Thursday, April 30, 2015
DON’T TOUCH MY CRAYONS
Sin, as
defined by the Bible is simply “missing the mark, God’s mark. We can think of
sins as colors, every sin a crayon, red, blue, green and so on. The Bible
teaches we all have colored, we all do color and we all will color, because we
like to color. This is not a license to grab a large box of crayons and go
play, but rather a consequence of the Self appeasing nature we were born with,
the very thing that needs to die so Christ’s divine nature can come forth. Our
Christian life is all about transformation, being changed into the very nature
of Christ, a replacement process where we reckon bits of our self nature dead
and Christ replaces those pieces with bits of His nature. For example, unforgiveness
is a condition of one’s heart, a sin, unjustifiable regardless of the
circumstances (yes, this is a tough one), a purple crayon. Unforgiveness is
often directed at one’s Self... we can’t forgive our Self for something we did.
When the Holy Spirit reveals through God’s word that unforgiveness is present
and is a sin, the only option is to consider it dead by placing it on the cross
of Christ and refusing to yield to it again – quit grabbing the purple crayon.
Now this will involve a struggle for Self loves to be in control and we can become
enslaved to sin, especially habitual sin that has festered like an infection in
our heart. God has promised we will prevail if we persevere, so we can only
lose by giving up. Everyone stumbles in a spiritual battle, it’s ok as long as we
get back up, the victory is in the “getting back up.” During this struggle God
is replacing every little bit of our unforgiving nature that dies with his
forgiving nature until one day the old unforgiveness has passed away and His
forgiving nature is alive thriving in us. The reason death to sin is the only
option is simple: God’s standards for our conduct are nonnegotiable – He’s God!
And perseverance, determined steadfast resolute endurance, is the “Big Wrench”
in God’s transformation toolbox.
Transformation
is a process and processes involve time, so along the way we still color, some
more than others, but hopefully less and less. And when we slip and miss the
mark, Jesus, who already paid the penalty for our sin on the cross, seeks
forgiveness from the Father on our behalf – this is grace. What gets us in
trouble is not that we color, but that we keep grabbing the same crayon, say orange
or pink, creating strongholds of habitual sin gratifying our Self nature. God’s
children simply cannot habitually sin, continually grab the same crayon, and
expect God’s transformation process to continue. Habitual sin will, over time,
suffocate Christ’s nature within, killing the only thing that can give us true
life, eternal life with Him.
Is one color worse
than another, is my gray worse than your yellow, is murder worse than hatred, adultery
worse than lust, homosexuality worse than failing to love one’s enemies, or suicide
worse than unforgiveness. Are any of these worse than lying, idolatry, pride,
divorce without cause, worse than failing to love God? Are they not all
crayons? When it comes to sin, God is colorblind, seeing only neutral: Whatever
the sin, big or small, subtle or blatant, socially acceptable or repulsive in
man’s eyes, all are neutral to God. Man makes distinctions between sins looking
at the effect; God ignores the effect and looks at the root cause, the
condition of our heart. Murder, oh that’s hatred. Adultery, oh that’s lust.
Lying, oh that’s protecting Self, and so on. God’s transformation process is
heart surgery, and as our heart changes we will quit coloring altogether, we
will become like Him. We all need heart surgery, we all still color, but my
coloring is no better or worse than your coloring, to Daddy. He wants to break
all the crayons of this life by giving us something better, His life, where we won’t
need or want to color.
Monday, April 20, 2015
NO PLACE TO HIDE
What if we had a secret place where we could
think anything and be outside the purview of God, where God would never know.
Remember what we say and do are just manifestations of what we think, so
everything starts with our thoughts. If we wish to fulfill the command to
examine ourselves to see whether we are demonstrating our faith by an ever
increasing manifestation of Christ within, this would be the ultimate test.
Would we continue to manifest Christ in our secret place, or would we release
the buried lusts of our old flesh-life and fully indulge. Would Christ reign or
would Self reign? Be honest... Honesty is death to performance!
For
many saints their mind is their “secret place”, the place where their real Self
hides from the world while influencing their every thought, word and action.
But there is no secret place safe from the all knowing, all powerful,
everywhere God we serve. The command for Self examination reads like this in
the Amplified Bible:”Examine and
test and evaluate your own
selves to see whether you are holding to your faith and showing the proper fruits of it. Test and prove yourselves -- not Christ.
Do you not yourselves realize and
know, thoroughly by an ever-increasing experience, that Jesus Christ is in
you—unless you are counterfeits, disapproved on trial and rejected”? Christ is not on trial, we are. And the
fruit-proof that bears witness we are ‘holding to our faith” is “an ever-increasing
experience that Jesus Christ is in us.” Saints, we all realize and know whether
we are passing or failing this test. We can hide in our secret place and
pretend God doesn’t know... but, deep inside we know He knows. He wants to
restore us to that place of an ever-increasing experience of the indwelling
Christ-Life. He wants us to hang our secret place on the Cross. He wants us to
be honest: An honest life is transparent, and does not try to control the
reaction of others to itself, or give others the façade they expect. Most of
all, an honest life does not try to fool God... Honesty is death to performance.
The
battle for control of our heart is won or lost on the battlefield of our mind. And
make no mistake, it is a battle. Our thoughts, inside the bastion of our mind,
are treated as sacrosanct, outside the purview of man and God. Thoughts do matter,
for from our thoughts precede our words, our choices, and our actions,
establishing the course of our life. Thoughts determine who will control us,
Self or the Holy Spirit: We cannot experience the progressive reality of Christ
within without right thinking, which is critical to accessing the overcoming
life Christ died to provide. Jesus said “thinking sin” was just as bad as
“doing sin.” Paul admonished that we bring every thought into obedience to
Christ, even giving us a list of things to think on – to help us “set” our mind
-- for “as a man thinks in his heart, so is he.” The right setting of the mind
is critical to living in right standing with God and being led by His Spirit. “Seek those things which are above... For those who live according
to the flesh set their minds on the things of the flesh, but those who live according to the Spirit, the
things of the Spirit ... Set your mind on things above, not on things on the
earth. For you died, and your life is hidden with
Christ in God.” God wants to renew our mind: He wants to give us the
mind of Christ. Remember saints, we are what we think: Jesus knows what is in
our heart... knows what we think... knows what we are... and we know too!
HONESTY IS DEATH TO PERFORMANCE...
(Mk.
7:20-23; Matt. 5:27-28; 2 Cor. 10:4-5, 13:5; Phil. 4:8, 2:5; Prov. 23:7; Rom.
8:5; Col. 3:1-3)
Monday, April 13, 2015
AND THOSE WHO ARE ALIVE AND REMAIN
(THE INEXPRESSIBLE JOY OF
DYING IN CHRIST)
Death
is merely stepping through the door between earth-life and God-Life, a change
of clothes from flesh to glory, a change of time zones from the finite of three
score and ten to timeless forever! When a saint dies, those who are alive and
remain may be tempted to “lose hope”, but this is the very time for our hope to
be renewed. The enemy comes to steal, kill and destroy our hope -- he has no
real power – because he knows faith is the substance of our hope. We cannot
have faith without hope, so our hope must always be in the eternally God and
His eternal promises, producing strong faith the enemy can’t touch. Nothing can
separate us from God’s love... death just takes us home to our Daddy. To be
absent from the body is to be in the presence of our Lord: Inexpressible, glorious
joy unknowable in earth-life awaits every saint as we step through deaths door
into forever with our Lord . Earth-life is but an obstacle course we run, ever
pressing toward the high calling of God-Life – spiritual transformation – while
homeward bound from birth. Life is only a nanosecond long if that, it only
seems longer because we live in time, but step into eternity and it appears as
a heartbeat... just one heartbeat long. And we who are alive and remain...
well, we will be together again with our loved ones who have stepped through
the door... soon and very soon! So be of good courage and rejoice when a saint
goes home, no matter the circumstances... Rejoice! Herein our hope remains
strong and our faith is increased.
“PRECIOUS
IN THE SIGHT OF THE LORD
IS THE DEATH OF HIS SAINTS”
Post Script: “A CHANGE OF CLOTHES: “For we
who are in this tent (of flesh)
groan, being burdened ... earnestly desiring to be clothed with our habitation which is from heaven ... a building
from God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens ... that
mortality may be swallowed up by life (eternal life).” Saints, if you aren’t
groaning for heaven... you should be...
(2
Cor. 5:1-8)
Tuesday, April 7, 2015
KNOWING GOD’S WILL IS EASY... LIVING IT IS HARD...
Sanctification,
holiness, and transformation are, in effect, synonymous terms for the process
whereby saints submit to the Lordship of Jesus and commit to the death of their
old Self-nature, enabling the release of the Christ-Life within and obedience
to God’s word. This life changing process is the primary will of God for His
children, the number one thing on His heart for us. Following are the
details:
“For this is the will of God,
your sanctification”: “Sanctification” and “holiness” are translated from the
same Greek word hagiasmo, which denotes not only a resultant state – separated
unto God, but also the holy nature and holy behavior befitting those so
consecrated. God has called us into holiness. He has given us His moral
commands and wants to release in our hearts the virtues and character of His
beloved Son, which will enable our obedience. How we live our life matters...
matters a lot! Whoever rejects God’s holiness, His nature and His lifestyle,
rejects God. God’s will is, simply put,
our transformation into the nature of His Beloved Son, and behavior befitting
that nature – obedience to His word... His commandments. And,
we cannot live God’s will apart from God’s will: Transformation is not in our
own strength for it is God who is continually effectually at work in us, energizing
and creating in us the desire and the power both to will and to work for His good pleasure...
His satisfaction and delight. So... we will never live holy until
we are holy – transformation enables and paces obedience.
To live in the will of God is to
submit to the Lordship of Jesus in all matters of life, and crucify Self, man’s
old unregenerated nature, daily until he is totally dead and gone. The seeds of
a new resurrected life are planted within each saint, awaiting release. Only in
the transforming power of Lordship coupled with death to Self can the
Christ-Life emerge within. “Be Holy for I am holy” is a command birthed in
transformation, impossible without it. Saints, we are to “Pursue ... holiness, without which no one will see the Lord ... perfecting holiness in
the fear of the God”, bringing holiness to its predestined end whereby we are
found “blameless in Holiness ... at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with
all His saints.” Without holiness... without transformation... without living
in God’s will, no one will see God!!! And know this: “The world is passing
away, and the lust of it; but he
who does the will of God abides forever.”
“THEREFORE YOU SHALL BE PERFECT...”
(1 Thess. 4:3, 7, 8; 1 Peter
1:16; Heb. 12:14; 2 Cor. 7:1; Phil. 2:13; 1 Thess. 3:13, 1 John 2:17; Matt.
5:48)
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