Sally’s Friend

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Archive for February, 2005

from Insight for living

From the Insight for living site

Grace in Action Thursday, 2/17
Bible Verse: Romans 14; Colossians 3; 1 Peter 2
Series: Church Family Values

I love the version He reads…click to this verse and change to the message oh, heck here it is…
it gets me thinkin, it does and feelin the truth, the truth of this beautiful Word, this beautiful Way…

The Message
1 Peter 2: 1 – 73 –
Study This Chapter

1 Welcome with open arms fellow believers who don’t see things the way you do. And don’t jump all over them every time they do or say something you don’t agree with – even when it seems that they are strong on opinions but weak in the faith department. Remember, they have their own history to deal with. Treat them gently. 2 For instance, a person who has been around for a while might well be convinced that he can eat anything on the table, while another, with a different background, might assume all Christians should be vegetarians and eat accordingly. 3 But since both are guests at Christ’s table, wouldn’t it be terribly rude if they fell to criticizing what the other ate or didn’t eat? God, after all, invited them both to the table. 4 Do you have any business crossing people off the guest list or interfering with God’s welcome? If there are corrections to be made or manners to be learned, God can handle that without your help. 5 Or, say, one person thinks that some days should be set aside as holy and another thinks that each day is pretty much like any other. There are good reasons either way. So, each person is free to follow the convictions of conscience. 6 What’s important in all this is that if you keep a holy day, keep it for God’s sake; if you eat meat, eat it to the glory of God and thank God for prime rib; if you’re a vegetarian, eat vegetables to the glory of God and thank God for broccoli. 7 None of us are permitted to insist on our own way in these matters. 8 It’s God we are answerable to – all the way from life to death and everything in between – not each other. 9 That’s why Jesus lived and died and then lived again: so that he could be our Master across the entire range of life and death, and free us from the petty tyrannies of each other. 10 So where does that leave you when you criticize a brother? And where does that leave you when you condescend to a sister? I’d say it leaves you looking pretty silly – or worse. Eventually, we’re all going to end up kneeling side by side in the place of judgment, facing God. Your critical and condescending ways aren’t going to improve your position there one bit. 11 Read it for yourself in Scripture: “As I live and breathe,” God says, “every knee will bow before me; Every tongue will tell the honest truth that I and only I am God.” 12 So tend to your knitting. You’ve got your hands full just taking care of your own life before God. 13 Forget about deciding what’s right for each other. Here’s what you need to be concerned about: that you don’t get in the way of someone else, making life more difficult than it already is. 14 I’m convinced – Jesus convinced me! – that everything as it is in itself is holy. We, of course, by the way we treat it or talk about it, can contaminate it. 15 If you confuse others by making a big issue over what they eat or don’t eat, you’re no longer a companion with them in love, are you? These, remember, are persons for whom Christ died. Would you risk sending them to hell over an item in their diet? 16 Don’t you dare let a piece of God-blessed food become an occasion of soul-poisoning! 17 God’s kingdom isn’t a matter of what you put in your stomach, for goodness’ sake. It’s what God does with your life as he sets it right, puts it together, and completes it with joy. 18 Your task is to single-mindedly serve Christ. Do that and you’ll kill two birds with one stone: pleasing the God above you and proving your worth to the people around you. 19 So let’s agree to use all our energy in getting along with each other. Help others with encouraging words; 20 don’t drag them down by finding fault. You’re certainly not going to permit an argument over what is served or not served at supper to wreck God’s work among you, are you? I said it before and I’ll say it again: All food is good, but it can turn bad if you use it badly, if you use it to trip others up and send them sprawling. 21 When you sit down to a meal, your primary concern should not be to feed your own face but to share the life of Jesus. So be sensitive and courteous to the others who are eating. Don’t eat or say or do things that might interfere with the free exchange of love. 22 Cultivate your own relationship with God, but don’t impose it on others. You’re fortunate if your behavior and your belief are coherent. 23 But if you’re not sure, if you notice that you are acting in ways inconsistent with what you believe – some days trying to impose your opinions on others, other days just trying to please them – then you know that you’re out of line. If the way you live isn’t consistent with what you believe, then it’s wrong.
1 So if you’re serious about living this new resurrection life with Christ, act like it. Pursue the things over which Christ presides. 2 Don’t shuffle along, eyes to the ground, absorbed with the things right in front of you. Look up, and be alert to what is going on around Christ – that’s where the action is. See things from his perspective. 3 Your old life is dead. Your new life, which is your real life – even though invisible to spectators – is with Christ in God. He is your life. 4 When Christ (your real life, remember) shows up again on this earth, you’ll show up, too – the real you, the glorious you. Meanwhile, be content with obscurity, like Christ.
5 And that means killing off everything connected with that way of death: sexual promiscuity, impurity, lust, doing whatever you feel like whenever you feel like it, and grabbing whatever attracts your fancy. That’s a life shaped by things and feelings instead of by God. 6 It’s because of this kind of thing that God is about to explode in anger. 7 It wasn’t long ago that you were doing all that stuff and not knowing any better.
8 But you know better now, so make sure it’s all gone for good: bad temper, irritability, meanness, profanity, dirty talk. 9 Don’t lie to one another. You’re done with that old life. It’s like a filthy set of ill-fitting clothes you’ve stripped off and put in the fire. 10 Now you’re dressed in a new wardrobe. Every item of your new way of life is custom-made by the Creator, with his label on it. All the old fashions are now obsolete. 11 Words like Jewish and non-Jewish, religious and irreligious, insider and outsider, uncivilized and uncouth, slave and free, mean nothing. From now on everyone is defined by Christ, everyone is included in Christ.
12 So, chosen by God for this new life of love, dress in the wardrobe God picked out for you: compassion, kindness, humility, quiet strength, discipline. 13 Be even-tempered, content with second place, quick to forgive an offense. Forgive as quickly and completely as the Master forgave you. 14 And regardless of what else you put on, wear love. It’s your basic, all-purpose garment. Never be without it. 15 Let the peace of Christ keep you in tune with each other, in step with each other. None of this going off and doing your own thing. And cultivate thankfulness. 16 Let the Word of Christ – the Message – have the run of the house. Give it plenty of room in your lives. Instruct and direct one another using good common sense. And sing, sing your hearts out to God! 17 Let every detail in your lives – words, actions, whatever – be done in the name of the Master, Jesus, thanking God the Father every step of the way.
18 Wives, understand and support your husbands by submitting to them in ways that honor the Master. 19 Husbands, go all out in love for your wives. Don’t take advantage of them. 20 Children, do what your parents tell you. This delights the Master no end. 21 Parents, don’t come down too hard on your children or you’ll crush their spirits. 22 Servants, do what you’re told by your earthly masters. And don’t just do the minimum that will get you by. Do your best. 23 Work from the heart for your real Master, for God, 24 confident that you’ll get paid in full when you come into your inheritance. Keep in mind always that the ultimate Master you’re serving is Christ. 25 The sullen servant who does shoddy work will be held responsible. Being Christian doesn’t cover up bad work.
1 So clean house! Make a clean sweep of malice and pretense, envy and hurtful talk. 3 You’ve had a taste of God. 2 Now, like infants at the breast, drink deep of God’s pure kindness. Then you’ll grow up mature and whole in God.
4 Welcome to the living Stone, the source of life. The workmen took one look and threw it out; God set it in the place of honor. 5 Present yourselves as building stones for the construction of a sanctuary vibrant with life, in which you’ll serve as holy priests offering Christ-approved lives up to God. 6 The Scriptures provide precedent: Look! I’m setting a stone in Zion, a cornerstone in the place of honor. Whoever trusts in this stone as a foundation will never have cause to regret it. 7 To you who trust him, he’s a Stone to be proud of, but to those who refuse to trust him, The stone the workmen threw out is now the chief foundation stone. 8 For the untrusting it’s . . . a stone to trip over, a boulder blocking the way. They trip and fall because they refuse to obey, just as predicted. 9 But you are the ones chosen by God, chosen for the high calling of priestly work, chosen to be a holy people, God’s instruments to do his work and speak out for him, to tell others of the night-and-day difference he made for you – 10 from nothing to something, from rejected to accepted. 11 Friends, this world is not your home, so don’t make yourselves cozy in it. Don’t indulge your ego at the expense of your soul. 12 Live an exemplary life among the natives so that your actions will refute their prejudices. Then they’ll be won over to God’s side and be there to join in the celebration when he arrives.
13 Make the Master proud of you by being good citizens. Respect the authorities, whatever their level; 14 they are God’s emissaries for keeping order. 15 It is God’s will that by doing good, you might cure the ignorance of the fools who think you’re a danger to society. 16 Exercise your freedom by serving God, not by breaking the rules. 17 Treat everyone you meet with dignity. Love your spiritual family. Revere God. Respect the government. 18 You who are servants, be good servants to your masters – not just to good masters, but also to bad ones. 19 What counts is that you put up with it for God’s sake when you’re treated badly for no good reason. 20 There’s no particular virtue in accepting punishment that you well deserve. But if you’re treated badly for good behavior and continue in spite of it to be a good servant, that is what counts with God. 21 This is the kind of life you’ve been invited into, the kind of life Christ lived. He suffered everything that came his way so you would know that it could be done, and also know how to do it, step-by-step. 22 He never did one thing wrong, Not once said anything amiss. 23 They called him every name in the book and he said nothing back. He suffered in silence, content to let God set things right. 24 He used his servant body to carry our sins to the Cross so we could be rid of sin, free to live the right way. His wounds became your healing. 25 You were lost sheep with no idea who you were or where you were going. Now you’re named and kept for good by the Shepherd of your souls.

Chuck S.


I was listening to something today as I worked. I want to share this one bit with you as I could not get past it and still do linger there. Blessings, me

Chuck Swindoll Teaching
1 Corinthians 9:24-10:13
Series: “Getting Through the Tough Stuff of disqualification”
Speaking about people who were over exposed, in touch with constant spiritual things, no longer take them seriously. People, ministers who have known God and fall away. He quotes
Charles Spurgen in “ Lectures To My Students”

“Recollect as ministers that your whole life, your whole pastoral life especially will be effected by the vigor of your piety. If your zeal grows dull you will not pray well in the pulpit, you will not. You will pray worse in the family and worse in the study, alone. When your soul becomes lean, your hearers without knowing how or why will find that your prayers in public have little savor for them, they will feel your barrenness, perhaps before you perceive it yourself. Your discourses will next betray your declension. You may utter as well chosen words and as fitly ordered sentences as afore time but there will be a perceptible loss of spiritual force. You will shake your selves as other times but you find that your great strength has departed. Sharp eyes will see the gray hairs here and there long before you do. Let a man be afflicted with a decease of the heart and all evils are wrapped up in that one. Stomach, lungs, viscera, muscles and nerves will all suffer and so let a man have his heart weakened in spiritual things and very soon his entire life will feel the withering influence.”

He says, with great passion (Swindoll does),
“Very serious. How? How can that happen? For, for people like us who traffic in this book? Who use it for weddings and funerals and baptismal services, who preach from it, who, who, who give it in devotions and and and and and speak of it while along the way and teach our children in it. How can we be victims of over exposure? Oh! it is so subtle! Remember the quote from Towzer? “The deadliest perils are subtle.”

“Look back in the text” he says, “they’re all here, like a concentric circle, like, I should say like a snail shell. Starts ever so small and gets increasingly more public”. (More on the text later)

I am moved. Moved.
He speaks of horrible things, tiny hateful thoughts that if are left unchecked , grow and consume and bear fruit so foul, corrupt and then finally, death.

I feel so very warned. So very warned as I am, my passion for Christ, for His word for the Worship of a God so very True and Real has dimmed, shrunk, I am fast becoming empty and I feel so , so very warned. I fear that I have fast become overexposed and numb to the things that have all that there is to do with Holiness and Him whom we serve, out here on this level playing field. But our lives are far from games and I have nearly, so nearly, forgotten this in my daily, move the pieces around and smile days. Oh God, bring me (all of us) to the Truth that is You today, Amen.

I am so very moved by the strict love of the only wise and very real God.
Tina

Strongholds

I went to this great church on Sunday.

The pastor spoke about strongholds

A subject I know something about.

While he talked I wondered…what is my thing?

What am I hopeless about?

What stops me?

I should explain about a stronghold.

It is something small, inserted deep inside us by an enemy who hates us.

It is, perhaps an unlikely thing, a a\small thing, that lay dormant and quiet; seeping out like nuclear waste might to cause trouble that would kill us. Trouble that we can not see the cause of. Please note that this is my paraphrase anyhow, it effects every aspect of our lives and when touched by any thing, small or great, it causes us pain, ext ream reactions, hopelessness and despair.

So I was sitting in the service, taking notes like a proper Christian would and wondering all the time, What is my stronghold?

I have dealt with so many things, deep and disturbing but is there (and of course there must be) more? But like with all tests or any thing in even the remotest like area I cannot answer just then, my brain wont let me, the answer wont come just then and I will lite upon it later and it was the same on this day.

In Worship this morning it struck me, the answer.

What shall I call it?

Unbelief?

Or the belief that I (in anything and everything) can only and will only ever be able and allowed to succeed just so far.

I can not get past being financially, in need and unstable.

My emotions will always be just off and under kept.

Writing is just a pipe dream and I will not ever really play the guitar.

I will always be so so, not quite free, not quite ever unafraid and able to act on the deep desires of an untamed heart.

And my life will be just as these last months ( shoot, this year) have been, full of regret, full of disappointment only.

I was unrealistic.

I was never meant to be.

What shall I call this thing that forever and always hangs just there over my head waiting to remind that I have come too far, reached my limit, wont quite get there?

Inquisitive today,

t