Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Processing salvation and fishing

A colleague recently invited me to go fishing with him.  So, we scheduled a time to walk around and talk and pray with folks.  We have done it several times now, and I think we had several encounters that were encouraging to the folks that we spoke with. 

Before our most recent outing, my colleague showed me a pamphlet and asked if I would like to hand them out to the folks that we spoke with.  I respectfully declined because it almost exclusively focused on avoiding eternal punishment.

In the church culture that I grew up with, I was prepared with several ways of explaining the Good News, for which I am thankful.  Unfortunately, I think many of those methods implicitly centered on avoiding eternal punishment instead of embracing the mercy, grace, and restored sonship of a Good Father.   While I agree that justification is an important concept, unfortunately, I think too many think of "justification" as a conversion from "sinner" to "sinner saved by grace", whereas Jesus's parable of the merciful and gracious father reveals that by faith, our sins are forgiven, and we are restored to sonship.

I was taught that salvation has three aspects, like the three aspects of a mathematical ray: justification (the beginning point, when a person begins faith in Jesus), sanctification (the finite period until death, growing into the image of Jesus), and glorification (the arrowhead that symbolizes continuation to infinity, fully restored to God after death).  Much attention has been spent on the topic of justification, and I think there is a tendency to drift towards religion. Moving forward, I would like to focus on sonship.

So, I am still trying to figure out what I would like to provide as a printed resource with spiritual information about sonship.

Father, you are a good father, and you have given us wonderful promises.  Jesus, thank you for showing us what it means to be a son.  Holy Spirit, thank you for leading me along in sonship.  I love you.

Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Replaceable versus irreplaceable

Yesterday, I spoke with Caleb on his drive home from work.  He made a great point that it is ironic that we work so hard at our jobs in which we are replaceable, and that limits our engagement at home with our families with which we are irreplaceable.

That statement resonated with me.  

Father, help me focus on spending my limited time making the biggest impacts.  My life is yours.  I love you.

Saturday, March 5, 2022

Repentance, holiness, and intimacy with God

God is holy.  Definitions of holiness include moral purity, wholeness, and being set apart.

Revelation 4:8 NIV
Each of the four living creatures had six wings and was covered with eyes all around, even under its wings. Day and night they never stop saying: " 'Holy, holy, holy is the Lord God Almighty,' who was, and is, and is to come."

And He calls us to be holy.  The word is also translated as "saint".

1 Peter 1:15‭-‬16 NIV
But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; for it is written: "Be holy, because I am holy."

However, sin/sinfulness separates us from God.  It is the elephant in the room, so you sit there silently looking at your feet instead of gazing into His eyes.  It sucks the air out of the room so that you can't say anything in His presence, and all you can think about is how you want to step away to catch your breath. 

So, repentance is necessary to return to unhindered fellowship/communion (i.e. intimacy) with God (i.e., holiness).  Repentance begins with a humble admission of responsibility of being the one who stepped away from the relationship, and it includes a God-given emotional sorrow for messing up the relationship, hurting Him, hurting others, and hurting yourself.

It is like the son who asked for his inheritance from the father (before he died) and ran away and wasted it.  But then he realized that he had messed up, and he decided to humble himself, return to his father, and admit that he was wrong.

And the Father forgives.  His character is fundamentally good, and He always forgives when we repent and return to Him.  Then He restores us to that place of intimacy, and He throws a party.

Father, thank you for making a way for us to return to intimacy and holiness with you.  Thank you for your compassion and love.

Thursday, March 3, 2022

Lent 2022

Several quotes from Day One of 
40 Days of Decrease: A Different Kind of Hunger. A Different Kind of Fast by Alicia Britt Chole and Dr. Simona Chitescu-Weik:

"Lent, in kind, is less about well-mannered denials and more about thinning our lives in order to thicken our communion with God. Decrease is holy only when its destination is love."

"God seems more interested in what we are becoming than in what we are giving up."

"I invite you to consider Lent as less of a project and more of a sojourn. A sojourn is a "temporary stay at a place." And a "stay" is about presence, not productivity."

"Spiritual disciplines do not transform, they only become relational opportunities to open the heart to the Spirit who transforms." — JOHN H. COE

"Why [fast], indeed. My annual fasts, seasonal forty-day fasts, and weekly twelve- to twenty-four-hour fasts are more love offerings than disciplines, though it certainly requires discipline to maintain them. In short, I ache. I ache for my Bridegroom. I ache to live every waking moment conscious of His presence. I ache to live aware of His past and present suffering. I ache to live unattached to what man counts and measures."



I have decided to fast from sugar/sweets during this Lenten season.  I have also decided to give up self-criticism and criticism of others (hopefully, permanently).  And as I focus on the fruit of kindness in 2022, I want to focus on the kindness of God through the life of Jesus during Lent.

Father, I want "to live every waking moment conscious of your presence".  I want to decrease the rocks and thistles in the soil of my hear to make more room for your zoe life.  Jesus, thank you for your suffering and sacrifice.  Holy Spirit, thank you for your presence and power.  I love you.