Mark 4:21-23
21 And he said unto them, Is a candle brought to be put under a bushel, or under a bed? and not to be set on a candlestick?
22 For there is nothing hid, which shall not be manifested; neither was any thing kept secret, but that it should come abroad.
23 If any man have ears to hear, let him hear.
There are a couple of things here that Jesus is pointing out to us. First, that His word should be prominent in our lives. As other scriptures point out that the word is the most important aspect and should be searched out as if it were gold. Secondly, is that the Word and the Spirit need to be used together? One cannot understand the Word without the Spirit. Here in this parable the candle would be representative of the Word and the Light would be representative of the Spirit.
With this in mind one cannot understand the Word unless Light is shed on it. Light alone cannot burn unless it has an accelerant, oxidation of combustible material. A candle (the Word) is that material illustrated in this parable. We need both a flame and the candle to produce a sustainable light. We cannot have one without the other, and so it is in our Christian walk.
If you’re wondering why the Holy Spirit is not working in your life maybe He does not have the word to produce a sustainable light. In John 14:26 Jesus illustrates the point that the Holy Spirit will illuminate only what Jesus has spoken.
John 14:26 But the Counselor, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, will teach you all things and will remind you of everything I have said to you.
Also in John 15:26 and John 16:13-15
John 15:26 "When the Counselor comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who goes out from the Father, he will testify about me.
John 16:13 But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all truth. He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to come.
14 He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you.
15 All that belongs to the Father is mine. That is why I said the Spirit will take from what is mine and make it known to you.
If you really want to change, if you’re tired of not seeing God working in your life, than the word is the missing portion in your life. You see the Holy Spirit always wants to help you grow, wants to help you be transformed into Jesus’ likeness, but He may be lacking the Word in your life that He can use as kindling, as combustible material. The greater part of your life should be spent reading and meditating on the word, when you do so you shall be planted by streams of living water, which yields its fruit in season and whose leaf does not wither. Whatever he does prospers. (Psalms 1)
The Holy Spirit needs a candle (the Word) in order to burn brightly and as the parable in Mark 4 says then it will not be kept a secret anymore but be manifested through your life.
Showing posts with label psalms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psalms. Show all posts
Friday, October 8, 2010
Monday, September 27, 2010
Ruthlessly Eliminate Hurry
Not long after moving back to Colorado Springs Colorado, I called on a wise friend to ask for some spiritual direction. I described the pace of life in my current ministry. The church where I serve tends to move at a fast clip. I also told him about my rhythms of life: driving, baseball-league, music-lessons, bible school, counseling, ministry moving pace of life. I told him about the present condition of my heart, as best I could discern it. What did I need to do, I asked him, to be spiritually healthy?
Long pause.
"You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life," he said at last.
Another long pause.
"Okay, I've written that one down," I told him, a little impatiently. "That's a good one. Now what else is there?" I had many things to do, and this time together needed to move on, so I was anxious to cram as many units of spiritual wisdom into the least amount of time possible.
Another long pause.
"There is nothing else," he said. "You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life."
I've concluded that my life and the well-being of the people I serve depends on following his prescription, for hurry is the great enemy of spiritual life in our day. Hurry destroys souls. As Carl Jung wrote, "Hurry is not of the devil; hurry is the devil."
For most of us, the great danger is not that we will renounce our faith. It is that we will become so distracted and rushed and preoccupied that we will settle for a mediocre version of it. We will just skim our lives instead of actually living them.
One of the great illusions of our day is that hurrying will buy us more time. I pulled into a service station recently where the advertising slogan read, "We help you move faster." But what if my primary need is not moving faster?
Time magazine noted that back in the 1960s, expert testimony was given to a sub-committee of the Senate on time management. The gist was that due to advances in technology, within 20 years or so people would have to cut back radically on how many hours a week they worked (or how many weeks a year they worked), or they'd have to start retiring sooner. The great challenge, they said, would be figuring out what to do with all the excess time.
Yet 50 years later, not many of us would say this is our primary time challenge. In fact, quite the reverse. Robert Banks, author of All the Business of Life, notes that while our society is rich in things, we are extremely poor in time. In fact, never before in human history has a society been so things-rich and so time-poor.
Our world has become the world of the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland: "Now here, you see, it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that."
Meyer Friedman (who with Diane Ulmer wrote Treating Type A Behavior -- and Your Heart) defines hurry sickness as "above all, a continuous struggle and unremitting attempt to accomplish or achieve more and more things or participate in more and more events in less and less time, frequently in the face of opposition, real or imagined, from other persons."
Though our age intensifies "hurry sickness," it's not a new problem; people in ministry have been subject to it at least since the days of Jesus. During one hectic season of ministry, Mark notes of the disciples, "For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat."
Far too many people involved in ministry think of this as a life verse, as if God will reward the hectic one-day with, "What a life you had! Many were coming and going, and you had no leisure even to eat. Well done!"
Not quite. Jesus was aware of this problem, and he constantly withdrew from crowds and activities. He taught the same to his followers. In one instance, when they returned from a busy time of ministry, filled with adrenaline, he told them, "Come away to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while."
The question becomes “was Jesus ever in a hurry about anything He ever did?”
If you want to follow someone, you can't go faster than the one who is leading; following Jesus cannot be done at a sprint. Jesus was often busy but he was never hurried. Being busy is an outer condition; being hurried is a sickness of the soul.
Jesus never went about the busyness of his ministry in a way that severed the life-giving connection between himself and his Father.
In Jesus' main parable about the sower and seed He shows us the principals of farming. The three main principals are seed, time, and harvest. Time is a principal that we cannot bypass or cram for. You cannot hurry the growing process along, it must be done in its time. You can't hurry God up, but you can slow Him down by not participating in the rhythms of His time. How fast did Jesus move?
Just think if God came along and said that you have only three and a half years to complete your life and then I will take you home to heaven. You would try to cram a whole life time of living and ministering in that short time. Jesus had only three and a half years to complete all of the ministry to benefit the whole world. Jesus still was not in a hurry about doing all that He needed to accomplish.
He never did anything in a way that interfered with his ability to give love when that was what was called for. Laying down laws does not take any time at all, but to love, that takes time. Laws take the place of loving, that is why we put them in place so we can speed the process up. Jesus observed a regular rhythm of withdrawal from activity, for solitude and prayer. He never was in a hurry, ever.
Jesus ruthlessly eliminated hurry from his life, and He always had time to love.
Psalms 46:10 Be Still and know that He is God.
Long pause.
"You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life," he said at last.
Another long pause.
"Okay, I've written that one down," I told him, a little impatiently. "That's a good one. Now what else is there?" I had many things to do, and this time together needed to move on, so I was anxious to cram as many units of spiritual wisdom into the least amount of time possible.
Another long pause.
"There is nothing else," he said. "You must ruthlessly eliminate hurry from your life."
I've concluded that my life and the well-being of the people I serve depends on following his prescription, for hurry is the great enemy of spiritual life in our day. Hurry destroys souls. As Carl Jung wrote, "Hurry is not of the devil; hurry is the devil."
For most of us, the great danger is not that we will renounce our faith. It is that we will become so distracted and rushed and preoccupied that we will settle for a mediocre version of it. We will just skim our lives instead of actually living them.
One of the great illusions of our day is that hurrying will buy us more time. I pulled into a service station recently where the advertising slogan read, "We help you move faster." But what if my primary need is not moving faster?
Time magazine noted that back in the 1960s, expert testimony was given to a sub-committee of the Senate on time management. The gist was that due to advances in technology, within 20 years or so people would have to cut back radically on how many hours a week they worked (or how many weeks a year they worked), or they'd have to start retiring sooner. The great challenge, they said, would be figuring out what to do with all the excess time.
Yet 50 years later, not many of us would say this is our primary time challenge. In fact, quite the reverse. Robert Banks, author of All the Business of Life, notes that while our society is rich in things, we are extremely poor in time. In fact, never before in human history has a society been so things-rich and so time-poor.
Our world has become the world of the Red Queen in Alice in Wonderland: "Now here, you see, it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that."
Meyer Friedman (who with Diane Ulmer wrote Treating Type A Behavior -- and Your Heart) defines hurry sickness as "above all, a continuous struggle and unremitting attempt to accomplish or achieve more and more things or participate in more and more events in less and less time, frequently in the face of opposition, real or imagined, from other persons."
Though our age intensifies "hurry sickness," it's not a new problem; people in ministry have been subject to it at least since the days of Jesus. During one hectic season of ministry, Mark notes of the disciples, "For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat."
Far too many people involved in ministry think of this as a life verse, as if God will reward the hectic one-day with, "What a life you had! Many were coming and going, and you had no leisure even to eat. Well done!"
Not quite. Jesus was aware of this problem, and he constantly withdrew from crowds and activities. He taught the same to his followers. In one instance, when they returned from a busy time of ministry, filled with adrenaline, he told them, "Come away to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while."
The question becomes “was Jesus ever in a hurry about anything He ever did?”
If you want to follow someone, you can't go faster than the one who is leading; following Jesus cannot be done at a sprint. Jesus was often busy but he was never hurried. Being busy is an outer condition; being hurried is a sickness of the soul.
Jesus never went about the busyness of his ministry in a way that severed the life-giving connection between himself and his Father.
In Jesus' main parable about the sower and seed He shows us the principals of farming. The three main principals are seed, time, and harvest. Time is a principal that we cannot bypass or cram for. You cannot hurry the growing process along, it must be done in its time. You can't hurry God up, but you can slow Him down by not participating in the rhythms of His time. How fast did Jesus move?
Just think if God came along and said that you have only three and a half years to complete your life and then I will take you home to heaven. You would try to cram a whole life time of living and ministering in that short time. Jesus had only three and a half years to complete all of the ministry to benefit the whole world. Jesus still was not in a hurry about doing all that He needed to accomplish.
He never did anything in a way that interfered with his ability to give love when that was what was called for. Laying down laws does not take any time at all, but to love, that takes time. Laws take the place of loving, that is why we put them in place so we can speed the process up. Jesus observed a regular rhythm of withdrawal from activity, for solitude and prayer. He never was in a hurry, ever.
Jesus ruthlessly eliminated hurry from his life, and He always had time to love.
Psalms 46:10 Be Still and know that He is God.
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Thursday, May 20, 2010
King of the Hill

In Maine we make our own mountains. Southern Maine lacks this natural terrain, so when the winter snows fall we build mountains by plowing the snow into huge piles. Maybe they are impressive only to schoolchildren, but schoolchildren make the most of these piles with a game called “King of the Hill.” It is a simple but furious game. Each child scrambles to the top of the hill. The first one there is king and defends against all attackers. This will include pushing, pulling, hitting, and sometimes kicking, and an eventual tumble down the hill, only to look up and see someone else is the new “King of the Hill.”
Psalms 24 suggests that “ascending the hill of the Lord” (vs. 3) is quite different from playing “King of the Hill.” When Jesus ascends, the psalmist cries for the gates to open to receive the “King of Glory” (v. 7). The Lord Jesus is “King of the Hill” forever. He alone is perfectly clean and pure (v. 4). He is the Lord of hosts.
And as we approach the throne, we do not find Jesus ready to repel our advances. Rather, he invites us to join him. He promises that, “I will be [their] God, and [they] will be my [people]” (Rev. 21:7). His blood makes us clean (1 John 1:7). We can follow the ways of the world and struggle to exalt ourselves or we can “humble [ourselves] before the Lord, and he will exalt [us]” (James 4:10).
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