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Saturday, September 23, 2023

Morning Sharing: From Forsaking to Reconciling

Although I am trying to make my way through Jeremiah right now (at least the first chapter), instead of moving further along this morning I was drawn to take another look at my starting place and (of course) saw something I hadn’t noticed before. 

God said, “And I will declare my judgments against them, for all their evil in forsaking me. They have made offerings to other gods and worshiped the works of their own hands” (vs 16). 

This got me thinking about why it is so evil to forsake God. This needs to be understood in relation to the greatest commandment, that we are to love God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. Obviously forsaking him is breaking that command.  

But both the command to love God and the indictment about forsaking him presuppose a reality that makes God the only measure of what is good. This would explain why Jesus said that no one does good except God alone. 

This feels a bit like the sourdough starter (leaven) that needs some time to permeate the whole lump of dough. I can see where God is going with this, and he is at least humoring me in my childish need to labor over it until I understand it for real, but it will take some more time of meditating on this and praying it through to see how exactly God is working in this and how I am to join him in his work. 

For starters, I know the focus is to see what God is doing in me to address anything in my life that reeks of forsaking him in immediate circumstances where I might not even notice I am leaving him out of my thinking and idolizing something of my own making (self-protective structures included). 

This will lead to specific expressions of surrender to his work of cleaning up my act so I am being transformed through the renewal of my mind “into the same image (as Jesus Christ) from one degree of glory to another.” 

And then I will look for new opportunities to keep sharing him with others in the confidence that his kindness will lead someone to repentance and back into the arms of his love. 

As usual, God tells me to go first, and then walk with him as he expresses his life through me for his glory and the good of others.

 

© 2023 Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8

Email: in2freedom@gmail.com

Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are from the English Standard Version (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.)

 

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

The Faith That Fearlessly Endures Corruption

Doing the right thing in relation to corrupt governments is nothing new. History is full of accounts of the kinds of evil people will do when they have the power to carry out their wicked desires. We just happen to be the current version of such heart-wrenching realities. 

I am always encouraged to hear of doctors, politicians, and scientists who stand against the flow of corruption and put their careers (and even their lives) on the line to tell people the truth. The accounts of communities wising-up to the lies and deception to join the revolution, so to speak, is certainly good news to counter the bad. 

However, when I consider the ultimate in standing against corruption, and ponder the very best ways of doing the very best for myself, my family, my friends, and even my enemies, I must acknowledge that the most extreme realities of corruption are coming from the spiritual realm, and the greatest way to stand against evil is to stand for the Holy One of the universe, Jesus Christ our Lord. 

As I was meditating on the wonder of how God delights to attach to us in what we see in his word, the Bible, I found myself in a scene where one of the most famous figures of history, the man named Moses, had to stand against the corruption of his day. The lessons from Moses and his parents are so uplifting, encouraging, and motivating. 

First, the background to what Moses and his parents did is in context of an evil edict made by the king of Egypt at the time. He told the midwives who helped the Hebrew women with their deliveries that when a child is born, “if it is a son, you shall kill him, but if it is a daughter, she shall live.” He then clarified this with a more explicit instruction, “Every son that is born to the Hebrews you shall cast into the Nile, but you shall let every daughter live.” 

Does that sound evil enough to you? A wicked tyrant is afraid that his thin thread of authority could be jeopardized by a certain group of people so killing all the male babies to prevent the reproduction of a whole generation makes sense. And yes, it is not difficult to find parallels in our day! 

So, then we are introduced to Moses’ parents. When Moses was born, were they going to sacrifice their son to the Nile River just because the King told them to? Were they going to act wickedly towards their child just because someone in charge ordered such an evil thing against children? In other words, were they going to let a government tell them what to do with their child just because it was the government?! 

Now, here is the short version of how Moses’ parents responded to their predicament: “By faith Moses, when he was born, was hidden for three months by his parents, because they saw that the child was beautiful, and they were not afraid of the king's edict.” 

Moses’ parents knew what the king’s edict was, but they were not afraid of it. There was something of much greater value in play than the threat of governmental repercussions. Not only were they under a much higher authority than the king of land (that of the Creator of the ends of the earth), but they had just brought a beautiful baby into the world and that little child mattered far more to them than a wicked taskmaster. 

What is the key word in that sentence about Moses’ parents? 

FAITH!!! 

Faith never stands alone. It is nothing without the object it attaches to. So many people have put their faith in a narrative of corruption and deception and are dropping like soap-covered maple bugs! Their faith may be just as strong as mine, but attached to the wrong object makes it deadly! 

When we read of Moses’ parents, and we read that what they did was “by faith”, the whole context of the Bible is faith in the Only True God, the Holy One of Israel, the Creator of the ends of the earth, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the God who had preserved his chosen people through the leadership of Joseph quite some generations earlier. In other words, their faith was in the One God revealed in the Bible and made known to us through God the Son, Jesus Christ our Lord. 

Now, as much as I am enjoying speaking to you of the faith of Moses’ parents, that is just the setting for the life of Moses. Because his parents were living by faith in God instead of fear of the king, God provided for Moses by using the king’s own daughter to rescue him, care for him, and raise him as a son of the very Pharaoh who had ordered his execution. 

So, decades later, what was Moses going to do when he discovered that his upbringing in the ways of Egypt, and his luxurious life in Pharaoh’s household, and the genuine care he had received from his adoptive mother, had put him on the side of the wicked government that had conspired to kill his people and was presently oppressing them with evil burdens of slavery? 

Answer: Moses was going to live by the same faith as his parents, and of the nation that the wicked king was oppressing. 

First, “By faith Moses, when he was grown up, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter”. Even though it was Pharaoh’s daughter who had taken him in, saved him from the king’s wrath, and provided for him such a luxurious lifestyle, that had positioned him in a family that was promoting evils against the people of God. The fact that he was confronted with such a conflict shows us that there is nothing new under the sun when we ourselves must choose between family and God. The issue is going to be where our faith sets its anchor. Whatever our faith is bonded to will direct how we then behave. 

Second, Moses chose “rather to be mistreated with the people of God than to enjoy the fleeting pleasures of sin.” Not only was Moses aware that giving up his relationship to his adoptive mother would put him outside the luxury he was conditioned to enjoy, but he knew that attaching to “the people of God” would set him up to be “mistreated” just as they were being abused. This does not mean that Moses was a sucker for punishment. It meant that he knew where his faith ought to be anchored, and he had to accept that the evil world he lived in would do its best to make him suffer for rejecting its wickedness. 

Third, we are given a look into Moses’ heart and mind as we are told that, “He considered the reproach of Christ greater wealth than the treasures of Egypt, for he was looking to the reward.” The conflict is now clarified very precisely. Even in Moses’ day, it was between Christ and the world. How much Moses understood of the Christ we do not know. But Moses’ faith was in the Only True God, and Christ has always been the golden thread in the history of God’s people, so when Moses was old enough to choose, he looked at “the reproach of Christ” he would experience by associating with God’s people, and he looked at “the treasures of Egypt” he could enjoy if he submitted to the wicked leadership of his adoptive grandpa, and he knew that what he would have with the people of God in Christ was “greater wealth” than anything he could have by playing it safe and doing what he was told. 

Part of this was because he had intel on where the two choices would lead: the “treasures of Egypt” would lead him into the same wickedness as his adoptive family had perpetrated over God’s people, while “the reproach of Christ” would lead him to “the reward” of God. And the reward of God is so vastly superior to the pleasures of sin and luxury that putting up with reproach from government and worldlings is a small price to pay to experience the favor of the Creator. 

Fourth, now we get to the description of Moses’ faith that put the spotlight on this scene from history for me: “By faith he left Egypt, not being afraid of the anger of the king, for he endured as seeing him who is invisible.” 

Faith is a partnership between our relational bonds and our reasoned beliefs. These bonds and beliefs determine how we will behave. In that sense, everyone lives by faith. The issue is who we bond to that determines our beliefs, and how we behave accordingly because of what those bonds and beliefs mean to us. 

In Moses’ case, his faith was not in his family. Even though the king’s daughter was the only family he had known, family is never enough reason to rebel against God our Creator. Even though the king had authority and power to mistreat Moses and the people of God, because Moses’ bond was with Yahweh, the God of Abraham, and that bond shaped what Moses believed about the world, he was not afraid of the fact that his actions would make his adoptive grandpa angry. He had something more important going on than what a wicked king was doing. 

And then we get the ultimate reason that Moses’ faith would choose the good over the evil: “he endured as seeing him who is invisible.” That is the whole thing. It explains why Moses endured. It explains why he would throw away such a luxurious lifestyle where the pleasures of sin were not only legal, but he was as close to the man in charge as anyone could be. 

The thing that is captivating my faith this morning is what happens when we live “as seeing him who is invisible.” There is so much to that expression that I barely feel like I am capturing the whole scene. The definition of invisible is, “impossible to see”.[1] Because God is spirit, he can’t be seen by the material eye. It is impossible! 

This is why it does not say that Moses “saw” the invisible God, but that he endured “as seeing” him. In other words, our faith in the Living God is so real and profound that it is just like we are seeing him. In fact, the fact that our faith sees God as real is the same as our eyes seeing the evil tyrants of our day. 

To bring ourselves into the scene, even though we can see the evil that government leaders are perpetrating, and we can see the repercussions of refusing to comply with their evil edicts, what our faith sees of God through faith in Jesus Christ is more real, if you will, than what we can see with physical sight. No evil tyrant remains in control of the whole world. They all come and go. They boast and spout out their prideful claims and edicts like they will live forever when the only ones who live forever are those who receive the ever living one through Jesus Christ our Lord. 

God woke me up early this morning. That has given me lots of time to meditate on why God would ask Jeremiah, what do you see?” Over the last week or so I have come to know by personal experience and faith that God does this for everyone who reads his word, he asks us every day, every morning, “what do you see?” He does this to help us focus and concentrate. He does this to help us stop our busyness and notice things we haven’t seen before. It is why after decades of seeking God in his word and prayer I constantly see things I have never noticed before, or I find connections between thoughts that have never stood out the way they are right now. And that is why, just this morning, reading of Moses in Exodus and Hebrews 11 brought me to that small phrase that has never attached to my bonds and beliefs as it is right now, “as seeing him who is invisible”. 

What this is doing is beyond the words I have written. When God asks me what I see in his word each morning, it is because he wants my faith to see him who is invisible. He reminds me that, while “the god of this world has blinded the minds of the unbelievers, to keep them from seeing the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God,” he is the “God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’” and “has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.” In other words, if Moses’ faith saw him who is invisible back in the day, we see him who is invisible “in the face of Jesus Christ” every day of our lives of faith. 

Which is why the apostle John declared, “No one has ever seen God; the only God, who is at the Father's side, he has made him known.” Jesus has made the Father known to us today even clearer than Moses could have seen him, and so Moses’ example must encourage us to live the life of faith as our witnesses of faith modelled for us. 

The bottom line is that, if Moses’ faith in Christ enabled him to endure the wickedness of the family that had raised him in the pleasures of sin back then, we who are under the new covenant that is in the shed blood of Jesus Christ our Lord have all the more clarity to feed our faith so that we will endure whatever evils and wickedness our government leaders are expressing in our day, including cutting (or minimizing) ties with any relationships with loved ones who are pulling us away from the Only True God.   

From my childhood, I have known that, if God is God, and if Jesus Christ is God’s Son, the image of the invisible God, then I cannot change the fact that I answer to the Triune, not to anyone on earth. I know what it is like to be afraid of people and circumstances. I know what it is like to have a fear-based identity that is terrified of being hurt. I know the piercing grief of losing people because standing at the foot of the cross of Jesus Christ is not worth it to them. 

But I also know that “faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen”, and it is the invisible God I will stand before one day and no earthly relationship, not matter how beloved, will do anything to affect whether that is a good or bad experience. It is Jesus Christ alone who can save me out of my sin and condemnation and give me the eternal life I long for. And so, my faith must remain attached to him no matter how lonely and scary that may sometimes feel. 

There is a phrase that was originally stated in reference to the firstborn son of history, Abel, “And through his faith, though he died, he still speaks.” However, I have applied this to so many of my mentors both in the Bible and in church history who have passed on in the flesh. Even though they have died, their faith still speaks. And what it tells me is to keep my eyes on him who is invisible, and surrender every day to Jesus, the image of the invisible God, and constantly follow where he leads no matter what I must give up on the journey, and no matter who may try to scare me into disobedience to God. I simply have too many witnesses showing me the superiority of the life of faith to lose what is eternal for the fleeting pleasures (and self-protection) of sin. 

 Then I looked, and I heard around the throne and the living creatures and the elders the voice of many angels, numbering myriads of myriads and thousands of thousands, saying with a loud voice, 

“Worthy is the Lamb who was slain,

to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might

and honor and glory and blessing!” 

And I heard every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth and in the sea, and all that is in them, saying, 

“To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb

be blessing and honor and glory and might forever and ever!” 

And the four living creatures said, “Amen!” and the elders fell down and worshiped. 

 

© 2023 Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8

Email: in2freedom@gmail.com

Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are from the English Standard Version (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.)

 

 



[1] From the Bible Sense Lexicon in Logos Bible Systems software.

Thursday, September 14, 2023

When Longing for More is Enough

ONE OF the most difficult things in life is living with unfulfilled longings. To be hungry but there is no food, or thirsty and there is no water, or in love and there is no reciprocation, or holding hopes and dreams in our hearts that are constantly denied, is simply a horrid feeling of dissatisfaction. 

THE REASON for the God-centered hope we have in Christ is twofold. Part of it is that what is promised to anyone who trusts in Jesus is secure in God and his kingdom and will not fail to be fulfilled. But the other part of it is that we are living as strangers in a foreign land that can never satisfy us in the present the way our Forever Home will satisfy us in the future. 

WHICH MEANS that we must become okay with longings. We must be okay with having longings that are not immediately met, and we must be okay with God changing our hearts so that we know which longings to live with and which to discard. 

WHY IS this front and center for me this morning? Because when I consider what it would have been like for the prophet Jeremiah to hear God speaking to him with such precision that Jeremiah would know how to experience, “for to all to whom I send you, you shall go, and whatever I command you, you shall speak,” is simply awesome, and amazing, and… well… IT FILLS ME WITH LONGING!!! 

THERE IS something I’ve learned about since doing daycare that is called referencing. It is when a child will look up from their play to see if their big people are noticing them. And when we do, when us big people acknowledge their referencing, even just the simple fact that we noticed them communicates volumes to those little hearts, but when we respond with a smile you can almost see the peace settle upon them that all is well with their little world. 

SO WHEN I hear that God appeared to someone, and that person got to experience actual referencing with him where all their senses were involved in feeling what God was doing, and their whole body, soul, and spirit was engaged with God so that the person’s heart, mind, and brain were overwhelmed by the realness of an encounter with God… well… IT FILLS ME WITH LONGING!!! 

I KNOW I’m setting myself up for that who-knows-what criticism of something here. But I can genuinely say that I cannot help having this longing to experience the same referencing with my soul/spirit as if my soul/body experienced God showing up right now so my eyes could see his countenance, and my ears could hear the sound of his voice singing over me, and my nose could breathe in the fragrance of life that is all about him, and my mouth could taste the freshness of the living water and the texture of the bread of life, and my whole body could feel the touch of God healing the wounds of my soul, filling my being with the comfort and satisfaction of a hug from heaven, and leaving me resting in the peacefulness of complete attachment to the Almighty. 

AND NO MATTER how much God may gift a person with moments of satisfaction in this lifetime, it is like a video chat with a loved one who is too far away to visit in person and, although we are ever so thankful for the technology that gives us such interaction, IT ISN’T LIKE THEM BEING HERE!!! 

MEDITATING on God’s word is delightful, but it leaves me with the longing of what it will sound like in paradise with God when the Word speaks to me in the glorification that unites every body-soul-spirit sense to feel full and complete attachment to the Triune God that satisfies longings to the fullness of God’s joy. 

AND PRAYER is a wonderful gift, but it leaves me with the longing of what it will be like in the new heavens and the new earth to speak to Jesus… (I tremble with the wonder of such a thought!) and… actually… feel the exhilaration of seeing what it looks like for him to see me in person, and hearing what it sounds like for him to reply to me in my wondering, and smelling the fragrances and aromas of my Forever Home, not only in the newness of its creation, but in the substance of every aspect of eternity that can only now be imagined, and tasting the fruit of the Tree of Life and the waters of the River of Life. 

I MUST LIVE with the longing of what it will one day feel like for Jesus to touch me in person as he wipes away every tear from my eyes when my experience of this earthly life has brought me to know Jesus so well as the “man of sorrows” who is “acquainted with grief”. I must live with the longing to be free of heartache, and sorrow, and death, and… ATTACHMENT-PAIN(!!!) as an inescapable reality in the here-and-now. 

AND SO it is that we live in HOPE. Hope means we live with unfulfilled longings now, but in the comfort of the certainty that they WILL be fulfilled in due time. We not only wait in expectation, and we not only let ourselves imagine the realities to come, but we feel a certain restfulness and peace that what is promised is as certain as if it was already ours right now. 

AND THEN we dress for the day in our Ambassador-for-Christ suit and continue living for his glory as strangers to this foreign land of the world. After all, there are still lost souls to save, and there are still outcasts to invite into the citizenship of the kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ, and there are still the wounded who need their hearts bound up in the comforts of God’s love, and… well… there’s just so many people who don’t even know the satisfaction of hungering and thirsting for righteousness because Jesus has died to set us free! 

I WOULD RATHER be the child of God traveling the narrow road with all its longings for my heavenly home, and longings for the realities of full and unrestricted attachment to God in the completeness of my whole being, than to be the worldling that feels satisfied by the lies, deceptions, mirages, fairy tales, and fabrications of a world that does not even know it is on the wide road to destruction. 

SO, we go into this day willing to feel the longing for others to be saved out of their sin and condemnation while they do not care one little bit that they are lost from our Savior. We go willing to feel these longings for people to be saved today from the hopelessness of this “present darkness” because we want them to be so satisfied with new life in Jesus Christ that they will join us in rejoicing in our Lord and Savior every day of our lives, while smiling in hope as we help and encourage one another that Jesus will soon return. 

AND, as Paul said, we admit that “now we see in a mirror dimly,” but we long with certainty for when we will see “face to face.” We acknowledge that “now I know in part” but with the confident hope that “then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known.” 

SO WE CONCLUDE with Paul that our focus is on abiding in “faith, hope, and love” because in this present world “the righteous shall live by faith”, we “set our hope fully on the grace that will be brought to us at the revelation of Jesus Christ”, and we “walk in love, as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.” 

I WILL LET the apostle Paul have the last word on living with unfulfilled longings. He certainly let himself feel such things beyond the norm. So let us heed his example as we shine our light into this dark world today: “Henceforth there is laid up for me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will award to me on that day, and not only to me but also to all who have loved his appearing.”

 

© 2023 Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8

Email: in2freedom@gmail.com

Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are from the English Standard Version (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.)

 

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Morning Sharing: Our Weakness Met by God’s Strength

What God is helping me with right now is to accept that I can do whatever he gives me to do no matter how weak I feel about it because HE is with me and HIS presence in the situation makes all the difference. I have been meditating on this again this morning and applying it to situations I have faced this week, and also the myriad of attacks on the Christian faith by Muslims, Roman Catholics, atheists, and skeptics of all kinds. It is impossible to keep up! 

But the Lord said to me,

“Do not say, ‘I am only a youth’;
for to all to whom I send you, you shall go,
and whatever I command you, you shall speak.
Do not be afraid of them,
for I am with you to deliver you,
declares the Lord.”

(Jeremiah 1)

My complaint to God would not be that “I am only a youth” in my physical age, but more like, “I am so unskilled” in my abilities to dialogue with argumentative people. 

So, the first observation is that, just because there are myriads of such people making their presence known on the stage of cyberspace, it doesn’t mean they are my responsibility just because I watched their reel. In fact, it may be that such reels are a distraction from what God really wants me doing, which appears to be talking with people in real life. 

The real issue in my faith is believing that, even when confronted with a situation that I feel totally inadequate to respond to, God WANTS me to have experiences where I feel completely weak and helpless so that I can experience the super personal aspect of him helping me in the moment, not by giving me time to prepare. 

And what I am just beginning to meditate on is what God says next: Then the Lord put out his hand and touched my mouth. And the Lord said to me, 'Behold, I have put my words in your mouth.’” 

So, Yahweh touched Jeremiah’s mouth, Yahweh said to Jeremiah the perspective of Yahweh, and Yahweh gave Jeremiah the words to say. I must attach to what my Father in heaven is doing in me, not the limits of what I perceive in myself. 

It is interesting to think of all the people I speak with, and how freely I am able to talk with them, as long as it seems to be an opportunity God is giving me. I am even starting to see how, in a given conversation with someone that feels like a divine appointment, there comes a moment when it appears I have said all I need to say. I am trusting that God is the one making such distinctions! 

And so, I will see what kind of assignments I am given today that would overwhelm me in myself but are matched by God’s presence and God’s words helping someone else through me. I want to be able to say with Paul, “when I am weak, then I am strong,” and I want God to be glorified in me and through me as much as he desires.

 

© 2023 Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8

Email: in2freedom@gmail.com

Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are from the English Standard Version (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.)



 

 

Friday, September 8, 2023

Morning Sharing: To Pray God’s Word with Longing

I’ve reached a point of saturation in the whole supplementing my faith with self-control focus (II Peter 1:3-15) and have way too much to share on Sunday! So, I went instead to my focus on Jeremiah 1 from my prayer time yesterday morning.

My prayer-chapel:

At my prayer-chapel yesterday, praying through Jeremiah 1 was such a heart wrenching mixture of grief and comfort. The grief was because of wounds and heartaches from people, and the comfort was in the invitation to know God as so different from humans! I was so aware of the longing to hear God say to me the same things he said to Jeremiah, and so I spent some time focusing on that this morning.

Here’s just the first thing that stood out: 

“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,

and before you were born I consecrated you;

I appointed you a prophet to the nations.”

(Jeremiah 1:5)

The first line (“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you”) I can affirm as true for me as much as for Jeremiah. When Paul spoke of “those God foreknew”, it means those God personally knew and loved before creation. Every believer in Jesus Christ can affirm that before we were even conceived, God already knew us for real.

The second line (“and before you were born I consecrated you”) also seems applicable to all believers in the sense that our place in the body of Christ would have been determined by God before we were born. It emphasizes that each of us is given the place in the body of Christ God has chosen for us, therefore we must live it out as people set apart to do what we are gifted to do.

And, the third line (“I appointed you a prophet to the nations.”) is more of a fill-in-the-blanks statement where we can replace “prophet” with whatever we know of our gifting and our place in the body of Christ and let ourselves feel the significance that our Father in heaven appointed us to this place for the good of people around us. This carries with it the weight of responsibility that, to fully be ourselves, we must be what we have been appointed to be.

When I prayed this through out at my prayer spot yesterday, there was a lot more emotion pouring out than this morning. Part of that was the way just praying through God’s word surprises us with whatever God says next.

At the same time, I am glad to meditate on this again today and see how it will encourage you as well. It is a wonderful encouragement to live out who and what we are in the body of Christ today as faithfully as Jeremiah and the other prophets fulfilled their assignments in the kingdom of God in their day. And God will speak to us through his word about what he is doing with us as surely as he did for them.

 

© 2023 Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8

Email: in2freedom@gmail.com

Unless otherwise noted, Scriptures are from the English Standard Version (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. ESV® Text Edition: 2016. Copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers.)

 

Thursday, September 7, 2023

Morning Sharing: Self-control That is Out of this World

The theme is still how to truly saturate my inner being with self-control as a supplement to my faith. Yesterday, I focused on this: 

15 Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16 For all that is in the world—the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride of life—is not from the Father but is from the world. (1 John 2) 

It is easy to see how self-control is required. Part of that is being convinced that the world as a system and interaction of people is always and only in rebellion towards God, and that the things our sarks desire, the natural cravings of what we see (spiritual ADHD), and the sinful kind of pride in ourselves and what we do in life, are NEVER from God and ALWAYS from the world. Since self-control is first a battle for our mind, John is urging us to believe the right things. 

Today that leads to this: 

17 And the world is passing away along with its desires, but whoever does the will of God abides forever. (I John 2) 

It is interesting that “the world” refers to the world system of rebellion, but we also know that the physical world is passing away and that it provides no solid rock for us to anchor our souls. The point is that, to nurture self-control, we must believe that neither the rebellious world of people, nor the physical world of creation, are ever going to give us the substance we are designed to experience. 

It is interesting that the counterpart to “the world” is “whoever”. This is a pattern in scripture that has really encouraged me over the years. God will speak of the “many” in reference to those who are not doing his will and the “one” who is doing his will. Even with the Laodicean church that was so lukewarm that Jesus was going to spew it out of his mouth, the whole church was called to repentance, but Jesus promised that if even one person opened the door to him, he would come in to that person and fellowship with him/her. 

All of that tells me to get my bearings from God and his kingdom. In fact, “seek first the kingdom and righteousness of God” has been flowing through my mind as of late. We don’t need to know what will happen, but only what is happening and how we express ourselves in the world by living in the kingdom first and foremost every day of our lives. 

And I have a prayer walk waiting for me to give this further meditation!

 

 © 2023 Monte Vigh ~ Box 517, Merritt, BC, V1K 1B8

Email: in2freedom@gmail.com

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