Monday, February 8, 2010

Ponder our Path


Proverbs 4:26-27 "Ponder the path of your feet, and let all your ways be established. [27] Turn not to the right hand or the left; remove your foot from evil."















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Every now and then it does a man (or woman) good to simply stop for a moment and to think about where his life is going, where the path is taking him. "Ponder the path of your feet" the proverb says, "and let all your ways be established." So now we have moved from simply thinking about our life, but now to establishing it. Many a thing can go awry if we do not establish our path, if we do not clearly mark it for our treading. Having an established breakfast, an established prayer time, an established bed time (hehe), and whatever else one may think of. Any way taken, truly it is wisdom that I in my life need to consider more often.

How, one may wonder, are is person supposed to establish their path, so to speak? "Turn not to the right hand or the left," God says to us, "remove your foot from evil." So, if a pattern in our life is by the wayside, or near the fence, or if our foot is stuck in some evil, then we must eradicate it.

Ponder our path, turn not to the side, continue straight on, and remove ourselves from evil. These things are what I get from this verses. Again, I know not who shall read, but it is good for me to write for Christ.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

BitterSweet


Proverbs 27:7 "The full soul loathes a honeycomb, but to the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet."

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I was thinking about this a little this week, but this verse is a good reminder just to myself that our perspective on what is going on in our lives can have a big impact in both how much we enjoy it and also how well we respond to it. In this Proverb it says "The full soul loathes a honeycomb". This is quite interesting. Honey is really sweet, so why wouldn't someone want it? They are, "full", the proverb tells us. I think everyone gets like this sometimes. God gives us so many good things, but then, being content with the things, we look at all of the good things that God blesses us with and say to Him "God, I think I need something more than this. I want something sweeter." But they don't really need anything sweeter, because it is not the quality of the honey which is the problem, but the appetite of the person who is receiving it. "To the hungry soul every bitter thing is sweet." This person is the complete opposite. It's like he gets this massive hunk of rotting wormwood, takes a big hunk out of it and goes, "MAN! WOAH! I get to eat THIS???!!!! God You are so very good to me." He eats this bitter nasty thing and it tastes sweet, because He is hungry for anything that God gives to Him. Because what may look like Wormwood on the outside may actually be honey within.

This is how we should always be, I think. Hungry--for God.

I know not who may read, but it gladdens me to write for Christ.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Plowing in the Cold





Proverbs 20:4 "The sluggard will not plow by reason of the cold; therefore shall he beg at harvest and have nothing."





Colossians 3:23-24 "Whatever you do work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward.








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I think a lot of times we as Christians and people, and Americans, often get tired of plowing. Very few reading this may be farmers, or even remotely close to such a profession (indeed I am not much of a simple gardener even), but I know that this still applies to my own life as it is.

I think, in my life at least, a person may go on for weeks or months throughout the school year, or in the work place, or at the market place, day in and day out doing one thing, and one thing only. Work, work work and more plowing and shearing and pruning and harvesting. Work. We people, especially in high school, would give a great deal simply to have no responsibility and simply sit for a few days and simply REST without doing ANYTHING at all that is required of us.
And then winter comes.

Yeah. We don't want to go out there and PLOW EVEN MORE when we've been plowing out and working our faces off for the rest of the year.

There's just one problem with this. While it is good to rest, we must also realize that when the time calls for it, it is good to work.

And according to Proverbs, it is only the sluggard who "will not plow for reason of by cold." And doing this also costs the sluggard something beyond just getting work done. "Therefore shall he beg at harvest." If we don't plow now, when it's hard, when it stings us in the wind, then we will pay for it later. This is what this verse said to me.

Beyond this, in the other verse I mentioned, it says to "work heartily as for the Lord and not for men."

The reason why we must plow now, in the cold, is not because we try to further ourselves, or so we can work less later. It is to provide for us in the future, and it is because it was to this end that God has created us to function.

To work. To work heartily. In the cold.

And most importantly, for Him.

I know not all who may read, but I write this to honor Christ. And that is all that matters.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Even at Maine West, God Has Control

Daniel 4:35

...But He does according to His will in the host of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth, and no one can ward off His hand...

Romans 8:28


And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.


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I wanted to write a short post about all of the cuts that are happening, which I'm pretty sure all of you know about (if you are from Maine West). I know that a lot of us, like me, are upset about at least one of the potential cuts, whether it's a teacher or a club/sport. The reason I wrote Daniel 4:35 is because it says that God's will will always be done. It really shows His sovereignty and power over all; and I think that it can also be comforting, like in this case, that He is always in control. Even if what we want doesn't get done, we can know that everything is going as He wants (and because He is holy and righteous, we should rejoice in that). No board member or anyone else involved can change that (or, ward off His hand).

Romans 8:28 was actually the first verse that came to my mind when I started thinking about my post. What's really great about it is that no matter what happens, God will turn all things for the good of those who love Him. The cuts might not be what we want or expect, and it might not even be the best for us academically, but we can know that God will work this out for our spiritual good, even if we don't understand why or how. And again, no one can change that.

I still encourage all of you to go to the meeting at Maine East on Wednesday (and I'd go too, except I help with Awana Sparks that night), but if things don't go the way we want it or the way we think it really should be, I just want to remind you (and myself) that we can trust that God is in control and will work it for our good, no matter what happens.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Rule or Die




Proverbs 16:32
"He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty, And he that rules his spirit than he that takes a city." Proverbs 25:28 "He that has no rule over his own spirit, Is like a city that is broken down, And without walls."

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I have not posted in a really, good long while. This is mostly due to neglect. I am a busy person, but every person is a busy person so there is no excuse in that sentiment. Nevertheless, I have been thinking about things for a while, reading a chapter of proverbs in the morning, and then reading the same chapter of proverbs before bed (when that hour comes). But one verse that has struck out to me has been these two.

What does it mean to truly have "rule" over one spirit? According to proverbs, a person who has this is "better than he who takes a city", and a person who does not "is like a city broken down, and without walls."

For a Christian, to have "rule over one's spirit" means to have your life be in submission to Christ. Before Christ, we were our own, blinded in our sinful ways. Now, we have Jesus, and He is the King of the castle.

So if we are Christians, and He is the ruler of our spirits, does that mean that every Christian will always have rule over their own spirit? No.

I used to ask how a Christian man could struggle with Pornography. That's because I was one of those, and I couldn't understand it. My life was miserable, and I didn't know what was going on. People said it was "common" and "normal" for people of my age to struggle with such a thing. But I knew--garbage. Those words are meaningless in Christ's kingdom! Against a Holy, Righteous God! Why do people who know Christ become unstable or have trouble fighting things like Pornography, drugs, alcohol, or bad video games, distasteful music, gossiping, slander, hate, jealously, covetousness--ANYTHING, fill in the blank? It is for this reason that this is even possible:

They do not have rule over their own spirit. Their "old man", their "old nature" is what is the problem, as is every Christian's problem. Basically, they are the problem. But it is the part that does not love Christ.

For at conversion, God creates in us a "new heart" and makes us a "new creation", the Bible says. When that person, the person that Christ created us to be, is in control, as Christians we are stable and have rule over our own selves, because Christ is our master. This is where all of us as Christians should be.

However, that is not always the case. Unbelievers have no problem sinning because their is only one master of their lives, and it is them. They are in control, and because of this, they unanimously have no problem with living sinful lives.

However as Christians this presents a problem, as man can not serve two masters. Whether it be God, money, lust, excitement, adventure, praise, man can only have one King of the castle at one time. If a Christian gets caught in an old sin, or even a new one, this presents a state of turmoil in his life.

The "castle" or "city"---basically his soul----is under siege. Christ is King, but it is a battle ground in the village. That is why Proverbs says that those with no rule over their own spirits "are like a city broken down, and without walls." Because when sin is trying to take over a believer's life, and the believer doesn't stop it, then it will. It waltz right on through and rip, tear, and pillage every single thing in a person's life that they had ever built, dreamed about, or hoped of nurturing. Sin will come to destroy you. That is what these verses say.

Paul talks in the new testament of a double-minded man as being "unstable in all his ways." Why is he unstable? Because he is at war! No town or city or even nation is stable or at peace when it is at war. The objective is to destroy the enemy, to shut them out and regain control. And this is precisely what these verses are getting at.

I don't know what these verses say to others, but to me it has said this thing:

"You will be victorious or die."

That is what dawned on me. A lot addicts of sin or substances are never freed from it because they do not realize this one thing: You can not beat an addiction step by step. There is no 10 Step plan that will help them, there are not a million Nicotine Patches in the world that can cut their habit. Either you have Total and Utter Victory, regaining your Rule over your spirit, or you don't--and then you die, because it kills you. It was on this realization that God gave me the ability and the victory to overcome my sin.

I used to be afraid of admitting such a sin. What would people think? But now that it is dead, now that Christ's sword is caught within its chest, being dead it no longer seems scary to me anymore.

Because Christ is stronger than sin. Maybe you aren't. Maybe you couldn't beat it in a game of checkers but Christ is always victorious. He never lost. Not once. In anything.

Thus you need only raise the sword, and Christ's arm shall be your victory. Complete victory, or utter defeat. It is the fight of your life, and it will be hard. But you must be determined and choose your victory, make it a decision, a final decision. If a Christian trusts in Christ and faces their sin with that choice, "I will not lose". If they choose victory, as Christ offers it, then they shall never be defeated.

I hope most of you won't be traumatized reading this. I hope this may help some people. We are all sinners; but the Christians have Christ as master.

I know not who shall read, but I know I have written to honor Christ, and that is all that matters.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Bless the Lord!

Okay, you may be thinking after these few months of no posts (by the way, this was actually posted on New Year's Eve, the date just got messed up) that this one will at least have something to do with Christmas or New Year's, but it's not. The thought did cross my mind to write something about it, but because there was so much that I could write and I didn't have the time I wanted, I decided that you could read the Christmas story for yourself if you haven't already this year. As for this post, I was meaning to do it for Thanksgiving, but things got a little busy. But it's been on my mind for a while, especially since I memorized the chapter, and I think it's a pretty good psalm; so here it is.

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Psalm 103:1-22

[1] Bless the LORD, O my soul,
And all that is within me,
bless His holy name.
[2] Bless the LORD, O my soul,
And forget none of His benefits;
[3] Who pardons all you iniquities,
Who heals all your diseases;
[4] Who redeems your life from the pit,
Who crowns you with lovingkindness
and compassion;
[5] Who satisfies your years with good things,
So that your youth is renewed like the eagle.

[6] The LORD performs righteous deeds
And judgments for all who are oppressed.
[7] He made known His ways to Moses,
His acts to the sons of Israel.
[8] The LORD is compassionate and gracious,
Slow to anger and abounding in lovingkindness.
[9] He will not always strive with us,
Nor will He keep His anger forever.
[10] He has not dealt with us according to our sins,
Nor rewarded us according to our iniquities.
[11] For as high as the heavens are above the earth,
So great is His lovingkindness toward those who fear Him.
[12] As far as the east is from the west,
So far has He removed our transgressions from us.
[13] Just as a father has compassion on his children,
So the LORD has compassion on those who fear Him.
[14] For He Himself knows our frame;
He is mindful that we are but dust.

[15] As for man, his days are like grass;
As a flower of the field, so he flourishes.
[16] When the wind has passed over it, it is no more,
And its place acknowledges it no longer.
[17] But the lovingkindness of the LORD is from
everlasting to everlasting on those who fear HIm,
And His righteousness to children's children,
[18] To those who keep His covenant
And remember His precepts to do them.

[19] The LORD has established His throne in the heavens,
And His sovereignty rules over all.
[20] Bless the LORD, you His angels,
Mighty in strength, who perform His word,
Obeying the voice of HIs word!
[21] Bless the LORD, all you HIs hosts,
You who serve Him, doing His will.
[22] Bless the LORD, all you works of His,
In all places of HIs dominion;
Bless the LORD, O my soul!


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First, you can probably tell that the focus of this Psalm is "Bless the Lord." The first blessing of God that David mentions is, "who pardons all your iniquities." Sometimes when I go through the chapter I have to actually stop and think about it: it's just so amazing that God would do it. The other things that God does for our souls are just as amazing, and you can see that He really is our Healer and Provider and He loves us enough to give all those good things to our souls. There is no wonder that our souls should bless the Lord because of His blessings and goodness to us, even when we fall into the pit.

The second part of Psalm 103 is pretty amazing, too. God has shown us His character; that He is "compassionate and gracious, Slow to anger and abounding in lovingkindness." This part kind of makes me laugh when I hear that God was mean and unforgiving in the Old Testament--it's pretty much the opposite. David also gives the ultimate example of God showing this: His lovingkindness and forgiveness of sins. He hasn't punished us in the way we deserve; but rather, He has removed our sins from us, "As far as the east is from the west." Now that is awesome. I really find a lot of comfort in this Psalm, especially in the last verses here about His fatherly compassion and His knowledge that we are but dust. Although it is definitely not an excuse to sin, it is a comfort to know that He understands who we are and that He does give us compassion--that we don't deserve. God's grace to us is amazing.

This next part contrasts the lives of people and God's love. While people are here pretty much here today and gone tomorrow, God's love and righteousness lasts forever. It's just so cool how He is always going to be the good God He is, forever.

Verse 19 is really interesting, at least to me. By saying that "His sovereignty rules over all," it shows that He's not some wimp who decided He would be nice to us. He is the all-powerful God, and no one can get out from under His rule. It shows that He is awesome, which makes His forgiveness so much more amazing. The rest of the Psalm calls all to bless the Lord, from the greatest angel in heaven to the tiniest bug on earth; and of course, David's own soul.

I guess the reason that I wrote this other than to share a Psalm that I thought was really cool, is that I think that a lot of times we forget to bless the Lord. Even David had to remind His soul to do it. In the good times and the bad, a lot of us, including myself, tend to complain instead of praising God for who He is. He always loves us and blesses us, even in the worst circumstances. And if, say, you were sick, you can always remember that although your body may not be healed, God does heal the diseases of your soul, which is the most important part of you. There are so many reasons for us to praise the Lord, in His power, His love and forgiveness, His salvation, His blessings, and His works; and He is always who He is, no matter what you are going through. So as this year ends, and in all of the years to come, don't forget to bless the Lord.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Blog Update: A New Resource

We have a new Resource that I'd like to make available to you all. For now it will simply be called, "Other Blogs". Basically, it is a way for you guys to get more than just from what you get here.

One blog in particular that I want you to see is "Stories From the Loft."

It is something being done by a good friend of mine, and I think that you all would enjoy it.

http://storiesfromtheloft.blogspot.com/