All posts by 5Q

Standing on His Shoulders

A word from God’s Word: “Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous man, though for a good man someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”1

“I read about a river town where sand was continually being dredged from the river bed and left in high piles by the river bank. This was a place where boys loved to play. Often times the sand piles, though dry on the top were still waterlogged beneath the sunbaked crusted surface.

“Some years ago two boys were late home for dinner so their parents went looking for them. When they found their bicycles outside the fence where the sand piles were banked high, they called for the boys, but no answer came. The family and other rescuers searched frantically in and around the sand piles and eventually found one of the boys buried up to his neck. He was barely alive when they found him and they dug furiously to rescue him. When he was freed from the waist up, and able to breathe properly, his panic-stricken parents and rescuers asked, ‘Where’s your brother? Where’s your brother?’

“‘I’m standing on his shoulders,’ the boy said.

“One loving brother gave his life so his brother could live.”2

And that’s exactly what Jesus Christ did for you and me. We were spiritually lost and destined for a lost eternity without God and without hope. But because of his great love for us, Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God, came to earth and gave his life to die in our place to pay the penalty for all our sins so we could be freely forgiven and receive God’s gift of eternal life.

Have you thanked God for giving his Son as a sacrifice for your sins, and have you thanked Jesus for dying in your place to pay the penalty for all your sins. If not, please do that today.

Note: For further help click on the link below to “How to Know God and be sure you’re a real Christian without having to be religious.”

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, thank you for giving your Son, Jesus, to die in my place on the cross to save me from eternal damnation. And thank you Jesus for dying for me, and because of your sacrifice for me, I offer my life to you as a living sacrifice to live for you all the days of my life. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

Click on www.actsweb.org/christian for the article: “How to know God and be sure you’re a real Christian.”

1. Romans 5:7-8 (NIV).

2. Adapted from a story heard on a Campus Crusade for Christ broadcast.

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What’s Your Purpose in Life?

The Apostle Paul wrote: “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith. Now there is in store for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to me on that day—and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his appearing.”1

“Josh McDowell tells about an executive ‘headhunter’ who recruits corporate executives for large firms. This headhunter once told McDowell that when he interviews an executive, he likes to disarm him. ‘I offer him a drink,’ said the headhunter, ‘take off my coat, undo my tie, throw up my feet and talk about baseball, football, family, whatever, until he’s all relaxed. Then, when I think I’ve got him relaxed, I lean over, look him square in the eye and say, “What’s your purpose in life?” It’s amazing how top executives fall apart at that question.’

“Then he told about interviewing one fellow recently. He had him all disarmed, had his feet up on his desk, talking about football. Then the headhunter leaned over and said, ‘What’s your purpose in life, Bob?’ And the executive said, without blinking an eye, ‘To go to heaven and take as many people with me as I can.’

“‘For the first time in my career,’ said the headhunter, ‘I was speechless.’”2

I’ve asked this same question to scores of people over the years in seminars I have led. Just about everybody believes God has a God-given life purpose for them, but when I ask them what it is, very few have the slightest idea what it might be. They have never carefully thought through it and written it down.

If we want to die well, we need to live well, and if we are to live well, it is imperative that we know what our God-given life purpose is and with God’s help give it our best shot.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to discern my God-given life purpose so that I know exactly what it is. And please help to fulfill this purpose so when I come to the end of my life’s journey, I will know that I have not lived in vain. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. 2 Timothy 4:7-8 (NIV).

2. Dr. Gary Nicolosi, “Preparing for the End Time,” sermon, www.stbartschurch.org

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Perspective and Persistence

The Apostle Paul said: “I have worked much harder, been in prison more frequently, been flogged more severely, and been exposed to death again and again.”1

Speaking to Thomas Edison, before Edison discovered how to make an electric light bulb work, a young journalist asked, “How come you keep trying to make an electric light when you have failed so many times. Don’t you know that gas lights are with us to stay?”

“Young man,” Edison said, “I have not failed but successfully discovered 6,000 ways that won’t work!”

If anyone knew opposition it was the Apostle Paul. Besides being in prison and being exposed to death, he received from the Jews the thirty-nine lashes. He was also beaten with rods, stoned, and shipwrecked three times. He was in constant danger from bandits, his own countrymen, and from Gentiles. He often went without sleep and knew hunger and thirst and was left cold and naked, and knew constant pressure because of his concern for all the churches.2

Paul was faithful to the end. In spite of innumerable setbacks, he never quit and he never gave up.

Great perspective. Great persistence. Great attitude. Having a Great God makes all the difference! You and I have the same Great God and can have the same great attitude in everything that we are doing for God and for his glory.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please give to me a great perspective, great persistence and a great attitude, and grant that today I can have a part in the great work you are doing in the world today. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. 2 Corinthians 11:26 (NIV).

2. See 2 Corinthians 11:24-28.

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Genuine Worship

God said, “What do I care about incense from Sheba or sweet calamus from a distant land? Your burnt offerings are not acceptable; your sacrifices do not please me.”1

The word “worship” comes from an old English word “worth-ship” meaning to acknowledge the worth of someone. For the Christian worship means to acknowledge the worth of God.

Many in the church today equate worship with singing upbeat choruses. Others equate it with a more traditional approach where the main meetings on the Lord’s Day are called “worship” services—both of which may or may not have anything to do with worship.

A friend of mine, John Fitzroy, was once asked where he worshiped, which meant what church he attended. He gave a straightforward answer when he replied, “I attend such and such a church where I lead the choir, but I don’t worship!” At least he was being honest.

As important as attending a good church is, I don’t need to be in a church or chapel to worship. I can worship when I see a beautiful sunset, a new-born baby, a flower, a tree, a singing bird, an animal, the ocean, in sunshine or in rain, on a mountain, in the desert—wherever I am at home, school, work, or play—as well as at church.

I need to constantly acknowledge the worth of God which is what worship is. Chances are, if I’m not practicing worship throughout the week, I’m not too likely to do so sitting in a church for one hour a week. We bring a worship attitude or spirit with us. If we don’t, we’re not too likely to find it in church regardless of whether the service is contemporary or traditional.

Worship is an attitude of the heart. Going through the motions when the heart isn’t in it may be religiosity or churchianity, but it isn’t worship. It’s just a shadow of the real. My best guess is that God thinks about the same of this as he did the burning of incense and burnt offerings in OT days when they were rituals without heart or sincerity. The same is true of prayers that are insincere and are words without heart.

How absurd it must be to God when he sees us trying to “drum up” what we call worship—whether it’s with a pipe organ, a grand piano, a clanging symbol, an electric guitar, or noisy drums—when our heart isn’t in it, and in so doing not be acknowledging the worth of God!

David had it right. He said, “I will praise you, O Lord, with all my heart; I will tell of all your wonders. I will be glad and rejoice in you; I will sing praise to your name, O Most High.” And again, “I will extol the Lord with all my heart in the council of the upright and in the assembly.”2 Now that’s worship—with or without music. And, by the way, I love music and used to be on a gospel musical team in younger days.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to understand the true meaning of worship and learn how to worship you in spirit and in truth, not only at church, but wherever I am. Please give me a worshipful heart and spirit. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Jeremiah 6:20 (NIV).

2. Psalm 9:1-2; 111:1 (NIV).

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Living Witnesses

“And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.”1

I read how, some years ago, “a missionary physician in one of China’s hospitals cured a man of cataracts. A few weeks later 48 blind men came to the doctor from one of China’s wilds, all holding on to a rope guided by the man who had been cured. He had led them in this way, walking in chain for 250 miles to the hospital.”2

Would to God that we who were once blind and healed spiritually by Jesus, the Great Physician, would do our utmost to lead others to Jesus, the only one who can cure spiritual blindness, and in so doing give people the gift of forgiveness for all their sins and, with it, the gift of eternal life.

To have our witness be credible, however, it is imperative that we, too, “with unveiled faces reflect the Lord’s glory” and more and more be transformed into Jesus’ likeness so that people will always “see Jesus” in us. “With unveiled faces” means being open-faced, genuine, personally honest, authentic, and not phony in any way. Nathanael is an excellent example to follow. When “Jesus saw Nathanael coming toward Him … said of him, ‘Behold, an Israelite indeed, in whom is no deceit [guile]!’”3

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to be a person in whom there is no guile or deceit, and always reflect your glory in all circumstances so that people will always “see Jesus” in me. And please help me to be transformed into your likeness and use me to be a living, effective witness for you in helping to introduce many others to you for your healing and forgiveness. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

Note: To help introduce others to Jesus, please consider joining with ACTS to be a People Power for Jesus Partner. There is no charge. All you need is the desire to bring/introduce others to Jesus, have an e-Mail account, and access to the Internet. For more information see: www.actsweb.org/people_power.

1. 2 Corinthians 3:18 (NIV).

2. Sunday School Times. Cited in Lee, Paul Tan, Encyclopedia of 7700 Illustrations, p.1614.

3. John 1:47 (NKJV).

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A Nation Blessed

“Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord, The people He has chosen as His own inheritance.”1

While this Scripture passage was addressed to the nation of Israel, the principle, “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord,” without doubt applies to every nation whose God is the Lord.

This is certainly applicable to the founding of the U.S.A., the foundation of which was solidly based on Judeo-Christian principles, and whose God was the Lord. Sadly, more and more, as a nation, we are increasingly moving away from this spiritual foundation.

Going back more than half a century we were given a grave warning by Charles Augustus Lindbergh of aviation fame, who, in the early days of flying, at the age of 25 was the first pilot to fly solo nonstop across the Atlantic Ocean. This was on May 20-21, 1927.

At the time of World War II Lindberg, at first, was opposed to the U.S. voluntarily entering the war, but later changed his mind. He had said: “I saw the aircraft I love destroying the civilization I expected it to save. Now I understand that spiritual truth is more essential to a nation than the mortar in its cities’ walls. For when the actions of a people are undergirded by spiritual truths, there is safety. When spiritual truths are rejected, it is only a matter of time before civilization will collapse.”2

It is significant that Lindberg’s foresight into the importance of spiritual truth for the enduring safety of civilization was seen at a time when the United States was becoming one of the most powerful nations in the world. But today, however, it appears that the need for this spiritual foundation is not only being totally ignored, but also being eroded, by so many of today’s leaders and citizens, who are much more concerned with being “politically correct” than they are about the nation being “undergirded by spiritual truths.”

Tragically, Charles Lindberg’s prophetic statement is indeed being played out in the U.S.A. of today. May God have mercy on us.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, thank you for your Word that assures us that ‘blessed is that nation whose God is the Lord.’ Tragically, we have as a nation, by and large, progressively turned from you and in so doing have sinned grievously. Please grant a great spiritual awakening so as a nation we will confess our sins and turn back to you and once again, as did most of our founding fathers, make you our Lord. And please start your work in me. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Psalm 33:12 (NKJV).

2. Lee, Paul Tan, Encyclopedia of 7700 Illustrations, p. 1529.

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Failure Turned Inside Out

David, the psalmist, prayed: “Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.”1

You sit with your head in your hands thinking you’re a total failure. “I’ve blown it again,” you mutter to yourself in despair.

Hold it right there! Did you know that Walt Disney went broke seven times and had a nervous breakdown before he became successful?

And that Enrico Caruso failed so many times with his singing that his teacher advised him to quit. He didn’t. His mother saw to that. And he became one of the world’s greatest tenors.

And Thomas Edison was called a dunce at school. Later, he failed more than six thousand times before perfecting the first electric light bulb.

Think, too, of King David in the Bible. He blew it big time. He not only committed adultery with Bathsheba and got her pregnant, but had her husband killed and took her as another wife. When he admitted his failure, God forgave him and gave him another chance. In fact, Bathsheba became the mother of King Solomon through whose line Jesus Christ came.

And remember Paul the apostle, he was so opposed to Christianity that he was running around having Christians killed when God got ahold of him and turned his life around and used him in an incredible way.

God wants to turn your and my life around too when we fail. So, if you feel like giving up, don’t. Remember failure is an event, not a person. Now is the time to give God a chance. It starts with being honest with yourself, with a trusted friend, and with God—admitting how and where you’ve failed and asking God to forgive you and to help you.

For real encouragement, read all of Psalm 51. And listen to these words also written by David: “There was a time when I wouldn’t admit what a sinner I was. But my dishonesty made me miserable and filled my days with frustration. All day and all night your hand was heavy on me. My strength evaporated like water on a sunny day until I finally admitted all my sins to you and stopped trying to hide them. I said to myself, ‘I will confess them to the Lord.’ and you forgave me! All my guilt is gone.”2

What a gracious, loving, forgiving God we have.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please be merciful to me a sinner. I confess all my sins (name the ones you’ve never confessed before) to you. Have mercy on me and forgive me. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Psalm 51:10.

2. Psalm 32:3-5 (TLB)(NLT).

Note: If you have never received God’s forgiveness for your sins and failures, please do that today. For help read, “How to be Sure You’re a Real Christian” at: www.actsweb.org/christian.

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Caught in the Act Part III

Jesus Christ said: “For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.”1

With the woman caught in the act of adultery, Jesus saw beyond her external act of sin—her adultery—to the deeper cause of why she acted out in the way she did.

We tend to see sin as only the external act. But the external act is often just the tip of the iceberg. Sin is anything that falls short of the perfection or wholeness God planned for us. It includes our damaged emotions, our wounded personality, our mixed motives, our unresolved inner conflicts, and our supercharged repressed negative emotions. Added to our sinful nature, these are the pains that keep us in bondage and cause us to act out in sinful ways. These are the barriers that alienate us from God, from others, and from ourselves so that we no longer know who or what we truly are. Sin is the whole “iceberg,” not merely the external tip.

Because of this, when Jesus ministered to the woman caught in adultery, he dealt with her whole person not just her sinful behavior. As already noted, to free her from acting out in sinful behavior, he first met the basic need in her life, the lack of which was driving her to commit acts of sin. Jesus loved and accepted her, and in doing this, possibly for the first time in this woman’s life, she was loved and accepted by a man for who she was rather than for what she had to offer. Jesus knew her sin, her weaknesses, and her hurt. He understood her fully and loved and accepted her unconditionally. In so doing he confirmed her personhood and her womanhood. In other words, the needs that her father didn’t or couldn’t meet, Jesus met. In meeting these father needs for love and acceptance Jesus set her free and could realistically say to her, “Go and don’t commit this sin anymore.”

Or take the person with a drinking problem, a lying problem, a stealing problem, a drug problem, a gossip problem, or any other kind of sin problem. Behind the external act of sin lies a deeper fault, problem, or sin. The external act of sin is merely the symptom of the deeper sin. And when a person is hiding a deeper sin or fault, he tends to confess a lesser sin all the more vigorously.

Therefore, how unkind it is of me, how lacking in understanding, and how unlike Christ to condemn you and make you feel guilty for your sin without ever seeking to understand you and help meet the basic need/s in your life, the lack of which are causing you to act out in sinful ways.

It’s easy to lay rules on you and make you feel guilty if you don’t conform, and in so doing deceive myself into believing that I have been obeying God, which is anything but the truth. But how difficult it is to seek to understand you, to learn why you do what you do, and then attempt to meet your deepest needs—the lack of which are causing you to commit acts of sin. This takes true commitment to Christ and commitment to you—it is my being as Jesus to you.

Being a sinner myself, I do not have the right to tell you not to sin again. I only have the responsibility to accept you as a fellow sinner and help to meet your needs and, thereby, help take away your need for sinning.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please deliver me of the sin of being critical and judgmental and give me a spirit of understanding to be able to help any who genuinely need your help, healing, and deliverance. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 3:17 (KJV).

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Caught in the Act Part II

“Neither do I condemn you,” Jesus declared. “Go now and leave your life of sin.”1

Yesterday we talked about the Pharisees trying to trap Jesus over the woman caught in the act of adultery. The last thing Jesus said to these pious religious bigots was, “Let the man who has never sinned be the one to cast the first stone.”

Their own accusations had boomeranged on them. The silence was deafening. And now, like frightened puppy dogs, they tucked their “religious tails” between their legs and got out of there as quickly as they could.

Jesus was left alone with the woman. He knew she’d been used. He understood her deepest need and gently asked her, “What happened to your accusers? Where did they go? Isn’t there anyone left to condemn you?”

“No, Lord,” she replied, “they’ve all gone.”

Then Jesus made a simple but profound statement: “I don’t condemn you either. Go, and don’t commit this sin anymore.”

The dynamic in this story is that before Jesus told this woman to go and sin no more, he first met the basic need in her life, the lack of which was causing her to sin. This is such a profound truth, it desperately needs understanding.

Let me explain. Counselors tell us that many a prostitute or a loose-living woman, for example, is a woman who has been hurt deeply by her father in her early life. Deep down she is still hostile towards him. He didn’t meet her needs for love, acceptance, and approval. Neither did he confirm her womanhood. For one or many reasons she felt rejected by him. Or he or another significant male in her early life may have sexually abused her. She doesn’t come to this conclusion consciously, but the greatest way she can hit back at her father or men is by becoming a prostitute or a loose-living woman. She is also desperately searching for the father’s love she never received as a child or as a young woman and is unconsciously trying to prove to herself that she is a woman. She is being driven into acts of sin because of unresolved hurt, anger, and by an unmet need for love and acceptance—especially that of a father’s love.

The same principle applies to the man who is running around using women. His problem includes lust, but it goes far deeper. He is not the great masculine figure he pretends to be. He may be angry at his mother and be using other women as a means of expressing his hostility. Or he may be still searching for the mother’s love he never received as a child as well as trying to convince himself that he is adequate as a male.

Behind all external acts of sin, there is almost always a deeper sin, fault, unmet need, or damaged emotion. In other words, all behavior is caused or motivated. There is a reason why people do what they do. This is not to excuse their behavior. Not at all. Jesus didn’t condemn the woman for her sin, but neither did he condone her actions. He told her not to do it again. However, he knew that this woman had a deep emotional need in her life and it was this unmet need that was driving her into acts of sin.

In meeting her unmet need, Jesus could realistically say to her, “Go and leave your life of sin.”

To be concluded …

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to always be sensitive to the true needs of others when they fall, and seek to meet them at that point of need just as you did with the woman caught in adultery. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 8:11 (NIV).

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Caught in the Act Part I

“At dawn he [Jesus] appeared again in the temple courts, where all the people gathered around him, and he sat down to teach them. The teachers of the law and the Pharisees brought in a woman caught in adultery. They made her stand before the group and said to Jesus, “Teacher, this woman was caught in the act of adultery. In the Law Moses commanded us to stone such women. Now what do you say?”1

Perhaps one of the most beautiful examples of communicating Christ’s love in the entire New Testament is where Christ ministered to the woman who was caught in the act of adultery.

Why the scribes and Pharisees brought only the woman—and not the man—to Jesus for judgment is a little difficult to understand. How the woman could be caught in the act of adultery alone is beyond my comprehension. If truth be known, the guilty man may very well have been one of the accusers even if he weren’t present in the accusing circle. The whole affair was undoubtedly a setup to trap Jesus.

Regardless, you can just see these religious bigots gloating over their victory. “We’ve got Him cornered at last,” they bragged among themselves with a false sense of anticipated triumph. “He can’t win. And we can’t lose. Whatever way he answers, we have him trapped. If he says to punish her according to the law of God, we’ll accuse him of having no mercy. If he says to let her go free, we’ll accuse him of breaking God’s law.” Quite a scheme … so they thought.

So here they are, encircling Jesus and the guilty woman. They were like a pack of hungry wolves just waiting for the signal to pounce on Jesus and devour Him. What did they care about the woman? Absolutely nothing. They were using her as a pawn in their game.

“Now, Master,” they piously addressed Jesus undoubtedly in a sanctimonious tone of voice, “this woman was caught committing adultery in the very act. God’s law demands that such a woman be stoned to death. How do you feel about that? What say you?”

Jesus ignored them. He stooped down and wrote on the ground. But these men were persistent. They were determined to win their devious game so they kept pressing Jesus for an answer.

So Jesus stood up, looked each one of them squarely in the eye, and agreed with them. “Yes,” he said, “you’re absolutely correct. The law of Moses, God’s law, does say that such a woman should be stoned to death.”

“He’s agreeing with us,” they mused among themselves, and you could see them going for the rocks tucked under their religious robes—the rocks of accusation they were about to hurl at Jesus. They were more concerned about killing Jesus than they were about stoning the woman or defending justice.

“So,” continued Jesus, “go ahead and stone her to death if that’s what you desire.” After a brief moment’s pause and with a burning look that pierced the depths of their consciences Jesus added, “However, gentlemen, wait just a minute—let the man who has never sinned be the one to cast the first stone.”

Thud. The silence was deafening.

To be continued …

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please give me a spirit of discernment so that I will always know when enquirers are genuine or if they have a hidden agenda seeking to hurt a fellow struggler who has fallen. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 8:2-5 (NIV).

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