IRRATIONAL FEARS (Fear – Part 1)

We use God’s mighty weapons, not worldly weapons, to knock down the strongholds of human reasoning and to destroy false arguments. We destroy every proud obstacle that keeps people from knowing God. We capture their rebellious thoughts and teach them to obey Christ. [2 Corinthians 10:4-5 (NLT)]

vulture (black) Bad things happen, unforeseen events occur, and every one of us will eventually become a fatality statistic of some kind. A certain amount of fear or caution is wise in our unpredictable world. Most of us, however, are rather selective in our fears. We obsess over things about which we have little or no control and ignore those things over which we do. We don’t want to give up control to the pilot when the odds of dying in a plane crash are 1 in 11 million but trust our driving when the odds of a fatal car crash are 1 in 5 thousand! While we are far more likely to die of heart disease (1 in 6), we tend to obsess about things like dying in a terrorist attack (1 in 20 million). In actuality, we are fourteen times more likely to die in our bathtubs and twenty-five times more likely to die by choking on our food than in a terrorist attack, but we prefer not to think about that while bathing or eating.

A younger friend has begun to let unfounded fears control her life. Instead of healthy fears that keep her prudent and sensible, her unwarranted fears are starting to diminish her enjoyment of life. Afraid to take the elevator, no matter how inconvenient, she chooses to take the stairs. While some of us may take the stairs for fitness, she takes them out of fear. There are, however, only 27 deaths per year attributed to elevators but 1,000 deaths a year are attributed to taking the stairs. When taking a plane, my friend’s fear and anxiety cause her to turn to alcohol and tranquilizers when the odds of dying from that combination are much greater than the odds of dying in a plane crash.

God doesn’t want us to live in fear of anything other than Him and that kind of fear is one of respect, veneration, and reverence; it is also a healthy fear of displeasing Him. Fear of God is a positive and productive fear that actually empowers us. Terrifying and paralyzing fear are not in God’s plan for us. The enemy, however, hates to see us happy or living life to the fullest and one of his best weapons is irrational fear. The Apostle Paul told us we can defeat the enemy’s plan by capturing those fearful thoughts.

When unfounded fear starts disturbing my thoughts, I picture a small fellow (looking a bit like Ziggy of comic strip fame) who carries a butterfly net. He is powered by God’s Word, the Holy Spirit, prayer and a large portion of common sense. His job is to chase after those baseless fears that flit around in my thoughts. Once they’re captured, he stomps on them and demolishes their power. He must start when those fearful thoughts first appear because, given time, they can multiply and grow large as vultures. For most of us, most of the time, that little God-powered guy is all we need to capture our fearful thoughts and defeat the enemy’s destructive plan.

With more than 19 million people affected by an anxiety disorder every year, however, even the most devout Christian can be stricken by mental illness. When our fears seem to overpower us, begin to interfere with everyday functioning, or become unrelenting or destructive, there may be issues that call for professional counseling or medical help. Christians are human; we can be afflicted and in need of healing as much as anyone else and should never hesitate to get mental health care when necessary. For those common “garden variety” types of fear, however, get out that net and start capturing those fearful thoughts.

For God has not given us a spirit of fear and timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline. [2 Timothy 1:7 (NLT)]

Copyright ©2016 jsjdevotions. All rights reserved.

BREATHE ON ME

Then the Lord God took some soil from the ground and formed a man out of it; he breathed life-giving breath into his nostrils and the man began to live. [Genesis 2:7 (GNT)] 

You were made from soil, and you will become soil again. [Genesis 3:19 (GNT)]

blazing star (prairie)Today, I thought again about that handful of dirt in the farmer’s hand and remembered the creation story. God scooped up a handful of soil, breathed life into it and made man. I don’t care whether the words are figurative or literal or if they support the creationist or evolutionary points of view. All I know is that God made something out of nothing then and continues to do so now!

He takes our worthless parts and gives them value. He imparts our exhaustion with vitality, our weakness with strength, and our loneliness with love. He makes whole our brokenness, fills our emptiness, and replaces despondency with hope and sorrow with joy. He gives sight to the part that is unseeing, perception to the part that is unhearing, and a voice to the part that is mute. He replaces our shame and disgrace with forgiveness and mercy. He takes our soiled parts, washes them in His blood, and makes them clean. He fills that cold void in our core with hearts of compassion and scoops us out of darkness into the light. He holds us in the palm of His hand, takes all of our deadness and decay, and breathes new life into us.

Thank you God, for taking this handful of soil and filling me with life anew!

Breathe on me, Breath of God, fill me with life anew,
that I may love what thou dost love, and do what thou wouldst do.
Breathe on me, Breath of God, until my heart is pure,
until with thee I will one will, to do and to endure.
Breathe on me, Breath of God, till I am wholly thine,
till all this earthly part of me glows with thy fire divine.
Breathe on me, Breath of God, so shall I never die,
but live with thee the perfect life of thine eternity.
[“Breathe on Me, Breath of God” by Edwin Hatch]

Anyone who is joined to Christ is a new being; the old is gone, the new has come. [2 Corinthians 5:17 (GNT)]

But if Christ lives in you, the Spirit is life for you because you have been put right with God, even though your bodies are going to die because of sin. If the Spirit of God, who raised Jesus from death, lives in you, then he who raised Christ from death will also give life to your mortal bodies by the presence of his Spirit in you. [Romans 8:10-11 (GNT)]

Copyright ©2016 jsjdevotions. All rights reserved.

DISCERNMENT

My child, don’t lose sight of common sense and discernment. Hang on to them, for they will refresh your soul. They are like jewels on a necklace. [Proverbs 3:21-22 (NLT)]

snowy egret I recently received an email from a Christian bookstore apologizing for one of their advertisements. Apparently, there had been objections to their “journaling” Bible ad, not because of the possible defacing of a Bible with doodles but because of the ad’s subject line: “Channel Your Inner Creative.” Customers protested their use of “inappropriate” New Age language. While the store’s goal had been to “embrace and celebrate the gift of creativity,” some people thought they were touting “channeling,” a New Age form of spiritualism. When channeling, people yield control of their discerning and reasoning faculties and enter a meditative or trancelike state in order to receive messages from a spiritual guide. When I first saw the ad, I gave no thought to its wording; I simply thought they were offering Bibles with extra wide margins so the reader could write notes or prayers on the pages. In their apology, the store promised to be “more vigilant and discerning” about their messaging. My first reaction upon receiving the apology was, ”Come on people—get a life!” I considered the complainers to be the kind of prissy judgmental people who give Christians a bad name.

The term “New Age” might make us think of crystals, meditation benches and cushions, incense burners, and Shirley MacLaine. After reading the store’s apology, however, I thought about people like Oprah Winfrey, Eckhart Tolle, Marianne Williamson, Neale Donald Walsch and Deepak Chopra and realized how much New Age thinking has crept into our lives and vocabulary. We search for authentic selves, follow Spirit’s guidance, personally transform and self-nurture, love ourselves into wholeness, commit to our spiritual awakening and enlightenment, visualize, and even channel. With its deceptively seductive vocabulary, New Age philosophy preaches an individual eclectic approach to “spiritual exploration.” Yes, we are made in the image and likeness of God but the New Age viewpoint would have us think that makes us divine. Being made in God’s image is most definitely not having His divine essence; although Satan tries daily to convince us otherwise, we are not God.

After giving the store’s apology more thought, I stopped criticizing those who’d protested their words (after all, I’d been as critical of them as they were of the store.) In fact, I applaud their diligence. Every day, we are bombarded with assorted philosophies that seem harmless. We read words that, while somewhat incomprehensible, seem extremely profound. When we have trouble making sense of the weighty verbiage, we think it is our fault. It’s not; it’s because the words are those of fake spiritual guides and charlatans. We all should be more vigilant and discerning about the words we read and the vocabulary we use. May we always remember: if it isn’t compatible with the Bible, it’s counterfeit.

The New Age Movement is a kind of yuppie religious expression in which you can have everything without any discomfort or pain or inconvenience. [Harvey Cox]

Dear friends, do not believe everyone who claims to speak by the Spirit. You must test them to see if the spirit they have comes from God. For there are many false prophets in the world. This is how we know if they have the Spirit of God: If a person claiming to be a prophet acknowledges that Jesus Christ came in a real body, that person has the Spirit of God. But if someone claims to be a prophet and does not acknowledge the truth about Jesus, that person is not from God. Such a person has the spirit of the Antichrist, which you heard is coming into the world and indeed is already here. [1 John 4:1-3 (NLT)]

Copyright ©2016 jsjdevotions. All rights reserved.

DEBT FORGIVENESS

God made you alive with Christ. He forgave us all our sins, having canceled the charge of our legal indebtedness, which stood against us and condemned us; he has taken it away, nailing it to the cross. [Colossians 2:13b-24 (NIV)]

Cathedral basilica of st. francis of assisi-Santa Fe2According to the Boston Globe, the college class of 2015 graduated with an average of over $35,000 in student debt. That’s a mammoth $56 billion in student debt, giving them the dubious honor of being the most indebted class in history. It’s likely that honor will pass to the class of 2016 come June. While a few occupations may qualify for student loan forgiveness programs, one way or another, that debt must be repaid. Recent college grads aren’t the only ones in debt. According to NerdWallet, the average American household carries nearly $131,000 in debt for such things as student loans, credit cards, mortgages, and both auto and personal loans. Even if we are fortunate enough to have no personal debt, the national debt of over nineteen trillion dollars still weighs heavily on each and every one of us. With a nation that has clearly spent more than it can afford, it’s too bad we no longer follow the laws in Deuteronomy for the Israelites that prohibited charging interest and canceled all debts every seven years.

Even if this was the seventh year and all of our nation’s debt was cancelled, that financial forgiveness wouldn’t come close in comparison to the debt payment Jesus made for all of mankind. Far greater than the national debt, that debt had nothing to do with dollars and cents but everything to do with sin. No amount of work, tears, shame, guilt, or even repentance could cancel it. No matter how few or great our sins, regardless of what we did or how long we worked, none of us could do enough to make things right or pay the debt of sin to God. The good news is that, when Christ hung on that cross and triumphantly announced, “It is finished!” that debt was paid in full. When the Lamb of God was sacrificed to take away the sin of the world, His work of salvation and redemption was complete; Jesus satisfied man’s debt to God. By dying on that cross, Christ paid a debt He didn’t owe because mankind owed a debt they couldn’t pay. His payment plan isn’t based on works but rather on grace through faith. Like any payment plan, however, there are strings attached—to qualify for God’s debt forgiveness plan, we have to accept Jesus as our Lord and Savior and be willing to forgive the sins of others. That seems a small price to pay for salvation and eternal life. If someone came along and offered to make you whole with everyone to whom you owe money, you’d probably jump on that proposal. Why, I wonder, are people so hesitant to accept Christ’s offer of making us right with God?

By his death he paid our debt, in his resurrection he received our acquittance. [Matthew Henry]

For you know that it was not with perishable things such as silver or gold that you were redeemed from the empty way of life handed down to you from your ancestors, but with the precious blood of Christ, a lamb without blemish or defect. [1 Peter 1:18-19 (NIV)]

And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. [Matthew 6:12 (NIV)]

Copyright ©2016 jsjdevotions. All rights reserved.

TAPPING OUT

If you think you are standing strong, be careful not to fall. The temptations in your life are no different from what others experience. And God is faithful. He will not allow the temptation to be more than you can stand. When you are tempted, he will show you a way out so that you can endure. [1 Corinthians 10:12-13 (NLT)]

I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, and I have remained faithful. [2 Timothy 4:7 (NLT)]

hairy woodpeckerRalph Waldo Emerson said, “Life is a journey, not a destination;” I thought of that quote when reading an article about a local man who attempted an unsupported solo ski trek from the edge of the Antarctic to the South Pole. This experienced adventurer spent several years preparing for the expedition and rigorously testing his equipment. With extras of nearly everything, he was sure he’d planned for every eventuality. What he hadn’t anticipated was encountering one of the worst summers the Antarctic has experienced, an issue with a ski that caused him constant soreness in his right foot, and a cracked teapot! The teapot (the lone one he had) was the only way he could melt snow and, without it, he’d have no water. Reluctantly, he asked a support plane to airdrop a new pot and, in spite of his best intentions, the trek changed from unsupported to supported. Then, a combination of wind and foot pain took their toll. Although he’d planned on making ten to twelve miles a day, no matter how hard he pushed himself, he averaged only eight and his supplies dwindled. After over 300 miles and thirty-six days alone on the ice, he approached an area where a plane could safely land. If he continued at his pace, he would definitely need more supplies. Moreover, there was an excellent chance that, if and when he arrived at the South Pole, extraction planes would no longer be flying. Although he’d have bragging rights for attaining his goal, penguins could be the only ones who’d ever hear his boasting. Weighing his options, he decided it was time to leave. “For me, turning back is never the wrong decision,” he said.

Not all of our goals are achievable and not every destination will be reached. If we are clearly following God’s plan, He’ll provide a way to continue. If it isn’t, He’ll provide headwinds and sore feet or other valid reasons to stop. I think of Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 10 that promise God will show us a way out so that we can endure. Sometimes, the way out is simply saying, “I quit!” Stopping allows us to heal, grow, strengthen, restock, change direction or learn from our mistakes.

At times, we might even need to quit when things seem to be going our way! In an amateur MMA fight nearly two years ago, the fighter who was clearly winning tapped out and deliberately lost. Realizing his opponent was either too proud or too foolish to quit, and knowing he’d seriously injure the man if the bout continued, the superior fighter ended the match. He could have had bragging rights for the win but understood there would be no joy if that meant he’d caused severe harm to another man.

Whether to continue or quit requires prayer, discernment and common sense. Quitting is often the wisest (and the hardest) thing to do. We get so intent on finishing the race in the winner’s circle that we forget the important thing is how we run the race. Both the Antarctic adventurer and the winning fighter who tapped out made the most of their journeys and successfully ran the race God set before them.

Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a huge crowd of witnesses to the life of faith, let us strip off every weight that slows us down, especially the sin that so easily trips us up. And let us run with endurance the race God has set before us. We do this by keeping our eyes on Jesus, the champion who initiates and perfects our faith. [Hebrews 12:1-2 (NLT)]

The Lord directs the steps of the godly. He delights in every detail of their lives. Though they stumble, they will never fall, for the Lord holds them by the hand. [Psalm 37:23-24 (NLT)]

Copyright ©2016 jsjdevotions. All rights reserved.

 

LOST

The Lord says, “I will instruct you. I will teach you the way that you should go. I will advise you as my eyes watch over you. [Psalm 32:8 (GW)]

The eyes of the Lord are everywhere. [Proverbs 15:3a (GW)]

DSC09352webAfter the GPS flawlessly led us to our hotel in Orlando, we wondered how a satellite navigation system can keep track of countless cars and their various destinations. The following day, I looked at the GPS screen and the arrow indicating our position was several blocks east of us. It seemed to think we were driving over a golf course, across a canal and into a lake. Apparently, that eye in the sky is nowhere near as accurate as we’d originally thought. There are around 24 satellites orbiting at any one time to provide us with global positioning and we need to receive signals from at least three of them to get accurate directions. The line between the satellites and GPS must be unobstructed, so tall buildings, heavy woods, tunnels, mountains, and storms can all interfere with receiving a signal. We figured something had interfered with the satellites’ view of us. Later that day, after following its directions to Sea World, our faith in the system was shattered. As we passed Sea World’s clearly marked exit, we were told to continue five miles eastward and then go north. At that point, we consulted a map and turned around. Personally, I think we got someone else’s directions to an entirely different location! We were just one car among thousands of tourists using their GPS to guide them through the land of Mickey Mouse. Perhaps the system was overloaded and some other poor soul was being led to Sea Word when he probably wanted to go to the Magic Kingdom. Who knows? All I know is that I’m not getting rid of our maps anytime soon!

While we may need at least three satellites to guide our cars, we only need one God to guide our lives. Fortunately, He knows where we are all of the time, even when we don’t! That’s true for each and every one of the 7.3 billion of us. Nothing external can obstruct God’s view of us, he doesn’t lose us when we are in a valley, and his voice doesn’t weaken when we’re in a wilderness. If His signal seems weak, it has nothing to do with tall buildings or thunder storms—we’re just not listening. Moreover, whenever we’re unsure, He’s even provided us with a map in the way of the Bible.

With my GPS, I tell it where I want to go. With God, however, it’s wise to remember that He is the one who tells us where to go. Neither Abraham nor Moses knew where they were going or how they would get there, but God guided them. The disciples certainly didn’t know what the future would bring when they joined an itinerant rabbi in his travels. Have you ever looked at a map of Paul’s travels? Even a GPS would have difficulty following him as he traveled from Damascus to Arabia and back and then to Jerusalem, Caesarea, Tarsus, Antioch, Cyprus, Asia Minor and more. These men of faith, without benefit of GPS or even modern maps, went where God sent them. They never let fear keep them from taking the next step and neither should we. Unlike these Biblical heroes, most of us won’t be remembered for our travels. Nevertheless, wherever God sends us, we need to go. He is our true north—our guiding star—our compass—our guide—and we are never out of His sight.

O Lord, you have examined me, and you know me. You alone know when I sit down and when I get up. You read my thoughts from far away. You watch me when I travel and when I rest. You are familiar with all my ways. … Examine me, O God, and know my mind. Test me, and know my thoughts. See whether I am on an evil path. Then lead me on the everlasting path. [Psalm 139:1-3,23-24 (GW)]

Copyright ©2016 jsjdevotions. All rights reserved.