Monday, December 28, 2015

Reacting to Change: Selfishness or Sanctification?

Change. 
It is likely one of the most detested words in the English language (unless when used to denote money, that is). Merely mention it, and people will respond with visceral reactions of apprehension, fear, and/or resistance. Understanding why such reactions are so common is not difficult. We are obsessed with comfort, dependent on routine, and enamored of the status quo. We’ve all heard the phrase a thousand times: “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it,” which is just another way of saying don’t go changing things up just for the heck of it.

But what if things really are “broke”?

Is change always a bad thing? Somehow I think we all know deep down that the answer to this question is a resounding “no.”  So why, then, do we so often automatically react negatively to the idea of change? Perhaps it is because change requires adjustment and because we also know deep down that adjustment makes us uncomfortable—and we detest being uncomfortable.

But as Christians, we have not been called to a life of comfort. We were not saved out of our depravity to live lives of ease and pleasure but rather to live in surrender to the One who died for us. We were rescued not for our own sake but for His. He experienced the ultimate discomfort in absorbing the full brunt of the wrath of God, and we have been called to follow Him—which means carrying a cross. Every. Single. Day.

Yet too often we are more concerned with maintaining a high level of comfort than we are with developing a lifestyle of holiness. We would much rather be catered to personally than serve others ourselves. We are more than content to sit back in the comfy recliner of assurance, knowing that we will be going to Heaven one day, and ride out the rest of our earthly lives encountering as little disruption as possible.

But the gospel is not about that.

Jesus didn’t become a human, live 33 years on this depraved earth, suffer the ultimate punishment for doing absolutely nothing wrong, and then rise from the dead just so we wouldn’t have to go to hell. Yes, that’s certainly part of it, but it’s so much more than that! He came to right the wrongs caused by the Fall, to restore man’s relationship to God, to creation, to other humans, and to himself. Jesus did what He did so that we could live a new life now, so that we could share His good news and bring Him glory here. On this earth. In 2015. And 2016. “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come” (2 Corinthians 5:17, ESV).

Now that’s some major change right there.

And, “All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation; that is, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. Therefore, we are ambassadors for Christ, God making his appeal through us” (2 Corinthians 5:18-20a, ESV, emphasis added). So basically, we have a job to do. It won’t always be easy, but it’s why we’ve been saved.  

As David Platt writes, “Grace brings about change” (Platt and Merida 2014, 11).

In other words, change is fundamental to the gospel itself. In being brought from death to life, we have experienced the greatest change of all, and that initial change produces continual change as we are daily sanctified, made more like Christ.

So when we encounter change in this life, let’s try to look at it through the lens of sanctification instead of the lens of selfishness. Before getting uptight and upset over minor adjustments or even major alterations, let’s ask the Holy Spirit to examine our hearts and reveal to us when we are being more in love with comfort than with Christ. And meanwhile, may we direct our attention to the broken parts of our own lives and allow Him to bring about the change in us that His death and resurrection has made possible.




Citation: Platt, David and Tony Merida. Christ-Centered Exposition: Exalting Jesus in Galatians. Nashville: Holman Reference, 2014.

Monday, December 14, 2015

The Eternal Wonder of Christmas

Somehow December manages to be the busiest month of the year. As strains of “Silent Night” fill the air, we are everything but silent as we scurry around buying gifts, going to parties, baking all sorts of delectable sweets.

Rather than pondering the lyrics of “It Came upon a Midnight Clear,” we burn the midnight oil until putting two coherent thoughts together becomes a major accomplishment. Then before we know it, it’s New Year’s Eve and Christmas is all but forgotten.

But what if we stopped for a moment to soak in the season? What if we made rest one of the items on our to-do list? What if we slipped away and stilled our soul long enough to think, long enough to ask some questions about the purpose and value of Christmas?

Perhaps we would discover that the story of Christmas is so much bigger than December 25.

In fact, it’s a story—a true story—that continues all the way to Easter and beyond. It’s a story that has the power to change every day of our lives on this earth and our eternal destinies as well—because it’s the story of the God of the universe humbling Himself to be born a man for the express purpose of sacrificing Himself so our relationship with Him could be restored.

If we take a moment to let that truth seep into the depths of our hearts and minds, I daresay we won’t be able to look at Christmas the same way again. No more will “the most wonderful time of the year” be limited to December. Instead, the message of Christmas will cause us to overflow with joy throughout the remaining eleven months of the year. Why? Because the Wonder that was born on Christmas is still alive today and will be forevermore.

As you take time this holiday season to ponder the significance of Christmas, my cousin and I hope you will find this song a helpful point of focus. We pray its rhetorical questions impress upon you the magnitude of the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, the Wonder of wonders.


To learn more about "Wonder of Wonders," read the story behind the song here.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Praying for Patience

“Don’t pray for patience!”

Perhaps you have heard someone exclaim this phrase or have even uttered it yourself. If so, you know the drill:

“Don’t pray for patience, or you’ll get stuck in traffic!”
                                “Don’t pray for patience, or God will make you wait.”
                                                                “Pray for patience? Are you sure you want to do that?”

I’ve heard statements like these, frequently uttered with a laugh, as long as I can remember, but it’s only been in the past few years that I have begun to understand how they have affected my own thought process.  As I’ve come to evaluate these warnings, I’ve discovered two ways in which the underlying mindset behind them is profoundly incorrect and downright dangerous.

First, these comments are spoken from the assumption, whether conscious or not, that God is what some have termed a “cosmic killjoy,” that He is all about making our lives as frustrating and difficult as possible. Now while it is true that God never promises us happy lives of constant pleasure and that as followers of Christ we are guaranteed to share in His suffering, it is also true that God does not withhold blessings (sometimes physical, but often spiritual) from His children. At His core He is good, and in His dealings He is good.  

Statements like “Don’t pray for patience, or you’ll get stuck in traffic” or “Don’t pray for help loving people, or God will send you a bunch of jerks,” imply that God will necessarily respond to your request for something good by forcing you to go through something hard or frustrating. Such an assumption became dangerous in my own life because it began to seep into other facets of my mindset to the point that I became hesitant to pray about certain things for fear of God’s taking them away or somehow bringing difficulty to my life through them.

—until one day the absurdity of this hesitancy hit me like a ton of bricks.

What an injustice to God’s Name to deny His wisdom in allowing what He chooses to allow. What a gross misrepresentation of His character to assume that He will always reward prayer with hardship!

And then I thought, but so what if He does?

Knowing that God is all-good and all-wise and that, because I am His child, He has my best interests at heart, then even if He does allow hardship and pain in my life in order to grow and refine me, would such hardship and pain not be worth it? Would it not be better to suffer hardship in the process of becoming more like Christ than it would be to live a life of perfect ease outside of the will of God?

This is not to say that suffering is enjoyable or that the Christian life is totally devoid of happiness and pleasure—quite the contrary!—but merely to highlight the way in which we as Christians should view hardship. We should not be afraid of its coming, because we have a Father who will never leave us nor forsake us, who will strengthen us and sustain us. And we certainly should not let a fear of potential suffering keep us from communing with our Father in prayer!

Advising someone against praying for patience, then, (or for kindness or self-control) not only can lead to a wrong view of God but also can hinder communication with Him.

The second (and perhaps more obvious) problem with saying “Don’t pray for patience” is that doing so is encouraging someone not to pray for a virtue that is clearly biblical to possess. Patience is an element of the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22); it is something that believers are exhorted to “put on” (Col. 3:12); and it is the goal of Paul’s prayer for strength for the Colossians (Col. 1:11).

If patience is evidence of our being filled with God’s Spirit, then why on earth would we want to avoid asking for it? Why would we quench the Spirit’s work in our lives by balking at the idea of being taught patience? After all, it’s not like we aren’t already in a position of waiting for things. Would it not be ultimately for our good to pray for help learning to be patient as we wait, to pray for the Holy Spirit to fill us to the point where patience becomes characteristic of our being? I daresay it would be.

So next time you think twice about praying for patience, ask yourself which would be better: to live a frustrating life of impatient waiting or to be empowered to exhibit patience while you wait.  


Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Reasonableness and the Refugee Crisis

My newsfeed is bursting at the seams with posts about the refugee crisis. Christians and non-Christians, Democrats and Republicans are adamantly expressing their support for one side of the debate or the other—should we take Syrian refugees or should we not?

What has struck me about many of the comments (on both sides) is that they treat the issue as if it is black-and-white, largely ignoring the complexity of the situation.

Any of you who know my background in studying history know that I’m all about avoiding oversimplification, and the comments on this issue reek of it.  So my plea with all of you today is that, whatever your position is, you evaluate it and the other side with reasonableness, recognizing that this very well could be a “both/and” not an “either/or” issue.

For example, Christians who are emphasizing our responsibility to be compassionate are not incorrect; we are to show compassion to others. However, some of those same Christians are assuming—without seeking to understand the reasons and thought-processes behind the objection—that if anyone objects to accepting Syrian refugees they are necessarily being uncompassionate and untrue to the gospel.

Similarly, Christians who think we should delay accepting Syrian refugees accuse those who want to allow them in of being foolish and naïve.

Brothers and sisters in Christ, this should not be! We, of all people, should be good thinkers and good listeners! Remember the exhortation the Holy Spirit gave us through the apostle Paul: “Let your reasonableness be known to everyone. The Lord is at hand;” (Philip. 4:5).

While you are trying to contend for the gospel, do not become a stumbling block through your unreasonableness and/or pride. Because the truth is, it’s possible to be compassionate and wise at the same time. What we need to focus on, then, is how to do just that.  


Monday, November 16, 2015

Why ‘Stand with France’ Isn’t Just a Cliché

Like many of you, I cloaked my profile picture in the French flag and posted statuses about praying for Paris. In the aftermath of such horrific events, it is easy to be swept up in the emotion of the moment, to hop on the bandwagon of a cause and pick up a rallying cry.

But for me, changing my picture and posting inspirational images is about more than the satisfaction of being part of something bigger than myself.  The hashtag PrayforParis and the call to stand with France are much more than mere clichés—or at least they should be.

Here are four reasons why:

1) France and the United States have a long and profoundly connected history.

It is fairly safe to say that if it weren’t for France, the United States would not even exist as an independent nation. Without her aid in the Revolutionary War, it is doubtful the British would have surrendered. This relationship with our oldest ally was further strengthened when the French bestowed upon us that iconic symbol of freedom, democratic government, and the American dream—Lady Liberty herself.

In the 20th century, France and the United States remained allies throughout both World Wars, and, at the dawn of the 21st, France supported the U.S. in the wake of 9/11. Now that a similar attack has taken place on French soil, it is only fitting that Americans continue to uphold the bond of friendship, letting the French people know that we feel their pain—with empathy, not merely sympathy—and that they are in our thoughts and prayers as they struggle through the days ahead.

Incidentally, I believe, this history explains why Americans have responded to the Parisians with such an immediate outpouring of support and proliferation of attention in contrast to the level of response to similar attacks happening much more frequently in the Middle East. The abundance of attention is not to make less of Lebanon, Syria, or any other country experiencing terrorist attacks but rather to make more of France.

Perhaps this seems to be unfair favoritism, but it’s a fact of life that we tend to think, speak, and write about things we care about and that we tend to care about things we are connected to. Paris simply hits closer to home—not only geographically, but ideologically as well, which brings me to my second point.

2) Ideas are important.

The present conflict is not primarily about land or wealth—it’s about a set of ideas, a way of understanding the world, a belief system that informs a way of life. Worldviews are significant because they are the foundation on which everything else stands, the base out of which action springs, as was clearly illustrated in the Paris attacks.

The worldview held by Islamic terrorists is diametrically opposed to that which has shaped and characterized Western civilization for centuries upon centuries. Standing with France, then, is affirming to yourself and to the world that you support the ideological pillars of Western civilization—the dignity of the individual, the rule of law, the value of intellectual discourse, and what is likely the most predominant characteristic of the West today—freedom—freedom of religion, of speech, and of the press, just to name a few.

If we do not know what we stand for or forget the importance of what we stand for, then we are setting ourselves up to lose it all at the hands of those who do know exactly what they believe and are willing to die to see their beliefs spread across the globe.

3) Freedom is worth fighting for.

The Islamic State is seeking to create just that—an Islamic state that eradicates Western values and imposes an Islamic religion-as-state/state-as-religion way of life.  The terrorists carrying out these attacks are doing so for very purposeful reasons. Their worldview is incompatible with that of Western civilization, and they are completely determined to ensure that their way of ordering society is the one that prevails.

Of course, it should go without saying that not all Muslims are bent on creating a world-wide Islamic caliphate. There are countless peaceful Muslims (like the two women I shared a meal with last week—some of the sweetest people you’ll ever meet!) and countless others who are oppressed by people within their own religion—which again raises the question: why is there not outcry on behalf of those victims?

Why do we seem more concerned about attacks in Paris than those in the Middle East? Along with the reason mentioned earlier, I submit that it is also because the Paris attacks mark an expansion of terrorism outside of already Muslim-dominated lands. As such, they are more blatant threats not just to people but to our very civilization. Yes, we should direct attention to the atrocities happening to civilians in Muslim countries. But the attacks in Paris signified much more than the deaths of 100+ individuals; they signified a brazen affront to freedom itself.

4) Christ has overcome the world (Jn. 16:33).

For those of us who are Christians, the most compelling reason to support the French people is that we have been entrusted with the hope of the world—Christ, the hope of glory (Col. 1:27). Because of this, we can offer the strongest Support there is to those who are hurting, angry, and confused.

As a secular society, France is filled with people who give no thought to God—people like the Charlie Hebdo cartoonist who has asked people not to pray for Paris. This request highlights how so-close-yet-so-far the French people are from the truth. The cartoonist is right—the French don’t need more religion. They need Jesus. No matter how great their zest for life, they live their days as we once did, “having no hope and without God in the world” (Eph. 2:12). So even with all the music and champagne, in forsaking Christ they rob themselves of an abundant life of persevering joy.

But we have the good news of hope and peace, of forgiveness, mercy, and grace in the midst of cynicism, bitterness, and fear, and sharing it is the best way we can help the people of France.

Yet it doesn’t stop there. This news is so powerful that it compels us Christians to expand our focus beyond France and recognize that the gospel “is the power of God for salvation” in every country—secular, Muslim, or otherwise (Rom. 1:16). 

In addition to praying for Paris, then, we must pray for and share with the whole world, because we have been entrusted with the greatest hope of all—the knowledge that even in the face of incredible evil, Christ reigns supreme and is seated at the right hand of God the Father, having conquered sin and death and having overcome the world.


Tuesday, November 3, 2015

The Diversity Delusion

In 21st-century America, diversity has become the golden standard, the banner under which organizations operate and the measure by which they are evaluated. Although I haven’t researched the growth of this trend, the elevation of diversity as a benchmark and/or a battle cry is likely related to our nation’s past of segregation—at least that is what we are told:  that diversity, whether in the workplace, in the schoolhouse, or elsewhere, is needed to reverse the way things were under Jim Crow, that it is evidence of the fact that we have realized the error of our ways and have corrected them.

But is that really what the current push for “diversity” does?

It is most definitely true that segregation is one of the darkest blots in the annals of our nation’s history. And it is also true that such discrimination is wrong and unacceptable. But relating cries for “diversity” to the history of discrimination leads to the premise that the absence of diversity indicates the presence of discrimination—a premise which is not necessarily true.

Why is that a problem?

Because it morphs diversity from something that is no longer avoided into something that is actively sought after for its own sake—and there’s a difference.

The triumph of America’s post-segregation years has been that diversity has been rightly recognized as something that is not bad, not to be feared, not to be avoided. But this shift of perspective where diversity is concerned has continued to the point where diversity is now seen as the ultimate good, as something that is to be intentionally sought after and obtained.

Again, why is that a problem?

Because when organizations seek after diversity, they are oftentimes seeking after it for the wrong reasons (e.g. we need to hire/recruit more African Americans, Asians, and Hispanics or we’ll be seen as discriminatory and/or lose our funding). So what do they do? They create strategies to increase the diversity on campus, in their business, etc. And what does that do to the people of various ethnicities who will be recruited and/or hired under these strategies?

Think about it for a second…

Whether overtly or not, such a perspective devalues them as individuals because they are not being sought after for their personal strengths or abilities but rather for the color of their skin. They are being identified by their ethnicity and brought on board so that the company, school, etc. can broadcast to the world that they are “diverse.”

But people from previously-discriminated-against populations are still being given the opportunity of a job or an education, you might be thinking. Isn’t that a good thing? Yes, but how would you like to know that the reason someone wanted to recruit you to attend their school or work at their business was because of your skin color? What would that tell you about what is most valued in you? Your mind? Your abilities? The content of your character? No, your skin. I don’t know about you, but that sounds a lot like what minorities have been trying to get away from for so long.

Some might argue, Well what do you know about it? You’re not a minority. No, but I am a woman, and the same goes for women in the workplace as well. I, for one, would not want to be the token woman on staff, hired merely to show that the company is not sexist. To be in such a position would be to have my value as an employee based in my gender rather than in my competence—which, when you get right down to it, is actually another form of discrimination. It’s just discrimination for instead of discrimination against.

Thus, we arrive at a second false premise mirroring the first, namely, that the presence of diversity equals the absence of discrimination.  

Is all this to say that diversity in and of itself is a negative thing? Not at all!

As a Christian, I understand the beauty of diversity because I know God to be the source of variety in His creation and because the Church universal (the body of believers across all space and time) is the most diverse body to ever exist. But the beauty of diversity in the Church is found in the recognition that at our core we are all the same. We have all fallen short of the glory of God (Romans 3:23), and we have all been offered freedom from our slavery to sin because our Maker died in our place. Those who have accepted this gift and surrendered their lives to Jesus are the same yet again—this time as redeemed human beings.

In the diversity of the Church, then, there is unity—a unity that is based on the knowledge that our value and identities are in Christ. With this understanding as the foundation, diversity may truly flourish as it is revealed to be the beautiful element of God’s design that it is.

It is my hope that in the years to come our nation can move toward a truer understanding of diversity—one that celebrates the variety among us while also recognizing the commonalities among our differences. And I hope that instead of elevating diversity itself to the place of highest value, we learn to value what is infinitely more precious: people themselves. 


Monday, October 19, 2015

Self-Sufficiency, Prayer, and the Glory of God

Whenever you come across a “pop-up verse” like I talked about last time, it’s always a good idea to look deeper into the surrounding verses as well. As I did this with the verses preceding 2 Corinthians 1:11, I found more implications for the Christian life when it comes to prayer, our view of self, and God’s glory.

“For we do not want you to be unaware, brothers, of the affliction we experienced in Asia. For we were so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself. Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death. But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead. He delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will deliver us again.” 2 Corinthians 1:8-10 (ESV)

“For we do not want you to be unaware, brothers, of the affliction we experienced in Asia.”

Paul does not hide his struggles from his fellow believers. To the contrary, for them to be “unaware” of his “afflictions” is precisely what he does not want. Coming on the tails of the comfort passage (vv. 3-7), this statement is clearly connected to the fact that as affliction is shared so will comfort be, but, as we saw last time, this verse also leads to Paul’s asking for prayer in verse 11. Thus, part of the reason he wants the Corinthian believers to be aware of his struggles is so that they may pray for him.

Let’s fast-forward to 21st-century America for a moment. Our society takes pride in individualism, exalts the “self-made man,” and encourages a certain level of isolation. Self-sufficiency is lauded, and anything that might reveal weakness is avoided like the plague. Sadly, this mindset often creeps into the church as well. Christians who are suffering—whether from physical ailment, emotional affliction, or spiritual struggle—often hide their pain and their neediness for fear of looking weak or spiritually immature or of unnecessarily burdening others with the weight of their own problems.

But look at what Paul’s dealing with:

“For we were so utterly burdened beyond our strength that we despaired of life itself. Indeed, we felt that we had received the sentence of death.” 
  
That’s some pretty serious suffering—and I don’t think he’s just being melodramatic. Neither is he trying to collect sympathy. He is acknowledging that his own strength is not strong enough; he is admitting he is weak. But he doesn’t stop there.

 “But that was to make us rely not on ourselves but on God who raises the dead.”

In the very same breath, Paul directs the attention to God and praises Him as the One powerful enough to raise the dead. As Paul reveals his own weakness, he testifies to God’s strength. He shows that he and Timothy were brought to the end of themselves so that they would trust in God’s sufficiency rather than their own. And the result?

“He delivered us from such a deadly peril, and he will deliver us. On him we have set our hope that he will deliver us again.”

By sharing about his struggle, his weakness, and his dependence on the Lord’s strength, he is able to share about the deliverance God provides, which in turn leads to God’s receiving glory. If people didn’t know about Paul’s afflictions, they wouldn’t see the power of God at work in his life. If people were unaware, they would not be praying and thus, as verse 11 shows, would not be able to give thanks to God when their prayers were answered.

So it is with each of us. If we keep our struggles to ourselves, not only do we deprive our fellow members of the Body of Christ from being able to do their job, but also we miss an opportunity to encourage others by letting them see God’s hand at work in our lives. Pretending that we’re strong enough doesn’t harm just us; it affects our brothers and sisters in Christ as well. And when it comes right down to it, projecting an image of self-sufficiency diminishes the glory given to God.


Let’s not be afraid, then, to ask for prayer when we are struggling. Let’s not deceive ourselves by thinking we can be self-sufficient. Instead, let’s encourage one another, pray for one another, and rejoice with one another as we see the work that God will do. That way, He’ll get all the glory.





Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Pop-Up Verses and Prayer

Last post, I talked about how God can reveal things in the Bible that previously went unnoticed. When this happens, it’s almost like the verse jumps out at you like a page in a pop-up book saying, “Look! Right here! Look at me!” So here’s an example of one such “pop-up verse” from my own life.

I was reading in 2 Corinthians 1 one day. Verses 3-7 in this chapter make up one of my favorite passages of Scripture. They identify God as the God of comfort and explain the purpose behind our receiving comfort from him, namely that we can in turn comfort others. But this time as I was reading the chapter, verse 11 jumped out at me:

“You also must help us by prayer, so that many will give thanks on our behalf for the blessing granted us through the prayers of many.”  (ESV)

I’d never really noticed this verse before, but as I read it and reread it that day, I realized just how much meat is really there. The context is Paul telling the Corinthians how he and Timothy had reached the end of their own strength and were learning to fully rely on the power of God to sustain them (vv.8-9).  In the preceding verse, he expresses his complete confidence in God to continue to provide deliverance (v. 10). Then he writes,

“You also must help us by prayer…”

At first glance, this might seem disingenuous of Paul; if he really believes God will deliver them, why ask for prayer?  Why must the Corinthian believers also pray if God will already sustain and provide?

“…so that many will give thanks on our behalf…”

I love those two little words: so that. Whenever we see them in Scripture, we know that whatever follows is an explicit answer to the question “why.” And this verse is no exception. Why does Paul want the Corinthians to pray? So that many people will give thanks to God. In other words, the more people who are praying, the more people will be praising God when He responds. So with that one little phrase “so that” we see the motivation behind the request: for God to receive more glory.
But what are the people giving thanks for?

“…for the blessing granted us through the prayers of many.”

Paul knows that as his fellow believers pray, God will hear and will bless him and Timothy. Yet he is clear that this blessing will come “through the prayers of many.” Paul speaks of the power of prayer here, for even though he is thoroughly confident in God’s deliverance, he knows that there is still blessing that God will provide when His people pray.

So from this one verse, we can see that prayer is important, that it makes a difference, and that one result of prayer is God being glorified. Which when you think about it, is the best result of all.



Have you had a specific verse “jump out” at you during your time with the Lord? I’d love to hear what He’s teaching you!

Thursday, September 24, 2015

The Living Word

One of my favorite things about the Bible is that no matter how many times you read it, there will always be something new to learn. You can read a passage a hundred times, and on the hundred-and-first pass something can jump out at you that you’ve never noticed before. 

The Holy Spirit’s cool like that. I mean, think about it.  Who better than the One who inspired the words in the first place to reveal the truth they contain? And who better to unveil certain passages at specific times than the One who knows you better than you know yourself? Pretty sure the answer is “no one.”

Yet how often do those of us who are followers of Christ, discount or completely forget the Holy Spirit’s role in our lives? Do we truly recognize that the very Author of the words we read lives within us? That He can and will teach us if we will only quiet our hearts and listen?

Ah, there’s the hard part—quieting our hearts in the midst of the craziness going on all around us. With the swirling myriad of thoughts and relentless distractions, simply being physically still can seem an insurmountable challenge, not to mention focusing our attention. However are we to do it?

We can’t—at least not with our own strength. But praise God we aren’t left to live the Christian life in our own strength. The very same Spirit who reveals the truth to us is the One who is powerful enough to help us quiet our hearts, to give us the strength to be still. May we marvel at the fact that the One who awakened us, who breathed spiritual life into our dead souls, is the One who lives within us 24/7, who helps us pray, gives us the desire to read the Bible, and then helps us understand what we read! How awesome is that?!

Brothers and sisters, remember the promise of Jesus: “When the spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all truth, for he will not speak on his own authority, but whatever he hears he will speak, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. He will glorify me, for he will take what is mine and declare it to you” (John 16:13-14, ESV). Be mindful of these words, and be encouraged that the promise has been fulfilled!

And whenever you sit down to open the Bible, remember that you are holding the very words of God Himself. Ask Him through the power of the Holy Spirit to quiet your soul, to clear your mind of distractions, and to prepare your heart to receive whatever He has to show you that day.  You never know how He’ll surprise you.

“For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. And no creature is hidden from his sight, but all are naked and exposed to the eyes of him to whom we must give account.” ~ Hebrews 4:12-13

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Starting the Journey

Hello, and welcome to my new blog! 

I'll begin posting soon, but until then you can check out the About Page to learn about the who, what, and why behind An Iris Awaits. 

Also, if you'd like to get email updates when I post something new, you can subscribe through the sidebar.

Thanks for visiting the blog! I hope it will serve as a means of challenging encouragement to you. 

Looking forward to the journey ahead,


P.S. Shout out to KV Designs for a beautiful design job!