Thursday, September 9, 2021
Committed to the Body
Tuesday, September 7, 2021
A Repentant Heart
As a life long Christian, I know the right things to say.
For instance, when life becomes difficult I know that the right thing to say is, "I am trusting God an His timing."
I may say that, but the reality is that I am full of worry. Rather than praying and doing the next right thing, I distract myself with scrolling through social media or watching YouTube videos. Then I wonder why God never showed up.
It is possible to say that right words while lacking the faith to believe those words.
What is the answer?
David wrote this Psalm after Nathan the prophet confronted him about his sin against Uriah, stealing his wife Bathesheba and murdering him. For a year afterwards David pretended everything was fine, but in reality it wasn't. So when David thought about what he needed to do, in light of Nathan’s words, this is was came to his mind: Repentance.
When we are prideful we believe we change the circumstance of our lives by ourselves. We pursue happiness the way we think is best. We may say all the right things and go though the motions, but the intentions of our heart is on our plans.
I am tired of mouthing the right things and ignoring God.
Monday, September 6, 2021
The Benefit of Principles
Last week I posted this to Facebook:
I believe this is true for the majority of controversial topics that are out there today. We watch a 7 minute segment on Tucker Carlson or Rachel Maddow and think we understand the topic to give our hot take on it. To truly understand topics we need investigate all sides of an argument. That doesn’t mean you can’t have a gut feeling on things (often that is all that we can go on because we can’t properly study every topic out there), but it does mean that we don’t present our gut feelings as THE truth on these topics.
There is no possible way that we can adequately research all the different areas of knowledge that are out there. No one is an expert on everything.
This is why it is okay to go with our gut feelings on things. When we do so we need to keep in mind that our guts could be wrong.
The gut feelings that we have often come from the principles that make up our lives. For instance, when it comes to something like biblical interpretation or reading the Constitution, the principle that guides my understanding is: How would the original readers understand this.
Granted, this is not always easy to figure out, but it helps us establish the original intent, then we are better able to apply that to our lives.
When we have certain principles that guide our lives, they provide shortcuts to through the maze controversial issues that we face in life. They provide a solid ground for us to stand on and they give us a starting point on determining what is true.
Since we don’t have the time or the ability to research all the different topics out there, our principles provide us with a way to navigate the landscape of current opinion as we seek to follow Jesus.
Friday, September 3, 2021
Masks, Vaccinations, and Love
“The most important commandment is this: ‘Listen, O Israel! The LORD our God is the one and only LORD. And you must love the LORD your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength.’ The second is equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ No other commandment is greater than these.” (Mark 12:29-31, NLT)
This has been a common sentiment the last 18 months as we have endured the COVID pandemic.
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