Do you get tired of the repetitiveness of everyday life? I know I do. I think that’s why we enjoy a vacation or a special holiday so much. It gets us out of our familiar routines and allows us to experience new things.
The idea of new things made me think about people in the Bible God called out of their comfort zone and what the consequences would have been if they hadn’t accepted that call. Abraham is a perfect example. God called him out of Ur of the Chaldeans - to leave his family, friends and everything he had ever known and go to a new place, somewhere he had never been before. “One day, the Eternal One called out to Abram...Abram, get up and go! Leave your country. Leave your relatives and your father’s home, and travel to the land I will show you. Don’t worry-I will guide you there” (Genesis 12:1 VOICE). Although Abram got waylaid in Haran, he did eventually make it to Canaan, the land of promise. He decided to trust God and the result was the nation of Israel and the lineage of Jesus. What would have happened if Abram (Abraham) didn’t go? God’s purposes will prevail and He would have chosen someone else. But Abraham would have missed out on all the blessings. “’I will bless you and make you famous, and you will be a blessing to others. I will bless those who bless you and curse those who treat you with contempt. All the families on earth will be blessed through you’” (Genesis 12:2-3 NLT). “And Abram believed the Lord, and the Lord counted him as righteous because of his faith” (Genesis 15:6 NLT). The disciples Peter, his brother Andrew, and brothers James and John are another illustration. They left everything familiar and their source of livelihood to follow Jesus. At the time they answered His call, they only knew they’d become fishers of men, as Jesus told them. They didn’t know that in the power of the Holy Spirit, they would turn the world upside down. The Apostle Paul is another case in point. Circumcised when eight days old, a citizen of Israel, member of the tribe of Benjamin, a Pharisee, one who obeyed the law without fault. He left everything he knew about how to be righteous in his own strength and accepted the call to be made the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus (2 Corinthians 5:21). What a paradigm shift he underwent. But he had to be willing to let go of the old. If he had clung to his old ways, he would have missed seeing the salvation of Jews and Gentiles alike, as well as being used by God to pen at least thirteen letters in the New Testament. I would like to conclude with a prayer. “Father God, we ask you for strength and boldness when you call us to step out of the comfort of our everyday world. In our own strength, we are weak, so we ask for Your divine power to obey. "Fill us to overflowing with Your Holy Spirit. Replace our fear with unwavering confidence in You and in Your promises. Give us the courage to follow You, our Shepherd, no matter the cost, trusting Your plans are for our good. In the precious Name of Jesus, Amen.”
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I recently read about a grandmother watering her freshly planted vegetable garden while her young granddaughter watered the flowers. Suddenly, her grandchild said to her, “Don’t water the weeds, Nana.” That got me thinking about weeds. Actually, I’ve been thinking about weeds quite a bit lately because my front lawn is full of crab grass and bit by bit, I’ve been pulling it out. Some of those roots go deep and I have to pull them out with two hands. It’s a lot of work. In my research, I learned the following about weeds.
In short, weeds are nasty things. The weeds in my lawn also got me thinking about the weeds which can invade our lives, like selfishness, jealousy, lying, greed, envy, anger, and pride. In this blog post, there are three types of weeds I want to talk about in more depth. The first is the weed of spiritual laziness. Proverbs 24:30-31 NKJV says, “I went by the field of the lazy man, and by the vineyard of the man devoid of understanding; And there it was, all overgrown with thorns; its surface was covered with nettles, its stone wall was broken down.” One of Satan’s strategies is to make us lazy about reading the Word of God. He’ll put thoughts in our minds, like, “you read your Bible yesterday, you don’t need to read it today.” That type of thinking wouldn’t work with physical food – and it doesn’t work with our spiritual food either. We need a daily intake of God’s Word. Without it, we starve spiritually. Unbelief is another deadly weed. When the seed of the Word of God is sown into our hearts (see Luke 8), the weed of unbelief can grow up and render it null and void. “But land that produces thorns and thistles is worthless, and its curse is imminent. In the end it will be burned” (Hebrews 6:8 BSB). The above verse shows the condition of the soil is important. Is it producing weeds or good fruit? What is the quality of the soil in our hearts? Are we keeping it moist with prayer and the washing of the water of the Word? “...For he (Jesus) died for us, sacrificing himself to make us holy and pure, cleansing us through the showering of the pure water of the Word of God” (Ephesians 5:25-25 TPT). Is our heart soil holy, pure, and cleansed, ready to receive the Word, or full of weeds ready to choke it out? The third weed I want to mention is fear and worry. This weed grows quickly and devours everything in its way. It must be dealt with as soon as it appears and yanked out by its roots. How do we eradicate it? With the words of our mouth. “Your words are so powerful, that they will kill or give life, and the talkative person will reap the consequences” (Proverbs 18:21 TPT). When the weeds of fear and worry raise their ugly heads, the solution is not to speak the problem, which will cause them to proliferate, but to speak the Word of God. If the fear is about finances, God has promised to supply all our need (Philippians 4:19), if it is about our health, He heals all our diseases (Psalm 103:3), and when it is about our children, He has promised that all our offspring will be taught of the Lord (Isaiah 54:13). Because weeds choke out the harvest, we must be diligent in rooting them out of our lives. If we want a harvest of the fruit of the Spirit - love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control, the weeds must be gone. So, like the granddaughter told her grandmother, “don’t water the weeds.” Instead, treat them like the enemy they are, and get rid of them. |
AuthorIn this Blog, I want to share with you some of the things I've learned from many years of following Jesus. Archives
January 2025
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