Mature Faith

LifeLink Devotional

Friday, March 15, 2019

In our study of faith from the life of Abraham we come to a climactic event that tests his faith to the nth degree.

Genesis 22:1-3 Some time later God tested Abraham. He said to him, “Abraham!” “Here I am,” he replied. Then God said, “Take your son, your only son, Isaac, whom you love, and go to the region of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains I will tell you about.” Early the next morning Abraham got up and saddled his donkey. He took with him two of his servants and his son Isaac. When he had cut enough wood for the burnt offering, he set out for the place God had told him about.

Abraham is commanded by God to take the son that has already been declared the son of the covenant and sacrifice him to the Lord. When I read this story, I am overwhelmed with the emotions that I would feel, the questions that I would ask, and the rationale I would use to support my disobedience. But we read of no such emotions or questions or excuses from Abraham. His faith in God was so strong that he simply obeyed and left the outcome to God.

Follow me along a little journey for a moment. Abraham is told to go to the region of Moriah to make the sacrifice. Moriah is mentioned only one other time in Scripture, in 2 Chronicles 3:2, where we read that “Solomon began to build the temple of the LORD in Jerusalem on Mount Moriah.” The place where God instructed the people to build the temple for the worship of God was the place of Abraham’s sacrifice.

It seems that God is saying that true worship is a sacrifice of anything connected to self on the altar of surrender to the will of God. This is what Paul means in Romans 12:1 when he writes, “Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God-this is your spiritual act of worship.”  Mature faith makes the supreme sacrifice of self as a response to God’s mercy.

So what was the real test of Abraham’s faith? I think the answer is simple but so very difficult to live. God wanted to know if Abraham’s faith was in God Himself or in the promises God have given him. This is a HUGE issue for all of us. Faith in God must not be confused with faith in what God can do.

Years ago, the music group The Imperials sang a song called Because of Who You Are. The lyrics state that our faith stands not in what God can do but in the very nature of God Himself. That message has been restated by the group Casting Crowns in their song lyrics “Not because of who I am, but because of what you’ve done; not because of what I’ve done, but because of Who You are.”

Paul does not state in Romans 12:1 that we are to offer our bodies as living sacrifices in view of God’s promises, or in view of God’s actions, but rather in view of God’s mercy, which is His nature.  Our faith is mature when we trust God’s nature and character. Not His promises, nor His actions, but His Being!

Let me illustrate. When you fly in an airplane, in what do you place your trust? My faith is not in the safety record of the airline, or the sobriety of the pilot, or the pleasantness of the flight attendant: my faith is in the airplane itself. I cannot choose which parts of the airplane to trust, I must trust the whole plane. In fact, I saw a cartoon recently that said, “Did you know that an airplane is made up of 150,00 parts that by themselves cannot fly?” I must trust the complete plane. That is a very simple example of what our faith in God must be like.

We all fight this kind of faith. We allow emotions, questions, and excuses to interfere with absolute dependence upon God. We have settled for an immature faith that trusts God’s promises or depends upon God’s actions, when God wants us to totally trust Him for Who He is. I hope you can see the distinction, and I trust that the Holy Spirit is creating a passion in your heart for that kind of relationship with the Father.

Pastor John

Grace for the Faithless

LifeLink Devotional

Thursday, March 14, 2019

In case anyone is wondering, today I am 2/3 as old as Abraham was when Sarah became pregnant…and NO!, that is not the faith lesson for me today. But I also don’t ever want to respond to the Lord’s voice the way Sarah did.

When the Lord had visited Abraham prior to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah He told him that he would have a son within a year. Sarah had overheard that conversation from the tent, and she had laughed in disbelief that something so absurd could really happen. Not only did she laugh, but when confronted with her disbelief she lied about it because she was afraid. Imagine what kind of faithless fear is necessary to lie to the face of the Lord. Instead of being humble and asking for the faith necessary to believe what she had been told, she lied because she was afraid of what would happen to her for her unbelief. Had she not considered that if there was punishment for unbelief there would also be punishment for lying? But in defense of Sarah, we probably would have responded the same way because the fear of self-loss blinds us to the consequences of future actions and we only see the need for self-protection.

Here we are several chapters later, and the time has come for Isaac to be born.

Genesis 21:1-5 Now the LORD was gracious to Sarah as he had said, and the LORD did for Sarah what he had promised. Sarah became pregnant and bore a son to Abraham in his old age, at the very time God had promised him. Abraham gave the name Isaac to the son Sarah bore him. When his son Isaac was eight days old, Abraham circumcised him, as God commanded him. Abraham was a hundred years old when his son Isaac was born to him.

The story of Isaac’s birth begins with a most incredible statement about the character of God – Now the LORD was gracious to Sarah as he had said, and the LORD did for Sarah what he had promised. The original Hebrew says, The Lord visited Sarah…

I see in this statement the incredible nature of God’s grace. Sarah’s response to the news of a son was sinful. The Bible mentions nothing about a confession and apology from her. The LORD visited her and was gracious to her. He fulfilled His promise without her understanding or cooperation.

I wonder how many promises of God are being fulfilled in our lives simply because of the grace of God, without any cooperation on our part. In fact, I would go a giant step beyond that and suggest that all the promises of God are fulfilled because of His grace, and that nothing we receive from Him is earned or deserved. According to human standards of relationship, Sarah had certainly lost the right to have a promise fulfilled. But not according to God’s standards. God deals with us by grace, not by grudges: by mercy, not merit.

I want to burst out in praise as I consider all the times I have walked by sight for selfish reasons, and yet God continues to fulfill His promises. Every day I wake up is a gracious visit from God with life. Every event of every day is a gracious visit from God with direction, guidance, and wisdom. Every improvement in my life is a gracious visit from God who is finishing the work He started in me. Every blessing in my life is a gracious visit from God who has promised every spiritual blessing from on high. Every test and trial is a gracious visit from God to make my faith stronger. None of these things is earned: all these things are God’s gracious visits to me.

May we begin to see every day as a celebration of God’s grace for each one of us. He is visiting us, and He is fulfilling His promise. That is reason to rejoice!

Pastor John

Faith Repents

LifeLink Devotional

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

No matter how strong our faith has grown, there are areas in which we still walk by sight. This is the predicament of us all, and almost cost Abraham his life.

Genesis 20:11-13 Abraham replied, “I said to myself, ‘There is surely no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me because of my wife.’ Besides, she really is my sister, the daughter of my father though not of my mother; and she became my wife. And when God had me wander from my father’s household, I said to her, ‘This is how you can show your love to me: Everywhere we go, say of me, “He is my brother.”’”

As I evaluate the motivations for choosing to walk by sight rather than by faith, I find there are primarily two: fear of others and fear of self-loss.

Abraham has been traveling around all the magnificent land that God has promised him, and he arrives in an area that is currently under the control of a king named Abimelech. Abraham, for the second time recorded in Scripture, tells a lie about his marital status with Sarah. Abimelech decides this new woman to the territory needs to be a part of his harem, so he brings Sarah to his tents to make her his wife.

Imagine the emotional response of Sarah to this.  She has just been told that within a year she will have a son with Abraham. Yet here she is in a stranger’s house with the expectation of marital relationships with the King. But God intervenes and speaks directly to Abimelech, telling him the truth of the situation. God gives him instructions to remedy the near tragedy. When Abimelech asks Abraham for an explanation, Abraham responds with an admission of walking by sight rather than by faith, and shows his human nature by trying to justify his actions.

Notice two very important lessons from Abraham’s confession:

  1. Abraham’s faith faltered because he feared how others might react. Abraham was more concerned with what men thought about God than with what God thought about men. He allowed his fear of what men could do to him to overwhelm his faith in what God had promised him. There are areas in our lives where this is true about us as well. Maybe it’s at work, or in some relationships, or maybe even in our church, but somewhere in our lives there is an activity that is motivated by the fear of how people will respond to us rather than by faith in how God will reward us. Growing faith in God’s promises conquers groveling fear of people.
  2. Abraham’s faith faltered because of the fear of self-loss. Let me share with you a very significant point that we need to consider in our walks of faith. Decisions motivated by fear rather than faith become almost unbreakable chains of bondage that can affect us for the rest of our lives.  Notice in today’s Scripture that Abraham admits to Abimelech that he made the decision to portray Sarah as his sister at the outset of his journey from his homeland. It was a condition of his walk of faith. When God told him to leave his family and comfort zone, Abraham agreed, on the condition that he would do what was necessary to protect his own life. That decision at the early stage of his faith held him in bondage for a long time.

I believe that we all need to seriously consider what conditions we have placed on our walk of faith. What areas of our lives have we decided are ours alone and that we are solely responsible for them? What decisions did we make at an early age that still hold us in emotional and spiritual bondage? How have we limited God’s power in our lives because of human restrictions we have placed on ourselves? These are serious questions and our responses will seriously affect us for a long time. Don’t be like Abraham and try to justify the decision that was made by saying that there was a small element of truth to it. We all know in our hearts what we have done from faith and what was done from fear. That which is of fear must be confessed and surrendered to God, so it can be replaced with His promises.

My friends, there is hope. No decision of the past that led to an emotional or physical addiction is permanent. That is the wonder of the forgiveness of Jesus Christ. Abraham learned from this mistake. He conquered his fears, and passed every additional test of his faith from this point forward.

So can you! God can and will forgive you and restore you. He will replace your fear with faith. Simply confess your need, make a decision of your will that you were wrong, and surrender to God’s will. He will make you whole!

Pastor John

Faith’s Compassion

LifeLink Devotional

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Today’s faith principles are found in this story of Abraham’s life that involves some very special guests at his house.

Genesis 18: 22-25 The men turned away and went toward Sodom, but Abraham remained standing before the LORD. Then Abraham approached him and said: “Will you sweep away the righteous with the wicked? What if there are fifty righteous people in the city? Will you really sweep it away and not spare the place for the sake of the fifty righteous people in it? Far be it from you to do such a thing-to kill the righteous with the wicked, treating the righteous and the wicked alike. Far be it from you! Will not the Judge of all the earth do right?”

The Lord Jesus Christ Himself has just appeared to Abraham and Sarah to confirm that in one year they will have a son. The two angels that accompanied Jesus have left to go down and visit the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah to see the terrible sinfulness of the people living there. Jesus stays behind with Abraham, and we can learn some lessons from their conversation.

  1. Abraham’s faith relationship with God had grown to the point where he was able to ask God to explain His purpose. Abraham asked God to explain the relationship between choices, actions, and character. This is an important step in a growing faith in God – to humbly seek to know more about God’s character by asking questions about circumstances that don’t make sense. We want to know God intimately and deeply so we can begin to understand that what He does is always a product of His character. Abraham was not attempting to correct God, or manipulate Him into a self-centered outcome: he was genuinely seeking to understand the relationship between God’s justice and the treatment of the righteous and the wicked. It benefits us to seek the heart of God when we don’t understand His actions, so long as we do it with a humble and submissive heart.
  2. By faith, Abraham was a man of intercession on behalf of others. He had already rescued Lot once, and now was pleading with God to save him again. I wonder how consistent we are being in pleading to the Lord on behalf of the lost around us? We are surrounded by people, even in our own families, who are trapped in sin. They are headed for the proverbial precipice of destruction and they need an intervention of God to turn them away from certain judgment. The angels are ready to be sent, and God’s compassion is ready to be extended. All that is lacking is the intercessory prayers of God’s people on their behalf. God is certain to respond. Let us remain consistent and persistent in our prayers for the unsaved and for the saved who have fallen away.
  3. Faith understands that God’s mercy protects the righteous in judgment. The last statement we have from the Lord in this conversation is this – “For the sake of ten, I will not destroy it.” Abraham was confident that there were ten righteous members of Lot’s family left, so the city would be spared from destruction. He was wrong. His sons-in-law rejected Lot’s request to leave the city. Would Lot now be destroyed in judgment with everyone else? No! In His mercy the Lord had the angels remove the righteous ones from the city before it was destroyed. God wants the righteous to live by their faith in Him, and not by any connection to the world, so He put Lot’s family to a test of their righteousness: don’t look back once you have left the city. Lot’s wife failed the test, and suffered the judgment of worldly attraction. Oh that we would be careful to live in the righteousness we claim, and to walk in the faith we profess.

May God use these thoughts to build us up in our faith, fill us with confidence in His saving power, and overwhelm us with compassion for the lost around us.

Pastor John

Faith Obeys

LifeLink Devotional

Monday, March 11, 2019

True faith involves obedience, even when it hurts. Let’s see how that lesson is taught to us in this story of Abram’s life. Here’s how the story ends.

Genesis 17:23 On that very day Abraham took his son Ishmael and all those born in his household or bought with his money, every male in his household, and circumcised them, as God told him.

Here’s what has just happened. God has confirmed his covenant with Abram by giving him a new name – Abraham (which means father of many) – and promising him a son with his wife Sarai, whose name is also changed to Sarah. God asks Abraham for a step of obedience to become a participant in the covenant. It was to be a painful step that would require days of healing. It would put the entire household at risk of attack by enemies. It would mean that daily chores would not get done. Animals would be unprotected. Women would have extra responsibilities added to their already busy schedules. This would take some planning and preparation, right? Wrong! Abraham obeyed immediately. He did not ask for time to make sure everything would work out right and that all the administrative issues could be resolved. He simply immediately obeyed.

When I discovered that I would require hernia surgery years ago, I made plans to have it at a time that would least interfere with my church schedule and personal plans. I knew I would be laid up and in pain for a while, and that my activities would be limited. I chose a date for the surgery that best fit my perspective of life. Now granted, my hernia surgery was not a step of faith that God was asking me to take, but I wonder how many other times I have delayed immediate obedience because I needed obedience to be convenient for me.

Complete faith does not take partial ownership in the outcome. Read that statement again carefully. Complete faith does not take partial ownership in the outcome. Sometimes God may give us responsibilities in determining the outcome, but when He clearly commands an activity we must obey immediately as Abraham did.

That’s what the teaching of James affirms in his New Testament letter:

Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like. But the man who looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what he has heard, but doing it-he will be blessed in what he does. What good is it, my brothers, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save him?  Faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead. But someone will say, “You have faith; I have deeds.” Show me your faith without deeds, and I will show you my faith by what I do.

God has ownership of the outcome: we are obligated to obedience. Not to earn anything from God, but to joyfully participate in His covenant promises. We are obligated by love, as Paul says in 2 Corinthians 5:14 – “Christ’s love compels us.”

By faith we are saved. By faith we continue to live. By faith we obey, and trust the next step to God.

Pastor John

Faith’s Patience

LifeLink Devotional

Friday, March 8, 2019

Sometimes our faith in God’s promises is tested by another person’s lack of faith. Abram has just been through some exciting faith-building experiences, including an upward look into the spiritual kingdom of God that would result from God’s covenant with him. However, his wife was not on the same page. Read about it in today’s story:

Genesis 16:1-6 Now Sarai, Abram’s wife, had borne him no children. But she had an Egyptian maidservant named Hagar; so she said to Abram, “The LORD has kept me from having children. Go, sleep with my maidservant; perhaps I can build a family through her.” Abram agreed to what Sarai said. So after Abram had been living in Canaan ten years, Sarai his wife took her Egyptian maidservant Hagar and gave her to her husband to be his wife. He slept with Hagar, and she conceived. When she knew she was pregnant, she began to despise her mistress. Then Sarai said to Abram, “You are responsible for the wrong I am suffering. I put my servant in your arms, and now that she knows she is pregnant, she despises me. May the LORD judge between you and me.” “Your servant is in your hands,” Abram said. “Do with her whatever you think best.” Then Sarai mistreated Hagar; so she fled from her.

We can only speculate as to why Sarai didn’t have the faith of her husband Abram. Was she tired of the social stigma of being childless? Was she simply devising a plan to protect herself as her husband had done when they went to Egypt? Did she know more about Abram’s doubts than we are told because she lived with him every day? Did she think that God had given her special permission to break His covenant because the end would justify the means?

Whatever the reason for her small faith, Sarai’s plan was to help God out in the accomplishment of making Abram the father of a great nation. In presenting the plan to her husband, she justifies it by blaming God for her condition. She demonstrates no faith in the power of God to change her current condition. She only has faith in her ability to fix the condition according to human reason. Abram’s response shows us that his faith still had some growing up to do also. He accepts the plan and participates in it.

Just think of all of the emotional tension that must have existed between Sarai and Abram. Both want God’s promise to be fulfilled, but for different reasons. Sarai wants a family. She wants to be a respected part of society. She has given up hope that it will happen naturally for her, so she chooses to give another woman to her husband and share him with her. She is willing to suffer those emotional consequences for the emotional benefits she hopes will come later.

Abram also wants a family, not for the emotional benefit but rather for the spiritual. His motives may be purer, but his method is still wrong. In fact, we can call his motives sinful, because Romans 14:23 says that “everything that does not come from faith is sin.”  When, because our faith is weak, we set aside the power and provision of God and use our power and provision to accomplish His promise, we sin.

My friends, there are some important issues for us to consider in this story as they relate to our own walks of faith.

  • How many of our choices are made based on human reason and understanding rather than faith in God’s purpose and plan?
  • How many of our choices are based on emotional responses to circumstances rather than faith in God’s power to provide?
  • How many of our choices are our attempts to hurry the process and bring to fulfillment the promises of God?
  • How many of our choices are responses to our emotional need to fit in and be accepted by others?

Consider carefully your circumstances right now, and before you make your plans, seek God’s purpose and trust His promise. Your faith will grow, and God’s glory will be experienced.

Pastor John

Faith’s Grace

LifeLink Devotional

Thursday, March 7, 2019

My faith seems to be backwards from Abram’s. Abram believed in the impossible but needed proof of the probable. I tend to be the opposite. When God speaks in terms and circumstances I can understand in my finite thoughts, I believe Him. It’s the hard-to-believe conclusions that give me problems.

Today’s faith lesson comes from this story in Abram’s life:

Genesis 15:7-18  God said to him, “I am the LORD, who brought you out of Ur of the Chaldeans to give you this land to take possession of it.” But Abram said, “O Sovereign LORD, how can I know that I will gain possession of it?” So the LORD said to him, “Bring me a heifer, a goat and a ram, each three years old, along with a dove and a young pigeon.” Abram brought all these to him, cut them in two and arranged the halves opposite each other; the birds, however, he did not cut in half. Then birds of prey came down on the carcasses, but Abram drove them away. As the sun was setting, Abram fell into a deep sleep, and a thick and dreadful darkness came over him. Then the LORD said to him, “Know for certain that your descendants will be strangers in a country not their own, and they will be enslaved and mistreated four hundred years. But I will punish the nation they serve as slaves, and afterward they will come out with great possessions. You, however, will go to your fathers in peace and be buried at a good old age. In the fourth generation your descendants will come back here, for the sin of the Amorites has not yet reached its full measure.” When the sun had set and darkness had fallen, a smoking firepot with a blazing torch appeared and passed between the pieces. On that day the LORD made a covenant with Abram and said, “To your descendants I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates.”

Abram believed in the impossibility of a son, and in the future Son of God that would come 1500 years later, but he could not accept without proof that the land in which he was already living would be his.

Sometimes our faith can be so fickle. What amazes and thrills me is that God meets us at the neediest point of our faith. The LORD God did not reject Abram for his need of proof, nor did he criticize him and tell him to grow up. He answered the request for proof.

There is great comfort in knowing that God does not require our faith to be perfect: He only requires that we be willing to be taught to have greater faith. I am so thankful that God is patient with us and graciously deals with our weaknesses. Imagine what a horrible condition we would be in if God were to treat us in any way other than with grace and mercy. We would live in fear and total despair because we would be constantly reminded of our failures. It breaks my heart to see the way some parents treat their children with constant reminders of failure. I see the broken spirits of the children resulting in lives of either criminal rebellion or emotional separation. So many of the drug, alcohol, and sexual addictions of our youth are directly traceable to their lack of personal value that should have been bestowed through the grace and mercy of parents. It may be because the parents weren’t present, or maybe because while they were there they didn’t model grace.

God’s grace is amazing. Even the sound of that word is sweet. His grace saved sinful wretches like us. You remember the song:

AMAZING GRACE  HOW SWEET THE SOUND
THAT SAVED  A WRETCH  LIKE ME
I ONCE  WAS LOST BUT NOW  I’M FOUND
‘TWAS BLIND BUT NOW  I SEE.

‘TWAS GRACE  THAT TAUGHT  MY HEART  TO FEAR
AND GRACE  MY FEARS  RELIEVED
HOW PRECIOUS  DID  THAT GRACE  APPEAR
THE HOUR  I FIRST  BELIEVED.

I praise God that he does not treat me as I tend to treat others, but rather meets me at my point of need and graciously meets that need. It is vital to the growth of our faith that we trust the grace of God so that we can be honest with Him about where we are struggling. Tell Him your struggles today, and listen for His response. He will confirm His promise and affirm your faith.

Pastor John

Faith Grows

LifeLink Devotional

Wednesday, March 6, 2019

I am encouraged when I see that Abram’s faith was a work in progress. I can relate. Abram’s faith was growing and being challenged to continue to grow, just as mine is every day.

Faith grows every time we take another step of faith. No step of faith is the last one, but each step of faith leads to a greater one. Abram has just demonstrated his desire to trust God for everything (see yesterday’s devotional). God now asks him to take yet another and even bigger step of faith.

Genesis 15:1-6 After this, the word of the LORD came to Abram in a vision: ”Do not be afraid, Abram. I am your shield, your very great reward.” But Abram said, “O Sovereign LORD, what can you give me since I remain childless and the one who will inherit my estate is Eliezer of Damascus?”  And Abram said, “You have given me no children; so a servant in my household will be my heir.” Then the word of the LORD came to him: “This man will not be your heir, but a son coming from your own body will be your heir.” He took him outside and said, “Look up at the heavens and count the stars if indeed you can count them.” Then he said to him, “So shall your offspring be.” Abram believed the LORD, and he credited it to him as righteousness.

In today’s story, God speaks to Abram and says that He is his very great reward. Abram’s faith is challenged. Abram is very wealthy already. He has a huge household of people serving him. He is in possession of a great land, and his fame is spreading. He has flocks and herds and camels, and he lacks for nothing. But Abram also understands that the heritage of future generations is the greatest reward any person can possess. This is obvious from his question back to God, which is, “What can you give me since I remain childless and the one who will inherit my estate is Eliezer of Damascus?” Abram knew that if he had no descendants he had no real reward.

Let me ask you – where is your treasure? Jesus said that wherever your treasure is, that is where your heart is. Is your treasure in what you have? Is it in what you accomplish?  Our first faith principle for today is this – our treasure is to be in the people to whom we model faith? Possessions cannot pass on heritage. Only people can! Put your heart into people, especially your family, and pass on the heritage of faith.

Back to the story: God gives Abram more details of His incredible promise. God says that Abram will have a son, and that through this son his offspring will become as numerous as the stars in the heavens. This is extremely significant. God’s earlier promise to Abram in Genesis 13 was that his descendants would be as numerous as the dust  (or sand) of the earth. In his early stages of faith, Abram needed to see things from a worldly, horizontal perspective.

The second faith principle is this – God understands our weak faith and meets us where we are to give us what we need to grow. Maybe right now in your life your faith is still small and all you can see is the world’s perspective. God will meet you there, but be prepared – He will not leave you there. As Abram’s faith grew, God asked him to change his perspective from looking at the world’s view to seeing a heavenly view. Abram’s significant step of faith was to hear God say, “Look up, don’t look around.”

I believe that is the step of faith many of us need to take today. Stop looking around for the fulfillment of life and the greatest reward: look up with the eyes of faith and trust the Sovereign Lord.

This is the first time in Scripture that anyone has called God Sovereign, and it is significant. Abram believed that God was in absolute control of all things and would accomplish His purpose. Even though he did not fully understand it, he surrendered to it, and God credited his faith as righteousness.

Abram did not work to receive righteousness; he believed the promise of a Son. It was more than a belief in a physical son named Isaac who would be born. By looking up Abram saw the spiritual heritage that he would be given when the Son, Jesus Christ, would be born. (See Romans 4:23-25) Abram’s reward was the spiritual understanding of God’s eternal purpose for man. He could not receive that reward by looking around. He looked up.

My friends, it is time for us to experience the fullness of God’s spiritual reward for our lives by looking up instead of looking around. It is time for us to take the next step of growing faith and surrender to the Sovereign so that the spiritual overwhelms the sensual. This will eliminate the need for knowing and seeing, and will solidify the reality of trusting.

Will you take that step today? If you do, you will soon be saying, “Things are looking up!”

Pastor John

Faith Gives

LifeLink Devotional

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Genesis 14:17-20  After Abram returned from defeating Kedorlaomer and the kings allied with him, the king of Sodom came out to meet him in the Valley of Shaveh (that is, the King’s Valley). Then Melchizedek king of Salem brought out bread and wine. He was priest of God Most High, and he blessed Abram, saying, “Blessed be Abram by God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth. And blessed be God Most High, who delivered your enemies into your hand.”  Then Abram gave him a tenth of everything.

In our ongoing saga of the life of Abram, from which we are learning great lessons in faith, Abram has become very established in the land of promise and has grown in wealth and power. Lot has moved from his tents on the outskirts of Sodom to living in the city. Lot is captured in a war with neighboring territories. When Abram receives word that his nephew has been taken prisoner, he organizes a small army of 318 men from his household and pursues Lot’s captors. When he catches them, he routs them in a nighttime battle and recovers all the stolen property and captured people.

This was a great act of faith on Abram’s part.  He took 318 men into battle against five kings and their armies from their respective cities.  But there is an even greater act of faith to follow.

On their way home, the King of Salem, now modern day Jerusalem, came out to meet Abram. King Melchizedek, holding a dual office of king and priest of God Most High, blesses Abram and gives the glory for the victory to God. Then, in phase one of Abram’s incredible act of faith, he gives Melchizedek one tenth of everything they had recovered in the war. Before there was any law that required tithing, from the love in his heart for God, Abram gave a tenth of everything to the Lord.

This is a great lesson for us today. We do not give to the Lord’s work because the law obligates us to: we give to the Lord because love motivates us – God’s love for us and our love for Him. If you wonder how much you should give, here is the starting point – 10% of everything you receive from any source, because the ultimate source is God.

But that is not the end of Abram’s faith in this story. The king of Sodom approaches Abram and tries to bargain for the rest of the spoils, specifically for the people. This king was smart, and knew that people were far more valuable than possessions, and people would generate more possessions. He offers to let Abram keep the material prizes in exchange for the people. But Abram models incredible faith for us and says this,

I have raised my hand to the LORD, God Most High, Creator of heaven and earth, and have taken an oath that I will accept nothing belonging to you, not even a thread or the thong of a sandal, so that you will never be able to say, ‘I made Abram rich.’ I will accept nothing but what my men have eaten and the share that belongs to the men who went with me – to Aner, Eshcol and Mamre. Let them have their share.”

WOW! Abram’s faith was so strong that he gave everything away except his actual expenses and the fair share for his men. Abram kept nothing for himself. Why? Because he never wanted any credit for his life to go to anyone but God. He trusted the promise of God so completely that he could give everything away and have complete confidence that God would continue to provide for him.

What a great lesson for us today – God alone is our provider. God alone receives the glory for what we have and what we accomplish. We can cease from our personal agendas, plans, pursuits, and power struggles, and relinquish everything to the promises of God. Let it never be said of our lives that anything of the world made us what we are. Let us raise our hand to the Lord God Most High, Creator of the heaven and earth, and swear an oath to Him that we will accept no glory for ourselves from the world. We will not allow the world to take any glory for who we are, what we have, or what we accomplish. All the glory is God’s alone.

Let us walk in that level of faith.

Pastor John

Choose Wisely

LifeLink Devotional

Monday, March 4, 2019

We are currently studying the subject of faith. The primary Biblical illustrator of faith for us is Abraham. Take a moment to read this story from his life.

Genesis 13:5-11 Now Lot, who was moving about with Abram, also had flocks and herds and tents. But the land could not support them while they stayed together, for their possessions were so great that they were not able to stay together. And quarreling arose between Abram’s herdsmen and the herdsmen of Lot. The Canaanites and Perizzites were also living in the land at that time. So Abram said to Lot, “Let’s not have any quarreling between you and me, or between your herdsmen and mine, for we are brothers. Is not the whole land before you? Let’s part company. If you go to the left, I’ll go to the right; if you go to the right, I’ll go to the left.” Lot looked up and saw that the whole plain of the Jordan was well watered, like the garden of the LORD, like the land of Egypt, toward Zoar. (This was before the LORD destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah.) So Lot chose for himself the whole plain of the Jordan and set out toward the east. The two men parted company.

Here are three faith lessons I learn from this story:

  1. Lot was selfish. He had made the great journey from Ur to Canaan on Abram’s bootstraps. He had gained his wealth and prominence by following Abram. Yet when a problem developed, Lot showed no humility and gratitude, but rather took advantage of the situation to further his own objectives. In such a situation I would hope that we would respond with humility and faith in God’s ability to provide for us, rather than with self-serving choices.
  2. Abram was a man of faith in God’s Word. He has just been through a learning experience in Egypt, and when he returns to Canaan he builds an altar and calls on the Name of the Lord. He is reminded again of God’s incredible promise and that he is to walk by faith every day. He passes the first test that arises with flying colors. He totally trusts God with the outcome of the land dispute and gives Lot the first choice for his flocks and herds. Afterwards, God affirms His promise, and rewards Abram’s faith by giving him not only the land He was left with, but all of the land Lot had just chosen as well.
  3. Abram was a content man in his faith. Lot chose city life, with all its pleasures and conveniences. Abram was left with his tents. Immediately he built another altar to the Lord, content in knowing that God would fulfill His promise. The walk of faith would be challenging as he moved through the length and breadth of the land to experience the fullness of God’s provision. He did not allow himself to be sidetracked by fleshly desires and worldly allures, as did Lot. When we are on God’s path of faith, moving through the entire coverage area of His provision, we can be content knowing that God is fulfilling His purpose.

You have probably heard these lessons many times before, but they are great reminders for us in our current situations. In every circumstance of our lives there is the potential for faith-walking or sight-walking. Sight-walking is selfish, and ends in destruction. Faith-walking is fulfilling, and ends in honor and glory. Make your choices accordingly.

Pastor John