Acts 1:3 tells us that Jesus spent 40 days on earth after his resurrection. It is said that the number 40 represents a complete period of testing, trial, and transformation. The number appears numerous times in scripture. Review the list below and notice how after each period of 40, a new phase of God’s work begins in scripture.Noah's Flood (Genesis 7:12): A new covenant is established between God and the earth (Genesis 9:13)Israelites' Wanderings (Exodus 16:35): They wandered in the desert for 40 years before God allowed them into the promised land to establish the kingdom of Israel.Moses on Mount Sinai (Exodus 24:18): Moses spent 40 days and nights on Mount Sinai with God receiving the Law including the Ten Commandments.Goliath's Challenge (1 Samuel 17:16): Goliath taunted the Israelites for 40 days, when David kills Goliath he begins the process of living out his anointment (1 Samuel 6:12-15) because Saul is no longer God’s chosen King of Israel.Jesus' Temptation (Matthew 4:2): Jesus fasted for 40 days in the wilderness during which he was tempted by the devil. Once the 40 days completed Jesus began his ministry.
Read full postI like to remind myself as often as possible, that Christianity is a counter cultural movement. This is not an original idea of mine but one I learned that helps shape how I read scripture.The Beatitudes are the epitome of Jesus’s counter cultural message. While teaching in lands under control of the Roman empire, possibly the greatest empire up to that time, Jesus teaches His followers that strength, might, and power are not what the Kingdom of Heaven, His Kingdom, are about. His Kingdom is about gentleness, peace, righteousness, and mercy.Lastly, notice that these are traits that describe Him as well, so by practicing the Beatitudes we ourselves are becoming more Christ-like which is the essence of Christianity.
Read full postOn Sunday night we discussed how we are to interact with others as Christians. Today's passage, Matthew 5:13-16, touches on this as well. As Christians, image bearers of God, we should be displaying God's goodness everywhere we go. Easier said than done though right? When someone cuts me off in traffic or I hit the wrong shot in tennis I don't always have the best reaction.That’s the tension Jesus is getting at in this passage. Being “salt and light” sounds inspiring until it collides with things in our lives like traffic, competition, frustration, difficult people, stress, pride. The hard part isn’t understanding the command, it’s living it consistently.In Matthew 5:13-16, Jesus says believers are the salt of the earth and the light of the world. Salt preserves and enhances. Light exposes darkness and helps people see clearly. In other words, Christians should affect the places they enter. People should experience something different because Christ is shaping us.But the passage also humbles us because it reveals how often we fail at that. One missed tennis shot and suddenly patience disappears. Someone cuts us off and anger shows up immediately. Those moments expose what’s really going on in our hearts.The encouraging part is that Jesus isn’t saying, “Try harder so people think you’re good.” He’s pointing us back to dependence on Him. The goal is our sanctification which isn’t perfection overnight, it’s transformation over time. As the Spirit works in us, our reactions slowly begin to change. Maybe not perfectly, but progressively.Something for you to think about today, what do people see from you when pressure hits? Light is most noticeable in darkness, and Christlike character is most noticeable in frustrating moments.Verse 16 says: “Let your light shine before men in such a way that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father who is in heaven.”The goal is not drawing attention to ourselves, but reflecting God’s goodness so clearly that people are pointed back to Him.Honestly, the brightest light might not shine when we aren't failing, but how we respond after we fail. Humility, repentance, patience, asking for forgiveness, showing grace, those are powerful forms of light too.
Read full postMike Ilitch, the founder of Little Caesars pizza and former owner of the Detroit Tigers and Red Wings heard that an elderly woman had been robbed and assaulted in her Detroit home. He and his wife quietly stepped in, found a safe apartment for the woman, and paid her rent for the remaining years of her life with very few people knowing about it.It was only after his death that the story came to light.And the woman he helped was Rosa Parks, the civil rights activist that refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery, Alabama in 1955.His motive was not to bring attention to his good deed, but for the sake of serving someone in need. Think about this story as you read today’s passage. Use it as a reminder that real generosity in the eyes of God only needs him as the audience.
Read full postAll of you are becoming adults and with that comes more independence. You will need to make more of your own decisions, figure out who you are, and rely less on your parents. That’s a normal part of growing up, but sometimes we start thinking we don’t really need God as well.With your independence you will also get to choose what you do with your time. Jobs, school, friends, and family will need some of that time, but there will still be downtime and there’s always something fighting for that time.When I was your age back in the ancient days of the 1900s, the distractions were TV, movies, video games, and painfully slow dial-up internet. I used to play a game called SimCity, and I’d sit down after dinner and tell myself I was only going to play for 30 minutes. Then I’d look up and somehow it was 1AM! Today, most of our distractions live in the rectangle you’re reading this devotional on right now.That’s why fasting matters.In Matthew 6:16–21, Jesus talks about fasting and frames it as a normal part of following Him. Fasting is giving something up for a period of time so we can focus more on God. It’s choosing to step away from responsibility, comfort, and distraction to remind ourselves that we need Him more than we need entertainment, convenience, or control.Fasting helps expose what we depend on most. It reminds us that even though we’re growing in independence, we were never meant to live without God. It helps reset our hearts and refocus our attention on what actually matters.Jesus says, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” What we give our attention to shapes our hearts. Fasting helps us put our attention back on God.I will admit fasting is not a regular practice for me, maybe it can become something we all try to incorporate more together?
Read full postWhat grabs your attention throughout the day? Today's passage isn't just about what you are looking at, but how you take in what you are seeing throughout the day. In the Jewish culture Jesus came from, someone had an "evil eye" if they were envious or covetous of another person's possessions, position, or generally was not charitable toward others. Someone had a "good eye" if they had an attitude of gentleness, generosity, goodwill, and kindness for others.When we focus on worldly things like possessions, status, and pleasures we foster an evil eye which creates a dark heart in us. Over time, our hearts drift away from what truly matters.An “evil eye” doesn’t always look obviously sinful. Sometimes it simply looks like living consumed by self. It can show up in constantly wanting more, resenting someone else’s success or being unwilling to give generously because we are afraid of losing what we have.But Jesus calls His followers to have a “good eye” which changes the way we see everything. We stop seeing people as competition and start seeing them as people to love. We stop chasing temporary treasures and start investing in eternal things. We stop asking, “What can I get?” and start asking, “How can I serve?”When our focus is on Christ, our hearts become full of light. His love produces generosity, humility, compassion, and contentment in us. Instead of being consumed by the world, we begin reflecting Him to the world.
Read full postThe reason this devotional is so late is because we had a major issue with some of our software this morning which took my attention almost from the time I got out of bed.When I finally sat down to read today's scripture I had a chuckle because my morning has been full of anxiety.The word anxiety gets tossed around a lot. Some people didn't study for a test and now have anxiety as they wait for the grade and the consequences of not preparing. Other people might not be able to get out of bed this morning or function through out the day without medication to help control their anxiety. The same word is used but these are two completely different situations.I'm not hear to tell you to "pray the anxiety away" or anything like that. I just want you to read today's scripture and let the Holy Spirit talk to you like it did to me when I read it this morning after all of my work issues.
Read full postOn Monday we talked about the difference between a bad eye and a good eye and how the two different eyes affect how we see other people.Today we see a similar lesson in how we are to judge one another. Jesus is warning us not to act hypocritically by seeing someone else’s issues while ignoring the sin in our own lives. When we first recognize the sin in our own lives and are actively trying to repent and move away from it, we are able to look at someone else with empathy and humility so we can try to help them in a loving, merciful, and healthy way. Which is how we hope God looks at us and our sin right?When we look at the passage this way, “Do not judge so that you will not be judged. For in the way you judge, you will be judged; and by your standard of measure, it will be measured to you.” reads a little different, doesn’t it?
Read full postToday we’re going to dig deeper into Matthew 7:6. When Jesus talked about dogs and pigs (swine), the people listening in the 1st century would’ve immediately pictured something very different than we do today. According to Jewish law, dogs and pigs were considered unclean animals, pigs being the most unclean of animals, so Jews were not allowed to eat or handle them. If they did, they would not be allowed back into the community until they ritually cleansed themselves.These animals were also used as insults toward other people. Dogs referred to Gentiles and pigs referred to pagans, people who didn’t follow God’s law. Jewish people looked down on them because they believed they were living outside of God’s law.With this context we can now look at the verse with better understanding. When Jesus talks about “What is holy” and “your pearls” He’s talking about the good news that Christ had come to share about God fulfilling the law through Christ. This is something that we have been called to share with others, but not everyone is ready to hear about spiritual things like these when we meet them.So, this verse is a call to practice discernment, using our good eyes (remember Matthew 6:22-23), to recognize those who are ready to hear the good news as opposed to those that continue to reject and attack Jesus’ teaching.Lastly, have you ever felt convicted by something Pastor Nate, Kyle, your parents, or another leader said? Maybe you heard truth that exposed something in your heart. Did you respond humbly and let God work on you? Or did you get defensive, angry, or start criticizing them in your mind?If I’m honest, I’ve done both. And when I read this verse again, sometimes I realize I’ve been the one acting like the dogs and pigs Jesus talked about. That’s probably a good moment to stop, check the mirror, and ask God if maybe there’s still a log stuck in our own eye.
Read full postI am reading and listening to N.T. Wright a lot in my personal study time and today's devotional relies heavily on his writing.Sometimes we treat prayer like we’re bothering God, like our problems are too small or too selfish to bring to Him. But Jesus teaches the opposite. God is our Father. He isn’t a distant boss or an annoyed dictator. Good fathers want their children to talk to them honestly about what they need, what they’re feeling, and what’s going on in their lives.That doesn’t mean we should pray for selfish things just to make ourselves look better or feel more important. But a lot of us actually have the opposite problem: we don’t ask God enough. We hold back, thinking He’s too busy for us. Yet even with all the pain and chaos in the world, God still cares deeply about our daily needs too.Do you remember when you were smaller and you would ask your parents for something? Sometimes you received it and sometimes you didn't. You did not understand why you didn't get that thing, maybe you were too young for it, maybe it was too dangerous for you, maybe your parent's had something better in mine. In the same way, prayer is mysterious. Sometimes God says yes, sometimes no, and sometimes we don’t understand why. But prayer isn’t pointless. God invites us to be part of what He’s doing in the world, and somehow prayer matters in that process. So Jesus says to ask, seek, and knock, trusting that God won’t let us down.When we really understand God’s love as our Father, it changes the way we treat people too. Jesus sums it all up with the Golden Rule: treat others the way you want to be treated. When we know God’s love personally, we can reflect that same love to the people around us.
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