Category Archives: General

The Burden of Busyness

Mary has chosen what is better. (Luke 10:42)

Did you know there is a major difference between busyness and productivity? When my father would remind me that “Idle time is the devil’s workshop,” he was not simply talking about keeping busy. Rather, he was talking about being productive. Let’s look at a few of the differences between “busyness” and productivity:

Busy People                               Productive People

Do hectic work                              Do holy work

Are driven by pleasure                 Are driven by purpose

Focus on action                              Focus on outcome

Speak about results                       Their results speak for themselves

Do many things at once                Prioritize important things

This list could easily be expanded to fill several blogs, but it can also be distilled down to one major distinction: The lives of busy people are marked by burden; the lives of productive people are marked by blessing. It was well said that “He who burns the candle at both ends isn’t as bright as he thinks!” Those of us who are burdened by busyness, as busy Martha was, can hear the Lord calling our name and admonishing us, “You are anxious and troubled about many things” (Luke 10:41). From a biblical perspective, the burden of busyness robs the child of God in two profound ways:

  • Busyness Robs Relationships – In order to grow in our relationships, we must invest in both quantity and quality time. Busyness robs us of both in the most important relationship we have: our relationship with God.
  • Busyness Robs Restfulness – Without adequate rest and recreation, our health suffers. An overloaded schedule crowds out regular exercise and the time it takes to maintain a healthy diet.

What is the best way forward when you sense the burden of busyness encroaching on your life? Go back to the encounter between Martha and Jesus and see what our Lord said about Mary, Martha’s sister: “Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her” (Luke 10:40-42). What had Mary chosen that Martha did not? Mary sat at the feet of Jesus. Mary had been busy helping Martha prepare the meal for Jesus and His disciples, but Mary knew when to stop the busyness for a priority of far greater productivity: Sitting at the feet of Jesus and listening to His teaching.

And therein lies the key that unlocks the door to easing the burden of busyness. Draw near to Jesus and He will draw near to you. Then the work we perform will be done for the glory of God and the good of others, not for self-satisfaction. Yes, we will be busy, but we will be busy being a blessing.

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

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Break-Fast

This I call to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning. (Lamentations 3:21-23 ESV)

Because the morning meal is designed to “break the fast” from the night before, it is important to begin each day with whatever “break-fast” will strengthen our bodies for the day ahead. But in addition to what you put into your stomach to fuel your body, you need to be putting God’s Word into your soul to fuel your spirit.

In our verse for today we see our faithful God offering us a full cup of “fresh-brewed mercy” every morning. The glorious, gracious truth for us to absorb is that, regardless of how things went the day before – from storms to sin, God sets new mercies before us each and every day. His grace and mercy are as certain as the sun rising every day, even on those days when we cannot see the sun because clouds are covering it.

Jeremiah, who was inspired by the Spirit of God to write Lamentations, also gave us Jeremiah 32:17, which exults, “Sovereign Lord, you have made the heavens and the earth by your great power and outstretched arm. Nothing is too hard for you.” You see, God is bigger than any battle we are facing, greater than any giant that is taunting us, and mightier than any mess we might find ourselves mired in.

Perhaps you are thinking, “Tommy, I know in my head that what you’re saying here abut the power of God is true, but in my heart I am feeling awfully weak.” Believe me, I understand! I have days like that myself. And when I am in a space like that, I remember today’s verse: “This I call to mind, and therefore I have hope.” God’s power, which is available to each one of us moment by moment, is made perfect in our weakness. When God said, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:9), He meant what He said! And that is why you and I need to break the fast each new morning with the Word of God. It is through that daily intake of His promises that we are strengthened by His grace and power and have true, biblical hope — a confident expectation that our gracious God will show us His grace, power, and love each and every day..

Remember, whether the day before was just a bit burdensome or marked by bitter brokenness, today is a new day and God has new mercies waiting for you in His Word. Experience has taught me that when we break the fast each day with time in God’s Word, we are restored, renewed, recharged, and repurposed to receive whatever the day has to offer.

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

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Dear Fear

Perfect love drives out fear. (1 John 4:18)

Here is a word of encouragement from the Lord that I am sure will help us all deal with the fears we face from time to time. Now, I should tell you right up front that I am not using the word “Dear” as a term of endearment for fear; rather, I am using it to indicate the life-long, intimate relationship that you and I have with it.

We all feel the presence of fear from time to time; it is one of the enemy’s most potent weapons in his siege against us. That is one of the reasons why we must keep God’s Word hidden in our hearts and remember the countless passages of Scripture that instruct and inspire us to refuse to bow down to the demands of whatever fear we are currently facing. Here are just a handful of those verses:

  • The Lord is my light and salvation – whom shall I fear? (Psalm 27:1)
  • I sought the Lord, and he answered me; he delivered me from all my fears. (Psalm 34:4)
  • So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. (Isaiah 41:10)
  • Jesus said, “Don’t be afraid, just believe.” (Mark 5:36)

Christian, fear and faith simply cannot co-exist. And that is why we must read from God’s love letter to the fears that try to weaken our faith: because the perfect love that has been given to us by God in Christ Jesus drives out every fear. I have only shared a very few of the many passages of Scripture that are designed drive fear from our hearts. Take some time to find more of them, which is one of the best ways to face your fears. Meditating on and marinating in the Word of God every day is the surest way to slay our fears.

Are you facing any fears today? Here is a mental note for you to remember when fear rears its ugly head –

Dear Fear,

I will not let you fracture my faith today.

I will not let you slay my strength today.

I will not let you prosecute my peace today.

I will not let you hollow out my hope today.

I will not let you retard my rest today.

Because greater is the power in me than any fearful power that can come against me.

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

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A New Thing

See, I am doing a new thing! (Isaiah 43:19)

When was the last time you ran into someone you knew and asked, “How’s it going?” to which they responded, “Same stuff, different day!” That is a response that the child of God ought never give. It comes from someone who sees life from inside of a rut – which, by the way, is nothing more than a grave with both ends knocked out.

But this is not for you! In our passage for today we have a word of eternal encouragement set before us, regardless of where this message finds you. For many, the past is paralyzing, which is why I often remind our congregation to “Learn from the past, but don’t live there.” When we cannot forget and rise above the former things, we are unable to focus on the new things God intends to do in our lives. We allow ourselves to be trapped in a painful past marked by unforgiveness, bitterness, betrayal, and regret.

Today’s passage provides us the key that unlocks the door that opens to a new thing: focusing on the faithful One who has promised to make all things new (Revelation 21:5). Notice what God went on to say through the prophet Isaiah: “I am making a way in the desert and streams in the wasteland” (Isaiah 43:19). The wasteland in this verse (most English translations render the original Hebrew as wilderness) can represent any desolate and lonely place we have visited in the past – mentally, emotionally, physically, and spiritually. We all find ourselves wandering in such a place at some point in our lives. But God is telling us something that is designed to change our perspective and ultimately our predicament – “I am doing a new thing!” God is healing our past wounds, breaking down old strongholds, and shining warm light into our cold darkness.

Throughout my years as a pastor, I have seen that perhaps the greatest “new thing” God has done in our lives is to give us a renewed, living hope, even when things seem utterly hopeless. That is the picture of rivers in the desert. God is in the business of doing what is impossible with man.

So, what “new thing” do you need in your life right now? Personally? Professionally? Relationally? Look up and see the heavens open right before your eyes, because your God is about to do a “new thing” in your life today. You have His Word on it.

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

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The Savior’s Self-Separation

For them I sanctify myself, that they too may be truly sanctified. (John 17:19)

When Jesus said, “I sanctify myself,” we are not to understand the word sanctify as it would apply to sinful humanity. Jesus was not talking about personal sanctification — that is, the putting off of the old, sinful self and the putting on of the new, Christlike self — for Jesus had no sin. Rather, Jesus was making it clear that He was setting Himself apart for the work His Father in heaven had sent Him to do.

Read on, and may you be greatly encouraged today!

Jesus consecrated Himself completely to the service of God. He willingly separated Himself from His throne in heaven to take on flesh and dwell among us. He willingly separated Himself from His inherent power as the second member of the Trinity and served completely in the power of the Holy Spirit. And yet, in spite of all this, it is vitally important that we understand that Jesus never separated Himself from the society of sinners. To be sure, Jesus was separate from fallen and sinful human nature, but He never separated Himself from human beings, other than those times when He withdrew alone to pray.

When we read through the gospel accounts regarding the ministry of our Lord, we see that it was the ones society disregarded and discarded that Jesus invested Himself in . . . so much so that the religious leaders continually condemned Him for it.

When the teachers of the law who were Pharisees saw him eating with the sinners and tax collectors, they asked his disciples: “Why does he eat with tax collectors and sinners?” (Mark 2:16)

In the religious Jewish society, the Pharisees and the teachers of the Law avoided sinful society in the very same way that they avoided lepers. As strict adherents to the Law, they believed that even being physically near sinners would defile them. What they absolutely refused to acknowledge, of course, was their own sin and their need of a Savior. Jesus replied to the Pharisees’ objection that He was eating with sinners by saying, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17). Our Lord was not saying the religious leaders were in any way righteous, but rather He was pointedly stating that the Pharisees were blind to their own sin because of their religious traditions and their belief that they could attain righteousness through their own efforts.

Is it not a great encouragement to know that Jesus came to save sinners just like you and me? And it is not an even greater encouragement to know that, unlike the Pharisees, Jesus does not require us to change before coming to Him for salvation? You see, Jesus first meets all of us sinners right where we are, refusing to separate Himself from us, and then He graciously leads us to where He is calling us to be.

Jesus expressed it very clearly in our verse for today: “For them I sanctify myself.” Jesus did indeed set Himself apart . . . for us! And He never separated Himself from us. No, the amazing, glorious truth is that while we were still sinners, Christ drew near to us and died for us.

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

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Cosmic Contrasts

You were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light. (Ephesians 5:8)

On Monday we looked at Ephesians 5:8 and God’s command to live in the light. Today I would like to return to this same verse and show you some of the cosmic contrasts contained in the Word of God. I pray that these contrasts, such as “once darkness . . . now light,” will be a source of great comfort to you. They come from the God who is faithful to finish what He has started.

In the beginning everything was very good. God placed His most special creation, the two who were His image-bearers, in a garden, a perfect paradise, and all was well until that terrible day when Adam and Eve chose to turn away from serving God and started satisfying themselves. In that one dreadful moment, sin stained everything and brought God’s judgment upon all creation.

But even in God’s judgment, we also see His mercy and grace displayed in His promise to redeem sinful rebels on the run. For He is truly righteous and just, and at the same time the One who graciously justifies those who trust in Christ for their redemption (Romans 3:26). With that truth in mind, please look at and rejoice in the cosmic contrasts found in the two books that act as the Bible’s bookends, Genesis and Revelation:

Genesis                                                                                               Revelation

When you eat this, you will die (2:17)                                             No more death (21:4)

You will experience intense pain (3:16)                                           No more pain (21:4)

I have placed a curse on the ground (3:17)                                      No more curse (22:3)

Adam and Eve banished from God’s presence (3:23)                     We will see His face (22:4)

The sinless life, sacrificial death, and supernatural resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ completely reversed the curse that resulted from sin. Because Jesus has done for us what we could never possibly do for ourselves, everything has changed. The original heavens and earth that God created will be recreated as the new heavens and the new earth. And the most stunning transformation of all is that by trusting in Christ alone for our salvation, we, who were rightly and justly under a sentence of death, are now recipients of the promise of everlasting life. We, whose lives have been marred and distorted by sin, will one day be like Christ!

And if that somehow is not enough to light the fire of your faith, consider this: In the beginning there were just two people who were saved by grace through faith, but in the end there will be a multitude that no one except the Lord can number, all of us rejoicing in the grace of God, and there will be no possibility that our sin can ever separate us from our Savior. For no one and nothing can snatch us out of His nail-scarred hand (John 10:28).

Are these cosmic contrasts not a comfort to you today? “You were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord.” But remember, until we cross the Jordan and arrive at the other side, these contrasts will not be experienced in their completed form. In this life we still deal with the effects of the fall in the garden, and that means we will still deal with sin – the sin of others and our own sin – as well as the corruption of the creation itself, which is manifested in destructive storms, fires, droughts, and the like.

Christian, keep these cosmic contrasts in view as you continue fighting the good fight of faith, and be fully confident that He who began the good work will in you and in this world will one day bring it to completion.

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

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Living In The Light

For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light. (Ephesians 5:8)

How are we to “live in the light” when we inhabit such a dark world? I pray that the answer to this question will be a source of eternal encouragement to you today.

First, let’s look at the meaning of light from a biblical perspective. Psalm 119 tells us that the Word of God is a lamp and a light, directing our attention to the timeless, immutable wisdom and truth that is found in God alone. In Romans 13 we see light used as a metaphor for moral deeds. Therefore, we are to understand that “living in the light” means living according to the wisdom, truth, and moral standards set forth God’s Word.

But the question still remains: How do we do it?

I’ve said it here before: We are to live out practically what we already are positionally. Reread today’s verse and you will see how this fleshes itself out. We were once darkness; that was our natural condition. But now we are “light in the Lord” — that is, we are in Christ. We are new creations in Christ, and so our dark nature has been transformed to light.

Notice that the Scripture does not say that we were “living in” darkness; rather, we were darkness. This is the nature of every person before Jesus shows up. But when we are raised from death to life, we become children of light because we have been changed from the inside out. Now, for the very first time, we have the ability to live the life God has called us to live . . . by grace through faith.

When Jesus said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness,” He was telling us to walk in His footsteps, to stay on His path, and to follow His plan and purpose for our lives. The closer we follow our Lord, the more we will produce the fruit of the light that Paul speaks of: goodness, righteousness, and truth (Ephesians 5:9).

Are you living in the light? Have you been walking in the footsteps of your Lord? If you would have to honestly answer “No” to those questions, what changes do you need to make in order to better shine His light on all those you come in contact with in this dark world?

“You are the light of the world,” our Lord says to us in His magnificent Sermon on the Mount. “Let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven” (Matthew 5:14, 16). Living in the light is the same as living for the Light, and when we are operating at that level of living, our lives have meaning, significance, and eternal value.

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

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The True Test of Trusting God

My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways. (Isaiah 55:8)

Every Christian will say they trust God, but the true test of trusting God comes when the storm winds of life begin to blow and the waves of challenge begin to crash over us. Today I have a word that I hope will provide both comfort and a challenge for you.

For one hour on Sunday morning we will readily say we are trusting in God. But from Monday through Saturday is where the rubber of our redemption meets the road of our reflection. When the sky is blue and the clouds fleecy, it is easy to reflect the character of Christ and demonstrate great trust in our God. But when the dark clouds of doubt, distress, disease, disappointment, and defeat roll in, we have a tendency to shrink back from our Savior and begin trusting in everything other than Jesus. We begin looking to the self instead of the Savior.  

Throughout my years as a pastor, I have found Isaiah 55:8, our verse for today, to be a source of both comfort and challenge, as I hope it will be for you. The text reminds us that life does not always go according to our plan. In fact, often it does not. Why? Because God’s plan is always better than our plan. He knows the end from the beginning; His ways are so much higher than our ways, and His purpose for your life and mine is not to make us comfortable but to make us Christlike. When we receive, understand, and live by this truth, we have a hope that simply cannot disappoint.

The true test of trusting God is only found in the test!

Where in your life have you been going through a test? Have you been trusting in your Savior? Or something else? Remember, whatever storm you are facing today, or will face in the future, God sent it for two reasons: your good and His glory. We may not understand all that God is doing when we are in the middle of the storm. In fact, we may never fully understand on this side of the grave. And therein lies the challenge in today’s message: to trust in Him at all times, not just during the “good” times. When we look to the cross, we can and should rest assured that our God is for us, He will never forsake us, and He is in the middle of the storm with us.

Let that truth set you free to trust Jesus, regardless of the test you are facing.

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

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The Positive Production of Pressure

The testing of your faith produces perseverance. (James 1:3)

One of the most important character traits for the people of God is the willingness to persevere under pressure, because the positive production of pressure returns blessings multiplied. Read on, and may you be greatly encouraged today!

The Bible is filled with examples of those who persevered under pressure. Joseph persevered under pressure, having been sold into slavery by his brothers, falsely and maliciously accused of attempted rape and cast into prison, only to rise out of the pit years later to the position of prime minister of Egypt. Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego persevered under pressure, submitting to the flames of the fiery furnace rather than bowing before King Nebuchadnezzar’s statue made of gold. Esther persevered under pressure when she chose to approach the king uninvited, which could have resulted in the penalty of death, to save her people Israel. Stephen persevered under pressure right up to his very last breath, preaching the truths of the Gospel and speaking words of forgiveness to the religious leaders, even as those men were stoning him to death.

Of course, there is no greater example of persevering under pressure than the one provided by our Lord Jesus Christ. From his infancy, Jesus was pressured on every side. King Herod sought to kill the newborn King and decreed a death sentence on all male children in Bethlehem aged two and under. Throughout His entire ministry, Jesus was pressured and harassed by the religious leaders, who schemed to kill Him time and time again. And in His hour of greatest need in the Garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus was sweating drops of blood as He prayed, His pressure produced perhaps the greatest word of inspired instruction in all recorded history: “Father, if you are willing take this cup from me; yet not my will, but yours be done” (Luke 22:42).

God’s grace is most magnified when we are navigating the waters during the storms of life. It all comes down to trusting God even when we cannot trace His hand. The positive production of pressure cannot be overstated. It is God’s ordained way of conforming us into the image and likeness of Jesus. Our lives are shaped and hammered out on the anvil of pressure. As Peter wrote —

These [all kinds of trials] have come so that your faith — of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire — may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. (1 Peter 1:7)

Remember, when you squeeze a grapefruit, you get delicious grapefruit juice. So the question is, “What do those around you receive when you are squeezed by the pressures of life?” Those pressures are merely the passageway into producing a deeper intimacy with the One who died to make you His.

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

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No Sprinting Saints

You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. (Hebrews 10:36)

I have a question for all of you who have ever been involved in running throughout your life, either for exercise or for competition: “What is the longest distance you ever ran?” Only a very few of you could answer that your longest run was 26.2 miles, the distance of a marathon. “Back in the day,” before my knees became so problematic, my favorite distance was a 10K run – 6.2 miles. Frankly, if I had been expected to run another 20 miles, I would have needed my car to finish the race! I’m sure some of you preferred the sprints — all-out speed competitions for relatively short distances of 100 yards or more.

Here is the point: the Christian life would be very easy to live if it were only a sprint and not a marathon. Then we could simply run —

  • A hundred-yard dash of devotion
  • A quarter-mile sprint of service
  • A half-lap of loving our neighbor as ourselves

But in God’s economy, unless He brings you home immediately after your conversion (as He did with the good thief who died next to Jesus), the Christian life has been divinely designed to be a long, grueling marathon, not a short sprint. Noah spent the lion’s share of a century on his boat-building project. Moses spent forty years on the back side of the desert as God was preparing him to deliver the people of Israel out of bondage in Egypt. David waited years after God had him anointed as king before he took possession of the throne. The list of biblical examples is long, and the lives of all these saints show us that God has called us to live lives marked by endurance, which is a requirement for living a life that is pleasing to God.

One final point about this marathon we are running. It’s never a straight and comfortable course that we travel. Often it is much more like an obstacle course, marked by barriers, steep hills, seemingly unsurpassable roadblocks, and many unexpected twists and turns. Yet we are called to persevere along whatever path God sets before us with a sustained determination until we reach our final destination.

And never forget this: your marathon race is never to be run in your own strength. God has given you and will give you everything you need to do everything He has called you to do (2 Peter 1:3) . . . as long as you determine to persevere in His strength and not your own.

Christian . . . How well have you been running your race? To be sure, it’s a long and frequently difficult road, but God has promised to make sure you have two things with you every step of the way: His power and His presence. Remember that He has promised never to leave you or forsake you! That knowledge makes all the difference in making sure we will cross the finish line filled with the joy of our Lord, which is our great strength.

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

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