Saturday: June 22, 2013

Read: Psalm 132

Think: I love sleep! Seriously, I choose it over many things, many times. During movies (even ones I WANT to see) I tend to choose sleep over finishing the story. Instead of watching another Food Network show, which I love to do, I choose sleep over that. Working out in the morning is good, but pressing snooze on my alarm is better. Even when I was younger and at slumber parties, I took my pillow over another hour of giggling.

This is why I am so struck by the Psalmists words about David in verses 4 and 5. “I will allow no sleep to my eyes, no slumber to my eyelids, till I find a place for the Lord.”

King David was bent on building a house of worship for God. Although it was his son Solomon that ended up building it- David persevered and fought is whole life for this to happen. David was willing to say no to himself for the sake of something greater.

It’s incredible to me how many opportunities I turn down every day because I choose sleep instead. I miss out on deep times of prayer and scripture study because of the silly snooze button. I flake out on friends who need a listening ear because I don’t want to stay up late for that phone call.

Sleep is an incredible gift from God, and we should thank him for it. However, we also need to check ourselves in this area. Am I being selfish with my time and energy? Are there days and situations where I know the extra hour will benefit and bless others, yet I choose to relax and rest?

Pray: Ask God to help you wake up early enough every morning to have quality time with him in prayer and scripture study. It isn’t easy to set the alarm, but the discipline it creates in us is beneficial for so many areas of life- mostly, our devotion, dedication and following of Jesus Christ!

Friday: June 21

READ: Leviticus 21 – 22

THINK: If you didn’t get a chance to read Throughin2 on Wednesday, June 19, please find a few extra minutes to read Mike’s commentary on this dense portion of scripture. Mike helps us to step back a few paces from all the details (which seem a bit crazy at times) and get the big picture of GOD’s plan and purpose for his people.
God placed an incredibly high standard on those called to be priests. Every aspect of their lives was to be a reminder that they were set apart – they were different. They were no ordinary men, and more importantly, they served no ordinary GOD! The priests of the Old Testament followed precise regulations so that they never forgot whom they were serving; so that they never got lazy or apathetic, or careless when serving Jehovah, Almighty God.
In the New Testament, we, too, are called to be priests! 1 Peter 2:9 tells us, “But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a people for his own possession, that you may proclaim the excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.” 1 Peter 2:4 says we are “chosen and precious.” And because of that, Jesus places an incredibly high standard on us! You see, we are no ordinary people either and we serve the same extraordinary GOD of the Old Testament. Like those priests, it can be easy for us to become lazy or half-hearted in our commitment. We, too, need to be daily reminded of who HE is and who HE has called us to be!

PRAY: That GOD will remind you that you have been set apart – consecrated – for His work! Let’s live lives that are so radically different from the world around us, we are a constant reminder to ourselves and to others of the LIVING GOD we serve!

Thursday: June 20, 2013

 READ:  2 Kings 23-25

THINK: There have been some horrendous defeats in sports history, but none more convincing than Cumberland’s 222-0 loss to Georgia Tech in 1916. It was the worst college football defeat ever, and the young men of Cumberland must have been devastated.

Another kind of loss happened to the people of Jerusalem in 586 bc, and it was much worse than any sports defeat. Because of God’s punishment for their sin of worshiping other gods, they were defeated by the Babylonian army (2 Kings 24:20).

Led by Nebuchadnezzar, the Babylonians laid siege to the Holy City and left it in ruins. They burned the majestic temple, the palace of the king, and the people’s homes.

It was perhaps the worst defeat in the long, often tragic history of God’s people. Their continued disobedience to Him had devastating consequences. Through it all, He urged them to repent and turn back to Him.

It’s sobering to me to see how much the Lord longs for His people to live in a way that glorifies Him. I need to remind myself often of my duty to live as God wants me to live because of how much it means to Him.

Judah’s worst loss can challenge us all to live in obedience to God. The more you love God, the more you hate sin.

– Dave Branon in Our Daily Bread

 

PRAY: Confess that you have rejected God and run from him despite his constant drawing you to him. Ask him to help you love him more and hate sin more.

Wednesday: June19, 2013

READ:  Leviticus 20

THINK: We are approaching a big chunk of the Old Testament that is filled with a whole bunch of rules and laws that govern the lives, the interactions, the practices, and the worship of the Israelite community. Sometimes they seem weird. Sometimes they seem arbitrary. Sometimes they seem endless…they go on and on and on. There are literally hundreds of them. And as modern readers who are approaching this text across centuries and across language and across culture it can be incredibly difficult to read and to understand. The laws can seem anachronistic and arbitrary. But there is a key to reading them. There is a key that helps us understand what God is doing and why – even if the particulars seem rather odd at times. And that key is to be found in Leviticus 20.

Leviticus 20:7-8 says, “Consecrate yourselves and be holy, because I am the Lord your God. Keep my decrees and follow them. I am the Lord, who makes you holy.”

THAT is the big idea! That’s the whole point right there. The laws that God gives about are about helping us become all that we are created to be – and that is men and women in the image of God. The Bible isn’t about us. We are not the main character. The main character is God, and everything within it is about revealing the single big question – and the natural question that follows: Who is God? Then, who are we in light of that? The Bible is God revealing himself to us. He is revealing to us who he is, and he says that we’re created in his image. We are designed to be like him. We are designed to be holy because he is holy! And keeping his decrees helps us be holy. The decrees point us to him.

God commands us not to lie. Why? Because lying could damage relationships? Yes, but not completely. Because lying could cause problems that ultimately make our lives worse? Yes, but not completely. Why? Because God is truth! In this passage God commands Israel not to sacrifice children to Molek – a horrible pagan practice with details to sickening to recount here. Why? Because killing kids is bad for the next generation? Yes, but not completely. Because treating children as less than human has serious societal consequences? Yes, but not completely. Why? Because God is life! In this passage he gives many commands about adultery. Why should we keep sex within marriage? Because it’s the best thing for kids and families? Yes, but not completely. Because it makes our lives better and our relationships more fulfilling? Yes, but not completely. Why? Because God is faithful! We shouldn’t covet because God is contentment, we shouldn’t lie because God is truth! Do you see the pattern?

Everything – all of the laws and the rituals and the commands – is a part of God’s gracious self-revelation to us. The law wasn’t given as a burden. It was given as a gift. A gift of grace. It was God saying to his people, “This is who I am, and this is who you are in light of that.” God was looking at a people scarred and broken from four centuries of slavery in a pagan land and giving them an identity in him. That’s the law. And while the parts of the law that were intended to govern the civil affairs of the nation of Israel don’t apply to those of us living in other nations across space and time, the moral thrust of God’s commands applies to all people everywhere. Because his law points us to him. It helps us to be holy because he is holy.

PRAY: Thank God for loving you enough to reveal himself to humanity. Thank him for giving you an identity and a purpose. Worship him today because he is holy, and ask him to help you be holy as well.

Tuesday: June 18, 2013

READ: Luke 14

THINK: Go out to the roads and country lanes and compel them to come in, so that my house will be full.” – Luke 14:23

We make so many excuses for not going out to the roads and the country lanes, to our schools, our workplaces, and our neighborhoods and compelling those around us to come in. We have so many reasons, that we can always justify within our own minds, for why we don’t need to go out and share our faith. We constantly have excuses for why the Great Commission to “go and make disciples” doesn’t apply to us, for why Jesus parable in Luke 14 was about somebody else. Why? Because we’re afraid. We’re deathly afraid that sowing the seeds of the gospel in our world might cost us something. And we’re not willing to pay the price. Our self-centered, materialistic American ethos conflict directly with Jesus statement in Luke 14:33 that we must give up everything if we want to be his disciples. So we twist his words in a way that allows us to be comfortable believing that everything doesn’t really mean everything.

I don’t say this heap guilt on you. I say it to force you to take an honest look at the truth of your life and your walk with Christ. How many people have you told about Jesus in the last week? Month? Year? Decade?

It will absolutely cost you something to sow the seeds of the gospel. If Jesus is to be believed (spoiler alert: I think he is) it will cost you everything. But here’s the catch: I think it’s worth it. I think what we’re getting by giving up everything for Jesus is immeasurably better than what we’re giving up. Even if it isn’t easy. Even if it’s painful. Psalm 126:5 says that, “Those who sow with tears will reap with songs of joy.

Del Tarr, a missionary to Africa, tells the following story: “In the Sahel [area of the Sahara Desert], all the moisture comes in a four month period: May, June, July, and August. After that, not a drop of rain falls for eight months. The ground cracks from dryness, and so do your hands and feet. The winds of the Sahara pick up the dust and throw it thousands of feet into the air. It then comes slowly drifting across West Africa as a fine grit. It gets inside your mouth. It gets inside your watch and stops it. The year’s food, of course, must all be grown in those four months. People grow sorghum or milo in small fields.

October and November…these are beautiful months. The granaries are full – the harvest has come. People sing and dance. They eat two meals a day. The sorghum is ground between two stones to make flour and then a mush with the consistency of yesterday’s Cream of Wheat. The sticky mush is eaten hot; they roll it into little balls between their fingers, drop it into a bit of sauce and then pop it into their mouths. The meal lies heavy on their stomachs so they can sleep.

December comes, and the granaries start to recede. Many families omit the morning meal. Certainly by January not one family in fifty is still eating two meals a day.  By February, the evening meal diminishes.  The meal shrinks even more during March and children succumb to sickness. You don’t stay well on half a meal a day.

April is the month that haunts my memory. In it you hear the babies crying in the twilight. Most of the days are passed with only an evening cup of gruel.

Then, inevitably, it happens. A six-or seven-year-old boy comes running to his father one day with sudden excitement. “Daddy! Daddy! We’ve got grain!” he shouts. “Son, you know we haven’t had grain for weeks.” “Yes, we have!” the boy insists. “Out in the hut where we keep the goats — there’s a leather sack hanging up on the wall — I reached up and put my hand down in there — Daddy, there’s grain in there! Give it to Mommy so she can make flour, and tonight our tummies can sleep!”

The father stands motionless. “Son, we can’t do that,” he softly explains. “That’s next year’s seed grain. It’s the only thing between us and starvation. We’re waiting for the rains, and then we must use it.” The rains finally arrive in May, and when they do the young boy watches as his father takes the sack from the wall and does the most unreasonable thing imaginable: Instead of feeding his desperately weakened family, he goes to the field and with tears streaming down his face, he takes the precious seed and throws it away. He scatters it in the dirt! Why? Because he believes in the harvest!

The seed is his; he owns it. He can do anything with it he wants. The act of sowing it hurts so much that he cries. But as the African pastors say when they preach on Psalm 126, “Brother and sisters, this is God’s law of the harvest. Don’t expect to rejoice later on unless you have been willing to sow in tears.” And I want to ask you: How much would it cost you to sow in tears? I don’t mean just giving God something from your abundance, but finding a way to say, “I believe in the harvest, and therefore I will give what makes no sense. The world would call me unreasonable to do this – but I must sow regardless, in order that I may someday celebrate with songs of joy.””

PRAY: Confess that you’ve made a lot of excuses in your lifetime for not sharing Christ with people. If you’re willing, give him everything today – completely surrender to him. Ask him to open your eyes to the opportunities around you. And then get out there onto the “roads and country lanes” of your life and share Christ with a desperate world in need of a Savior.

Monday: June 17, 2013

READ: Psalm 131

THINK: I have always been really proud of how humble I am. 🙂

This short Psalm is incredibly powerful, and its message has nothing to do with David patting his own back for being humble. Saul and his men often accused David of being prideful and haughty, but here David comes before the Lord and very earnestly and honestly lays out his heart.

David knows that life is not simple, and that he is currently facing a number of difficulties and will continue to face them all his life. Sound familiar? David’s situation when he wrote down these words mirrors ours thousands of years later. Our world is broken and, until Jesus returns, there will be no end to our troubles. So what do we do? What’s the answer to the brokenness of our world?

Our natural instinct is to trust ourselves. It is to pridefully assume that somehow we can figure everything out on our own. But David wisely realized that he didn’t have the answers to his own problems – that ultimately he was powerless to solve them. He realized that the only solution was to completely and totally put his entire hope in God alone.

Where is your hope? When times are hard, when troubles arise, when you find yourself in difficult situations, what is your natural inclination? Do you trust yourself? Do you let your pride win the day?

Or do you “not concern yourself with great matters” and “put your hope [completely] in the Lord”?

PRAY: Thank God for being a hope in times of trouble. Confess that your pride has inhibited you from trusting him, and as him to help you put your faith completely in him and let go of the false pride that leads you to think you can do it on your own.

Sunday: June 16, 2013

READ: 1 Thessalonians 1

THINK: Charles Barkley is not only an NBA Hall-of-Fame basketball player, but he is also one of my favorite television personalities. His candor and humor in analyzing the game of basketball and all of its nuances are fun to listen to. And Sir Charles, as he is affectionately known, is a well-liked and widely respected guy who generally avoids controversy these days. But this wasn’t always the case. Barkley was a combative player on the court and he once caused major waves by doing a Nike commercial in which he famously declared, “I am not a role model.”

Barkley’s point – and Nike’s – was that parents should invest in their kids lives and not simply entrust their futures to whatever celebrities they happen to follow and look up to. It’s a good point. But there was severe backlash to the commercial because people rightly observed that Charles Barkley was a role model. It didn’t matter if he didn’t want to be one. In the end, it didn’t even matter if he shouldn’t have been one. Because of who he was – because of his identity as an NBA star – he was a role model whose behavior had an impact on young people no matter what.

To his credit, Barkley seems to have realized that. We could all learn from his experience. That is to say, every single one of us is a role model to somebody. Whether we want to be or not. Whether we should be or not. Whether we feel qualified to be or not. There are people who are watching us – people who are in our lives, who we interact with daily – whose actions are influenced by who we are, what we say, and what we do.

As believers in Jesus we have an identity. We are children of God, bought and paid for by the blood of Jesus Christ. That identity means that we are called to be role models to those around us. This is exactly what the church in Thessalonica was. Paul commends them for following his example and, in turn, setting an incredible example of Christ-likeness for those around them. This is the model that God set in motion to bring Jesus to a world that is desperate for him! His people are to be changed in a way that helps them model Jesus for everyone around them.

Do people see Jesus in you? That may be an uncomfortable question. Many of us want to avoid the duty of being role models. We feel like we’re not good enough Christians to do it, or we’re so distracted by the world that we don’t want to make it a priority. But we are role models whether we want to be or not. We are designed and called and equipped to bring Jesus to our world through who we are and what we say and do. The world should see him through us. If the people around us don’t – if we aren’t willing to be the hands and feet of Christ in our world – then we have effectively abandoned them to hopelessness.

PRAY: Confess that your faith has not always shown God’s love and grace and truth to those around you. Confess the times when you have shied away from being a role model and reflecting Jesus. Ask God to help you be more Christ-like and help you reflect him to your world.

LIVE: Today is Father’s Day. If you have a father who has been a role model in your life, be sure to thank him! If you don’t, take a moment today to thank somebody who has been an important role model in your life.

Saturday: June 15, 2012

READ: Leviticus 18-19

THINK: In 1955, when the South was still highly segregated, Emmett Till, a black teenager from Chicago, visited relatives in Mississippi. After Emmett “dared” to talk to a white woman, two white men brutally murdered him. An all-white, male jury found the two “not guilty”—after deliberating for barely an hour. The two men later confessed to the crime in a Life magazine article.

Following the verdict, Emmett’s mother said, “Two months ago I had a nice apartment in Chicago. I had a good job. I had a son. When something happened to Negroes in the South, I said, ‘That’s their business, not mine.’ Now I know how wrong I was. The murder of my son has shown me that what happens to any of us, anywhere in the world, had better be the business of us all.”

Making another’s concerns our own is what Leviticus 19:18 calls us to do: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Jesus quotes this verse and interprets it as not placing any limitations on loving those around us (Matt. 22:39; Luke 10:25-37). Our neighbor doesn’t just mean someone close by; it’s anyone who has a need. We are to care for others as we care for ourselves.

To love our neighbor means to make the persecution, suffering, and injustice of our fellow human beings our own. It is the business of all who follow Christ.

ASK: How can I be a good neighbor? How can I love those around me like I love myself?

PRAY: Confess that you have not always lived up to God’s call upon your life as a neighbor. Ask him to give you his heart for those around you. Pray for boldness to stand up against the injustice you see around you.

 

Friday: June 14, 2013

READ: 2 Kings 20-22

THINK: Read 2 Kings 22:11-17 again and try to get a feel for the situation. As you read about it, think about the images, words, or phrases that especially impact you and jump out to you, such as the raging anger or the anguish in the words and actions of Josiah.

Why do you think these images, words, or phrases stood out to you?

PRAY: Take time to silently repeat the word or phrase from the passage or to let the image play itself out in your mind. See how it meshes with your thoughts, feelings, and memories. Eventually let your contemplation lead you to consider whether there are any questionable or sinful areas of your life that you have been ignoring lately. Can you tell why you’ve been ignoring them? Bring them before God. What is your posture?

LIVE: Picture this God whose anger is burning furiously. What’s it like to be before him? Now see Jesus, the mediator between the holy God pictured in this passage and the sinful people God loves. Turn to Jesus and together examine your heart. Watch his response to the sinful areas you noticed. What is he inviting you to do in response to what you see? Respond to his invitation. Watch God the Father accept Jesus’ redemption of your sin – see God’s white-hot anger cool – and experience being welcomed back into full fellowship with him once more.

Adapted from Eugene Peterson in Solo

Thursday: June 13, 2013

READ: Ezekiel 46-48

THINK: The book of Ezekiel comes to a close with some incredible imagery and a powerful vision of the restoration of the Kingdom of God and his presence with mankind. And the culmination of this vision, the most important part, the key to understanding this entire section of the Bible and, frankly, the big idea and overarching theme of the book of Ezekiel comes at the very end in the last 2 word phrase that Ezekiel uses: Yahweh-Shammah. The LORD is there.

There are many names for God in the Old Testament that describe his love, his power, his greatness, his sovereignty, his faithfulness and more. Yahweh-Shammah is the last new name for God that is introduced in the Old Testament. And, though it is technically used by Ezekiel to name the great city and not to name God, it gives us a powerful understanding of what the city is all about. We might be tempted to read this passage and think that the glory of the city is found in it’s temple, it’s size, it’s riches, or it’s river of life. After all, Ezekiel’s words demonstrate that this city is the most glorious place on earth and in the history of the earth. But Ezekiel ensures that at the end of all things we understand this clearly: the presence of God is the glory of the most glorious place. Of all the amazing things Ezekiel describes about this place, the peculiar glory of it all will be that God is there. Yahweh-Shammah. Yahweh-Shammah is who God always intended to be. And living in the very presence of God is what mankind was created for.

For Ezekiel, getting the name Yahweh-Shammah was the greatest blessing the city could possibly receive. I wonder, do we consider God’s presence to be the greatest blessing we could possibly receive? Do we yearn for his presence? Do we seek it out wherever it may be found? Our answers to these questions matter deeply.

Sometimes we may try to escape God’s presence and sometimes we simply neglect it. But the interesting truth of the situation is that nothing but our sinful nature and corrupt hearts allows us to feel at ease anywhere but the presence of God. That is to say, if your life is comfortable outside of God’s presence – if you can find some joy or peace or comfort outside of passionately seeking him – then the comfort you have found is a false comfort predicated upon your sin. In our rebellion against God we try to live without him. But we were built – designed, wired, and created by a Creator – to run on the presence of God in the same way that a car is built to run on gasoline. We were made for it, and it’s the greatest blessing we can ever receive! Without it we begin to die, we live beneath the dignity and potential for which he created us. With it we begin to truly live.

ASK: What am I doing to seek God’s presence? What habits, disciplines, and practices are a part of my life that bring me to that place? How am I plugging in to church community (where God literally promises his presence will be)? What changes do I need to make to be where God is and avoid being where God isn’t? What experiences in my life have shown me the blessing of being in God’s presence?

PRAY: Thank Yahweh-Shammah for the indescribable gift of his presence.