Humble Gratitude

A Pharisee invites Jesus to his home.  He treats Jesus rudely – neither giving him water to wash his feet or even giving  a proper greeting.  Then comes this woman.  We know little about her – only that she was a sinner.  She had a reputation – and not a good one.  Somewhere, somehow we must surmise that she had crossed paths with Jesus.  She had heard him speak of repentance and forgiveness.  She had found mercy and love and grace.  And so now she comes.  Risking the ridicule and hostility of those at the Pharisee’s house, she comes.  She begins to weep at Jesus’ feet.  She begins to anoint his feet with ointment.  She begins to wash his dirty feet with her hair, and kiss his feet.  Here is an incredible example of humble gratitude toward God.

Do we remember our past sins?  Can we see our continued failures to follow the Lord?  Are we still amazed at his mercy and love and grace in our lives?

Everything we have talked about this week in past posts – humble submission, humble worship, humble service, and humble giving will quickly become a chore, a duty, a struggle – unless it is motivated by a humble gratitude to God for all that he has done for sinners like us.

What motivates us?  Why do we do what we do?  Are we trying to earn God’s favor?  Earn our way into heaven?  Trying to impress God?  Impress others?  All of this is so much foolishness and will wear us out in the trying.

Jesus died for our sins.  He loves us in spite of our rebellion.  In humble gratitude may we give ourselves to God…like this sinful woman did.

(Luke 7:36-50)

Humble Giving

We often think of the 12 disciples when we think of those who followed Jesus, but he had many other followers – including many women.  These women not only followed Jesus, but they provided for him and his ministry from their own means.  They give us an example of humble giving to God.

Are we following their example?  Are we providing for the ministry of our local church out of our means?  Not occasional token gifts, but true regular giving to the Lord out of what God has graciously given to us?  Have we discovered the joy of giving?

I know of numerous missionaries who are stranded in our country, unable to go to the missions field because they can’t find the support.  Yet we are the wealthiest country in the world!  This is a huge indictment upon the American church.  Are we serving God with our money or ourselves?  Are we bowing down to the Lord or materialism?

How we need to follow the example of these dear women.  How quickly we could send out these missionaries if all of God’s people regularly and joyfully gave back to God a portion of what he has given to them.  Not a meager portion.  But a generous portion for his work and his glory.  Father, grant that we would humbly give to you.

(Luke 8:1-3)

Humble Service

Simon’s mother-in-law was sick when Jesus came to visit, but not for long.  Jesus healed her, and immediately she arose and began to serve.  To serve.  What an incredible example of humble service to God.  Jesus gave her health, and she served him.  Even so God has given each of us whatever level of health we have so that we might serve him.  That is the reason we exist – to serve him and in doing so bring him glory.  Are we using the health God gives us to serve him?

Serving God can take many forms, but most often it comes in the form of serving people.  Simon’s mother-in-law served God by serving not only Jesus but also the disciples.  Even so, we can serve God by serving people.  We can serve God as we serve our families.  We can serve God as we serve our employers (see Colossians 3:23-24).  We can serve God as we serve our church family.  We can serve God as we serve the poor and needy.  We can serve God as we serve our neighbors, our friends, and the list goes on.

But do we see our service to people as service to God?  Do we offer up our service to people as service to God?  How do we approach serving?  What is our attitude?

And are we using the health God has given us to serve God by serving people?  Or are we too busy serving ourselves?

Simon’s mother-in-law gives us a good example of humble service to God.  May God’s Spirit help us to follow her godly example.

(Luke 4:38-39)

Humble Worship

There was a lady named Anna.  She had been a widow for many years.  She did not depart from the temple, but worshiped God with prayer and fasting night and day.  Night and day.  24/7.  Continuously.  Constantly.  This speaks volumes about her heart…and ours.  How many of us can see ourselves doing this?  Her heart must have been ablaze with love and adoration toward God to sustain this constant humble worship.

Do we approach each day as an opportunity to worship God? To spend time with God in praise and prayer?  As we awake?  On the road?  In our spare moments?  As we go to sleep?  Even in the midst of many tasks, we can praise God and pray – do we?  Most of us can’t focus exclusively on worship like Anna did – we have families and jobs.  Yet even those activities can be offered up to God as worship – honoring him, serving him.

Are you ready to offer humble worship to God today?

(Luke 2:36-38)

Humble Submission

One day an angel visited Mary with incredible news.  She was going to be the mother of the Messiah.  She would bear the one whose coming was foretold throughout the Old Testament.  What a privilege!  But she is confused.  She isn’t married.  How can she bear a child?  The angel tells her it will be through the Holy Spirit.  It will be a miraculous, supernatural birth.

Mary’s life suddenly becomes very complicated.  She was going to have a child outside of marriage in a culture that firmly held to God’s law?  What would her fiance Joseph think?  And while a great privilege to bear the Messiah – what an incredible responsibility to raise such a child.

But her response speaks volumes about the character of this young woman.  “Behold, I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word.”  She is God’s servant.  She will humbly do what God says.  She gives us an incredible example of humble submission to God. She will submit to his word.

When we come to God’s Word, do we come with the attitude: “Behold I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word”?  Do we approach the Word ready to humbly submit to his authority?  To do whatever he commands?  To believe whatever he says?  To follow wherever he leads?  No matter what?  No matter how hard?  No matter whether we like it or not?  No matter what others think or say?  Do we come to the Word, ready to humbly submit to God?

The answers to these questions will have serious ramifications for our lives.  As we approach God’s Word today, this week, are we ready to humbly submit to his Word?

(Luke 1:26-38)

The Family of Jesus 4

The church is the family of Jesus.  We are called to unity and community.  We have considered our need for unity amidst differences and offenses.  And we have considered our need to be a community together.  Today we conclude with our need to be a caring community.

Caring Community

Healthy families practice the one anothers.  They care for one another.  They serve one another.  They encourage one another.  They pray for one another.  They simply love one another.

And the New Testament clearly calls us to live out the one anothers as a church.  The church must be characterized by the one anothers.  Care for one another.  Serve one another.  Encourage one another.  Pray for one another.  Love one another.

It would be good for us to regularly ask questions like these:  Who could use some help in my church?  Who could I seek to encourage this week?  Who do I need to pray for?  Who is lonely that I could show love toward?  May we not only ask these questions, but also act on the answers – that our churches might be caring communities.

Conclusion

God has made us the family of Jesus.  He calls us to unity amidst differences and offenses.  May we strive to maintain that unity with humility and love.  He calls us to be a caring community together.  May we strive to build deeper relationships that we might be a more caring community.  May we live as his family – for his glory!

The Family of Jesus 3

The church is the family of Jesus.  As his family we should be united amidst our differences and amidst offenses.  But we should not only have unity, we must also be a community.

Community Together

Healthy families spend time together.  They do things together.  They build relationships with each other together.  They simply are together.

When Jesus chose the 12 disciples, he brought them into a community together.  For three years they ate together, traveled together, simply were together.  As the foundation of the church, so the early church was a community together.  They devoted themselves to the apostles preaching, fellowship, breaking of bread, and prayer – in the context all things they did together (Acts 2:42).  They “were together” and were “attending the temple together” (v44, 46).  They were a community together.

The church today needs to be a community together.  We need to spend time together, do things together, build relationships together.  Indeed the one another commands require us first to know one another.  The more we know one another, the more we can love one another, care for one another, serve one another, encourage one another, and pray for one another.  The more we know each other, the more we will share our real needs with one another, and the more we will know how to meet the needs of one another.

We must know each other.  We need to be a community together.  Many church activities are designed to help people get to know each other at some level or another.  And the church needs to continue to find ways to encourage people to grow in relationships.  But real relationships can’t be forced or programmed.

Nor can they be rushed.  Real relationships require time.  Our world has become so busy that deep relationships are hard to find – and the hustle and bustle has come into the church.  We must rethink our priorities, re-adjust our lives, and simply slow down.

We must make it a point to build relationships in our churches.  Get together with another family.  Meet at the park, invite them over for a cookout, have a game night, do something together.  Real relationships are built informally as we simply take the time to be with each other on a regular basis.  Don’t wait for a church program or someone else to act.  Just start.  I know some are shy, and I’m not the most outgoing person either.  Perhaps get a couple families together – that takes the pressure off any one individual to carry the conversation.  Doing something together can help too.

Finally, don’t just consider people that are just like you.  Remember that the family of Jesus includes unity amidst differences.  Include “different” people.  Look for people in your church that look lost, who need a friend.  When I speak of families, I mean not only married couples with or without kids, but also singles.

We are the family of Jesus.  We must be a community together.  May God help us to build relationships with each other for his glory.

(The conclusion tomorrow)

The Family of Jesus 2

The church is the family of Jesus.  He calls us to unity amidst our differences.  He also calls us to unity amidst our offenses.

Unity amidst Offenses

Put the same people together long enough and people will be offended.  This is true in families and churches.  Something will be said or done that will offend someone.  In some cases the words or actions were meant to offend, in other cases the offending person had no intention of offending, but someone is offended anyway.

In Matthew 20:20-28.  James and John have their mom (their mom!) ask Jesus if they can sit on his right and left in glory.  The other disciples are indignant.  Angry.  Upset.  Ticked.  Offended.  Yet a few weeks later after the ascension we find the disciples all gathered together with “one accord” (Acts 1:14).  There is no division.  No lingering animosity.  There was an offense, but it was dealt with.  They moved on as one family.

How we in the church today need to learn from those early disciples!  We will be offended.  We will offend.  But that is not reason to leave or divide or to become bitter.  It is an opportunity to recommit to the unity God has called is to.  We must strive to hold on to our oneness in Christ.  How?

Again, we return to Paul’s words in Ephesians 4:2 – with humility.  Pride refuses to let go of an offense, but humility will exhibit gentleness to the offender.  It will show patience towards each offense.  It will bear with the offenses of others in love.  In love.  As we have compassion for each other, we will be willing to let offenses go, to forgive as needed.  Humility and love will lead the offender to apologize to the offended.  Humility and love will work towards reconciliation, toward unity.

May God help us to grow in this humility and love that we might strive to maintain our unity even amidst offenses.

The Family of Jesus

In Luke 8:19-21, Jesus’ mother and brothers are trying to reach him.  When someone tells him, Jesus responds that his mother and brothers are those who hear the word of God and do it.  Those who hear and do.  Those who follow.  They are the family of Jesus.  So Paul calls other Christians his brothers and sisters.  They are family.  The church is a family.  Not all who simply go to church, but those who truly believe and follow Jesus.  We are his family.  What should his family look like?  Two things.  There should be unity and community.  Let’s start with unity.

Unity amidst Differences

The 12 disciples Jesus chose in Luke 6:13-16 is interesting.  You have Matthew the tax collector.  He was working for the Roman government, a Roman collaborator.  Then you have Simon the Zealot.  He was working to overthrow the Romans, kick them out of Israel.  One struggles to see these two getting along.  But Jesus brings them together, and over time they become one in Christ.

The early church was made up of very different people.  Galatians 3:28 speaks of Jews and Greeks, slaves and free, male and female.  Very different people.  Yet they are one in Christ.

The church today is made up of very different people – differences in economic/social status, younger and older generations, hymns vs. choruses, different Bible translations, differences in minor doctrines, differences in personal convictions, home school vs. Christian school vs. public school, differences in personalities, and the list can go on.  But Jesus brings us together as a family.  In Christ we find unity in our differences.

And in our differences, we find strength.  Younger generations have energy; older generations have wisdom.  Different translations can help us understand the meaning of a verse better.  Differences in minor doctrines can help us think through them more carefully.  We need each other.

Yet what Jesus brings together, we too often tear apart.  Too often we approach church as consumers.  We want everything to be tailored for us.  We go to church like we go to McDonalds, each wanting our own thing.  But church is not a fast food restaurant, it is is a family.  And our times together are not like gathering at McDonalds, but gathering for a family dinner.  My wife doesn’t make separate meals for each of us.  She makes one meal.  Sometimes it is my favorite, sometimes it may be my kids’ favorite.  This is a picture of the church.  Sometimes we may sing my favorite song, sometimes we may sing songs that others like.  I won’t like everything our church does.  But that is okay – we are family.

Paul reminds us that we are one in Christ in Ephesians 4:4-6.  This is an objective reality.  We are one.  But in v3 he tells us to maintain that unity.  Live out the reality of our oneness.  How do we do that?  Verse 2 gives the answer – humility.  Humility that looks to the interests of others (Philippians 2:3-4).  Humility that is gentle towards different people.  Humility that is patient with one another’s difference.  Humility that bears with one another’s differences in love.  In love.  Compassion for each other.  Loving as Jesus loved us.  Despite our differences.

How we need this humility and love in our churches!  Pride calls us to divide over the smallest stupidest things.  Pride calls us to hop from church to church trying to find a church that believes and acts exactly as I do in every way.  But humility and love calls us to live out unity amidst differences.  To agree to disagree on numerous things that in light of eternity really don’t matter.

We are one in Christ.  Jesus died for our sins.  We have been saved by grace.  Let us rally around these glorious truths.

(Further thoughts on unity in the next post)

Examples of Grace 11

The book of Ruth is short, but gives some great examples of grace.

Ruth is a foreigner, apart from the people of Israel, apart from God.  Yet God graciously makes her part of his people, even including her as an ancestor of Jesus. She finds refuge in God.  In the same way, Peter tells us once we were not among God’s people, but now we are God’s people (2:9-10).  In Christ we have a relationship with God.  Ruth didn’t deserve it; neither do we.  But God made us his people and drew us to himself – that’s grace.

There is also the picture of the kinsman redeemer.  Boaz is a kinsman redeemer for Ruth – marrying her and providing for her.  Jesus is our kinsman redeemer – we are the bride of Christ, and he provides for us not only our daily needs but salvation as well.  Again, we don’t deserve this – it’s all grace.