Month: July 2021

Giving

Thanks be to God for his indescribable gift.  (II Cor 9:15)

Father, you have given me all I have.  Make me a man who gives to you all I have. 

God gives.  He so loved the world that He gave.  He saves by grace, and grace is a gift.  Eternal life is a gift.  Your own breath is a gift.  Food and home and friends are all gifts.  Forgiveness is a gift.  A new nature is a gift.  The Holy Spirit, peace and joy are gifts.  Every good and perfect gift comes from above, from the Father of lights.  God is not merely a giver but a lavish giver.  He gives exceedingly and abundantly above all that we could ask or think. 

God is a lavish giver because He is a lavish lover.  God gives because He loves, and He gives lavishly because He loves lavishly.  Love gives.  The more you love, the more you give.  When a man and woman love each other, they give themselves to each other in marriage for life.  No greater love is there than to give your life for your friend.  God loves us so deeply that He has given His life for us.  He now asks us to give our lives for Him. 

If we do not love God, we will not give our lives for Him, but when we love Him, we give everything for Him.

The Christian life is a life of giving.  Christ calls people to lay down their lives and follow Him.  It’s expensive.  You have to give Him everything.  If you don’t want to give Him everything, don’t follow Him.  If you want to give Him everything but find it hard . . . well . . . me too.  Come join me and let’s walk this path together.  It may be hard, but it’s full of joy and freedom.

Typically when we think of giving, we think of money and possessions, and, of course, giving certainly involves money and possessions, but Biblical giving is so much more.  Biblical giving begins with the heart.  To God writing a check without your heart in it, is a bit shallow.  The heart is the foundation to giving, so let’s lay that foundation.

Here are some principles that are part of the foundation for the type of giving that God wants from us.  No particular order.

Understand where everything comes from.  Do you have a family?  God gave it to you.  Do you have a job?  God gave it to you.  Your bank account, your home, your education, your time, your ability to play the piano, your skill with numbers or words, your compassion?  God gave them all to you.  Is there any good thing you have that God did not give you? 

The Christian must understand deep in the heart that everything he has came from God.  We cannot give what we do not have, and we have because God first gave.  We love because He first loved us, and we give because He first gave to us.  Everything we give originated with God.  A father gives his child spending money.  The child takes some of that money and buys a gift for his father.  The child thus gives to his father what his father had first given to him.  Christian giving is like this. 

The person who best gives sees that everything he has came from God.

Understand that everything we have is by grace.  This principle relates to the one above but focuses on something different.  The first principle states simply that God is the source of every good thing in our lives.  This second principle focuses on merit.  It’s not just that God is the source; it’s that we do not deserve any of the good things He has given.  You have air to breathe and water to drink, but you did nothing to deserve such.  In Christ, you have forgiveness and peace, but you did not deserve them.  You have a thousand blessings at your right hand, and you have done nothing to earn them. 

The Christian who sees his heart knows that he deserves nothing.  And yet God has given us everything.  This is grace.  You have work by God’s grace.  You have a family by God’s grace.  You have a home by God’s grace.  You have a clean heart, a renewed mind and a new nature by God’s grace. 

Sometimes the rich and powerful receive gifts because they are rich and powerful, and people court their favor.  But God does not need your favor.  He gave to you when you were lowly and poor.  You were nothing but He gave you life.  You were naked but He clothed you.  You were hopeless but He gave you hope. 

Christians sometimes think that salvation is the only thing they have received by grace.  This could not be further from the truth.  Everything we have has come by grace.  This fact should affect our giving because it should touch our heart.  We should be grateful for what we have and not demanding that we receive more. 

The Christian who best gives is the Christian who sees that he deserves none of God’s good gifts. 

We need new hearts in order to give.  I suppose you do not technically need a new heart to write a check or to volunteer to lead worship.  Many who write checks have old hearts, and many who lead worship are merely performers.  But Biblical giving goes beyond externals.  If we are to give as God desires, we need new hearts, and these new hearts require God to make them new. 

Ask God to give you His heart.  The heart of Christ wants to give, and the heart of Christ comes only from Christ.  You cannot make yourself give.  You cannot clench your fists and will God’s heart.  You cannot change yourself.  Only God can do this.  So go to Him.  This is where giving is interconnected with everything else we have been discussing about walking with God.  Get your heart into the Scriptures, into prayer, into a Christ-honoring church.  Trust in the Cross and Resurrection, and lean on His Spirit.  Look to Christ for your new life.  When you do, and when He gives you a new heart, you’ll give – from the heart. 

Giving is grace.  This principle is different from the principle about grace above.  That principle says that what you have received is grace.  This one focuses on what you give. 

When Paul encourages the Corinthians to give, he uses as an example the churches in Macedonia.  He says, “We want you to know, brothers, about the grace of God that has been given among the churches of Macedonia.”  Paul then describes the giving of those churches and  concludes with “ . . . see that you excel in this act of grace also”  (II Cor 8:1-7). To Paul, the giving that the Macedonian churches practiced was by the grace of God, and the giving that he encouraged the Corinthian churches to practice was also by the grace of God. 

When we give, we give out of the grace of God.  This principle flows naturally out of all the principles above.  The money, time, talents, and resources we have are by grace.  God gave them to us.  The very heart to give is also grace.  God gave it to us. 

All aspects of Biblical giving are grace.  God graciously gives us the resources, the ability, the heart, and the privilege to give.  Thus, when we give, we should be grateful. 

We must give ourselves before we give our things.  Paul says of the Macedonian churches, “they gave themselves first to the Lord and then by the will of God to us” (II Cor 8:5).  One of the biggest mistakes people make when they give is that they give only their things.  This sort of giving usually arises out of either legalistic motives – “I did my duty” – or a desire to feel good about ourselves – “see what a kind person I am!” 

In this type of giving, the self is still at the center.  We may let go of some money, but we haven’t let go of ourselves.  God wants so much more than your stuff.  He wants you.  He wants you to give Him yourself and not just some material goods.  Of course, when you give God yourself, He gets your stuff as well.  Giving God yourself is not a substitute for giving Him your resources.  It is the motivation and power for doing it. 

When it comes to giving, keep first things first.  Giving your resources is not first.  It flows out of a life given to God. 

Healthy giving requires contentment.  Godliness with contentment is great gain.  When we give ourselves to Christ, we have Christ, and if we have Christ, we have all we need.  We are rich.  In fact, we are richer than if we had merely a trillion dollars.  The Christian who sees this is content with what he has.  When we are content with what we have, we are freer to give.

If we are not content in Christ, we are not truly content.  We will always want something more, and when we want more, we tend to hold on to what we have or we give grudgingly.  Scripture says God loves a cheerful giver, and a cheerful giver is content.  Contentment is essential to Biblical giving.

The principles above focus on our hearts.  This is where giving begins. 

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The Christian Life: A Summary So Far

Over the past months, I have been discussing how to live the Christian life.  I want now to stop and summarize what we have seen so far.  This is, thus, a review, a satellite picture of a portion of the Christian life.  When you live the Christian life, what should it look like?  What helps us live the life Christ calls us to live?  So here goes.

  • The Christian life requires a Christian.  This is basic.  To live the Christian life, you must first have the life of Christ in you.  Unconverted people cannot live converted lives.  Christ must change you.  You must be a new creature in order to live a new life.
  • The Christian life requires Christ.  The Christian life is a life of “not I but Christ.”  It is a life of being dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus.  The Christian who relies on his own strength will not live the Christian life.  But the Christian who looks to Jesus and leans on Jesus and trusts in Jesus will find in Jesus the power to live for Jesus.  In the Cross and Resurrection, God has done the work to make us righteous.  He has cleansed us from all sin, crucified our sinful nature, and given us new life through the Spirit.  Believe these truths from the heart.  Rest in them and let them lead your life. 
  • The Christian life requires the Spirit.  In Christ, God has come to dwell in you through His Spirit.  It is His Spirit who convicts you of sin, judgment and righteousness.  It is His Spirit who brings holiness.  It is His Spirit who applies the power of Christ in your life.  Let Him do so.
  • The Christian life requires perseverance.  We live in a fallen world, and those who are in Christ still fall, but when we fall, we confess our sin, we trust in the Cross of Christ to make us whole, and we get back up.  We don’t quit.  Ever.
  • The Christian life requires desire.  You cannot die to self unless you have a greater desire for Christ.  The Christian life is not about forsaking our desires but about fulfilling a higher and deeper desire for Christ.  You must have passion for Jesus if you are to live for Him successfully. 
  • The Christian life requires a church.  God made His people to be a body in which each member needs the others.  You need a church, and the church needs you.  People who choose to live outside a Christ-honoring church are not living the Christian life.  In fact, they cannot live it until they choose to participate with the body of Christ.  Christians should grow in their relationship with God, but God designed them to do this within the context of a Biblical community.
  • The Christian life requires the Scriptures.  If you want a healthy soul, feed it healthy ideas.  If you want to know God better, learn what He says.  God’s words are in the Bible.  Read it.  Meditate on it.  Listen to it.  Take it to heart.  Obey it.  If you want to live the Christian life, the Bible is essential.  It points you in the right direction.  It centers your soul on Christ.  Those who best live the Christian life spend significant time daily feeding their souls from the living word of God.
  • The Christian life requires prayer.  If you want to live the Christian life, you need to know God, and if you want to know God, you and He need to talk . . . intimate talk . . .  soul talk.  Not just “grant me these three requests” talk.  You need to pour out your heart to God, and this heart-to-heart communication needs to happen daily.  Indeed, it needs to happen as you live life, so that you talk with God from the heart throughout the day.  The more you pray – real prayers, not just scripts – the closer your relationship with God grows, and as you draw near to God, He changes you, and you will see Him work through you.  A Christian life without real prayer is not a Christian life. 

All of the above represent a summary of the past several months blogs about how to walk with Christ.  I felt it necessary to stop and recap before we move on, for we have so much more to address, and it is good from time to time to stop and bundle things up. If you want more details, go back and read the blogs, but even they are incomplete.  There is so much more to the Christian life than can be written.

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Sharing Your Life

that I may know Him (Phil 3:10)

Lord, I want to know you.  In the end, nothing else matters.  Let me know you.

When I married Leanne, we became one and began a life together.  I married her because I knew I wanted to be with her.  But when I married her, I also began a lifelong process of getting to know her.  I knew her but I didn’t know her.  I knew her because I had spent time with her, had talked with her, and had seen her life.  But when we married, the time with her, the talking with her, and the seeing her life multiplied intensely.  After 27 years of marriage, I now know her much more intimately than I did on our wedding day.  We have shared life together.  We have walked together through unemployment, a miscarriage, deaths of parents, divorces of loved ones, ministry failures and successes, the births of our children, homeschooling, graduations, and more.  We have shared life.  Today I am a richer man because I have gotten to share life with Leanne.

Scripture says that our relationship with God is like a marriage.  Just as Leanne and I have shared life together, so, too, are you and I to share life with God.  He wants us to share life with Him for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in sickness and in health.  He wants to walk with us and us with Him through unemployment and promotions, miscarriages and births, cancer and healing, ministry failures and successes.  God wants a marriage with you. 

Now one of the most basic practices of a good marriage is that the husband and wife talk.  They share their pains and joys, their doubts and certainties, their frustrations and pleasures.  As life happens, the communication of all these thoughts and feelings happens.  It’s part of marriage. 

And it’s part of what God wants from you.  God wants you to know Him and to grow in knowing Him.  This growth happens as you share life with Him, and sharing life with Him requires you to talk with Him.  There is no other way.  If you want to know God, you will pray.  If you don’t pray, you will not know God.  Prayer is where your soul touches God.  Prayer is where you pour out your heart.  It’s where you share with God your pains and joys, your doubts and certainties, your frustrations and pleasures, and you share these thoughts and feelings as life happens.

For too many Christians, however, prayer is flat and one-dimensional.  They come to God to ask for stuff – heal my mom’s knees, give me this job, help me on that test.  While such prayers are certainly legitimate, if this sort of praying is all you ever do, you are not sharing life with God. Quite the opposite in fact.  You are keeping your life to yourself and coming to God when you want something.  What if my wife spoke to me only when she wanted something from me?  What kind of marriage would that be?  That would not be sharing life together. 

Our growth in Christ depends on our willingness to share our souls with Him.  If you want to live the Christian life better, then get to know Christ better.  Come to Him and share with Him your heart and let Him share with you His heart.  The people who best live the Christian life are the people who best know God. 

Indeed, this is why Jesus died:  so that you may know Him. 

So get to know Him.

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