God’s promise in Psalm 55:22 is in
two parts. He makes a promise for right now, while we’re struggling with
our burdens, and He also makes a promise for forever, for any and all burdens
we might experience in the course of our lives.
Sunday, May 25, 2014
"What is God's Promise?" - Casting Your Burdens on the Lord, Part 3
When we cast our burdens on the
Lord, what happens? What does He promise to do about our distress and pain? Cast your
burden on the LORD is His command, in Psalm 55:22. And His promise follows: and he will
sustain you; he will never permit the righteous to be moved.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Casting Your Burden on the Lord - Part 2: "What are Your Options?"
Everybody has burdens, and Psalm 55:22 tells us what to do with them. Cast your burden on the LORD, and he will sustain you; he will never permit the righteous to be moved.
Last time I asked “what is your burden?” Burdens may seem heavy, wearisome, painful, unfair, and destructive. But they are also given to us by our wise, kind, loving, and all-powerful Heavenly Father.
So in this post I want to focus on how we’re supposed to deal with our burdens.
Last time I asked “what is your burden?” Burdens may seem heavy, wearisome, painful, unfair, and destructive. But they are also given to us by our wise, kind, loving, and all-powerful Heavenly Father.
So in this post I want to focus on how we’re supposed to deal with our burdens.
What are your options?
As in most things, there are only a limited number of possibilities to deal with the burdens of life.
- Resent them. Sometimes people express their resentment at the burdens they carry by bitterness and blaming. But resentment only increases the weight of the burden. Not to mention that ultimately the resentment is aimed at the God of the universe. Not a good option.
Monday, May 19, 2014
Casting Your Burdens on the Lord - Part One: "What is Your Burden?"
When I became a Christian many years ago, one of the
first verses I ever “hid in my heart” was Psalm 55:22: Cast your burden on the
LORD, and he will sustain you; he will never permit the righteous to be moved.
At the time, those words seemed almost too good
to be true. They helped me deal with my problems and encouraged my growth in
grace. I read them over and over, memorizing them without even trying. Now, four
decades later, Psalm 55:22 is even more precious to me. Its truth and comfort
and promise remain constant, even though my life circumstances (and burdens)
are much different.
I thought it might be a blessing to share the verse that has
been such a blessing to me. My plan is to focus on asking and answering three
questions: for this post, what is your
burden? Next time, what are your
options? And for a final post on the verse, what is God’s promise?
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Four Steps to Climb Out of a Pit of Depression
Mark Alan Williams, one of my oldest and closest friends, has a great blog you should read called Making Life Count. Here's a guest post from Mark that should encourage all of us. Thanks for writing this, Mark!
While planting my first church I experienced the worst
depression of my life. It seemed as though I had worked so hard with such
minimal results. I felt like a terrible failure.
At meals I hardly spoke and stared blankly. I was too
embarrassed to share my feelings. I suffered silently, miserably and alone.
Sadly, I even doubted God’s love and His Word. This caused
me to question whether I should be a pastor. My negative doubts and thoughts
threw me into a tailspin of confusion and despair.
I was stuck in the
pit of depression.
Labels:
Depression,
despair,
Elijah,
faith,
gloominess,
hope,
hopelessness,
melancholy,
sadness,
unhappiness
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
Jesus, the Judge, and You
Seated facing you, across that holy bench, is God the
Father. He looks at Jesus, and smiles with radiance and love and fatherly
pride. You know His deepest delight is His Son. “This is My Beloved Son, in
whom I am well pleased!” Then He glances at
you without speaking.
The Judge of all the earth is holding in His hand a stack of
papers, and you can see that they are a list of many, many sins. With dismay you realize
this is a personal list – an exhaustive description of all your sins.
The Father begins to read. “Lying.” The word hangs there,
like a rude noise in a still room. You immediately remember a half dozen times
where you lied just recently. You’re about to confess, when Jesus
speaks. “I did it.” “What?” the Father says. “You’re the liar?” Jesus nods.
The Judge returns to the paper. “Pride, and treating other
people with contempt.” Again you flash on many occasions when you've been
guilty. But again Jesus confesses. “That’s Me. I did it.” The Father seems to be looking at Jesus
differently.
He keeps reading – a whole string of things: lust, murder in your heart, cheating, anger to manipulate others, blasphemy, callousness toward the pain of
others, coveting and envy. You know in each case that you did all these things multiple
times.
But Jesus says, “Yes, that was Me. I did them all.”
A dark cloud seems to cross the Father’s face. He stares at
Jesus for a long minute. “You? You did all these things? I am of purer eyes
than to look upon sin. You disgust Me.” And even as He turns away from Jesus, He
pronounces sentence: “You’ll be punished to the full extent of the Law, even
unto death.”
Then the Father looks at you. His smile is radiant as He says, “My beloved child, in
whom I am well pleased.”
For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. 2 Corinthians 5:21
For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. 2 Corinthians 5:21
Monday, May 5, 2014
The Signs of the Filling of the Holy Spirit
What does the “filling of the Holy Spirit” look like? What signs
or evidences mark the Spirit’s fullness in the life of a Christian?
Some Christians might be inclined to answer, The signs of the fullness of the Spirit are ecstatic utterances, or
prophetic words of knowledge, or supernatural power. But the passage that
gives the most complete answer comes from Ephesians 5:18-21. And the real
evidence of the Holy Spirit’s fullness might surprise you.
Friday, May 2, 2014
Are You "Filled with the Holy Spirit"?
Are you “filled with the Holy Spirit?”
And what does “full
of the Holy Spirit” mean, anyway? What does "the filling" look like?
I’d like to tackle those two questions in this post and the
next one. And to do so, I’ll rely upon the most definitive passage on this
subject in the Scriptures, Ephesians 5:18-21.
18 And do
not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery, but be filled with the Spirit,
19 addressing one
another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to
the Lord with your heart, 20 giving
thanks always and for everything to God the Father in the name of our Lord
Jesus Christ, 21 submitting
to one another out of reverence for Christ.
So first, what is the filling of the Holy Spirit?
Here are four key words that summarize my understanding of
the Holy Spirit's filling: 1. Contrast. And do
not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery, but…Paul points out a striking
difference between two experiences: alcoholic drunkenness versus Holy Spirit
filling. Instead of of abandoning ourselves to a drug, we are to yield ourselves
to the Spirit. Instead of being an embarrassment (debauchery) to the name of
Christ, we are to be under the sway of His Spirit.
2. Control. Essentially
Paul is talking about who or what is the dominant influence in the life of believers in Jesus. When we
repent of our sins and believe in Christ, the Holy Spirit takes up residence in
our lives (see Romans 8:9). He is the one who supplies the power to live our faith in Jesus. Spirit-filled
Christians are people who submit to the Holy Spirit.
3. Command. Be filled with the Spirit. Scripture
lists the fullness of the Spirit not as a suggestion or a good idea to investigate, but as God’s
directive for all His children.
4. Continuous.
Literally, God’s command is “be continually filled with the Holy Spirit.” Some
people speak of the Holy Spirit’s filling as an event that happened to them,
but God’s word describes it as an ongoing flow of life. More like water flowing
through a pipe than water being
poured into a container.
The filling of the Holy Spirit is God’s desire (His command)
for all believers in Christ. Obeying His command that we be filled is not
complicated. Simply pray, confess any known sin, and yielding by faith to the ministry
of the Holy Spirit.
And for next time, let’s talk about the evidence of the filling of the Holy Spirit.
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