as sermon illustrations for a long time now. Muller was an evangelist and a missionary, but he is most famous for founding and overseeing multiple orphanages and Christian schools in England in the mid-to-late 1800s. Still, while it is estimated that over the course of his lifetime Muller cared for 10,000 orphans and saw 120,000 students educated, the sermon illustrations never focus upon any one orphan or any one student. They focus instead upon Muller’s uncommon faith and the oftentimes virtually miraculous answers he received to his prayers. Muller, you see, was a man who early on in his life made the decision to never borrow money for anything he wanted to start, build, or sustain. If God didn’t provide the means by way of people voluntarily making charitable donations, Muller would pray until God did provide.

In one of the most famous stories from Muller’s life, the children in his orphanage were all sitting down at the breakfast table one morning but there was absolutely nothing for them to eat that day. Muller, in his typical fashion, had the children bow their heads in prayer and led them in a prayer of thanksgiving. No sooner had he finished his prayer than a knock was heard at the door. It was a local baker who had brought enough bread to feed everyone in the orphanage. God had burdened the baker the previous night to get out of bed and bake bread for the orphanage. But the story doesn’t end there. Even as the baker was unloading the bread, a milk man came to the orphanage door. His milk cart had just broken down right in front of the orphanage and all of his milk was going to turn bad if the orphanage couldn’t use it. Such was George Muller’s life.

While I have heard, read, and (yes) used Muller stories many times over the course of my ministry, I recently came across a personal word from him that I didn’t even know existed. It was entitled How I Use My Bible, and it was Muller’s testimony about how he had once made a significant change in his morning schedule. I won’t restate the entire piece here, but I will provide the highlights of it.

Being the great man of prayer he was, Muller would get up very early each morning, dress himself, and immediately enter into a lengthy time of prayer before breakfast. He kept up this daily schedule for over a decade but found himself becoming increasingly frustrated over how long it took him in prayer to enter into what he called “the holy place” with God. He wrote:

I often spent a quarter of an hour on my knees before being conscious of myself as having derived comfort, encouragement, humbling of soul, etc.; and often, after having suffered much from wandering of mind for the first ten minutes or a quarter of an hour or even a half hour, I only then began to really pray.

Finally, there came a point where Muller’s frustration led him to try a different approach to his morning schedule. Rather than get up, get dressed, and begin praying, he would get up, get dressed, and begin reading his Bible. This early morning Bible reading, Muller found, made all the difference to his morning quiet time. In his own words, he described his reading process as follows:

I began therefore to meditate on the New Testament from the beginning, early in the morning. The first thing I did, after having asked in a few words the Lord’s blessing upon His precious Word, was to begin to meditate on the Word of God, searching as it were into every verse to get a blessing out of it, not for the sake of preaching on what I had meditated upon, but for obtaining food for my own soul.

The result I have found to be almost invariable this, that after a very few minutes my soul has been led to confession or to thankfulness or to intercession or to supplication, so that though I did not, as it were, give myself to prayer, but to meditation, yet it turned almost immediately more or less into prayer.

When thus I have been for a while making confession or intercession or supplication, or have given thanks, I go on to the next words or verse, turning all as I go into prayer for myself or others, as the Word may lead to it, but still continually keeping before me that food for my own soul is the object of my meditation.

Did you catch what Muller threw there? He got up each day, opened his Bible to a passage — he says he began with the New Testament but I figure that he eventually started reading from the Old Testament as well — and began reading a passage word for word until something in the passage impressed him to say a quick prayer of confession, thankfulness, intercession, or supplication (asking, requesting). Then, having offered the brief prayer, he moved on to the next word, thought, or verse until something else impressed him to offer another quick prayer, whichever type of prayer was in order.

Two things about Muller’s testimony stand out to me. First, the morning prayers of this legendary man of prayer actually sprang from his reading of the Bible. Rather than see Bible reading and prayer as rivals for his time, Muller found a way to combine them into a singular river. Second, his goal in Bible reading each morning was to be nourished himself by way of God’s word, not get sermon material or preaching points. He wanted to be fed spiritually before he ate breakfast to be fed physically.

So what do you think? Will George Muller’s approach to having a daily quiet time with the Lord still work in this modern era? I’m sure it will. I myself am a night owl, not a morning person, but the important thing is the combining of Bible reading and prayer. That, of course, can happen anytime of day. And maybe, just maybe, whenever and wherever we do that combining we’ll start seeing some of those “Muller style” answers to prayer. I know that I sure could use some of those, and my guess is that you could, too.

Posted in Bible Study, Discipleship, Faithfulness, Needs, Prayer, Prayer Requests, Scripture | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Snowstorm That Helped Charles Spurgeon Get Saved

This past Saturday night we got a little skiff of snow that created some slick roads and icy parking lots early Sunday morning. Consequently, like some other churches in our area, we cancelled Sunday School and 11:00 p.m. worship service Sunday morning and opted instead for a 2:00 p.m. worship service Sunday afternoon. All things considered, the attendance at the service was pretty good and we had a blessed time in the Lord.

The service brought to my mind the story of the conversion of Charles Spurgeon, the most legendary preacher England ever produced. To make the story even more relevant, it occurred on today’s date (January 6) way back in 1850. Spurgeon himself loved to recount the tale, telling it hundreds of times over the course of the years, enough to make it probably the most famous conversion story in England’s history.

As a backdrop for the story, you need to know that Spurgeon was born into what we would call a Christian home. He was christened as an infant and became a member of the Congregational church. As he got older, he read the Bible and prayed daily. Still, though, despite all his religion, he continued to feel spiritually lost. He had no joy or happiness about him. He walked around with a gloomy look upon his face all the time. In his sleep, he often dreamed of hell.

Everything changed, however, on that fateful day of Sunday, January 6, 1850. Young Spurgeon was 15 years old at the time, and that morning he was walking in a snowstorm to get to a church in his hometown of Colchester, in southeast England. His route took him up Hythe Hill, but as he ascended that hill he realized that the storm wasn’t going to allow him to proceed much further. He needed to seek shelter somewhere down a local street, and happily he found that the nearby Primitive Methodist Church of Artillery Street was having service that morning. He didn’t hesitate to join them despite the fact that all he knew about the Methodists was that they “sang so loudly that they made peoples’ heads ache.”

The snowstorm had severely affected church attendance that day as there were only 15 or so people there. The minister hadn’t even arrived. As Spurgeon used to tell it, “Snowed up, I suppose.” In the minister’s stead, a layman filled the pulpit. Spurgeon described him as “a very thin-looking man, a poor man, a shoemaker, a tailor, or something of that sort.”

The text the fellow read that morning was Isaiah 45:22:

Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for I am God, and there is none else. (K.J.V.)

As Spurgeon listened to that text, he was immediately struck by the potential hope he heard in it. With his interest piqued, he sat there intently listening as the layman proceeded to explain that looking didn’t take much effort, education, or income, but the looking had to be done unto the Lord. Looking unto one’s self would provide no help.

Finally, the layman ended his short talk by saying for Jesus, “Look unto Me; I am sweating great drops of blood. Look unto Me; I am hanging on a cross. Look unto Me; I am dead and buried. Look unto Me; I rise again. Look unto Me; I ascend: I am sitting at My Father’s right hand. O, look to Me! Look to Me!”

It was then that the layman looked squarely at the visiting Spurgeon and said, “Young man, you look very miserable. And you will always be miserable — miserable in life and miserable in death — if you do not obey my text. But if you obey now, this moment, you will be saved.” Then the man shouted at Spurgeon, “Young man, look to Jesus Christ!”

And did young Spurgeon look to Jesus? You bet he did! As the close to this post, I’ll let Spurgeon tell it in his own words. He said:

I saw at once the way of salvation. I know not what else he said — I did not take much notice of it — I was so possessed with that one thought. I had been waiting to do fifty things, but when I heard that word “Look!” what a charming word it seemed to me. Oh! I looked until I could have almost looked my eyes away. There and then the cloud was gone, the darkness was rolled away, and that moment I saw the sun; and I could have risen that instant, and sung with the most enthusiastic of them, of the precious blood of Christ, and the simple faith which looks alone to Him. Oh, that somebody had told me this before, “Trust Christ, and you shall be saved.”

Posted in Belief, Church Attendance, Faith, God's Omnipotence, God's Timing, God's Provision, God's Sovereignty, Salvation, Scripture, The Bible, The Gospel | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

Pet Verses

Why are there so many different denominations, groups, cliques, and movements, with each one claiming the title “Christian”? It is because they all have “pet verses” to which they give favored preference over other verses from scripture. Allow me to offer five examples from a list that could surely provide many more.

Example #1: The Church of Christ denomination as well as The Christian Church (The Disciples of Christ) denomination both believe that water baptism is an essential requirement for salvation. Their pet verse is Acts 2:38, which says:

Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. (K.J.V.)

Of course, one verse these two denominations don’t say much about is 1 Corinthians 1:17, where Paul says to the Christians of Corinth:

For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel: not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of none effect. (K.J.V.)

It certainly seems strange that Paul, who desperately wanted to lead people to salvation in Christ, would say, “Christ sent me not to baptize” if baptism is a requirement for salvation.

Example #2: While Calvinism is not itself a denomination, it is a doctrinal system that pervades various denominations such as Presbyterians, Primitive Baptists, and Reformed Baptists. Also, various congregations that are aligned with the Southern Baptist Convention are Calvinistic in nature. One of Calvinism’s pet verses is Ephesians 2:1, which says:

And you He made alive, who were dead in trespasses and sins,… (N.K.J.V.)

In reference to an individual making a decision to believe in Christ as Savior, Calvinists use this verse to teach that salvation is wholly and completely an act of God, an act in which the individual essentially has no free will. To the Calvinist, if God has chosen an individual for salvation from eternity past, He will do a work inside that person to make sure the person places saving belief in Jesus. As the Calvinists say concerning an individual making a freewill decision to believe in Christ, “A dead man — one dead in trespasses and sins — can’t make any decision, even one to believe in Christ as Savior.”

There are, however, many verses that flatly contradict Calvinism. One of them is John 5:40, where Jesus says to a group of lost Jews:

“But you are not willing to come to Me that you may have life.” (N.K.J.V.)

Notice that Jesus didn’t say to those Jews, “You can’t come to Me because God the Father didn’t chose you for salvation from eternity past.” No, what He said was, “You aren’t willing to come to Me.” If, as Calvinism contends, those Jews had absolutely no possibility of coming to Jesus for salvation because they were all dead in trespasses and sins and dead men can’t make decisions, Jesus’ words would have amounted to Him taunting them concerning their eternally lost state and powerlessness to do anything about it.

Example #3: Like Calvinism, the teaching that a Christian can potentially lose his or her salvation is one that is prominently featured in various Christian denominations and groups such as Catholics, Freewill Baptists, and Pentecostals. One of the pet verses used to support this teaching is John 15:2, where Jesus says:

“If anyone does not abide in Me, he is cast out as a branch and is withered; and they gather them and throw them into the fire, and they are burned.” (N.K.J.V.)

On the flip side, however, besides the fact that the Bible doesn’t offer even one example of anyone getting saved twice, there are numerous verses and passages that can be used to teach the eternal security of the Christian. One of those verses is John 10:28, which is another quote from Jesus:

“And I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; neither shall anyone snatch them out of My hand.” (N.K.J.V.)

Example #4: Many denominations (Southern Baptists, Independent Baptists, Freewill Baptists, Pentecostals, etc.) teach that any and all consumption of alcohol is a sin. One of their pet verses to authenticate this teaching is Proverbs 20:1, which says:

Wine is a mocker, strong drink is raging: and whosoever is deceived thereby is no wise. (K.J.V.)

Is drunkenness always a sin? Absolutely. But before we start outlawing any and all drinking, regardless of the amount and the setting, we might want to remember that Jesus turned the water into wine, not grape juice. And then there is 1 Timothy 5:23, where Paul says to Timothy:

Drink no longer water, but use a little wine for thy stomach’s sake and thine often infirmities. (K.J.V.)

Example #5: The Seventh Day Adventists teach that Christians should meet together for weekly worship on Saturday rather than Sunday. This teaching stems from the fact that the Jewish Sabbath officially lasted from sundown Friday evening to sundown Saturday evening. As might be expected, one of the pet verses the Seventh Day Adventists use to promote this teaching is Exodus 20:8:

Remember the sabbath day, to keep it holy. (K.J.V.)

Okay, so is there a verse that can be used to contradict the teaching that Christians should meet for worship on the Sabbath (Saturday)? Yes, there is. That verse is Colossians 2:16, which says:

Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of a holy day, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: (K.J.V.)

Can you see how, if we couple that verse up with other verses such as 1 Corinthians 16:2 — which indicates that the early Christians met for worship on Sunday — we can understand why the vast majority of Christians meet for worship on Sunday rather than Saturday?

In conclusion, what I’m trying to get you to realize by way of these five examples is that it is unwise to build your doctrine around a handful of your pet verses. The Bible is a highly complex book that can wrongly be used to teach just about anything, and a ton of time and effort are required to do the studying necessary to get at what the book actually teaches. That’s why cherry-picking a verse here and there to back up what you already believe just won’t get the job done. Instead, you must embrace the totality of scripture, from Genesis to The Revelation, and compare your pet verses with other verses that might be used to contradict them.

This, then, is my challenge to you: Whatever you believe, give the teachings of other denominations, groups, cliques, and movements a fair investigation. Hear them out concerning their pet verses and their comebacks to your pet verses, and keep an open mind about things. After all, everybody thinks they have “the truth.” (I’ve never once heard a preacher stand in a pulpit and say, “Today, I’m going to teach you a pack of lies.”)

The fact is that everybody uses certain portions of scripture in their attempts to back up what they believe. Obviously, though, everybody isn’t right. How can they be when there is so much blatant disagreement? Someone has to be wrong, and you don’t want that someone to be you. As for God, He doesn’t do pet verses. He considers each and every word of the Bible to be inspired by Him and, as such, equally important. Therefore, that’s the attitude that we must have as well if we want to stand a chance of being right in our beliefs.

Posted in Alcohol, Baptism, Bible Study, Calvinism, Church Attendance, Discernment, Election, Eternal Security, God's Word, Scripture, The Bible, Truth | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments

Resolution or Repentance?

Little Johnny’s mother plainly told him not to eat any cookies before supper. As soon as her back was turned, though, Johnny ate some cookies. When the mother discovered what he had done, she asked him, “Didn’t you know it was wrong to eat those cookies?” Johnny answered, “Yes, mamma, and the whole time I was eating them, I was asking God to forgive me.”

Sadly, this story sums up how many of us — including many of us Christians — deal with our sinful conduct. We keep on sinning and keep asking God to forgive us. Over and over again the pattern repeats itself: sin – ask for forgiveness – sin – ask for forgiveness – sin – ask for forgiveness. It’s like we’re stuck in a loop, one that will never result in any real change.

Genuine repentance, on the other hand, is much more serious. The Greek verb that gets translated as “repent” in our English translations of the Bible is metanoeo. Interestingly, this verb doesn’t primarily involve actions. Any change in action only comes at the end of the process. First and foremost, the verb involves the mind. In his Word Studies in the New Testament, Greek scholar Marvin Vincent explains that metanoeo is the combination of a preposition that means “after” or “with” alongside a verb that means “to perceive.” Thus, he says, “…the whole compound means to think differently after.” We find this same basic definition in Vine’s Complete Expository Dictionary of Old and New Testament Words, which defines “repent” as “to perceive afterwards.”

The point is that there is a distinct process that works itself out in regards to repentance. First, you commit the sin, either once or a hundred times. Second, somewhere along the line after you have committed the sin, you realize that what you did was wrong and you are actually sorry that you did it. Your sorrow shows that you are now thinking differently about the sin and see the sin as a problem. Third, now that your thinking has changed concerning the sin, you have the inner motivation necessary to stop committing the sin.

By understanding this process, you can understand why repentance has been defined as “a change of mind that leads to a change of action.” Also, you can understand why the apostle Paul said, “For godly sorrow produces repentance…” (2 Corinthians 7:10, N.K.J.V.). Admittedly, the specific context for those words from Paul has to do with the salvation, but the link between feeling sorry for your sin and repenting of that sin always applies.

This explains why high-pressure tactics, threats, and even emotional pleas don’t produce repentance that lasts. If someone badgers, threatens, or begs you enough to get you to stop committing a particular sin, but deep inside your mind you don’t feel sorry for having committed the sin in the first place, you will almost certainly eventually return to the sin. Why? It’s because your repentance was not produced by a change of mind and what Paul calls “godly sorrow.”

I’ve always loved that illustration about the little boy who was told to sit down but wouldn’t. Finally, his mother walked over to him and manhandled him by picking him up and plopping him down into a chair. As the little fellow sat there stewing, he said, “I may be sitting down on the outside, but I’m standing up on the inside!” That, my friend, is why so much so-called “repentance” doesn’t last in our lives. Even as we are outwardly doing the right thing about the sin, inwardly we are still thinking wrongly about it. We are rationalizing it, minimizing it, or attempting to explain it away. Like that little boy, we are still standing up on the inside, mentally. And what will that mean in the long run? It will mean that at some point, sooner or later, we will run back to the sin. It’s virtually inevitable.

Therefore, as we begin this New Year let me say that repentance is infinitely better than resolution. While resolutions are typically barely skin deep, repentance goes way deep, penetrating even to the inner recesses of the mind. Accordingly, show me a person who says, ‘I’ve got to change my way of doing,” and I’ll show you a person whose attempts to stop committing his pet sin won’t go the distance. On the other hand, show me a person who says, “I’ve got to change my way of thinking,” and I’ll show you a person who has an honest-to-goodness chance of laying a pet sin in the dust once and for all. You see, the battleground is the mind, not the body. If you can get the mind turned around, the body will naturally follow.

Posted in Backsliding, Change, New Year, Repentance, Sin | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Year-End Report (2019)

The Disciples Road is hosted by Word Press, and Word Press does an excellent job of providing in-depth statistical analysis for the blog. Anytime, night or day, I can click on “Stats and Insights” and get all kinds of information regarding the blog’s views for the day, the week, the month, the year, or all time. I can find out which posts are being viewed the most, which referrers (Search Engines, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)  are bringing people to the blog site, which countries are reporting views, and a whole lot of other info that I don’t even need. Needless to say, Word Press makes it easy for me to provide a year-end report regarding what’s going on with the blog.

And just exactly what is going on? Well, it’s all good. For the first time since I began the blog in 2009, the total views for the year exceeded 40,000. Right now they stand at just under 45,000, and that’s with most of a day to go. That breaks the previous year’s record, last year’s 36,830, by over 8,000 views. When the final numbers are posted, the end result will be a betterment of approximately 700 views per month.

November’s 5,182 views and average of 173 views per day made that month the year’s best in terms of views. October’s 4,878 views and average of 157 views per day ranked second in both categories. The fact that these months fall late in the year indicate that the blog’s views are trending upward. Admittedly, December’s views fell back to just under 4,000, but December — with everything that goes on that month — always sees a decrease in views.

While a blog’s number of views typically serves as the primary indicator in regards to readership, the number of visitors to the site is a big deal as well. Just by way of a reminder, one person visiting the site registers as one visitor, but if that person views two posts the number of views comes in at two. For 2019, 27,190 people visited the blog, and the average number of views per visitor was 1.65. Both of those were increases from 2018’s 23,260 visitors and 1.58 average number of views per visitor.

As for the posts that received the most views this year, there were some changes from the 2018 list. For each of the past several years, Does God Want Everyone to Get Married? has held the top spot as the most viewed post, but this year it fell to #3 with a current total number of views of 1,724 for the year. Ahead of it on the list were What a Bird’s Nest Can Teach Us About God’s Will (currently at 1,756 views for the year) and The 10 Times Israel Tested God (currently at 3,713 views for the year).

Those 3,713 views for The 10 Times Israel Tested God were an increase of over 2,500 views from that post’s 1,151 views last year. Did I see that coming? No way. When I wrote that post in 2018, I never dreamed that it would do much more than get its share of views as the new post on the site and then fade into obscurity as I wrote more posts to push it further down the list of the latest posts. Boy, was I wrong.

Anyway, here are the top 10 most viewed posts for 2019:

  1. The 10 Times Israel Tested God (3,713 views)
  2. What a Bird’s Nest Can Teach Us About God’s Will (1,756 views)
  3. Does God Want Everyone to Get Married? (1,724 views)
  4. How Does a Worm Get Inside an Apple? (1,380 views)
  5. How Would You Describe Your Walk With the Lord These Days? (1,111 views)
  6. “Lord, Why am I Having to Wait?” (863 views)
  7. Lessons From Habakkuk (800 views)
  8. What Satan Did to Joshua: Accusation (613 views)
  9. About the Author & the Blog (546 views)
  10. The Importance of Spanking a Child (380 views)

It’s significant that the bottom 5 posts on that list are different from last year’s bottom 5 of: What Will Life Be Like in Christ’s Millennial Reign?; Should We Pray Silently to Keep Satan From Hearing?; Why God Hates Gambling; The Old Testament’s General Teaching on Prayer; and the Mayonnaise Jar. That indicates that the site is getting even more healthy as a wider selection of posts are finding increased traction with readers. In other words, the site’s numbers aren’t just being driven by two or three popular posts.

Here now is the updated list of the posts that have been viewed the most all time on the site. That list currently reads as follows:

  1. Does God Want Everyone to Get Married? (17,860 views)
  2. How Does a Worm Get Inside an Apple? (7,461 views)
  3. The 10 Times Israel Tested God (4,862 views)
  4. What a Bird’s Nest Can Teach Us About God’s Will (4,495 views)
  5. Oral Roberts & “Seed Faith” Giving (2,079 views)
  6. How Would You Describe Your Walk With the Lord These Days? (1,193 views)
  7. What Does the Bible Teach About Divorce & Remarriage? (1,857 views)
  8. The Importance of Spanking a Child (1,530 views)
  9. Should We Pray Silently to Keep Satan From Hearing? (1,528 views)
  10. The Importance of Individuality in a Child (1,354 views)

Now let me say a word about how God is using the blog around the world. In 2018, the blog registered at least one view from 174 different countries, and this year’s number matched that number perfectly. 2019’s top-10 list of countries that registered views for the site currently reads like this:

  1. United States (32,227 views for 2019) (134,734 views all time, #1)
  2. India (1,437 views) (3,319 views all time, #5)
  3. South Africa (1,302 views) (3,735 views all time, #4)
  4. United Kingdom (1,310 views) (5,129 views all time, #2)
  5. Canada (1,105 views) (4,612 views all time, #3)
  6. Nigeria (938 views) (2,322 views all time, #8)
  7. Philippines (898 views) (2,947 views all time, #7)
  8. Australia (607 views) (2,958 views all time, #6)
  9. Kenya (531 views) (1,136 views all time, #10)
  10. Singapore (390 views) (1,329 all-time views, #9 all time)

In closing, about all I can say is “THANK YOU” to each one of you out there who has ever registered a view on the blog. And for those of you who are regular readers, I hope it goes without saying that you have my undying appreciation. Many of you I know personally. Others of you I’ve never met. Either way, though, without you this blog’s scope and influence would be a shell of what it is. As you’ve probably noticed, I don’t allow any advertisements on the blog. (If you see one, I didn’t put it there.) Also, I don’t promote the blog other than sharing a short paragraph on Facebook or Twitter whenever I publish a new post. That means that much of the work to grow the readership comes from God using word of mouth.

As always, I have no plan concerning the blog. I just write new posts, on average three per week, and launch them out onto the internet. I have no agenda, no long-range goals, no plans to rule the world. My entire approach is simply to write what God lays on my heart to write. I’m pretty good at grammar and punctuation, but a true expert could find enough errors to hurt my feelings. And typos? Let’s just say they come with the territory.

In the end, though, I trust that you can hear my heart by reading my words. Even more than that, I want the Lord to use my stuff to help you not only learn the Bible but also learn how to better walk with Him and serve Him. As I’ve explained before, the word “disciple” literally means “learner,” and that’s why the blog is called The DISCIPLE’S Road. I myself am still learning, and so when I write about a topic, that is me writing myself clear about that topic. You, the reader, receive the overflow, and hopefully that overflow is a help to you. That’s how this blog thing has been working and how it will continue to work.

So, as we stare down the gun barrel of 2020, my prayer is that God will continue to use this blog in great and mighty ways, and that each person who clicks on the site will be genuinely blessed by doing so. If you want to pray something for me, please pray that I’ll be encouraged in the work. In case you don’t know, life is hard and serving Jesus can make it harder because it puts you on the radar screen of the devil and his demons. That’s why it’s so encouraging to read a year-end report like the 2019 one for the blog. For that, again I say, “Thank You.” I really don’t have the words to adequately express the full measure of my appreciation, but just know that the measure is plenty deep and plenty wide.

Posted in Personal | Tagged , | 6 Comments

How to Hurt Your Best Friend

Adulterers and adulteresses! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Whoever therefore wants to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God. Or do you think that the Scripture says in vain, “The Spirit who dwells in us yearns jealously?” (James 4:4-5, N.K.J.V.)

What could possibly make God the Holy Spirit, who dwells inside each Christian, become nothing less than jealous? According to our text, it happens when the Christian chooses to be a friend to the world rather than a friend to God. Like a spurned friend, the indwelling Holy Spirit reaches the point of jealousy in His yearning to have that Christian back as a friend.

The old King James Version translates verse 5 by saying the Spirit “lusteth to envy.” The idea is that the Spirit lusts for (passionately longs for) the friendship the world has with the Christian. Putting it another way, the Spirit envies the relationship the world has with the Christian. He wishes the Christian felt about Him the way he or she feels about the world.

Kenneth Wuest, in his Untranslatable Riches From the Greek New Testament, describes the situation this way:

The indwelling Holy Spirit possessing all the potential power and help a saint needs, has a passionate desire to the point of envy. Of what is He envious, and what does He passionately desire? The context makes this clear. James is speaking here of adulterers and adulteresses in a spiritual sense. Christians who were not living in separation from the world and unto God. They had committed spiritual adultery in playing false to their Lord and in fellowshipping with the world. They were allowing their evil natures to control them, those evil natures from which they had been delivered when God saved them. The Holy Spirit is envious of any control which that fallen nature might have over the believer, and passionately desirous of Himself controlling his thoughts, words, and deeds.

You see, anytime the Christian reverts back to his or her former friendship with the world, the indwelling Holy Spirit actually gets His feelings hurt. He’s pained that the Christian would voluntarily choose the world’s friendship over His friendship. A similar passage is Ephesians 4:30, which says the Spirit can be grieved.

Christian, imagine that you and God the Holy Spirit are sitting together on the couch in your living room. You are talking, laughing, and enjoying each other’s company. Then suddenly your phone rings. It’s your old friend the world calling. He’s just pulled into your driveway and wants you to hit the road with him for an adventure. The only stipulation is that your friend the Spirit isn’t invited. As you know, the world and the Spirit intensely dislike — the relationship might best be described as hate — each other. Truth be told, they are rivals, and so if you want to roll with the world, you’ll have to leave the Spirit behind. Besides, the world’s car is a Corvette that only has two seats, just enough room for you and him.

And so what do you do? You hang up the phone, abruptly tell the Spirit you’ve got to go, race out the door, and jump in the car with the world. And what does the Spirit do? He gets up from the couch, walks over to the window, and watches as you and the world tear out of the driveway together. That’s when that strange mix of hurting, grieving, yearning, envying, and being flat out jealous begins inside Him as His best friend has callously, flippantly, insensitively chosen His rival over Him. That is the situation James 4:4-5 is describing.

Actually, we can stretch the analogy even further. Since the Holy Spirit literally dwells inside the Christian’s body and never leaves, we can envision the Spirit being forced to tag along as the Christian has his or her time with the world. I guess the Spirit can ride in the trunk. Of course, no one riding in a car trunk has any control over where the car goes or what the driver and passenger(s) do. 1 Thessalonians 5:19 describes this as quenching the Spirit.

You should think about all this, Christian, the next time the world calls and wants to come between you and the friendship you have with the indwelling Holy Spirit. As I’ve tried to illustrate in this post, you must understand that the Holy Spirit is a person, not an “it.” He is every bit as much a person as God the Father or Jesus, and as such He has feelings. Yes, He can even get jealous, red-hot jealous, and does so each time you choose the world over Him. Because of this, you must always be on guard against that enticing phone call and that Corvette sitting in your driveway with the motor running. For one thing, that’s not a trip that will ever be in your best interests. And for another, you’ll have to deeply hurt your best friend in order to take it.

Posted in Backsliding, Disobedience, Holiness, Jealousy, Personal Holiness, Rebellion, Sanctification, Separation, Sin, Temptation, The Holy Spirit | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

A Little Church Humor for the Day After Christmas

Because I’m pretty much fried — in body and brain — from a month’s worth of all things Christmas, I thought it would be nice if I let others do the writing today. A good friend of mine sent me a couple of pages of jokes a while back, and I’m just going to pull out some of my favorites and share them with you. Enjoy.

*A Sunday School teacher challenged her children to take some time on Sunday afternoon to write a letter to God. They were to bring their letters to class the following Sunday. One little boy wrote, “Dear God, We had a good time at church today. Wish you could have been there.”

*Another Sunday School teacher was teaching her young students about Noah and the Ark. When she asked them what they thought Noah did to pass the time aboard the Ark, she got no reply. Finally, she remembered that there weren’t any fish in the Ark and said, “Maybe he did a lot of fishing.” To that, one little boy gave her a funny look and said, “I don’t think so. It’s kinda hard to fish with just two worms.”

*One man said to another man at a gathering, “I’ve been racking my brain, but I can’t seem to place you. But you do look like someone I’ve seen a lot, someone I don’t particularly like. But I can’t tell you why. Isn’t that strange?” “There’s nothing strange about it,” said the other man. “You have seen me a lot, and I know exactly why you resent me. For two years I passed the collection plate in your church.”

*The church service was over, and the pastor stood at the door shaking hands with the people as they left. A woman shook his hand and said, “You know what? I don’t think I’ll come back to this church any more. Every time I come you people sing the same two songs. You either sing Silent Night or He Arose.” (Get it?)

*Deer-hunting season began one Saturday. The next day, at the close of the Sunday morning service, a pastor said to his congregation, “Raise your hand if you bagged a deer yesterday.” Not one hand was lifted. Puzzled, the pastor said, “I don’t understand this. I know that many of you went hunting yesterday, and I specifically asked God to bless your deer.” After a brief pause, one hunter replied, “Well, preacher, He did. They’re all safe. Next time, ask Him to bless our aim.”

*(Here’s one that is particularly relevant to this time of year.) The following conversation occurred when an IRS agent visited a pastor:

  • agent: “Pastor, do you know a Mr. Karten?”
  • pastor: “Yes, I do.”
  • agent: “Is he a member of your congregation?”
  • pastor: “Yes, he is.”
  • agent: “And did Mr. Karten really donate $100,000 to your church, as he has claimed on his tax return?”
  • pastor: “I assure you he will!”
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“Christian Verses” Podcast: Isaiah 7:14

Merry Christmas everybody! A couple of weeks ago I preached a sermon on Christ’s virgin birth. Along about the same time Malcolm taught a class on the topic. So, we decided to pool our efforts and devote a podcast to the topic. In the podcast, Malcolm gets things going by quoting some interesting statistics regarding professing Christians’ belief (or lack of it) in the virgin birth. Then we go from there to delve deeper into the discussion. To hear the podcast, just click on the link below. And, again, MERRY CHRISTMAS!

https://soundcloud.com/user-185243867/the-essential-virgin-birthcv2019015

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Your Reaction

“Reactions to Christ’s Birth” series (post #7)

That was the true Light which gives light to every man coming into the world. He was in the world, and the world was made through Him, and the world did not know Him. He came to His own, and His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, to those who believe in His name, who were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. (John 1:9-13, N.K.J.V.)

In regards to the news of Christ’s birth, you can talk all you want about the reactions of Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, the wise men, Herod, and the Jewish religious leaders. In the end, though, the only reaction that gets into your wheelhouse is your reaction. Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, and the wise men all reacted appropriately to Jesus becoming flesh and dwelling among men, while Herod and the Jewish religious leaders reacted inappropriately to that incarnation. But what about you? How have you reacted to it?

Even more importantly than how you have reacted to the news of Christ’s birth is the matter of how you have reacted to the news that He: grew up, lived a sinless life, performed miracles that proved His divinity, died on a Roman cross as the sacrifice for your sins, arose from the dead, ascended back to heaven, and right now offers salvation to you if you will (as our text passage says) receive Him as your personal Savior. Obviously, that sweet little baby in the manger didn’t stay an infant and didn’t stay in that manger. No, He became an adult who did business with the human race, and now the human race must do business with Him one way or the other by either receiving Him or rejecting Him.

This idea of receiving Jesus goes hand in hand with the Bible’s teaching that salvation is a gift that can only be received or rejected. Consider the following passages (all from the N.K.J.V.):

  • For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 6:23)
  • For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works lest anyone should boast. (Ephesians 2:8-9)
  • Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift! (2 Corinthians 9:15)

You see, the Bible so inseparably links Jesus with the gift of salvation that the two become one and the same. The only way to receive the gift is to receive Jesus. As evidence of this, think about John 3:16. That verse teaches that God loved the world so much that He gave it a gift. But what was that gift? It was a person: God’s Son, Jesus. Similarly, in John 4:10, Jesus tells a Samaritan woman, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you, ‘Give Me a drink,’ you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water” (N.K.J.V.). Do you see how the “living water” (a description of salvation) and Jesus are the same? The only way the woman could receive the living water was for her to receive Jesus.

Actually, the Bible uses various terminologies to describe how a person gets saved. Many passages talk about believing in Jesus (John 3:16, Romans 10:14, etc.), but other passages talk about putting faith in Him (Romans 3:21-31, Colossians 1:3-5, etc.), trusting in Him (Ephesians 1:11-14, 1 Timothy 4:10), calling upon Him (Romans 10:9-13), or coming to Him (John 5:39-40, John 6:35-37). Revelation 3:20 even describes it as opening the door after hearing Jesus knock.

It’s not that these passages are describing different types of salvation experiences. The point is that the genuine salvation experience will incorporate all of these descriptions. This brings us back to the terminology of our text passage. What does it mean for a person to receive Jesus? It means, in regards to salvation, that the person believes in Him, puts faith in Him, trusts in Him, calls upon Him, comes to Him, and opens the door to Him.

This Christmas, or any other time of the year for that matter, you need to make sure that you have truly received the gift of salvation that is Jesus Christ. Personally, whenever I present the gospel, I usually use the words “believe in Him” in reference to what the individual needs to do concerning Jesus. I favor this terminology because it’s the one most frequently used in the New Testament. As I’ve pointed out, though, any of the terminologies will work if the decision itself is real. It’s the decision’s authenticity that is paramount, not the specific wording.

But make no mistake, that decision or lack of it is what determines each individual’s eternal destiny. I’m happy to report that all scriptural indications are that Mary, Joseph, those shepherds, and those wise men didn’t just rightly receive the news about Christ’s birth; they also rightly received Him. Again I ask you, have you done this? If you haven’t, then I’m not happy to report that you’ll spend this Christmas abiding under the condemnation of God (John 3:18). But if you have, then you’ll spend it as God means for you to spend it. The choice is yours to make because the gift has already been given to you in the person of Jesus Christ. All that’s left to be decided now is, will you reject the gift or receive it?

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The Religious Leaders’ Reaction

“Reactions to Christ’s Birth” series: (post #6)

Imagine that you have waited your whole life for John Doe to arrive. When you were a child, your parents told you, “One day John Doe will come to our people, and when He gets here He will solve all our problems.” When you attended school, your teachers told you, “We are waiting for John Doe to arrive, and when He does He will lead our people into an age of peace, prosperity, and prominence in the world.” When you became an adult, other adults told you, “Surely it is almost time for John Doe to finally come and save us.”

Then one day, out of the clear blue, some strangers show up in your city and ask to be shown to the site where John Doe was recently born. How do they know He’s been born? They know it because they’ve seen His sign, a miraculous star, in the nighttime sky. To them, the question is not whether or not John Doe has been born. The only question is, “Where is He?”

Well, you don’t know these strange men, but you do know the answer to their question. According to what you’ve always been taught, John Doe is supposed to be born in Bethlehem. Bethlehem, that’s the little town that is located only about five miles from where you stand. Okay, so what’s your next move?

Based upon what you have been taught your entire life, shouldn’t you be excited about the possibility that John Doe has at last been born? Shouldn’t you be encouraged by the news of His birth? Most importantly, shouldn’t you follow those strange men to Bethlehem? Better yet, shouldn’t you say to them, “Follow me, I’ll show you the way there. I want to see this child myself”? That’s what common sense would dictate you should do with such news.

This brings us to the Jewish ruling elite of Herod’s day. When those wise men from the East showed up at Herod’s palace and asked him about the whereabouts of the newborn king, Herod immediately called in Jerusalem’s chief priests and scribes and asked them for the answer. And they gave it to him by quoting the Micah 5:2 prophecy about Bethlehem. But, after giving that answer, those men simply faded back into the shadows, never to be heard from again (at least as far as the story of Christ’s birth goes).

Isn’t that incredible? Isn’t that shocking? Isn’t that sad? Those Jewish religious leaders weren’t interested enough or even curious enough to make the five-mile trip to at least investigate the validity of the claim. As far as we know, they were content to just return to the “business as usual” of their little world of religion and wait to see if any more was heard about the Messiah being born.

The Bible doesn’t tell us the reason why those men reacted that way. Perhaps they were terrified that Herod would see them get excited about the birth of the Messiah. After all, it’s not like they couldn’t have guessed that he would want to kill the newborn king. On the other hand, perhaps they inwardly hoped that the Messiah hadn’t been born. After all, they knew that if He really was on the scene, He would create a tidal wave that would come crashing down into their comfortable lives and positions of authority among the Jews.

While I don’t doubt that those religious leaders were terrified of Herod’s wrath, it’s impossible for me to believe that their reaction to the news of Christ’s birth didn’t have plenty to do with them potentially losing their lofty status among the Jews. Along these lines, it doesn’t help their case that, some 30 years later, when Jesus began His public ministry, these same groups hounded Him at every turn, tried to discredit Him, and ultimately worked through the Romans to get Him crucified. That tells us all we need to know about how they felt about Him.

In this way, those religious leaders symbolize all the people who won’t embrace Jesus as Savior because they know that doing so will bring major change to their lives. Show me a lost person who really, really, really likes the way his or her life is going, and I’ll show you someone who isn’t a top candidate to come under the Lordship of Christ. Seriously, Christian, if you try to witness to a lost person by saying, “Jesus can give you a new life,” and that person’s comeback is, “But I like the life I have now,” you’re probably not going to win that person to Jesus. That’s just reality.

What many lost people instinctively understand is that Jesus won’t play second fiddle or be a co-pilot. If He gets invited into a life, He’s taking over that life completely. Furthermore, the individual’s personal comfort won’t be nearly as high on Christ’s priority list as it is on the person’s. Yes, Jesus will help the individual in whatever way is needed, but then He’ll start to mold and shape that individual to be used in His service. Unfortunately, most people simply don’t have much interest in that kind of life.

At the bottom line, those Jewish religious leaders saw Jesus as a threat — a threat to their way of life, a threat to their place in society, a threat to their power over the people. It’s no wonder they had no interest in seeing Him. Even if they had traveled with those wise men to Bethlehem, they certainly wouldn’t have joined them in worshiping Him. It’s much more likely they would have ridiculed the idea of the virgin birth and dismissed Jesus as being nothing more than the product of premarital sex between Joseph and Mary.

You know, in many ways, the reaction from those religious leaders was about as bad as Herod’s reaction. The only difference was, they didn’t add in the effort to kill Jesus. But then again, that would come about three decades later, wouldn’t it? For that matter, the chances are that a few of those same chief priests and scribes who first heard the news about Christ’s birth were still alive to play an active role in His death. And if that was indeed the case, it meant that they helped finish what Herod had started. I wonder if they ever noticed the connection. They probably didn’t, did they? That would have required far more spiritual discernment than their warped minds were capable of generating.

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