Daily Devotional 1-8-21

Daily Devotional 1-8-21

Polluted By Holy Motives?

What a veil is lifted up by these words, and what a disclosure is made! It will be humbling and profitable for us to pause awhile and see this sad sight. The iniquities of our public worship, its hypocrisy, formality, lukewarmness, irreverence, wandering of heart, and forgetfulness of God—what a full measure have we there! Our work for the Lord, its emulation, selfishness, carelessness, slackness, unbelief—what a mass of defilement is there! Our private devotions, their laxity, coldness, neglect, sleepiness, and vanity—what a mountain of dead earth is there! If we looked more carefully, we should find this iniquity to be far greater than appears at first sight.

Dr. Payson, writing to his brother, says, “My parish, as well as my heart, very much resembles the garden of the sluggard; and what is worse, I find that very many of my desires for the improvement of both, proceed either from pride or vanity or indolence. I look at the weeds, which overspread my garden, and breathe out an earnest wish that they were eradicated. But why? What prompts the wish? So that I may walk out and say to myself, ‘In what fine order is my garden kept!’ This is pride. Or, so that my neighbors may look over the wall and say, ‘How finely your garden flourishes!’ This is vanity. Or I may wish for the destruction of the weeds, because I am weary of pulling them up. This is indolence.”

So even our desires after holiness may be polluted by ill motives. Under the greenest sods worms hide themselves; we need not look long to discover them. How cheering is the thought that when the High Priest bore the iniquity of the holy things he wore upon his brow the words, “HOLINESS TO THE LORD,” and even so while Jesus bears our sin, He presents before His Father’s face not our unholiness, but His own holiness. O for grace to view our great High Priest by the eye of faith!

From: https://www.truthforlife.org/resources/daily-devotionals/latest/?gclid=CjwKCAjwnK36BRBVEiwAsMT8WCR8UteIwaWlAyP4o9ZIuAWio8l7qmAM1nDcB3pFiYr-jOUNkgMsShoC68IQAvD_BwE

Meet: John Crowley, SBO ’21 Evangelist

John Crowley – Florida

2004 Born Again at Calvary Chapel

2006 Share Jesus without fear Training

2009 Way of the Master BasicTraining

2009 Way of the Master Intermediate Training

2010 Ambassador Academy Way of the Master

2011 Foot of the Cross Bible and leadership training

2012 Grief Share leader- Calvary Chapel Leadership

2014 Super Bowl Outreach New York

2008-Present The Bridge Evangelist -President

2014-Present His Glory –Evangelist outreach

Daily Devotional 1-7-21

Daily Devotional

The Man Born to be King

The Festival of Epiphany marks the 12th day of Christmas to help us see all of the happenings marking the incarnation of the Son of God in the baby Jesus as one single revelatory event. An epiphany, generically considered, is when something becomes manifest and thus known where otherwise it would not be. While we often assume the Magi arrived in Jerusalem seeking the just-born special King of the Jews guided by a strange star, this event took place later, perhaps a year or more after his birth (Matt. 2:1-3).

Nevertheless, their arrival is firmly fixed in the history of the church as an event to be considered part and parcel of the miracle of Christmas. Through the ages, when creche scenes have depicted God became man in the baby Jesus – in icons, paintings, figurines, Christmas cards, and outdoor depictions of all sorts – the wise men are always there in the barn with the shepherds, animals, and holy family. In medieval times, artists exaggerated historical accuracy even more. Many paintings depicted Jesus’ birthplace in a contemporary court, with contemporary rulers and dignitaries joining the shepherds and Magi in the worship of the baby Jesus.

We all are familiar with the sense of destiny that often surrounds the stories of kings. Many have been the tale about the lad of low estate born to be king. At a point in time when the people need a courageous and charismatic leader to face difficult and perilous times, his ascension arises from obscurity. However, a much more startling royal event attended the mission of the magi guided by a star. They were determined to see in the epoch event of Christmas an even stranger set of royal circumstances that did not involve a man born to be king. Indeed, the Christmas event was not a royal ascension but a divine condescension. The eternal sovereign ruler of the universe, the King of Kings, stooped down to become a man.

From Heaven above to earth I come. God has come and invaded our space, packaged as a baby king. With mere kings, it is a fitting honor to bring your loyalty, your willingness to serve, and perhaps some tribute. But these things are not sufficient for the King born to be man. The magi bowing down in traditional creche scenes is not a sign of loyalty but an act of worship. On their knees, they came face-to-face with Deity in human flesh. They bowed to worship him and present gifts of thanksgiving. They found God in all of his glory, and so have we.

Forget the historical anomalies in the depictions of this event; there is great theology here. John expressed the significance of Epiphany by announcing that “the Word became flesh and dwelt among us and we have beheld his glory, as of the Son from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14). Not just the shepherds, nor the magi and medieval dignitaries have been privy to this appearance. Epiphany celebrates that we have not been left in our hearts’ cold darkness and this spoiled creation. The morning star of Bethlehem was not the amazing guide for the wise men, but the Christ made manifest first in Bethlehem, in our hearts, and at the close of the age (2 Pet 1:19, Rev 22:16).

The Christmas season celebrates an epiphany. It is about God making a personal appearance with us. He has entered his spoiled creation to fix things and to make possible that Gentiles as well as Jews might become loyal subjects of the Lord God without becoming enslaved by a rule of law that no one can fulfill.

From the days of Samuel, Kings ruled over the people of God by law. The children of Israel thought they could be loyal, obedient subjects if God would relent and allow a king to rule over them. A thousand years of rule through countless monarchs and pretenders to the throne, however, proved them wrong. Back in those days, when God looked down to find subjects who were good and godly according to the dictates of the law, he could not even find one (Ps 53:3). If we were there during his search, would the results have been any different?

When it comes to the reign of Christ and your life in his kingdom, tis’ more blessed to receive than to give.

We, too, have all fallen short of the glory of God. Our need is the same as theirs: We need a king who will deliver us from the slavery of the law, not one who would inspire and motivate us to try harder or cut us some slack so we can do better. The manifestation of the Word becoming flesh signals a dethronement of the reign of law. He comes with grace and truth in his person and in his reign. Loyalty to this King of Kings is to embrace his gift of righteousness in your heart and in your confession. This King comes to you, bearing the gifts of life, forgiveness, and salvation. He comes to reign over a kingdom with righteousness to cover all of your sinful frailty, poverty, and lawlessness.

Sometimes parents have promoted the wrong message from children’s Christmas programs, complete with the wise men bearing gifts for the baby Jesus. For countless generations, our children have been told that it is more blessed to give than to receive. This is the wrong message of the Christmas season: When it comes to the reign of Christ and your life in his kingdom, tis’ more blessed to receive than to give.The proper tribute to this King for all children, young and old, is to receive his gifts of grace and truth. Loyalty to his reign is the obedience of faith that lives by grace, not our works, not even our gifts. His administration in the kingdom as Lord overall and Lord of your life is as the Savior from sin. He rules in your life by faith as the one who has come to save you from your sins, to deliver you from the slavery of the law, and to anoint you as a royal child of his everlasting kingdom. All our gifts are but thank-you responses to these supreme gifts that give life and give it forever.

Today we do not have to gaze into the stars to find the Morning Star. He comes to us with his light and life-bearing tokens and gifts for our well-being. If the feed trough was a rather humble wrapping for the incarnate Son of God, today he has chosen even more mundane ways to visit us and grace us with his royal presence. Using simple elements of water, bread, wine, and common human language, our gracious Lord now grants us an epiphany. The King born to be man has wrapped himself in these tokens to make his royal appearance to us. He bids us come – not primarily to worship by giving him gifts – but rather to come with empty hands and hearts to receive his heavenly treasures of forgiveness, life, and salvation. He is the Morning Star that radiates the warmth of God that has relieved Israel and all of us from the cold winter’s chill of our sinful wretchedness. Oh, come let us adore him!

From: https://www.1517.org/articles/the-man-born-to-be-king

Meet: John Coble, SBO ’21 Evangelist

John Coble – Nashville, TN

I’m John Coble and I live in the Nashville, TN area with my wife, Cara. I didn’t grow up in a Christian home, but came to Christ just before high school. Many years later, in October of 2008, I was experiencing severe back pain and went forward for prayer at a special “worship and prayer” service at my church. I didn’t receive physical healing, but I did receive a burden for lost people and for sharing the gospel. (My back eventually got better after months of physical therapy.)

I discovered Ray Comfort and Living Waters ministry a few months later when my TiVo DVR spontaneously recorded “The Way of the Master”. In 2010, I had the tremendous blessing of getting to attend Ambassadors’ Academy (#13) and as a result got connected with Bill Adams and Sports Fan Outreach Int’l.

Since then I have participated in at least 10 outreaches sponsored by SFOI. I regularly preach on the sidewalks and outside special events on weekends in downtown Nashville. I also preach at most of the Titans football home games. Proclaiming the Good News has been the most exciting, meaningful adventure I can imagine.

Daily Devotional 1-6-21

Daily Devotional 1-6-21

Risk Averse…?

2020 has been a troubling, turbulent year – one to which we could apply Her Majesty, the Queen’s apt and pithy comment in 1992: annus horribilis.

While commentators and historians will analyze the events of the year for some time, in many ways it has been God’s wake up call to the reality that, despite what we might like to think, there are significant events in life beyond our control.

Indeed, unexpected events suggest that there’s another dimension to life which we should not ignore – especially as we move into the new year.

In the minds of many, the rise of secular progressivism and its antipathy towards religion has blunted the reality of God’s existence and revelation. How important it is that we keep calm and stay the course of faith – faith that is not a blind leap in the dark, but a faith in the One whose quiet and humble coming into the world opened the door to the glory and joy of life eternal.

Isaiah 60 is one of the great chapters of the Old Testament. It looks to the glory of a future day for God’s people. It begins: Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you. For behold, darkness shall cover the earth, and thick darkness the peoples; but the Lord will arise upon you, and his glory will be seen upon you. And nations shall come to your light, and kings to the brightness of your rising… I am the Lord; in its time I will hasten it (Isaiah 60:1-3, 22b).

In the minds of many, cities are synonymous with evil, corruption and the unbridled pursuit of the pleasures of the flesh, so that we can easily overlook the significance of the city in the Bible. The Scriptures consistently speak of the City of Zion or Jerusalem as a picture of God’s dwelling with his people.

Isaiah’s first readers had lost their city, the temple (the symbol of God’s presence) and their king. We can only begin to imagine how they would have received Isaiah’s words in chapter 60. For he was now telling them that darkness would give way to light and gloom would give way to glory, for God would establish his City – the City of Zion.

You may find it helpful to read Isaiah 59:15b – 60:22 that speaks of the coming of God’s kingdom in great glory. But it is a section that exemplifies the tension between the is and the yet to be of God’s kingdom. As we read this, a helpful question to ask is what lessons can we draw for today from this great section of Isaiah?

Isaiah 60 prepares us for the coming of God’s king in all his glory. It speaks of our ultimate destiny as members of a city, the new Jerusalem where, as Revelation 21:1-4 tells us, there will be no more pain or suffering, crying or death. Above all we will know the deep joy of God’s presence with us. Springing from this we will enjoy life to the full with one another as his people. But this new city lies on the other side of a cosmic divide. Isaiah’s words will only be fulfilled through the personal intervention of God himself. Only then will we be delivered from the tragic consequences of our present world.

How then should we now live – as pessimists or optimists about life? The answer lies in our need to be biblically rich in our understanding of God and his purposes. An unqualified optimism that says we should expect all the benefits of God’s kingdom now, is unhelpful. But so too is an unqualified pessimism. For to be pessimistic about life now implies that we should withdraw from society and not get involved with present issues and concerns. Pessimists tend to think of outreach as holding an evangelistic event and then drawing back into the security of the church community. They have little motivation to engage with people in their wider community in the gospel cause. Sadly, it is one of the reasons only 10% of churches in the US are experiencing what is called ‘gospel’ as opposed to ‘transfer’ growth.

Instead, we need to believe that what we do in this world has significance and can change people and things for the better; that what we do in the service of Christ in this world lasts. Paul the Apostle in 1 Corinthians 15:58 writes, Therefore, my beloved, be steadfast, immoveable, always excelling in the work of the Lord, because you know that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.

As we start a new calendar year it’s worth pausing and considering the amazing picture Isaiah paints in chapter 60. He speaks of the return of the exiles to Jerusalem – which occurred in 520BC – and the rebuilding of the city. This was nothing short of a miracle. God had said it would happen. And it did.

Furthermore, Isaiah wants us to see this event as a picture of God’s far greater promise and far greater success. The success of God’s future city points us to the success of God’s rule. Come what may, no human authority, no evil power is greater than God. God and his purposes can be trusted.

Let’s pray for the grace and the wisdom, the commitment and the strength to live every day in this new year in the light of God’s tomorrow.

From: https://anglicanconnection.com/risk-averse/

Daily Devotional 1-5-21

Daily Devotional 1-5-21

Becoming a Witness

The more the laity is involved in ministry, the more they want to deepen their understanding of the Word of God. The more they deepen their understanding of the Word of God, the more they want to put that understanding to work in ministry.

One thing that disturbs me about contemporary Christian jargon is the inexact use of the word witness. Too often people use the terms evangelism and witnessing interchangeably, as if they were synonyms. They are not.

All evangelism is witness, but not all witness is evangelism. Evangelism is a specific type of witnessing. Not everyone is called to be a pastor or teacher. Not everyone is called to administration or specialized ministries of mercy. Not everyone is called to be an evangelist (though we are all called to verbalize our faith). We are all called to be witnesses to Christ, to make His invisible kingdom visible. We witness by doing the ministry of Christ. We witness by being the church, the people of God.

Some of us can plant. Some of us can water. When we plant and water, God will bring an increase.

Coram Deo

How are you actively fulfilling your divine mandate to be a witness for Christ?

Passages for Further Study

1 Corinthians 3:6

Acts 1:8

Luke 24:48

From: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/becoming-witness/

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