Do not accept the glory due to God

When Peter entered, Cornelius met him and fell down at his feet and worshiped him. But Peter lifted him up, saying, “Stand up; I too am a man.” (Acts 10: 25-26)

On an appointed day Herod put on his royal robes, took his seat upon the throne, and delivered an oration to them. And the people were shouting, “The voice of a god, and not of a man!” Immediately an angel of the Lord struck him down, because he did not give God the glory, and he was eaten by worms and breathed his last. (Acts 12:21-23)

“Worship not your fellow man, for you are as great as he.” – Pete Tzerzak

“You shall worship GOD alone – do not associate anything with Him.” Qur’an 4:36

“I am not the Christ.” – John the Baptist

When people try to glorify you, eschew it like the plague, blessing loudly the name of the Lord Almighty and His Son Jesus Christ. There is one God, and one mediator, and we are all equals.

If we would, he would

There is a longing in the heart of God which defies his sovereign will somehow. God thinks in the subjunctive case. “If only…!” he says, urging his people to do what they refuse to do. O God, I will! I want! Let my stubbornness not keep me from blessings withheld, honey and wheat reserved in your heart for the moment when I would choose you. You will not open my mouth for me, Lord, but I open it now and beg like a baby chick for your food!

Psalm 81

Hear, O my people, and I will warn you—
if you would but listen to me, O Israel!
9 You shall have no foreign god among you;
you shall not bow down to an alien god.
10 I am the LORD your God,
who brought you up out of Egypt.
Open wide your mouth and I will fill it.
11 “But my people would not listen to me;
Israel would not submit to me.
12 So I gave them over to their stubborn hearts
to follow their own devices.
13 “If my people would but listen to me,
if Israel would follow my ways,
14 how quickly would I subdue their enemies
and turn my hand against their foes!
15 Those who hate the LORD would cringe before him,
and their punishment would last forever.
16 But you would be fed with the finest of wheat;
with honey from the rock I would satisfy you.”

New colors

Then the moon will be abashed and the sun ashamed, for the LORD of hosts will reign on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem, and His glory will be before His elders. – Isaiah 24:23

The sun will be ashamed at the glory of the Lord, so marvelous will it be. Is the sun not that which illumines and colors everything we see? So then will everything on which our eyes fall not be a thousand times more beautiful in the light of God’s glory – will there not be myriad pleasures and discoveries and little marvels everywhere in Zion, each one giving glory to God through its very visibility and vibrancy? Sight itself will be remade, for there will be a new and greater “electromagnetic spectrum” there, which would make ours here seem like black and white – or perhaps just black. I think if we say that we will all be only staring at the Throne for eternity is quite a narrow view of the beauty of the Lord. He makes everything glorious. Oh I long for that day, when my eyes will at last be opened to gasp and stagger and laugh and shout in the streets of Zion, “the perfection of beauty,” where the Beautiful One reigns!

Amillenialism

After a some research and hearing a symposium of pre-, post- and amillenialistic opinions (hosted by John Piper), I’m leaning toward amillenialism. This will surely come as a shock to the Liberty folk. It seems a more unified interpretation that best captures the weight of the impending return of Christ. And I agree with the heavily symbolic interpretation of Revelation 20, based upon, among other things, a sort of parallelism with Genesis 1-2.

Proverbs 27 selections “in other words”

1Do not boast about tomorrow, For you do not know what a day may bring forth.
Life is unstable – don’t be complacent in your plans.

2Let another praise you, and not your own mouth; A stranger, and not your own lips.
Don’t compliment yourself.

4Wrath is fierce and anger is a flood, But who can stand before jealousy?
To woo the heart that belongs to another is theft.

5Better is open rebuke than love that is concealed. Faithful are the wounds of a friend, but deceitful are the kisses of an enemy.
Honesty is love, flattery is hate.

7A sated man loathes honey, But to a famished man any bitter thing is sweet.
When there is food to be had, it is better to be hungry than full.

10Do not forsake your own friend or your father’s friend, And do not go to your brother’s house in the day of your calamity; Better is a neighbor who is near than a brother far away.
It is fitting to rely on your friends and confide in them.

14He who blesses his friend with a loud voice early in the morning, It will be reckoned a curse to him.
God hates morning people.

17Iron sharpens iron, So one man sharpens another.
1+1=3

22Though you pound a fool in a mortar with a pestle along with crushed grain, Yet his foolishness will not depart from him.
No amount of punishment will cure foolishness.

23Know well the condition of your flocks, And pay attention to your herds; For riches are not forever, Nor does a crown endure to all generations.
You must be consistently analyzing and monitoring your assets if you want future security.

Proverbs 25 selections “in other words”

It is the glory of God to conceal a matter, but the glory of kings is to search out a matter.
Our place is the pursuit.

Like apples of gold in settings of silver is a work spoken in right circumstances.
Timeliness is beautiful.

Like the cold of snow in the time of harvest is a faithful messenger to those who send him, for he refreshes the soul of his masters.
What a relief it is to have a reliable helper.

Have you found honey? Eat only what you need, that you not have it in excess and vomit it.
Be mindful of your pleasures this side of paradise.

Let your foot rarely be in your neighbor’s house, or he will become weary of you and hate you.
Give the man his space.

Like one who takes off a garment on a cold day, or like vinegar on soda, is he who sings songs to a troubled heart.
Do not be quick to comfort, nor make light of grief.

If your enemy is hungry, give him food to eat; and if he is thirsty, give him water to drink; for you will heap burning coals on his head, and the Lord will reward you.
Returning good for evil will bring a gratifying agitation on the wicked. And God likes it.

It is better to live in a corner of the roof than in a house shared with a contentious woman.
Solitude is better than bad company, and irritation of the body than that of the soul.

Like cold water to a weary soul, so is good news from a distant land.
Missionaries are better than Coca-cola.

Like a trampled spring and a polluted well is a righteous man who gives way before the wicked.
It is a shame to be a sycophant.

It is not good to eat much honey, nor is it glory to search out one’s own glory.
Receive honor gratefully when it comes to you, but do not go after it.

Like a city that is broken into and without walls is a man who has no control over his spirit.
Filter your mind, resist being molded by every worldly passerby.

On the miracle at Cana

The first of Jesus’ signs is not some uninterpretable transmogrification of water to wine, the purpose being to refute the expectation of total abstinence from liquor. It was a beautiful and fitting first glimpse of the coming Messiah. John’s story is loaded with symbolism indicating that God has become flesh in Him to purify mankind, with the curious sensation that “something is afoot” with this man from Galilee.

According to Jewish wedding tradition, the bridegroom and his family were obligated to provide the wedding feast, including the wine. To fail in this feast was a terrible social mistake – an embarassment on the family so grievous that it even made the family liable to lawsuits from the bride’s family.

Thus, at the wedding in Cana, the when they ran out of wine, the bridegroom and his family were in danger. When Jesus provided sufficient wine, he satisfied the legal obligations of the bridegroom and saved the family’s honor. The wedding was saved from total disaster.

It seems to me that Christ, in doing this, was indicating that he would do the very same thing for his own wedding feast, the Marriage Supper of the Lamb. He came to earth to restore his people to God as a wandered woman to her husband (read Hosea) and marry her as his own. In some cosmic sense, the whole messianic mission that Christ began with this miracle was to provide wine for His wedding feast.

I will venture that providing the wine required by law is symbolically equivalent to providing the blood required for the atonement of sins. Consider how intricately linked is the symbolism between blood and wine, throughout scripture. “This is my blood, given for you” (Matthew 26:28). This symbolism is the basis of one of the greatest sacraments given to the church, the eucharist/Lord’s Supper (the name depends on your denominational camp). Blood and wine are interchangeable here. Now in heaven there was a price to be paid by the bridegroom for his bride (God for his people) and there suddenly appeared a great lack. The law demanded “more blood!”, just as it demanded the wine in Cana. “Insufficient!” The honor of this God who intended to draw humanity back into his holy arms was in danger. Thus Christ provided this blood and saved the honor of God in the eyes of his own justice. Do you see the parallel?

The means of his providing it also shows a majestic picture of the incarnation. For consider that it was in pots of ceremonial cleansing that the servants poured the water which became wine. How were we to be purified, made holy and cleansed before God? Not through water alone, as had been done in the Old Testament covenant, but through wine—through atoning blood. What is the difference between blood and water? Blood contains living cells—it is the life of the being contained in water, if you will. Perhaps the spirit is saying this: Our atonement could be achieved not through mere water, until real flesh and blood and life entered this water. Without the substance of real incarnated life, our purification was incomplete. “For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that makes atonement for one’s life” (Leviticus 17:11). It was Christ’s becoming man – his incarnation, his adoption of a human life with human blood, that satisfied the debt incurred by our for our sinful blood.

So what did the miracle at Cana say? Can you here God speaking through the scripture, “There is a price to be paid for the union of God and man, and my son Jesus Christ will provide it, through his taking on human blood, to complete the life-for-life exchange that mere water pots could never fulfill?”

Praise be to God, who through this first sign of Christ’s ministry is already peeling back the revelation of the beauty of His Son crucified for the sins of the world!

We are wonder-babies

“From the mouth of infants and nursing babes You have established strength because of Your adversaries” (Psalm 8:2)

The humble are like children and babes before you, Lord, but from their mouths you have chosen to reveal your strength to earth. Through the impotent ones you have brought your kingdom and authority to earth. What is man, that you are mindful of him, but you have given authority to exercise stewardship of your kingdom on the earth.

This means that even the most feeble baby believer has power to shake the earth by bringing the kingdom of God down into contact with it, to unleash divine strength. Lord, if I have but a mustard seed of faith, a drop of hope, a quick but earnest call to heaven, I can move entire mountains. Let me never say, “Ah, but I cannot do that – I am too impotent of a believer.” We have no faith in faith. We simply have faith in God. Faith is not a quantity which we must accumulate through long disciplines, it is an immediate reality when it comes. Let me not forget that God works miracles through the most abecedarian believer.

Service is a response

Restore to me the joy of Your salvation and sustain me with a willing spirit.
THEN I will teach transgressors your ways, and sinners will turn back to You.

Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, the God of my salvation;
THEN my tongue will joyfully sing of Your righteousness.

O Lord, open my lips,
IN ORDER THAT my mouth may declare Your praise.

By Your favor do good to Zion; Build the walls of Jerusalem.
THEN You will delight in righteous sacrifices, in burnt offering and whole burnt offering; then young bulls will be offered on Your altar.

Your vows are binding on me, O God; I will render thank offerings to You.
FOR You have delivered my soul from death, Indeed my feet from stumbling, so that I may walk before God in the light of the living.

Our sacrifice and good works are a response to his grace coming upon us. The realization of the good news and a sweetly broken heart in the light of it is the root out of which our action flowers. Better to be mindful to cultivate this cause in my heart and let it do its sprouting work, rather than to be mindful of the works themselves.

Seeds sprouted after

Ride a jeepney two hours into the beautiful green-clad mountains outside Butuan City, and you’ll reach a covered basketball court that serves as the community center for a small village. A group of medical missionaries were holding a clinic in the middle of the concrete pavilion one morning in late June. They had been welcomed that morning by the village captain and his assistant, who said, “I have lived here all my life, and this is the first time a medical clinic has come to our village.” Jordan and Sam, two college students, took temperatures and blood pressure, then gave everyone a number and sent them to some benches to wait until they were called.

Pastor Antonio leaned on a table near the benches. He was a brown-skinned Filipino with a thick and powerful build, and deep grooves that time had etched into his face. He had once been in the rebel army, but now his hardened face had a sublime tranquility in it, as he taught the people sitting on the benches about the Gospel. Behind Antonio was a large banner with pictures illustrating Bible stories that outlined the Gospel, the Gospel that changed his life and took him from military to ministry. He pointed to the box that depicted a cross on a hill, and addressed the small crowd in deep-voiced Cebuano. I knew what he was saying.

A few minutes later, Pastor Antonio called me over. “I want you to share your testimony,” he said. There was a new group of patients waiting at the benches. I agreed, exited at the opportunity and a little nervous. I told my story, about how I had been raised in the church, how I had wrestled with my father’s atheism, how I had fallen into secret sins that taught me God’s patient love, how I had resolved to hold no part of my life back from my King, how Christ was my only good. Pastor Antonio translated after every few sentences, so I had plenty of pauses to think about what to say. The mothers and children looked at my intently as I urged them to seek God and find him good, as I had. I prayed, and it was over. We passed out some tracts, smiling at the families.

I repeated my testimony to two or three other groups of patients. At three o’clock, the medical mission wrapped up, and we took the bone-rattling jeepney ride back down the mountain road. “Lord,” I prayed, “I’ve been faithful to tell who you are to me. I’ve done all I can, but no one responded openly. Please bring fruit out of it in your own time.”

Pastor Antonio had a daughter who had just given birth and was in the hospital with complications. She was taking heavy antibiotics to fight infection. About a week after the medical clinic, I went to the hospital in Butuan City to visit Antonio and his daughter, marveling at dank corridors that would have appalled most medical professionals back home. As I sat beside his daughter’s hospital bed and talked with him and our friend Rudy, Antonio pointed a finger at me and said something in Cebuano. I didn’t quite catch it, but Rudy translated.

“He says God used your testimony to bring people to salvation. Three people from the medical clinic last week came to Pastor Antonio here in the hospital and asked how to join our church.”

“Wait, they came here?” I asked. The trip to Butuan City was not something casually done for most rural residents.

“Yes, they sought him out in the hospital. There were two women and a man,” said Rudy.

“Praise God!” I said, unable to keep back a smile. Are you serious God? Thank you so much!

Antonio had referred the three villagers to Pastor Allen, a pastor in a neighboring area who came to the village to do social work. He was the closest permanent minister to them, so we put the task of follow-up with these people in his hands – and in God’s.

I walked away from the hospital reeling in delight. God had surely used what I had said, together with what Pastor Antonio had spoken, to stir the hearts of those people. I was sure their faith was genuine. They had gone to such great lengths to find Antonio, a symbol of their search for the Truth.

God had used me, the media guy who took pictures, to be part of communicating the life-changing message of the gospel to these people. God had altered eternal souls, and he had done it through me. Even days after I had left the field, seeds sprouted. Praise be to God, who stirs hearts beyond our sight or knowledge.