Required Characteristics


Micah 6:8 He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God? 

 God is graciously clear to us in His Word. He does not hide His will from us but shows us plainly. In this verse we are given three characteristics that God requires. Lets think about these for a moment.

  1. Do Justly—This simply means to do what is right. One man said, “Do right till the stars fall.” The disciple of Christ must always strive to do what is the acceptable will of God. Do what is right toward God, our families, our employers, our co-workers and other believers. Live each day purposing to do right in every situation. When we act unjustly, we must make it right as soon as possible in order to keep a clear conscience toward God and man.
  2. Love Mercy—The greatest act of mercy was displayed at Calvary. Jesus gave His life for hell bound sinners so that they could be heaven bound saints. Having been shown so much mercy, how can we not delight in showing mercy to others. It is easy to treat others with less grace than we have received. We hold out for full restitution to be made for wrongs committed rather than show mercy and forgive. As believers, we ought to be excited to show mercy just as Christ did toward us.
  3. Walk Humbly—Our daily prayer ought be for the enablement of God to live our lives before Him in humility. How we need a fresh daily realization of our absolute need of His guidance. When we walk humbly we will pray without ceasing, seek God’s will in His Word, treat others with respect and kindness and take the disappointments and trials of life as allowed by our loving Heavenly Father trusting His perfect plan. God will be first in our thoughts and actions. 

Micah 6:8 provides characteristics that are practical and ought be applied to our lives today. Take a moment and ask God to help you live accordingly.

Anger

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Ephesians 4:26-27 Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath: Neither give place to the devil.

I was reading Spiritual Leadership by J. Oswald Chambers and came across a helpful list of six conditions that make anger sinful. These were taught by Joseph Butler (1692–1752) and I believe helpful in evaluating our anger.

  1. When, to favor a resentment or feud, we imagine an injury done to us. 
  2. When an injury done to us becomes, in our minds, greater than it really is. 
  3. When, without real injury, we feel resentment on account of pain or inconvenience.
  4. When indignation rises too high, and overwhelms our ability to restrain.
  5. When we gratify resentments by causing pain or harm out of revenge. 
  6. When we are so perplexed and angry at sin in our own lives that we readily project anger at the sin we find in others.

Are You Vocal?

Untitled designIt is easy to be vocal against policies with which we disagree especially those that are morally wrong. Being vocal and exercising the right of free speech is one of the great benefits of being an American. However, on this Presidents Day, we should be vocal in another way—vocal in prayer. As people of the cross, we can get distracted by news stories, rulings and the silence about ISIS persecutions. Let’s be reminded of a Bible truth.

Proverbs 21:1 The king’s heart is in the hand of the LORD, as the rivers of water:He turneth it whithersoever he will.

God holds our President’s heart in his hand and is perfectly able to direct it. As believers we ought to lift up our President in prayer today because the God of the Bible is ultimately in control. After all, this is what God commands us to do for all those that are in authority over us.

1 Timothy 2:1-2  I exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men; 2 For kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty.

Take a moment and pray for our President Barack Obama today.

Technology and Christian Homes

Teens-and-Technology-blankIt is very clear that technology is not going to go away. Children and teenagers growing up now need parents to both protect and direct them in the Godly use of technology. The fact is they will be using technology daily as adults and the principles that they learn now will help them live Godly while using technology. Here are a few suggestions.
  1. Use a family policy. 
    Every family with teens should have a carefully thought through and written set of guidelines regarding the use of technology. As with any guidelines, what is not inspected should not be expected. Be sure that you establish adequate accountability such as parents should have open access to all devices and accounts. By the way, open accountability ought be modeled by mom and dad. Teens ought to see that their parents are practicing what they preach.
  2. Use your computer’s existing features.
    Both Apple and Windows come with parental controls as a feature. You can set up allowed apps, sites people and time limits. Here are instructions for Mac and Windows. If you have Android devices, you can use an app called Kids Place. Apple devices have a built-in feature called restrictions.
  3. Use an internet filter.
    While parental controls limit access, filters filter content. There are two that I have discovered to be great options— Covenant Eyes and Safe Eyes. Each are full service filters. Each come with a monthly cost (which are cheaper than lifetime scars). I would encourage you to take the time and research a filter that is best for you and your family’s devices.
  4. Develop the heart. 
    One man said in relation to the internet, “The best filter is the heart.” While parental controls and filters will make it harder to stumble on or intentionally view junk on the internet, the heart is what determines to do right or wrong. If a man, woman or teen has a heart for God and righteous living, they will not seek out the dark side of the internet. No filter is completely fail proof, but coupling a right heart and a good filter will insure internet safety.

    Proverbs 4:20-27 My son, attend to my words;
    Incline thine ear unto my sayings.
    21 Let them not depart from thine eyes;
    Keep them in the midst of thine heart.
    22 For they are life unto those that find them,
    And health to all their flesh.
    23 Keep thy heart with all diligence;
    For out of it are the issues of life.
    24 Put away from thee a froward mouth,
    And perverse lips put far from thee.
    25 Let thine eyes look right on,
    And let thine eyelids look straight before thee.
    26 Ponder the path of thy feet,
    And let all thy ways be established.
    27 Turn not to the right hand nor to the left:
    Remove thy foot from evil.

My Hope is in the Lord

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“And now, Lord, what wait I for? My hope is in thee.”  Psalm 39:7

This verse was written in a time in David’s life when he was facing something few of us will ever face—a son who was out to kill him. Absalom was bitter because his father failed to take action against the crime Amnon committed against his sister Tamar. Certainly, David should have stood up, taken charge in his family and dealt with this horrible sin. Like each of us though, David had his failures. Maybe he had hoped time would heal the situation or that by ignoring it everything would go back to normal. The opposite happened and this problem continued to fester.  What is so encouraging is that as David was going through these consequential circumstances he placed his hope in God. He realizes his desperate need for God. He sees ever so clearly that he cannot look to himself to resolve his problems. David not only places his hope in God but goes on to acknowledge his sin and to seek deliverance from God.

“Deliver me from all my transgressions: Make me not the reproach of the foolish.” Psalm 39:8

There is a lesson here for us all! From time to time we find ourselves in situation because of our own failures. We agonize and look for resolutions but come up empty. We must learn to do as David did and to acknowledge that God is our only hope, confess our sin and seek His deliverance. God is always there willing and ready to help the believer who acknowledges his need.

“Hear my prayer, O LORD, And give ear unto my cry; Hold not thy peace at my tears.” Psalm 39:12 

“God is our refuge and strength, A very present help in trouble.” Psalm 46:1

No matter the situation you can always put your hope in God. He will be right there for you!

Focus

IMG_0032There is no end of talk about the characteristics of the millennial generation. As a millennial myself, a characteristic that I am burdened about is the willingness to criticize the older generation. Sure, every generation, including the millennials, has its blind spots and failures. You would be hard pressed to find a preacher in his 60’s who would not readily admit theirs. My question is this. What should the focus of millennials be as we are taking the mantle of ministry? It seems that many of my generation are so focused on the issues of the past, valid and invalid, that they have forgotten the present mission. Many would rather sit behind a keyboard and criticize than knock on doors and preach the Good News. God did not commission us to be critiques but to be couriers. I believe we need to refocus and set our priorities right.

  1. Focus on Continuing
    Paul commanded Timothy to continue not critique in the things he had learned. Let’s not be so in love with “new” that we ditch what is good old, real Christian practice. I hear so many criticize the last generation’s standards as legalistic throwing them out the window not realizing they have just ripped out key protections of purity wisely put in place.  Check your heart when you find yourself zealous to disregard that which you have been taught. Be careful to follow the wise advice of the Apostle Paul to continue in the things you have been taught.
  2. Focus on the Commission
    In these last days, we must use the strength of our youth to preach Jesus boldly, publicly and constantly. The devil would love to sidetrack us with the wrong doing of a preacher, a vendetta against standards or a desire to be accepted. Bottom line, Jesus has called us to follow Him so that we could be fishers of men. We need a laser focus on the great commission influencing others to follow suit and turn our worlds upside down. Have you stopped to think that the time taken to write that criticizing blog may have been better used planning an outreach campaign or just getting some tracts and going soul winning. Let’s be busy for Jesus and for souls!
  3. Focus on the Christlikeness 
    This is the ultimate goal of every believer. Jesus has clearly revealed Himself in the Word and commands us follow His example. Let us be passionate about following His commands to hate sin, to be holy, to love not the world, to preach the Gospel everywhere, to walk as children of the light and to prove all things. It saddens me to hear millenials criticize the older generation’s practices as legalistic and unbiblical while many of them simply had a desire to follow Jesus and obey his commands—to be Christlike. We must personally focus on following and becoming like our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.