Imagine What Could Happen

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Luke6
Meditation:
Luke 6:31

“And just as you want men to do to you, you also do to them likewise.”

Shift Your Focus… It has been called “The Golden Rule.”  It is the ethic of reciprocity, the basis of all human rights.  You can find its roots in the Old Testament (Leviticus 19:18 & 34) and it appears in various forms in practically every culture and religion known to man.

The Golden Rule is so universally embraced, at least in theory, because it originated with God.

So what if we actually began to live our lives by that ethic?  Can you imagine how life on Planet Earth might change if enough of us got together and bound ourselves to this rule for living?  Think of how your own private world would drastically improve if you treated everyone as you would want them to treat you!

Re-read verses 28-43 and you will get a glimpse of the kind of things that would happen:

  • You would encourage and edify even those who irritate you
  • You would pray for those who hurt you
  • You would offer reconciliation to those who have injured you
  • You would do good to those who have done bad
  • You would be generous with everyone—friend, foe, and those in need
  • You would criticize others less and work on you more
  • You would be kind even to those who are ungrateful and evil
  • You would prove yourself to be a true child of the Most High in word and in deed

What would happen if you did that?  The world would be a much better place, that’s what!

Sounds like a good plan to me!  How about you?

“Kindness is in our power, even when fondness is not.”  ~Samuel Johnson

Prayer… Lord, it is so easy, especially with this rule for life, to be a hearer of the word only, and not a doer. Help me, O God, to fully live out The Golden Rule in my every waking moment.

Giving Faith Permission To Rule Feelings

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Luke 5
Meditation:
Luke 5:4-5

When Jesus had stopped speaking, He said to Simon, “Launch out into the deep and let down your nets for a catch.” But Simon answered and said to Him, “Master, we have toiled all night and caught nothing; nevertheless at Your word I will let down the net.

Shift Your Focus… From the very moment Jesus first called him to follow, Peter demonstrated what it meant to be a true disciple. In so doing, the response of this very first disciple established the benchmarks for would-be disciples in every age.

To begin with, Peter exhibited a fair amount of holy discontent with his current experience. Peter could have rejected Jesus’ command, and we would understand. He had already worked hard the previous night. He had tried what Jesus was suggesting, with no results. He had “been there, done that.”

But Peter wasn’t satisfied. Despite his best efforts, his past experience had left him empty. The old way hadn’t worked. To keep doing the same thing yet expect different results was pure insanity. Peter wanted more, so he was willing to let go of the past and risk the adventure of something new in order to follow Jesus.

As Peter’s experience demonstrated, both literally and figuratively, you cannot set sail for new horizons of faith and stay tethered to the shore of what you know. Holy discontent calls you to let go, and set sail!

On top of holy discontent, Peter was quick to subjugate his feelings to his faith. He was tired. His muscles ached from a night of tossing and dragging those heavy fishing nets. His fingers had been worked to the bone as he picked out the weeds, untangled the tangles and mended the rips that had been caused by snagging rocks.

Making it even worse, all Peter’s effort had resulted in nothing to show for it. He just wanted to get to the local pub, unwind with his buddies before heading home to crash for the night, where he would catch a few winks, get up early the next day and go through the same routine yet again.

Peter had neither the physical nor emotional strength for another fishing expedition. Yet there was just something about this amazing man named Jesus who had the audacity to ask Peter to do what he had already been doing that caused his faith to rise. And in that moment, Peter made a life-altering decision to grab his “want-er by his will-er” and do what Jesus had commanded.

True discipleship demands that you give your faith the authority to rule your feelings.

That’s what Peter did. He simply obeyed. That’s the bottom line of authentic discipleship. Peter was willing to take Jesus at his word and just do it. Without argument or delay, Peter merged belief with behavior; he took action.

And the result was a miraculous catch. Suddenly where there had been emptiness and barrenness, there was fullness and fruitfulness—the reward of obedience.

And that’s what Jesus is asking of us today. We must allow the Spirit of God to foment a holy discontent with the emptiness and barrenness of our lives. We must take our feelings and our emotions and enslave them to whatever faith is requiring of us. And then we must simply, purely, quickly and completely obey. That is true discipleship.

If we will just do that, a miraculous provision of holy contentment will be ours!

“Beware of reasoning about God’s Word – obey It.”  ~Oswald Chambers

Prayer… Lord, full obedience, not out of fear, but out of love, is what I will offer you today—and every day for the rest of eternity.

How To Get Noticed

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Luke 4
Meditation:
Luke 4:14

Then Jesus returned in the power of the Spirit to Galilee, and news of Him went out through all the surrounding region.

Shift Your Focus… It seems that the god of our age is fame. People would do just about anything for their fifteen minutes of it. Just watch one of the fifty reality shows that you can now choose from on any given night, or even the evening news, and you will see a half dozen goofballs pushing their mugs into the camera or offering their mindless drivel on a talk show just to get their shot at being in the spotlight. And, unfortunately, we have a mindless media that is all too happy to oblige these fame seekers.

People want to be famous, but for all the wrong reasons. Fame itself isn’t bad, but there is a better way to achieve it. Just notice how Jesus attained fame in Luke 4.

The setting for this chapter is the launching of Jesus’ public ministry. He has been baptized in the Jordan—and in the Spirit (Luke 3:21-22), and he has been tempted by the devil (Luke 4:1-13).

Now he launches his ministry as Israel’s Messiah in the power of the Spirit (Luke 4:14) by going into their synagogues to teach the Word, heal the sick, and deliver those oppressed by demonic spirits. And we are told that everywhere he goes people are simply and utterly amazed by him:

“News about him spread through the whole countryside.” (Verse 14)

“He taught in their synagogues, and everyone praised him.” (Verse 15)

“All spoke well of him and were amazed at the gracious words that came from his lips.” (Verse 22)

“They were amazed at his teaching, because his message had authority.” (Verse 32)

“All the people were amazed and said to each other, ‘What is this teaching? With authority and power he gives orders to evil spirits and they come out!’” (Verse 36)

“And the news about him spread throughout the surrounding area.” (Verse 37)

How did Jesus become famous? He was full of the Spirit’s power and overflowing with God’s grace! That is probably not what you were expecting, but it is the best way to attain the kind of fame that really counts. Allow the Spirit to empower you and then just go about your day exuding the grace of God in every circumstance.

We live in such a graceless world that when one of God’s servants spreads a little Divine grace around, people notice.

Do that enough, and people will begin to talk about you too! 

“Grace is but Glory begun, and Glory is but Grace perfected.”  ~Jonathan Edwards

Prayer… Lord, if fame ever comes my way, may it be because I am full of your Spirit and overflowing with your grace.

Jesus The Baptist

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Luke 3
Meditation:
Luke 3:16

John answered, saying to all, “I indeed baptize you with water; but One mightier than I is coming, whose sandal strap I am not worthy to loose. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.

Shift Your Focus… John the Baptist launched his ministry as the forerunner to the Messiah with preaching the likes of which people had never heard before.  His messages were so confrontational and penetrating that the crowds were convicted to the core of their being. People from every dimension of Jewish society began to repent and return to the God of Israel.  Israel was in the midst of a great revival.

This spiritual awakening was so powerful that people began to wonder if John himself was the long-awaited Messiah.  But John quickly put those rumors to rest by letting them know that his ministry was simply to lead people to repentance in preparation for the Messiah.  It would be the Messiah’s ministry that would empower them with the very Spirit of God.

The Message version of Luke’s account offers this rendition:

“I’m baptizing you here in the river. The main character in this drama, to whom I’m a mere stagehand, will ignite the kingdom life, a fire, the Holy Spirit within you, changing you from the inside out. He’s going to clean house—make a clean sweep of your lives. He’ll place everything true in its proper place before God; everything false he’ll put out with the trash to be burned.”

The ministry of the Messiah was not simply to announce and launch the Kingdom of God on Planet Earth, it was to so immerse his followers in the Holy Spirit that they themselves would embody the words and carry out the works of Jesus, and as the King’s agents, extend his Kingdom “to the uttermost parts of the earth.” (Acts 1:8)

Now the real question for those of us reading these words today is this:  Is the baptism with the Holy Spirit and fire something you just read about historically, or is it an experience that is personal and fresh in your life today?

The truth is, despite all the misgivings and discomfort modern Christians may have about this baptism with the Holy Spirit, we cannot simply erase this important dimension of Christ’s ministry from the pages of Scripture.  To paraphrase D.L. Moody, to remove the work of the Holy Spirit from the Bible is like using a sundial by moonlight.

Jesus is still the baptizer with the Holy Spirit.  The Holy Spirit is still the one who empowers believers to do words and works of Jesus.

And Paul’s question to the Ephesians in Acts 19:2 is as critically important for you today as it was for them nearly 2,000:  “Have you received the Holy Ghost since you believed?”

If you haven’t, perhaps you should spend some time with the Great Baptizer and ask him for the Holy Spirit and fire.  Jesus himself has said in John 14:16-17 and in Luke 11:13,

“I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever—the Spirit of truth … how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”

I think Someone is waiting to be asked!

“If Christians are forbidden to enjoy the wine of the Spirit they will turn to the wine of the flesh…Christ died for our hearts and the Holy Spirit wants to come and satisfy them.”  ~A.W. Tozer

Prayer… Lord, give me a fresh baptism of the Spirit and fire.  Cleanse me and empower me so that I can embody your words and carry out your works in my world.

Ponder That!

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Luke 2
Meditation:
Luke 2:19

“But Mary kept all these things and pondered them in her heart.”

Shift Your Focus… That statement has always intrigued me, and I am not exactly sure what it means. It is stated again at the end of the chapter in verse 51 as Luke gives us a glimpse into the life of Jesus as a growing boy at about the age of 12.

We don’t know a great deal about Jesus’ early life beyond what we read here, but to say the least, it must have been quite interesting for Mary to be the mother of God. I think it is safe to say that, on the one hand, Jesus was like any other baby who needed to be changed, cried when he was hungry, developed a cute little personality as the months passed by, and became an inquisitive little boy.

On the other hand, he was the Son of God. Angels attended his birth, shepherds came to worship him, wise men from afar brought him expenses gifts, prophets prophesied over him during the customary temple ceremonies, and he carried on a spirited dialogue with the intelligentsia of his day during a family visit to the temple.

I am sure that most mothers and fathers would have bragged incessantly and shamelessly to the neighbors about their son’s many outstanding qualities and unusual experiences. But not Mary; she simply treasured all these things that were said about Jesus and all the things that Jesus did as he grew, and pondered them in her heart. In other words, she gave them a lot of thought; she kept them between herself and her Lord.

That is not such not a bad idea, wouldn’t you say? We probably ought to do that a lot more often. Rather than blurting out everything that happens to you or happens in you, perhaps you ought to just meditate on those experiences and keep them between the Lord and you.

When someone comes to you with a “word from the Lord”; when you have a dream that seems to have an unusual spiritual dimension to it; when you have an extraordinary encounter with God, and you are not quite sure how to respond to these experiences, why not just treasure them and ponder them in your heart. Keep them between you and your Lord and just watch over time to see how God uses them.

I have a feeling that this, in part, is how we grow deeper in our spiritual lives. Likewise, I would not be too surprised to find out that when we give in to our need to blurt out all of these holy things to anyone within earshot, we have spent the entire capital of that experience, and it will go no further than that.

Some of the things that may happen in your life this week will be of a truly rich nature. Ask God for the wisdom to discern if that experience is of the kind that should simply be treasured and pondered in your heart.

“How pleasant, how delightful, to sit alone and in silence, to converse with God, and so to enjoy the only chief good, in whom all good things are found!” ~Thomas A` Kempis

Prayer… Lord, teach me to understand the difference between the things that need to be shared and those experiences that are so rich that they are meant only to be shared between you and me.

The Benedictus

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Luke 1
Meditation:
Luke 1:67-68

Zechariah was filled with the Holy Spirit and prophesied: “Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel, because he has come and has redeemed his people..”

Shift Your Focus… Over the years the church has given Zechariah’s song the title, “The Benedictus,” or The Blessing. The lyrics of this brief song, which we read in verses 67-79, were sung by one of the proudest and oldest first time fathers of all time. But more than being just a happy little diddy from a happy old daddy, Zechariah verbalizes two timeless and timely truths about God’s character that you and I probably need to hear again today.

First, we are reminded that God never breaks a promise! John’s birth was living proof of God’s faithfulness. In His song, Zechariah belts out to all who will listen, “Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel, because he has come and has redeemed his people.” (v. 68)

God keeps his promises—every one of them. He can’t help himself; it is just his nature. He had promised through the prophets a redeemer for Israel hundreds of year before, and 400 silent years had passed since the last prophet Malachi had uttered the oracles of God until the time the angel Gabriel revealed God’s plan to Zechariah. Though God’s promise had been ever so slow in coming, it was nonetheless fulfilled.

Zechariah’s song reminds us that even though God may be slow, he is never late!

Second, God never forgets. “Zechariah”’s name meant “God remembers”. And in his song Zechariah exploded with the joyful realization that God does remember: “God has remembered his oath…” (vv. 72-73)

Zechariah must have been discouraged. He was a priest of a nation that had turned its back on God. He and Elizabeth, whose name meant “the promise of God,” had been faithful to God all their lives—they lived up to the meaning of their names. Yet God had not blessed them with a son, and wayward Israel continued to be oppressed by its pagan enemies.

But Zechariah clung to this truth: Our Creator remembers! God knows who we are, where we are and what we need. He remembers us. He remembers his promises, and God graciously acts at the proper time.

Isaiah 49:15-16 reminds us, “Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you! See, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands; your walls are ever before me.”

God can’t forget!

You may remember the name of Tom Sutherland. He was taken hostage by radicals in the Middle East and held in captivity for four years in the mid 1980’s, mostly in solitary confinement. He existed in deep darkness during that long ordeal.

Sometimes he could hear his captor’s radio when they tuned it to the BBC, and Tom would listen intently hoping and praying to hear his name mentioned on a newscast. But he never heard it, so he figured that people back home didn’t even know he was alive, much less imprisoned.

Finally, Tom was released. He flew back to the US and landed in San Francisco, and he was amazed as he got off the plane to see a huge crowd, people waving signs, cameras, reporters, and TV lights. He turned to his wife and said, “There must have been a famous person on this plane with us. See if you can spot them.”

She said, “Tom, they’re all here for you!” At that, Tom broke down and cried like a baby.

After he regained his composure, he said, “I thought everybody had forgotten me…I felt abandoned…I didn’t think anybody cared. Thank God I was wrong.”

If you are reading these words today and feeling a little forgotten by God, thank God you’re wrong! Zechariah reminds you from first hand experience through his song that God remembers you and will fulfill every single one of his promises to you at the proper time!

So be faithful!

“God often gives in one brief moment that which He has for a long time denied.”  ~Thomas A` Kempis 

Prayer… Thank you Lord for your unfailing faithfulness.  You remember your promises to me, and you will fulfill them all.  I will rejoice in you this day and give my life faithfully back to you.

The Fragrance of Forgiveness

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: Philemon 1
Meditation:
Philemon 1:10,16

“I appeal to you, Philemon, to show kindness to my child, Onesimus…He is no longer your slave, he is your brother.”

Shift Your Focus… The Apostle Paul wrote this short little letter while under arrest in Rome. Rather than being one of his typical doctrinal treatises, this one is a personal letter. It is to a friend from the city of Colosse, written about the same time Paul wrote a profound doctrinal epistle to the church in that city, the book of Colossians.

Paul’s friend is Philemon, who hosted the church in his home, along with his wife Apphia and their son, Archippus. The letter concerns Philemon’s slave, Onesimus, who apparently stole from his master, which we learn about in verse 18—and then fled to Rome, hoping to blend in with the hundreds of thousands of people who lived there.

But, we see in verse 15, that in the providence of God, Onesimus, the slave of Philemon, met Paul, the slave of Christ, who introduced him to the real Master, Jesus. And this one-time slave became a brother-in-Christ—a spiritual brother to Paul, and as Paul points out in verse 16, a “dear brother” to the man who is rightfully his master.

Now that Onesimus has made things right with God, Paul, as we see in verse 12, is sending him back to Colosse, along with this letter, to make things right with Philemon.

Which brings up an application here that, though not the point of this letter, is very important: We cannot earn salvation, but sometimes the authenticity of our salvation experience requires us to make restitution to those we’ve offended—sometimes!

Sometimes that’s not possible—but when it is, God requires us to do our best to make the things right that we’ve done wrong.

That’s why Paul is sending this new convert, Onesimus, back to his master, Philemon.

That’s a spiritual principle that too often gets ignored in this age of “easy believism” and “cheap grace.” But those who treat their Christian faith that way are sadly mistaken!

Paul isn’t letting Onesimus off the hook at Philemon’s expense. There is a price to be paid…and someone’s got to pay it. Legally, Onesimus should pay. Paul hopes Philemon will pay it—not that he has to legally, but spiritually he should. But if he won’t, Paul is willing to make restitution happen at his own expense (verse 18).

So what Paul is asking Philemon to do is huge!

And what he is asking Onesimus to do is huge as well. The death penalty for runaway slaves was not off the table here. Historically, we know that slaves were often crucified as punishment and as a deterrent to other slaves thinking about their freedom. At the very least, the penalty could be a long imprisonment or perhaps physical punishment. When a runaway slave was caught, sometimes an “F” was branded into his forehead—the Latin, “fugitives”, or fugitive. Onesimus had committed by Roman law a felony and had become a fugitive from justice.

I would suggest that here in Philemon—and this is the main thrust of this letter—that Paul reinterprets the “F” to stand for something else: Rather than “fugitives” it stands for “forgiveness.”

That’s the message of Philemon—forgiveness.

What Paul is saying to Philemon, and to you and me, is that if we want to be truly authentic in our faith, if we want to truly be like Jesus, then we’ll have to readily extend forgiveness to those who’ve offended us. Forgiveness is the first step on the pathway to Christ-likeness.

Of all of the human qualities that make us in any sense like God, none is more divine than forgiveness. Why? Precisely because God is a God of forgiveness. In fact, in Exodus 34:6-7, God identifies himself in that way:

“And He passed in front of Moses, proclaiming, “The LORD, the LORD, the compassionate and gracious God, slow to anger, abounding in love and faithfulness, maintaining love to thousands, and forgiving wickedness, rebellion and sin.”

Moses says to God, “What’s your name?” And God says, “my name is ‘the God of forgiveness.’ That’s who I am.”

God doesn’t forgive grudgingly—just to make himself appear more divine. It is in his nature to forgive! He looks for opportunities to forgive. Micah 7:18 says, “Who is a God like you, who pardons sin and forgives transgressions…? You do not stay angry forever, but delight to show mercy.”

God is a forgiving God and you are to be forgiving person. That’s basic Christianity. You’re never more Christ-like than when you forgive.

Moreover, forgiveness, really, is an indication and an authentication of your faith. The Puritan preacher Thomas Watson wrote, “We need not climb up into heaven to see whether our sins are forgiven. Let us look into our hearts and see if we can forgive others. If we can, we need not doubt that God has forgiven us.”

In Matthew 5:44-45, Jesus said, “Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may become the children of your Father in heaven.” (TEV)

That’s how you enter into Christ-likeness: Practice forgiving! I’m never more like God than when I forgive. Why? Because God is never more like God than when he forgives.

Do you really want to be like Christ? Ephesians 4:32 says, “Forgive one another as quickly and thoroughly as God in Christ forgave you.” That means you treat the person who has hurt you just like you hope God will treat you…just as you would want to be treated by those you’ve hurt. Do it quickly, freely, completely!

Forgiveness is an act of sheer obedience. Notice what Paul says at the end of his appeal in verse 21, “Confident of your obedience, I write to you, knowing that you will do even more than I ask.”

I’ll be the first to admit, forgiveness is probably the toughest of all Christian virtues. It means letting go of what is rightfully yours—justice! When you forgive, in reality, it’s you—the one who is owed, who pays the price of forgiveness in full.

But isn’t that what God did for us? In Christ, the debt was paid for us. This is what theologians call the doctrine of imputation… “to put it on someone else’s account.” When Jesus died on the cross, my sins were put on his account. He was treated the way I should have been treated.

But even more, not only was he my substitute, his guiltlessness became mine. He took my guilt and exchanged it for his righteousness. He said to the Judge, “He no longer owes the debt—I paid it in full. Receive him as you would receive me. He’s family now!”

That’s what the letter of Philemon is reminding us of, that Christ-likeness requires no less of us than what Jesus has done for us!

Missionary Stan Mooneyham tells of walking along a trail in East Africa when he became aware of a delightful odor that filled the air. He looked up in the trees and around at the bushes trying to find what is was.

His African friends told him to look down at the small blue flower growing along the path. Each time they crushed the tiny blossoms under their feet, its sweet perfume was released into the air.

They said, “We call it the forgiveness flower.”

The forgiveness flower doesn’t wait until we ask forgiveness for crushing it. It doesn’t wait for an apology or restitution; it merely lives up to its name and forgives—freely, fully, richly.

Forgiveness is the fragrance of the flower that’s left on the heel of the shoe that crushed it.

I hope you give off that fragrance today!

“He who cannot forgive others destroys the bridge over which he himself must pass.” ~George Herbert

Prayer… Dear Father, you have freely, unconditionally and completely forgiven me. Now give me the grace to forgive, just as in Christ, you have forgiven me.?