Tag Archive for: devotion

If we want something done we often seek someone with an “In.” Want to change something in your city, who do we know that knows the Mayor? Access to someone in power is the world’s way of getting things done. Guess what? We have that kind of access to God. You might say “Why pray? God already knows what we want.” God wants us to ask. God hears our prayers. Sometimes they are misdirected and God doesn’t give us the answer we seek. Why not? Because he has something better in mind. He always answers. The answer may be “Yes,” “No,” or “Not yet.” Also, it may be “Yes, with some changes.” 

John 14:14 (NASB) reads “If you ask Me anything in My name, I will do it.” We often close our prayers “In Jesus name, Amen.” That isn’t a magic phrase we add to our prayer to make it come to be. Think about what it means to do something in someone’s name. When we invoke someone’s name we are saying that something is to be done with the authority of a specified person or thing. When we invoke Jesus’ name in our prayers  we are agreeing with Him that this prayer is in accordance with His nature and character. God would not grant a petition that is contrary to who He is. 

As we pray, we sometimes get a clearer view of what God wants. It is somewhat like a planning session. We start off in one direction, but as we progress we see that our original idea isn’t best. We may need to modify it. God may show us His modifications when we talk (and listen) to Him in prayer.

Sometimes we may be critical of others or feel uncomfortable ourselves in bringing a matter to God time and time again.  Some feel that we should bring it to God once. He has heard our prayer, now I’ll wait for the answer. It’s somewhat like the 60’s practice of calling the radio station with our song requests.  God is not there to take and fulfill our requests. He is there to listen to us and to talk to us. The interaction we get in prayer gives us clarity.  It is ok to continually bring a matter before the Lord in prayer. By continuing to talk with God about a matter, we see more clearly. 

As we pray and listen, our prayers change. As our prayers change, we change. When we pray we need to be prepared to be part of the answer. If God has placed a matter on your heart, He probably wants you to put feet to your prayers and work toward the answer you seek. 

I Thessalonians 5:16-18 (NASB) reads “Rejoice always; pray without ceasing; in everything give thanks; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. Do not quench the Spirit” To pray without ceasing means to maintain an attitude of constant intercession.  Always in a state of prayer, always listening. Our failure to pray may mean we are quenching the Spirit. 

Prayer should never be a last resort, it should be our first step. Don’t take the attitude that you’ve tried everything else, I might as well try prayer. Internally, I cringed once in this regard. My church was embarking on some project, I don’t remember what it was. But our pastor was outlining the various tasks involved. Then he said “And if you can’t do anything else, you can pray.” I wanted to stand up and shout “NO NO NO!” Prayer is the first step, not something added as an afterthought. Not something left to those who can’t do anything else. 

Nothing is too insignificant to pray about. I remember when my father died, Gloria and I were driving to his home. On the way we had to stop and buy something. I don’t know why, but the parking lot was packed. I was tired and I was stressed. I uttered a silent prayer for a parking spot. Almost immediately I saw a woman walking to her car. She stopped and asked me if I was looking for a space. To this day I believe God sent her as an answer to my prayer.

Pray first, believe God will answer, and heed his response. 

What enables us to finish well in life? The answer is Jesus. He gets us. He understands us. Why?

Jesus was all man – he could touch people, he spoke with an accent, he could blend into a crowd. Yet he was all God – he could heal, he spoke with authority, he could change history. He has been remembered for over 2,000 years. All man. All God.

Jesus never sinned, but He understands our sin. He died for our sins so he feels them even more than we do. He was shamed, humiliated, treated like a sinner. He deserved none of that. But he experienced it. He became sin – every sin we have ever committed. He felt the guilt, remorse, and embarrassment that was ours—Jesus doesn’t condone our sin, but he understands it.

I would hasten to add that falling down does not mean we can’t finish well. It is what we do after we get up, pick up the pieces of our lives and move on.  In another race I was running, this one a 10K, I was tripped at the starting line when someone cut in front of me. I got up with a fiery determination and ran. Fast. Interestingly, I caught and passed the person who tripped me, and gave him a look. It was sort of a “you tripped me but I passed you” look.  Strangely, I did not see him at the finish line. But picking up the pieces isn’t automatic and it isn’t easy.

For those who seek Him, God restores us. Lamentations 3:22-23 (RSV) reads “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases, his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is thy faithfulness.” Did you get that? We start each day new! Our lives don’t have to go on in the same way. There may be, should be, changes. 

I can get up from a fall in a race, but I can’t deal with my sin alone. “Jesus is the only one who can help. Let him. Jesus has the strength you do not have. He is, after all, your High Priest, able and willing to help in your time of need. So let him do what He came to do.”- Max Lucado. Jesus’ help isn’t automatic. His help may come from Him working through another individual, through a song or a sermon at just the right time, through a book we are reading. There is no limit to the ways God can work in our lives. Look for him. 

God is a God of second chances. He forgives us. Our focus should be on what we do with those second chances.

Photo credit © Can Stock Photo / Tawng

As Christians, we hold a dual citizenship. We have citizenship in an earthly country. I am a citizen of the United States. Proudly so. Notice that I did not say I am an American Citizen. There are two continents with the word “America” in their name. If I am an American citizen it is assumed that we mean we are citizens of the United States. But a Mexican, a Canadian, a Brazilian can all say equally with me that they are American Citizens.

I am also a citizen of Heaven. In Phillippians 3:20, Paul states “For our citizenship is in heaven, from which also we eagerly wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.” (NASB) We are citizens of heaven. Our perspective is different. Our goal is the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus (verse 14). Looking at verses 18-19 Paul states “They [non-Christians] are enemies of the cross of Christ, whose end is destruction, whose god is their appetite, and whose glory is in their shame, who set their mind on earthly things.” Their goal, their “so-called” glory is diametrically opposed to our perspective. As Christians we view life through a different lens.

We have a balancing act to perform in dealing with our two citizenships. Never let us forget which one has the priority. Our ultimate allegiance is to Jesus, to the Kingdom of Heaven. A verse in Fernando Ortega’s song “Jesus King of Angels” sums it up well:

With all my heart I love You, Sovereign Lord
Tomorrow let me love You even more
And rise to speak the goodness of Your name
Until I close my eyes and sleep again.

But how does this play out in life on earth? We in the United States must remember that Jesus is not a citizen of the United States or of any other country in this world. Jesus is not an American of any stripe. Yet, all too often, individuals and churches equate our dual citizenships. Churches hold patriotic services, they display a flag of the United States in their sanctuary, they may even recite the pledge of allegiance. Don’t get me wrong, these things are fine in their place. But a church is not that place. I come to church to worship the God of the Universe, not the United States of America.

Once I saw an elaborate outdoor Christmas display put on by a church. I was absolutely appalled when I saw a very large flag of the United States as a backdrop to the nativity display. I tried to discuss this with one of the church pastors and the only response I got from him was that “I am a proud American, and I don’t see anything wrong with that.” My thought was “So you are a proud American, what place does Christ have in your life?”

When we place Christianity and the United States together we are non-verbally saying that Jesus is American. In doing so, we risk our Christian witness. We are telling the 7.5 billion people who are not citizens of the United States that they cannot have Jesus because he is an American. I see this as similar to the situation faced by the early church. There was a division between Jews and Gentiles, or non-Jews. Some felt that, in order to be a Christian, one had to become Jewish first. Today we seem to be saying that to be a Christian you must be a citizen of the United States first.

Let us remember that song many of us sang as children:

Jesus loves the little children
All the children of the world
Red, brown, yellow
Black and white
They are precious in His sight
Jesus loves the little children
Of the world

We all come to God as children.