Love is a Language of Action
July 28, 2015
1 John 3:18
My little children, let us not love in word, neither in tongue; but in deed and in truth.
Love is a Language of Action
“I love you.” How many times have we said this or heard this? What does it mean? While the words can be meaningful and precious, it is what they convey, imply and promise that is of even greater weight. How many times have these been shallow words, void of promise and only speaking to someone what they so desire to see in reality? What gives flesh to these words are the actions that follow them. If we say that we love God, but we are cold and indifferent to our fellow man is the love of God truly in us or are we just clouds without rain, empty and void of the substance of God’s love.
For love to be meaningful, it has to be a language of action. Its expression is seen in our attitudes, our deed and in the true intent of our heart. I would say most of us often fall short of the kind of love we really want to have. Sometimes, even our best efforts seem in vain, but I believe God sees the motive and the intent of our heart. He is really the means by which we can truly love. The more expression we have of Christ in us, the greater our love, or rather the love of God in us, is expressed and made manifest. It will be seen, not only in the things that we give, but in our tolerance, our forgiveness, our patience, self control, our joy, our peace and in the way that we respond and act toward others. Christ in us is not measured in how much we know about the bible, or how much spiritual revelation that we have. It is not about how much we go to church or how religious that we appear. Christ in us is the measure of God’s love flowing through us. The less that we are in the way, the less restriction there is to the flow of His love through us. This is why we die to self, because self only hinders the flow of God’s unselfish love.
If we think that we truly love God and have His love in us then may our actions speak it and not our tongue. Let us manifest the works that He did. The manifestation of His love through us is God loving His world; this is what signifies to the lost that God is love when they see us give what they do not deserve. Are we a people of words or action?
Blessings,
#kent
Garbage: Destructive or Constructive?
December 24, 2014
Garbage: Destructive or Constructive?
Matthew 5:38-48
“You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth. 39But I tell you, Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. 40And if someone wants to sue you and take your tunic, let him have your cloak as well. 41If someone forces you to go one mile, go with him two miles. 42Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you. 43″You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ 44But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, 45that you may be sons of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. 46If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? 47And if you greet only your brothers, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? 48Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect.
Which of us doesn’t deal with garbage in our lives? When I say garbage I am talking about all of the offenses, insults, persecutions, inequities and evils that come at us in life. We all deal with it on some level and some more than others do. Life inherently holds hurts, disappointments, pain, frustrations and offenders of our person. Most of these come directly or indirectly through people that touch our lives in a negative way. Mostly we brush it off and go on, but there is garbage that can emotionally cripple and traumatize us. There are some offenses that are gut-wrenchingly hard to deal with, let alone let go. All of this is the garbage that gets dumped into our life. Even in the good things there are by-products that must be passed and flushed down the toilet of forgiveness and forgetfulness.
Here’s the thing, if we don’t pass the poop in our life, it will back up on us. It will eventually make us sick and can even become septic, especially if gets into the rest of our system. It not only makes us sick, but it can begin to poison our other relationships that were healthy as well. It changes our state of emotional and spiritual health.
In the scripture that Jesus gives here in Matthew 5 we find some principles that in the natural are kind of hard to swallow, because they seem unfair. There is an old saying, “No one can get your goat unless you have one to be got.” Jesus is simply saying get rid of your goat. These principles that Jesus speaks of are hard, because we are still holding on to us, our rights, our goods, our dignity and pride. You see, a dead man can’t be hurt. If we are truly dead to this old man and alive unto Christ, then our life is hid with Christ in God and living a life pleasing unto Him is all that matters. Most of us aren’t there yet. We are still struggling with the garbage.
Garbage or dung can have a positive and a negative side. We have just spoken to the negative effects it can and does have on us such as bitterness, covetousness, unforgiveness, strife, jealousy, envy, gossip and the like. It feeds upon the flesh like bacteria. On the other hand if we can process our garbage and our dung in a healthy way, then it can become the fertilizer for a productive and godly life. If we ask ourselves, “Where do we grow spiritually”? Is it when everything is roses, prosperity, health and great relationships? No. We grow out of adversity, trials and tribulations. These are what stretch and exercise our faith. These are what cause us to lose ourselves and press into Christ. The law of our mind wars against the mind of the Spirit, because it still wants the law of ‘an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.’ The kingdom we are entering into is not one in which we seek to preserve this life, but we willing lose it for Christ’s sake. We are to be using our garbage to grow from and not to be allowing it to pollute and defile our lives. Your garbage must become your fertilizer. It must become the fabric for growth and not destruction. It is out of this garbage that we can see the fruit of the Spirit produced in us, but if we hold it in and allow it to become septic and toxic, it will poison us. It will feed the fruit of our flesh and it will produce death and not life.
Be careful how you process your garbage. Don’t hold on to it. Process it and pass it. Use it as the fertilizer for your spiritual growth and health in Christ.
Blessings,
#kent
Lay Down Your Life
October 5, 2012
Matthew 16:24
Then Jesus said to his disciples, “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.
Lay Down Your Life
“Lay down your life.” What does that mean?
“My life” constitutes all of my hopes, dreams, visions and ideas. It constitutes how I live my life, my likes and dislikes, my agendas, my self-worth and personal identity. It is made up of my own principles and values that I have deemed important and worthy of holding on too. It is pretty much about my wants, my desires, my objectives and about “me”.
We often think and maybe even tell the Lord. “I would lay down my life for You. Lord I give you my life.” Yet how many of us are like Peter and Jesus would say to us as He did Peter in John 13:38, “Then Jesus answered, “Will you really lay down your life for me? I tell you the truth, before the rooster crows, you will disown me three times!” How many times have I said or you said “Jesus take my life I give it to You”, only to latter take it back again and live it for ourselves? Our spirit is willing, but our flesh is weak. So many of us have a heart to follow Jesus, but our true heart isn’t willing to go there yet.
Did Peter get there? Yes, he did. He couldn’t go there in His own strength and through his failure, he had to come to that revelation of himself that he wasn’t as sold out as he said he was. It took Pentecost, the Holy Spirit and a life of living unto Jesus that prepared him for the giving up of his own life when he was martyred. This is where the trying of our faith comes in that is much more precious than gold. True gold, true faith is revealed in the fire of the trials and testing. Then we find out if what we say and proclaim is really what we are. God knows, but we don’t always really know ourselves. Trials have a way of unmasking us and stripping our true feeling, emotions and beliefs naked. In reality, most all of us dress ourselves in a lot of pretense. It is not only what we want others to believe about us, it is what we want to believe about ourselves. Sometimes we are living a lie and we don’t even know it. We are blind to it. If someone told us the truth about us, we would be offended at them, because it is not our perception.
As we walk with Jesus in sincerity and truth. As we ask Him to conform us to be like Him and transform us into His image and likeness; that doesn’t happen in day or even a year. It is a process of the Holy Spirit peeling and unveiling the layers of us like an onion. Layer by layer He is dealing with us as we are willing to allow Him to do so. If He dealt with us all at once, we would be overwhelmed and would probably give up all hope of being changed. Yet through life processes He is faithfully, each day, dealing with us where we are at and each of us are in our own unique places, that is why we can’t judge one another. He is wanting to touch something in your life today. He is wanting to grow you more in some attribute of His character and nature. Often we think in terms of the big transformation and that often takes place in a greater measure when we are saved and filled with the Spirit.
Salvation is an ongoing experience that starts when Christ comes to indwell our spirits as we invite Him in by faith, but then it begins the process of going into the battle ground of the soul; the mind, will and emotions. There it must be a daily submission of our will to His, our mind for His, our heart and feelings for His heartbeat.
Today God is wanting to work on some aspect of you. Tune into Him and ask what it is and how you can cooperate in giving that aspect of yourself to Him more fully and completely. We need to learn to practice His presence, so that in every aspect and compartment of our lives we are allowing Jesus to be Lord, saying “yes” to Him and “no” to self. “Let us “continue to work out our salvation with fear and trembling.” That means in great reverence, humbling ourselves to the Holy Spirit and how He wishes to deal in our lives to bring about a greater transformation into who He is.
That is our goal isn’t it? To be like Him? Then each day is a daily sacrifice to what we formerly were, to walk into what we now are. It was completed upon the cross, but now we are putting application to the truth as we lay down our lives, pick up our cross and follow Him.
Blessings,
kent