Robert & Kay Camenisch encouraging and equipping relationships

Consider Your Way

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When driving, we consider everything around us and adjust our alertness and speed depending on the conditions. Likewise, when choosing what to wear, we consider our plans and the weather. We also adjust what we say to fit our audience.

We constantly consider things as we make decisions concerning what we will say and do.

And yet, in many ways we sail—or fumble—through life without stopping to think. We follow the easy path, the exciting adventure, or the feel-good moment without reflecting on what the consequences will be.

We don’t stop to consider how our choices will affect our future. The Jews of ancient times made the same mistake.

Not only did they fail to consider what they were doing; they didn’t heed the prophets’ warnings.

And, it cost them dearly. They strayed from God, became rebellious. Consequently, Jerusalem was utterly destroyed, the temple was demolished, and they were Jews were captured and exiled.

They didn’t sit down and decide to turn their back on God. It happened as they went about their daily lives. They failed to fully obey the Lord in one area and then in another, choosing to do things to their own understanding and satisfaction.

Because they refused to listen, God turned His back on them. They were taken captive by King Nebuchadnezzar, and lost everything. (2 Chron. 36:5-21)

It could have been the end of the Jewish nation, but God was faithful to his covenant people.

Seventy years after Jerusalem was destroyed, King Cyrus sent some of the Jews back with instructions, materials, and supplies to rebuild the temple. They returned with high hopes of rebuilding Jerusalem (Ezra 1).

One of the first things they did was build altars and offer sacrifices to God, acknowledging His mercy, goodness, and faithfulness toward them (Ezra 3:1-6).

They then laid the foundation of the temple and had a great celebration, offering sacrifices morning and evening, shouting, and weeping with joy (Ezra 3:10-13).

But the celebration didn’t last long. Neither did their focus on the Lord and their mission. They were soon distracted from their mission.

Life in Jerusalem was not easy. Establishing homes was a challenge. Neighboring people opposed them and thwarted their efforts to rebuild the temple. Even their crops were destroyed.

Then a new king ordered a halt to rebuilding the temple. It remained in ruins for about fifteen years.

The people were probably confused and questioned their difficulties. They volunteered for the noble task of rebuilding the temple of their God—and thus Jerusalem. In return, their reward seemed to be one hardship after another.

Their efforts seemed futile. They likely wondered if God had deserted them.

Then God, through Haggai, said, “Consider your ways!” (Hag. 1:7).

He also explained their struggles, “’You look for much, but behold, it comes to little; when you bring it home, I blow it away. Why?’ declares the LORD of hosts, ‘Because of My house which lies desolate, while each of you runs to his own house’” (Hag. 1:9).

They may have felt like martyrs for the Lord. They might have thought He had forgotten them, but God said otherwise. Instead, they had forgotten God.

God multiplied their trials because of disobedience. They were working for themselves rather than completing what God sent them to do. God’s hand opposed them—until they returned to Him and began work on the temple.

I can understand how the faithful remnant returned with great hopes only to become discouraged. When trials come, it’s easy to be distracted by difficulties.

When we find ourselves burdened by trials, we need to stop and consider our ways. Have we been distracted from God’s mission?

When life gets rough, we tend to get distracted and seek a path of less resistance, something to make us feel better. We’ve even coined the phrase “comfort food,” for one source of satisfaction in such times. But food is not our only source of comfort.

We seek comfort in entertainment, a book, or—like the Jews in Jerusalem—fixing up our own nest. In the midst of trials, we want comfort.

Furthermore, like the Jews, we tend to seek to fulfill self-centered desires to find comfort.

Jesus tells us to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness (Mt. 6:33), and to love the Lord with all of our being (Mark 12:30)—even when (or especially when) life is hard.

David’s familiar words remind us where to find our comfort when trials come. “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I fear no evil; for Thou art with me; Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me” (Ps. 23:4). David found his comfort in the Lord, not in chocolates or fancy houses.

It would behoove us to stop and consider our ways—especially in the midst of trials. Is our heart fully focused on God? Do we love Him with our whole heart, soul, and strength? Are we running to Jesus for comfort?

If not, it’s time for adjustments, time to get back on the path that He has prepared for us.

When the Jews repented and obeyed God, He told them, “I am with you” because “according to the covenant” “my Spirit remains in your midst” (Hag. 1:13, 2:4,5). The Comforter gives grace to endure through the trial.

Paul reminds us of further benefits of seeking the Lord while suffering.

“Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort; who comforts us in all our affliction so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God. For just as the sufferings of Christ are ours in abundance, so also our comfort is abundant through Christ” (2 Cor. 1:3-5).

If we stop, consider our ways, and turn back to God, we find true, abundant, lasting comfort. Comfort and grace that satisfies and energizes.

 

 

 

From Joy to Perfection

What do you want your Christian walk to be like? In other words, what do you want God to do in your heart and life as you walk with and serve Him?

I want to reflect the heart of God. I’d like to grow in righteousness, peace, joy, and holiness. I’d like to have aImage result for image of sunset servant’s heart, and move in the power of the Spirit, and more.

But, it seems the things I want to do, I don’t do, and the things I don’t want to do, I do. I’m hopeless without the Lord working through me.

Indeed, are we not all hopeless unless the Lord does the changing within us?

While studying faith, and considering the testing that is part of a faith walk, I bumped into a secret of growing in the Lord and into His likeness. It’s not new. The verses are common to anyone who has spent much time in church or in the Word, but it hit me in a new way.

The secret is in James 1:2-4. “My brethren, count it all joy when you fall into various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces patience. But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing.”

That’s what we desire, right? Would you like to be perfect, complete, and lacking nothing? That takes in righteousness, peace, joy, love, and all we desire.

But what were the conditions that lead to our goal?

Testing and trials? Hmmm. Counting it all joy when we go through the trials? Patience?

You’ve heard the saying, “I don’t know why God tests my patience, He knows I don’t have any.”?

What does patience have to do with anything anyway? And how do you “count it all joy” when experiencing trials that threaten destruction? How can we count it all joy if life is spiraling out of control?

Did you notice that James tells us to “count it all joy when you fall into various trials”? If we fall into them, they were not part of our plans, and often beyond our capacity to handle them.

The only way to have joy in the midst of such is to realize that we don’t have to be in control, because we know the One who is sovereign over all. We lose our joy when our faith in Him wavers and we think we have to maintain control.

There are various reasons why we feel the need to control. We may think we have to have all the answers—or strength, or grace, or whatever is needed in the situation. We may be so overwhelmed or distracted by the situation that we don’t even think about God’s faithfulness to lead, guide, and provide when we depend on Him. Or, we may unconsciously feel that it’s too big for God to handle, or that we know what’s best.

I have never had the thought, “Oh, this tragedy is a gift from God to answer my prayer. He’s giving me what I’ve been asking for. Hallelujah! Praise the Lord! I’m going through this so I will be perfect, complete, and won’t lack anything!”

We don’t tend to quickly rejoice when we encounter trials. We usually see His faithfulness more clearly when we look back on suffering, and there are times we never understand His purpose.

If we don’t have patience for things to straighten out, we tend to get in a dither trying to fix them. However, if we have faith that God loves us, has a plan for our lives, and wants the best for us, it gives us forbearance and expectancy to see how He will provide.

After all, He promised that “all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose” (Rom. 8:28), so we can rest in Him with confidence through the storm—if we love the Lord and are called by Him.

With that confidence, we can even rejoice in His faithfulness and can learn patience by focusing on Him and His desire to make us perfect, complete, and lacking nothing.

A book could be written about the fact that we won’t be perfect, complete or lacking nothing until glory because we were born with a sin nature. However, we are in Christ and He is in us. He is perfect, and lacks nothing.

As we draw from Jesus, it is ours too. We are complete in Him. Our problem is that we tend to rely on our own resources.

It’s through the trials that we are driven to Him. Therefore, let us rejoice.

When speaking of a trial when God seemed distant, Bob Mumford said, “I praised God with the praise dripping off my chin.” He chose praise when he did feel it.

If we choose to count it all joy when we are assailed with trials—even if joy drips off our chin—it will turn our hearts toward God. That will give us grace and strength to draw from Him. It will increase our confidence and faith as we realize that we aren’t alone in the trial.

Through Him we can walk victoriously. In Him and through Him, we can learn patience and be perfect, complete, and lacking in nothing. Because He is in us and we’re in Him, we can be more than we are.

Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, in everything give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you (1 Thess. 5:16-18).

Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit (Rom. 15:13). And may you grow to be perfect, complete, and lacking in nothing.

Preparation for Persecution

Have you ever been persecuted?Jesus on the cross

In His final moments with the disciples, Jesus said, “If they persecuted Me, they will also persecute you” (John 15:20).

If you live in America, you probably haven’t given persecution much thought, because it hasn’t been a common experience in our sheltered world. After all, our constitution guarantees us freedom of religion.

However, in recent years, the winds have changed. Animosity and hostility toward those who take a stand on Christian convictions is rapidly becoming more acceptable, even approved by some. Those who don’t condone acts that are an abomination to God are increasingly targets, both socially and legally.

If change continues, we could soon see more and more American Christians openly persecuted for their faith.

We need to prepare for battle, lest we be caught unawares if, or when, the attack becomes personal. To learn how to prepare, let’s look at someone who has gone before us and remained faithful to God.

Job suffered personal attack from Satan and discouraging judgment from his friends, and yet he stood faithful. Like Job, our battle is also with Satan, against “spiritual forces of wickedness in heavenly places” (Eph 6:12).

Most people would give up on God if they suffered the loss and misery that Job did. They would decide that God wasn’t powerful or that He didn’t care. Where did Job find the strength to maintain his trust in God?

When it seblue_contact_by_claimyourself-d7sdd8qemed the onslaught against him would never end, Job said, “I have made a covenant with my eyes; how then could I gaze at a virgin?” (Job 31:1). In the verses that follow, Job references many situations where he managed to walk with integrity in his daily life.

Consequently, I believe, “gaze at a virgin” is a conceptual term. It seems to refer to the idea, “How could I be unfaithful to God?” “How can I consider turning from Him to even consider something else?”

Job linked that with “I have made a covenant with my eyes.” In essence, Job said, “I made a binding covenant before God to be faithful to Him; how then could I be unfaithful?”

In the Bible, covenant is full of meaning that we often miss. A covenant is a two-way commitment, a reciprocal  giving of all that you have and are. He gave himself to God in covenant and was therefore confident that he could trust in God in return.

Job trusted God. He did not understand the trials or know when or how they would end, but he knew that God is faithful.

In today’s culture, we don’t think in terms of a total commitment which places complete trust in another. Independence is important to us. We value our own identities, ideas, strengths, freedoms, and rights. Consequently, when in crisis, rather than trusting in God, we tend to draw from deep within ourselves to meet the challenge.

And sometimes we aren’t strong enough for the challenge.

God has not changed. He will carry us just like He did Job. He promised to be our provider and protector too–if we place our trust in Him and obey Him, rather than leaning on our own strength and understanding.

If we want to be prepared for trials in life (persecution or life happenings), like Job, we need to make a covenant with our eyes now, before our faith is severely tested. We need to surrender ourselves to God, with a covenant commitment that He is our all.

The beautiful part is that God longs for that kind of commitment. He longs for a relationship with us where we depend on Him for every thing, every day. If we develop such an intimate relationship with Him today, when the crisis comes, we will know how to trust in Him.

Like Job, we will be able to stand firm in our faith. But it won’t be because we are so strong or so tough, it will be because we will know that we are cradled in the arms of the One whose love for us is perfect and who is sovereign over all.

He is faithful to the covenant. If we keep our eyes on Him, He will carry us through whatever life brings.

“For the eyes of the Lord move to and fro throughout the earth that He may strongly support those whose heart is completely His.” (2 Chron. 16:9a)

There is no need to fear of trials or persecution. Instead, we need to draw near to our Savior and Lord. We need to covenant with Him.