Updates from January, 2011 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • Mark 12:29 pm on January 27, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Disowned by Your Dad, Owned by Your Father 

    I don’t know the relationship you have with your father, but if you are like many across this great big world, it may have its rocky points.  Maybe you were even traumatically abused, or disowned by your dad.  There’s little that can do more damage to a young boy or girl than to have a broken, immature dad in the household… but possibly worse is not having one in the house at all…

    63:16 Surely you are still our Father!

    Even if Abraham and Jacob would disown us,

    Lord, you would still be our Father.

    You are our Redeemer from ages past.

    Much of what you see in God, for better or worse, you originally got from your dad.  Even Jesus Christ, the very image of God, called the LORD his “Father” – Abba his word for “Papa.”  This kind of intimacy was scandalous in Jesus’ day – but as one who’s earthly dad was suspiciously absent, Jesus understood that God was to be his father now.

    Were was Jesus’ dad, Joseph?  After such a display of faith at Jesus’ conception and birth, he is never mentioned as Jesus enters adulthood.  Was he killed in a masonry accident?  Could he have abandoned the family?  Whatever the case, he was not there when Jesus was at his most crucial moments (his baptism, his temptations in the desert, his crucifixion…the list goes on and on.)

    A young man wants a mentor, a father to show him the way – to point out the path he should go in this life.  But truth be told, we have a lot of men in this world, and in the church who’d rather wallow in isolation, immaturity or passivity; and refuse the gift of fatherhood they’ve been given by God.

    Jesus only did what he saw his Father doing, and even with the absence of his earthly dad, he moved beyond the earthly example of fatherhood and pursued intimacy, and mentoring from his heavenly Father.

    Papa God wants this for each of his children – for you and me.  In an age where fatherhood has lost the vitality and the adventure and the abiding love it must have to create healthy, maturing people – God is ready to offer you that kind of relationship.

    Being disowned by your earthly father is not the end. Let it be what propels you into the arms of Papa God who is ready to train you as his son or daughter.

    What does being ‘fathered by God’ look like?

    You will be given his characteristics!

    First off, you may have to learn God’s capability to forgive - starting with your earthly father. He is still fighting through things himself, and will need your forgiveness.  But after that, only God knows where he’ll take you.  One thing is for sure – you will be given increasing maturity and capacity that only God has to handle the inevitable wounds of life, and the attacks of the Evil One.  You will charge out with God on mission – you will be given a new name, a new identity – sons and daughters of the King!

    All this – through God’s grace.  Thank you, Father.

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    • Sean Durbin 7:19 pm on January 27, 2011 Permalink

      Mark, there is so much good stuff from the LORD in this writing. One of the ways I can tell if someone is bringing up a principle that is of God is when the Spirit brings a scripture to my mind. This is the scripture He brought to me while and after reading your blog:Galatians 4″And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, crying, “Abba! Father!” 7So you are no longer a slave, but a son, and if a son, then an heir through God.” LOVE IT. ad maiorem Dei gloriam

    • Mark W 3:42 pm on January 28, 2011 Permalink

      We have been adopted into God’s household! This means we live under a new kind of leadership – and we are given a new name (see the previous post “You are Whose You are”.) I want there to be an awakening across our nation – those that call themselves children of God – to begin to understand what that changes about how they actually live!

  • Mark 10:24 am on January 24, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Piles of Money 

    Isaiah 60 is all about the economic development of Jerusalem as they begin to return from exile.  The promises of vast, global wealth are almost unbelievable for a pitiful, beaten nation who doesn’t even have a wall of protection built around its perimeter…and at least for the rest of Biblical history, there was never any major comeback for the Jews; they were more or less passed from one roaring empire to the next.

    So what’s with all the predictions on incredible influence and wealth? Did God “over promise and under deliver?”

    There are hints of this prophecy fulfilled; specifically when Jesus was born in Bethlehem. (Matthew 2:11) Somehow I don’t think that the exiled Jews of the 5th Century BCE were satisfied with this interpretation – they wanted piles of money! They wanted the honor and recognition of the nations!  ”The flocks of Kedar!  The rams of Nebaioth!  The camels!  Where are my camels?!”

    I wonder if this is how Christians understand their relationship with God.  They sense that there is a pile of blessings, maybe even actual money, waiting on the other side of a “right relationship with God.”  They think that if they love God hard enough, if they believe the right things, if they just do it all right, then they’ll have life right where they want it.

    Trouble is, life is never quiet as we want it – but its right where God has it. He has sprinkled the fulfillment of his promises to bring blessings to his people from the far corners of the earth – he does it in the birth of Jesus; secretly, and its just enough money to keep a family of three out of the cold and filthy stables and enough to get them down to Egypt, where they can safely escape disaster.

    THAT is the blessing of God…the wealth of heaven.

    Yes, wealth seen in the light of God’s nature is not something that we can put in a bank account, but something that gives us another chance to dive deeper into him – knowing that we may not have enough to survive on our own, but plenty to keep following…for one more day.

    But why would God make all these promises of very specific assets that exiles would gain from as they returned to the holy land of Jerusalem?  I think its important to remember that each of us come to God for personal, selfish reasons.  God knows this, he loves you for it – and he wants you to know that the things you care about are important to him too – even if he sees how short-sighted they are.

    So he’ll help you get out of debt if that is something you see as important – and then he’ll remind you that you’ll always be in debt to him.  He’ll help you with as much worldly wealth as he’s called you to…then he’ll call on you to give it all back to him…

    In other words, our tangible gifts are only whispers of the real gifts he hopes to give us. The question is, can we let go of the tangibles in order to receive what truly matters…?

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  • Mark 10:07 am on January 22, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Bad Gifts 

    Have you ever gotten a gift for someone that, when the gift was given, both of you knew that it was something you hoped to use yourself?  This happens just about every year at Christmas.  I give Katrina kitchenware, hoping against hope that I receive the benefits of that gift time and time again.  Yeah, she asked for it – but somewhere deep down that gift was really all about me, not her.

    Why give someone a gift they aren’t asking for?  You waste time and money, and feel slighted, forgotten.  No bueno.  What about God?  If you give a gift to God that he’s not interested in, are you really giving that gift to him, or are you giving it to another god, a cleverly disguised version of yourself that you’ve constructed in your mind?

    The Jews remain in a fragile place in their geo-political situation halfway through the 5th Century BCE.  Several thousand Jews have returned to Jerusalem, and under the watch of the benevolent dictator-king Cyrus, they are rebuilding the walls of the city.  In other words, they are exposed – vulnerable to attack.  In order to finish the work quickly, they are beating and oppressing each other for fear of not getting it done before a hungry empire comes to swallow them up.  And they are using religious means too – they have instituted a nation-wide fast to keep God on their side…but God sees right through their “gift.”

    Yahweh’s wishlist may have included fasting…but not this brand.  You got this fast at the wrong store.  He’s interested in a fast that leads to right living, the kind that promotes one’s fellow human beings, and does not oppress them.

    58:5 You humble yourselves

    by going through the motions of penance,

    bowing your heads

    like reeds bending in the wind.

    You dress in burlap

    and cover yourselves with ashes.

    Is this what you call fasting?

    Do you really think this will please the Lord?

    6 “No, this is the kind of fasting I want:

    Free those who are wrongly imprisoned;

    lighten the burden of those who work for you.

    Let the oppressed go free,

    and remove the chains that bind people.”

    Outwardly, the Jews are eager to please Yahweh with signs and commitments, but in daily life they exploit all their workers.  God wants your fast to include breaking the chains of injustice, to share the food you are not eating with those who have no food, provide shelter to the homeless…  The Jews wanted their wall built, and they were dealing fiercely with themselves to see it accomplished ASAP.

    Some might think God was unduly interested in high and lofty morals in a time when these folks were in dire straits.  Maybe once they were safe behind their city walls they could get on to practicing decency and transcendence and all that mushy stuff.

    But God sees it another way.

    Treat your neighbor right, shelter the homeless, feed the hungry… and you’ve just enlisted a larger and more loyal workforce!  Instead of beating fear into people, invite them to join you on a mission to rebuild the broken walls of a society that caved in on itself.  The old way of violence and oppression didn’t do much for your city’s walls, that’s what brought them to the ground.  God is trying to set the tone for a God-centered people…this is what is on God’s wishlist – and believe me; its something he knows we’d benefit from too.

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    • Acid 9 4:07 am on January 24, 2011 Permalink

      I was once told that the word “fast” in this text (IS 58) is the hebrew word “tsum”. This literally means “to cover one’s mouth”. That could mean abstaining from food. But could also mean to shut up and listen…and in the case of IS 58…shut up so you can hear the plight of the poor.

      Never knew if that word study was true. But listening to others is definitely serving.

    • Mark W 3:38 pm on January 24, 2011 Permalink

      The Hebrew word “tsum” yields some interesting word study results. The concept of “self-limitation” (whether its food gorging your pie hole, or words coming out…) it seems that we have a fixation in our culture with consumption and expression – and we downplay the importance of their inverses.

      May God shut us up and keep us hungry! Think of the “other side” we are typically blind to in our rage to consume and spew out expression…

      Thanks for the comment Acid9. Never thought about (tsum) as a “shutting the mouth to listen” – but to throw another Hebrew word study in, I was learning the other day that there is no difference between “hearing” and “obedience” in the word “listen” (shema). If you don’t respond to what you’ve heard, you obviously didn’t hear it in the first place!

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