Anointing, Direction, God's Call, Subumission

Don’t Be Self-Called

1 Comment 12 December 2007

Scripture
And no one can become a high priest simply because he wants such an honor. He must be called by God for this work, just as Aaron was. That is why Christ did not honor himself by assuming he could become High Priest. No, he was chosen by God, who said to him, “You are my Son. Today I have become your Father.” Hebrews 5:4

Observation
There is a funny scene in the movie The Apostle actor Robert Duvall portrays a has-been Bible-banger who launches his ministry with a humorous scene of self-baptism. He plunges himself into the water, places his own hand on his head, and baptizes himself as an apostle. Of course it’s dumb, but is closer to the mark than we think. How many times in little ways in life do we act out of presumption rather than God’s presence. We charge in as the self-anointed saying things like

It may not be my place to say, but…
Excuse me for butting in…
Here’s my two cents worth….

There is something to be said about waiting to see what God has to say about us. Jesus, in all of his greatness, did not march from the manger into the market square and start preaching. He waited 30 long years, he waded into the muddy baptism waters and he waited until his Father spoke. The simple words from heaven carried Jesus through the next three years. “You are my beloved son, with whom I’m well pleased.” Later when he was challenged about his right to preach in the great Temple without a license, Jesus went straight back to that moment.

Application
If the son of God, Jesus himself, did not take on himself the office of high priest without God saying the word, then no matter the role here on earth we should wait for the Father to speak. Whatever work we do for the Lord, it is ultimately God who does the choosing. Leaders recognize God’s call, but it is the Lord who does the choosing.

So we must wait for the Lord to speak about us.

Prayer
Lord, speak over my life the things you have prepared in advance for me to do so that it will be clear both to myself and to others. Amen.

Accountability, Holiness, Subumission

Asking Directions

No Comments 05 December 2007

Scripture
Carefully determine what pleases the Lord. Ephesians 4:10

Observation
It isn’t easy to know what pleases God and what offends him because not all of God’s judgments come immediately. Because consequences can often be delayed we can skip along with the notion that God is okay with whatever we do.

But not so. If we know anything about the way God works, he takes his time. He lets the sins of the wicked reach their “full measure” before taking action. He told Abraham it would be a wait of over 400 years before he would deal with his enemies. Some bad guys never get their comeuppance because not all rewards and punishments come in this life.

It is not enough to be led by a life of consequences because they don’t come quickly enough. This is why we have the Bible. This is why we have the Holy Spirit. It sounds simple but the moment by moment inquiry of the Lord to know what pleases him is often forgotten.

Application
I need to be careful to determine what pleases the Lord. If I want a life with his favor I need to have the upward glance with just about everything.

Prayer
Father, help me to pray reflexively this prayer, “What would please you?” Amen.

Subumission, Surrender

Free as a Captive

1 Comment 10 November 2007

Scripture
…If you were a slave when the Lord called you, you are now free in the Lord. And if you were free when the Lord called you, you are now a slave of Christ. 1 Corinthians 7:22

Observation
We are free only when we are captivated with the Lord. I like the word “captivated” because it says we are not captives against our will but because we desire Jesus. When I rightly understand who Jesus is and what he offers to me then I want only what I can find within his love. I become a willing prisoner.

In this captivation I find real freedom. Freefalling can feel like freedom but the hard ground argues otherwise. Freedom is when I let Jesus take me over. The choice to follow him is a guided adventure. Following the Lord is never dull.

I remember from my childhood a hymn that rang out,

Make me a captive Lord, and then I shall be free,
Force me to render up my sword, and I shall conquer be.
I sink in life’s alarms, when by myself I stand,
Imprison me within your arms and strong shall be my stand.

Those words were written by a blind man whose fiance broke their engagement after he lost his sight. His sister, who devoted herself to her sightless pastor/brother, learning Greek and Hebrew to help him prepare for his sermons, fell in love and was married. George Matheson was alone. He could not attend her wedding, so great was his anguish. In what he described as a mental collapse too great for words, he wrote that night another hymn,

O love that wilt not let me go,
I rest my weary self in Thee,
I give Thee back the life I owe,
That in Thine ocean depths its flow may deeper, fuller be.

Application
The greatest liberty I have is to pray, “Jesus, take me over.” He will pull me to the shore of his choosing. We will end up where God wants us to be. The secret is to be captivated by Jesus.

Prayer
Father, let Jesus take me over. Let the confines of my situation remind me of his embrace. Amen.

Accountability, Authority, Humility, Jesus, Leadership, Self-Image, Significance, Stability, Subumission

Snug like Lego

No Comments 15 October 2007

Amaze yourself with these Nathan Sawaya’s Lego sculptures on CNN and his blog.

Amaze yourself with these Nathan Sawaya’s Lego sculptures on CNN and his blog.

Scripture

For Jesus is the one referred to in the Scriptures, where it says,

‘The stone that you builders rejected
has now become the cornerstone.’ Acts 4:11

Observation

Back in April of ’79 I was a senior in high school saving for college. My summer job was working construction. The boss had just finished laying rows of cinder blocks 27 feet tall. My job was to pull down the scaffolding. I ate my McDonalds lunch from that sky perch and did two historic things. First I made a time capsule of junk food as I put the McDonalds packaging into the holes in the wall. And then I did what no one can resist: I wrote my name and the date in the wet concrete in the top course of blocks.

No one can resist making their mark in stone. There is graffiti etched in sandstone along the Oregon Trail from the 1850′s. There are tags in Roman catacombs and even the Egyptian tombs. I once asked a graffiti artist what it was that drove him to spray paint his tag on blank walls around town. He said, “It’s the desire to be noticed.”

Every human longs for significance and wants to make their mark. Deep down, somehow, in some way, for some moment of time no matter how brief we want to be important. Otherwise Gold Class, First Class, Platinum would not exist. We want to end up on top of the heap of humanity and be treated special.

We are each special to God, but he has designed it such that none of us can claim to be superior. That’s why this little phrase is repeated over and over in the Bible:

The stone that you builders rejected
has now become the cornerstone.

The “cornerstone” is not a shinny granite block at the bottom of the wall, it is a huge monolith at the top of all the courses of stone. The cornerstone in the temple was the largest building stone on earth. It was a rectangular block of rock nearly the size of a house. The walls of the Temple were built with man-sized blocks of granite. The rows and rows of huge stones were held in place by the top capstone. It was pure genius as it withstood earthquakes for centuries.

Application

Here’s the point for us: we are definitely not the capstone, that’s Jesus. Nor are we dirt because the stones were built without mortar. Instead each of us is a living stone with a part to play in the wall, high or low, visible or invisible wherever the Stone Mason wants it to rest. Once each of us is in position, Jesus takes his place on the highest level and holds us in place.

It is a secure feeling being locked into Christ submission. Like a row of Lego blocks, he puts me where I belong and holds me secure. And submitting to his Lordship is a joy because he did not take this exalted position for himself. The stone was rejected and God the Father himself hoisted him into the highest place. Jesus’ authority over me is submission and that is a joy.

All comes together when Jesus is in the right place over our lives. Jesus will only be in the right place when I confess that Jesus is the cornerstone, I am not.

Prayer

Father today I want to stumble on Jesus so I find just the place I am to be. Amen.

Anger, Disappointment, Emotions, Grief, Moods, Overcoming, Setbacks, Subumission, Waiting

The Beauty of Sorrow

No Comments 08 June 2007

Listen to music while you read this entry.

Mercy Me So Long Self 

Scripture
“Frustration is better than laughter, because a sad face is good for the heart.” (Ecclesiastes 7:3)

Observation
When I read those words today I had a ‘monback moment” – you know, when the Bible snags your soul like a rosebush and says “come on back here now and study this bloom.” Most translations say “sorrow is better than laughter.” But this translation uses another word that sends me hunting to find the true definition of the word “sorrow” or “frustration”. (By way, here’s an easy way to do word studies on line.)

My dictionary tells me that the word in Hebrew means both “sorrow” and “anger” at the same time. It seems that the word “frustration” is a good compromise between the two. Grief is accepting that something lost is lost. We can feel sorrow and anger about that loss at the same time. That frustrating sadness is a good thing.

Learning to live without something we once depended upon is good heart exercise. It obviously brings us to our knees but it also brings to the surface what laughter will only disguise. Not getting our way is the best way forward.

Application

This scripture leads to a radical new direction in prayer. Instead of praying, Lord change my condition! It calls me to pray, Lord change me!

Prayer

Today, Father, I thank you for the loss of things I’ve depended on. Let the limp I walk with cause me to depend upon you more. Amen.

Faithfulness, Friends, Subumission

Loyalty

No Comments 13 May 2007

Press the arrow to listen to a song that underscores the message of today’s devotion.

 

Sanctus Real We Need Each Other

Scripture
“Once again he Philistines were at war with Israel. And when David and his men were in the thick of battle, David became weak and exhausted. Ishbi-benob was a descendant of the giants; his bronze spearhead weighed more than seven pounds, and he was armed with a new sword. He had cornered David and was about to kill him. But Abishai son of Zeruiah came to his rescue and killed the Philistine. After that, David’s men declared, “You are not going out to battle again! Why should we risk snuffing out the light of Israel?” These four Philistines were descended from the giants of Gath but they were killed by David and his warriors.” (2 Samuel 21:15-17).

Observation
David had started his warrior life with a fight with a giant, and he ended his battle career in a fight with a giant. In some ways the second giant battle was more significant than David’s first. The first showed what kind of a man David was. The second showed what kind of men he had.

Several interesting things happened.

First his cousin Abishai rescued David when he was whooped. There are men, a few men in life, who will fight along side of a leader but it isn’t until a crisis moment that their real value is known. Abishai saved David’s life and such an act of bravery and loyalty is the greatest gift a leader can receive.

Second the leaders around David matured to the point hat it wasn’t necessary for them to have the King leading the charge as a PR stunt. They were made of better stuff. A change had come and they adapted well to that. They would step up to the battle line even if he was not there and still fight as if he were.

Third, because David had the humility to rest on the strength of his loyal leadership team they finished a job that had waited a lifetime to complete. All of Goliath’s brothers were killed. David had selected five smooth stones. One killed Goliath, the rest were intended for his brothers. But it was not David who finished that job. It was his mighty men. The excellence of his leadership was proved not in the battles he fought and won but the loyal leaders who were released to fight and win.

Application

Who can a leader trust? Many at the beginning of the journey swear loyalty. But many wander off to follow their own interests. Others will betray. Some will turn on the leader and become his fiercest enemies. Who can a leader trust? Those who are still fighting for him at the end are the warriors he can trust. I want to be that kind of man.

Prayer

Father, help me to be like Abishai… like one of the men around David who proved faithfulness not with words but in action. Amen.

I'm Phil McCallum, a husband, father and most of all one of the people Jesus loves. I'm privileged to serve Evergreen Community Church in Bothell, Washington as Senior Pastor where people love enough to believe "it's all about relationships." In 1982 I made a vow to read God's word daily and apply it to life. Each day I write out my reflections. Some days I post those on my blog. It's a little personal but it's my hope it will stir you to go deeper still. Learn how I do my devotions. These are my thoughts and not necessarily those of the ministry I serve. By the way check out the computer study Bible Glo. I highly recommend it.

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