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ThuThursdayFebFebruary25th2010 Seeing God in Different Ways
byDan Richardson Tagged No tags 0 comments Add comment

Seeing God in different ways

“No one has ever seen God; if we love one another, God abides in us and His love is perfected in us. By this we know that we abide in Him and He in us, because He has given us of His Spirit.  And we have seen and testify that the Father has sent his Son to be the Savior of the world (1st John 4:12-14).”

 

Seeing God

Christians readily confess no one has ever seen God the Father.  The Apostle Paul said God dwells in unapproachable light (1st Timothy 6:16).  But the inability to see God is not a hindrance in knowing Him because His Son Jesus, “who is at the Father’s side (John 1:18)”, has clearly revealed Him to us.  

 

Letters and correspondence make it possible to know someone without actually seeing them.  Many first century Christians found Christ through letters just as others do today.  Those who never saw Christ in person learned of His life the same way people today learn about Paul Revere, Augustine of Hippo or Julius Caesar – by reliable eye-witness reports. 

 

Christians see Jesus in the Gospel record - one of the most reliable texts of antiquity.  In one of the records, we find the words of Jesus pointing us to God the Father.  Jesus said, “Whoever has seen Me has seen the Father…Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father is in Me…(John 14).” 

 

Add to the letters the divine gift of faith, and now anyone can know the one true God personally.  In addition to the written word, the love of His children is another way to see God today. 

 

Seeing God in others

One visible sign of God is the unique ‘perfected’ love found in His followers.  In other words, one who loves God and His laws possesses perfected love.  Its perfection is verified not by its perceived quality of expression; but rather by its object: God and His laws.  When Jesus said, “if you love Me, keep My commandments (John 14:15)”, He was speaking of the laws of God.  Therefore, our love for God and His law is evidence of His handiwork and should point people to His Son Jesus Christ.    

 

For example, Jesus said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven (Matthew 5:44-45).”  The perfected love is the delight in being “sons of your Father who is in heaven”.  When the world observes such love communicated and expressed in adversity, God’s glory is on display for them to see. 

 

Commandment keeping doesn’t prove love; rather, it is a proof of love.  A love for God’s word springs from a love for Him.  Scripture never credits a love towards God to the innate ability of man.  “The mind that is set on the flesh is hostile to God, for it does not submit to God’s law; indeed it cannot (Romans 8:7).”  So if such love is not of human origin, it must be superhuman – or divine.  It is a product of regeneration and the indwelling of the Spirit of God.    

 

Authenticated by the Spirit of God

Regeneration follows an awareness of spiritual death.  Paul explained a second death: “when the commandment came, sin came alive and I died (Romans 7:9b).”  He thought moralism gave life, but not so.  Instead, it only informed him of his sin.  He knew the soul that sins shall die (Ezekiel 18).  No matter how hard he tried, without perfected love, he could not please God.    

 

But when Jesus saved him, he was born again and Christ gave him the Spirit of life.  He was able to love God’s law by the Spirit of God.  In spite of his sin, his right standing with God was secured in Jesus Christ.  All his sins were condemned to Christ on the cross.  As his mind was set on the new way of the Spirit, he pleased God and enjoyed life and peace.  The new life in the Spirit assured Paul and other early Christians that they lived in God and God lived in them. 

 

How perfected love is conveyed

Sometimes the perfect love of God is communicated in a clear Gospel message where God’s good news to sinners is made known:  There is a Holy God who deserves our worship.  As sinners, we deride Him and disregard His laws.   God in His mercy provided a sacrifice for our sins by dispensing His righteous anger upon His Son on Calvary.  Anyone who turns from sin, esteems and trusts in His Son’s sacrifice is born again into a new life.  Jesus Christ, the Son of God, rose from the dead and defeated sin and death.  He is coming back as judge and king.  The Gospel call is to repent (forsake sin) and trust the Savior.

 

While God is invisible, He is clearly revealed in the Person of Jesus Christ.  Following Christ, we see God anywhere His people are making Him known and loving one another.  Their love is not their own, it is of the Spirit of God and given at regeneration. A life saved and changed by God is good enough to talk about in public.  

 

Our Godly Heritage Quote of the Week

“A monopolistic system of education controlled by the state is far more efficient in crushing our liberty than the cruder weapons of fire and sword.”

J. Gresham Machen, Selected Shorter Writings, Theologian & Church Leader

 

 

TueTuesdayFebFebruary9th2010 Discern Truth and Error
byDan Richardson Tagged No tags 0 comments Add comment

Discern truth and error by listening to Jesus’ disciples

 

“Little children, you are from God and have overcome them, for He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world.  They are from the world; therefore they speak from the world, and the world listens to them. We are from God. Whoever knows God listens to us; whoever is not from God does not listen to us. By this we know the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error (1st John 4:4-6).”

 

Last week we dealt with the myth of the all loving God.  At the core of every false prophet is a denial of the nature of God and His Christ.  False teachings of a “non-judgmental and everything goes god” spread like wild fire.  The Lord Jesus warned of false prophets because they lure God’s people towards worldly choices that corrupt His gifts, exalt sin and waste the precious joy Jesus died to give us.       

 

Sin divided people into two groups: those who trust God and those who do not.  It is ironic that while division started with sin, God’s people are accused of being divisive.  And as God’s people are vilified, they continue to introduce other people to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ so to unite more people into true worship of the one true God.   

 

Greater is He Who is in you

Jesus said a lot about the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.  “I tell you the truth: it is to your advantage that I go away, for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you. But if I go, I will send Him to you. And when He comes, He will convict the world concerning sin and righteousness and judgment…He will guide you into all the truth, for He will not speak on His own authority, but whatever He hears He will speak…He will glorify Me (John 16:7-14).”  

 

The Holy Spirit of God guards the Christian from deceiving spirits.  To know the indwelling of the Holy Spirit is to have complete assurance of being born of God.  Jesus is God and a Christian is born of God.  Therefore, a Christian knows Jesus intimately and trusts what He says. 

 

Listening and trusting His words

When Jesus invited listeners into an intimate spiritual relationship, He described Himself as the Bread of Life.  Many received His message as too strange, intimidating and risky.  In the end, they rejected His words.  Here we see how rejecting His words and His deity go hand-in-hand.  Knowing His message was not received, Jesus said, “Do you take offense at this?  Then what if you were to see the Son of Man ascending to where He was before? (John 6:62).”  In other words, “if you can’t believe My words, then you won’t believe your eyes when you see Me ascend to heaven!” 

When a man is determined to reject God, he is ready to deny any supernatural event using whatever dopey Dan Brown theory he can find.  That is why the Apostle John ties the denial of Jesus in the flesh to false teachers.  Those who reject the incarnation of Jesus Christ as God entertain each other with empty, abstract and heretical theories of moral relativism, sexual perversion and atheism.   

 

Children of God follow Jesus.  Like Simon Peter, who rhetorically asked, “Lord, to whom shall we go?  You have the words of eternal life, and we have believed, and come to know, that You are the Holy One of God (John 6:68-69).”  Simon Peter trusted in Jesus’ words.  To him, these were words from above, not earthly words.  Although Peter’s understanding was limited, trusting in the words of Jesus was sufficient to associate him to eternity and things eternal.  Indeed, Peter placed his trust in Jesus because God was working in him (Matthew 16:17). 

 

Public, not private

Peter’s personal relationship with Jesus was public, not private.  He did not hold to a private interpretation of truth and reality nor did he keep his knowledge secret.  His witness was public and thus, verified by others.  God’s truth is for everyone to discover “knowing first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture comes from someone’s own interpretation (2nd Peter 1:20).”   

 

Unlike the clever myths found in the circles of higher critics, Peter’s “eyewitness of His majesty” was broadcasted, known and tested by public scrutiny.  He tells what he saw and heard and tied it directly to the messianic prophesies.  No one in his day refuted him because the life of Jesus was common knowledge.    

 

Discernment necessary and applied

The trend of the home church is thriving as families and individuals choose to meet in homes rather than church buildings.  Reasons for the pull out of conventional churches include a lack of strong biblical preaching from the pulpit, a low view of Scripture and lifeless worship.  While the home church movement serves a need, it is not fool proof.  More home churches mean more teachers which leads to an increase number of false teachers.  

 

Years ago I was in a bible study when a guest teacher introduced an idea concerning the person of Jesus Christ.  It turned out he rejected the fact that the Son of God had a body like ours.  The Holy Spirit reminded me of Jesus’ baptism and the Father’s voice from heaven (as recorded in Matthew 3) and helped expose the teaching as erroneous and heretical.       

 

To know God in truth demands a personal relationship with Him.  The good news is that God has come into our world in the Person of Jesus Christ.  The incarnation of the Son of God is indeed the greatest love act of all time.  While many try to misrepresent His love in Christ and

offer reasons to doubt His word, Christians apply discernment and Christ guards them from destructive teachings. 

 

Our Godly Heritage Quote of the Week

“Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that this mighty scourge of war may speedily pass away. Yet, if God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword, as was said three thousand years ago, so still it must be said ‘the judgments of the Lord are true and righteous altogether.’”  Second Inaugural Address of Abraham Lincoln, 1865

 

FriFridayFebFebruary5th2010 He Knew Me In The Womb: Thoughts from Psalm 139
byDan Richardson Tagged No tags 0 comments Add comment

How can I desire a God so different and distant?  As a finite creature, I can only know in part the things of God.  Though to discover Him seems enormous and overwhelming, He comes down to me and makes it a possibility.  To find Him is an endeavor most wonderful, humbling and consoling.

 

While God is wonderful, powerful and mighty, He finds interest in knowing me completely.  Who on earth has dedicated hours, days, weeks and years just to study and know me in and out?  Sure, my spouse and a lifetime friend know me well; but many things remain unknown to them.  The LORD searches, knows, discerns and is acquainted with me.  He knows all the words I said and will say.    

 

He knows what is best for me.  He “hems me in, behind and before”.  His boundaries, His Laws, are for my good.  No matter where I go, He is with me.  If in my foolishness I run from Him, He is there.  If my words lead me in a wrong direction, He is with me.  He is Lord of the entire universe and beyond.  He is my God.

 

If He knows me so well, shall I not know Him?  If He is so wise and powerful, shall I not desire to be with Him?  I praise Him for I am fearfully and wonderfully made!  Unique from all creation, I am made in His image and likeness.  Though I cry, I laugh.  Yet I tremble, I rejoice.  When in despair, I find my hope in Him.

 

His Word fills my mind with satisfying, thrilling thoughts.  When the knowledge of His perfections and holiness place Him at distance, I think of His Son Who came to live with me.  His love was so great that He willingly suffered and died on a cross to satisfy holy divine judgment.  Because of Jesus, I am confident to approach the Father in prayer and counsel. 

 

Knowing the richness and beauty of God produces a godly hatred towards wickedness.  Psalm 101:3, “I hate the work of those who fall away; it shall not cling to me.”  The values and beliefs of the world which oppose the counsel of God speak against the love of Jesus Christ, the very Source of life.  These poisonous ideas are like imposters of a desert caravan whose hatred toward life works to sabotage every source of water available.  As a sojourner seeking a heavenly homeland, I must resist these works that serve to waste my water supply (1st John 2:15-17, James 4:4). 

 

The enemy is too great for me.  I need God.  He knows my heart.  Though I grieve at the many times I passed Him by, when I found “more important” things to do instead of seeking Him, I am comforted because He knew it all the time.  He is calling me, and I am confident to come to Him.  

The suffering and death of the Son of God is the basis for my justification before God.  My sins were placed on Him and He died in my place.  My just condemnation is cancelled because He was condemned in my place.  I am safe because I am in Him.

 

Lord, lead me in the way everlasting.

 

Our Godly Heritage Quote of the Week

“Then, in the privacy of our chamber, he took his Bible and read that beautiful chapter in Corinthians beginning with the sublime hope of the resurrection-“For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle can be dissolved, we have a building of God, a house not made hands, eternal in the heavens;” and then kneeling down, he committed himself and her whom he loved to the protective care of the Father in heaven.” 

Anna Jackson, recounting what her husband Stonewall did before answering the call to serve in the Civil War. (Source: Battlefield and Blessings, Terry Tuley, LivingInk Books)

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