Tuesday, November 8, 2016

God’s Ministers


Bless the LORD, all His hosts,
and you ministers of His, that do His pleasure.”
Psalm 103:21

Do I seek to please men?  No!
If I were still pleasing men, I would not be a servant of Christ.”
Galatians 1:10

God’s true ministers are the ones who do what pleases Him.  Paul said it plainly: If he pleased men, he would be disqualified from being a servant of Christ.
I know ministers to whom Jesus has shown truth, but they will not tell that truth to their congregations for fear of displeasing them.  These weak brothers are not serving Christ; they are serving men.  They are hiding the light in order to please men; they are not “doing God’s pleasure”.
Paul once wrote, “It is required in a steward that he be found faithful” (1Cor. 4:2).  That is a true statement.  If God condescends to entrust a man with manna from heaven, that man is required, as a steward of the truth of Christ, to feed God’s people with it.  To feed God’s hungry children is the very reason God reveals truth, and for a man to feed them the truth is to do God’s pleasure, and by doing so, he proves himself to be a genuine minister of God.

Monday, November 7, 2016

Learning From the Law


Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law.”
Psalm 119:18

In the summer of 1975, the Lord Jesus spoke to me for the first time, to teach me.   The following year, and the two years after that, he spoke to me again.  (The truths he taught me I made into a book, “Spiritual Light”, which you can find at www.GoingtoJesus.com.)  Years later, I was thinking about those thrilling experiences and realized that every time Jesus spoke to me, I was studying the law of Moses in the Bible, and praying for understanding.
Jesus told his detractors, “If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote about me.  And if you don’t believe his writings, how will you believe my words?” (Jn. 5:46–47).  Take time to read Moses’ writings – and believe them!  And while you’re reading Moses’ words, pray, as I did, “Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law!”  Jesus will answer your prayer, and he will “show you great, inaccessible things that you do not know” (Jer. 33:3).

Sunday, November 6, 2016

“You Heard Me”


I have declared my ways, and you heard me.”
Psalm 119:26

David was thrilled that when he confessed his sin, God heard him.  David had seen the terror and miserable end of King Saul, whose confession and pleas for help God would not hear: “And when Saul enquired of the LORD, the LORD answered him not, neither by dreams, nor by Urim, nor by prophets” (1Sam. 28:6).
Saul, desperate and alone, at the end, resorted to a witch for help, and he explained why: “I am sore distressed, for the Philistines make war against me, and God is departed from me, and He answers me no more, neither by prophets, nor by dreams” (1Sam. 28:15).
May God give us the wisdom to “seek the LORD while He may be found; call upon Him while He is near” (Isa. 55:6).

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Ask for Truth


Remove from me the way of lying.  I have chosen the way of truth.
Psalm 119:29a, 30a

When I was in high school, some students put on a play in which one character addressed the audience with this question: “What kind of liar are you?”  Everyone laughed, but the question was appropriate.  Living “in the flesh”, as Paul would say it, every one of us lies, to one degree or another.  This is why Paul said if we live in the flesh, we will die (Rom. 8:13).
David was humble enough and honest enough to admit that he was a liar, and to hate it.  And he was also wise enough to go to God with his problem, and to ask God to take the way of lies away from him.  David sincerely desired the way of truth instead, and asked God for it, and God gave it to him.
God will do the same for you.  He will set you free from every lie, whether your own or someone else’s, and fill you with the truth instead.  All you have to do is confess your need of His truth, and ask for it.

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Cursed in Christ?


You have rebuked the proud that are cursed,
who err from your commandments.”
Psalm 119:21

According to this scripture, those who walk contrary to God’s commandments are cursed.  But many Christian ministers teach that we all must walk contrary to God’s commandments, and sin every day!  Are they not teaching that we all, even those who are in Christ, are cursed?  Further, the apostle John said that those who commit sin are “of the devil” (1Jn. 3:8).  But if those who are in Christ must sin every day, then those who are in Christ are of the devil!
The saving grace of God “teaches us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, and righteously, and godly in this present world” (Tit. 2:12).  God’s children are not of the devil because they no longer live in sin.  Nor are they cursed, but blessed, for they are led by the Spirit and do not err from God’s commandments.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

The Truly Alive and the Truly Dead


The dead praise not the LORD, neither any that go down into silence.
But we will bless the LORD from this time forth and for evermore.”
Psalm 115:17–18

In these two verses, the psalmist redefines death as a spiritual condition instead of a physical one.  According to him, the dead are those who are silent, those who do not praise God.  But, he declares, the righteous will never stop praising God, forever.
If you are truly alive, your voice is heard in the congregation of God’s saints, offering God the sweet aroma of praise for His wonderful works and grace.  But beware.  The psalmist said that a believer’s silence in the midst of God’s congregation carries with it the stench of death.

Monday, October 31, 2016

The Wise Response to Slander


Princes sat and spoke against me,
but your servant meditated in your statutes.
Psalm 119:23

One of the great tests of faith comes when you are slandered.  You want to be there; you want to have a fair hearing; you want to reason together with the slanderer in the presence of an honest judge.  But slanderers do their work in the shades, away from open, honest dialog.  They put on a bold face, but they are cowards when it comes to openly facing those who know the truth.
When slander happens – and it happens to every godly soul – faith responds by focusing on the wonderful things of God.  What a relief God’s sweet thoughts are in times of trouble and sadness!
The dogs will bark, but what is that noise compared to the gentle voice of our Shepherd?  And Jesus keeps in perfect peace all those who have learned to keep their minds on him.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Not Ashamed


Then shall I not be ashamed,
when I have respect unto all your commandments.
Psalm 119:6

Whoever keeps the whole law,
and yet stumbles in one thing, he is guilty of all.”
James 2:10

In the Bible, the word “ashamed” often means “disappointed”, as in Jeremiah 14:3–4, when God sent a famine on the land: “Their nobles sent their little ones to the waters.  They came to the pits, and found no water.  They returned with their vessels empty; they were ashamed. . . .  The ground is chapped, for there was no rain in the earth.  The plowmen were ashamed, they covered their heads.”
Those who believe in God’s Son have hope of being blessed at the end of this life; they have a sweet “harvest” to look forward to.  However, if while they live they disobey any of God’s commandments, they will be “ashamed” on the Day of Judgment.  
The psalmist said that he would not be ashamed if he obeyed all of God’s commandments, not most of them.  And James insisted that whoever broke one of God’s commandments was guilty of breaking them all.  Then, let us wait on Jesus to lead us; listening to him and following his holy Spirit, we will never sin.  That is the truth behind the wonderful promise of the Son of God through Isaiah: “They shall never be ashamed who wait for me.”


Friday, October 28, 2016

Fearless and Afraid


The LORD is on my side; I will not fear!
Psalm 118:6

What time I am afraid, I will trust in you.”
Psalm 56:3

The book of Psalms is so true to life.  We all, like David, have had times of great confidence, when we joyfully proclaimed that we will not fear men.  And, like David, we all have had times when we were afraid.  Those times when we were afraid do not mean that our times of joyful faith were false, any more than David’s fearful times meant his faith in God was false.  Times of fear do not void our times of faith or make us hypocrites.  They are only times of trial, given to us by God to teach us patience and humility.
All of God’s children experience times of great faith.  Go ahead and rejoice in those times; you’re supposed to.  But stay sober.  You know that troubled times, designed by God, will come to try your faith and to increase it.  Don’t be ashamed when you are afraid.  Just do what David did: admit to yourself and to God how you feel, and keep trusting Him.  The trial will pass.  And you will rejoice in hope again.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

No Resistance


God is the LORD, who has shown us light.
Bind the sacrifice with cords, even to the horns of the altar.”
Psalm 118:27

If you have been called by God, you have been chosen to be offered as a gift, a “living sacrifice”, for His Son.  It is as contrary to our nature to be that kind of gift as it was for an animal in the Old Testament to be willing to be a sacrifice to God.  It had to be held down, or tied to the horns of the altar, in order for the death blow to be delivered.  Only after they were dead could they safely be untied.
Spiritually, until we die to our flesh, we have to be held down by rules.  But once we die, we offer no more resistance to the will of God.  We are at that point like a sacrificial ox after being slaughtered; we offer no more resistance to the priest’s work.  This complete submissiveness to our high priest, Jesus, is what Paul was talking about when he said, “I die daily.”

Doing No Iniquity


Blessed are the undefiled in the way,
who walk in the law of the LORD.
Blessed are they that keep His testimonies,
and that seek Him with the whole heart.
They also do no iniquity: they walk in His ways.”
Psalm 119:1–3

Those who obey God do not sin.  God’s way is called the “perfect law of liberty” because obeying it makes us perfectly free from sin.  Walk in the law of the LORD; keep His testimonies; seek Him with your whole heart.  Doing these things, you will not – cannot – sin.




Monday, October 24, 2016

Not Given Over to Death


The LORD has chastened me sore,
but He has not given me over to death.”
Psalm 118:18

When I came to visit my cancer-ridden mother in her hospital room, she asked me to read that scripture.  A family member told me that he heard my mother’s physician say that he had never seen a larger tumor in a patient’s lung and that he had never met a person with a sweeter spirit.  She would be dead in a couple of weeks, but the Lord had comforted her while she was reading Psalm 118 shortly before I arrived.  If she had ever been touched so deeply by a single verse, I don’t know it.  It felt as if she was clinging to that verse with all her heart and faith. 
She knew that she had displeased God and that the cancer was the “sore chastisement” with which God had now afflicted her, but when I came into her room, I could see that her spirit had been touched in a special way by Psalm 118:18.  She was feeling, deep in her soul, the great relief of knowing that her heavenly Father had not turned her over to death.  She may have been entertaining the idea that she would be healed, as God had once healed her brother of cancer when he was given no more than ninety days to live, but that was not what He was saying to her.  He was telling her that although her body would die, she herself would be saved and live with Him.
This is reminiscent of the situation in 1Corinthians 11:27–30.  In those verses, Paul says that some saints in Corinth were suffering sickness because of their disobedience.  Others had even died because of it.  However, Paul went on to say that God had sent those sicknesses and had taken some home to be with Him “so that they might not be condemned with the world.”  In other words, God “chastened them sore, but He did not give them over to death.”  That was the encouragement Jesus gave my mother in her last days on earth.  She was one of the many dear children of God who, though often chastised, just cannot seem to overcome a serious fault, and  so, for them to continue to live in this world would not be good.  In those cases, Paul revealed to us, their loving heavenly Father may choose to bless them by taking them home before their appointed time.


Saturday, October 22, 2016

Beyond Heaven


The LORD is high above all nations, and His glory above the heavens.”
Psalm 113:4

The one who descended is the same one who ascended
far above all heavens so that he might fulfill all things.”
Ephesians 4:10
The heaven we know about is unworthy of God’s presence, and is unclean in His sight (Job 15:15).  God is so pure and so holy that He condescends to even look on things in heaven (Ps. 113:6).  The Bible repeatedly speaks of a holy place that is beyond heaven.  That is where God really is, and Jesus was exalted by God to sit at His right hand in that place.  Paul is the one who let us know that Jesus’ glory is much more than heavenly; it is so great that heaven itself is beneath him.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Telling the End from the Beginning


All nations compassed me about,
but in the name of the LORD will I destroy them.
They compassed me about; yea, they compassed me about,
but in the name of the LORD, I will destroy them.
They compassed me about like bees; 
they are quenched as the fire of thorns.”
Psalm 118:10–12

Then, when the thousand years come to an end, 
Satan will be released from his prison,
and he will go out to deceive the nations,
to gather them for the war.
And they came up and surrounded the camp of the saints
and the beloved city, but fire came down out of heaven
from God and devoured them.”
Revelation 20:7–9
Be patient.  God has already told us how it all will end.  He is in complete control, and His prophets have proclaimed from the beginning of the world how it all will end: “I am God. . . .  There is none like me, making the end known from the beginning, and from ancient time what has not yet happened” (Isa. 46:9–10).

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Wanted: Alive Only


The dead do not praise the LORD; nor do any that go down into silence.
But we will bless the LORD from this time forth and for evermore.
Psalm 115:17–18

Notice, please, that the psalmist redefines death as a spiritual condition instead of a physical condition.  According to him, the dead are those among God’s people who are silent; that is, those in the Assembly of God who do not praise Him.  Next, the psalmist declares that the righteous will never stop praising God.   In other words, they are alive and will live forever.
If you are alive in God’s sight, then your voice is heard in the congregation of His saints, praising Him for His wonderful works and grace.  But silence in the praises of God is an open testimony to all, saying, “Help me!  I am dying!”
In the Old West of the 1800’s, posters of criminals were sometimes nailed to walls around town with the words: “Wanted!  Dead or Alive”.  But friend, God is better than that.  He only wants you alive.  He wants to hear your voice blend with all His saints, singing joyful praise and offering Him thanksgiving for all that He has done.  He is calling out to you, saying, “Forsake the foolish, and live!

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Man’s Sinful Nature


Until recently, I was unaware of the Jewish opposition to the notion that we are all born with a sinful nature.  I had always heard it taught, and I assumed it was a universally acknowledged truth.  Besides, that people are by nature sinful and in need of a Savior seemed self-evident.  I did not know that so many people deny that truth, which is undeniably biblical.
Thinking on this, I realized again how much the apostle Paul learned from God.  Mankind’s natural state of sinfulness was a revelation to him from God.  It was not personal opinion that inspired Paul to write, “All have sinned and come short of the glory of God,” and “In me, that is, in my flesh(ly nature), dwells no good thing.”  Without being greatly humbled by God, and without a revelation from God, Paul would have never even thought to confess such truth as that.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Ask for the Source


When he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he’ll guide you into all truth.
For he won’t speak on his own, but whatever he hears, he’ll speak,
and he’ll reveal to you things that are coming.”
John 16:13

I’d have you to know, brothers, regarding the gospel delivered by me,
that it is not of man.  I did not receive it from man, nor was I taught it,
but it came by a revelation from Jesus Christ.”
Galatians 1:11–12

Believers should ask those who teach them where they got the doctrine they are teaching.  If a man received his doctrine from another man, or from the headquarters of a denomination, or even from the Bible, the saints would be wise to leave him.  The true doctrine of Christ comes through revelation, and those who truly are servants of God declare what Jesus has revealed to them, not what men have taught them or what they have figured out from the Bible.

Monday, October 17, 2016

Being Shaped


Their idols are silver and gold, the work of men's hands.
They have mouths, but they speak not; eyes have they, but they see not.
They have ears, but they hear not; noses have they, but they smell not.
They have hands, but they handle not; feet have they, but they walk not;
neither speak they through their throat.
They that make them are like them; so is every one that trusts in them.
Psalm 115:4–8

What you worship shapes your spirit so that you become like what you worship.  If God is the author of what you believe, then you are worshipping Him and are being made like Him.  If a human devised the faith you believe in, then your worship belongs to him, and you are being made more fleshly every time you participate in it.  And if – God forbid! – the faith you believe in originated with Satan, then you are worshipping him and are becoming more and more like him as you continue in that faith.
Paul was wise to exhort us to examine ourselves to see whether we are truly in THE faith (2Cor. 13:5).  He wanted God’s children to become more and more like their heavenly Father, and not like the over-religious men who puff themselves up to devise their own doctrines, and certainly not like the very religious Satan.
Have you taken the time to examine yourself, to see whether or not the faith that you are in is the faith of Christ

Sunday, October 16, 2016

Let the Son Praise God through You!


Praise ye the Lord!  I will praise the LORD
with my whole heart in the assembly of the upright.”
Psalm 111:1

I will declare your name to my brothers.
In the midst of the congregation will I praise you.”
Psalm 22:22

In these verses, the hidden Son of God is speaking through the Psalmist, prophesying of the day when he would send the holy Spirit to us.  Every time the Spirit falls and we praise God, that prophecy is fulfilled.  That Spirit which falls on us is the Son (2Cor. 3:17) praising God through us “in the midst of the congregation”.
When you yield to the Spirit and let the Son praise God through you, you play a part in the fulfillment of the Son’s ancient prophecy of how he would praise God in the congregation of New Testament saints.

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Reverend vs. Reverent


Holy and reverend is His name.”
Psalm 111:9b

Let me not, I pray you, give flattering titles to a man.
Job 32:21

One of the flattering titles ministers bestow upon themselves and upon one another is “reverend”.  But that lofty title belongs to God alone.  As the psalmist said it, “Holy and reverend is His name” – not ours.
My father, a minister of Christ for over 60 years, told me of the danger of being called “reverend”.   If you are reverent, he said, that is a good thing.  But only God is reverend; that is, only God is worthy to be revered.  We should all be reverent toward God, for “holy and reverend is His name.”