Showing posts with label christian life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christian life. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2013

Not All Rainbows and Butterflies


There are many who would have you believe that if you become a Christian everything in your life will be easy. There are preachers who preach that your life will be free from suffering, all things will go your way and you will be materially prosperous once you give all control over to Christ. That is a lie.

Nowhere in Scripture does Christ say, “Follow me and your life will be all rainbows and butterflies.” What does He say? “If anyone would come after me let him take up his cross and deny himself and follow me.” Take up his cross? Deny himself? That doesn’t sound like rainbows and butterflies and you would be right. It’s not. The Christian life is the hardest there is to live. We should not only expect suffering but we are promised suffering. We are fish swimming up stream constantly. There is no time to relax, no point at which we can stop and catch our breath. We must be always on our guard because our flesh is always ready to take advantage of our weakness and the devil is standing in the shadows preparing snares for our feet. 



My brothers and sisters, if life were supposed to be easy God would have laid everything we could ever need or desire right at our feet. But if this were the case, there would be no need to trust Him, and no need to rely on His faithfulness. So we have trials. Sometimes God might wait until the last minute to provide a need for you just to see if you’ll still trust Him when your need is most dire. He tests us. And this is good! Tests show us where we are at in our walk with God. Just like in school, they help us track the progress we are making in a particular area of our life. Sometimes, we may fail but the Lord remains faithful even then. So dear reader, I exhort you to put your trust in our Lord and His providence and to have faith that He will always be faithful to us, His children. Only by casting our cares on Him and trusting in Him for our every need will we have the true rest we are all longing for. 

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Blessings, Blues, and Blinders

Usually when I sit down to write, I have a pretty good idea of what I'm going to write about. Today, however, is not such an occasion but I need to write. Anyway, I guess telling you a little bit about my summer wouldn't be a bad a place to start. Perhaps, something more specific will spark from my account.

This summer I was privileged to participate in an internship with Ligonier Ministries. I got to do so many cool things. I edited books, wrote radio scripts and even wrote a book release. I also got to learn about the heads of the departments within the ministry, becoming more familiar with the purposes and goals of the ministry simultaneously. I was blessed to work under Deborah Finnamore, a sister and friend who has become very dear to me over the last weeks. She has guided and supported me throughout my internship and I have gained so much from her gentle heart and unwavering confidence in me.

Other than the benefits an internship usually gives you such as experience and something to put on your resume, God graciously allowed me the wonderful opportunity to get to know and grow closer to my sisters in the faith, Heidi, Karisa, and Tabitha. Their sweet and loving hearts have been such a wonderful blessing of comfort and companionship to me this summer, as I have been missing my dear friends from FSU and sometimes feeling like there isn't a place for me here in the general Orlando area. That has made the summer more difficult, an almost winter of sorts for a lonely heart.

But God teaches us that we are never truly alone. "Behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age" (Matt. 28:20). And He promises never to forsake us (Deut. 31:6,8; Ps. 37:28). He uses these times to cause us to run to Him and to look to Him alone to tell us who we are in Him and because of Him, to find our strength, and to take refuge in His loving arms. The lessons of loneliness are not easy but they are necessary.

Over the past few weeks, even months, I have become aware of an unhealthy mindset I have allowed to grow and fester within me. I have been comparing myself to a friend and her spiritual walk instead of focusing on my own personal walk with the Lord. Every time I looked at how well she seemed to live her Christian life, I was discouraged and disappointed in myself. I would say to myself, "Kayla, you'll never be as good as this person and so you'll never get the things that she has and that you want." Not only is this a thought from the Devil himself, but it also encouraged an envious and ungrateful heart. It also stole away any motivation I might have had to grow closer to God simply for the sake of knowing Him more intimately because I put a measuring stick up to someone else and said, "This is how I should look and anything less isn't worth investing in."

Well, every time I held up that measuring stick, I fell short. I saw the magnitude of sin in my heart and was overwhelmed. I felt like David who proclaimed in Psalm 51, "For I know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me" (v. 3). I asked myself, "How will I ever be able to overcome my lack of self-discipline, my inconsistency, and my lack of perseverance? Why do I feel alone in this fight? Doesn't God want me to be victorious?"

The answer is a resounding, "Yes." God does want us to overcome our sin and He will help us do it. 1 John 5:4-5 says, "For everyone who has been born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that has overcome the world--our faith. Who is it that overcomes the world except the one who believes that Jesus is the Son of God?" I realized that I have been relying on my own strength and that's why I keep on failing. I need to repent of this and turn to Christ and rely on His strength, for only then can I be victorious.

I once heard someone describe walking your own Christian walk as a horse running a race. The jockey always places blinders over the horse's eyes so that the only thing he can see is the dirt right in front of him, keeping him from being distracted from the other horses in the race. We have to remember that all Christians are in different stages of maturity. Some are farther along than others and that's okay. The danger is in expecting ourselves to be as spiritually mature as someone else overnight and maybe even convincing ourselves that that person is perfect even though the Scriptures clearly tell us that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" (Rom. 3:23). Entertaining this mindset will be a stumbling block to you, so put your blinders on and don't let your brothers' and sisters' walks distract you from your own.

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Thanks for reading!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

What do I know of holy?

"but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, since it is written, 'You shall be holy, for I am holy.'" ~I Peter 3:16

What does it mean to be holy?

A word study on net.bible.org produced these definitions:

holy: set apart to the service or worship of God; reserved from profane or common use; free from sinful affections; pure in heart; godly; guiltless; acceptable to God

Oswald Chambers has this to say on the subject of holiness,

"Never tolerate, because of sympathy for yourself or for others, any practice that is not in keeping with a holy God. Holiness means absolute purity of your walk before God, the words coming from your mouth, and every thought in your mind--placing every detail of your life under the scrutiny of God Himself."

WHOA! God demands holiness, absolute purity, in EVERY aspect of my life. But how can this holiness be attained when every aspect of my being--my speech, my actions, my thoughts, my desires and feelings, my mind, soul and body--is completely, totally and all-inclusively infected, degraded and depraved by my sin?

We need to be holy and live holy lives--anything less is unacceptable to God. We gain this holiness through a relationship with Jesus Christ. He is our substitute, our propitiation for our sins. His righteousness is transferred to us and God reconciles us to Himself through him.

"God can put [us] into perfect oneness with Himself through the death of Jesus Christ, without a trace of anything coming between us any longer."
-Oswald Chambers

My fellow Christians, my brothers and sisters in the Lord,

Do you believe that we need to be holy? Do you believe that God can come into you and make you holy through the blood of Jesus Christ? Search your being. What parts of your life do you still need to surrender to God? What unholiness are you tolerating in your own life? Are you willing to give up the sin in your life so that God can work his holiness in you and bring glory to himself? Ask your heavenly Father, who is ready and willing to do all that you ask of him, to transform your heart, to give you a heart of absolute purity. We are called to be holy, and even more, we are destined for it. Don't let anything hold you back from attaining it.