Friday, May 9, 2014

A Call to Love



Day 5

A Call to Love . . . and to Death
John Piper writes the following on how dying to self is the key to truly loving (love is not self-seeking).
§  Being long-suffering means dying to the desire for an untroubled life.
§  Having no jealousy means dying to the desire for unshared affection.
§  Not boasting means dying to the desire to call attention to our successes.
§  Not acting unbecomingly means dying to the desire to express our freedom offensively.
§  Not seeking our own way means dying to the dominance of our own preferences.
§  Not being easily provoked means dying to the need for no frustrations.
§  Not taking account of wrongs means dying to the desire for revenge.
§  Bearing all things and enduring all things means dying to the desire to run away from the pain of obedience.

Love at home, love at the office, love in the neighborhood, love in the body of believers? Are we willing to die? If we are this satisfied with all that God is for us in Christ, then the promises will surely come true: we will bear much fruit, we will live forever, we will be with the Lord, and the Father will honor us.
When Jesus calls a man, Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, he bids him come and die. Come. Reckon yourself dead to sin and alive to love.

How does this impact your grasp of 1 Corinthians 13:4-7)? 
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Thursday, May 8, 2014






Day 4

Rejoice in Hope, Resist Cynicism


1 Peter 1:3 Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ to his great mercy he has given us new birth into a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.

Psalm 42:5 Why are you down cast, O my soul?  Why so disturbed within me?   Put your hope in God, for I will yet praise him, my Savior and my God.

Hebrews 6:19-20 We have this hope as an anchor for the soul, firm and secure.  It enters the inner sanctuary behind the curtain where our forerunner, Jesus has entered on our behalf…

Hope is essential and fundamental to Christian life.  Our source of hope is our Savior Jesus Christ.  We place our hope in God who is absolutely trustworthy.  His Words will not fail.  We can stand on His promises.  Hope is described as “living”, not frail or perishable.  It serves as an “anchor, firm and secure”.  Hope is a belief and confidence that positive outcomes will be attained.  It focuses on strengths and resilience. Hope is a catalyst for change and healing.

1 Corinthians 13:7 It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

Love always protects, always trusts, always hopes, and always perseveres.  “Always “  encompasses all things.  We can all hope for some things.  But God calls us farther and deeper into love for Him, for one another, and for the lost.  It is impossible to have this love apart from God’s help.

Cynicism is an attitude characterized by a general distrust of others.  Life experiences, media, and education contribute to the unrealistic negativity.  To believe the best about people and give them the benefit of the doubt is considered naïve and gullible.  Love is willing to take a risk with others.  Love believes that good is possible for anyone.

Hope thrives in a Christian’s personal relationship with God.  Faith, hope, and love are intertwined.  Faith grows as we meditate upon God’s Word.  Prayer is powerful.  We are blessed to have a wealth of Christian books at our fingertips.  Fellowship on a regular basis with Christian friends brings encouragement, love, and spiritual growth.  Would you like to be better equipped for evangelism?  Each of us has the opportunity to attend the Christian Life and Witness Course from Rock the Lakes for exceptional training to present hope to the lost.   (A series of three classes will be held May 3rd, 10th, and 17th from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm at the CMA of North East; other dates and locations are available.)   Let hope rise in your heart.

If you are reading this after these classes have started, you can come to the remaining sessions even if you have missed the first one.  And if you wish to make up the first one, a make-up opportunity will be provided.  Look at www.rockthelakes.org for times and locations.


Questions for Reflection


Write out your vision of hope.  For example, think of a relationship or circumstance that has been darkened by cynicism.  What would it look like if hope replaced cynicism?  
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Look at Psalm 42:5,  the second Scripture quoted in this devotional.  It is this verse which prompted the late Martin Lloyd-Jones to write,
Have you realized that most of your unhappiness in life is due to the fact that you are listening to yourself instead of talking to yourself?  Now this man’s treatment [in Psalm 42] was this: instead of allowing this self to talk to him, he starts talking to himself. “Why art thou cast down, O my soul?” he asks. His soul had been depressing him, crushing him. So he stands up and says,: “Self, listen for moment, I will speak to you.” (Spiritual Depression, 20-21)

John Piper then concludes:
On this side of the cross, we know the greatest ground for our hope: Jesus Christ crucified for our sins and triumphant over death. So the main thing we must learn is to preach the gospel to ourselves:
Listen, self: If God is for you, who can be against you? He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for you, how will he not also with him graciously give you all things? Who shall bring any charge against you as God’s elect? It is God who justifies. Who is to condemn? Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for you. Who shall separate you from the love of Christ? (Romans 8:31–35 paraphrased)
Learn to preach the gospel to yourself. If this psalmist were living after Christ, that is what he would have done.
So…this is our practice for today.  When your soul is preaching against hope to you, do not just listen…preach the gospel back to yourself!  And the gospel fills us with hope and love like that found in the greatest love song, 1 Corinthians 13! 







Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Love Perseveres




DAY #3

Love Perseveres

“Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance.”
I Corinthians 13:7

When troubles and fiery trials come our way, Peter and James tell us to be truly glad – that it is an opportunity for great and wonderful joy! (1 Peter 1:6-7, James 1:2-4, 1 Peter 4:12-13) Why?  That sounds foolish to most of us.  But when our faith is tested, our endurance has a chance to grow and when our endurance is fully developed, we will be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing! 
Our faith and hope support our love by enabling us to endure through every difficult circumstance.  Oswald Chambers writes,
 “Perseverance is more than endurance.  It is endurance combined with absolute certainty that what we are looking for is going to happen.  Perseverance means more than just hanging on, which may be only exposing our fear of letting go and falling….Then there is the call to spiritual perseverance.  A call not to hang on and do nothing, but to work deliberately, knowing with certainty that God will never be defeated….”
How do we continue to show kindness to those who are unlovable or continue to pray for a loved one for months or years when we see no change?  We don’t try harder.  We pray for the power of the Holy Spirit to increase our faith, to put His hope in us, and to overflow with His love.  We are incapable on our own to love the unlovable for an extended period of time, but filled with the Holy Spirit we are capable of the genuine love of Christ in any and every circumstance.  We can do all things through Him who gives us strength! 
Because we have faith that God knows, plans and directs our lives for the good, that He who suffered and died for us will not abandon us, but carry us through, that God does indeed answer prayer, that our future is secure with Him, that He fulfills all His promises and that He loves us to the uttermost.  And because we put our hope in this living, all-powerful, unchanging, loving God, then we are able to not only endure but persevere – loving and working “deliberately, knowing with certainty that God will never be defeated”.


Questions for Reflection

Can you think of some circumstances where your love was tested and greatly strengthened by difficulty?  
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Why is perseverance such an important element of love?  The word is used only here, but in the term patience (v. 3) and the extended teaching regarding the permanence of love (vs. 8-13) we see that the fact that love endures and lasts and sticks-to-it is one of the distinguishing marks of higher love.  Why? 

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Where is the perseverance of your love being tested right now?
Write out a prayer to God about this.

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Thursday, May 1, 2014

Love always protects, always trusts, always hopes, and always perseveres. (1 Corinthians.13:7)






Day 2

Love always protects, always trusts, always hopes, and always perseveres. (1 Corinthians.13:7)

When you hear this verse, what does it make you think of?  Could it be you thought of your husband and children?    Who loves us more than our family?  God does!  Where do we learn to love the way God does?  God shows us His Love in His word, in our prayers, in our conversations with fellow Christians, in our churches, in our circumstances, and sometimes as we just listen and practice love.

If one of your children does something that you do not approve of, do you ignore it, talk about it or forgive it?  Is there room for discipline?  Yes, of course.  If we love as God does, we will discipline as God would, with love and faith that we are doing the right thing.  We want to be loving and forgiving; we can with the help of the Holy Spirit.  It is good to keep good relationships with our children; we never know what tomorrow will bring.  We have to persevere through trials in this life and trust that God will use us to help our children grow in their love for Him.

If a friend disappoints us, should we never talk to them again?  No, we go and talk about the problem with them and love them enough to forgive them.  Is this easy, no, but it has been said, “love covers a multitude of sin”.  So true, if we are truly one of God’s children, with the help of the Holy Spirit we can forgive.  Without Him, it is very difficult to do.

      God has promised to never leave us or forsake us.  (Hebrews 13:5b)

We could name many incidents in our life of betrayal but in all of the circumstances we must always remember, God loves us and is in all of our lives all of the time.  His love is greater than we can imagine and He will see us through anything.

We must love God and practice loving others so that one day when we stand before the Lord He will say, “well done thou good and faithful servant”.


Dear God,

Help us to put you first in all things, to love others as you have loved us, Show us how to live our lives for you and fulfill the destiny you have chosen for us. 

Amen


Questions for Reflection

The devotional reads: “God shows us His love in His Word, in our prayers, in our conversations with fellow Christians, in our churches, in our circumstances, and sometimes as we just listen and practice love.”

Can you think of examples where you have learned of God’s love through each of these? 

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Presently, who do you need to talk with about something that they have done to hurt you and challenge your love?  Whose sin does your love need to cover? 

Read and reflect on Ephesians 5:1-2 as a help in the circumstances where your love needs to rise to the occasion and hang in there with someone you find difficult:

Follow God’s example, therefore, as dearly loved children and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.

How does this help your perspective?  Your courage? 

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What further help do you need to take the necessary steps to protect, hope and persevere in your love ? 

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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Love: Be Constructive





Week 7

Day 1

Love: Be Constructive

Buffets can be great places!  We can eat a lot or a little (I’ve never done the latter, but I hear it can happen).  We can eat what’s good for us…or…not so much.  We can eat fast or slow.  Kids can eat frozen pizza and chicken nuggets while mom and dad eat crab legs. The point is, we can pick what we want.  Assuming that the buffet has good food (that’s the rub, buffets tend to be lesser quality), it can be a happy dining experience, a win-win for each person, a triumph of individual tastes and free choice. 

Unfortunately we have a cultural view of love which likes to treat love as a buffet.  We like to pick and choose what we think tastes good to us…and leave behind what doesn’t.  That, according to our Higher Love song, 1 Corinthians 13, is not love at all.  Look at verses 6 and 7.
Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

One way to summarize this powerful passage is “love does not approach life like a buffet, choosing the parts of “love” which please ourselves (verse 5 love is not self-seeking), and abandoning the course when it ceases to taste good.”

Max Lucado writes,
What if parents could do this with kids?  “I’ll take a plate of good grades and cute smiles, and I’m passing on the teenage identity crisis and tuition bills.”…and spouse with spouse,  “H’m, how about a bowl of good health and good moods.  But job transfers, in-laws, and laundry are not on my diet.”  It wouldn’t be love…Love is willing to accept all things.[1]

Verse 6-7 provide the answer to “buffet love” – Verse 6 emphasizes that love is not a feeling (what pleases me) but a guide to rejoice in the truth, what pleases God rather than what pleases me.  And note the prominence of the word always in verse 7.  It literally reads (in original language) bears all things, believes all things, etc.  The idea is that love is not buffet style.  It is more like mom’s kitchen.  You know, “I am not running a restaurant here, you eat what you’re given you clean your plate.”  This “mom’s kitchen” kind of higher love is the love The Father shows us in His Son Jesus, it is the love that is poured into us by the Holy Spirit, and is the love described in this greatest of all love songs, 1 Corinthians 13. 


Questions for Reflection

Reflect on the aspects of higher love from 1 Corinthians 13:4-7:

Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.

Which of these do you find appealing to your taste, like the items you choose in a buffet? 
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Which of these do you find yourself passing over like the things you don’t like in a buffet? 
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Search your heart: why do you make the above choices?  Usually it has to do with past or current circumstances where love is tough.

Based on this devotional, write out a prayer expressing your heart to the Lord. 
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[1] Max Lucado, A Love Worth Giving















Sunday, March 30, 2014





Day 5

A Call to Love . . . and to Death
John Piper writes the following on how dying to self is the key to truly loving (love is not self-seeking).
§  Being long-suffering means dying to the desire for an untroubled life.
§  Having no jealousy means dying to the desire for unshared affection.
§  Not boasting means dying to the desire to call attention to our successes.
§  Not acting unbecomingly means dying to the desire to express our freedom offensively.
§  Not seeking our own way means dying to the dominance of our own preferences.
§  Not being easily provoked means dying to the need for no frustrations.
§  Not taking account of wrongs means dying to the desire for revenge.
§  Bearing all things and enduring all things means dying to the desire to run away from the pain of obedience.

Love at home, love at the office, love in the neighborhood, love in the body of believers? Are we willing to die? If we are this satisfied with all that God is for us in Christ, then the promises will surely come true: we will bear much fruit, we will live forever, we will be with the Lord, and the Father will honor us.
When Jesus calls a man, Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, he bids him come and die. Come. Reckon yourself dead to sin and alive to love.

How does this impact your grasp of 1 Corinthians 13:4-7)? 
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Contributors:  Claudia Brydon, Chris Firth, Bob Klecan, Ed Pierce





Day 4

The Cross and Love


During the 1720’s Count Nicholas von Zinzendorf visited a Dusseldorf art museum, where he was especially moved by a particular painting of the crucified Jesus.  The painter had painted the picture with the intent of conveying his love for Christ.  Below the picture were the words:
            All this I did for thee,
What hast thou done for Me?

Zinzendorf’s heart was affected.  Christ’s love as demonstrated in the cross became the constraining power of his life, as 2 Corinthians 5:14 states, “The love of Christ constrains (compels) me.”  “I have,” he exclaimed, “but one passion, tis He and He only.”  It was the dying love of Christ mastering his life that fitted Zinzendorf for the work he had to do.
Zinzendorf returned home to provide spiritual leadership for about three hundred refugees from religious persecution, the majority of which were Moravians, spiritual descendents of the Czech martyr Jon Hus.  The goal of Zinzendorf and the elders was to lead their souls deeper into the love of Christ, into which they had been baptized. 
In August 1727 the community experienced a breakthrough of love and unity during a special Lord’s Supper celebration.  They asked the Lord to “keep us in the saving power of His grace, and not allow a single soul to be drawn away to itself and its own merits from that Blood-and-cross theology, on which our salvation depends. 
Following this experience the Moravian brethren were possessed by a zeal for missions.  The Spirit breathed in power on the young and the old.  People’s hearts were filled with a burning love for the Savior who died for them.  They emphasized Isaiah 53:10-12 as their chief incentive, from which they drew their battle cry, “To win for the Lamb that was slain the reward of His sufferings.”  They started a 24-hour prayer vigil which lasted 100 years.  

During the following 25 years they sent out more than 100 missionaries.   It is worth noting that this is before the start of the modern missions movement. 
Some of these Moravian missionaries met John Wesley on a boat bound for America.  In the presence of their sincere and wholehearted devotion to Christ Wesley realized that his own religiosity was bankrupt.  He was later converted to Christ at a Moravian chapel in London, and became the founder of Methodism and the Great Awakening in England. 
William Carey, the “Father of modern missions,” was also greatly influenced by Moravian missionaries.  Carey went on, against the overwhelming opposition of his church associates, to be the founder of a missions movement that really continues, in many different waves and manifestations, to this day. [1]

Think about this.  One artist painted to communicate his deep love for Jesus. One man’s faith caught fire during this encounter with the suffering Savior and became the spark for a group of three hundred refugees to catch fire with a  “blood and cross” motivation that impacted the entire world for Christ.  Our desire is that of the Moravian leaders, to lead our souls deeper into the death of Christ.  It is certain that, if we go there, we will be changed.  Whether we impact people around the world, in our own homes, or in our communities, we will be people of new impact and power.  Author John Stott says that the cross is “the blazing fire at which the flame of our love is kindled, but we have to get near enough to it for its sparks to fall on us.[2]

                           Questions for Reflection


Re-read John Stott’s words in the last sentence of the devotional.  How will the cross kindle the flame of our love?

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Specifically, if the flame of our love is kindled by the cross, how will this affect this week’s theme, love keeps no record of wrongs? 
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The Moravian’s chief  incentive was Isaiah 53:10-12.  Read and reflect and ask the Lord to motivate you to a deeper and fuller love and service through the truth of the cross.  


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[1] This story is summarized from several sources, most significantly From Jerusalem to Irian Jaya by Ruth Tucker and Come to the Lord’s Table by Claude King.  
[2] From What Christ Thinks of the Church by John Stott