Enjoy Your New Time Zone

Being With Jesus:
John 8:20 (NLT)

The Jewish leaders tried to arrest Jesus; but no one laid a hand on him, because his time had not yet come. (John 7:30, 8:20)

Twice we are told in John 7 and 8 that the Jewish leaders, increasingly threatened by Jesus, tried to arrest him, but couldn’t. The reason they couldn’t? Because Jesus’ time had not yet come!

Several times in John, Jesus reveals his total awareness and complete submission to God’s timetable. In John 2:4, Jesus tells his mother, who is insisting that he perform the miracle of turning water into wine, that this is not the right time for him to “go public” with his ministry. In John 12:23 and 27, Jesus is revealing to his disciples that he will be crucified as a part of God’s redemptive plan for mankind. He is grappling with that reality as a man (his own suffering and death) and as deity (taking into himself the world’s sin), but at the end of the day, he is willing to submit to the beautiful but awful reality of dying on the cross—because the hour—the perfect time—has come. In John 13:1, Jesus reveals his perfect love to his disciples by washing their feet, knowing that the hour of his arrest and crucifixion was at hand. Speaking of which, in John 17:1, Jesus realizes the weightiness of God’s hour—the ultimate triumph of Divine life over death through the cross—is now upon him, so he offers his moving “high priestly” prayer that we have come to know and love.

We may think time marches on, unimpeded by fate, uncontrolled by human planning or Divine intervention, but Jesus had a different view of time. And why not, as the Word, the creative agent of the Holy Trinity, he had created time and gifted it to the Father as servant to his eternal plan. Jesus knew that time was in God’s wise and loving hands—ever day, ever hour and every split second!

A man named David had also come into that revelation. In Psalm 139, King David wrote, “Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed.” (Psalm 139:16) David knew and relied upon this immutable truth that Jesus was depending on, that God knew the exact number of days that David would live, and he would not die a day sooner nor live a day longer than what God had foreordained. And for David, nothing could change that—not betrayal, not war, not poverty, not disease—nothing. God alone held that power over David’s life and foreknew the hour of David’s death.

That’s why David and Jesus found this world a perfectly safe place. That’s why even in the midst of his crisis, they could calmly walk into the storm, courageously walk into battle, fearlessly face the angel of death—circumstances that would cause ordinary humans to lose heart—because they knew it was the Lord who was sustaining them.

When you understand that your life—your days, your hour, your time—is in the sovereign hand of God, you just think that way; you just live your life that way. Time—your time—is servant to the Master’s plan.

Arthur W. Pink wrote, “A consciousness of our powerlessness should cast us upon Him who has all power. Here then is where a vision and view of God’s sovereignty helps, for it reveals His sufficiency and shows us our insufficiency.”

Yes, God is sovereign, and he had infinitely large hands. And like Jesus and David, your life is there in his hands too. You know that…or maybe you don’t. But even if you don’t, that truth remains firm, and because of the saving faith that you have expressed in Jesus Christ, your address has permanently changed to God’s hands.

It’s high time you starting enjoying your new time zone.

“As truly as God by His power once created, so truly by that same power must God every moment maintain.” (Andrew Murray)

Getting To Know Jesus: Memorize Psalm 139:16. Every day this week, when you are tempted to worry over your life, quote that verse to your worries.

Cave Time

Read I Samuel 21:1-24:22

Cave Time

David left Gath and escaped to the cave of Adullam. When his brothers and
his father’s household heard about it, they went down to him there.
I Samuel 22:1

Go Deep: If you are like me, you want to live in the never-ending summer of God’s blessing—the sunshine of his grace—where you’ll flourish and enjoy a fruitful life. But to get from here to that land of spiritual fruitfulness, you will have to first endure some “cave-time”.

The cave is core curriculum in the school of spirituality. Call it whatever you want: the pit (Joseph’s “cave”), the desert (Moses’ “cave”), the prison (Paul’s “cave”), the wilderness (Jesus’ “cave”), the cave is to Christians what Camp Pendleton is to marines:  Boot camp!  It’s basic training for believers. Every believer gets cave-time!

The cave is the place of testing. It’s the blast furnace for moral fiber—where your mettle gets tested! Put a person in the cave of distress, discouragement, doubt or delayed hopes and true character is revealed.  The cave always reveals just how much work God still has to do to get you ready for great things.  In the cave of Adullam, God revealed to David that his good looks, musical skill and winsome personality weren’t enough for the kind of king Israel needed. Saul had that—looks, skill, charisma—but he didn’t have the kind of depth with God that the leader of a God’s people needed. David needed more of God; the testing of the cave clearly revealed that.

The cave is also a place of learning.  David recognized that he needed “cave time” so he could  “learn what God will do for me.” (I Samuel 22:3)  In the cave, David learned what it meant to fully depend on God, because God stripped him of all his misplaced dependencies: his position (David went from fair haired boy to fugitive overnight), his friends (David was separated from his best friend, Jonathon), his spiritual mentor (Samuel died while David was in the cave) and even his dignity (he actually had to feign insanity to escape the Philistines).  These were all good things in David’s life, yet God knew that they were a barrier to the great things he had in store for David. So God removed them.

The cave was perhaps the most frustrating period in David’s life—but in hindsight, it turned out to be the most fruitful. That’s because the cave is also the place of forging. As an unknown poet said, the cave is where you are, “pressed into knowing no helper but God.” And that’s exactly what happened to David in the cave of Adullam.  Through the discipline of that place, David came into a profound experience with God, and that is the one thing David would need to be a great king.

That’s what God does in the cave.  And by the way, God does some of his best work when we are experiencing “cave time”.  It was there in the cave of Adullam that David wrote three of his most moving psalms—Psalms 34, 57 & 142.

Psalm 142 shows us that David learned to talk openly and honestly with God—and that God could handle David’s raw emotion.  David got brutally honest with God in the cave, and it was great therapy: “I cry aloud to the Lord…I pour out my complaint before him; before him I tell my trouble.” (Psalm 142:1-2)

Psalm 52 shows us that David learned to toughen up in the cave, because God was training him how to “king it!” That’s why David said of his “cave time” experience, “I cry out to God, who fulfills his purpose for me.” (Psalm 57:2)

Finally, Psalm 34 shows us that David learned to look for God in the cave.  It was there David found that God was his all-in-all, and out of experience he penned Psalm 34:18, “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”

So here’s the deal: If you are in a cave right now, I want to remind you of some good news:  You are not alone—God is with you.  And furthermore, God understands all about caves.  He’s been there! You see, the son of David, Jesus, was stripped of everything, too.  He lost his position as a spiritual leader. His own family criticized him. His friends ran away. He lost the adoration of the cheering crowds.  He suffered the mockery of a trial and the humiliation of a cross. And when he died, they buried his lifeless body in a cave, and it looked like it was over!

But God does his best work in caves, because it’s where he resurrects dead stuff! That cave was where a dead Messiah became a Risen Savior…and your cave is where your dead dreams, or maybe your dead ministry, or perhaps your dead career or even your dead marriage will take on resurrection life.

Your cave may be very deep and dark and devastating to you, but here’s the thing you need to know: God works in caves!  So stay patient, pliable and trusting—your resurrection is coming!

Just Saying… What a great reminder, that, as Spurgeon said, “Many men owe the grandeur of their lives to their tremendous difficulties.”  Perhaps it would be a good idea right now to thank God in advance for the grandeur that he is forging from your “cave time”!

Not One Day Sooner

Read Acts 27

“Do not be afraid, Paul; you must be brought before Caesar; and
indeed God has granted you all those who sail with you.”
(Acts 27:24)

Food For Thought… Paul was in a pickle—that was not usual for Paul. Because of his bold and uncompromising witness to faith in Christ, he had at times found himself in the middle of rioting crowds, in front of hostile courts, bound hand and foot in a stockade, and on the receiving end of a good old fashion stoning, just to name a few.

Now he was traveling by ship to Rome to stand trial before Caesar and make his case for Christianity. Due to some unfavorable winds, the going was slow and the season changed, and the ship got caught in a hurricane. Day-after-day the ship and its cargo, both human and goods, were at the mercy of this monster storm, and it became increasingly apparent that the ship was going to go down and they all were going to die.

Then we have these incredible words that the angel of the Lord spoke to Paul in the night: “Do not be afraid, Paul; you must be brought before Caesar; and indeed God has granted you all those who sail with you.”

Paul’s response was to take God at his word and encourage the fear stricken passengers, “Therefore take heart, men, for I believe God that it will be just as it was told me. However, we must run aground on a certain island.” (Acts 27:25-26)

Paul understood something that should give you and me great comfort and strength. He knew that he would not die a day sooner, nor live a day longer for that matter, until he had fulfilled God’s purpose for his life. God’s purpose was for Paul to preach the Gospel in Rome before the court of Caesar. A little hurricane was not going to prevent that!

God has a purpose for our lives, too, and nothing, except our willful rejection of his plan, will take us off course from the fulfillment of his Divine purpose for our lives. Not sickness, accidents, financial hardship, hostility, failure, rejection—not even death.

David wrote in Psalm 139:16, “Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed.” What that means is that God knows very well every one of your days even before they come to pass. He knows exactly how many you will have, and what each one will contain. He is the One in charge of you.

Take courage, my friend. Your life is in God’s hands. Nothing can happen to you except by permission of God. And the day of your death will not come a day sooner than your gracious Father will allow, and that will not be until his purpose for you in this life has been completed.

Then a new purpose will begin—and this time, it will never end!

Prayer… Father, how comforting to know that every one of my days has been planned out and ordained by you—even the one’s yet ahead. You know how many days have been allotted to me, and I will not die a day sooner than by what your plan allows. I will therefore live my days to the fullest and strive to fulfill your purposes in each one.

One More Thing… “We are never more safe, never have more reason to expect the Lord’s help, than when we are most sensible that we can do nothing without Him.” —John Newton