Saving Faith

I found this quote by Charles Spurgeon and wanted to pass it along.

“We believe everything which the Lord Jesus has taught, but we must go a step further, and trust him. It is not even enough to believe in him, as being the Son of God, and the anointed of the Lord; but we must believe on him . . . The faith that saves is not believing certain truths, nor even believing that Jesus is a Savior; but it is resting on him, depending on him, lying with all your weight on Christ as the foundation of your hope. Believe that he can save you; believe that he will save you; at any rate leave the whole matter of your salvation with him in unquestioning confidence. Depend upon him without fear as to your present and eternal salvation. This is the faith which saves the soul.” (Spurgeon)

“But This is All I Have…”

In the sixth chapter of John we read of the time when Jesus fed the 5,000 with a kid’s “sack lunch.” It was one of those scenarios in which Jesus already knew what he was planning to do, but purposely asked Philip (one of his followers) where they could get enough food to feed so many people.  Andrew (another follower of Jesus) then stepped up and said, “There’s a boy here with five loaves of barley bread and two fish, but what is that for so many people?”

I think we all can relate to Andrew’s question: How can this little bit that I have accomplish anything? We look at our lives, and in our own eyes we don’t see anything that God could use. We may not speak well, we may consider ourselves to be broken and scarred from the trials of life. We see that the need is great, but doubt that we could possibly be of use. “Lord, all I have are these five measly loves of bread and two fish. What can I do with this?” Matthew’s account of this same story gives us the answer.

In the Gospel of Matthew we find that when Jesus was told of the bread and the fish, he said, “Bring them to me.”  This is step one: give all you have to Jesus. We may not believe that what we are capable of accomplishing anything for the Lord, but he says, “Bring what you have to me.” All that follows is what Jesus does with those things which are given to Him. Matthew tells us that He took the loaves and the fish, blessed them,then broke the loaves and proceeded to feed 5,000 people

Jesus will take you, bless you, and yes, break you, then use you to meet the needs of those He brings your way. Be assured that He has equipped you with all you need to minister to those around you,just give it all to Him, and watch Him do the impossible.

I Resemble That Remark

Many are familiar with the writings of R. A. Torrey, and though he died in 1928, his work is still relevant for us today. We tend to place men like Torrey upon a pedestal and they somehow seem far removed from us regular folk.

I wanted to share the following excerpt from Torrey’s testimony in hope  that, in his own words, “many will recognize it as a description of the main features of their own condition.”

“But peace of mind and rest of conscience are not to be found in what the world calls ‘easy circumstances.’ Notwithstanding that I had apparently every reason to be well satisfied with my lot, and every opportunity to enjoy the good things of this world, my mental condition was anything but satisfactory. It is hard to picture the state of a mind subject to increasingly frequent and protracted spells of depression, for which there seemed to be no reason or explanation. Certainly I was thoroughly discontented, desperately unhappy, and becoming more and more an easy prey to gloomy thoughts and vague, indefinable apprehensions. No longer could I find mental satisfaction and diversion in the places and things which once supplied them. My gratifications had been largely of an intellectual order, and my mind had been much occupied in efforts to pierce the veil of the material universe, and to discover what, if anything, lay concealed behind it. This quest had carried me into the domains of science, philosophy, occultism, theosophy, etc., etc. All this pursuit had yielded nothing more reliable than conjecture, and had left the inquirer after the truth wearied, baffled and intellectually starved. Life had no meaning, advantage, purpose or justification; and the powers of the much-vaunted human intellect seemed unequal to the solution of the simplest mysteries. The prospect before me was unspeakably dark and forbidding.” (R. A. Torrey)

Like Torrey, we all suffer a similar malady; whether we are rich, poor, small or great, we have one thing in common: we’re looking for something, someone, anything that will fulfill and give life.

Jesus says, “Come to Me.”

Do You Swear to tell the Truth, the whole Truth, and nothing but…

Recently, the trial of Casey Anthony has captured the attention of many.  Thanks to modern advancement,the mystique of courtroom drama is now broadcast live into our homes. I was thinking this morning about witnesses. You have to have witnesses no matter which side you’re on in a particular case.

Really, all a witness is is someone who testifies about what he or she knows. In a court room there are expert witnesses and there are just ordinary folks like us; but, they all perform the same function- the tell about what they know. Jesus said that we would be His witnesses when the Holy Spirit comes to dwell within us.

We are each called to tell what we know about Jesus. I like the story found in John 9, the time that Jesus healed the man who had been blind since birth. This miracle caused quite a commotion and resulted with the formerly blind man being brought up before the religious leaders of the Jews. Keep in mind, these leaders were hostile towards Jesus and the presence of this healed man really ticked them off.

They grilled him with questions about Jesus, claiming Jesus was a sinner and a nobody. I can imagine the man was probably frightened as well; but here is the beautiful part, he is still a witness:  “I don’t know whether he[Jesus} is a sinner,” the man replied. “But I know this: I was blind, and now I can see!”(Jn9:25) He didn’t know a lot, he just spoke of what he did know. And it could not be denied!

You don’t have to go to seminary, or be a “professional minister” to be a witness for Jesus- just tell what you know! Some folks have a dramatic testimony of deliverance, some have the testimony of Jesus’ continued faithfulness after coming to Him in their childhood, it doesn’t matter; tell what you know. Your life is a living “epistle”, proclaiming to others the reality of Jesus.

Be filled with he Spirit, and allow Him to use you as a witness who testifies to the things you have seen and heard from Jesus.

Let It Flow

“Whether it was two days or a month or a year that the cloud lingered over the tabernacle, staying above it, the sons of Israel remained camped and did not set out; but when it was lifted, they did set out. At the command of the LORD they camped, and at the command of the LORD they set out; they kept the LORD’S charge, according to the command of the LORD through Moses.”

Reading the above scripture you can’t help but be awestruck by the way Israel was led in their journey e.g., a physical manifestation of God’s presence. We think how easy it would be to know where to go, what to do and when to do it if we experienced something like that. Actually, we’re in a much better position than they were. We are in Jesus and God lives in us. We are actually in the “flow” of the Trinity.

I used to think that real, spiritual Christians probably got up in the morning, and found an index card on their kitchen table mysteriously written by the Holy Spirit, providing instructions for their lives. Maybe the Über-Christians discerned the will of God through signs, specific prophetic utterances, or some other super spiritual means. Well, God can indeed lead in all of those ways (even the index card), but I’ve come to understand that more often than not, living in the will of God is simply a direct result of abiding in Jesus.

Remember the call to Abraham? The Lord said, “Get up and go to the land that I will show you.” Abraham didn’t receive a lot of information, only the command to leave and the promise of guidance. Over and over in the Old Testament we read of God’s promises to lead His people. We read stories about the ways God led certain individuals, and think, “Oh, if God would would only speak to me like that…” But we’ve got it even better! In the New Testament, we find Jesus assuring us that the Holy Spirit would actually indwell us, reveal Jesus to us, give us the “mind of Christ,” and guide us into all truth. Jesus spoke of us actually being in him, abiding in him like branches in a vine. ThLiving Water by Cassie Searse thing about branches is they don’t spend a whole lot of time trying to figure out what their supposed to be doing. It flows naturally as they are connected to the vine.

Following the will of God is not so much a matter of knowing stuff as it is being in Someone. As we remain in Jesus, drawing our life from him, being continuously filled with his Spirit (like the “sap” flowing through the vine), the will of God will be a natural process. Branches that abide in the vine simply bear fruit for that is the will of the “Husbandman.”

Someone told me something once, and I didn’t understand it at the time. But I get it now. It went something like this: “Come to Jesus, abide in him, and then do what you want.” You want to stay in the will of God? Abide in Jesus, and let it flow.

Nicky the Cat

Nicky is the first cat I’ve ever had in my life. He showed up about a year and a half ago, and well, we made friends right off. I hope this doesn’t sound too crazy, but sometimes, the Lord speaks to my heart through my relationship with Nicky.

Like all male cats, there were times when Nicky  just had to get out of the house. Upon returning from his romps, he would often be wounded, scratched up, and just exhausted. I would doctor him up, keep him inside until he started going crazy, and then I’d let him out again. I began to watch him as he would make his way up the dirt road to who knows where, and I learned that after each incident, he always made a straight line up that dirt road for more “beat-down.”

I began to think to myself, “Doesn’t he know he’s only going to get hurt again? It seems like he would learn  after so many times of pain and misery.”

It dawned on me that Nicky wasn’t any better or worse than any other cat. He wasn’t stupid or anything, he was just doing what was in his nature for him to do. It would take him somehow getting a “new nature” to change his behavior. He could not stop himself. In fact, he had no desire to change his behavior at all. He would keep repeating the same actions over and over again.

Isn’t that true for us as well? We need a new nature. We need to be born again by the Spirit of God, and be transformed into the image of Jesus. Until we receive the new nature that only comes from the indwelling Holy Spirit, we keep on doing the same old things over and over again. It’s not that we are any better or worse than anyone else, it’s just that we do what our sin-nature tells us to do.

We aren’t sinners because we sin, we sin because we’re sinners. The good news is that Jesus can give us a new nature, one that desires to know and please God. We can be born anew. I don’t know about you, but, I’m tired of going up that same old dirt road for another “beat-down.” Let’s cry out to Jesus, to save us and make us like Him!

By the way, I wasn’t able to give Nicky a new nature; but I did introduce him to the covenant of circumcision if you know what I mean.

I Need a Drink

  We are all drawing water from one well or another. There is something or perhaps someone that we run to in the hope of quenching the thirst resident within each of us. One of the coolest stories in the Bible can be found in John 4 – Jesus and the woman at the well.  She had come that day to draw water as she had for who knows how long, and finds a weary, disheveled rabbi sitting by the well.

  “Give me a drink,” he says.                    

She is taken back at the request for the Jews had absolutely no dealing with her people at all. The Samaritans were considered to be unclean by any self respecting Jew and they were to be avoided at all times.

“How is it that you, a Jew would ask me for a drink?” she asks.

Jesus replies,” If you knew who I am you would be asking me for a drink, and I would give you living water,”

Like most of us would, she thinks he’s talking about some source of physical water she isn’t aware of and asks, “How can you give me this water?”

She is thinking that this Jew must know something she doesn’t about Jacob’s well. Jesus assures her that he has something totally different in mind.

“You’ll keep getting thirsty if all you have is this water”, he says, “But, if you drink the water I can give you, you will never, ever thirst again.”

Her mind is still on the natural so she asks Jesus to give her this water so she won’t have to keep coming to draw at the well every day.

“Go, get your husband and come back here.” Jesus tells her.

“I have no husband” she replies.

Jesus informs her that he is aware that she has had five husbands and now lives with a man she is not married to. It is obvious to her that this is more than your average rabbi, he must be a prophet.

Again, she uses tactics familiar to us: “Well you Jews say we should worship your way and where you say and we believe something totally different, I mean, you can’t really know what the truth about this stuff. Every one has their own opinion.”

Jesus will not be deterred, “Woman, the time has come when the place you worship doesn’t matter anymore. It is those who worship God in truth, in reality, honestly, in the Spirit that he accepts.”

Again she side steps the issue, “Well, one day we’ll understand, when Messiah comes.”

Jesus replies, “You’re speaking with him.”

Can you see that this whole thing was orchestrated by Jesus: at a well, talking about water, thirst and how she tried to quench her thirst? The real issue was not the water in Jacob’s well, Jesus wanted her to see that empty religion and trying to satisfy herself with men was the “well” she had been drawing from , and that it would continue to live her thirsty. He was there to quench that thirst.

Like the Samaritan woman we think, “If I only had that man, that woman, that job, enough money, more power, fame, etc…” We seek to quench that thirst within us in so many ways: religion, sex, drugs, technology, more apps, 3D- TV, movies, sports, and on and on and on; but, we are always left wanting more. All the while Jesus is saying, “I am who and what you’ve been looking for, I can quench your thirst.”

We find at the end of the story the woman left her water pot, there at the well, with Jesus. We too can leave our “water pots” behind and Jesus will give us that living water we so desperately seek. 

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Parousia

While one cannot help but make light of the predictions so often made by those who would claim to be followers of Jesus; as I see the overwhelming response to this latest misguided attempt to pinpoint the EXACT time of the “parousia” (Christ’s return), I am reminded that there will indeed come a day when, according to the gospel, Christ shall indeed return. There will be no time for blogs and clever video postings; instead we shall come face to face with Reality Himself. 

It is my prayer that while we are intrigued and amused by this latest prediction, we will pause for a moment and allow the Holy Spirit to speak to our hearts as to the reality of the cross and where we stand in relation to it. 

“Now as to the times and the epochs, brethren, you have no need of anything to be written to you. For you yourselves know full well that the day of the Lord will come just like a thief in the night. While they are saying, ‘Peace and safety!’ then destruction will come upon them suddenly like labor pains upon a woman with child, and they will not escape. But you, brethren, are not in darkness, that the day would overtake you like a thief; for you are all sons of light and sons of day. We are not of night nor of darkness; so then let us not sleep as others do, but let us be alert and sober. For those who sleep do their sleeping at night and those who get drunk get drunk at night. But since we are of the day, let us be sober, having put on the breastplate of faith and love, and as a helmet, the hope of salvation. For God has not destined us for wrath, but for obtaining salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for us, so that whether we are awake or asleep, we will live together with Him. Therefore encourage one another and build up one another, just as you also are doing.” (I Thessalonians 5:1-11 NASB)

Concerning Jerusalem

“The LORD builds up Jerusalem; He gathers the outcasts of Israel. Like flying birds so the LORD of hosts will protect Jerusalem. He will protect and deliver it; He will pass over and rescue it. On your walls, O Jerusalem, I have appointed watchmen; All day and all night they will never keep silent. You who remind the LORD, take no rest for yourselves…”  

“Behold, I am going to make Jerusalem a cup that causes reeling to all the peoples around; and when the siege is against Jerusalem, it will also be against Judah. It will come about in that day that I will make Jerusalem a heavy stone for all the peoples; all who lift it will be severely injured. And all the nations of the earth will be gathered against it. For I will gather all the nations against Jerusalem to battle…” (Various passages concerning Jerusalem)