May 18, 2006

The High Cost of Cleansing

Author: Warren Wiersbe

Source: Prayer, Praise and Promises

Scripture Reference 1 John 2 Psalm 51:18-19 

The High Cost of Cleansing

Read Psalm 51:18-19

Cleansing sin is not cheap. Keep in mind what God has to do. Sin creates debt, defilement and disease, which can be rooted out and forgiven only through the shed blood of Jesus Christ. Every one of us deserves eternal death, but He died in our place. Mercy is God not giving us what we deserve; grace is God giving us what we don’t deserve.

When we confess sin, Jesus represents us before God (I John 2). He is our Advocate. When you are tempted to sin, remember that your sin put Jesus on the cross. And when you sin, you don’t simply sin against family and friends; you sin against the Savior, who died for you. He is standing in heaven, wounded, representing you before the throne. The high cost of cleansing sin is that Somebody had to die. This is a great motivation not to sin.

If you are saved, you are forgiven–your debt to sin is eliminated. Remember, God is not keeping a record of your sins, but He is keeping a record of your works, and sin hinders your ability to serve Him.

Never take for granted God’s act of cleansing sin. Forgiveness was purchased at a great price–the blood of Christ. Next time you are tempted to sin, remember that it cost Jesus His life to provide redemption for you.

When the River Bursts

Filed under: Literature

Author: Elisabeth Elliot

Source: A Lamp For My Feet

Scripture: Luke 6:49  

Psychologists chart "stress factors" related to various kinds of emotional trauma and the response of different people to those factors–death, divorce, job loss, illness, and such which threaten the very foundations of people’s lives. What can hold us at such times?

In a simple story Jesus showed the secret of stability. One man comes to Jesus, hears Him, and acts on what he hears. He is like the man who builds a house on solid rock. Another man hears (is exposed to the same truth, given equal opportunity) but does not act (does not choose to act) on the word he hears. Jesus said he is building a house on sand. When floods come, the river bursts upon it (Lk 6:49 NEB), the house collapses and falls with a great crash.

What sort of floods was He talking about? What rivers might be likely to burst over a man’s house? Surely He meant the stresses of life, not terribly different from the stresses we experience, anything that shakes the foundations. It is at such times that we become aware of what those foundations are. Have we laid them on the Rock that never moves, or have we, merely by not obeying the word we have heard, been laying them on sand? That sand is the self–shifty, unstable, carried back and forth by conflicting currents (popular opinions, for example?), utterly undependable and incapable of holding up under pressure.

Lead me, Lord, to the Rock that is higher than I. Let me hear your word, give me grace to obey, to build steadily, stone upon stone, day by day, to do what You say. Establish my heart where floods have no power to overwhelm, for Christ’s sake. Ame

Prayers

Filed under: Literature

Richard Foster,

Prayer catapults us to the frontier of the spiritual life… it is the discipline of prayer that brings us into the deepest and highest work of the human spirit… prayer lies at the root of all personal godliness… To pray is to change… central avenue that God uses to transform us. If we are unwilling to change, we will abandon prayer as a noticeable characteristic of our lives. The closer we come to the heartbeat of God the more we see our need and the more we desire to be conformed to Christ… But when we pray, God slowly and graciously reveals to us our evasive actions and sets us free from them. ‘You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions’ (James 4:3). To ask ‘rightly’ involves transformed passions. In prayer, real prayer, we begin to think God’s thoughts after him" to desire the things he desires, to love the things he loves, to will the things he wills. Progressively, we are taught to see things from his point of view… David’s desire for God broke the self-indulgent chains of sleep… for those explorers in the frontiers of faith, prayer was no little habit tacked on to the periphery of their lives; it was their lives… We are working with God to determine the future!

Sanctifying the Imagination

Filed under: Literature

Richard Foster, 

…it is so vitally important for us to be thrown in utter dependence upon God in these matters. We are seeking to think God’s thoughts after him, to delight in his presence, to desire His truth and his way. And the more we live in this way, the more God utilises our imagination for His good purposes… to meditate upon the events of our time and to seek to perceive their significance. We have a spiritual obligation to penetrate the inner meaning of events, not to gain power but to gain prophetic perspective… for God wants us to live out our spirituality in the ordinary events of our days… through memorisation the biblical witness becomes rooted deep in the inner mind and begins to mould and adjust our world view almost without realising it…

R8:28

Filed under: Reflections

Romans 8:28

And we know that all things work together for the good to those who love GOD, to those who are called according to his PURPOSE.

The Focus of Faith

Filed under: Literature
Author: Elisabeth Elliot

Source: A Lamp For My Feet

In one of the photo albums from my years in Ecuador is a close-up of a big scorpion on a window screen. I know what was beyond that ugly thing–a green lawn set about with palm trees, a garden of pineapples, a sweep of pasture land, and then the curve of a wide river. The photograph knows nothing of all that. The photographer had focused on the scorpion. He got a very good picture of a scorpion. The eye of the camera saw nothing else. 

The eye of faith looks through and past that which the human eye focuses on. Faith looks at the facts–even the ugly ones (remember Abraham who looked at his wife’s barrenness and his own impotence)–but does not stop there. It looks beyond to the beauty of things the human eye can never see–things as invisible as the palms and the pineapples are in my photograph. 

When the eye of the heart is fixed on the world and the self, everything eternal and invisible is blurred and obscure. No wonder we cannot recognize God–we are studying the scorpion. Instead of gazing at Him in all his majesty and love, we peer at the screen, horrified at what we see there. 

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. Make my heart pure, Lord, that I may will to do your will. Give me the courage to see my world with all its evil and pain, but change the focus of my life.

Lord Jesus, make Thyself to me A living, bright reality, 

More present to faith’s vision keen Than any outward object seen, 

More dear, more intimately nigh Than e’en the sweetest earthly tie. 

–(J.B. French)






















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