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Devotions to help you Think about God’s Word and Apply it to your Lives.

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Unburdened

Shrek the sheep belonged to a shepherd in New Zealand. He became famous in 2004 when he was found after hiding out in caves for six years. During all that time his fleece grew and grew and grew some more. Typically, sheep are sheared once a year. But not Shrek. He was hiding, staying away from the shepherd, struggling through on his own. He was found in April of 2004, and a few weeks later was shorn by a professional sheep shearer in about twenty minutes. The shearing was broadcast on national television in New Zealand. His fleece weighed sixty pounds and contained enough wool to make suits for twenty men. Most sheep have a fleece weighing just under ten pounds. For all those years, Shrek carried that ever increasing weight around with him, and that weight got bigger and heavier and filthier each and every day. Simply because he ran away and stayed away from his shepherd.

 

I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep…I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me—just as the Father knows me and I know the Father—and I lay down my life for the sheep. (John 10:11, 14-15)

 

We know that Jesus is the Good Shepherd and we, His followers, are His Sheep.  We know that He willingly laid down His life to pay the penalty for all sins. We should know and understand without a doubt that our Shepherd loves us, cares for us, and wants only the best for us.

 

So then why do we act like Shrek the sheep? We do, you know. What Shrek the sheep did is like a person who is a follower of Jesus but wanders away from Him. We tell ourselves we don’t need Jesus watching over us all the time. We want to do things our own way. We listen to the lies that tell us Jesus is too controlling or His rules are too restrictive. We try to live outside His watchful eye. And that is where we get ourselves into all those messes that we get ourselves into – when we run away from our Good Shepherd.

 

Another consequence of staying away from the Shepherd is that we accumulate extra weight—a weight we don’t have to bear—the weight of our sin. Just like that sixty extra pounds Shrek carried, when we run away and stay away from the shepherd, we carry around the dirty, filthy, heavy burden of our sin. Shrek had his burden removed when he returned to his shepherd. The same can happen for you and me.

 

We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; and the Lord has laid on him the iniquity of us all. (Isaiah 53:6)

 

Jesus has already paid the debt for us. It was laid on Him. He bore the burden of our sin so that we would not have to carry it around. Christ can lift any burden you carry, if only you stop hiding and running away from Him. He can shear off your ‘fleece,’ your self-imposed burdens.

 

“Come to Me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and my burden is light.” (Matthew 11:28-30)

 

God wants to do that for you. In fact, He wants to do that for everyone. It doesn’t matter who you are or what you have done or how long you have been away from Him. If you want to be unburdened, stay close to your Good Shepherd.

 

 

 

Unburdened2023-08-28T09:12:43-05:00

A Football Analogy

I mentioned yesterday that my family moved to Dallas in 1966 when I was in the third grade. It did not take long for me to become a fan of the Dallas Cowboys. I remember going to see them play in the Cotton Bowl, and I have been a fan ever since, through thick and thin. Since that time I have lived in Nebraska, Missouri, Nevada, Illinois and Oklahoma, but I have remained a fan of the team that wears a star on their helmets.

When I was working with the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League on the National level, I became friends with Karen. She is just as big a football fan as I am, but her team was the one that used to be known as the Washington Redskins. One year her birthday was just before the Monday night game in which the Cowboys and Redskins would play. When I sent her birthday greetings, I added “Go Cowboys.” Her response was something to the effect that the Redskins would prevail.

The game was one of those that grinds out and it was not pretty. Dallas could not score a touchdown, but did manage 6 field goals and held on to win by one point. The day after the game I texted my friend to rub it in just a bit. Her response was: “It is frustrating when a team plays down to such incompetent competition! I gave up and went to bed before the game ended.” Later, she added me that there was surely a sermon topic in there somewhere.

She was right. The temptation we face every day is to “play down” to what everyone else in this sinful world is doing rather than concentrating on being the people God has called us to be in Christ. We try to rationalize our misdeeds with that tired old “everyone else is doing it.”  But that is not what God wants from His redeemed children.

Ephesians 4:22-24  You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; to be made new in the attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.

Jesus has already paid the price for every sin by offering His perfect life. He gives us His righteousness and holiness and wants us to live in it.

My friend Karen also raised the question that if you see a car that is parked crooked in a parking space and crossing over the lines, do you park the same way or do you try to park within the lines as intended?

God has given us “lines” in His Law. We don’t have to stay between the lines to get to heaven. Jesus took care of that for us. But we know that God wants us to stay between the lines, so we should be doing our best to live that way in order to show our gratitude to God.

P.S. While that team is no longer called the Redskins, for Karen’s sake I hope they win a few games this year. Just as long as they lose when they play the Cowboys.

A Football Analogy2023-08-28T09:01:17-05:00

One of the Best

I am a football fan. Have been as long as I can remember. My family moved to Dallas when I was entering the third grade in 1966, and I have been a long-suffering Dallas Cowboys fan ever since. As much as I like watching professional football, I like college and high school games even more. I’ve sat in plenty of stadiums on Friday nights in my life, although that has slowed down a bit in recent years. Nowadays I tend to watch games on television on Saturdays. But this weekend, I will be in College Station at Kyle Field with my brother, son-in-law and grandson to see the “Fightin’ Texas Aggies.”

While I’m a fan of the game, I could do without most of the announcers. I dislike how one of them will coin a term or phrase and then suddenly every sportscaster feels the need to start using it. You know what I mean. They latch on to terms like “athleticism” and “physicality.” One year every game I watched had someone talking about “playing behind the chains.” But the most overused phrase, in my humble opinion, is “one of the best.” After a player makes a good tackle, they will say “he is one of the best linebackers in the league.” A quarterback completes a long pass and they say, “he has one of the best arms in the game today.” Every game you will hear the announcers say that a player in that game is “one of the best” at something.

I don’t think I have ever heard them describe a player as being “one of the worst.” That probably would not help ratings or that announcer’s status the next time he tried to interview that player. It is not praise, false or sincere, to call someone “one of the worst.” We would all rather be told we are “one of the best” whether it is true or not. Well, almost always.

When the apostle Paul wrote to a young pastor named Timothy, he included these words:

1 Timothy 1:15  Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners—of whom I am the worst (NIV84).

The word translated “worst” in the NIV is actually the word that designates someone as number one or first place. The ESV renders the verse this way:

…Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am the foremost.

The King James Version said “of whom I am the chief.” 

As unflattering as it sounds, Paul was claiming to be not just “one of the best” sinners, but the number one sinner of all. And he was not claiming to be better in the sense of not being as bad as all the other sinners. On the contrary, Paul knew the evil that he had done and the evil desires that continued to live in him (See Romans 7). And he accepted that about himself in light of the affirmation made in the first part of that verse: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.

God the Father sent His very best, His only Son, to take the place of sinners in punishment, pay all our penalties, and give us complete pardon and peace with God. That is why you and I can happily say with Paul, “I’m one of the best sinners.” We know that Jesus came precisely for us.

 

One of the Best2023-08-28T08:43:15-05:00

Children of the Heavenly Father

A hymn that I have known for longer than I can remember is “Children of the Heavenly Father.” Some days I just find myself humming the melody and singing the words in my mind. It has long been one of my favorites. It was written by Karolina Sandell-Berg in 1858. As is the case with many hymns, it was written after the author had experienced a personal tragedy in her life. She had been on a boat with her father when he fell overboard and drowned. This hymn was an expression of her faith and confidence in the aftermath of that event. Here are the first three stanzas.

Children of the Heavenly Father
Safely in His bosom gather
Nestling bird nor star in heaven
Such a refuge e’er was given

God His own doth tend and nourish
In His holy courts they flourish
From all evil things He spares them
In His mighty arms He bears them

Neither life nor death shall ever
From the Lord His children sever
Unto them His grace He showeth
And their sorrows all He knoweth

To be God’s child is a privileged status. Those who have been born of the Spirit, or been brought to faith in Jesus Christ, have that status. Scripture affirms You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:26). Being a son implies that you are an heir of all God has promised. The verses just after this say that all believers are “sons” regardless of their gender or nationality.

You are a child of God with an eternal inheritance because God has given you that status. Your spiritual birth elevates you to the status of God’s child. And that is a gift. Even the faith that grabs onto this is a gift. (Ephesians 2:8). When you believe that Jesus has paid the penalty for your sins, you are God’s child.

You are not God’s child because you strive to be good. You are not God’s child because you’ve earned that right. You are not God’s child because you have been obedient. You are God’s children simply because you’ve been born again, and He is your Father who loves you.

May you find comfort in your status as a child of God.

 

 

Children of the Heavenly Father2023-08-28T08:46:32-05:00

Jury Duty

Over the years I have served on several juries. I will admit that I was usually less than thrilled to receive that summons in the mail. Back when I was still working full time, Monday was supposed to be my day off and almost every time I was summoned to appear was on a Monday. Most of the times I was selected to serve on the jury, there would be a mistrial or a settlement before we were asked to deliberate and render a verdict. But I remember one time I was impaneled and the trial started that same afternoon. We were released around 5 p.m. and told to return at 8:30 on Tuesday morning, which meant missing a day of doing whatever I was supposed to do that day.

I tried to take the attitude that I was doing something to render a service to my community. As we listened to the evidence against the defendant and then the defense offered by his attorney, it was obvious that the young man was guilty and that was the verdict we rendered.

I remember trying to imagine what it would feel like to be sitting where he was, hearing the charges read against him, listening as the evidence was presented and then hearing the verdict announced. Then it occurred to me that I will one day be in that position.

2 Corinthians 5:10 For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive what is due him for the things done while in the body, whether good or bad.

Romans 14:10b For we will all stand before God’s judgment seat.

Imagine sitting before the throne of Jesus and hearing all the charges read against you, every single thing you have done wrong in your life. The list would include everything from that “little white lie” to marital infidelity, stealing a candy bar to spreading false and vicious rumors, losing your temper to taking God’s name in vain. Just imagine hearing it all read out loud. And then imagine trying to defend yourself in the face of those charges, all of which you know to be true. That is a frightening prospect.

The good news is that you don’t have to face those charges alone. You have an advocate on your side who will do more than offer a defense. He will not try to justify your actions. Rather, He takes the punishment in your place so that you will not have to suffer the eternal consequences your actions deserve. Paul wrote about that as well in 2 Corinthians.

God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. 2 Corinthians 5:21

In what has to be the most marvelous exchange in all of history, Jesus took your sin on Himself in order to pay its price, and then offers you His righteousness, His perfect life of obedience. It is because of your faith in Christ that you can walk out of that final courtroom, away from the judgment seat, as one declared to be “not guilty.”  The verdict that should be rendered against you was instead placed on Jesus so that you can go free.

I prayed for the man we convicted in that jury trial. His earthly consequences for his actions have long since been fulfilled. Hopefully he turned his life around.

If we were to pay the penalty for our sin, we would never finish that sentence. It would be eternal separation from God. That is why the salvation Jesus accomplished for us is so astounding. It frees us from guilt and condemnation. It gives us the certainty of forgiveness and life everlasting with our Creator, Redeemer and Sanctifier. This message of forgiveness and life and salvation that comes from Jesus is for everyone, including that man our jury found guilty … and each of you reading this today.

Jury Duty2023-08-27T08:14:35-05:00

Summer Cold

I really hate summer colds. Last week I had a head full of congestion, a little bit of a sore throat, accompanied by some sneezing and coughing and blowing my nose quite a bit. In today’s world everyone wants to jump to the conclusion that it is Covid-19, but people were getting head colds long before the pandemic and will continue to do so most likely until our Lord returns.

What did I do? I stayed home a few days, took it easy, drank lots of fluids, asked God for healing, and got plenty of rest. After I recovered, I thanked God for healing me and went on with my life.

In my “down time,” I came across this passage.

Psalm 41:3–4 The Lord will sustain him on his sickbed and restore him from his bed of illness. I said, “O Lord, have mercy on me; heal me, for I have sinned against you.”

What a great reminder that our healing is a gift from God. He is, after all, in control of everything. Restoration of health is a gift. But we can also be blessed when God withholds healing here on earth. Paul discovered that truth in his life (2 Corinthians 12:7-10).

I bring this up because this Psalm seems to say that the illness is the result of David’s sin. Many people jump to the conclusion that if someone has a terrible illness or problem in their life, it is because of something they did wrong. The truth of the matter is that all of us are so sinful that we all deserve nothing but bad stuff in our lives. We deserve much worse than illness. Our sins deserve to be punished eternally. But a better way to understand the problems and illnesses we have here on earth is this: all the problems on earth are the result of all the sin on earth.

And God did something about that. That is why Jesus came. He took care of the penalty our sins deserve. He lived a life without sin that was the only acceptable sacrifice for the sins of the world. He let Himself be killed so we could be forgiven. And then He defeated death for us as well by rising from the dead. Those who put their faith in Jesus get the benefit of all He did.

When we are sick, we avail ourselves of what is available to help us heal: Doctors and medicines and rest. When we need spiritual healing, the only thing that will help us is Jesus. Interestingly enough, after He gives us His healing, He gives us rest.

Matthew 11:28 “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.

 

Summer Cold2023-08-26T09:15:33-05:00

God’s Word

The book “All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten” shared bits of wisdom like this:

  • Share things
  • Play fair
  • Don’t hit other people
  • Clean up your mess
  • Put things back where your found them.

The basic things you need to know in life. It isn’t complicated.

We have all the stuff we need to know in a book. The Book. Sometimes called the Good Book, the Bible. Some of it sounds kind of crazy and out there. But it is God’s Word, and tells you what you need to know.

Have you ever considered that the people God used to write the Bible come off looking bad?

  • Moses disobeys God’s command and dies before he gets to the Promised Land
  • David committed adultery and killed his lover’s husband.
  • Solomon chases after all sorts of women and winds up bitter
  • Peter denies knowing Christ
  • Paul calls himself the chief of sinners

We usually think in terms of putting your best foot forward, but these guys did the opposite. These guys put their worst foot forward. Why? That’s insane! It doesn’t make sense. And that’s the point. No one would write this way, unless their writing came from outside of them. It was not their word, but God’s.

The message of God’s Word that is constant and steadfast is this: We have all messed up, just like those people in the Bible. We all deserve to be punished. We cannot get ourselves out of the mess we are in. So God stepped in on our behalf. He promised to help us as soon as sin entered the world, and He followed through on that promise. He sent Jesus to be the Savior of all people, which He accomplished by taking our place in punishment and paying our penalty so that we could have forgiveness and life everlasting. The only way you will know this is to get it from the source, God Himself, in His Word.

When our daughter Bethany married Scott, he brought three daughters into our family, which means we inherited three granddaughters. We welcomed them to our family and became known as Grandma and Grandpa Texas to them. That first Christmas, the youngest girls were four and five years old. They live in Arizona, so we didn’t get to see them much, but we wanted to establish a connection with them. Cheryl found this little story book where we could digitally record our voices reading the story to them. So we took turns reading the pages. When the girls got the book, as they turned the pages, they heard our voices reading the story to them.

Perhaps you should think of that when you read your Bible. Listen for God’s voice speaking to you. You hear His message of Law and Gospel, of sin and grace, of mercy and forgiveness and salvation. Listen to Him.

God’s Word2023-08-28T08:44:03-05:00

Gratitude

A hot, freshly brewed cup of coffee while visiting with a friend…

A day on the lake whether the fish are biting or not…

The growth I’ve experienced through hardship and trials…

A clear, bubbling mountain stream on a crisp summer morning…

Living in a nation where we enjoy prosperity and freedom…

A God who loves me enough to let His Son die in my place to pay for my sins…

My family: a beautiful, godly wife, three wonderful daughters, three sons-in-law and seven grandchildren…

My baptism…

Sitting on my back porch watching the beauty of God’s creation…

The chance to receive the Lord’s Supper, sharing in the death of Jesus and fellowship with my brothers and sisters in Christ…

A home and possessions that far exceed my needs…

Working in my yard…

Christian friends…

All the wonderful parts of this country and around the world that I’ve been able to visit…

The opportunity to have been a minister of the Good News of Jesus Christ …

You’ve all heard the admonition to count your blessings. I’ve shared a small part of my list with you here. However, the thing that stands out above everything else is a cross and an empty tomb. That is what puts all my blessings into proper perspective.

“Give thanks to the LORD, for He is good; His love endures forever.”  Psalm 118:1

Gratitude2023-11-24T09:04:53-06:00

For All The Saints

For all the saints who from their labors rest,
Who Thee by faith before the world confessed,
Thy name, O Jesus, be forever blest. Alleluia! Alleluia!

That hymn has long been one of my favorites. I can remember singing it when I was a child, and later playing it on my trumpet to accompany the organist in worship. It became a little more difficult for me to sing this hymn after it was part of the service for my father’s funeral. Difficult because tears of joy would stream down my face as these words took on more significance for me. I freely admit that I still get choked up with emotion more often than not when this hymn is used in a worship services.

The lyrics are beautiful and powerful. I love to think of fellow believers in Jesus as saints, because that is what Jesus makes us. But that does not mean we are without sin.

One of the teachings that reemerged during the Reformation was that we are simul justus et peccator. This is a Latin phrase that means “at the same time sinner and saint.”

Those who have put their faith in Jesus have been made holy by Him, so they are saints. You are saved as a gift from God, not by what you do. God declares you to be “not guilty” for Jesus’ sake. This is true even though you remain sinful.

You and I have the same struggle in our lives that Paul described in Romans 7:7ff. And we will sometimes give in to temptations, just as Paul said: “the evil I do not want to do, this I keep on doing. We are sinners. But because of faith in Jesus, God will not count your sins against you (2 Corinthians 5:19). Instead, He sees you as righteous and holy: a saint.

This is what gives us our peace, our confidence, our ability to face each day. That is why we can rejoice and sing with confidence, even through the tears, when someone dies with faith in Jesus.

Revelation 14:13 Then I heard a voice from heaven say, “Write: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.” “Yes,” says the Spirit, “they will rest from their labor, for their deeds will follow them.”

Those who die in the Lord are those who put their faith in Christ. They, along with all of you who believe in Jesus, are saints, having been made holy by God.

 

 

For All The Saints2023-08-19T11:37:30-05:00

Humble Service

Over 15 years ago I was able to attend the fiftieth wedding anniversary celebration of some former members who had moved down to a north Dallas suburb. As part of the celebration, there was a worship service at which the couple renewed their vows. It was wonderful to hear different people offer tributes and memories and testimonies about this couple. Their sons offered both touching recollections and light-hearted ribbings.

A recurring theme was the wonderful way they lived, how they treated each other and all those around them. The presiding minister’s message was based on Psalm 23:6, how “goodness and mercy” have followed them. That was true, and goodness and mercy have flowed through them to others.

After all the slide shows and accolades were complete, the husband arose to say a few words. In his usual humble and gracious manner, he thanked everyone for attending and affirmed that he and his wife loved everyone there. The man always sppoke in a sincere and genuine fashion, and this was no exception. He went on to say that this celebration was not really about himself and his wife, but it was about God’s goodness in their lives. He shared a wonderful witness of his faith in Jesus and how that made everything in their life together worthwhile and meaningful.

That same year, the Billy Graham Museum opened in Charlotte, North Carolina. News reports said the evangelist toured it with his son, Franklin, shortly before it opened.  As Graham finished the tour, his son Franklin asked how he had liked the tribute. The gruff reply: “Too much Billy Graham.”

Franklin Graham said, “The last thing my father wanted was to have a monument to himself.” In an email interview, Dr. Graham said, “I’m humbled that anyone would want to honor me in this way.” He added that he had instructed Franklin and other museum designers “to point people to Christ rather than to make it too much about me.”

These two godly men gave me powerful reminders of what it means to be a disciple of Jesus. It is not about who I am or what I can do or what I have done or even what I will do. It is all about Jesus, who He is and what He has done. The only-begotten Son of God came into this world as one of us, to live among us, to live a life without sin and offer that life as complete payment for the sins of all people. The promise is that everyone who puts his or her faith in Him will receive the benefit of everything He did. Forgiveness, life eternal and salvation become our possession through faith in Jesus as our Savior. We escape our deserved punishment for His sake. Because of that, the focus of our lives on earth becomes living in a way that responds to God’s goodness.

Disciples of Jesus will want to dedicate themselves to humble service. Life is not about receiving awards and plaques or getting your name in the paper – It is about helping your neighbor. Jesus points us in this direction in Matthew 24:

I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.

I’ve given you some masculine examples of this, but I don’t want to ignore the feminine. I had the privilege of working in an advisory role with the women’s organization of our church, the Lutheran Women’s Missionary League, at the congregational, area and state and national levels. I loved working with them because they are all about getting the message of Jesus to more people and don’t get bogged down in politics. They are also committed to doing so in a humble manner. This is the pledge of this organization:

In fervent gratitude for the Savior’s dying love and His blood-bought gift of redemption we dedicate ourselves to Him with all that we are and have; and in obedience to His call for workers in the harvest fields, we pledge Him our willing service wherever and whenever He has need of us. We consecrate to our Savior our hands to work for Him, our feet to go on His errands, our voice to sing His praises, our lips to proclaim His redeeming love, our silver and our gold to extend His Kingdom, our will to do His will, and every power of our life to the great task of bringing the lost and the erring into eternal fellowship with Him. Amen.

A humble disciple will want to echo the sentiment of John the Baptizer when Jesus came on to the scene: He must become greater; I must become less, or, as some translations have it, He must increase, I must decrease (John 3:30). I hope you will join me in praying that God will make more and more of us His humble and willing servants.

 

 

Humble Service2023-08-19T11:27:18-05:00
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