1/28/2019
It’s been a few days. I used to wonder what it was like to have a “writer’s block,” not sure, but I think I’m still wondering. Each day I thought of something to write, but it didn’t seem interesting enough to me for me to think anyone else would enjoy reading it. So why write it? But, today will be different, hopefully.
The SIMH this morning is “Farther Along”—the version Willie Nelson did with his sister playing the piano. There is a certain peace that fills your mind listening to Willie sing and play this song. It is as if Mr. fletcher, in 1911, wrote these words for people like you and me 108 years later. I don’t know what kind of a preacher Mr. Fletcher was, but knowing the grace of God in his life is evident by the words. As for Willie, I’m pretty sure he understands grace if he doesn’t understand anything else about God’s plan.
When I last wrote it was about belief, which leads to faith without which it is impossible to please God. Since we are naturally inclined to tend toward evil instead of good, how shall we have the faith to produce what pleases the Lord? As Scripture bears out, we can’t, we don’t, we never will. Where does that leave us? Lost. What is our hope? Instead of “doing” a thing or two “right things” and getting His nod as having pleased the Lord, He fully explained how pleasing the Lord is possible: do nothing.
Our approach to our Holy and Righteous God is not on the basis of doing something or things, it is on the basis of Jesus Christ’s faith in the word of the Father*. When a man who had authority over the Apostle Paul fell to his knees and asked, “Sirs, what must I do to be saved?” they replied, “Believe on the lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved.” A simple, flat, unemotional call. Believe. Believe on. Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ. Why? When we “preach” (that’s proclaim, not a sermon) Christ, we tell a little bit more about what and who He is. If one or two verses had explained why, the bible could be a lot shorter. But we start with the first word in Paul and Silas’ statement. Believe. Believe what? Believe how that Christ died for our sins, was buried, and was raised again for our justification (Rom.4:24,25.)
Then, the next verse in order to know NOT to claim we’ve figured it out and DONE something to get peace is this: “(God) made (Christ) to be sin for us, Who knew no sin, that might be made the righteousness of God in (Christ.)” You see, we didn’t do that, God made Him to be sin, made you and me “the righteousness” we needed to be. Simple. How simple? Believe.
The same man who was used of the Lord to tell the jailer in Acts 16 to believe, wrote that verse in 2 Cor.5:21. He, of all the finite people used by the Lord to unfold His plan, knew his need of the “how to please the Lord” faith; he had been a believer in that which was opposed to the Lord Jesus Christ and had committed blasphemy of the Holy Ghost at least 5 times before being confronted on the road to Damascus. He was doomed with absolute zero hope. He was down on the ground, unable to see, therefore unable to do anything! But, there was Jesus, right where He needed to be, to bring life and light to a doomed man. After then preaching the good news about his own salvation and the salvation of all peoples, one of this man’s last written words were these: Consider what I say, and the Lord give thee understanding in all things.-2 Tim.2:7.
If you consider what Paul said (Romans through Philemon in your bible), you will understand the rest of your bible. You’ll begin to see time in an altogether different light and meaning than you’ve ever seen before.
No, I didn’t always believe that. I was saved very simply at 22, but didn’t know how to study the bible until I was 31. That’s a lot of years to just not know anything about the will of God, but I loved my religion. When I saw the bible contradictions in my religion, I wrestled them till I gave up, as I had given up the night I was saved, and submitted to the authority of the Word of God. The plain truth about us as people in this world—this isn’t our world. The Lord has redeemed us unto himself to be His. And thus, He can gather us unto Himself when our time has come to go.
These stories I occasionally write about are not for me to seem like a teller of tales. They are for contrast to the deeper things of the Lord in our lives. To show how we substitute fluff and frivolity as a diversion from the more sober and intense side of our time spent here. Almost as a resorting would be physically, so the stories that make up ours or other people’s lives fit in, to lighten or to bring us to melancholy, to a place of reflection, ultimately to bring us back to a clear picture of today, and bright hope for tomorrow!
*Recommended reading: John 17—the prayer of Christ unto the Father to see Christ’s faith in the Father’s words.
Thanks for reading, the Elder