Strength Renewed

“The Lord is my shepherd; I have all that I need. He lets me rest in green meadows; he leads me beside peaceful streams. He renews my strength. He guides me along right paths, bringing honour to his name. Even when I walk through the darkest valley, I will not be afraid, for you are close beside me. Your rod and your staff protect and comfort me.”
Psalm 23:1-4 NLT

With our picture building of “green meadows”, “peaceful streams” and times of “rest” it is inevitable, or so we think, that our strength would be renewed. After a hard day’s work, a good meal and an evening on the sofa followed by a good night’s sleep, we will be equipped for the next day with all the strength we need. But that’s the physical strength that is necessary for our work-a-day lives. When we consider our spiritual strength we are in a different league, one that needs a different approach, and one that cannot be achieved without God. 

Consider the spiritual “green meadows” and “peaceful streams”. They are places where we can satisfy our spiritual hunger and thirst, but finding them is impossible for those who don’t believe in Jesus. We have said before that counterfeit solutions are sought after, in the hope that a worldly solution exists to renew an unbeliever’s spiritual needs (they definitely have them, by the way). Just because someone says he or she doesn’t believe in God doesn’t remove the need to find a remedy to the internal craving in their souls. Just yesterday, I shared the Gospel with a neighbour who subsequently became quite agitated and defensive. I suspect that I wasn’t the first to talk about God in his presence but he explained that he wasn’t “religious” and that he tried to be a good and kind person, worthy of respect. Of course he was, but that won’t feed and satisfy his soul. I pray for another opportunity to introduce him to God, the only One who can satisfy his spirit’s needs.

We pilgrims know where we can find the “green meadows” and “peaceful streams”. We find a quiet place somewhere and open God’s Word if we can, or remember a particular verse if we don’t have our Bibles with us. It could be a park bench, or a corner of our bedrooms. Our office desk or on a walk somewhere. I can remember the rich times I spent with God feeding my spirit as I walked around the Union Canal in Edinburgh during my lunch breaks. I was going through a stressful time at work and I needed to “renew my strength” before facing the second half of the day. It was truly amazing how God spoke to me and encouraged me through God-incidents and encounters on those walks. I am eternally grateful.

Isaiah wrote, “Have you never heard? Have you never understood? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of all the earth. He never grows weak or weary. No one can measure the depths of his understanding” (Isaiah 40:28). We worship a God who is limitless, who has all the resources we need, and who is always looking for an opportunity to bless His people. But we have to put ourselves into a receiving mode. For most of our waking hours we are filling our lives with noise, not just of the audible variety, but also with our busyness, with our activities and distractions. Hence the need to find a quiet place, where we can get away from all our worldly cares and anxieties. Isaiah knew the limitlessness of God. He knew about God’s constant presence and he went on to write, “He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless. Even youths will become weak and tired, and young men will fall in exhaustion. But those who trust in the Lord will find new strength. They will soar high on wings like eagles. They will run and not grow weary. They will walk and not faint” (Isaiah 40:29-31). What an amazing picture of God’s bountiful provision. It doesn’t matter if we feel “weak” and “powerless” because God has, and is, all the strength that we need. It’s not a physical thing, with muscles strong and functioning. It is all about our spiritual resilience in a world that despises anything to do with God. 

Yesterday I had a walk in a local park, where the weekly “Parkrun” was taking place. Runners displaying a cacophony of colours, with different forms of attire. Lycra very much in evidence. People of all ages and shapes pounding their ways around a circuit marked out with different coloured cones. I was amused to even see a man with a toddler in a running buggy (one with extra large wheels) puffing and panting, pushing his way around the course. What the toddler thought I don’t know. The runners’ dedication to their event was commendable. They would have eventually returned home, full of self-satisfaction no doubt, but the hunger and thirst in their souls would have still been there. I remarked to one of the stewards that physical exercise was good, but all these sweating bodies would one day lie “mouldering in the grave”, their souls that will live forever sorely neglected. 

We pilgrims “trust in the Lord” don’t we? David did and he wrote this wonderful Psalm from his own experiences. Pastures and streams for his body and his soul. He knew them all. He fed his soul in places of rest, as he worshiped and meditated in God. There he renewed his strength, just as Isaiah wrote. And so can we pilgrims. If we find that we don’t have time in the morning to spend it with God, then we must get up a bit earlier. But find the time we must, because our spirits are refreshed and our “strength renewed” only when we sit in God’s presence.

Dear Lord Jesus. Only You are the Way to Heaven. Only You have the word of eternal life. Only You can refresh our souls. Thanks You. Amen.

Promises

“Who may worship in your sanctuary, Lord? Who may enter your presence on your holy hill? … Those who despise flagrant sinners, and honour the faithful followers of the Lord, and keep their promises even when it hurts.”
Psalm 15:1, 4 NLT

We spend another day looking at the qualities required for those desirous of worshiping the Lord in His presence. David wrote that those who make promises must keep them “even when it hurts”. From God’s perspective, the Bible is full of His promises. Take 1 Chronicles 16:34 for example, “Give thanks to the Lord, for he is good! His faithful love endures forever“. God promised to never stop loving human beings, and yet, when we see the hurt that we have caused Him, we perhaps think that this is one promise too far. Look at Genesis 6:6, “So the Lord was sorry he had ever made them and put them on the earth. It broke his heart“. What a poignant response to the way the ones He loved were treating Him. But nevertheless, God never stops loving us.

We too have an opportunity to make a promise to God. The writer to Ecclesiastes noted, “When you make a promise to God, don’t delay in following through, for God takes no pleasure in fools. Keep all the promises you make to him. It is better to say nothing than to make a promise and not keep it” (Ecclesiastes 5:4-5). The writer implied that those who fail to keep a promise are fools and shouldn’t have made a promise at all if there was any doubt that they would keep it. Notice too that the writer said “When” and not “If”. Promises should be made to God, and especially the one that we made when we knelt at the cross in repentance, asking for forgiveness. 

There are too many examples of broken promises in the world today. Take for example our politicians, quick to make all sorts of promises in the run up to an election, but forgetting they ever made them once elected. Another common example is a promise made by a couple getting married, only to find that the promise, “to have and to hold from this day forward; for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, till death us do part, according to God’s holy law. In the presence of God I make this vow“, is abandoned at some point down the road when the going gets tough. Apparently, 42% of marriages officially end in divorce, but many more happen in people’s hearts, I’m sure.

David wrote that a prerequisite to being able to worship the Lord in His presence is being able to keep a promise, no matter what it takes. From Gotquestions.org, “Promises can be beautiful and honourable and made for the good of others. But they must be kept. As we are imperfect humans, we should only make promises with care and introspection so they do not turn into sin. Promises can be easily broken or made with the wrong motivation, which may result in damage to ourselves or others”. So there we have it. But we pilgrims are promise keepers, no matter what, because we want to worship our amazing Saviour in His sanctuary.

Dear Father God. We make this promise today, that we will follow You all the days of our lives. For Jesus’ sake, amen.

Entering the Sanctuary (2)

“Who may worship in your sanctuary, Lord? Who may enter your presence on your holy hill? Those who lead blameless lives and do what is right, speaking the truth from sincere hearts.”
Psalm 15:1-2 NLT

David asked the question, “Who may enter your presence on your holy hill?” There is of course two scenarios – one in this life and the other in the life to come. In this life we believers want to worship the Lord wherever we can find Him. It doesn’t have to be in a Temple, or on Mount Zion, or even in a church. He can be found anywhere and everywhere. And in the life to come we will be in God’s presence and will join with the angels and all the saints in worship so incredible that it will be nothing like we have ever experienced.

But consider that the sanctuary David wrote about was Heaven, where the Lord will be worshipped, and where there will be no soul present that is still polluted with the stains of sin. We pilgrims know that one day we will join the Lord there because we responded whole-heartedly to the Gospel, the Good News about Jesus and all He did for us at Calvary. In Heaven the worship of the Lord will be absolutely amazing and we who worship Him in this life look forward to it. Sadly, there are many people, however, who don’t lead blameless lives and, in fact, don’t know Jesus at all, but they think they will end up in Heaven when they die. Will those people still find themselves able to worship the Lord, or will they be somewhere else?

Anyone who goes to a funeral will often find many who are deluded in their thinking. They have come to believe that their departed loved ones are in Heaven with the Lord and they find comfort in the thought that they will also join them there one day. They even go further and think that their loved ones are benignly looking down on them, pleased or otherwise about what they are doing. The departed spirits will go somewhere of course, and they may even be looking down at those left behind, but I always come back to the story Jesus told of the Rich Man and Lazarus. Luke 16: 22-23, “Finally, the poor man died and was carried by the angels to sit beside Abraham at the heavenly banquet. The rich man also died and was buried, and he went to the place of the dead. There, in torment, he saw Abraham in the far distance with Lazarus at his side”. The souls of our departed loved ones, and everyone else come to that, end up in one of two places. Those that know and love Jesus, those who are His wholehearted followers, will end up in a place called Heaven, or Paradise (look up the conversation the thief on the cross next to Jesus had with the Lord). Those who are unbelievers, the agnostics, the atheists, followers of other religions or those who don’t believe that our souls will survive death, will end up in the place of the dead, called Hades or Sheol in the various Bible translations. We know from the Luke 16 account of the resting place of the Rich Man that the place of the dead will not be a pleasant place. But it is logical really. David asked “Who may worship in Your sanctuary, Lord?” Those who don’t know the Lord will not really want to worship Him. What would be the point?

Jesus was asked a question about eternal life which we can read in Matthew 19:16, “Someone came to Jesus with this question: “Teacher, what good deed must I do to have eternal life?”” Jesus replied to the young man who asked the question with an answer outlining the commandments that must be followed. We read the man’s reply in Matthew 19:20, ““I’ve obeyed all these commandments,” the young man replied. “What else must I do?”” Jesus’ reply was for him to sell his possessions and give away the proceeds to the poor, something, as it turned out, that he was unable to countenance. In the subsequent conversation with His disciples, they said it was impossible to achieve a life spent in the presence of God by human efforts alone. Jesus agreed, and we read in Matthew 19:26, “Jesus looked at them intently and said, “Humanly speaking, it is impossible. But with God everything is possible””.

David asked the question, “Who may enter your presence on your holy hill?” The same question still hangs in the air today and we should perhaps ask a similar question of those we meet, “Where will your soul go when you die – the place of the dead or will it join the Lord in Heaven?” In this life we have a powerful choice between being a believer in Jesus, with all that that means, or being against Jesus as an unbeliever. Making the right choice is the most important decision we can make in our lifetimes because it determines where we will spend eternity. Jesus was very clear. In John 14:6 we read, “Jesus answered, ‘I am the way and the truth and the life. No-one comes to the Father except through me”. The times are short and many of my friends are reaching the age in life when this question needs to be answered soon. Remember, those who fail to make the decision for Jesus will end up in a place they find they don’t want to be by default. 

At the end of Revelation 20 we read, “And anyone whose name was not found recorded in the Book of Life was thrown into the lake of fire“. Why did people have to be “thrown” into that place? Because when they saw what was coming they recoiled in horror and did everything they could to avoid going there. But it was too late. Their resistance had to be overcome with force. A stark and horrible warning that we pilgrims have to be clear about when we share our testimonies of what Jesus has done for us. There is a time coming when the results of a person’s choice will be realised. There is no escape. There is no third way. And we pilgrims have been entrusted with a Gospel that not only presents God’s love, but also His judgement. 

Father God. We have reviewed some sobering thoughts this morning and we pray for Your love and grace to flow even more in our lives and the lives of those we meet. Please help us present the Good News about Jesus to those who are heading for a lost eternity in a way that exposes Your heart for them. We love You Lord and always will. Amen.

Merely Human

“But the needy will not be ignored forever; the hopes of the poor will not always be crushed. Arise, O Lord! Do not let mere mortals defy you! Judge the nations! Make them tremble in fear, O Lord. Let the nations know they are merely human.”
Psalm 9:18-20 NLT

David brings Psalm 9, what is to many a difficult Psalm, to an end. Its references to wicked people, enemies, judgement, and nations that ignore God, are not uplifting reading. But they are a sobering reminder that we live in an evil and sinful world that, particularly here in the West, and if the news media reports are to be believed, is set on ignoring God. David doesn’t forget the poor and needy in his society however, and he possibly feels despair that poverty is present. But his confidence in God is such that the “hopes of the poor” together with the cries of the needy will “not be ignored forever”. One day the scales of justice will be balanced, as we saw from the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus (Luke 16). 

David looked around his society and the adjacent nations from his kingly perspective and expressed his frustration that God didn’t seem to be doing anything about the injustices of life. The poor continued to be poor. His enemies continued to defy God. And David continued to pray, even cry out, to God for justice. Not some time in the future, but now. 

David ends his Psalm with the request for the nations to be put in their place. Point out to them that they are “merely human” is his request of God. Of course, God will one day answer David’s prayer in every generation, but anyone can compare his status with that of God right now. The evidence is all around us everywhere. Elihu, one of Job’s friends, said the following about God, “He repays people according to their deeds. He treats people as they deserve. … He doesn’t care how great a person may be, and he pays no more attention to the rich than to the poor. He made them all. In a moment they die. In the middle of the night they pass away; the mighty are removed without human hand” (Job 34:11 19-20). And then, in Job 38:1-7 we read, “Then the Lord answered Job from the whirlwind: “Who is this that questions my wisdom with such ignorant words? Brace yourself like a man, because I have some questions for you, and you must answer them. “Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth? Tell me, if you know so much. Who determined its dimensions and stretched out the surveying line? What supports its foundations, and who laid its cornerstone as the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy?” 

There is no doubt that human beings are “merely human”. But the arrogance of mankind is endemic. It was in David’s day and it still exists today in 21st Century societies and nations everywhere. People everywhere ignore God and even invent theories that try and explain origins and how the world was formed. Even in the Church, some men and women stand up and in their arrogance they declare the thoughts of the Lord as though they live almost on His plane and have a special hot-line to His very throne. They well might have, but where is the reverence and awe of the One who created the universe? Where is the acknowledgement of the One to whom all glory and honour is due? Where is the humility of those God has created? It is just as well that God has not answered David’s prayers for justice and punishment because there would not be a single human being left on this planet.

But we pilgrims worship at God’s footstool. We are there in awe of the One who gave His life for those who are “merely human”. Let’s not ever forget that.

Dear Father God. Sometimes we assume too much from our relationship. Please forgive us when we step over the mark. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

Harmony

“So then, let us aim for harmony in the church and try to build each other up.”
Romans 14:19 NLT

Harmony in the church? Whatever next! Whoever heard about such a thing! One thing I have concluded during my Christian life is that “harmony in the church” is an elusive thought or outcome, and something not supported by actions. But was Paul meaning just the local church or the global movement of Christians, regardless of race or denomination? 

Let us consider the global situation. There are so many denominations, each believing in something slightly different, that harmony between them seems non-existent. The word “harmony” implies something melodic, with a sound pleasing to our ears. Like playing a major chord on a guitar or piano. The opposite would be a discord, formed by random notes not related musically to each other. A musical harmony builds with complementary notes and develops into a richness that we enjoy and appreciate. To take this analogy into the church globally across all denominations, we find something different. We could be excused for thinking that each denomination within itself would be acting together in harmony. We would perhaps expect that the richness of different cultures would combine with a unity of belief to provide a harmony pleasing to watch and be a part of. Such a thought might be the case in the smaller denominations or independent fellowships, but those outside the traditional churches, the Anglicans for example, sadly observe strife and dissension over basic stuff like the authority of the Bible. The liberal wing want to absorb the ways of the world into the church against Scriptural teaching, whereas the traditional wing want to hold fast to what God said through His Word.

And that is within a denomination. Across the denominations there are even more examples of strife and dissension. For example, some denominations believe that the Gifts of the Holy Spirit died out with the early Apostles. Others believe that the Gifts are still here for the encouragement of Christian’s today. Some believe in speaking in tongues. Others don’t. Some believe in infant christenings, others believe in adult full immersion baptisms. Some believe that women should not be in a position of church leadership, others believe that they should. It is so sad that expediency sometimes trumps the Word of God, as expressed in the Bible.

Turning to the local church, the local expression of a group of like-minded Christians who meet together in their neighbourhood, harmony between them is essential. But again, strife can develop, and church splits occur from time to time. Division can occur due to differences of opinion between leaders, or sometimes doctrine. At other times disunity within a church is tolerated by keeping the two factions apart. I know of an Anglican church that holds two separate services on a Sunday morning – one for the more “charismatic” members, using the church hall, and the other for the traditionalists who use the original form of service, and which takes place in the main church building.

But whatever we believe, we need to remember what Jesus said to Peter. In Matthew 16:18, we read, “Now I say to you that you are Peter (which means ‘rock’), and upon this rock I will build my church, and all the powers of hell will not conquer it”. The church of Jesus Christ will be built. It started with Peter and will continue throughout the ages until God calls time on this world. Another Scripture that we need to remember is in John 10:14-16, Jesus said, “I am the good shepherd; I know my own sheep, and they know me, just as my Father knows me and I know the Father. So I sacrifice my life for the sheep. I have other sheep, too, that are not in this sheepfold. I must bring them also. They will listen to my voice, and there will be one flock with one shepherd”. 

I’m sure Jesus isn’t fazed by all the mayhem that goes on in our churches and denominations. Through the power of the Holy Spirit, He is there building His church. It may be full of imperfect people. It may lose its way every now and then. But one day, there will be a glorious coming together of Christians everywhere. We read in Revelation 7:9-10, “After this I saw a vast crowd, too great to count, from every nation and tribe and people and language, standing in front of the throne and before the Lamb. They were clothed in white robes and held palm branches in their hands. And they were shouting with a great roar, “Salvation comes from our God who sits on the throne and from the Lamb!”” Worship in Heaven will be amazing. There will be no more disunity and strife. The Heavenly harmonies will be nothing like we experience in this human life. At the end of the Bible we read, “He who is the faithful witness to all these things says, “Yes, I am coming soon!” Amen! Come, Lord Jesus!” (Revelation 22:20). Worth an Amen?

Dear Lord. We look forward to the Heavenly harmonies that we will experience one day. But with our feet firmly planted on Planet earth we aim to live in harmony now with our fellow believers. Please help us! Amen.


Being a Servant

“I, John, am the one who heard and saw all these things. And when I heard and saw them, I fell down to worship at the feet of the angel who showed them to me. But he said, “No, don’t worship me. I am a servant of God, just like you and your brothers the prophets, as well as all who obey what is written in this book. Worship only God!””
‭Revelation‬ ‭22‬:‭8‬-‭9‬ ‭NLT

John was so overcome with his conversation with the angel, that he felt the urge to fall on his knees before him and worship him. What was there about the angel that induced that feeling in John? But John had been there before. We read in Revelation 19:10 about another time when he felt he had to worship an angel. We read, “Then I fell down at his feet to worship him, but he said, “No, don’t worship me. I am a servant of God, just like you and your brothers and sisters who testify about their faith in Jesus. Worship only God.…..””.

What is there about angels that can perhaps invite their worship? It may have been a problem in early church days, because the Apostle Paul warned the Colossians church about it. We read in Colossians 2:18, “Don’t let anyone condemn you by insisting on pious self-denial or the worship of angels, saying they have had visions about these things. Their sinful minds have made them proud,”. Angels are created beings, but they are eternal and they have the powers to travel through space and time. They serve God continually, and they have a form that is supernatural and beyond our understanding. Many books have been written about angels, and the Bible is full of references about them. We may even be able to sense the presence of angels, keeping us from danger. But mankind has a tendency to be wowed by something amazing, and that perhaps initiated John’s feelings of a need to worship. 

The angel claimed that he was a “servant of God”, just, as he said, like John and his “brothers the prophets“. But in what way did the angel serve God? In the case before us, God had obviously assigned him the task of showing and explaining all that he did to John. And he did it with patience, gentleness and kindness, threads we see throughout the Book of Revelation. But what about the brothers, the prophets? How do they serve God? Paul gave us insight, in Colossians 2:23-24, “Work willingly at whatever you do, as though you were working for the Lord rather than for people. Remember that the Lord will give you an inheritance as your reward, and that the Master you are serving is Christ.” There is a connection here between living our earthly lives and service to God. Many church people have claimed to do “the Lord’s work”, preaching, teaching, being missionaries and so on, but the reality is that serving God can be a job as mundane as cleaning the toilets or drying the dishes. We read in Philippians 2:14-15, “Do everything without complaining and arguing, so that no one can criticise you. Live clean, innocent lives as children of God, shining like bright lights in a world full of crooked and perverse people.” That’s serving God in the way He expects.

In our societies today, we don’t tend to think of worship as something we do outside a church building. But we pilgrims know what it means to worship God. And we do so continually. We must worship only God, and not one of the false gods that can sometimes wheedle their ways into our lives. We see people worshipping on a golf course, at football matches, polishing a piece of metal in their driveways. The list of false gods is endless. We make something a god when we elevate it higher than the true God. We need to pay attention to who and how we serve, and who or what we worship. Get the priorities right and we won’t go far wrong.

Father God. We need some help here. You know our tendency to get caught up with false gods and how we grumble and complain. Please help us! Amen.