Friday, February 5, 2010

Given by the Father and Kept By Christ- John 6:37-40

"All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me,
and the one who comes to Me
I will certainly not cast out.
For I have come down from heaven,
not to do my own will,
but the will of Him who sent Me.
And this is the will of Him who sent Me,
that of all that He has given Me I lose nothing,
but raise it up on the last day.
For this is the will of My Father,
that everyone who beholds the Son
and believes in Him, may have eternal life;
and I Myself will raise him up on the last day."
(John 6:37-40)

Such wonderful words of encouragement are found in these verses.

First is the marvelous, merciful declaration of the Father's calling of sinners and of Christ's absolute willingness to receive them. "All that the Father gives Me shall come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out."

God the sovereign Father has set His electing seal upon sinners and those He has given to Jesus will come to Jesus - all of them (the words of Christ, not of Lori). Oh, it is by grace that we are saved and it is by mercy that we are received. Christ Jesus, our Savior, will not cast us out nor refuse us - no matter what we've done, who we are, how we've behaved. If, by faith, we come to Him, He will receive us, forgive us, cleanse us, adopt us, love us, and give us everlasting life. Is this not good news?!

Second is the powerfully preserving declaration that once we are apprehended by Christ, we will be kept by Christ. "And this is the will of Him who sent Me, that of all that He has given Me I lose nothing, but raise it up on the last day. For this is the will of My Father, that everyone who beholds the Son and believes in Him, may have eternal life; and I Myself will raise him up on the last day."

Those whom the Father has given to Christ will be kept by Christ. How that soothes my sinful soul. I may sinfully and stubbornly wiggle in His lap but He will keep me there! Satan may prowl but Jesus will protect! The world may seek to draw me away but He, Himself will raise me up! Is there any safer place to be than in Christ?! The answer is a resounding NO! "He who began the good work in you will carry it on until the day of Christ Jesus." (Ph 1:6).

Ryle writes: "Christ will not allow any soul that is committed to Him to be lost and cast away. He will keep it safe from grace to glory, in spite of the world, the flesh and the devil. Not one bone of his mystical body shall ever be broken, not one lamb of His flock shall ever be left behind in the wilderness. He will raise to glory, on the last day, the whole flock entrusted to His charge, and not one shall be found missing."

Is that not our only hope. If it could be lost, this wandering sheep would lose it. Praise God for an omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, ever merciful and all wise Shepherd who keeps His flock.

Safe,
Lori

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Bread That Satisfies - John 6:31-35

"Our fathers ate the manna in the wilderness;
as it is written, 'He gave them bread out of heaven to eat.'
Jesus therefore said to them, 'Truly, truly I say to you,
it is not Moses who has given you the bread out of heaven,
but it is My Fahter who gives you the true bread out of heaven.
For the bread of God is that which comes down out of heaven,
and gives life to the world;
They said therefore to Him, 'Lord, evermore give us this bread.'
Jesus said to them,
"I am the bread of life;
he who comes to me shall not hunger,
and he who believes in Me shall never thirst.'"
(John 6:31-35)

In John 6, Jesus has fed 5,000 + with physical bread. Here, halfway through this chapter, the conversation turns once again to hungry folks and to the bread that will eternally satisfy.

The multitude begins to recount the miraculous giving of Manna during the time of Moses and they challenge Jesus to do some act of a similar magnitude. He doesn't jump through their hoops. Instead He points them to gospel truth. "You want bread? I am the Bread you most need. Moses fed your body, I will feed your soul. Your ancestors ate Moses' bread and died. If you will feast on Me you will live forever."

Ryle writes: "Christ is the appointed food for man's soul. The soul of every man is naturally starving through sin. Christ is given by God to be the satisfier of man's spiritual need. In Him alone are our wants supplied."

Is your soul hungry? Come to Jesus. Here is the Bread of life that will meet your every need and meet it fully. Here is a meal that will satisfy - forever!

Full and satisfied,
Lori

Sunday, January 31, 2010

The Greatest Work - John 6:28 - 29

"They said therefore to Him, 'What shall we do,
that we may work the works of God?'
Jesus answered and said to them,
'This is the work of God,
that you believe in Him whom He has sent."
(John 6:28-29)


Just like the rich young ruler who came to Jesus asking what he must "do" to inherit eternal salvation, we all seem to have a tendancy to want to add a bit of elbow grease to our spiritual condition. That tendancy is seen here by the response of the crowd to Christ's words regarding work.

Jesus has just challenged them with what the major focus of their labors is really aimed at in their heart of hearts - temporal things or eternal? Just the simple mention of "work" and they are suddenly stirred up to find out what they must "do" to be OK with God.

So often, particularly in the neck of the woods where I live, people seem to have a check list of what will get them into heaven. Sometimes it involves things that they do - "I give to charity, I go to church, I'm nice to animals." Sometimes it involves things that they don't do - "I don't drink, smoke or chew, nor date girls that do!"

Here, Christ gets to the crux of what "work" matters most to God and that "work" is faith in Jesus. "This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent."

Friends, it is not what you DO that will lead you to heaven for your most righteous deeds are but filthy rags (Isaiah 64:6) and will not fit you for heaven but will doom you to hell (James 2:10, Romans 3:23, Romans 6:23). It is not what you do, it is in Whom you believe (John 3:16, John 14:6).

And just in case you find yourself thinking - "Hey, I can DO that!" Let me remind you (and myself) that even our faith in these things is grace! "For by grace you have been saved through faith: and that [faith] not of yourselves, it is the free gift of God; not as a result of works, that no one should boast." - Ephesians 2:8

Humbled at His work in me,
Lori

Saturday, January 30, 2010

What Are You Working For? - John 6:27

"Do not work for the food which perishes,
but for the food that endures to eternal life,
which the Son of Man shall give to you,
for on Him the Father, even God,
has set His seal."
(John 6:27)

In looking over the next section of John 6 I had to pause for a moment on verse 27 and ask myself - "What am I working for?"

If I take an honest evaluation of my days and the way I spend them how must I honestly answer this question? How must you? Is the bulk of our time spent working for "things" that will rust and fade or on things that will last forever? Are we living and striving and giving ourselves to a house, a yard, a hobby, the computer, a career, a sport - the list could go on and on? Is the greatest investment of our time spent in passing things or on eternal things?

[As an aside, please note that we ARE to be diligent in all of our duties. Scripture speaks much about labor and the importance of it. I do need to be a good housekeeper (sorry, you'll find no excuse here for ignoring the laundry or the dishes). I do need to be concerned about putting daily bread on the table for my husband and my children because "things" do matter. God has placed us in a physical place within a physical time. BUT am I so concerned with the things of the moment that I am forsaking the things of forever? Am I doing the things of "time" while ignoring the things of "eternity'? Am I so caught up in my physical duties that I am ignoring my spiritual duties? Are the scales of my life balanced or does one far outweigh the other - for both are important?]

J.C. Ryle is very thought provoking when he writes concering the importance of our spiritual labors. He says:

"Christ would have us take pains to find food and satisfaction for our souls. We must labor in the use of all appointed means. We must read our Bibles like men digging for hidden treasure. We must wrestle earnestly in prayer like men contending with a deadly enemy for life. We must take our whole heart to the house of God and worship and hear like those who listen to the reading of a will. We must fight daily against sin, the world and the devil like those who fight for liberty, and must conquer or be slaves. This is laboring! In this, we shall have little encouragement and much opposition. We must strive, we must run, we must fight, we must throw our whole heart into our soul's affairs."

Wow! When you put it like that I have to hang my head in shame. How often do I dig for treasure, wrestle for my life, worship like an heir, and fight against my flesh like one whose whole freedom depends upon it? I am lazy. I am glad He is patient. Well, I need to go and do my dishes but I think there is some pretty important pre-washing that needs to go on in my spiritual closet first. Going to get to work!

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Friday, January 22, 2010

It Was a Dark and Stormy Night - John 6:17-21

"His disciples went down to the sea,
and after getting into a boat,
they started to cross the sea to Capernaum.
And it had already become dark,
and Jesus had not yet come to them.
And the sea began to be stirred up
because a strong wind was blowing.
When therefore they had rowed about three or four miles,
they beheld Jesus walking on the sea
and drawing near to the boat;
and they were frightened.
But He said to them, 'It is I; do not be afraid.'
They were willing therefore to receive Him into the boat;
and immediately the boat was at the land
to which they were going."
(John 6:17-21)


Have you ever found yourself in a dark, stormy, terribly frightening situation? That is where the disciples of Christ have found themselves in John 6 and their dark and stormy situation has much comfort to speak to our own.

Jesus has just fed the 5,000 + and the well-fed crowd has found itself overwhelmed by the miraculous work He has just performed. They want to make Him their king - but it is not time for His coronation so, as Christ often does, He withdraws from them. The disciples have headed out to sea and suddenly they find themselves in a bit of a pickle. Night is falling. The sea's waves are churning. Jesus is no where to be seen and the disciples are becoming a bit unsettled by the whole scenario. It was a dark and stormy night...really!

This particular story is recorded in Matthew and in Mark as well as here in John. Those two gospel accounts shed an interesting angle of light not expressed by John. Jesus MADE them get in this boat.

"And immediately He made the disciples get into the boat, and go ahead of Him to the other side...." (Matthew 14:22, Mark 6:45).

Christ "made" His disciples get into a vessel that He knew would carry them right slap dab into the middle of a frightening storm!
Friends - Christ set the stage here. He orchestrated and designed the situation. I suppose you could go as far as to say that the omnisicent and sovereign Savior set them up. However, we must remember that Christ is an all-wise, holy, and loving Lord who knows best what we need most - even storms. As we will see, this frightening situation which has been perfectly laid out and ordained according to the counsel of God's will, has a purpose - a faith increasing purpose.

Christian, what storm are you facing today? What "boat" has Christ "made" you sit in? Do you recognize God's hand in it and will you trust Him with it?

Several things prick me from John's account.

1. It appeared that they were alone in the storm. "It had already become dark, and Jesus had not yet come to them." (vs 17)

Here they are in a boat, in the dark, and in a storm. The water is churning all about them. The winds are blowing all around them. They are rowing feverishly. And they are scared stiff (see vs 17-19). Jesus MADE them get into this boat - and where is He? "OK Master - You sent us here! You put us in this vessel! Where are You?!?!" They feel alone. They feel abandoned. Where is He? Where is Jesus?!?!

Have you been there? I have. Even recently, Christ has put me in a "boat" on a churning sea and in moments of enveloping darkness and strong storm winds He "seems" to have disappeared. Job understood the feeling and his words have been my mantra many times over this past year:

"Behold, I go forward but He is not there,
and backward, but I cannot perceive Him;
When He acts on the left I cannot behold Him;
He turns on the right, I cannot see Him."
(Job 23:8-9)

But even Christ's apparent withdrawing (note that I say apparent) is with divine purpose. As we are about to see, Christ is coming, walking on the water - right on time - as He always does! Christian, you may "feel" alone - but you never are!

2. Despite their fears and feelings, they were not alone in the storm. "When therefore they had rowed about 3 or 4 miles, they beheld Jesus walking on the sea and drawing near to the boat." (vs 19)

The storm was fierce. They had to work hard to row against the winds and waves. Yet, here comes Jesus - walking on the water! Spurgeon once said that the things which to us are a crushing burden are to Him but a speck of dust. Here's a prime picture of that reality. Friends - Jesus is God. The crashing waves were as firm a walking spot for Christ as the sidewalk on Main Street is to me! Ryle reminds us that Christ was the Maker of the sea and that it was as easy for Him to walk on it as it was for Him to make it!

Oh dear ones, these weighty, pressing, debilitating and absolutely overwhelming things in our lives are less than feathers to Him and He will poof them away when it is time. He walks upon the storm. He walks to us on the storm. Do you trust the Maker of the storm to come to you in the storm? Too often I find myself rowing instead of resting and pouting instead of praying.

3. Thinking we are alone in the storm makes us irrational! "They beheld Jesus walking on the sea; and drawing near to the boat; and they were frightened." (vs 19)

It was dark, they couldn't see Him. Their faith was weak, so weak that when He did appear to them they freaked out! How fickle and fearful we are as His disciples. "Hey Jesus - where are You? Did you bail on me?" Then He comes - not perhaps as we had assumed that He would - and we are scared stiff of Him! May God have mercy on us for our foolishness - and may we praise Him that He does. Whatever is right and true and honorable - let us think on these things rather than dwelling on the emotional irrationalities that our minds so often conjure up. Bilbically out-think your feelings and take your thoughts captive to the obedience of Christ.

4. Christ knows our fears and calms our frights. "But He said to them, 'It is I; do not be afraid." vs 20)

No sooner does Jesus see the fear mounting on their faces than He calms it and settles them - just as He calmed the waves and settled his disciples onto the dry ground. Oh, He knows our frailties. He knows we are but dust. He knows we are weak and faltering and foolish, faithless sheep - and He loves us anyway.


Ryle sums the whole scenario up well when he writes:

"Let all true Christians take comfort in the thought that their Savior is Lord of waves and winds, of storms and tempests, and can come to them in the darkest hour, walking upon the sea. There are waves of trouble far heavier than any on the Lake of Galilee. There are days of darkness which try the faith of the holiest Christian. But let us never despair if Christ is our Friend. He can come to our aid in an hour when we think not and in ways that we would not expect. And when He comes, all will be calm."

Hold on storm tossed one - knowing that He holds on to you. It may be a dark and stormy night, you may be fearful, you may even be irrational, but the King of all creation is coming to calm you and He is coming right on time.

Safe in the storm,
Lori

Monday, January 18, 2010

Seeking Our Own Glory, Sitting on Our Toy Box - John 5:44

"How can you believe,
when you receive glory from one another,
and you do not seek the glory that is from
the one and only God."
(John 5:44)

Doubt and unbelief. They abound. They surround us. They fill the unregenerate world and at times they even invade the regenerate heart and mind. I know - I tend to be a doubter at times. Perhaps that is why verse 44 struck me so much this morning. It seems to strike at the root of our doubts and unbelief - that root is selfishness and pride.

Christ is speaking to a group of unbelieving Jews in this passage. He has just challenged them with the fact that they "search the Scriptures, because [they] think that in them [they] have eternal life; and it is these that bear witness of Me; and yet [they] are unwilling to come to Me, that [they] may have eternal life."

Three verses later He is still pressing them with the heart of the matter. Christ, the long awaited Messiah, has come - and they don't want Him!! Why? Verse 44 gives us the answer. They are seeking their own glory not God's!

The Westminster Shorter Catechism begins with the profound question "What is the chief end of man?" In today's terms it might be asked this way - what is my purpose? Why am I here?

The answer: "Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever." I am here to glorify God and to enjoy Him! I am here for Him. He is not here for me as some divine genie in a bottle.

"Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever." I go back to that succinct statement regarding the purpose of my life time and time again. I go back to it because I need to be reminded. I seem incredibly prone to seek my own glory above Christ's. Perhaps that is why I struggle with recurring doubts.

Verse 44 pricked me. It has made me ask "If I am really, really honest what do I most desire - God's glory or my own?"

From day to day that answer changes. Some days I really do desire His glory above my own. On other days I pick up the idol of "me" and bow down before it saying: "Hey God, I think I'll do it my way today. I'll check back with you tomorrow if I feel like it." It is on those days that I fall - and usually fall hard.

J.C. Ryle was poignant in his comments on this verse. He writes:

"As long as there is anything a man is secretly loving more than God, there will be no true faith. The man may be puzzled and wonder why he does not believe. He does not see that he is like a child sitting on the lid of his toy box, wishing to open it, but not considering that his own weight keeps it shut."

Hmmm - how often do I not receive the fullness of the gifts that have been given me in Christ because I'm sitting on the "lid" rather than resting in His lap. Oh - how I need His mercy to help me abide in Him and seek His will, His way, and His glory more than my own.

Praying for grace to get off the lid,
Lori

Friday, January 15, 2010

A Bad Case of Don't Wanna (John 5:40)

"And you are unwilling to come to Me, that you may have life."
(John 5:40)

People are full of excuses. To be perfectly honest, I'm full of excuses! You know, I spent quite a few years of my life making up excuses for not coming to Christ. I was a radical unbeliever for a period of several years. People told me about Jesus and challenged me to put my faith in Him. I regularly and often quite rudely turned them down. I said I didn't come to Him because He could not be. "God is illogical. Christ as the divine Savior is impossible. Me as a guilty sinner - that's irrelevant! I'm too smart to buy into that religious stuff!" Truth is I didn't come to Him because I didn't want Him, didn't like Him, couldn't stand Him! Truth is - that is what is at the heart of all of our unbelief - a bad case of don't want to!

John 5:40 drives that fact home : And you are unwilling to come to Me, that you may have life. While we may encounter tons and tons of excuses from our unbelieving friends as to why they cannot join us in our faith journey, the bottom line is this - they don't WANT to join us in our faith journey!

Christ costs! He costs us "us" and we love "us"way more than we love Him! The natural trinity that we all worship is the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and the boastful pride of life. Christ calls us to abandon this selfishly created triune deity and fall fully and freely upon Him as our only Lord and Savior. He calls us to die to self and live to Him and for the natural man that pill is just too hard to swallow.

Oh, let us pray more for the Spirit of God to move the hearts of our unbelieving friends to see sin for what it is and Christ for who He is. It's not so much a lack of evidence (there is much clear and reasonable evidence in Creation and in the Word). Instead of a lack of evidence, it is a lack of desire. The problem is not too much intellect, the problem is too much sin.

The natural man is unwilling - I once was. Praise Christ for the sovereign grace by which He changed my heart and made me want Him more than I wanted me!

Lord, recreate us, make us new, make us willing!

In His glorious grace,

Lori

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Do You Wish to Get Well? - John 5:1-9

"And a certain man was there,
who had been thirty-eight years in his sickness.
When Jesus saw him lying there,
and knew that he had already been a long time in that condition,
He said to him, 'Do you wish to get well?'
The sick man answered Him,
'Sir, I have no man to put me into the pool
when the water is stirred up,
but while I am coming, another steps down before me.'
Jesus said to him, 'Arise, take up your pallet, and walk.'
And immediately, the man became well,
and took up his pallet and began to walk."
(John 5:6-9)

Coming off of the heels of seeing the mysterious mercy that weaves its way through great affliction we here find another suffering character described by John's pen. Jesus has come to the pool of Bethesda and there He finds a man who has been in desperate straits for 38 years. 38 years!! This is one who has known suffering and suffering has owned him!

What particularly grabs my attention this morning is verse 6 and what it tells us about Jesus. Jesus SAW this man and Jesus KNEW what he had suffered. Not only that, but Jesus was about to DO something about it.

This is a man who had been neglected and overlooked and laughed at and scorned and ignored and ridiculed for years. He was a forgotten cripple, an outcast, a piece of garbage to the busy world. He was passed by on the streets. He was passed by with their feet and in their minds. No one cared to help him. He was despised by the multitudes but he was NOT despised by Christ! Mark it well, dear one - Christ treasures that which the world trashes!!

'Do you wish to get well?' the Savior asks. 'Well, sure - but how? No one will help me at all. No one! What am I to do?'

What is he to do? Well, Jesus tells him to "arise, take up your pallet and walk.' And miracle of miracles, that is just what he did - he got up and walked!!

This is our Savior! This is our Lord and Master! Here is the merciful and compassionate Friend of sinners! Here is our hope and consolation! Here is our ever seeing, ever knowing, ever acting God! In some way are you crippled this day? Has the world despised and forsaken you? Have you despised and forsaken yourself? Jesus will not, has not and can not! If He is your Savior and Lord He will never leave you nor forsake you and He will make all things beautiful in his time. "Let us remember that Christ sees and knows and can heal if He thinks fit." (Ryle)

"Do you wish to get well?" Do you wish to walk past the excuses that have held you captive for years? Then look unto Jesus and in His strength and power and might take up your pallet and walk!

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

The Mercy of Affliction - John 4:46-53

"He came therefore again to Cana of Galilee where He had made the water wine. And there was a certain royal official, whose son was sick at Capernaum. When he heard that Jesus had come to Galilee, he went to Him, and was requesting Him to come down and heal his son; for he was at the point of death.

Jesus therefore said to him, 'Unless you people see signs and wonders, you simply will not believe.' The royal official said to Him, 'Sir, come down before my child dies.' Jesus said to him, 'Go your way; your son lives.' The man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him, and he started off.

And as he was now going down, his slaves met him, saying that his son owas living. So he inquired of them the hour when he began to get better. They said therefore to him, 'Yesterday at the seventh hour the fever left him.' So the father knew that it was at the hour in which Jesus said to him, 'Your son lives;' and he himself believed, and his whole household."
(John 4:46-53)

Affliction is a fact of life. It happens - more often than we'd like. It crosses all of our paths. It breathes down all of our necks. It finds a way across the threshold of all of our homes. Sooner or later it hunts us down and hits us hard. In this life we will have trouble - some way, some how, some time.

Affliction is common to man. What is not always common to man is how we view it and how we respond to it. This passage in John 4 is a telling text on suffering. Several things pierce me this day as I meditate on this section of God's precious Word.

First - the characters in this true story teach us much about those who are the recipients of affliction. In the opening scene, we meet the father - a royal official. He is a man of power and prestige. He is no commoner and he is no pauper. This is a man of means and of influence. Yet this is a man who is facing a terrible trial - his son is at the point of death. Power, pomp, prestige nor purse can keep us from trouble. The rich and mighty face tough times as well as the poor and wretched.

Next we meet the father's son. In my reading I find myself assuming that he is a young man, though the text does not clearly spell that out. In this character we find sickness and the real possibility of death falling upon a son and here we are reminded that youth is not a guarantee of life and that being in the spring of life is no promise of having eternal summers of health. The first death in this world was the death of a son - young Abel - who was killed by his own brother. Suffering is common to man and it is no respector of persons young nor old nor in between. Be not surprised if it strikes you or your loved ones - no one is exempt from heartache and affliction.

Second - the ultimate outcome of this story teaches us much about the good purpose of affliction. At first glance, there is nothing pleasant about this scene - nothing! It's a BAD day! A son is dying! A father is desperate! But, praise God that a sovereign Savior is near!

What is amazing, beautiful, and wonderfully encouraging to me is that this horrible situation is the very thing that serves as a catalyst for the greatest blessing and grandest good that will ever happen in both this father's life and in his son's. This dastardly sickness drives them to Jesus. The father had a need - his son's failing physical condition - and that need caused him to flee to Christ. If suffering forces us to Jesus then praise God for suffering and may He bring it on as needed for our growth in grace!

The father cried out to the only One he thought might be able to help. As is His custom, Christ would show Himself compassionate to the father's cries and full of healing power for the son's dire situation. What a great God we serve! He would show Himself able to heal the body of the boy and, even more wonderfully, able to heal the souls of the boy's entire family.

Had a son not lay dying, had a father not been grieving, then perhaps the Great Physician would never have been sought out. Had He not been sought, He would have never been found. This affliction served a greater purpose than the temporary heartache. This difficult trial served as the entry way to eternal good. This suffering brought about the salvation of an entire family - and while ultimately they would all die a physical death at their appointed hour - this was the appointed hour for the sting of death to be removed - forever!! Had there been no temporary trial there would have been no eternal triumph. Know that is is true for us as well, Christian!

Ryle writes: "Affliction is one of God's medicines. By it He often teaches lessons which would be learned in no other way. By it He often draws souls away from sin and the world which would otherwise have perished everlastingly. Health is a great blessing, but sanctified disease is a greater. Prosperity is what we naturally desire, but losses and crosses are far better for us if they lead us to Christ!"

Psalm 119:71 records that "it is good for me that I was afflicted, that I may learn Your statutes."

Some of us know the truth of these words from experience. I do. I have seen time and time again that "God causes all things to work together for the good of those who love Him, for those who are called according to His purpose" (Rom 8:28). I have seen over and over and over how, in God's economy, some of the most difficult times of my life have ultimately been the greatest times of growth and refining. I have gained MUCH more in the house of sorrow than in the house of laughter. Yet I seem apt to forget these truths in the midst of trial and am prone to wander and lick my wounds and wallow in self-pity when I am in pain. I am a stubborn and often stupid sheep. Not only that, but I seem to find myself a stubborn, stupid sheep with a bad case of amnesia!! How grateful I am for a gentle, patient, and preserving Shepherd. I am also thankful that the sanctifying outcome of all the lessons in the school of life are ultimately dependent upon the promise of God and not upon the performance of me!

That fact brings me to the third lesson I have learned from this text: this story teaches us much about the reliability of the Word of Christ and of our need to trust in it during affliction. The declarations of our God as found in His Word are an anchor that will hold fast in any storm that blows our way in this fallen world.

Look at how the scenario before us unfolds. The royal official hunts Jesus down and pours out his plight before Him. "Please have mercy on my son, He lies dying." Christ responds simply with these words: "Go, your way; your son lives." And live he did! Jesus didn't jump up and run to the boy's bed. He didn't send a potion nor even pray a prayer. He simply made a statement and it was so!

The next day, as this father is walking home, his servants meet him on the road and inform him that indeed his son is healed. He asks them when this healing occurred and discovers that it was at the seventh hour - precisely the hour when Christ spoke His word of promise. Christ's Word is sure. It is a firm foundation. It is a safe haven. What He says He will do.

Oh beloved, do we believe the word of Jesus? Do we hold dear the precious promises that He has given to us? Do we trust Him to bring about what is best for us - even if it has to hurt for a moment - even if it has to hurt for many moments? Do we doubt Romans 8:28 and the character of the One who stands behind its promise?

The scalpel of the Great Physician is not always pleasant and quite often it is very painful. But the instrument of affliction wields an eternal good for the patient who bears up under it. It is the very tool that will remove the cancer of sin from our hearts and make us more like our Master.

Do not grow weary in your affliction. Do not doubt that He will accomplish that which He has ordained for you. Do not fear, He is near though we see Him not. Do not despise the day of sorrow. As the father of this dying son did, flee to Jesus for help and mercy in your time of trial.

Christ did not have to be physically present for this miracle to occur - He spoke and it was done! The same is true this day. "Christ's word is as good as His presence and what He has said He is able to do. What He has undertaken He will never fail to make good!"

May we not be foolish regarding trials - they will come to rich and poor to young and old. They will come and they will come with providential purpose. Most importantly, if they cause us to fall more fully upon Christ then they are truly of the greatest value and we need to beg Him for mercy and strength to embrace affliction as a merciful gift rather than fear it as a destructive force.

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Monday, December 28, 2009

A New Home Missionary - John 4:28-30, 39

“So the woman left her water pot,
and went into the city and said to the men,
‘Come, see a man who told me all the things that I have done;
this is not the Christ is it?’
They went out of the city and were coming to Him…
And from that city man of the Samaritans believed in Him
because of the word of the woman who testified,
‘He told me all the things that I have done’.”
(vs 28-30, 39)

While on a mission for tongue quenching water, the Samaritan woman mercifully encountered soul quenching water and once she had drunk of it she had to tell others about it. No sooner does this woman see Christ for who He is than do we find her becoming a missionary to those she cares for most!

She left her water pot by the well and carried not even a drop of it home. Instead, she carried living water into the city and offered it to everyone she saw. Her life had been changed. Her greatest need had been met. Her purpose in life had suddenly been discovered and she couldn’t keep quiet about it!!

Her words echo Philip’s words to Nathanael – “Come, See!” Missionary messages don’t have to be difficult. We don’t have to have all the answers. We don’t have to be extremely eloquent. We don’t have to wait to become a professional. We just need to point folks to come to Christ – the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!

I can relate to the Samaritan woman. Christ changed me – radically and I can vividly remember going and telling others what had happened. Like metal drawn to a magnet I had to tell my friends, my family, even complete strangers what Jesus had just done for me. Do you recall such a time? Has that passion faded? If so, I hope that Mr. Ryle’s words will light a spark in you again as they have in me. He writes:

“That which the Samaritan woman here did, all true Christians ought to do likewise. The church needs it: the state of the world demands it. Common sense points out that it is right. Everyone who has received the grace of God, and tasted that Christ is gracious, ought to find words to testify of Christ to others. Where is our faith, if we believe that souls around us are perishing, and that Christ alone can save them, and yet hold our peace? Where is our charity, if we can see others going down to hell and yet say nothing to them about Christ and salvation? We may well doubt our own love to Christ if our hearts are never moved to speak of Him. We may well doubt the safety of our own souls if we feel no concern for the souls of others.”

She laid down her water pot. She picked up the good news. She carried it with her into the city of her habitation and told its residents of the Christ who knew her fully, loved her nevertheless, and saved her completely. She told them. She called them to come and the text tells us that they came!

The words of this one woman move a city to run after Christ! Does that not excite you? You and I are not too feeble nor too frail to be used by God! Dear sisters in Christ – as women we are not worthless useless doormats in the kingdom of God. Christ went to the woman at the well and her encounter with Him was used by Him to move the heart of an entire city. While we have not been called to preach Him from the pulpit of the church we have been called to proclaim Him from the pulpit of life. Few men, if any, in Scripture had a greater impact on an entire city than did this one newly converted woman. May our Lord be pleased to use us as instruments of seeing our own communities “coming to Him.”

Praying to have the humble boldness of this dear sister,
Lori

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Leaving the Waterpot Behind - John 4:28-29

“So the woman left her waterpot,
and went into the city, and said to the men,
‘Come and see a man who told me all the things that I have done;
this is not the Christ, is it?’”
(vs 28-29)
Christ ministered, the disciples marveled, and the Samaritan woman high tailed it for home without her water pot! She came to draw water from the well. She left the well on a different mission than she began. Forget well water (at least for the moment), there is living water to carry home!

Everything changed for her at Jacob’s well. Everything! Purpose, perspective, passion – they have all changed. The things that were once so dear to us lose their hold on us once we have truly encountered Christ!

Here’s Ryle’s take:

“Grace once introduced into the heart drives out old tastes and interests. A converted person no longer cares for what he once cared for. A new tenant is in the house; a new pilot is at the helm. The whole world looks different. All things have become new. It was so with Matthew the publican: the moment that grace came into his heart he left the receipt of custom (Mt 9:9). It was so with Peter, James, John and Andrew: as soon as they were converted they forsook their nets and fishing boats (Mk 1:19). It was so with Saul the Pharisee: as soon as he became a Christian he gave up all his brilliant prospects as a Jew, in order to preach the faith he had once despised (Ac 9:20).

“The conduct of the Samaritan woman was precisely of the same kind: for the time present the salvation she had found completely filled her mind. That she never returned for her water-pot would be more than we have a right to say. But under the first impressions of new spiritual life, she went away and left her water-pot behind.”

Can you relate to this woman? What thing that we once held so dear has been totally eclipsed by Christ? What worldly water-pot have we left behind to follow Christ? With this Samaritan woman may we not wrongly forsake our necessary duties but our inordinate devotion to them. May we be willing to leave all to follow Christ. May we, with Paul, honestly say “Whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ. More than that, I count all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them as rubbish, in order that I may gain Christ.” (Ph 3:7-8).

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Monday, December 21, 2009

They Marvelled - John 4:27

“And at this point His disciples came,
and they marveled that He had been speaking with a woman;
yet no one said ‘What do you seek?’ or ‘Why do you speak to her?’”
(vs 27)

It’s just one verse in the middle of a grand narrative, yet it tells us a lot. The disciples return and find Christ conversing with this sinful Samaritan woman. They walk right in the middle of this evangelistic opportunity and there is truly much to marvel at. Two things strike me particularly this morning.

First, they marvel that Jesus – a Jew – is talking to a Samaritan woman – and He's talking to her about living water and worship. Jesus is no respecter of persons. He is no racist nor sexist. He is an equal opportunity Savior! How we should marvel at Christ's condescending to convert any of us. Our mouths should drop open. Our heads should shake in amazement. Our minds should marvel. Do they?

Second, they marvel that Jesus is talking to anyone at the moment. Come on, He’s worn out, He’s weary, He’s had a long hard day! Surely He has an excuse to NOT engage anyone else in conversation. Isn’t it time for Him to be off the clock? No, not Jesus. He is never too tired, never too busy, never too over extended to pursue sinners and save them! Shouldn’t that shame us a bit? How often do I find a plethora of excuses to not be bothered by the Samaritans that cross my path?

The disciples marveled at their Master’s conversation. I have marveled as well. I’ve marveled at how He has orchestrated and ordained it all. I’ve marveled at the wisdom and compassion He has displayed along the way. I’ve marveled and the miracle of mercy which has changed this wayward woman’s life. Mostly, I’ve marveled at a God who is the Author and Perfecter of her faith and of mine!

Marveling,
Lori

Saturday, December 19, 2009

A Lesson in Evangelism (part 6) - John 4:25-26

“The woman said to Him,
‘I know that Messiah is coming
(He who is called Christ);
when that One comes, He will declare to us all things.’
Jesus said to her,
‘I who speak to you am He!”
(vs 25-26)

Talk about a clear declaration. Here is THE black and white statement of black and white statements. There’s nothing confusing about this one. Jesus is the Messiah!! “I who speak to you am He!”

Is there anywhere else in all of the Bible where Jesus more plainly testifies to who He is? I know of none! And look who He tells it to – an immoral, adulterous, wicked woman!! Jesus is so willing to receive sinners. Here is grace portrayed in all of its amazing majesty. God the Son, Christ the Messiah, the eternal Son of David, the King of kings and Lord of lords loves this sinner enough to reveal Himself to her!!

He doesn’t say these words to the high priest. He doesn’t proclaim them to the rich man. He doesn’t announce them to the powerful potentate. He tells them to a sinner in need of living water!!

Beloved, this is our Savior! This is He to whom we are to point the lost to behold! This is the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. Christ loves sinners and is willing to reveal Himself – in all of His glory and majesty – to them.

As we minister to the lost and dying may we be faithful in proclaiming Him to them and may we be serious and steadfast in our prayers that just as He revealed Himself to this Samaritan woman, that in the same manner He would reveal Himself to them!!

Christ’s love for sinners is beyond our ability to comprehend. He loved this lost and immoral woman. He loved her enough to seek her out, to begin the conversation, to expose her sin, to open her eyes, to reveal Himself.

He’s done the same for me. His love for me is beyond my understanding. I can’t grasp it. How can it be? How could the Holy Son of God care to meet me on a college campus (my well) and offer to me living water? Yet, through the faithful witness of believing friends that is exactly what He did. I was pointed to this Lamb who had come to take away my sin. I was offered this water of eternal satisfaction and was clearly told that NOTHING else would ever truly satisfy me. I was shown the reality of my sin. I was pointed to worship the God who had made me and who had mercifully condescended to save me. Through those things He revealed Himself to me! I was once as the Samaritan woman was and I pray to be much more like Jesus is! May He be pleased to use me as an humble means of revealing Him to others. May He be pleased to use each of us as funnels and channels through which His living water may freely flow to sin parched souls!

Longing to be used,
Lori

Friday, December 18, 2009

A Lesson in Evangelism (part 5) - John 4:20-24

“’Our father’s worshipped in this mountain,
and you people say that in Jerusalem
is the place where men ought to worship.’
Jesus said to her,
‘Woman, believe Me, an hour is coming
when neither in this mountain, nor in Jerusalem,
shall you worship the Father.
You worship that which you do not know,
for salvation is from the Jews.
But an hour is coming, and now is,
when the true worshippers
shall worship the Father in spirit and truth;
for such people the Father seeks
to be His worshippers.
God is spirit and those who worship Him
must worship in spirit and in truth.’”
(vs 20-24)



In this ongoing encounter with Christ, the Samaritan woman has come to see her sin and now her conversation has turned God-ward rather than world-ward. Suddenly, out of the blue, they are discussing worship! What? Worship? Where did that come from? Well, it came from her. She asked and Christ is about to answer.


So, what in the world does this have to do with evangelism? Well, I think it has a lot to do with it! First of all, she is curious and asks about it. This is, to me personally, a reminder that in our encounters with the unbeliever we need to be willing to dialogue and hear out their questions, listen to their concerns, and give an answer if necessary. Secondly, worship is an important issue because, bottom line, it is THE issue. We are all worshippers. We were created to worship and in some way, we ALL do worship!


In our natural, unredeemed condition we are all idolators and our false gods and false worship of them is ultimately at the root of all our misery. By nature we all have “other God’s before Him.” By nature we worship and serve the creature rather than the Creator. As Calvin said “our hearts are idol factories.” Therefore, the topic of worship – the topic of TRUE worship - is an important issue to cover in our evangelism.

To be honest, I’d never really thought about this until meditating on the various points of this passage. In that meditation I’ve been reminded that worship is one of the ultimate purposes in our salvation. We are saved not to continue in a worship of the world’s trinity (the lust of the eyes, the lust of the flesh, and the boastful pride of life) but of the divine Trinity (Father, Son and Spirit). We are saved for a purpose. We are created with a chief end in mind – to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever. The convicted sinner needs to be pointed to that which his repentant soul should be all about - the worship of the true and living God. The unbeliever needs to be challenged to leave her idolatry and pursue the only One worthy of worship.

This Samaritan water gatherer has obviously heard much about Jewish worship through the years and apparently she has a bitter taste from it. Probably with much reason! The Jews didn’t care one iota for the Samaritans. They were as unclean dogs to the Israelites. Here she finds herself face to face with the great Prophet of Father Abraham’s heirs and she must pose a question that is troubling to her. “You people say that in Jerusalem is the place where men ought to worship.”

Christ responds to her with a brief dissertation on the problem of outward formalism in religion as compared to the inward condition of a worshipping heart. That was the problem with what she’d seen and heard. It was outward form that was devoid of inward devotion. Jesus speaks to her about worship in spirit and in truth. He has come to rend the veil that separates men from their Maker and to fulfill all of the laborious types and shadows of temple sacrifice. He has come to shatter the fetters of idolatry. He has come to enable us to worship rightly. Who better to teach her about worship and what a better time than right slap dab at the beginning of her walk with Him!

As was alluded to earlier, we were made to worship. We are saved to worship. Sadly, even once the reigning idolatry of unbelief is conquered – even as redeemed sinners, we still tend to mess worship up. White washed walls are easy and can feed our pride. Outward appearance can be pulled off in an academy award winning fashion. We tend to have a check list of duties – yet often our duties are void of devotion. You know what I’m talking about. You make it to worship but you argue with your husband and yell at your kids on the way. You walk in the church door and your mind is on everything but your God and your Savior. You sing the songs without having any meditative thought regarding the lyrics. You stare at the preacher while he preaches and maybe even nod every now and then just to fool him – but what would you say if he asked you what you learned from his message? You have your Bible on your lap, drop a dollar in the plate, shake hands with your neighbor on the pew – but where has your heart been in all of these activities? Where are your thoughts? Have you worshipped in spirit and in truth or in game face and hypocrisy? What idol have you worshipped while feigning true worship? We are all guilty from time to time!

Jesus, in His initial conversation with this woman, in His first moments of spiritually enlightening her directs her gaze at true heart worship! We’d do well to listen! “The principle contained in these sentences can never be too strongly impressed on professing Christians. We are all naturally inclined to make religion a mere matter of outward forms and ceremonies. The heart is the principle thing in all our approaches to God. ‘The LORD looketh on the heart.’ (1 Sam 16:7).

How’s your heart regarding worship? How’s mine? As we point others to Christ let us make sure we point them to the importance of true worship. May we direct them from idolatrous worship to heart-felt, God-centered worship. Worship that is in spirit and in truth and as we do, may He be pleased to add to His church true heart worshippers!

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

A Lesson in Evangelism (part 4) - John 4:15-19

“The woman said to Him,
‘Sir, give me this water, so I will not be thirsty,
nor come all the way here to draw.’
He said to her, ‘Go, call your husband, and come here.’
The woman answered and said,
‘I have no husband.’
Jesus said to her, ‘You have well said, ‘I have no husband’;
for you have had five husbands, and the one whom you now have
is not your husband; this you have said truly.’
The woman said to Him,
‘Sir, I perceive that You are a prophet.’”
(vs 15-19)

The Samaritan woman has paused to chat with Christ. She wasn't looking for a dialogue with deity but Jesus was seeking a Samaritan sinner this day and the pursuing Savior has constructed an incredibly tactful conversation starter. His topic has intrigued her. His demeanor has won her ear. His offer has peaked her curiosity. His statement of the eternal excellencies of His water has made her drool and she wants it. “Sir, give me this water, so I will not be thristy, nor come all the way here to draw.”

No doubt this sounds like a good deal and she is all about taking advantage of it. But Christ is not through with this lost and wayward one. He has an important truth to teach her - repentance. The gifts of the gospel are free but they are not cheap. In a few years, the Lord Jesus will be paying a great price to set this woman (and us) free. While belief is the key upon which the door of salvation will open – repentance is the hinge that will show that it has.

Jesus is about to deal with the sinner’s sin and in that we learn fourthly that sin MUST be dealt with before any soul is truly converted. If we must be “saved” then certainly there is something amiss – something we must be saved from. That something is sin.

The Westminster Shorter Catechism defines sin as “any want of conformity unto or transgression of, the law of God.” For this woman, one of the ways she has failed to conform and has transgressed God’s law is in regards to her relationships – marriage, divorce, adultery. We all suffer from “want of conformity unto and transgression of , the law of God.” We all have NOT done that which we ought and have done that which we shouldn't. “All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.” There are no exceptions and that is why the Lamb of God had to come. He came to take away the sin of the world. If we never deal with and confront sin then we have never truly talked about the gospel.

Notice again the great tact of Jesus. When she asks for this living water He doesn’t look at her and say “What? Are you kidding me! You wicked woman! You adulterous wretch! You better turn or burn. Get right or get left. I know what you’ve done and who you are – repent you abominable sinner!!” Our Lord doesn’t enter into the bully pulpit nor does he begin to bash her on the head with all she’s done wrong. Instead He asks her another question – a question that draws out an acknowledgment of her sin. “Go call your husband.” The question graciously exposes her sin.

Ryle points out that from this point on she is different. The conversation, from her end changes. Perhaps because for the first time she is seeing herself for who she is. Suddenly there is a spiritual dimension to her talk. Here are Ryle’s words:

“Those heart-searching words, ‘Go, call thy husband,’ appear to have pierced her conscience like an arrow. From that moment, however ignorant, she speaks like an earnest, sincere inquirer after truth. And the reason is evident. She felt like her spiritual disease was discovered.

“To bring thoughtless people to this state of mind should be the principal aim of all teachers and ministers of the Gospel. They should carefully copy their Master’s example in this place. Till men and women are brought to feel their sinfulness and need, no real good is ever done to their souls. Till a sinner sees himself as God sees him, he will continue careless, trifling, and unmoved.

“By all means we must labor to convince the unconverted man of sin, to prick his conscience, to open his eyes, to show him himself. To this end we must expound the length and breadth of God’s holy law. To this end we must denounce every practice contrary to that law, however fashionable and customary. This is the only way to do good. Never does a man see any beauty in Christ as Savior, until he discovers that he is himself a lost and ruined sinner. Ignorance of sin is invariably attended by neglect of Christ.”

Wise words! May God grant us the grace to be full of tact in our approach, faithful in pointing our hearers to the mercy and the incomparableness of Christ and of His gifts, and unafraid of humbly driving them to see themselves as sinners in need of this glorious Savior.

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Friday, December 11, 2009

A Lesson in Evangelism (Part 3) - John 4:11-14

“She said to Him, ‘Sir, you have nothing to draw with
and the well is deep; where then do You get that living water?
You are not greater than our father Jacob, are You,
who gave us the well, and drank of it himself,
and his sons and his cattle?’
Jesus answered and said to her,
‘Everyone who drinks of this water shall thirst again;
but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him
shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him
shall become in him a well of water
springing up to eternal life.’”
(vs 11-14)
The encounter continues. Christ has started a conversation with this Samaritan sinner and He has turned it to the subject of living water. He’s made it clear that He would delight to give her of this water. Her response – “What are you talking about Sir?” Jesus has no bucket, no scoop, no nothing. How in the world could He possibly give her well water much less living water?! Christ quickly makes it clear that He is not talking about ordinary water. There is nothing worldly about the gift He is referring to.

The third evangelistic lesson that we find here is to note the excellency and the superiority of Christ’s gifts compared to anything this world could ever offer. When the door of evangelistic opportunity has sprung open we need to make a clear distinction between that which the world offers and that which the Creator of the world offers. There is a BIG difference!

“Riches and rank, place and power, learning and amusements are utterly unable to fill the soul. He that only drinks of these waters is sure to thirst again. Every Ahab finds a Naboth’s vineyard hard by his palace, and every Haman sees a Mordecai at the gate. There is no heart-satisfaction in this world, until we believe on Christ. Jesus alone can fill up the empty places of our inward man. Jesus alone can give solid, lasting, enduring happiness. The peace which He imparts is a fountain, which, once set flowing within the soul, flows on to all eternity. Its waters may have their ebbing seasons; but they are living waters, and they shall never be completely dried up.” (Ryle)

People are thirsty. That fact is obvious by the enormity of things that we try to fill ourselves up with. Money, relationships, work, drink, fashion, attention, fame, family, on and on and on it goes. Things, in the proper place, are not all bad – but they are not that in which we will find our chief end. We were made by God, for God and until we are in God through being in Christ we will always be dissatisfied.

The natural dissatisfaction that all men face is a point of contact for us with the gospel. Even the things that we consider good could always be better in this life. We have a lot of money – we could have more. We have great friends – we could have greater. We have a nice home – it could be bigger or cleaner, on a better lot, in a better neighborhood. The most wonderful spouse has some flaws. The cutest kids still have their blemishes. This world and all that it contains will always leave us reaching for something more, something better, something truly filling. The living water that Christ offers to this woman is the one thing that will fully fill!

Have we drunk of that water? Then let us pause to meditate upon its grandeur and point others to the eternal, free, and full satisfaction that is found in it alone. Everyone who is filling themselves on the world’s water WILL thirst again. Jesus informs this Samaritan sinner and He informs us that “ whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall become in him a well of water springing up to eternal life.”

Drink of Christ – drink often – think as you drink – meditate on the wonder of this living water that He has provided for you and as you do, tactfully tell the world of His willingness to give to them this same source of everlasting satisfaction!

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

A Lesson in Evangelism (Part 2) - John 4:7-10

“There came a woman of Samaria to draw water,
Jesus said to her, ‘Give me a drink.’
For His disciples had gone away into the city to buy food.
The Samaritan woman therefore said to Him,
‘How is it that You, being a Jew, ask me for a drink
since I am a Samaritan woman?’
(For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.)
Jesus answered and said to her,
‘If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you,
‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked Him
and He would have given you living water.”
(vs 7-10)

Christ, the greatest evangelist, is making us privy to one of His evangelistic encounters. He is at Jacob’s well. He is weary and thirsty and up comes a Samaritan woman. He asks her for a drink – not so much to slake His physical thirst as to slake her spiritual thirst. In the previous post He had begun the conversation with great tact and providential prudence. In so doing He has caused this woman to enter into the conversation of a lifetime – the conversation of an eternal lifetime!!

The second thing we see in this conversation is just how willing Jesus is to give His good gift to the sinful, undeserving, and even to the uninterested. This lady doesn’t have a clue who she is talking to!! She’s not looking for the Messiah. She’s not looking for an epiphany. She’s gone to get some water. This is business as usual for her. This is an ordinary day. Well, it started as an ordinary day, then she met Jesus at the well.

“Give me a drink,” He asks. “What? YOU want ME to give YOU a drink. But you are a Jew and I am a Samaritan – you folks don’t do things like that!” Jesus answered and said, “If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you, ‘Give Me a drink,’ you would have asked Him, and He would have given you living water.”

Christ has turned the conversation. They are no longer talking about wet, worldly water but about the living water that flows from heaven! She didn’t ask Him for a thing but He directs her thoughts towards the Thing of things! Oh friends, just as Christ initiated this conversation with this lost soul – so He still does with each of us. If you are in Christ it is by His doing – by His starting – by His interest in your soul. Both the apostle Paul and the psalmist David tell us that “there is no one who seeks after God.” Praise His merciful name that He is a sheep seeking Savior – He is a Samaritan seeking Savior – He is a sinner seeking Savior!! She wasn’t looking, neither were we – but Christ came to SEEK and to save that which was lost. Christian – He has sought you and has apprehended you!

“The infinite willingness of Christ to receive sinners is a golden truth, which ought to be treasured up in our hearts and diligently impressed on others. The Lord Jesus is far more ready to hear than we are to pray and far more ready to give favors than we are to ask them. All day long He stretches out His hands to the disobedient and the gainsaying. He has thoughts of pity and compassion towards the vilest of sinners, even when they have no thoughts of Him.” (J. C. Ryle)

And as we see in this text, when she had no thought of Him, He turned her thoughts to Him! “Jesus what a friend for sinners! Jesus lover of my soul!” Has the Lord Jesus Christ met you at some well and turned your thoughtlessness into thirst for living water? Has He so directed your heart and mind and will and affections that you now drink fully and freely of that water? Then His mercy has been great towards you! His purposed pursuit has born fruit in you. May He continue to reap a harvest in and through us as we meet others at that same well and point them to the great Giver of grace, mercy, peace and eternal pardon.

Go and tell others with tact of the beneficent God who has saved you!

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Monday, December 7, 2009

A Lesson in Evangelism (Part 1) - John 4:7-10

“There came a woman of Samaria to draw water,
Jesus said to her, ‘Give me a drink.’
For His disciples had gone away into the city to buy food.
The Samaritan woman therefore said to Him,
‘How is it that You, being a Jew, ask me for a drink
since I am a Samaritan woman?’
(For Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.)
Jesus answered and said to her,
‘If you knew the gift of God, and who it is who says to you,
‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked Him
and He would have given you living water.”
(vs 7-10)

Walter Chantry has a wonderful book entitled “Today’s Gospel: Authentic or Synthetic.” In this short work he takes an in depth look at Christ’s encounter with the rich young ruler. That encounter gives us a glimpse at how our Lord did evangelism and gives us a picture of how we should as well. If you have a burden for evangelism, or if you long to develop one, I highly recommend Chantry's work - it's practical and purposeful.

Here in John 4 we have another tangible example of how the Jesus reached out to the immoral and spiritually ignorant. Quite a number of things jumped out and grabbed me from Christ’s conversation and I hope to take several days to unpack them. The first thing is the way in which Jesus began the conversation.

Weary Jesus is sitting by Jacob’s well. Along comes a Samaritan woman. Obviously water is on her mind – she’s coming to the well! Christ, who must be thirsty after such a long day asks her for a drink. However, His own thirst is not the primary reason for the request. No, our all-wise Lord is taking a common thing of life and is about to turn it into a great spiritual lesson which will have eternal consequences on this woman. Look, listen and learn!

The community in which I live is one that often prides itself on its “Christian” heritage. There are churches on every corner – sometimes multiple churches on every corner. Quite a few of those churches are active in their attempts at evangelism. However, some of their attempts are more like a bull in a china shop than like our Lord’s example. I have personally been the “victim” of “drive by” evangelism (a man in a truck once threw a tract out the window to my husband and me as we walked down Main Street). I have been bludgeoned by street preaching evangelism (On several occasions groups have literally yelled the gospel at me on the same street as the random “truck tracker”. However, I’ve been unable to get the “preacher” to talk to me one on one afterwards.) I have friends in my town who have been accosted outside their work place (because they were smoking a cigarette) and told that they would burn in hell just like that cigarette if they didn’t repent. The examples are endless, but I think you get the picture.

Christ is about to meet one on one with a sinner – a chief of sinners – and He well knows it. The omniscient Lamb of God who came to take away the sin of the world knows who He’s dealing with. Knowing full well just how wicked she is, He deals with her in a tactful, gracious, and providentially wise fashion. He asks her for a drink of water.

Ryle writes: “He does not wait for her to speak to Him. He does not begin by reproving her sins, though He doubtless knew them. He opens communication by asking a favor. He approaches the woman’s mind by the subject of “water” which was naturally uppermost in her thoughts. Simple as this request may seem, it opened a door to spiritual conversation. It threw a bridge across the gulf which lay between her and Him. It led to the conversion of her soul.

“Our Lord’s conduct in this place should be carefully remembered by all who want to do good to the thoughtless and spiritually ignorant. It is vain to expect that such persons will voluntarily come to us, and begin to seek knowledge. We must begin with them, and go down to them in the spirit of courteous and friendly aggression. It is vain to expect that such persons will be prepared for our instruction, and will at once see and acknowledge the wisdom of all we are doing. We must go to work wisely. We must study the best avenues to their hearts, and the most likely ways of arresting their attention. There is a handle to every mind, and our chief aim must be to get hold of it.

“Above all, we must be kind in manner, and beware of showing that we feel conscious of our own superiority. If we let spiritually ignorant people fancy that we think we are doing them a great favor in talking to them about religion, there is little hope of doing good to their souls.”

Make the most of the moment, seize the circumstance, pursue that which Providence has ordained. Unbelievers are in our paths repeatedly. As a mom I run into them in the grocery store, at the library, at the park. Am I about the business of engaging them in conversation regarding the “water” of the moment? Am I seeking to be a conversation starter with others? Am I looking for ways to be kind, courteous, and compassionate to those who walk up to the “well”? Do I honestly care at all? Do I have a haughty spirit and an arrogant attitude where they are concerned or am I like John the Baptist recognizing that I have received nothing that hasn’t come from God? Am I humbly bold? Do I see myself as simply one sinner saved by grace longing for the salvation of another sinner by that same amazing grace?

The soul searching questions are endless! Lord, Jesus – You who are the Master Evangelist give me a heart like Yours and tact like Yours. Here I am, send me, use me, be glorified through my feeble efforts to point others to behold, You – the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!

Praying for tactful opportunities this day,
Lori

Thursday, December 3, 2009

A Real Savior - John 4:6

“And Jacob’s well was there.
Jesus therefore, being wearied from His journey,
was sitting thus by the well.”
(vs 6)
There is just something special about talking with a friend who really understands what you are going through. Perhaps they’ve faced a similar situation to yours. Perhaps they’ve faced the exact same thing at the exact same moment that you have. There is a kindredness when one has walked in your shoes. Well, Christ - the Friend of friends has walked in our shoes!

In the book of Hebrews we are told that “we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin.” (He 4:15). Here in John 4 we have a tangible example of just how much like us Jesus - our wondrous Emmanuel - was.

Christ was weary from His journey. He’d has a long walk and a long day and He was tired, so He sat. Have you ever been weary and worn out? Christ understands! He’s been there and even now is there with you. Throughout the pages of Scripture we see times when our Lord was hungry, thirsty, lonely, tearful, sleepy, righteously indignant, in physical pain, and in spiritual anguish. Oh how greatly He humbled Himself to come to this fallen world and walk with us, among us, as one of us!! This is God incarnate! This is amazing love – sent by the Father – for the sole purpose of saving sinners from the wrath to come!

“The truth before us is full of comfort for all who are true Christians. He to whom sinners are bid to come for pardon and peace, is One who is man as well as God. He had a real human nature when He was upon earth. He took a real human nature with Him, when He ascended up into heaven. We have at the right hand of God a High Priest who can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, because He has suffered Himself being tempted.

“ When we cry to Him in the hour of bodily pain and weakness, He knows well what we mean. When our prayers and praises are feeble through bodily weariness, He can understand our condition. He knows our frame. He has learned by experience what it is to be a man. The poor, the sick, and the suffering, have in heaven One who is not only an Almighty Savior, but a most feeling friend.” (Ryle)

Oh hear these words. Let them soak in. The Lord Jesus Christ is that friend who understands – better than any other friend ever will. He is the Friend of sinners. He is the sympathizing High Priest. No wonder the writer of Hebrews goes on in verse 16 of chapter 4 to encourage us to flee to this understanding One. “Let us therefore [because He sympathizes] draw near with confidence to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and may find grace to help in time of need.”

Are you weary? Christ understands and He is a Friend who can not only supply you with an understanding ear but with all the strength you so desperately need. “Hallelujah, what a Savior. Hallelujah, what a Friend. Saving, helping, keeping, loving – He is with me to the end!”

Thankful for an understanding and enabling Friend,
Lori

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

The Present Privilege & Abiding Wrath of God - John 3:36

“He who believes in the Son has eternal life;
but he who does not obey the Son shall not see life,
but the wrath of God abides on him.”
(vs 36)
John the Baptist was a humble man. However, his humility didn’t negate boldness. John was brave enough to speak the truth – whether the truth would be palatable to his hearer’s ears or not. Verse 36 is a great example of that humble boldness.

Here we see John echoing the words of Jesus regarding the way to eternal life. Believing in Christ is the key which alone will open the gate to heaven. There is no other One by whom we may be saved than through Christ and there is no other means by which He will save us than through faith. The cries of the reformation still ring true - we are saved by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone, that to God alone may all the glory fall!

Two main points have stuck with me while dwelling on this one verse this morning. First of all, there is a precious promise. “He who believes in the Son HAS eternal life…” The gift of faith is not one that we must wait to receive when we get to heaven’s gates. No, it is a gift that belongs to us here and now. He who believes HAS!

As I have so many times in these first three chapters of John, I turn once again to Mr. Ryle’s comments.

“He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life. He is not intended to look forward with a sick heart to a far distant privilege. He ‘hath’ everlasting life as soon as he believes. Pardon, peace, and a complete title to heaven, are an immediate possession. They become a believer’s own from the very moment he puts faith in Christ. They will not be more completely his own if he lives to the age of Methuselah.

“The truth before us is one of the most glorious privileges of the Gospel. There are no works to be done, no conditions to be fulfilled, no price to be paid, no wearing years of probation to be passed, before a sinner can be accepted with God. Let him only believe on Christ, and he is at once forgiven. Salvation is close to the chief of sinners. Let him only repent and believe, and this day it is his own.”

Good news!! The first part of John’s final sermon is a joy to preach and to proclaim. Who wouldn’t want to her these things? However, John is a faithful crier of the truth and he will not stop short and speak only half truths. John will hold forth the whole counsel of God.

So, part two - the hard truth. Secondly in this verse we see the serious warning to those who refuse to believe. “…but he who does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him.” Christ has commanded men to believe on Him. John has done the same. Those who choose to disobey this gracious command of the God who created them and who alone can save them rebel to their own peril. Ryle’s words are piercing to me personally. He writes:

“Let us leave this passage with one grave and heart-searching thought. If faith in Christ brings with it present and immediate privileges, to remain unbelieving is to be in a state of tremendous peril. If heaven is very near to the believer, hell must be very near to the unbeliever.”

John understood the eternal danger that was lurking around the souls of his hearers. If they heeded not his warning it was to their eternal doom. This is a big deal – the biggest of deals! So often in our current culture the church, her ministers, and her people shy away from ever speaking of anything but the love of God. We paint a Picasso type portrait of our God. It is an abstract and unrealistic rendering. Rarely in our day and time do we see Rembrandtish realism – a full orbed view of a God who is holy, just, and righteous as well as loving, merciful, and full of compassion. John was not about painting with abstract strokes. The God he held forth was FULL of love and was also holy in just wrath.

“Here we find that the last words of one of Christ’s best servants, consist of a solemn declaration of the danger of unbelief. The wrath of God is John’s last thought. To warn men of God’s wrath and of their danger of hell is not harshness but true charity.”

The promise of having eternal life – God’s gracious gift, sent in love to unworthy sinners - is held out to all. “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved.” The warning of eternal death – God’s just and holy punishment to unrepentant sinners – is held out as well. May the gracious Spirit who is the divine Initiator of the new birth renew our hearts that we might make the only choice which is wise – believing and therefore receiving!

In His glorious grace,
Lori

Monday, November 30, 2009

Increasing and Decreasing - John 3:27-30

“John answered and said,
‘A man can do nothing unless it has been given him from heaven.
You yourselves bear me witness, that I said,
‘I am not the Christ’, but ‘I have been sent before Him.’
‘He who has the bride is the bridegroom;
but the friend of the bridegroom,
who stands and hears him, rejoices greatly
because of the bridegroom’s voice.
And so this joy of mine has been made full.
He must increase, but I must decrease.’”
(vs 27-30)




Not too many entries ago I learned a lesson in humility from my dear brother John the Baptist. In John 1 folks had taken notice of his giftedness of tongue and holiness of life and they wanted to know about him. “Hey, who are you?” It was red carpet rolling time and he could have milked their question for all it was worth. “Well, I am the only person besides Christ who is specifically prophecied of in the entire Old Testament. I suppose you could say I’m ‘the man.’” But John is not about the business of promoting himself – He is about the work of promoting Christ. “I am just a voice, a simple voice sent to plead and implore you to behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. He’s the important one, I’m just a noisy gong sent to set your attention on Him. Behold the Lamb, not me!”

Well, John the Baptist is giving lesson number two in humility to us here in his final recorded sermon. A dispute has arisen among his disciples. They’ve become a bit jealous of Christ’s disciples. “Wait a minute, why are folks going to them instead of to us? Hey John, what’s up with that?!” John doesn’t bite as we would. He has no pity party that the Jesus group is growing more than the John group. He’s not about clubs, He’s about Christ! And if people are coming to Christ – that’s what really and truly matters! Well we would do to heed his words and follow his example.

His response? “A man can receive nothing, unless it has been given him from heaven.” John has consistently reminded folks that One greater than himself was coming. “Look to the Lamb, not to me!” John also has come to the point of realizing that we have NOTHING to be presumptuous or proud about. EVERYTHING we have is a gift from God – EVERYTHING! We have created and accomplished NOTHING on our own – every good and perfect gift comes from the Father of lights in whom there is no shadow! Therefore, everything we have should be used for the furthering of the Kingdom of God not for the furthering of the kingdom of us! What John has and is, what his disciples have and are, what you and I have and who we are is all from and all for Jesus Christ – the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. We would have nothing without Him. We would be nothing were it not for Him. Therefore, let us use what we have been given – all that we have been given – as a means of seeing more men, women, and children glorifying Him, not glorifying us. John understood that and wants his disciples to as well!

He understands it to the point of telling them plainly, “He must increase, but I must decrease.” It doesn’t matter one iota if John the Baptist drifts off of the scene as long as Jesus the Savior moves to center stage. John is disposable – so am I – so are you. The sooner we realize that fact the more boldly, humbly and fervently we will serve. May everyone I encounter see more of Jesus and less of Lori. Don’t behold me, behold Him. I can give you nothing of eternal significance. Christ can give you everything of eternal worth. As one who has heard John’s call from the mouth of another who heard it from another who heard it from another, etc.; as one who by grace has responded to that call I now join with John begging others to look not to me but to Christ. It is He alone who takes away the sin of the world. It is He alone that is worthy of our attention and devotion. Look to Him dear one. Let Him increase and let everything else in this fallen and feeble world decrease.

May we all learn from John the Baptist. “Let us endeavor in life and death, to hold the same views of our Lord Jesus to which John here gives expression. We can never make too much of Christ. Our thoughts about the church, the ministry, the sacraments [and ourselves], may easily become too high and extravagant. We can never have too high thoughts about Christ! We can never love Him too much. We can never trust Him too implicitly, lay too much weight upon Him, and speak too highly in His praise. He is worthy of all the honor that we can give Him. He will be all in heaven. Let us see to it, that He is all in our hearts on earth.” (J. C. Ryle)

Increase dear Savior. Increase in my heart. Increase in my mind. Increase in my living and in my loving. Swallow me up Lord Jesus and move me out of the way that You might shine. Make me a mirror that reflects your glory not a sponge that seeks my own.

Decreasing, by grace,
Lori

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Making Shipwreck of Our Souls - John 3:14-21 (Part 3)

“And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness,
even so must the Son of Man be lifted up;
that whoever believes may in Him have eternal life.
For God so loved the world
that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him
should not perish, but have eternal life.
God did not send the Son into the world
to condemn the world, but that the world
should be saved through Him.
He who believes in Him is not judged,
he who does not believe has been judged already,
because he has not believed in the name
of the only begotten Son of God.
And this is the judgment,
that the light has come into the world,
and men loved the darkness rather than the light;
for their deeds were evil.
For everyone who does evil hates the light,
and does not come to the light,
lest his deeds should be exposed.
But he who practices the truth comes to the light,
that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.”
(vs 14-21)


With such a grand display of such amazing love one might ask, “Why wouldn’t everyone jump on the band wagon?” This is the deal of deals. This is the free gift of a life time – of an eternal life time. Yet, while myriads accept the gift by faith, many mock it, scoff it, ignore it, disdain it, and refuse it. Why?

The last 3 verses of this text give a plain answer. “Light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than the light; for their deeds were evil.” We sinners love our sin. We love the darkness in which we believe we can hide out with our sin. Loving our sin and the shadows which cover it, we want nothing to do with a light that will expose it. “Everyone who does evil hates the light, and does not come to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed.”

We won’t be able to blame God for our lost condition if that is where we find ourselves on the last day. The fault is our own – all our own. We have worshipped our lusts as lord of our life. And that lustful love of darkness will be our ruin!

God has loved us. He has loved us to such a degree that He has sent Christ to die for our sins if only we will believe on Him. Clearly God is willing to save. Certainly He has sent light into the darkness. Sadly, many have loved the darkness and have therefore hated their only hope. “His blood will be on his own head, if he makes shipwreck of his soul. The blame will be at his own door, if he misses heaven. His eternal misery will be the result of his own choice. His destruction will be the work of his own hand. He loved darkness, and therefore darkness must be his everlasting portion. He would not come to Christ, and therefore he could not have life.” (Ryle)

Dear reader, what do we love? Darkness or light? Are we fearful of the exposing light of the gospel or do we long for it to search us and chase out our darkness? “He who practices truth comes to the light, that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.”

Here are the final words of Christ’s sermon preached to Nicodemus. Here we have most clearly heard Christ Himself expound the gospel. He has held forth the necessity of a new birth – “you must be born again.” He has foretold the ordained death of Himself as the only atoning sacrifice for sinners – “so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” He has trumpeted the need for justifying faith as the only way to heaven – “whoever believes in Him should not perish, but have eternal life.” “He who believes in Him is not judged, he who does not believe has been judged already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.” Christ has kicked out from under us the crutch of any excuse for our unbelief – “Light is come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the light; for their deeds were evil.”

Do we believe? Do we love the light? Are we resting in Christ alone and living as those who are resting in Him? Let us look upon Him, believe on Him, live for Him, and die in Him knowing that we will go to Him! O Lord, increase our faith and search our hearts, test our ways, chase out the shadows that we still long to lurk in. Let us love Your light for in it there is life. In it and in no place else there is life. Life eternal!

Believing, by grace,
Lori

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Amazing Love - John 3:14-21 (Part 2)

“And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness,
even so must the Son of Man be lifted up;
that whoever believes may in Him have eternal life.
For God so loved the world
that He gave His only begotten Son,
that whoever believes in Him
should not perish, but have eternal life.
God did not send the Son into the world
to condemn the world, but that the world
should be saved through Him.
He who believes in Him is not judged,
he who does not believe has been judged already,
because he has not believed in the name
of the only begotten Son of God.
And this is the judgment,
that the light has come into the world,
and men loved the darkness rather than the light;
for their deeds were evil.
For everyone who does evil hates the light,
and does not come to the light,
lest his deeds should be exposed.
But he who practices the truth comes to the light,
that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.”
(vs 14-21)
Are there any better known words in all of Scripture than John 3:16? “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life.” Here is, as Luther put it, “the gospel in miniature.” Here is the crux of it all in capsule form. Here is the finest cliff note version of the gospel that you’ll ever see.

Well known words, yet not known well enough. Familiar words, yet perhaps so familiar that we miss their grandeur. This day, my heart and mind have been stirred anew at the awesomeness of their message and I pray that yours will be as well.

Note, first of all, that it is from God that all of these blessings flow. “For GOD so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son...” The salvation of sinners was all His idea. He is the grand initiator. He is the first cause. He is the spring from which this grand fountain flows. He is the great and divine mover who gets salvation’s ball rolling. We owe all to Him and to His love.

Secondly, note how great this love that begins with God is. “For God SO loved the world…” Have two tiny letters ever communicated as much as the word “so” does in this verse. Bishop Sanderson is quoted as saying, “How much that ‘so’ containeth no tongue or wit of man can reach.” God SO loved the world. We see the enormous depth of that “so” when we see the end that it accomplished. “God SO loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son.” God loved sinful, fallen, rebellious man SO much that He gave Christ to die for us!! Can it truly be? Could God have loved the world so much that He gave Jesus to die in our place that we might live in His? “Love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all!”

Ryle writes in his commentary notes the following regarding verse 16:

“A more startling declaration is impossible to conceive. A more wonderful verse is not to be found in the Bible! That God should love such a wicked world as this, and not hate it – that He should love it so as to provide salvation – that in order to provide salvation He should give, not an angel, or any created being, but such a priceless gift as His only begotten Son that this great salvation should be freely offered to everyone that believeth – all, all this is wonderful indeed!”

Were it not “impossible for God to lie” I’m not sure that I could believe it. It is beyond amazing. It is beyond miraculous. It is beyond comprehension. Yet its truth is that which has changed my life and scores of others! “God so loved the world – and me as one who lives and breathes His air in this fallen world – that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life.”

This is indeed amazing love. Christ came not to judge us but to save us (vs 17). The channel through which this salvation is applied to us is by the means of belief. “…that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life.” It is not of works, lest any man should boast. It is not of blood line or wealth or education or any THING. It is of faith – “and this is not of yourselves it is the gift of God” (Eph 2:8-9).

I turn again to Ryle and his comments on these verses for they ring forth as a clarion call to those in need of saving mercy.

“Faith in the Lord Jesus is the very key of salvation. He that has it has life, and he that has it not has not life. Nothing whatever beside this faith is necessary to our complete justification; but nothing whatever, except this faith, will give us an interest in Christ. We may fast and mourn for sin, and do many things that are right, and use religious ordinances, and give all our goods to feed the poor, and yet remain unpardoned, and lose our souls. But if we will only come to Christ as guilty sinners, and believe on Him, our sins shall at once be forgiven, and our iniquities shall be entirely put away. Without faith there is no salvation; but through faith in Jesus the vilest sinner may be saved.”

Dear ones, – God loved. God SO loved that He gave. God SO loved that He gave His only begotten Son. God So loved that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. God loved and God gave. The crucial question for each of us is have we believed? That is the question of questions. At the end of this life it is the only question that will matter of all the questions ever asked of us. Our answer to that question is the hinge pin upon which the gates of heaven and hell swing. There is no other question of such inestimable value. There is no answer which will bring about such eternal consequences. Oh sinner, do you believe?

Believing, and praying that you will as well,
Lori