Whistle While You Work

Read Ephesians 6:1-24

“Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord,
not men, because you know that the Lord will reward everyone
for whatever good he does, whether he is slave or free.”
(Ephesians 6:7-8)

Thoughts… What is your attitude toward work? What does your attitude tell your co-workers, your supervisor, or if you are a boss, your employees about you? Do you go about your job as if Jesus were your boss or your customer?

If who we are as God’s chosen people is to show up in our work—and it should—then there are some important qualities that ought to characterize how we go about our jobs. Paul speaks to 4 of these qualities.

The very first thing that must characterize you is that you’ve got to consistently demonstrate right actions in your work. Verse 5 says, “Slaves, obey your earthly masters…

Some people have assumed the Bible is implicitly affirming slavery here. Not true! The Bible speaks in Exodus 21:16 against the kidnapping of anyone for the purpose of making them a slave. The Euro-American slave trade, which is such a moral blight on our national fabric, clearly violated Scripture.

Now the Bible doesn’t explicitly condemn slavery—or any other social malady—because it speaks primarily to the reformation of the heart. The Bible isn’t a book about the reformation of social institutions. But you get a heart reformed and you’ll see a society reformed. Most of the great reforms, including the abolition of slavery, began with spiritual awakening in the hearts of individual men and women.

The operative word here in this verse is obey. Grammatically, it’s in the present tense, indicating uninterrupted action. What’s the point? Obedience isn’t only to occur when the desire is there or when an employer is fair, generous and reasonable. Believers are to obey their earthly masters in everything and at all times, except when they’re told to do something that would violate God’s higher law.

When Paul wrote these words, one-third of the Roman Empire was enslaved. It was a social and economic way of life. There were doctors, lawyers, teachers and musicians who were slaves. But most were menial laborers who were nothing more than human tools. They had no standing or rights.

As the Gospel reached many of these slaves, they began to question if they needed to be subject to a cruel, unfair earthly master now that they had been freed by Christ and were submitted to God.

Paul’s answer was that through the message of grace being lived out through these slaves, the pure love of God would begin to transform Roman society…and it ultimately did. Authentic Christianity killed slavery with love, respect, honor and dignity. In the upside-down logic of God’s kingdom, obedience always rules the day!

So whether the boss is kind or cruel, believer or pagan, we are to be obedient because it’s God’s will. When you submit to your boss’ authority, it’s a literal and powerful witness of your submission to a higher authority and it releases God’s power to work on your behalf.

Second, you’ve got to go beyond right actions and display a right attitude in your work. Verse 5 continues by challenging us to do our work, “…with respect and fear, and sincerity of heart…”

It’s one thing to grit our teeth and obey. God wants it to come from the heart. The idea of fear is not of cowering fright and intimidation, but the honor for the position, if not the person you work for.

The attitude of sincerity refers to genuineness and thoroughness. Attitude shows up in reverence, authenticity and diligence.

Third, you are work with the right motives. The last part of verse 5 says, “Just as you would obey Christ.” Verses 7-8 go on to say, “Serve wholeheartedly, as if you were serving the Lord, not men, because you know that the Lord will reward everyone for whatever good he does, whether he is slave or free.”

What should motivate your work? In truth, you are serving the Lord. You don’t work for Schwab or Chevron or McDonalds…you work for Jesus.

Nadia Boulanger, a pianist and teacher told the story of an old woman who cleaned her floors. The lady, Madame Duval, was 80 years old. One day she heard a knock at her door and it was Duval: “Mademoiselle, I know you don’t like to be disturbed, but the floor, come and see it; it shines!

Boulanger wrote, “In my mind, [the great violinist, Igor] Stravinsky and Madame Duval will appear before the Lord for the same reason. Each had done what he does with all his consciousness. When I said this to Stravinsky, who knew Madame Duval, he said, ‘How you flatter me, for when I do something, I have something to gain. But she, she has only the work to be well done.’”

What motivates you? Pay? Recognition? Or love, gratitude and obedience to Christ?

Fourth, you are to display right character in your work. Verse 6 tells us, “Obey them not only to win their favor when their eye is on you, but like slaves of Christ, doing the will of God from your heart.”

Someone has said character is who you are in the dark. Integrity is who you are when no one’s looking.

Howard A. Stein wrote in Reader’s Digest of a retired friend who became interested in the construction of an addition to a shopping mall. Everyday he’d watch its progress, and he was especially impressed by the conscientious operator of a large machine.

One day the man had a chance to tell this equipment operator how much he’d enjoyed watching his scrupulous work. The operator was astonished: “You’re mean to tell me you’re not the supervisor?”

Character! Who are you when no one’s watching?

If you’ve ever gone through a tollbooth, you know that your relationship to the person in the booth isn’t the most intimate you’ll ever have. It’s a non-encounter: You hand over some money; you might get change; you drive off. You can go through every one of the booths on the Bay Bridge a thousand times, and never have an exchange worth remembering with anybody.

Dr. Charles Garfield wrote about an encounter that was memorable:

Late one morning, headed for lunch in San Francisco, I drove toward one of the booths, and I heard loud music. It sounded like a party, or a Michael Jackson concert. I looked around. No other cars had their windows open… I looked at the tollbooth. Inside it, the man was dancing. “What are you doing?” I asked.

“I’m having a party,” he said.

“What about the rest of these people?” I looked over at other booths; nothing moving there.

“They’re not invited.”

I had a dozen other questions for him, but somebody in a big hurry to get somewhere started punching his horn behind me and I drove off. But I made a note to myself: Find this guy again. There’s something in his eye that says there’s magic in his tollbooth.

Months later I did find him again, still with the loud music, still having a party. Again I asked, “What are you doing?”

He said, “I remember you from the last time. I’m still dancing. I’m having the same party.”

I said, “Look. What about the rest of the people…”

He said. “Stop. What do those look like to you?” He pointed down the row of tollbooths.

“They look like … tollbooths.”

“Nooooo imagination!”

I said, “Okay, I give up. What do they look like to you?”

He said, “Vertical coffins.”

“What are you talking about?”

“I can prove it. At 8:30 every morning, live people get in. Then they die for eight hours. At 4:30, like Lazarus from the dead, they remerge and go home. For eight hours, brain is on hold, dead on the job. Going through the motions.”

I was amazed. This guy had developed a philosophy… about his job. I couldn’t help asking the next question: “Why is it different for you? You’re having a good time.”

He looked at me. “I knew you were going to ask that. I’m going to be a dancer someday.” He pointed to the administration building. “My bosses are in there, and they’re paying for my training.”

Sixteen people dead on the job, and the 17th, in precisely the same situation, figures out a way to live. That man was having a party where you and I wouldn’t last 3 days.

He and I did have lunch later, and he said, “I don’t understand why anybody would think my job is boring. I have a corner office, glass on all sides. I can see the Golden Gate, San Francisco, the Berkeley hills; half the Western world vacations here … and I just stroll in every day and practice dancing.”

Where you work, you’re either dead on the job or your dancing for Jesus. What is it for you?

Prayer… Lord, I pray that the people I work with will clearly see you in the way that I work today…and for the rest of my life.

One More Thing… “There is always the danger that we may just do the work for the sake of the work. This is where the respect and the love and the devotion come in—that we do it to God, to Christ, and that’s why we try to do it as beautifully as possible.” —Mother Teresa

Yield!

Read Ephesians 5:1-33

“Don’t be drunk with wine, because that will ruin your life.
Instead, let the Holy Spirit fill and control you.” (Ephesians 5:18

Thoughts… “Be filled with the Spirit.” Between Ephesians 4:30 and 5:18, Paul details some of the practical ways that will either grieve or please the Spirit; behaviors that either deny him access or give him greater access to our lives.

It is God’s deep desire for us as Christ-followers that we live as Spirit-filled people. One of the great promises Jesus made to his disciples for the reason he was leaving them and going back to heaven after his resurrection was that he would give us the Father’s gift: the Holy Spirit.

It was and is God’s plan that we literally allow him to dwell in us by his Spirit. For the believer, the Spirit-filled life is not an option, it’s a divine expectation. Spirit-filled living is a Christian essential.

When Paul says, “Don’t get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery (meaningless, valueless, even self-destructive living)…instead be filled with the Spirit,” he was speaking to believers who’d come out of the pagan culture of Ephesus.

In their pagan worship and ritual, one of their idols was Baccus, the god of wine and drunken orgies. And they believed that to commune with their god and be led by him they had to get drunk. In their drunken stupor, they believed they could know his will and how best to serve him. And the sick bi-product was sexual immorality with cult prostitutes.

Just as depending on wine was a destructive counterfeit to Spirit-filled living in Paul’s day, so we need to be careful in our culture today where alcohol is the drink of choice to help people relax, feel confident, or take away the pain of whatever ails them, and make them feel good, that we don’t buy into that deceptive line.

I am not preaching against drinking, because I don’t believe the Scriptures explicitly forbid it. But unfortunately, there are a lot of Christians today whose drinking habits are no different from unbelievers. The truth is, it is still God’s desire that we depend on being filled with his Spirit to make us confident, competent and joyful rather than a drink, or a relationship or position or a possession, for that matter.

That’s what Paul is pointing out in this chapter: By being controlled by his Spirit, not only do you not have to depend on wine to feel good, as we see in verse 18, but verse 3 says you don’t have to depend sexual gratification apart from marriage, or greedily grab for anything other than Jesus to gratify yourself.

And verse 4 says you don’t have to gain attention by trying to be funny with foul-mouthed language and crude jokes. Usually someone with a foul-mouth is trying to impress you and gain ?your respect and get you to laugh…because they’re insecure and don’t know how to carry on a normal conversation that you’d expect in a healthy relationship.

Then verse 8 and following says you don’t have to follow the darkened logic of culture to find happiness…the upside-down reasoning that makes black look like white and continually expands the gray areas so everything becomes ethically fuzzy to the point you’re no longer guided by the moral compass. Rather you can live in God’s love, impact others by your godliness, walk in wisdom and know God’s will, and overflow with joy by being filled with God’s Spirit. That’s what the Spirit of God longs to do for you…if you will yield control of your life to him.

In truth, nothing compares to the Spirit-filled life to satisfy every longing of your heart and enable you to experience the good life. The greatest and longest lasting high in the world comes from Spirit-filled living.

Paul is not referring to that instantaneous infilling of the Spirit that we read about in Acts 2, but rather the ongoing submission of our will to God’s work through an active yielding of one’s life to the Spirit’s control.

Spirit filling in the book of Acts was an event, while the filling in Ephesians is an ongoing process. In Acts, it was evidenced by extraordinary, miraculous happenings while in Ephesians, it was evidenced by ordinary, everyday choices that submitted them to the Spirit. In Acts, the Spirit was received by asking in faith, while in Ephesians the Spirit is responded to by yielding in obedience. Both kinds of Spirit infilling are valid, and needed.

D. L. Moody once held up a glass and asked his audience, “How can I get the air out of this glass?” A man shouted, “Suck it out with a pump!” Moody replied, “That would create a vacuum and shatter the glass.” After numerous other suggestions Moody picked up a pitcher of water, and filled the glass. “Now, all the air is now removed.” He then went on to explain that living the victorious Christian life isn’t accomplished by “sucking out a sin here and there,” but by being filled with the Holy Spirit.

Being filled with the Spirit is not a matter of eliminating sinful or unproductive behavior in your life and passively waiting for God to supernaturally fill you, Paul is saying it’s about eliminating those things that grieve him and replacing them with passions that please him.

Paul gives us several areas of eliminating and replacing that will allow us to live as Spirit-filled people. Being filled with the Spirit is about yielding control of your life to him. Yielding your life is about the choices you make to please God.

If you want to be filled with the Spirit, here are some things you’ve got to do:

First, going back to verses 1-3, you’ve got to replace lustful desires with loving decisions. You’ve got to leverage your life so that the expression of it is characterized by agape love rather than simply living to satisfy your desires. Look at what it says:

“Be imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children and live a life of love [agape], just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God. But among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality [porneia—immorality of a sexual nature], or of any kind of impurity [anything unclean in a general sense], or of greed [the expression of self-will, self-gratification and self-centeredness], because these are improper for God’s holy people.”

Second, you must replace a polluted tongue with praiseworthy talk. You’re mouth needs to communicate gratitude, not just spew garbage. Look at verse 4-7,

“Nor should there be obscenity [that which is degrading and disgraceful], foolish talk [from moros, or moron, which is stupid talk befitting one who is intellectually deficient] or coarse joking [twisting innocent words into suggestive innuendo], which are out of place, but rather thanksgiving. For of this you can be sure: No immoral, impure or greedy person–such a man is an idolater–has any inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God. Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of such things God’s wrath comes on those who are disobedient. Therefore do not be partners with them.”

Third, you’ve got to replace foolish choices with fruitful character. Is your faith producing fruit, or are you characterized by foolish choices influenced by the dark logic of the world? Verses 7-8 say,

“For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Live as children of light (for the fruit of the light consists in all goodness, righteousness and truth) and find out what pleases the Lord. Have nothing to do with the fruitless deeds of darkness, but rather expose them. For it is shameful even to mention what the disobedient do in secret. But everything exposed by the light becomes visible, for it is light that makes everything visible… Be very careful, then, how you live–not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil. Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is.”

And fourth, you’ve got to replace self-gratifying actions with Spirit-inspired activities. Rather than pursuing activities please you, the Spirit wants you to submit your will to spiritually productive endeavors that please the Lord and bless those around you. Verses 18-21 say,

“Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit. Speak to one another with psalms, hymns and spiritual songs. Sing and make music in your heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ. Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ.”

Living the Spirit-filled life is about the daily choices you make to yield control to him. Choices to imitate God and eliminate immoral or questionable practices…

Choices to find out what pleases God…choices to find out what God’s will is.
The great evangelist D. L. Moody went to England for an evangelistic crusade, but was met with some professional jealousy. One pastor protested, “Why do we need this ‘Mr. Moody’? He’s uneducated and inexperienced. Who does he think he is anyway? Does he think he has a monopoly on the Holy Spirit?” One wise pastor pointed out, “Moody doesn’t have more of the Holy Spirit than we do, but the Holy Spirit has more of Mr. Moody.”

Make a decision today to allow the Holy Spirit to have more of you! In every area of your life, yield control to him.

Prayer… Holy Spirit, take control of all of me—mind, tongue, hands, eyes—all my thoughts, words and actions. Have more of me, I pray.

One More Thing…
“O Holy Spirit, descend plentifully into my heart. Enlighten the dark corners of this neglected dwelling and scatter there Thy cheerful beams.” —Augustine

There Ought To Be A Difference

Read Ephesians 4:17-32

“Throw off your old sinful nature and your former way of life, which is corrupted by lust and deception. Instead, let the Spirit renew your thoughts and attitudes.
(Ephesians 4:3)

Thoughts… There really ought to be a noticeable difference now that you know Christ as our Savior and Lord. The change in your heart should have made its way outward to your behavior by now. If not, you need to go back and check the authenticity of your salvation experience! If you are still drinking, carousing, gambling your money away, going places you shouldn’t go and doing things you shouldn’t do, hanging with people you shouldn’t hang with, then you’d better take a second look at your walk with Christ.

I am not judging your salvation, I’m simply inspecting your fruit!

Christianity in our day has, by and large, ceased to focus on the never-ending list of “don’t’s” that seemed to be the dominate subject matter of sermons when I was growing up. By the time I had reached junior high school, I was well versed in what Christians don’t do: They don’t drink, dance, chew snuff, smoke, play cards, roller skate (that was dancing on wheels), where jewelry (that one was for the women), go to movies, and on and on that list went.

To say the least, the list was overbearing, it sucked the life out of relationship with Jesus, and it gave the false impression that righteousness was something determined by outward behavior. It missed the point of faith.

I am afraid, however, that when we got rid of that list, we threw the baby out with the bathwater. We now live in a time when just about anything goes in terms of acceptable Christian behavior. All in the name of grace, the behaior of many believers is not all that unlike their non-Christian counterparts.

But there are a few things that we “don’t” do as Christians, or at least we shouldn’t be doing. And Paul talks about a few of these:

We shouldn’t be dominated by lustful thinking: “Live no longer like the Gentiles do…they have no sense of shame. The live for lustful pleasure and eagerly practice every kind of impurity.” (vv. 17, 18) In the narrow sense, that means we shouldn’t be controlled by sexually impure desires. In the broader sense, “lust” refers to any strong desire other than the desire to please God that controls your thinking and behavior.

Not only must lust go, but deception should not be practiced by a Christ-follower: “Throw off the old sinful nature … which is corrupted by lust and deception.” In other words, there is no room for lying and cheating; no cutting corners on your taxes, no cooking the books at work, no saying “yes” when you really plan on doing “no”. Being a Christian means being a person of honor, a person of your word, and a man or woman of complete and thorough integrity.

Furthermore, greed has got to go: “If you are a thief, quit stealing.” (v. 25) Worshiping the god of wealth and fame has no place in the Christian’s life. Rather, contentment, hard word and generosity should be our distinguishing characteristics.

Anger has to go too: “Don’t sin by letting anger control you.” (v. 26) There are no excuses for an out-of-control temper. It is a poor reflection of the Christ who lives within you and it is an open door for Satan to work in your life. An angry Christian is an oxymoron…or maybe just a moron.

And, finally, making it on the list of “don’t’s” is foul language: “Don’t use foul or abusive language.” (v. 30). If your language hasn’t changed, if four-letter words are still a part of your vocabulary, if you are dropping the F-bomb here and using the B-word there, then you are clearly not being controlled by the Holy Spirit (v. 30). Following Christian means cleaning up your language.

Paul is not promoting living by a list of “don’t’s”. If your life is governed by all that you can’t do, then you will miss the whole point of salvation by grace through faith. You will miss out on the pure joy of walking in an intimate relationship with Jesus Christ. You will be so focused on the don’t that you never enjoy all the good stuff you get to do.

All Paul is trying to do is to get us to live with a constant consciousness that the Holy Spirit has indwelt us, and because of that powerful reality, there are some things that we just won’t do anymore, and there are a whole bunch of things we will do.

So what is a believer to do? Simply this: The Holy Spirit is living within you, so yield you entire life to him. In all that you do, live to make him happy, and everything else will fall into place.

Prayer… Holy Spirit, empower me to live my life today, even in the smallest details, in such a way that I bring joy rather than grief to you.

One More Thing… “A baptism of holiness, a demonstration of godly living is the crying need of our day.” —Duncan Campbell

Walking Worthy

Read Ephesians 4:1-16

“Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit
through the bond of peace.”
(Ephesians 4:3)

Thoughts… The story is told of Princess Margaret, when she was a young girl, as she sat beside her mother, Queen Elizabeth. It was the first presentation to the British public of the princess and she was called to walk to the microphone and say a few words to the dignitaries. As she prepared to stand, her mother leaned over to her and whispered, “You are a princess. Now walk like one!”

As children of the King, our actions ought to match our royal identity. That’s why, after spending the first three chapters in Ephesians telling us who we are, the Apostle Paul now says, “You’re a prince… you’re a princess…you’re a child of the King…now walk like one.” In light of what God has done for us through Christ—he has chosen, adopted, and accepted us as his very own—we must now walk worthy of our royal calling.

And the first duty of our worthy walk is to walk in unity with our brothers and sisters in Christ. We have been united with Christ, now we are to be untied with others in the family of God.

So just what is unity? It is oneness of purpose. It is putting personal agendas—preferences, opinions, demands, expectations—on the back burner to allow God’s purpose for his church to be our first and all-consuming passion.

Now that doesn’t mean that within the body of Christ we won’t have different opinions, desires or preferred ways of doing things, it just means that those differences are not going to become issues that divide us from our unity and distract us from our purpose. Nor does unity means uniformity. By God’s design, the church is an incredibly diverse organism, as witnessed by the variety of spiritual gifts that have been given to the individual members who make up the church. The church arguably the most diverse institution on the planet. It just that its diversity is channeled into a singleness of mind and ministry that makes it altogether unique.

So how does that kind of unity come about, and how can we as individual members of Christ body contribute to its unity? In verses 2-3, Paul asks us to cultivate six unity producing virtues: Humility, gentleness, patience, forbearance in love, effort and peace.

To begin with, we are to “be completely humble…” Humility is foundational to all the other virtues needed to produce unity. In fact, it’s the most foundational of all Christian virtues. Humility literally means to think or judge with lowliness of mind.

The concept of humility is uniquely Christian. The Greeks and Romans had no word for it. Some think Paul may have coined the word himself. Later secular writers began to use it in a pejorative sense as a character weakness. But in the Biblical sense, humility is anything but a weakness. It is to see yourself as you truly are, no more and no less. It’s to see yourself as God sees you. That is the basis of unity.

Now the product of humility is the next virtue: Gentleness. We are to “be completely…gentle…” Biblical gentleness simply means to be mild-spirited and self-controlled. It doesn’t refer to someone who is weak, but to one whose power was under control.

Along with gentleness we need to practice patience. Paul says in verse 2, “Be patient…” Literally, patience means to be “long-tempered.” It refers to someone who has the right and the power to strike back, but doesn’t. It’s the ability to endure irritating people without fighting back and undesirable circumstances without giving in.

The next part of this worthy walk is that we must demonstrate unconditional love. We are to “…bear with one another in love.” That means being willing to cut others some slack. It means not being quick to jump on someone because of either an unintentional mistake or a deliberate sin, even when that sin is directed at you. It’s the kind of love that Peter talks about in I Peter 4:8 when he says, “Love covers a multitude of sins.” It throws a blanket over the sins of others, not to justify or excuse them but to keep those sins from becoming any more destructive to the individual who committed them or to the one against whom they were committed. Literally, it means to practice unqualified and unselfish love, even when that love is not reciprocated.

Another virtue needed for unity is hard work. We are to make every “effort” to keep the unity of the Spirit. Unity doesn’t come easily. The drift is always toward individualism, isolation and division. It takes commitment and intentionality to go against the current and stay in harmony with others. The word effort means to be diligent, to be zealous, to make haste to do something. In this case, it means being eager and fully dedicated to maintain the unity of the Spirit. It refers to a holy zeal that guards our Christian unity.

Finally, if we’re going walk in unity, we’ve got to pursue peace. The final part of verse 3 says, “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.” If humility is the foundation for unity, then peace is the frame that holds it together. Paul says in Colossians 3:15, “Let the peace of Christ keep you in tune and in step with each other. None of this going off and doing your own thing.”

When these virtues of unity—humility, gentleness, patience, forbearance in love, effort, and peace—are lived out, the body of Christ will build itself up in love as each part does its work.

Vance Havner once said, “Snowflakes are frail, but if enough of them get together they can stop traffic.” That’s a great picture of spiritual unity. Unity among God’s people is a very powerful thing. Without it, the church is dead in the water. But with it, the church is an unstoppable force in the world. Get the individual members who make up the church in unity of mind and purpose, and watch out world!

And that’s God’s greatest desire for us!

Prayer… Lord Jesus, you prayed that we would be one, just as you and the Father are one. Help me, O Lord, to do whatever I can to see that prayer answered through my life. Make me a champion for the spiritual unity of your church.

One More Thing… “Where there is unity there is always victory.” —Publilius Syrus

A Prayer For You

Read Ephesians 3:1-21

“I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you with
power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ
may dwell in your hearts through faith. And I pray that
you, being rooted and established in love, may have
power, together with all the saints, to grasp how
wide and long and high and deep is the love of
Christ, and to know this love that surpasses
knowledge — that you may be filled to the
measure of all the fullness. of God Now
to him who is able to do immeasurably
more than all we ask or imagine,
according to his power that is
at work within us, to him be
glory in the church and in
Christ Jesus throughout
all generations, for
ever and ever!
Amen.
(Ephesians 3:16-21)

Thoughts… The problem many believers have is a disconnect between the head and the heart. That’s why Paul prays this eloquent and moving prayer for the release of divine power that will move us beyond an experience of intellectual Christianity to an experience of Jesus in our hearts.

Perhaps that’s the thing you need most today—to experience the marriage of Biblical knowledge to passionate love for Jesus Christ, a supernatural connection between your head and your heart.

That’s Paul’s prayer for you. It’s not that you will have more self-discipline, not that you will think more positively, not that you will have a better attitude. He’s not asking for physical, intellectual or emotional power. He is praying that you will receive spiritual power—the power of the Holy Spirit to get done in your Christian life what needs to be done, namely, a deeper faith that allows Jesus to settle in and feel at home in your heart—to take up residence there.

That’s a great prayer! And when that prayer gets answered, you will experience an altogether deeper dimension of love where you are “rooted and established in love…” and you “grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ…a love that surpasses knowledge…” and you are filled with “the measure of all the fullness of God” (Verses 17-19)

Now that’s a pretty tall order, obviously, and you may be wondering how this will happen, if, truthfully, it can happen at all this side of heaven. Here’s the good news: Verses 20-21 tells us that it is God himself who will make this happen:

“To him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us…”

Paul is saying that if you simply and humbly open your heart, ask for and align yourself with a release of God’s transforming power, then you will get an experience of God beyond your most sincere requests and wildest dreams.

Do you need that kind of experience today? The love of God that goes way beyond an intellectual understanding and consumes your whole being, mind, body and spirit?

That is certainly within the realm of possibilities today, because God wants it for you. So why not ask for it?

Prayer… Father, as Teresa of Avila so honestly prayed, so I pray, “Oh God, I don’t love you, I don’t even want to love you, but I want to want to love you.” Create in my heart a burning desire to love you more than life itself. And lead me to an experience of divine love that surpasses knowledge and fills me with your fullness. And Lord, do it today.

One More Thing… “Our prayers lay the track down which God’s power can come. Like a mighty locomotive, his power is irresistible, but it cannot reach us without rails.” —Watchman Nee

Rest and Enjoy The Ride

Read Ephesians 2:1-22

“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this
not from yourselves, it is the gift of God — not by works, so
that no one can boast. For we are God’s workmanship,
created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which
God prepared in advance for us to do.”
(Ephesians 2:8-10)

Thoughts… These are perhaps three of the most revolutionary verses in the entire Bible. They tell us how our salvation really came about, and the news is all good. Basically, Paul is telling us that we are saved totally by the love, grace, mercy, will and power of God.

We had very little to do with it—except to receive this marvelous gift. And even that God helped us with.

So what does this mean for me? Plenty! Among the countless numbers of ramifications, one of the most enjoyable is that you can sit back and simply rest in this wonderful gift of salvation provided in Christ Jesus.

Using the word REST, from these verses let me suggest 4 acts of worship that you can offer to God in response to his free gift of salvation:

Reflect: First of all, this week, reflect on God’s grace. Verse 8 says “it is by grace you are saved…” Verses 4-5 say, “Because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead…” You did nothing to save yourself and make you acceptable to God. You were dead! Do you know what a dead person can do to be un-dead. Nothing—except lay there and be dead! It was all up to God—so just spend some time thinking about that…and it will lead to this…

Express: Second, express your gratitude to God for the gift of salvation with a daily prayer of thanksgiving this week. Spend some time meditating on the wonder of this unmerited gift. Verse 8 says that every aspect of your salvation “is the gift of God.” Even the faith to believe was God’s gift, according to the grammar of that verse. God even provided you with the ability to believe—how awesome it that!

Stop: Third, stop working for what you already have—God’s acceptance and approval! Verse 10 says “you are God’s workmanship…” God does not accept or approve of you based on your efforts—he does so based on Christ’s work. You were “created in Christ Jesus.” You are his masterpiece! So whenever you feel the need to perform for your worth—quit! You’re already worthy. Just take delight in God and what he’s done for you through Jesus. Delighting in God is a very spiritual matter—and it’s appropriate! John Piper writes, “Delighting in God is the work of our lives. God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in him.” So just enjoy God this week!

Trade: Fourth, trade your ‘to do’ list for God’s. Verse 10 says you were created, “to do good works which God prepared in advance for you to do.” Once you’re freed from the need to work for approval and acceptance, you can do the works that arise out of grace — those are the “good works prepared in advance for you to do.” What are those good works? I don’t know, but as Augustine once said, “just love God and do as you please,” and I have a feeling you’ll be just fine!

A flea was riding on an elephant’s ear when they came to an old wooden bridge. And as they crossed the bridge wobbled badly and almost collapsed. When they got the other side the flea said to the elephant, “Boy, we shook that bridge, didn’t we!”

Friend, you’ve crossed over the bridge of faith ridding on someone else’s efforts. So quit trying to add to it—it’s already done. Quit trying to get there—you’re already there. Just rest and enjoy the ride. Enjoy who you are in Christ based on what he’s done for you on the cross.

Prayer… Father, I am your workmanship. I am your masterpiece. How marvelous the thought! Enable me to live up to that and honor your design in everything I think, say and do.

One More Thing… “If we could ever see who we truly are in Christ, we would be tempted to fall at our own feet and worship ourselves.” —C.S. Lewis

Let Me Introduce You To The True You

Read Ephesians 1:1-23

“Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who has blessed us in the heavenly realms
with every spiritual blessing in Christ.”
(Ephesians 1:3)

Thoughts… What amazing spiritual wealth we possess! Paul says that since we have come to know Christ, we have been blessed with every spiritual blessing that heaven has to offer—right now! Not someday; not when we get to heaven; but right here and now.

What are those blessings? Paul enumerates them here in the first chapter of Ephesians:

1. I am a saint
2. I am in Christ
3. I am faithful
4. I have every spiritual blessing
5. I have been chosen by God
6. I am holy and without blame
7. I have been adopted by God
8. I am accepted by God
9. I’ve been redeemed and forgiven
10. I abound in His grace
11. I have knowledge of His will
12. I have an eternal inheritance
13. I’ve been sealed with the Spirit
14. I am guaranteed my eternal inheritance

Do you see yourself that way? Do you see yourself as a saint? Do you see yourself as holy and blameless? Do you see yourself as God’s chosen, adopted and accepted child? Do you see yourself as faithful? Are you experiencing all of those spiritual blessings in your life right now, or settling for so much less?

I think most of us, in truth, settle for so much less than what God has already made available to us in Christ. C. S. Lewis said it this way:

“We are half-hearted creatures, fooling around with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at sea. We are far too easily pleased.”

Fortunately, we can change the way we think and how we perceive ourselves and begin to act according to our new identity. How? By learning to see ourselves as God sees us.

According to these verses in chapter one, this list of 14—what I’d call spiritual birthmarks—is how God identifies you, and how you must begin to see yourself.

I want to give you an assignment. Copy the list of 14 to a 3×5 card and tape it to your mirror, your dashboard or computer terminal and read it aloud to yourself, at least once a day, for 21 days.

When you look into a mirror, you see yourself as you see you. When you look into your mirror and see yourself along with these 14 identifying characteristics, you will see yourself as God sees you. And I think you will like what you begin to see—God certainly does.

But you say, “I don’t really feel like any of those!” So what! Who said it was based on how you feel? You say, “But I don’t deserve any of those things!” You’re absolutely right! You don’t deserve a one of them.

All those wonderful things GOD declares to be true of you are the result of GOD’S doing, not yours. You are a saint by HIS will. HE chose, adopted and accepted you. It was because of HIS good pleasure and purpose and by HIS power. It was HIS calling, inheritance, love. HE predestined you, redeemed you and forgave you.

If you were to take a sneak peak at chapter 2, you would see that all this was done by HIS grace, because you are HIS workmanship. In chapter 3, it is GOD who is able to do more than you ask or imagine according to HIS power working in you.

Do you see the pattern? All of these spiritual blessings are up to God, not you.

So the question now is, will you begin to believe what God has declared to be true of you?

I hope you will, because if you will, it will change your life for the better!

Prayer… Father, thank you for all those spiritual blessings that are mine in Jesus Christ. These are now my spiritual birthmarks. This is how you identify me, how you see me. Now, Lord, give me the vision to see myself as you see me.

One More Thing… “When you understand and believe God’s truth about you, it will lead you to think healthy thoughts about you. Healthy thoughts will produce healthy emotions, and healthy emotions lead to right behavior. Right behavior results in the righteous life that God has promised to bless.”