Owning Nothing (Leviticus 25:23)

Leviticus 25:23 – “The land shall not be sold in perpetuity, for the land is mine. For you are strangers and sojourners with me.”
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One of the most beautiful provisions in the Levitical law was God’s commanding the year of Jubilee. The Israelites could buy and sell properties as they needed for a period of 49 years. In the fiftieth year, the land would revert back to its original owner. This kept people from ever becoming too rich or too poor. But more than being a plan for social order, this command reminded the people of Israel that they owned nothing. They were renting the land. Everything, all land, property, and people, belonged to God.

As you may well know, we have no record (at least of which I am aware) of the Israelites ever obeying this command of God. We know nothing of the Israelites returning lands to their original possessors. For some reason, the allure of thinking that they owned something that was totally theirs outweighed their desire to obey the clear instruction of the Lord.

But, you know, we are in the same boat. Though we have no standing commands for a year of Jubilee, we do have a true understanding that we own nothing too. The earth is the Lords and all that is on, under, or above it. God owns everything. Anything you or I possess is simply on loan to us from the Lord who created it. We dare not allow ourselves to think that we are the masters of anything. To do so is to risk idolizing our possessions, giving into greed, and failing to be truly thankful to God for the things over which he has given us stewardship.

Today, take a look around you. What do you have? Whom do you love? Take time to remember that all of it belongs to God. Take time to remember that you are a short-term steward of the King’s property. Take time to give God thanks for what he has given to you. Take time to confess to God that you know that he has the right to give or take things from you as he sees fit for his glory. Learn to live as one who truly owns nothing.

Be Still and Know (Psalm 46:10)

Psalm 46:10

“Be still, and know that I am God.
I will be exalted among the nations,
I will be exalted in the earth!”
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Psalm 46 is a beautiful piece of poetry. In it, we see attacks leveled against the people of God which the Lord, in his timing and in his power, repels. Though there appears to be turmoil all around the fortresses of the people of God, the Lord is still clearly sovereign, clearly in control.

Verse 10 of this psalm is an often-cited verse of scripture. Sadly, often the teachers who draw our attention to this verse do so in a call for some sort of mystical and quietistic meditation. That certainly would not appear to be the point when the psalm is taken in context. The world is going crazy. People are gunning for God’s people on every side. There is apparent cause for alarm and fear. Yet the Lord calls to his people and tells them to be still. He calls us to stop striving, stop fearing, stop worrying. He calls us to remember that he is God, that he is sovereign, and that he will insure that he is glorified.

Recently, have you taken part in one of those Christian conversations in which you and another believer bemoan the fact that the world, the nation, or your local church are sliding down a slippery slope? Have you railed against the sad state of politics in the nation? Have you decried the ugliness of the entertainment world? If so, take time out, be still, and know that God is God. He is aware of the ugliness that surrounds us. He is aware of the moral filth that is flying through our airwaves. He is aware of the attacks of scholars who look down their noses at our faith. He is aware of the waters breaking against us on all sides. The Lord wants us to remember that he is still God, he is still in charge, and he will still be glorified.

Be careful, by the way, not to hear this as a call to stop working to bring about the glory of God in this world. Some take this verse as an excuse to “cease striving” in such a way that they no longer work to honor God. That is in no way what the Lord is commanding. We are to work for God’s glory and the advancement of his kingdom. What we are not to do is to fret, to worry, to moan and gripe about how bad things are. We serve a God who is in control. Thus, as we work for his glory, we can also be still in our hearts, knowing that he is our God and he will be glorified.

God Cares About Worship (Leviticus 10:1-3)

Leviticus 10:1-3 – 10:1 Now Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, each took his censer and put fire in it and laid incense on it and offered unauthorized fire before the Lord, which he had not commanded them. 2 And fire came out from before the Lord and consumed them, and they died before the Lord. 3 Then Moses said to Aaron, “This is what the Lord has said, ‘Among those who are near me I will be sanctified, and before all the people I will be glorified.’ ” And Aaron held his peace.
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I’ve spent a good deal of time lately at a couple of different events as a worship leader instead of simply a “preacher.” During that time, I have noticed a particular attitude among many of God’s people regarding worship. Many groups will disagree with one another as to what is proper in a service of worship. Some will argue that we should lift our hands while others think it inappropriate. Some think we should sing hymns while others want modern songs. Some think we should be formal while others want things to be loose.

It does not disturb me that there are disagreements between people as to what things in worship are most appropriate. At least these people, in many cases, care about what we do in order to honor our God. What disturbs me is the attitude that some people display in which they say something like, “Well, it doesn’t really matter what we do as long as it’s for God.” Such an attitude is very—and I mean very—dangerous.

In Leviticus 10, we see two of the sons of the high priest get an idea for a new kind of worship. They had just seen God demonstrate his power by sending fire down to consume the ordination offering. Nadab and Abihu really get into the excitement of the service, and they offer an offering to God which God did not authorize. What was the result? Fire came from the Lord and killed them both instantly.

Now, I’m not one of those guys that says that since the Bible did not mention guitars or electricity we ought not use either. However, I am one who understands that the service of worship is a very serious, very sacred thing. We dare not play it off-the-cuff and make things up as we go along. We dare not assume that any old thing we want to offer God is OK. God cares what is offered to him, because he is holy and demands that we see him as holy.

How does this all apply? I can’t really say for you. Perhaps God wants you to read this little section and simply learn to take his worship seriously. God’s holiness is deadly, and we ought handle worship with care. Perhaps God wants you to rethink some of the practices that you bring into worship, questioning whether or not such practices are things that God wants you to do. For sure, God wants you to look at worship and to realize that God deeply cares about both our hearts and our actions when we approach him in worship.

A prayer for an Eternal Mindset (Psalm 39:4-5)

Psalm 39:4-5

4 “O Lord, make me know my end
and what is the measure of my days;
let me know how fleeting I am!
5 Behold, you have made my days a few handbreadths,
and my lifetime is as nothing before you.
Surely all mankind stands as a mere breath! Selah
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Above is a prayer that, I’m guessing, few of us have prayed anytime recently. However, if we would grasp the depth of this portion of the word of God, we might pray it a bit more often. The prayer is simple. David asks God to help him to realize how short his earthly life is. He wants God to remind him that he is on this earth for what seems like no time at all. And in that prayer, David demonstrates for us a focus that we often miss.

As I have been preaching through the Gospel According to John, I have found myself repeatedly returning to the theme of eternity. John points us toward eternal life, and we find joy in the concept of heaven awaiting us. However, if we truly get a glimpse of what it means for us to think eternally, we will live and think differently.

How long is your life going to be? Perhaps you will live to be only 25. Perhaps you will live to be 100. What is either of those numbers in the light of eternity? When we compare our lives on earth to the forever that we will exist, the time on earth is a mere blip on the screen, a mere breath, a mere blink of an eye. God did not create us so that we could focus on a mere 70 year period of time; he created us for eternity with him.

What is the difference between thinking in a this-worldly way and thinking in an eternal way? When you think in a this-worldly way, you get very caught up in such things as being comfortable, having people like you, climbing the corporate ladder, or taking vacations. When you think in an eternal way, you become more focused on sharing Jesus with those who do not know him, on honoring God in such a way that he will reward you eternally, on the fact that our sufferings last for but a moment in this life.

I’m not saying that we should never enjoy this life. I’m not arguing against taking a vacation, planning for the future, or making friends. But what I am calling us to is to have an attitude that always remembers that this life is very brief. This life will pass. What will remain is eternity. Let us learn to pray as David did in Psalm 39. Let us learn to ask God to help us to see just how short our time here on earth will be. Let us learn to live with our hearts on forever as we honor God in the here and now.

How to Tell the Difference between God and Bill Belichick

*** Sarcasm Alert: For those who cannot easily spot sarcasm in printed material, the following article is not meant to be taken completely seriously. ***

For many who have watched this past NFL season which culminated in Sunday’s broadcast of Superbowl XLII, it has often been difficult to draw distinct lines of demarcation between New England Patriots’ head coach Bill Belichick and the divine. Certainly listening to Coach Belichick’s aloof responses to mere mortals such as newspaper reporters and/or the NFL commissioner would not necessarily show us that, at least in the coach’s mind, there is a difference. Therefore, it is my goal to undertake the seemingly insurmountable task of defining for you, the discerning public, at least one point of dissimilarity between God and Bill Belichick.

The Difference: Holiness

Revelation 4:8b – “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty, who was and is and is to come!”

Holiness is a quality that only God possesses. To be holy is to be so completely perfect that you are different than all others. No one is like God, because God is infinitely perfect, pure, and righteous.

While one might think that the coach’s failure to lead his team to a Superbowl victory is where I’m aiming, think again. Truly demonstrating Coach Belichick’s lack of perfection is the Spygate scandal. Reports are swirling around the NFL that a former Patriots assistant, Matt Walsh, may have illegally videotaped the practices of Patriots’ opponents as far back as 2001. Earlier this season, Coach Belichick was fined $500,000 by the NFL for his illegal videotaping of the hand signals of New York jets’ coaches during a game. So, regardless of the near perfect season, Belichick is a proven cheater, and thus is less than divine.

Some have attempted to argue, by the way, that God is a cheater too. God, his opponents point out, is perfectly just; yet he chooses to forgive the sins of those who come to him in repentance and faith in Jesus Christ. Forgiving the guilty does not seem to be perfectly just. Thankfully, the Bible helps us to see an answer to this difficult objection. All people are indeed sinners before a holy God and thus deserving of the wrath of God (Romans 3:23). God is indeed just, and must rightly punish sin in order to remain just. So, how could God get out of the cheating allegation? The only way is to prove that God actually does punish all human sin. And, he does so for the forgiven by sending Jesus Christ to be our sacrificial substitute. For all who are willing to turn from their sin and place their faith in Jesus alone, God will count Jesus as guilty of their sin and count them as righteous. Why did Jesus have to take our place and suffer for our sin?

Romans 3:25b-26 – “This was to show God’s righteousness, because in his divine forbearance he had passed over former sins. It was to show his righteousness at the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.”

So you see, God is perfectly just. All people will either have their sins forgiven by God and the punishment carried out on Jesus on the cross or they will pay for their own sins by suffering god’s wrath. God is no cheater. And that is why we know that God is different than Bill Belichick.

[For another difference, see God’s promise never to leave or forsake his own (Deuteronomy 31:6).]

Healthy Fear (Exodus 20:18-20)

Exodus 20:18-20 – 18 Now when all the people saw the thunder and the flashes of lightning and the sound of the trumpet and the mountain smoking, the people were afraid and trembled, and they stood far off 19 and said to Moses, “You speak to us, and we will listen; but do not let God speak to us, lest we die.” 20 Moses said to the people, “Do not fear, for God has come to test you, that the fear of him may be before you, that you may not sin.”
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Fearing God is a concept that has fallen out of common use in many of our churches. We have worked so hard to present to the world the loving nature and gracious ways of our God that we have robbed the church herself of the idea of trembling at his holiness. Many of our more modern worship songs talk of us boldly declaring our desire to see God, to touch him, to climb up in his lap and call him daddy, or to embrace him. Several modern songs are sung in worship, but could easily be used as popular love ballads if only we would replace “God” or “Jesus” with “baby.”

In contrast to our present condition is the word of God which draws for us a very different picture of one group of the people of God in his presence. Immediately after God first spoke the Ten Commandments to Moses in the hearing of the people who stood at the bottom of the mountain, the people of God reacted fearfully. They saw the lightning and smoke and heard the thunder. They heard the voice of God and felt the earth quake. And when the people of God heard the voice of God and saw a manifestation of the presence of God, there was no thought of glibly sliding into God’s presence for a handshake. Instead, the people trembled and begged that they not hear the voice of God again. It is not that they disliked God or wanted to turn away from him; rather, they feared the Lord, knowing that to be in the presence of such holiness and power is incredibly dangerous.

Neither God nor Moses condemned the people’s fear. Moses did not respond to the people by telling them not to be afraid or that God may sound tough but he’s really just a big teddy bear. Moses did not give the people a false sense of their own righteousness or offer them a cheap form of grace without repentance. Instead, Moses simply told the people that God was testing them, showing them his holiness to cause them to fear him. That fear, Moses indicated, would be good for the people because they would avoid sin so long as they truly feared God.

Now we sit, reading this ancient text through our modern lenses, and it seems incredibly strange to us to think of anyone fearing God. Most certainly a look at our society would not indicate that we as a people have any fear of God whatsoever. We often live lives that are oblivious to the presence of God for all but a few hours of the week (and those lives are lived by the churchy folks).

The question must be raised: Is there anything to fear about God? Let’s just ponder that for a moment. God is holy, absolutely perfect in every way. God is just, and cannot ignore our sin. God is infinitely powerful, the Creator of all the universe and of all people. And when you combine all those things, God’s holiness, justice, and power, we all should tremble. All of us have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory (Romans 3:23). All of us should be able to realize that we have earned for ourselves God’s wrath. So, yes, there is something to fear: the infinitely devastating wrath of an infinitely holy and just God.

Thanks be to God that what we should fear in him is exactly what he has provided for in his love. God sacrificed Jesus in our place, as our substitute, in order to justly satisfy his wrath toward our sin. All who come to God in repentance through faith in Jesus Christ have their sin completely forgiven.

So, let’s draw the final conclusions. If you stand before God and have not yet received his grace through faith in Jesus Christ, you have much to fear as you have God’s infinite wrath to fear. But if you have been forgiven by God, you need not fear his wrath because your sin has been forgiven. Yet, there is something to still be said for showing God the respect and awe due his name. Let us learn from the Israelites’ trembling before the mountain that our God is indeed a mighty and terrifying God even while remembering his great love and grace for all who come to know him through Jesus.

Let the revelation of God lead you to a life of obedience empowered by God. (Psalm 19:12-14)

Psalm 19:12-14

12 Who can discern his errors?
Declare me innocent from hidden faults.
13 Keep back your servant also from presumptuous sins;
let them not have dominion over me!
Then I shall be blameless,
and innocent of great transgression.
14 Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart
be acceptable in your sight,
O Lord, my rock and my redeemer.
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The verses leading up to this portion of Psalm 19 point out first that God’s glory can be glimpsed in all of creation, in all nature (in general revelation). Verses 7-11 declare the word of God, the Bible, to be God’s perfect tool for changing and perfecting our lives. As a good Southern Baptist, I love that section as it champions the infallibility, inerrancy, and sufficiency of God’s holy word. But, a proper question might be asked of any of us who uphold the Bible with such vigor: So what? What should we do now that we know God’s word to be fully inspired and perfect and life-changing? Should we sit around and pat ourselves on the back for this knowledge? Well, just look at what David asks to close the psalm after declaring the value and perfection of God’s word. And don’t just look, let David’s point of application of God’s word and revelation lead you to respond to God’s word in the same way.

“Who can discern his errors?” David asks who truly knows their own heart. Who truly knows all that is right or wrong in his or her own soul? The clearly understood answer is that no one knows their own heart, and no one can discern their errors or their right living apart from God’s holy word. Without the scriptures, you and I would be like a pagan who prays to any and all gods, never knowing when we have said, eaten, or walked on something that might earn for us the wrath of the unknown deity.

David’s realization that he does not even know, on his own, his own errors along with his understanding that the word of God is God’s perfect revelation of himself and his statutes leads David to pray what we read in these final verses. He first asks God to declare him innocent, forgive him for his hidden sin. David knows, when looking into the perfect word of God, that he has failed to live up to God’s commands in a thousand ways, some of which he knows and some of which he does not. So, he asks God to grand him grace, to count him as not guilty of those hidden flaws in his heart that not even David himself can discern. And, he has confidence, because of what God has revealed in his word, that God has made a way for him to be forgiven of all his sin.

David then asks God to protect him, to hold him back from presumptuous sin. He wants God to guard him from arrogantly crossing the line and committing great transgressions before God. He asks God to keep those kinds of sins from having dominion over him, because he knows that once you begin to sin boldly before God, such sins can conquer your life and enslave you to their destructive power. But, if God keeps him back through the guarding and protecting power of his holy word, David will be innocent of presumptuous, arrogant, bold, insolent sins. That is correct, God is telling us in his word that, while we may regularly need to be forgiven of things we did not see in our life until he reveals them to us, we can, as his children who obey his word, be free from boldly crossing the line and breaking his commandments. Christians, you are no longer slaves to sin.

And David closes with the beautiful prayer of verse 14. He asks that his words and his thoughts, the things he says and the things just deep within his mind, would be pleasing to God. He is asking that God would help him to please God in every aspect of life. And, let me simply point out that this desire can only be rightly prayed after someone truly grasps the glory of God’s revelation in his word—a word which Hebrews 4:12 tells us reveals the thoughts and intentions of men’s hearts.

For you and me the call here is simple. God’s word reveals to us his ways and his commands. It shows us that our hearts are very tricky, deceptive, and full of hidden faults. We need to ask God to forgive us of those, but also to show us, as we study his word, where those flaws are in order that we might repent of them. We also can ask God to aid us in staying away from presumptuous sins, those things which we know are clearly dishonoring to God. And, we have the confidence that by his power and through his holy word, we have the ability to resist such temptation. Then, as we have examined ourselves in the light of his word, we cry out with David, begging God to help our words and our thoughts be pleasing to him in every way.

Praise God that he has revealed his glory in the heavens. Never let such a gorgeous picture of the power of God pass you by. Never lose the wonder of what you can see of God’s glory in general revelation. But praise God even more for his written word, his special revelation. Even more wondrous than the sky and all of outer space, the Bible reveals to us who God is and what he commands of us. The Bible helps us to come to know God, to be forgiven by God, and to see our own hearts for the deceitful little things they are. And, it is through God’s graciously given word that we can seek forgiveness for hidden flaws, step back from intentional sin, and seek that all we think, say, and do be pleasing to the God who created us.

Love the God whose glory is glimpsed in the sky. Love the God whose ways are written in his word. Thank him for both forms of revealing himself to you. Follow him according to his word. Treasure his word. And seek to please him in all that you do.

Provision for Destruction (Genesis 15:16)

Genesis 15:16 – “And they shall come back here in the fourth generation, for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete.”
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What an incredible God we serve! As God was making his promises to Abram about his future, he throws in for us a statement that we easily overlook if we are not careful. God tells Abram that his descendants are going to go away for a while before being brought into the land of promise. Why? It is because the iniquity of the Amorites has not yet reached its full potential.

OK, stop and think about this for a moment. God knew that the Amorites were an evil people. He knew that they were sinning against him in great ways. He knew that they were not going to repent. Yet, instead of destroying them outright, he allowed them to sink further and further into their sin while he grew up the nation of Israel that would eventually be their destruction. God saw their sin, remembered their sin, and made provision for their destruction because of their sin.

What does this do to our concept of God? Hopefully, if we have a biblical understanding of who God is, this passage serves only to remind us of the holiness and the justice of God. Hopefully it reminds us of his sovereign rule over all things, events, people, and nations. Hopefully this little section reminds us of how seriously God takes all human sin, and how perfectly God will judge all sin.

In fact, one of my desires is that we will allow this passage to remind us of Jesus Christ. All human sin is to be judged by God. Either we will pay for our own sin by spending forever in hell, or our sin will be paid for by the blood of Jesus Christ. He died as our substitute so that God did not destroy us when our iniquity reached its full measure. Let this passage not only remind you of the justice of God, but also let it remind you of the grace of God that is given to all believers in Jesus.

The Good News of Wrath (Psalm 5:4-5)

Psalm 5:4-5

4 For you are not a God who delights in wickedness;
evil may not dwell with you.
5 The boastful shall not stand before your eyes;
you hate all evildoers.
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When we present the gospel of Jesus Christ, we had better be careful to present the true gospel. In many modern gospel presentations, the pattern is to express to the lost person that God loves them deeply and has a wonderful plan for their lives. We act as though the main reason to come to God is not for his glory or to be sheltered from his wrath, but instead is so that God can make our life better by degrees than what it currently is.

I’m not saying, for even a minute, that God is not loving toward those he wants to save, but take a look at the verses above, and think about how they too must fit into the Gospel. God is really, and I mean really, angry toward sin. Such evil cannot be in his presence. God hates all evil-doers. These are not gentle terms. Sin is a very big deal. God’s very nature is that he cannot tolerate sin in his presence. His very nature is to hate sin, and the sinner according to verse 5.

So, what is the gospel? Don’t stop sharing the love. Don’t stop quoting John Piper about the wondrous glory of God and soul-satisfying joy that is offered to us by God. Don’t stop presenting how much better your life is because of your faith. But don’t ignore the fact that the gospel is also God rescuing us from wrath and making us clean enough to be in his presence. Don’t forget that the gospel is God changing us from the wicked that he hates and will destroy to the righteous whom he adopts. Don’t take the wrath out of the gospel, because if you do, you make the gospel less than the glorious thing that it is.

Wow, God Is In Control (Acts 2:23)

Acts 2:23 – this Jesus, delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God, you crucified and killed by the hands of lawless men.
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Do you want to ponder something that will absolutely stretch the limits of your understanding? Then think about this: God planned the sacrifice of Jesus. You say, “Of course he did.” But wait, think. The crucifixion of Jesus Christ, while something we embrace as the source of our salvation, is also the cold-blooded murder of the Son of God. It is a crime committed against the infinitely holy God. It is the worst crime ever committed. The murder of Jesus is the greatest sin ever committed by man, and it was brought about by the plan—not only the foreknowledge, but the actual plan—of God.

How can it be that God would actually plan the acts of the lawless men who crucified the Son of God? My only answer is that I can’t explain it completely. However, there are some truths that we have to affirm from this text if we are to truly and rightly follow the scriptures.

First, let us affirm that God is not the author of sin. God did not sin in planning and bringing about the crucifixion of Jesus. Our Lord is holy. He does not force any person to sin. He does not, in one sense, want anyone to sin. So, we cannot say that the heart desire of God was for evil men to commit the most heinous act of human history.

Second, we have to affirm that the most heinous act of human history was not only foreseen by God, but was his plan. God planned and brought it to pass that Jesus would be crucified by evil men while not at the same time forcing men to sin. Our sovereign God allowed evil men to do what they would most naturally do by their own hearts’ desires, but never losing his own control. There was absolutely no chance involved. There was no chance that the Son of God would not be crucified by evil men. It was God’s plan. Yet those men did exactly what they wanted, and were most certainly accountable to God for their actions.

So, what do we conclude? We have to conclude that God is sovereign, and that man is free within God’s sovereignty. God is sovereign, meaning that God is in control and nothing, absolutely nothing, happens without his allowing it to occur and even planning for its occurrence. Nothing goes on over which God is not sovereign. At the same time, man is free within that sovereignty, meaning that man is free to act in how he desires under God’s sovereignty. No man will ever behave in a way that will contradict or even challenge the sovereignty of God.

What is the appropriate response? We should praise our God, honoring him for his sovereign power. Our Lord is in control. He is the Mighty One who is over all. We may be free, but not so free as to ever trump his control. And his control is not merely knowledge of what will happen; God plans and rules over everything. Of course, this leads us to say that we cannot understand why God does all that he does, but that should not be a surprise. On the other hand, there is great comfort and joy in knowing that our lives are under the control of our great and wonderful God who came to earth and sacrificed himself for our sin.