Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Year 6, Day 243: Micah 3

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Character

  • Character: Having the interior life that is necessary to support the work that God sets before a person.  It is hearing from God and obeying.  It is doing the right thing when nobody is looking.

When looking at the minor prophets, especially the early minor prophets, it is important to be prepared for what you will find.  God is not happy with the people.  He has a laundry list of complaints.  That being said, it is even more important to understand what the complaints are all about.  God isn’t upset that they aren’t paying enough attention to them.  He isn’t upset that they are worshipping Him in the wrong way.  He’s upset about something far greater.

He’s upset about their character.  He’s upset about the fact that the leadership looks to their constituents as means to get rich.  The leadership are treating their people like meat prepared for a pot – ready to be consumed.

The leaders turn the straight things crooked.  The leaders take bribes.  The priests preach what the people with money want to hear.  The prophets give oracles for the right price. 

They aren’t interested in leading people to God.  They aren’t interested genuinely proclaiming God’s truth.  They aren’t interested in being used by God.

Their character is flawed.  In fact, we might say that there is no character at all.  They aren’t interested in righteousness.  They are interested in their own desires, their own pursuits, their own prosperity, and their own glory.  Their character is centered on themselves.

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Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Year 6, Day 242: Micah 2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Appetite

  • Appetite: We all have needs that need to be filled.  When we allow ourselves to be filled with the people and things that God brings into our life, we will be satisfied because our In will be in proper focus.  But when we try to fill ourselves with our own desires we end up frustrated by an insatiable hunger.

Micah 2 continues its declaration against the people.  In the beginning verses, we hear the continued theme of people willing to take advantage of others.  Micah accuses people of lying in bed and contemplating ways that they can oppress them.  What’s worse is that when they wake up, these people go about the business of enacting on their plans!  They covet the fields of others.  They seize houses away from their rightful owners.  They oppress people.

A little later on in Micah 2:11, we get another vivid example of God’s opinion of the people.  God says through Micah that if there was a person who would preach to them on wine and other alcohol, the people would listen to them!  In other words, God is accusing the people of only wanting to listen to people who will encourage them to pursue the things that they want to pursue.  In other words, the people are only interested in their own appetites.

It is sad when a culture falls into pursuing their own desires.  It is sad when a culture allows the rich and wealthy and well-blessed to plot the oppression of the poor and scantily blessed.  Our human appetite can cause us to justify many things in our mind, all of which God finds deplorable if our appetite is for things that are not of Him.

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Monday, August 29, 2016

Year 6, Day 241: Micah 1

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: King

  • King: This is the pinnacle of the Kingdom Triangle.  When we look towards God’s position in the universe, we acknowledge that He is an omnipotent king.  Authority comes from Him.  Power comes through His authority.  He is looking for representatives for His kingdom.

Micah lowers the boom in this first chapter.  He is a prophet sent to warn the Hebrew people about the coming judgment of God.  They will be laid to waste because of their sinfulness.  They will be judged because of their transgression.

Notice, though, how God is described in the judgment.  The mountains will melt under Him.  Valleys will split open.  The world will be like wax before a fire.

The reality is that God is King.  He is King over us.  He is King over creation.  Nothing can stand in His way when He proposes to act.  We certainly cannot prevent His will when He determines to act.  Neither can the mountains, the valleys, or any other portion of the earth.

Before I leave this passage, I want to break away from the theme of King and make sure that we understand why God is so upset.  Look at Micah 1:4.  What is the sin of Jacob?  Samaria.  What is the sin of Judah?  Jerusalem.  These are the capitols of each nation.  These are the places of leadership, both political and spiritual.  Why are the nations to be judged?  Their leadership fails.  The King must come and deal with the effects of leadership that does not mirror the leadership of the King.

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Sunday, August 28, 2016

Year 6, Day 240: 2 & 3 John

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Imitation

  • Imitation: This is the second over-arching step of the discipleship process.  First we gain information, then we imitate our spiritual mentor.  Imitation leads to innovation of spirituality in our own life.

When we look at 2 John and 3 John, we can hear a clear emphasis on work and visible signs of faith.  We are to love.  How do we love?  We show our love by walking in the commandments of God.  In other words, we imitate Jesus and His teachings.  We show our love in imitation of godliness.

This is truly the message of John 3 as well.  Do you hear the contrast between Diotrephes and Demetrius?  Diotrephes is all about himself.  He is putting his ways first.  He isn’t interested in imitating anyone else; Diotrephes is interested in making himself the center of attention.  He is not welcoming other people who are trying to imitate Christ.

On the other hand, we hear about Demetrius.  He has received a good testimony.  He is imitating the brothers.  Truth shines through him because he is willing to imitate the faith of those who came before him.

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Saturday, August 27, 2016

Year 6, Day 239: 1 John 5

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Calling

  • Calling asks whether or not God has called the person to the particular work at this point in their life.

1 John 5 is a very interesting chapter.  In this chapter, we hear a very familiar set of messages.  John is writing this because He wants us to know God’s love.  We know that we are in God when we obey His commandments.  In this we hear the echoes of themes such as Father and obedience.

However, as we finish this chapter I am most drawn to the idea of calling.  Let’s start with the familiar theme of obedience.  What are we called to do?  We are called to obey.  We are called to listen to God and follow His example.

But we’re called to do more than that.  If we see a fellow believer falling into sin, we should reach out to them and try and dissuade them from their actions.  While we cannot force others to keep from sinning, we are called to be there to help them resist the temptation to sin.

However, there is still more.  We are called to know truth.  In knowing truth, we can also know who is true.  In other words, we are to be discerning.

In the end, what are we really called to do?  We are called to overcome the world in faith.  We are called to overcome the world in our obedience.  We are called to overcome the world like Jesus, and like Jesus, we are called to step forth into a brave new godly existence.

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Friday, August 26, 2016

Year 6, Day 238: 1 John 4

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Challenge

  • Challenge: God does not merely wish us to be in relationship with Him as we are.  He challenges us to grow, stretch, and transform as we take on the mantle of being His representatives to this world.

You may wonder why it is that I’ve picked challenge for this chapter.  After all, this whole chapter is on love.  This whole chapter focuses on the greatness of God’s love and how wonderful it is to partake in that which god offers to us.  This is a really uplifting and inspiring chapter.  So why do I focus on challenge?

For me, this is a very challenging chapter.  After all, perfect love casts out fear.  That’s a very hard verse; it’s a very hard concept.

Am I ever afraid to love?  Perhaps now more than ever.  Am I ever hesitant about opening up myself out of fear that I might be rejected, abused, mistreated, taken advantage, or some other negative thing?  Absolutely.  If I had to confess, I don’t know of many times in my life that the call to love hasn’t been accompanied with a little fear.  Love is difficult because it opens the door for rejection and many other negative concepts.

However, in saying this I know that I am not wrong.  After all, when Jesus loved, was He not rejected?  When Jesus reached out to others, was he not shunned?  If I desire to imitate my Lord, why should I think that the very things that He experienced would not happen to me?

Yet, that didn’t keep Him from loving.  He loved in spite of the rejection that was coming.  That’s where the challenge comes in.  It’s one thing to be afraid to love.  That’s human.  The inspiration of the divine comes when we know we have every reason to fear the rejection that can come with love and we love anyways.

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Thursday, August 25, 2016

Year 6, Day 237: 1 John 3

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Father

  • Father: This is the pinnacle of the Covenant Triangle.  God is the Father.  He is the creator.  He is love.  Our relationship with the Father is rooted in His love for us.  We get our identity through Him.  When the Father is in our life, obedience becomes clear.

We are the children of God.  That is truly the undercurrent of the whole of God’s Word.  God created us.  We sinned; God sent His Son to us to redeem us.  God is coming again so that when He appears we will live with Him.  It really, truly is a simple message.  It is an inspirational message, too.  No matter who we are, no matter what we’ve done, we can belong to Him.  He is our true Father.

Following this message of inspiration, John then returns to the idea of obedience.  This is really a question of identity.  If we are truly getting our identity from the Father, shouldn’t our actions demonstrate this?  If the Son came to take away sin, what does it mean when we keep on sinning?  If He is our Father, should we not spend more time imitating Him and following in His love?

To this end, John reminds us about love.  He loved us.  He loved us enough that He sent His Son to lay down His life for our sake.  If we are truly in the Father, then we should do likewise.  If the Father gave up everything to come and be like us for our sake, should we not follow in that pattern?

In the end, though, regardless of how often we try to imitate the Father or even how well we do it, He is still the Father.  He loves us.  He desires relationship with us.  He forgives.  He restores.  Again and again – we never deserve it – He is the greatest Father we will ever know.

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Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Year 6, Day 236: 1 John 2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Obedience

  • Obedience: Genuine and satisfying obedience comes out of our identity.  Our true identity comes only from our Father.

1 John 2 places the initial focus upon Jesus Christ as our redeemer.  Of course, He is.  He came and died so that we might be able to know God and relationship with the Father.  That much is simply understood through the witness of God’s Word.

However, look at the natural conclusion to this passage.  Wat is it that John writes to us immediately after speaking about Christ as our redeemer?  How do we know that we have received Christ?  We obey His commandments.  If we say that we know Christ but do not keep His commandments, we are a liar.  It’s there.  It’s black and white.  If we are in Christ, we will obey.

This is why at the end of the passage we hear John advocate abiding in Christ.  When we are abiding in Him, we are listening to Him.  We are resting in His care.  We are communing with Him.  When we abide in Christ, obedience should be second nature.

What’s interesting is the example that John gives to us about what obedience looks like.  When John speaks about applied obedience, he talks about how we feel in our heart with respect towards our brothers and sisters.  If we are truly in Christ and obedient to Him, we should not find ourselves at odds with other people who are in Christ.  Hatred and anger has no place in the heart of the person who is obedient to Christ.  I don’t know about you, but I find that an incredibly challenging proposal.

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Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Year 6, Day 235: 1 John 1

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Character

  • Character: Having the interior life that is necessary to support the work that God sets before a person.  It is hearing from God and obeying.  It is doing the right thing when nobody is looking.

It might seem easy to talk about character in this chapter.  In a sense, it is.  After all, God is light.  In Him there is no darkness.  God is wholly good.  That’s really simple to understand.

While that is must certainly true and absolutely important, I want to go a little deeper than that in this blog post.  Let’s look at us.  John tells us that when we say we do not sin we lie.  He says that when we claim to walk with God yet still walk in darkness, we lie.  In fact, not only do we lie, we deceive ourselves!  We convince ourselves of the lie.

So what does character look like for us if God’s character is wholly good?  It is really pretty simple.  When we follow His ways, we walk in the light and demonstrate our God-given character.  However, when we confess our sins, we acknowledge the truth about ourselves and defeat the lie.  When we confess our sins, we break the hold that our deception has over us.  When we confess our sins, God’s forgiving character is bestowed upon us and we also demonstrate our character to Him in response.

Good character is not just about perfection.  God’s good character is perfect, but He is the only such being.  Good character is about trying to do the right thing and acknowledging the truth when we mess it up.

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Monday, August 22, 2016

Year 6, Day 234: Jonah 3-4

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Bear Fruit

  • Bear Fruit: We bear fruit after we grow.  Bearing fruit is ultimately the goal of abiding and the goal of being called into the Kingdom of God.  However, while bearing fruit is our calling, it is not the end.  We bear fruit so that we can then prune, abide, grow, and bear more fruit in another season.  Bearing fruit is not the end, but rather only a portion of the whole rhythm of life into which God has called us.

Jonah is a sad story, and it is a story with which I usually wrestle.  I wrestle with it because if I am honest, I see much of my humanity within Jonah.  When I look into this story, I see that I could so easily be Jonah if I am not careful.

To see what I mean, let’s look at what happens.  After being swallowed by the fish, Jonah heads to Nineveh.  He does it rather grudgingly because he doesn’t want the Ninevites to find salvation.  He wants them judged.  He wants them to receive what he believes they deserve.  He wants the errors of their ways to come back and haunt them.

Is that feeling really very far from any of us?  I know I feel that.  I’m sure that I feel that way every time a car sails past me on the highway, clearly breaking the speed limit.  I feel that way every time I hear about some corrupt politician clearly gaining popularity in spite of their lack of ethics and morality.  I feel that way every time I see someone using someone else unfairly.

To be honest, I’m not sure that such a feeling is inherently bad.  Where it turns bad is when I allow those feelings to cloud my understanding of bearing fruit.  Look again at Jonah.  He proclaims God’s message and the people actually believe!  They repent!  But Jonah isn’t happy about it.  He doesn’t want them to find salvation at all.  This is where it goes wrong.  It’s not wrong to want sin to meet conviction.  It’s wrong when we ever become unsatisfied with repentance.

We are called to bear fruit.  What greater fruit it there than people repenting and finding God?  We should always find joy in that fruit.  When we don’t find joy in grace and repentance, we are focused on bearing the wrong fruit.

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Sunday, August 21, 2016

Year 6, Day 233: Jonah 1-2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Obedience

  • Obedience: Genuine and satisfying obedience comes out of our identity.  Our true identity comes only from our Father.

Do you remember the parable that Jesus gives to us in Matthew 21:28-32?  In that parable we have two sons.  One who seems agreeable but is really disobedient and one that seems disagreeable but who is obedient.  Keep this parable in mind as we study Jonah.

God comes to Jonah.  He tells him that He has a message that needs to be delivered to Nineveh.  Jonah receives the message.  He packs his things and hits the road.  From all outward appearances, Jonah is the dutiful servant of the Lord.

However, Jonah turns a corner and gets on a ship instead.  If you’ve ever seen a map that has Jerusalem and Nineveh upon it, you realize pretty quickly that there isn’t any need to board a boat at all.  Jonah has no intention of obeying.  He’s like that son in Jesus’ parable who says, “Yes, dad.  I’ll go and work.”  But he never does.

I’m not doubting Jonah’s faith.  I’m not doubting Jonah’s belief that God is a great God.  Do you hear his prayer when he is in the rather large fish?  Jonah clearly has respect with God.  From Jonah’s perspective, he values his relationship with God.  But there is no obedience.  His faith is completely one-sided.  There is belief, but there is no obedience.  That’s what is wrong with Jonah.  That’s why he makes the mistake he does.

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Saturday, August 20, 2016

Year 6, Day 232: Obadiah

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Appetite

  • Appetite: We all have needs that need to be filled.  When we allow ourselves to be filled with the people and things that God brings into our life, we will be satisfied because our In will be in proper focus.  But when we try to fill ourselves with our own desires we end up frustrated by an insatiable hunger.

Obadiah is a book written against the people of Edom.  Remember that there is a connection between the people of Edom and the Hebrew people.  The people of Edom are Esau’s descendants.  That means that while they may not be from Jacob, they are certainly from Abraham.  They are kin to the Hebrew people.

Obadiah writes because he sees Jerusalem in ruins.  They have been conquered by Babylon.  That was at God’s hand, so that is not what Obadiah is speaking against.  When Obadiah looks to a ruined Jerusalem and the surrounding land, he sees the Edomites coming in and taking advantage of their downfall.  They are taking over the land.  They are rounding up escaped Hebrew people and selling them as slaves to other nations.  They see the downfall of the Hebrew people as a means to gain.

Generically speaking, that is what the book of Obadiah is all about.  Our human appetite thirsts for opportunities to take advantage of the downfall of other people.  This is why we have sayings like “top dog” and “kick them while they are down.”  Human appetite loves the easy victory.  We love to increase our wealth and standing, and if possible we will take the easiest route.

This is horrible.  There is nothing wrong with taking the easy route, mind you.  There is no point in making things more difficult than they need to be.  However, we should not consider taking advantage of people as the easy way.  Easy victories over people who are in no position to do anything about it is not a victory, it is bullying.  It’s not good business, it is indecent human behavior.  We should have an appetite for honest gain through honest work, not biggest gain by taking advantage of other people and their circumstances.  That is what God finds absolutely deplorable in this passage.

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Friday, August 19, 2016

Year 6, Day 231: Amos 9

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: King

  • King: This is the pinnacle of the Kingdom Triangle.  When we look towards God’s position in the universe, we acknowledge that He is an omnipotent king.  Authority comes from Him.  Power comes through His authority.  He is looking for representatives for His kingdom.

When I think about the concept of king, I personally think about the word omnipotence.  This last chapter epitomizes this in my opinion.  Here we see God in no less than three different forms.

First, we see God as judge.  He knows the hearts of the people and how far they have fallen away from Him.  He knows their sin.  He doesn’t need to accept the sacrifices that are not made in earnest.  He is capable of searching out those who run away from Him and who try to hide.  There is none in better position than God in all His righteousness to sit as judge over us: king in every way.

Then, we are reminded about who God is.  He is the creator.  When He touches the earth, it melts.  He calls for the rain and causes it to fall upon the earth.  He causes the Nile to rise and flood and then diminish.  He deserves to be thought of as king because He is the creator.

Finally, we see God as a loving God.  He is a king who does not let judgment and wrath have the final word.  He wants to redeem us.  He wants to reinstate the relationship that we break.  He wants to see us come back into His grace and His will.  He deserves to be king because when all is said and done, He will be the one remaining to love us at the end of judgment.

What does it mean to be king?  A king has the power to judge and rule.  He has the power to create and rule.  But a true king shows the compassion to love and rule.

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Thursday, August 18, 2016

Year 6, Day 230: Amos 8

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Appetite

  • Appetite: We all have needs that need to be filled.  When we allow ourselves to be filled with the people and things that God brings into our life, we will be satisfied because our In will be in proper focus.  But when we try to fill ourselves with our own desires we end up frustrated by an insatiable hunger.

When we read through Amos 8, we hear many complaints of the Lord.  The people can’t wait for the holy days to be over so they can get back to their regular life where their interests lie.  They trample the needy.  They walk all over the poor.  In fact, they are even willing to buy the poor like slaves.

Do you hear what God’s grievance truly is?  The appetite of the people is interfering with a lifestyle that is congruent to God’s ways.  The appetite of the people is causing them to look upon fellow human beings as a means to profit rather than as a means to express grace and love.  The appetite of the people for economic gain is pulling the people away from the Lord in general.

Look down towards the end of the chapter.  Do you hear the natural conclusion to human appetite?  When we hunger and thirst for things that are not of the Lord – especially when we do it as a nation – God will cause a spiritual famine to come among us.  I don’t think that it is a coincidence that our hunger for things that are not of God causes a famine of spiritual proportion.

Of course, I can’t help but wonder if the famine is really God’s doing or God’s allowing us to reach the natural conclusion to our actions.  After all, if only a very small percent of a population cares about God and His ways, where would the spirituality come from?  Where would the examples be?  Where would God draw out His prophets and teachers and evangelists?  Our earthly appetite results in a spiritual famine of our own making – a famine God presents to us as the consequence of our choices.

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Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Year 6, Day 229: Amos 7

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Prophet

  • Prophet: A prophet is one of the fivefold ministry categories that is used throughout the Bible and especially lifted up in Ephesians 4:11. The prophet is primarily concerned with whether or not the people are hearing the voice of God.  The prophet is also concerned about whether or not the people are responding to God’s voice.

There is one reason above all other reasons for which I love the prophets of Israel: they are obedient to God, not interested in the respect of the people around them.  Look at Amos in this chapter.  Amos gets done telling us about how God showed him planned punishment after planned punishment.  Again and again Amos asked God to relent and God relents.  Amos desires to uphold the people of God in His sight.  That’s what God calls the prophets to do.  They are to uphold the people of God.

However, immediately after upholding the people in the presence of God, do you hear the story that Amos relates?  Amaziah, a priest under the service of the king, comes to him and tells him to go away.  He tells him that his message isn’t welcome here.  How is that for gratitude?

Amos lives up to His calling.  He is a prophet through and through.  Whether the people love him and respect him is irrelevant.  What matters is that he does what God asks him to do.  He lifts up the people in God’s sight.  He proclaims God’s message knowing that it will bring rejection, criticism, and even all out hatred.  But there is Amos, willing to be hated for the sake of his calling.

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Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Year 6, Day 228: Amos 6

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Identity

  • Identity: Our true identity comes from the Father.  Only when our identity comes from God can we be obedient in ways that satisfy our person to our core.

What a humbling chapter!  Look at the things that Amos decries in this passage.  Amos decries the people who live in lavish luxury.  He raises a cry against those who do not see an issue with the downfall of the Hebrew people.  He cautions those who spend their time doing idle and unimportant things.

Why is this chapter humbling?  When Amos looks around at his own people, he sees a people who are falling into disrepair and who don’t really seem to care about it.  He sees a people who are falling away from God and who are too interested in the things of their own life to care.  He sees a nation that no longer cares about justice and righteousness and instead cares about their own luxuries.  Nations in positions like these are not going to earn the favor of the Lord.  People who are following these rhythms in life are not going to have the favor of the Lord.

What does Amos say that God abhors in verse 8?  He abhors their pride.  He hates their strongholds because it allows them to rely on their own failing power rather than His infinite power.  God knows what happens when our priorities shift.  We become proud.  We become focus on our own pleasure rather than our fellow man and our community around us.  He knows that as we focus on ourselves, we are less able to be His representatives to the world around us.

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Monday, August 15, 2016

Year 6, Day 227: Amos 5

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: King

  • King: This is the pinnacle of the Kingdom Triangle.  When we look towards God’s position in the universe, we acknowledge that He is an omnipotent king.  Authority comes from Him.  Power comes through His authority.  He is looking for representatives for His kingdom.

I don’t think that there is any doubt among believers that God is king.  After all, He created the world.  Why shouldn’t He be king over it?

However, just because He is king – even when all of His people acknowledge that He is king – doesn’t mean that His people live as though He is king.  We rebel.  We follow our own desires.  Sometimes we follow ourselves instead of the king because we think our way is better.  Sometimes we do our own think out of sheer rebellion.  As King, God knows this.  He understands that just because He clearly is king doesn’t mean we will live like it.

Look as Amos’ complaint here in this chapter.  How many times does Amos tell the people to return to the Lord to live?  Amos knows that life is found in the king, our Creator!  But this also implies that the people have wandered away.  They need to come back!

Yet there is a twist on this as we come to the end of the chapter.  Although Amos tells the people that if they turn and seek the Lord then they will live, he also reminds the people that the Day of the Lord will be dark.  The Day of the Lord will be a day of judgment. He knows that they will not turn.  Therefore, a king who desires to love us will turn away when we offer up meaningless sacrifices.  He will turn aside when we offer up our praise but don’t live out His ways in life by being concerned for the poor and orphaned.

He is a king who can offer us life.  He is a king who can set us right when we have gone astray.  But He is also a king who will judge us when we do not turn back to Him.  He is a King who can see through our empty offerings and instead hold us accountable for what is truly in our hearts.

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Sunday, August 14, 2016

Year 6, Day 226: Amos 4

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Calling

  • Calling asks whether or not God has called the person to the particular work at this point in their life.

When we read through this chapter in Amos, we get a strong sense of love.  Yes, there is a heavy hand of vengeance and judgment.  But the overarching phrase that returns is, “Yet, you did not return to me.”  God isn’t primarily concerned about making sure that their sins are punished.  God is concerned that the relationship is broken.

This is a dynamic that I believe is often lost when we talk about God.  It is so easy to talk about God as an all-powerful being who can mete out judgment and wrath and punish us for our inability to live in ways fitting for our created purpose.  While God certainly is powerful enough to step into that role, it is not the role that God desires to play.  God desires to be in a role of relationship rather than judge.

This leads us to the idea of calling.  We are called to be in relationship with God and with each other.  We are called to live according to our created purpose.

When we disobey, we are called to listen to God’s correction and return to Him.

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Saturday, August 13, 2016

Year 6, Day 225: Amos 3

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: King

  • King: This is the pinnacle of the Kingdom Triangle.  When we look towards God’s position in the universe, we acknowledge that He is an omnipotent king.  Authority comes from Him.  Power comes through His authority.  He is looking for representatives for His kingdom.

Amos is a prophet before the captivity.  He is a prophet who brings warnings of approaching judgment.  His message is often stern and strict and dark.

In this chapter it is no different.  Amos begins the chapter with a reminder that God is the one who is in charge.  But even more importantly, the Hebrew people are special to God.  He has known no other people like the Hebrew people.  They are special to Him.  However, it also means that the wounds that the Hebrew people open up are deeper when they disobey Him.

So what is Amos’ point in this chapter.  God is King.  God is in control.  But when we disobey Him, it is God who brings the judgment.  It is God who brings the snare.  It is God who finds us punished.  When we disobey the King, He has the power to bring us under correction in the hope that we will come back to Him.

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Friday, August 12, 2016

Year 6, Day 224: Amos 2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Character

  • Character: Having the interior life that is necessary to support the work that God sets before a person.  It is hearing from God and obeying.  It is doing the right thing when nobody is looking.

Amos 2 gives us another interesting perspective into the character of humanity.  Look at all of the various things that human beings are accused of doing in this chapter.  As a fair warning, it isn’t pretty.

First of all, we hear about the Moabites.  What are they guilty of?  Well, we are not entirely sure.  We know that they “burned the bones of the king of Edom.”  But what exactly does this mean?  It could be that they are disrespecting the dead.  It could be that they are guilty of grave robbing.  In any case, the people of Moab are guilty of living a life that is willing to take advantage of the defenseless.  When there is no respect for the dead, there is no respect for the helpless, either.

Then we get to the Hebrew people.  What is Judah guilty of?  Judah is guilty not valuing their relationship with the Lord.  They lie.  They seek their own gain.  They trade the truth of God for their own passion.

Then we hit the people of Israel, the northern kingdom.  What is their great sin?  According to Amos, their sin is that they are selling the righteous and the needy.  In other words, they’ve become slavers.  They are willing to look upon other human beings as a means to an economic end.  They no longer see each other as human beings deserving of love; instead they see each other as an object from economic advantage.

What does all of this say about the human character?  We are inherently greedy.  We are willing to use one another.  We are willing to take advantage of those who cannot stop us from doing so.  We are willing to follow the whims of our passion regardless of whether or not it’s right or wrong.  Why do we need God?  I think that list of character traits says it all.

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Thursday, August 11, 2016

Year 6, Day 223: Amos 1

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Out

  • Out: This is the focus of our mission.  These are the people to whom God has called us to go.  These are the people into whom we are focused on attempting to speak God’s truth.

Amos gives us a great perspective, especially among the Minor Prophets.  The reason that I say this is because the Minor Prophets are all short books.  As such, they typically focus on the Hebrew people as the recipients of their message.  But this isn’t true with Amos.  Amos’ Out isn’t the Hebrew people.  Amos’ Out – the focus of his mission – are the nations around the Hebrew people.

Of course, we must realize that especially in the beginning of this book the message is dark, gloomy, and full of judgment.  It is fairly hard to see this as out, because when we think about ministry we often think about benefits that we bring into the lives of others.  When most of us think of out, we think about feeding people, clothing them, listening to them, giving them godly advice, helping with their children, and things like that. 

It doesn’t have to be this way.  Giving correction is helping someone.  Where would any of us actually be if we did not get correction from time to time?  Giving a warning is actually helping people!  Where would any of us be if we didn’t receive warnings about our actions and potential dangers?

That’s what Amos is doing here.  Amos is turning his eyes past the limits of the Hebrew people and into the nations around him.  He is offering up cautionary warnings.  He is revealing impending judgment before it comes so that they can prepare.  When Amos looks to the people to whom God is calling him, he sees the Gentiles around him as much as the Hebrew people themselves.

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Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Year 6, Day 222: 2 Peter 3

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: King

  • King: This is the pinnacle of the Kingdom Triangle.  When we look towards God’s position in the universe, we acknowledge that He is an omnipotent king.  Authority comes from Him.  Power comes through His authority.  He is looking for representatives for His kingdom.

I feel like this is a bit of an usual topic for today’s verse.  After all, look at the focus for the first half of this chapter.  Peter is talking about people who scoff and mock God.  Peter talks about people who fall away from the faith because they don’t think Christ is coming after all.

To be honest, it has been 2,000 years since He died.  It has been a long while.  But that really shouldn’t surprise us, should it?  After all, it was roughly a few thousand years before Abraham and Jesus.  God gave the promise of salvation roughly a few thousand years before He revealed His plan.  Should it really surprise us that He is going to take a few thousand years to allow His Gospel to spread, allow people to come to Him, and allow relationship to be restored before returning and ushering in judgment?

So, why do I focus on King today?  Ultimately, I think the ability to keep the faith rests in our ability to remember that God is king and then live like it.  After all, if we believe, confess, and live as though God is indeed king, why would we even doubt that He is coming back?  Why would the amount of time matter if we genuinely see God as king?  His timing is what matters.  His control is what matters.  My doubt is nothing when He is king.

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Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Year 6, Day 221: 2 Peter 2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Challenge

  • Challenge: God does not merely wish us to be in relationship with Him as we are.  He challenges us to grow, stretch, and transform as we take on the mantle of being His representatives to this world.

When I read this chapter in 2 Peter, I can’t help but think about challenge.  Truthfully, I can’t help but think about pitfalls, which causes me to think about challenge.  Navigating the world is a bit of a precarious thing.  There are plenty of places where we can get it wrong if we aren’t careful.

The first place that we can get it wrong is with the people around us.  If we are not careful, we can fall in the path of false teachers.  How do we know them?  They are sensual, all about what feels good or feels right.  They are greedy, focused on personal gain and exploitation.

The second place that we can fall is in our own personal ego.  We boast about ourselves.  We promise freedom but we cannot deliver.  We start by following Christ but get so focused on ourselves that we no longer find ourselves following Him.

How can we resist the temptation to fall?  We surely don’t do it on our own strength!  We do it by remembering that it is God who spares us.  It is God who rescues us.  It is God who can bring us out of the time of trial.  It is God who can affirm our character.

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Monday, August 8, 2016

Year 6, Day 220: 2 Peter 1

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Character

  • Character: Having the interior life that is necessary to support the work that God sets before a person.  It is hearing from God and obeying.  It is doing the right thing when nobody is looking.

As Peter opens this letter, we can hear a large exhortation to have a good character.  I’d like to start near the end of this letter, though, because I think that it is there that we find the root of Peter’s call for character.  It is in this chapter that we hear Peter’s reminder of the Transfiguration.  “This is my Son; with whom I am well pleased.”  In other words, the Father approved of the character of the Son.  We should imitate Him.

Because Peter heard this first hand, he can be confident in his assertion.  Because he heard this first hand, he can be confident that the character that he saw in Jesus is the goal for which we should strive.  If we wish to please God, we will need our character to be modeled after the character of Christ.

What does the character of Christ look like?  It is faith supplemented with virtue.  It is knowledge supporting the faith and virtue.  It is self-control.  It is steadfastness.  It is godliness, which of course leads us to love.

This is the character of Christ.  This is the character that allowed Him to obediently sacrifice His life for our sake.  This is what allowed Him to look evil intentions in the face and come out victorious with His honor intact.  This is the character that we should boldly proclaim with our lives and with our words.

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Sunday, August 7, 2016

Year 6, Day 219: 1 Peter 4-5

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Character

  • Character: Having the interior life that is necessary to support the work that God sets before a person.  It is hearing from God and obeying.  It is doing the right thing when nobody is looking.

As we might expect from a book that has had such a great emphasis on obedience, we end with two strong chapters on character.  When I say strong chapters, I also inherently mean challenging chapters.  There are many things in these chapters that sound great.  Ye each thing of greatness is also a thing of challenge and difficulty to accomplish.

For example, Peter encourages us to put aside the time in our life where we are thinking about ourselves and simply responding to our emotions.  He tells us to be a people whose character is about self-control and sober-minded thinking.  We are to show love often, which is easier said than done.  We are to be hospitable without grumbling.  We are to suffer without being ashamed.  We are to lead through the willingness of invitation instead of compulsion.  We are to be humble.

Each of those things are great things.  Each item in the list above are things that if we had a mentor in life we would want the mentor to possess.  However, we know the difficulty faced by always remembering to be in control, showing love, being hospitable, or not grumbling.  The character traits that Peter lists here are excellent traits.  But they are not traits that come naturally or easily within us.

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Saturday, August 6, 2016

Year 6, Day 218: 1 Peter 3

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Identity

  • Identity: Our true identity comes from the Father.  Only when our identity comes from God can we be obedient in ways that satisfy our person to our core.

I have to confess that I really wanted to write on obedience again today.  Peter really hits the same note that he has hit all along in his writing within this chapter.  However, I wanted to force myself to come at it from a slightly different perspective.  Therefore, much of what I have to say today is really rooted in the concept of obedience.  But I want it to be heard through the lens of identity.

In many ways, though, this goes back to what I said yesterday.  When Peter talks about obedience, he isn’t doing it from the perspective of lesser beings commanded by someone greater, more intelligent, or more powerful.  When Peter talks about obedience, he isn’t talking about a resigned subservient behavior.  Peter talks about obedience that looks ahead towards the rest of the people with whom they will come into contact.  That’s why I want to focus on obedience through the lens of identity.  In order to get obedience right, we need to get identity right as well.

When we read Peter, as with all of the rest of the Biblical authors, we read the words of a person who is trying to see through the eyes of God.  As Peter looks through the eyes of God, he doesn’t focus on the here and now.  Rather, Peter focuses on the future to which we are always being pulled, always being called.  It is that future, and most importantly the people who are within that future, that has the focus of God and thus the focus of Peter.  That’s the identity that Peter is getting from God.  Because Peter is looking ahead, he can focus so well on identity and preparing himself to live out in community the very witness that God has placed within him.

This is why Peter can tell wives to submit to their husbands.  When they submit, they are more likely to be able to show God’s love to them if they do not already know God.  This is why Peter can talk about doing good in the midst of being mistreated and misaligned.  When we do good, people will see us for who we are and they will see the love of God shining through, especially against the darker context of being mistreated and maligned.  As I said yesterday, for Peter, obedience is really the groundwork for witness.  He can see it this way because his identity is in the Lord.  When he looks at the world through the eyes of God and not through his own eyes, he can see the opportunity for ministry all around.  His identity from God allows him to deeply understand why obedience is so important for being able to witness about the grace, love, and mercy of God.

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Friday, August 5, 2016

Year 6, Day 217: 1 Peter 2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Obedience

  • Obedience: Genuine and satisfying obedience comes out of our identity.  Our true identity comes only from our Father.

You may not have realized that Peter wrote so much on obedience.  If we look at the witness of the Gospels, it really makes sense.  When we read through the Gospel stories, Peter is the man who tries everything and seemingly fails at His first attempt.  What does this show us?  He has a heart for obedience.  But it also shows us that he understands that there is a difference between desiring to be obedient and actually succeeding at being obedient.  Then we turn to Acts, where he develops into a strong and mighty tool in the hand of God.  In Acts, Peter has managed to sort out obedience in a very rich and meaningful way.

When we take this into consideration, we find that Peter really has some great thoughts with respect to obedience and its development.  Where I want this to take us in this blog is the “why.”  Why should we obedient?  What purpose does obedience serve except for the accomplishment of someone else’s will?

Do you notice that Peter doesn’t actually mention the accomplishment of God’s will as the answer to the why?  Naturally, I still believe that the accomplishment of God’s will is the primary reason.  After all, God’s hand at work is what we are all about.  But look deeply at why we are to be obedient.  We are to be obedient so that we do good things.  Why do we do good things?  Not for our reward in heaven!  No, we do good things so that when people look at us and accuse us and malign us and mistreat us they will be confronted with our charity and generosity and kindness.  We do good works so that the mean things that people will say about us will not resonate with the visible character that people see.  We are obedient as a protection against slander and mistreatment!

Isn’t that an interesting perspective on obedience.  So often obedience is looked down upon as being subservient and undesirable.  But Peter tells us here that obedience is actually for our own good and our own protection.  Obedience to the will and ways of God is what will keep the falsehoods of the world around us from harming our character and our witness.

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Thursday, August 4, 2016

Year 6, Day 216: 1 Peter 1

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Obedience

  • Obedience: Genuine and satisfying obedience comes out of our identity.  Our true identity comes only from our Father.

Peter ends this chapter with a reminder that we are purified through our obedience to the truth.  Clearly, the idea of obedience was rather important to Peter.  It is our obedience that leads to our ability to have brotherly love within us.  It is our willingness to submit to God’s will that allows us to love others who are similarly submitted to God’s will.  In the end, our obedience is very important to our community.

How are we to be obedient?  We are to be like children, understanding that our Father knows and sees what is good for us far better than we do.  We are to be called holy, set apart for His work.  We are to work in fear, not phobia, but a fear in awe of the greatness of God and all that He can do beyond our ability to understand.

But why are we to obey Him?  He is the one who brought us into salvation.  He is the one who sent Christ to us.  Christ Himself was obedient to the will of the Father.  He is the one who raised Christ from the dead, why wouldn’t we be obedient to Him?  He is the one who fulfilled His own words.  Again, if He has the ability to speak truth into our future, why wouldn’t we obey Him?

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Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Year 6, Day 215: Joel 3

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: King

  • King: This is the pinnacle of the Kingdom Triangle.  When we look towards God’s position in the universe, we acknowledge that He is an omnipotent king.  Authority comes from Him.  Power comes through His authority.  He is looking for representatives for His kingdom.

I think the message of Joel 3 is that God truly is in control.  He is the king.  He gets the last say.  His word is final, and His verdict will last forever.

Let’s look into this chapter more deeply.  Joel is certainly speaking against the world, specifically against the nations around the Hebrew people and even more specifically against Philistia and Tyre and Sidon.  God is angry with them for multiple reasons.

The question is, what did they do that was so bad?  Yes, they didn’t help out the Hebrew people.  Worse, the celebrated when the Hebrew people fell.  But their worst offense was that they saw the downfall of the Hebrew people as a means to profit themselves.  God finds this deplorable.  When we see people around us fall and we get excited about the possibility that the fall could mean for us, it shows us quite clearly more about ourselves than anything else.

It is in this fact that we see God as king.  The Hebrew people were doomed to go into their own captivity.  But God as King means that He also has the ability to restore them when they are become willing to repent and listen to Him once more.  But the surrounding nations didn’t need to act like vultures and swoop down upon their downfall to look for profit.  And in this we see that God is still king.  Even though these nations may profit in the short-term at the loss of the Hebrew people, God will bring them under justice and judgment in due course of action.  Because God is king, He can bring everyone into true and righteous judgment – even those who take advantage of us when we fall.

The thing to remember, though, is that God does not play favorites.  Just as God will avenge the Hebrew people when other people step over us when we fall, we need to remember that if He is king He will do the same to us.  We must remain humble.  We must remain true to our calling and not overreach what God has called us to do.
 
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Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Year 6, Day 214: Joel 2

Theological Commentary: Click Here


Discipleship Focus: Forgiveness

  • Forgiveness: Forgiveness is when our sins are absolved by God.  We do not deserve this forgiveness, but God grants it to us anyway.  We cannot earn forgiveness, but God gives it to us anyway.  As we are forgiven by God, He also asks us to forgive others.  In fact, Jesus Himself teaches us to pray for our forgiveness in the Lord’s Prayer when He says, “Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.”

Joel 2 is the epitome of passages regarding forgiveness.  The chapter begins with a discussion about the enemy coming against the nation.  It speaks of judgment and wrath.  It speaks of guilt and wrongdoing.

The next section is a call to repentance.  It speaks for the people to acknowledge their guilt and come before God.  It speaks about true repentance being a thing of the heart, not just an outward act.

The third section promises the forgiveness of the Lord.  Here we learn that when we are told about our sin and repent of it, the Lord is faithful to forgive.  He will have mercy.  He will have pity.  There is no reason to fear.  We can find ourselves back into the provision of the Lord.

Quite often, though, we think that is the end.  We think that the process ends with our forgiveness and God restoring His provision.  That shows how self-centered we are!  In reality, the process ends with the reception of the Holy Spirit.  It is one thing to repent and be forgiven.  But the real joy in God’s presence is not the perishable provision that He faithfully gives.  The real joy is knowing that He will comes and dwell within us as He pours out His Spirit.
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