A periodic devotional affirming the promise of Jesus Christ in John 10:10, "I am come that they have life to full." Reflections from the author's daily experience and those who share his journey in Christ.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
LIVING WITHIN THE SEASON
Sunday, April 26, 2009
YOU'E NOT THE BOSS OF ME !
Reading: Exodus 20:3
"No other gods, only me." The Message translation
Many years ago I encountered this person for the first time. He was a six-year old neighbor kid. He was making a general pest of himself in the neighborhood. Particularly troublesome was that he was bilingual--cursing was his second language. When I told him to watch his mouth, he stiffened in defiance and said pointedly, "You're not the boss of me!"
I have met this same person over and over in my 58 years of life. In a self-centered teenager at youth camp who did not want to be quiet during "quiet time.' In a husband who I confronted about his abuse of his wife. In a deacon who wanted to make the church walk his financial line. In an ordination candidate who wanted the church to approve him even though his doctrine was at variance with the Body. In a woman who wanted to keep her lover even though it meant trashing her marriage. In each case I was the spokesperson for authority--sometimes the duly appointed spokesperson for the Lord and His church. In each case it did not matter to this person. "You're not the boss of me."
Human beings have always wanted to be the boss of themselves. And they have sometimes foolishly exercised their freedom to be the boss. That was essentially the first sin in the Garden--Adam and Eve's desire to be their own boss by eating of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, so they could be like God.
But there is only one Lord of the Universe, and we are not Him. And when we try to claim His job, we only reap trouble. We may experience the momentary satisfaction of doing what we want when we want, but the ultimate consequence is that we lose our lives in the slavery of sin. We may want to be the boss of ourselves, but without God's leadership, sin becomes our Master.
This devotional is published on behalf of the Church of God of Landisville and its friends.
(C) 2009 by Stephen L. Dunn. All rights reserved. You can subscribe by email by sending a message to Patty at coglandisville@coglandisville.org or signing on as a follower of this blog.
Thursday, April 23, 2009
PURPOSEFUL EXTRAVAGANCE
Reading: Matthew 26 6-16
The disciples were not in a good mood, especially Lazarus. The disappointment they felt was magnified by having to go to dinner at Simon's. Then the air was filled with a powerful perfume. Following their noses they saw Mary--foolish, irresponsible Mary--washing Jesus feet and drying them with her hair. Their indignation rose and finally Judas said, "What a waste! We could have taken this perfume and sold and given the money for the poor."
Jesus is not amused or rebuked. "Mary has had more faith and vision than all of you put together. She gets it. She knows that I must die and that will be the best thing for all you.
The poor you will always have, but I will do this one time and it will be over. When the whole story is told, Mary will be remembered and honored."
The disciples were really angry at Jesus. They didn't "get it" or they didn't want to. They wanted discipleship without sacrifice (what Bonhoeffer called "cheap grace.") And that's problem with Jesus--he is too extravagant. He calls us to take risks, to take up a cross, to embrace sacrificial servanthood --- and we just think of it as wasteful. But here's the takeaway from the story. Stop identifying with Judas and the disciples. Identify with Mary.
Purposeful extravagance is never wasteful. It is a testimony.
This devotional is published on behalf of the Church of God of Landisville and its friends. (C) 2009 by Stephen L. Dunn. All rights reserved. To subscribe use the "friends" link of this blog or email coglandisville@coglandisville.org.
RESPONSE TO DEVOTIONAL
From Steve: Craig is one of my PTI students who subscribes to this devotional via email. We reprint this with his permission.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
FALLING APART
"Falling Apart"
Reading: Proverbs 24:10
"If you fall to pieces in a crisis, there wasn't much to you
in the first place." - Proverbs 24:10 The Message
In a fallen world, people are a lot more in crisis than they let on. They often put off getting help until the bleeding has become critical. Then they call out for help, usually in a panic. Then they call their pastor. In my experience, they also often call all at once. No orderly consultations with their pastor with the luxury of helping settle one person's problem before the next one presents themselves. When the flood starts the waiting room is filled, and you just have to do what you have to do.
This is when a pastor, or any person committed to serious people-helping learns what they are made of. In crisis, you learn whether or not you can handle crisis. And how you handle crisis determines how the person having the crisis handles it ... and whether or not they will survive.
A pastor, or any people helper, prepares for those days by choosing to build their life upon Christ. To live all their days guided by Him and empowered by Him--whether in times of crisis or just quiet ordinary times. And you learn whether Christ is really in them when you see how they work in crisis.
Crisis times WILL come. Are you living in the power of Christ?
This devotional is published on behalf of the Church of God of Landisville and its friends. (C) 2009 by Stephen Dunn. All rights reserved. Reprint rights can be secured by contacting Steve at sdunnpastor@coglandisville.org
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