Category Archives: General

No Favorites On God’s Team

He shows no partiality to princes and does not favor the rich over the poor. (Job 34:19)

If you have ever been picked last to be on a team, you know what it is like to be on the short end of the “favorites “stick. My middle school years were difficult; I was just trying to fit in and figure out what it meant to be “in the middle” between elementary school and high school. Then there was the middle school P.E. experience. The top athletes would be chosen as captains and they would pick their teams for whatever sport we were playing at the time. What a dismal experience it is to see the line dwindle down as each name is called, and you are the last one standing there! And then I would hear those soul-crushing words, always uttered in a disgruntled tone: “I guess we’ll have to take Boland.”

Well, I have good news for you today: God does not play favorites! The ground is level at the foot of the cross. God does not prefer the prince over the pauper. He loves equally. In God’s economy, there is no such thing as “the wrong side of the tracks.” Why? Because God is on both side of them! God loves you so much that He sent His Son to die in your place so that He could have relationship with you.

Now, God does not need any of us. But He wants us! How wonderful is that truth?! We are not needed, but we are wanted. Regardless of where this message finds you today, you can be sure that God is quite fond of you! You are the apple of His eye and the object of His Almighty affection. He loves you unconditionally, and He has loved you from eternity past (2 Timothy 1:9). There never was a time when God did not love you . . . AND there will never be a time when He stops loving you. He will not love you less when you mess things up, and He will not love you more when you get it right. He simply loves you.

He wanted me to remind you of that truth today.

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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Knees Knocking? Kneel On Them!

Then you will call on me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you. (Jeremiah 29:12)

Did you know there is a fail-proof and a foolproof method for curing knocking knees? Kneel on them, and lift your voice to heaven. Regardless of what is causing you anxiety — whether it is personal, professional, or relational — getting on your knees in prayerful communion with God is the way to receive the peace that passes all understanding.

Jesus opened the way for us to come into God’s presence 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. “Ask and it will be given to you,” He assures us; “seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you” (Matthew 7:7). After all, it’s not like we are coming to God with something He doesn’t already know. God knows your name, He knows the number of hairs on your head, and He knows everything about every circumstance in your life, because it is God who has ordained all things in your life for His glory and your ultimate good. He obviously knows the answer to our every question and the solution to our every problem before we bring any of them to Him. But God delights in us when we come into His presence to share with Him what is going on in our lives.

The Bible commands us to pray; prayer is to be the bedrock of every believer’s life. But just beyond the command is God’s cosmic care for us. Like any good father, God loves it when we come to Him. And we shouldn’t just come to Him when things are hard! God loves to hear from us when things are going well. God wants us to be in constant communion with Him for any reason at any time throughout each day.

“Do not fear, for I am with you,” God has told us; “do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand” (Isaiah 41:10). Regardless of what may be causing your knees to knock, get on those knees and bring your fears to God! Come before the throne of grace and tell Him what is on your heart. The more you pray, the more you practice the presence of God, and that is the best practice in the world to keep your knees from knocking.

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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Is it Time for a Faith-Lift?

Walk by faith, not by sight. (2 Corinthians 5:7)

In today’s world, it is much easier to live by sight rather than by faith. The sights and sounds of the world we live in capture our attention and control our affections. All too often we find ourselves living for the here and now, rather than the there and then. But God wants us to live according to His promises, even though we may not see them being fulfilled in the present moment. Living in this way empowers us to live in the now with a view to the then.

The Bible’s “Faith Hall of Fame” chapter, Hebrews 11, tells us that this is the kind of faith that “the ancients were commended for.” The chapter goes on to describe numerous heroes of the Christian faith, both named and unnamed, who “were all commended for their faith, yet none of them received what had been promised. God had planned something better for us so that only together with us would they be made perfect” (Hebrews 11:2, 39-40). These men and women of God did not see God’s promises fulfilled during their time on this earth, but they held firm to their total trust in God’s promises, often enduring great hardship and suffering as they did so.

Martin Luther King Jr. said that “Faith is taking the first step, even when you don’t see the whole staircase.” We know that God is sovereign and in complete control of everything; not a bird falls to the ground apart from His will (Matthew 10:29). When we live our lives in the light of that truth, we can look to Him and trust where He is leading us. We don’t need to know where the inevitable twists and turns will appear in the path He has set us on. All we need to do is trust the One who is leading us every step of the way. When Paul tells us to walk by faith and not by sight, he is telling us to build our lives on the things that have eternal value and to live in light of eternity, just like the great heroes of the faith who have gone before us.

Every child of God needs an occasional faith-lift. We need to be reminded of God’s plan and purpose for our lives and resist our natural inclination to follow our own plan and purpose. We must recommit to leaning not on our own understanding, but to putting all our weight on our Lord and following wherever He leads us. A faith-lift shifts our trust away from self and puts back where it should be: on our Savior.

We need a faith-lift to elevate us above our feelings, which can be so fickle. Our feelings change like the breeze: we feel one way in this moment and another way in the next. A good faith-lift will lift us past the circumstances of life and reset our focus squarely on Christ.

What exactly is a faith-lift? It is a recommitment to surrender to the Spirit of God and a refusal to live in self-reliance. Cling to Christ! Allow God’s power to renew your mind, recalibrate your heart, and realign your will. This is the kind of faith-lift we all could use; pray and ask God to give it to you!

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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You Need A Good “Forgettery”

I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more. (Hebrews 8:12}

We know that God knows everything, everywhere, and at all times. That is omniscience. So what in the world does our Lord mean when He says that He will remember our sins no more? Does God really forget our sins? That’s not possible! If God really could forget something, then He would not know everything, everywhere, and at all times. So God doesn’t actually forget our sins; no, He chooses to leave our sins — all our sins — nailed to the cross. He simply refuses to bring up our past sins, no matter what we do.

Listen, the memory of our past mistakes, shortcomings, and sins can cause us to live in the past rather than learn from the past. I’ve said it here many times: God wants us to treat the past like a school. We are to learn the lessons from the past, but not live there. It is Satan who whispers in our ears: Remember what you did back then? How could you possibly do that again? You probably aren’t even a child of God at all! Our remorseless enemy is relentlessly trying to shift our focus away from our Savior and put in on ourselves.

I’ve had so many people tell me during pastoral counseling, “I just can’t forgive myself.” That is one of Satan’s sharpest darts aimed at the heart of the believer. Do you see just how man-centered that statement is? It’s not about forgiving yourself; it’s about appropriating God’s promised forgiveness that has been secured for us by Jesus through His crucifixion and resurrection.

When we sin and repent of our sin, that is the end of it. When we are in a saving relationship with Jesus, all of our sins are forgiven: past, present, and even those sins we haven’t yet committed! What we need to do is develop a good “forgettery.” If God deliberately refuses to bring up our past, so should we . . . and not allow our past sins to keep us in bondage to our sinful past.

How well is your forgettery working? Are you letting your past sins and failures drag you down into the mud pits of life? Look to the cross! Fix your eyes on Jesus, and you will rise above Satan’s strategy to keep you remembering your sins. Remember, God has chosen to forget them, all of them. This is to be the confession of our lives.

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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Powerful Promise

No temptation has seized you except what is common to man. And God is faithful; he will not let you be tempted beyond what you can bear. But when you are tempted, he will also provide a way out so that you can stand up under it. (1 Corinthians 10:13)

I long ago lost count of how many times someone has told me that the temptations they are struggling with are sin. Not true! Jesus Himself was tempted. Hebrews 4:15 tells us that our Lord was “tempted in every way, just as we are—yet was without sin.” We are all tempted. Temptation is simply a part of living in a fallen and broken world. Temptation is not sin; it is giving in to temptation that is sin, and all of you reading this know this truth from personal experience.

So what is the key to resisting the temptations we all face? There may be no better section in all of Scripture to strengthen us for facing temptation than the wilderness experience of our Lord Jesus Christ. After He had been fasting for forty days, the devil came to Jesus and tempted Him—not once, but three times. Jesus dealt with each temptation the same way: with Scripture. Each time He was confronted with temptation, Jesus used Scripture for strength so as not to be overtaken by it. 

It is important to point out one thing about the encounter between Jesus and the devil in the wilderness. Both of them quoted Scripture. Both Jesus and the devil know the Word of God, which means they were both students of Scripture. They were both in the Word of God. But there was one great difference between Jesus and the devil: Inasmuch as both were in the Word of God, the Word of God was only in Jesus. You see, it’s not enough to simply know and be able to quote Scripture. We must be submitted and surrendered to the Bible’s authority and rule in our lives. 

What temptations have you been wrestling with lately? In your personal life? In your professional life?  Let me repeat: Temptation is not sin; giving in to the temptation is. The more we get into the Word of God, the more the Word of God will get into us, and the better we will be able to resist temptation.

One final thing. When temptation does overtake you, remember the cross. Jesus already paid for that sin, and you have already been forgiven. Yes, grieve over your sin. Yes, be filled with a godly sorrow and repent of your sin. But never forget, nothing can separate you from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus. Not Satan nor even your sin. Now, that is a powerful promise! 

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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No Camouflage For The Christian!

This is how we know that we live in him and he in us: He has given us of his Spirit. (1 John 4:13)

Adam and Eve hid behind fig leaves rather than face God for healing. You and I have a lot in common with our first parents. We try to hide behind statements like, “That’s just the way I am” or “I’ve always been this way.” That has to stop! What we were yesterday matters not to God, because He has given us His Spirit to make us into something we had never been.

Excuses are like camouflage; we try to hide behind them when we would rather not do the hard work of getting in step with the Holy Spirit’s work in our lives. It is much easier to settle into our old self and live in the flesh rather than discipline ourselves to live in His Spirit. But this greatly dishonors our Lord, who paid the ultimate price to redeem us from our slavery to self and bring us into relationship with Him. He died so that we might live — not to live any way we like, but to live like Him.

Think about it this way: When we say to someone, “I’m just not a loving, patient, or kind person,” we are denying the work of the Holy Spirit within us. We are that kind of person because we are indwelt by the power of the Spirit, whose fruit includes love, patience, and kindness (Galatians 5:22). We just need to begin acting out practically what we already are positionally: a child of the Most-High God.

Have you been hiding behind any camouflage lately? Get rid of those flimsy fig leaves and draw near to the One who has promised to make all things new . . . including you!

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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By Any Means Necessary!

Serve the king of Babylon, and you will live. (Jeremiah 27:17)

We must not limit God in His dealings with us. His ultimate goal is for Christlikeness to be formed within us, and He will accomplish this goal in His way, in His timing, and by any means necessary.

God used the pagan king Nebuchadnezzar and the godless people of Babylon as instruments of judgment in the lives of His people in order to accomplish His ultimate purpose of weaning their hearts away from the things of this world. The message is clear for us today: We must accept God’s ways in our lives, even when we cannot comprehend them. Every circumstance in your life is filled with God’s chosen instruments of sanctification, regardless of their relationship to Him, for all things serve Him (Psalm 119:91).

We should not think that God will only use godly people to form Christ in us. God will use any means necessary to grow and mature us in the faith. It might be a skeptical supervisor, a Christless coworker, a non-Christian neighbor, or an atheistic acquaintance. God will use both the pastor and the pagan, the godly and the ungodly, the agreeable and the aggravating in accomplishing His perfect purpose in this world, and that includes His purpose for each of His children too.

What “King Nebuchadnezzar” has God brought into your life to use as a tool to chisel Christlike character into your heart? Never forget that the ungodly and the unspiritual are under God’s complete control at all times. Thank God today! And be on the lookout for those unexpected instruments He is using in your life to make you more like Jesus . . . by any means necessary!

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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Inconceivable Inheritance

I am to be the only inheritance the priests have. You are to give them no possession in Israel; I will be their inheritance. (Ezekiel 44:28)

Today’s divine declaration is frequently repeated throughout the Law of Moses, whenever God gave instructions for His priests, the Levites, who were to be totally supported by the tithes given to God and by their portion of the offerings that were brought to Him. God ordained that His priests would not share in the possessions that the other eleven tribes of Israel received, for He alone would be their prized possession and their inconceivable inheritance. He would provide for the Levites’ every need as they served wholly unto God. You might say that the Levites were “holy,” in the sense that they were set apart for God. Their brethren received land; the priests received the Lord.

There is great comfort in this word for us today because we, the people of God, are a “royal priesthood” (1 Peter 2:9). The priesthood of all believers is a foundational concept of Christianity; the Roman Catholic Church had drifted from this teaching, but it was reclaimed during the great Protestant Reformation of the 16th Century. Having been chosen and set apart by God, we, just like the Old Testament priests, are called to offer “spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 2:5). Our privileged status makes us heirs to the kingdom of God — to wit, God Himself is our inheritance!

Take careful note of this truth: Unlike an earthly inheritance, which is passed down after a person dies, we have access to our inconceivable inheritance right now — not only daily, but moment by moment. Regardless of what you may possess in the here and now, you cannot take any of it with you when you go. But in God’s economy, your true inheritance, who is your Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, is not only available to you, He is with you always (Matthew 28:20). So we cry with the psalmist, “Lord, you alone are my inheritance, my cup of blessing” (Psalm 16:5 NLT).

Have you been living in the light of this truth? The answer to this question will be provided by the beating of your heart. What does your heart beat most strongly for right now? Does your heart beat for the stuff of this life? Or does it beat for your Savior, who has given you life?

Paul declared, “In [Christ] we have obtained an inheritance” (Ephesians 1:11 ESV). Some Christians limit their understanding of this “inheritance” to eternal life in heaven with Jesus and all the saints of God, but there is much more to it than that! Your inheritance includes everyday life on earth and every spiritual blessing imaginable (Ephesians 1:3): You are forgiven . . . you are redeemed . . . you are a new creation . . . you are adopted into God’s family of faith . . . you are given a purpose to live for and the power to live it out. In a word, your inheritance is inconceivable! Let this truth set you free to live the life God has called you to live — today, right now, right where this message finds you.

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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Is There Ever a Time When God’s Goal Is Not Good?

Jesus, knowing that they intended to come and make him king by force, withdrew again to a mountain by himself. (John 6:15)

God the Father sent God the Son to be King of His people. So what was wrong with the people wanting to assist the Almighty in the process? They knew from the Old Testament prophecies that is was indeed God’s ultimate goal for His Son to be the King who would fulfill God’s covenant with David. So what was wrong with what the people who wanted to make it happen right now and the reasons they had for doing it? Why did Jesus withdraw from them? The answer is that they wanted to make Jesus king by force for their temporal and earthly good, and that stood in direct opposition to the perfect plan and purpose of the Father.

Of course, it was Satan himself standing behind the people. When Satan failed to derail God’s plan with his wilderness temptations of Jesus, he did not abandon his fight against the Son of God. Luke’s gospel tells us that after Satan had been rebuffed by Christ in the wilderness, “he left [Jesus] until an opportune time” (Luke 4:13). And so, seeing his opportunity, the devil stirred the hearts and minds of the people to rebel against God’s purpose and plan for Messiah. It was the sly strategy of the serpent to cause the crowd to clamor for the king they wanted, a king who would reestablish the throne of David in Jerusalem and remove the boot of Rome from their necks.

Perhaps, the adversary reasoned, Jesus could be tempted to don His king’s crown without having to endure the cruel cross. Here was an opportunity for instant gratification AND the accomplishment of God’s ultimate goal, as the mass of Jewish humanity was ready to rise up against the hated Roman oppressor and joyfully hand the King of Israel the throne of David. God’s goal for His beloved Son was within reach . . . but not according to God’s perfect plan to accomplish it.

Never forget that Jesus Christ was fully man, which means He had an ego that could have fallen prey to the applause of man and the heady appeal of popularity, just like any of us. Proverbs 27:21 warns us, “The crucible for silver and the furnace for gold, but man is tested by the praise he receives.” Make no mistake, Satan was dangling a very real temptation for Jesus. The Bible tells us that Jesus was “tempted in every way, just as we are — yet was without sin” (Hebrews 4:15), and that He “suffered when he was tempted” (Hebrews 2:18).

Satan was laying a very real trap for our Savior, one that the enemy knew would disrupt God’s perfect plan if his scheme succeeded. But Jesus always immediately recognized “the snake in the grass,” who would do anything to derail the destiny of the Chosen One. Jesus knew when the accomplishment of God’s goal would not be good . . . that was when it was accomplished by human effort, rather than by submission to the Spirit.

I’d like to make one final point, and I pray that you will let this truth strengthen you to resist the devil whenever he comes calling to entice you to accomplish any good goal God would have for you in a way that is not in line with God’s plan and purpose for achieving it. Go back and reread today’s verse; how did our Lord deal with the temptation that Satan had thrown at Him?

Jesus withdrew again to a mountain by himself!

It was Jesus’ continual communion with His Father that kept Him on track. By praying continually, just as you and I are commanded to do (1 Thessalonians 5:17), Jesus was strengthened to stay the course and follow the will of His Father, even when that will was leading Him to the most awful, agonizing death known to man at that time: a Roman cross. Our Lord’s prayer life was the key that unlocked the door leading to a resolve that refused to even consider trying to accomplish any goal God had for Him in any way apart from the perfect plan of His Father.

How are you doing at that? Have you been seeking to accomplish God’s goals for your life in your way . . . or His way?

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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What’s in a Name?

“Ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.” (John 14:14)

Prayer is a powerful tool in the hands of God’s people. Why? Because there is infinite power in the name of Jesus Christ. Not only have we been invited to come boldly to the throne of grace, we have also been assured that anything we ask for in the name of Jesus will be done.

I must make something clear before we go on: To ask in Jesus’ name is to ask for Jesus sake. Our prayers are to be directed at the expansion of Christ’s kingdom, not our own. Make no mistake; when God opened the way for us to come into His presence, every minute of every day, twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year, He was not giving us a blank check to cash for a life of ease and the advancement of our personal affluence. To ask in Jesus’ name is to ask about the things that matter most to Him.

John 17 recorded our Lord’s High Priestly Prayer, which gives us valuable insight as to what matters most to Jesus. He expressed it in His prayer to His Father: “As you sent me into the world, I have sent them into the world.” As a sent people, we are to be living lives of other-orientation. Jesus has commissioned us to live in a way that brings glory to God and good to others . . . all others. We are to meet people in their place of need with the hands and feet of Christ.

To pray in Jesus’ name is to pray for the advancement of the Gospel; when we are praying like this, we can be assured our prayers will be answered with a resounding “Yes!” To pray in Jesus’ name is to pray to fulfill His plans and His purposes in this life. To pray in Jesus’ name is to lay aside our personal goals, agendas, dreams, and desires. It is to abandon self as we advance in the direction of our Savior. When Jesus prayed in the Garden of Gethsemane, “Yet not my will, but thy will be done,” He was providing us with the model for a prayer life that is rooted in Jesus’ name.

Finally, when you are praying in Jesus’ name, you are being reminded to rely on His wisdom, His power, His strength, and His guidance. To pray in Jesus name is to heed the word of warning that James provided to the people of God: “When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend what you get on your pleasures” (James 4:3).

I hope you will be encouraged today to take some time to pray, to pray in Jesus’ name, knowing that whatever you ask for in His name, He has promised to do for you.

This is the Gospel. This is grace for your race. NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

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