Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Gotta Make Your Mind Up


Luke 16:13
“No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money.”

My puppy Lucy likes playing and chasing after a toy while she still has one in her mouth. But then she gets into a dilemma of which toy to carry, which to chase, and how to get them both into her mouth at the end. And it doesn’t work out. Why? Because you can’t serve two masters.

I think that’s what we try and do. We carry God in our heart, but then we go chasing after money and success and self-gain; not actually sure which one we want more. Or maybe those other things hold our heart, but we try and chase after God, try and seek Him, then find we have no room for Him in our heart. We can’t do both.

As humans we love to multitask. Even smartphones now come with dual-core processors, allowing us to do two or more things at once. But when it comes to our hearts, they need to be pure, set on only one thing (No Added Extras). Jesus says we must hate and despise one master and love and be devoted to the other. He asks us to be hot or cold, yes or no, in or out. Kicking it with Jesus, or kicking yourself? You gotta make your mind up. Which master are you going to serve?

Wednesday, August 03, 2011

*YOU*


Today I was reading this chapter in Zechariah, and I thought, “This is cool, it can really apply to my life.” So I read it again, and wherever it says ‘Israel’ or ‘them’ or something like that, I subbed in ‘you’, and read it to myself. It goes like this:

Zechariah 10

The LORD Will Care for you
 1 Ask the LORD for rain in the springtime;
   it is the LORD who sends the thunderstorms.
He gives showers of rain to you,
   and plants of the field to you.
2 The idols speak deceitfully,
   diviners see visions that lie;
they tell dreams that are false,
   they give comfort in vain.
Therefore you wander like sheep
   oppressed for lack of a shepherd.
 3 “My anger burns against the shepherds,
   and I will punish the leaders; 
  for the LORD Almighty will care 
   for you and make you like a proud horse in battle. 
4 From Judah will come the cornerstone, 
   from him the tent peg, 
from him the battle bow, 
   from him every ruler. 
5 Together you will be like warriors in battle 
   trampling their enemy into the mud of the streets. 
You will fight because the LORD is with you, 
   and you will put the enemy horsemen to shame.
 6 “I will strengthen you
   and save you. 
I will restore you
   because I have compassion on you. 
You will be as though 
   I had not rejected you, 
for I am the LORD your God 
   and I will answer you. 
7 You will become like warriors, 
   and your heart will be glad as with wine. 
  You will see it and be joyful; 
    your heart will rejoice in the LORD. 
8 I will signal for you
   and gather you in. 
Surely I will redeem you; 
    you will be as numerous as before. 
9 Though I scatter you among the peoples, 
   yet in distant lands you will remember me. 
  You will survive, 
   and you will return. 
10 I will bring you back from Egypt 
   and gather you from Assyria. 
I will bring you to Gilead and Lebanon, 
   and there will not be room enough for you. 
11 You will pass through the sea of trouble; 
   the surging sea will be subdued 
   and all the depths of the Nile will dry up. 
Assyria’s pride will be brought down 
   and Egypt’s scepter will pass away. 
12 I will strengthen you in the LORD 
   and in his name you will walk and live securely,” 
            declares the LORD.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

The Start Of Something New





Isaiah 43:18-19
“Forget the former things; do not dwell on the past. See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.

 “Forget the former things;”
That’s a command, not a “maybe you should think about doing this.” And it doesn’t say, “Learn from them, wrestle with them, figure out a valuable lesson you can take from them.” It says “forget” them.

“…do not dwell on the past.”
God knows what we’ll be tempted to do. In this case, it’s obvious: We’re going to struggle with dwelling on the past. With making our home in the past, with defining ourselves by our past. God knows we’ll struggle with that and pleads, “Do not dwell on the past.”

“See, I am doing a new thing!”
Don’t you want to hug the Bible when it ends a sentence with an exclamation? This is not something casual or ordinary. This is a new thing! Hope is loud and bright and colourful!

“Now it springs up; do you not perceive it?”
In this we’re told God’s ability to spring it up and change our lives will not be dependent on our ability to perceive it. There are so many days where I don’t see or feel the new thing he is doing in my life, but that matters not. He is doing it nonetheless, regardless if I do not perceive it.

“I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland.”
I don’t care how wild your past was. I don’t care about how wasted the wasteland of your life was. Those are the very places God loves to redeem. Those are the very places he puts a way through. Those are the very places he puts a stream.

Sometimes, my past feels big and inescapable. It looms large in my head and my heart, a tattoo that will not fade, a defining moment that cannot be forgotten. But the truth is, the past is not my home. God is doing a new thing. In me, in you, in us. The old has gone, the new has come, I am a new creation!