Friday 15 May 2020

Waiting in Faith

"Wait on the LORD; be of good courage, and He shall strengthen your heart. Wait, I say, on the LORD."                                                                   
                                                                                                Psalm 27:14.  NKJV

This Psalm was penned by David - a man who knew what it was like waiting for God to move. He had to wait 10 - 13 years after Samuel had anointed him, before he became king. That was a long time, especially when he was chased about by Saul, who was intent on killing him, because of his jealousy.

In our 'hurry up,' world, waiting for anything can cause great tension which can lead to frustration and anger. We want things now! No one enjoys waiting in a queue at the supermarket or bank; and traffic lights are a pain, especially when they're there because of road works, and they're only letting 3 cars through each time. When a car jumps these lights and we have to wait for them to come through, we are tempted to glare at the person and say a few things that are not encouraging to them.  
God wants us to have patience and wait for what He is doing. To rush ahead of Him, doing our own thing or trying to fix things ourselves, can lead to disappointment or even disaster. 

Sometimes, God tests our patience and that is why we enter the 'waiting room.' But not always. God has a plan for us, and for that plan to be successful, He has to push a few buttons elsewhere; so that when we proceed, all will go well.

When God says, 'Wait,' He means it and wants us to do this in faith. We ask Him for things and He tells us not to doubt but believe and then receive. (Mark 11:22-24). Doubt totally negates anything that we ask for in prayer. We have to have faith and believe, whether it is for healing, for a job or whatever else we are seeking for. It may take some time, but during this time, it would be foolish to allow doubt to creep in. The devil loves that: 'God didn't say that, did He?'  Genesis 3:1- 4.

Waiting may be tedious but do it anyway from a faith-filled heart. Whatever you are waiting for God to do for you, stand firm and believe, because it will surely come  (Habakkuk 2:3).

Copyright 2020 Grahame Howard



















Thursday 14 May 2020

Life in Lockdown

"13 Brethren, I do not count myself to have apprehended; but one thing I do, forgetting those things that are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead, 14 I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus."
                                                                                             Philippians 3:13-14.  NKJV

I don't know about you, but I'm getting a little tired of the endless debates and updates pertaining to the Coronavirus. Every newspaper, radio and television station, have become experts in this field. They fight for the best stories and answers and it can be so confusing.

The virus itself is awful and we could make many comments ourselves if we don't check ourselves. I feel however, that the best comment that we could say is:

'This is the day, the LORD has made; we will rejoice and be glad in it.'
                                                                                            Psalm 118:24.  NKJV

What with all the sickness and fear that is around, it is a tonic to just stop and declare something positive and this verse, I feel, fits the bill. We have not yet apprehended or laid hold of a cure or vaccine, and the full decline of the virus, but we can make the choice to move forward to the goal when one day soon, the virus will be conquered. 

But until then, we can choose to rejoice and be glad in each day that God gives us. There is so much sadness, depression, fear and anger around because of the Coronavirus and what it is doing to people's lives. But as Christians, we can try to put a smile on every face we see by just giving them a smile. It costs us nothing and it is infectious. Smile and usually others smile too.

At the moment, unless God intervenes, we cannot change things. But we can spread a few smiles around. What's more, it will make you feel good about yourself too. So press towards the goal  and each morning, shout out:

'This is the day the LORD has made, we (I) will rejoice and be glad in it.'

Lift the pressure off. There's life out there, let us live it and help others to do the same. Put some praise music on; get your bible out and start praying. As Winston Churchill once said, 'We will never surrender!'

Wednesday 13 May 2020

Living for Jesus

"I have been crucified with Christ, it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life that I now live in the flesh, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me."
                                                                                                      Galatians 2:20.  NKJV

In verse 19, Paul had said that he had died to the law that he might live for God. He knew that Jesus had died in his place - for his sins and that he now had a new life, although he was still living in the flesh. He was now alive in Jesus, Jesus lived in his heart. The old Paul's life was over.

And if you're a Christian, yours is too. You belong to Jesus. You were crucified with Him and have risen to a new life. However, you still live in the flesh at the moment; and at times that can be a problem. We can only live our new life by faith, we can't do it any other way. Therefore, we will still make mistakes; we will still fail at times and we'll still undergo temptations.

Living the Christian life is not that we are trying our best, but rather that we allow Jesus to live in and through us by faith. By doing this, we become His representatives, we make a stand for Him wherever we are. We need to take promises such as, 'I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.' Philippians 4:13 and 
'Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us.' Romans 8:37. Don't forget that as Christians, 'We walk by faith not by sight.' 2 Corinthians 5:7. To try and make it alone - without consulting with Jesus, we will only make a fool of ourselves, in fact, things may go horribly wrong. We need Him. 'Yes, but I keep letting Him down,' you may say, 'I try not to do what I do but then end up doing it.' Then, join the club. We are all the same. We are works in progress and we do things by faith; we never give up, although we may be tempted by this or that or say something bad. We still live by faith in our fleshly body.

Are you worried that you are not doing enough to deserve a relationship with Jesus? And are you fretting that you could lose your eternal life because you have and keep messing things up? Firstly, You can never earn God's love or be worthy of it by doing good works. It doesn't work that way. We receive His love by Grace. Secondly, there is nothing we can do or fail to do that will force us to forfeit our eternal life. God is faithful and He gave Himself for you so that one day, you will meet Him face to face, in Heaven and I know, He will throw His arms around you.

Copyright 2020 Grahame Howard

Tuesday 12 May 2020

You are an Epistle of Christ

"(2) You are our epistle written in our hearts, known and read by all men; (3) clearly you are an epistle of Christ, ministered by us, written not with ink but by the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of flesh, that is, of the heart."
                                                                                               2 Corinthians 3:2-3  NKJV

In the early church, letters of recommendation were often sent with Christians clarifying their position of ministers of God. Otherwise, anyone could turn up claiming to be a prophet, apostle or whatever. These letters, although probably not foolproof, helped to certify that they were who they claimed to be and with the rightful qualifications. In today's world, a certificate of ordination helps to clarify a person's credibility as a minister but not that they are born again or baptised in the Holy Spirit.

Dwight L Moody said:


'Where one man reads the bible, a hundred read you and I.'

The recommendation that Paul is speaking about here, was not written in ink. It was written by The Holy Spirit and Jesus was the author. As Dwight L Moody said, many men may read and study the bible; they may know it off by heart and be able to quote every scripture they need. But that is only head knowledge if there is no fruit from their labours. As we've seen in our earlier commentaries, people are not all that impressed with what you know, it is what they see - in you and I. 
Dwight L Moody went on to say:

'I wouldn't give much for what can be accomplished though sermons, if we don't preach Christ by our lives.'

Again we come to, what do people see in you? Do they see Jesus or the knowledge that you may have? If you have both, that is fine. But if it is just knowledge they see, then some tweaking needs to be done before anything of spiritual value will come.
You can preach a great sermon and have no fruit from it at all. If that happens, you need to be ready to analyse yourself, seek God and find out what is missing. You may speak to many people about Jesus but, if nothing happens, are you doing this in your own strength or through the power of God?
Look at our scripture again and focus on, 'written not with ink but by the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of flesh, that is, of the heart.'
We can have stony hearts, made brittle by life events - things that have wounded us over the years. These can prevent us from flowing in the Holy Spirit. If this is the case with you, lay it all before God and let Him deal with it all - heart surgery. Once that is out of the way, just allow the Spirit of God to lead you and speak through you in all ways so that you become an epistle of Christ with God's recommendation of your credibility, written on your heart.

'Lord Jesus, Come and live in my heart in such a way, that I am a living testimony of Yourself, to all I meet and speak with today. In Jesus' Name. Amen.











Monday 11 May 2020

Love and Compassion

"But a certain Samaritan, as he journeyed, came where he was. And when he saw him, he had compassion."                                                  Luke 10:33 of 10:30-37 NKJV

The road to Jericho, at the time of Jesus, could be quite a dangerous place to walk along, on your own. Thieves often attacked and killed people, robbing them of all they had. Here, a young Jewish man was walking along the road from Jerusalem and suffered this fate. He was severely beaten, possibly stabbed, and he was left for dead having his goods and clothes taken from him.

A priest came along, took one look at him and walked by on the other side of the road. He was followed by a Levite, probably an assistant priest or worshipper from the tribe of Levi. He looked but chose to do the same, walk by. Before we are tempted to judge these people, let's stop and think of the times that we may have done this. Maybe there was a homeless drunk laying on the pavement, ranting and raving and we've given this person a wide berth. Maybe there was a beggar on the street and we have done the same. In a way, there really is no difference.

Next came a Samaritan and love in action took place. Now Samaritan's were the scum of the earth as far as a Jew was concerned. Very rarely would they associate with one another. And yet, this man, jumped down from his donkey and checked the wounded man over. He exercised love, pouring oil on his wounds and very carefully binding these. He must have used some of his only clothing, ripping them to form bandages as he probably would not have had a first aid kit with him.
He put the man on his own animal and led him to an inn where he made financial provision for the young chap to be taken care of and fed, before his return.

We can lecture and preach to people until they are bored out of their brain and walk away. But when we become the bible to them; when we are living it and show them Jesus, they will respond. There are a lot of hurting people in our world today, especially now with the Coronavirus killing people. They need compassion; they need love, they need to see this in action at this time. They may not go to a church because they may be blaming God for all of their pain. But having us just showing them compassion, listening and helping them when we can, can be a lifeline to them.

We are told by the Coronavirus experts, that life will probably never be the same, as far as we know it. But Jesus will. He never changes, 'Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever.' (Hebrews 13:8). He will be with us forever and His love and compassion will never end. 

The old song says it all: 'What the world needs now, is love, sweet love; it's the only thing that there's just too little of.' is so true and so much needed. As Christians, can we agree that we will begin to show more of Jesus' love and compassion to people on a daily basis. The world needs it!

Copyright 2020 Grahame Howard

Do what you can

"She has done what she could."                                         Mark 14:8.  NKJV

Nothing we do for God is ever wasted. Whether it's a massive thing we do, or something that is done in the blink of an eye, it is relevant and useful to Him. In fact, He sees no difference. It can be a major thing that gets a lot of recognition in the world. On the other hand, it can be something that people do not notice. You can be. cleaner in a church or the pastor. To God, you are both doing an equally, worthy job.
We may not be able to do a great thing for God, but if each of us will do something, however small, much will be accomplished for Him and He will appreciate our efforts.

Zechariah 4:10 says, 'For who has despised the day of small things.'

People may look at what you have done and consider that it is very insignificant. Take for instance the woman who anointed Jesus' feet with very expensive oil of spikenard. There was an uproar because the onlookers started saying that the perfume could have been sold and the proceeds given to the poor. (Mark 14:3-9). However, Jesus said: 

'Leave her alone. Why do you trouble her? She has done a good work for Me. (7) For you have the poor with you always and whenever you wish you may do them good; but Me you do not have always. (8) She has done what she could. She has come beforehand to anoint my body for burial.'     Mark 14:6-8

To the onlookers, this act was wrong. To Jesus, it was received as her act of love towards Him and He was not going to let her be overlooked. 'She has done what she could'.

In Luke 21:1-4, Jesus is looking at the people putting their gifts into the treasury. Many are giving out of their vast wealth; but a poor widow comes along and puts in two mites, which was worth about an old penny in British money. This was not a lot but it was all the widow had. She gave everything. A small amount to many of the rich gentry, but a fortune in Jesus' eyes. She had done what she could and that was everything.

We should never despise the small tasks that people do, and we should consider ourselves worthy whether we clean toilets or preach the gospel. All is important to Jesus.

You may be struggling with the fact that the things you do for God are so small in comparison to others. Be encouraged, for the things you do are all recorded in Heaven and you will be rewarded for your hard and valued work. 'Yes but..' Yes but nothing, as long as you do what you can, God is blessed and when He is blessed, you in return will be blessed as well.

Copyright 2020 Grahame Howard

Sunday 10 May 2020

'I don't know what to do, Lord'

"O our God, will You not judge them? For we have no power against this great multitude that is coming against us, nor do we know what to do, but our eyes are upon You."
                                                                                               2 Chronicles 20:12 of 2 Chronicles 20 NKJV

Jehoshaphat was faced with a great problem, a multitude of armies were coming against them to attack Israel - Moabites, Ammonites and Meuntites and he became afraid. But rather than cower in fear, he declared a fast and called the nation to seek the Lord.

The people came from far to seek God. This may have been from a necessity to repent and ask for God's favour and forgiveness, as well as ask for wisdom and power to face this incredible problem that was imminent. When our hearts are right before the Lord, He reveals His will and brings protection. When our hearts are not right, it's possible that He will allow things to happen to us in order to get our attention. This all helps to keep our focus on Him and Him only; not on the battle that we face. He is able to take care of that. It is more important that we make sure our walk is right with Him. When we do this, the rest will follow. This all comes from prayer and possible fasting. God doesn't want us to deliberately starve ourselves. Fasting is a way that we can show Him that we mean business and we are willing to make sacrifices in this way. This helps us to win.

Jehoshaphat reminded God that they were in the place that He had provided to their descendants, the people who were attacking them, God had prevented their descendants from attacking and they were now showing their thankfulness by trying to kill them and take their land. At that time, their descendants, had stood in the place and declared that if disaster should ever come upon them, they would cry out to God and He would hear their prayer and save them (verse 9)

Reminding God of His promises is never rude, pompous or out of line. We have a relationship with Him - a covenant, and He holds that dearly and so should we. Through Jesus, we have a wonderful relationship with God, and He wants us to trust and rely on Him. Jehoshaphat said, 'Lord, we don't know what to do, but our eyes are upon You.' (Paraphrase) It was almost like he was saying, 'Lord we don't know what to do, but You do and we're counting on You.' Nothing wrong with that, because we are displaying our trust and friendship with Him. 

Our whole relationship with Jesus would be greatly improved, if we could say, Jesus, our eyes are upon You.' Just think about that. Whatever problem came our way, if we were only to say to Him, 'Jesus, we don't know what to do, but our eyes are upon You, because You know the way forward, because You are the way. We are counting on You and You only.'

There would be no mountain too big for us to conquer. Try it.

Copyright 2020 Grahame Howard



Grace

" Then Paul stood up, and motioning with  his  hand said, “Men of Israel, and you who fear God, listen:   17  The God of this people  I...