So... Living My Life

So... Living My Life
Washing an elephant in India

Monday, October 25, 2010

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Apart From Me You Can Do Nothing

Today at church, Josh Harris continued Part 3 of the series, “Desperate,” preaching from John 15:1-11 and focusing on how only when we abide in Christ, the true vine, can we have a fruitful spiritual life.

Introduction
The good kind of desperate is when you know you need help, and you confidently know that there is someone who has both the power and loving desire to help you. In John 15, Jesus teaches his disciples this good kind of desperation. It tells us that we can do nothing, but it promises that in Jesus we can know spiritual life and fruitfulness.

Spiritual Life Begins Only in Jesus
Jesus uses the imagery of a vine to describe spiritual life. Jesus is drawing from an Old Testament imagery, which frequently described the people of Israel as a vine. God’s specially chosen people were like a vine that God had planted. Their obedience to him and worship of him were the means by which God’s spiritual life and truth was made known in the world. The only way to know and relate to the living God was by joining oneself to the people of Israel. Sadly, God’s people repeatedly failed in this role. They forgot God, pursued idolatry, and were faithless. They were an unfruitful vine. (See Isaiah 5:1-7, Jeremiah 2:21, Psalm 80).

When Jesus says, “I am the true vine,” he’s making a profound claim. He is stating that where the people of Israel failed to rightly obey and represent God, he, Jesus, perfectly obeys and perfectly reveals the character and purpose of God. Now, the only way to be joined to the spiritual life of the one true God—the only way to know God and relate to him—is through Jesus.

In verse 3 Jesus speaks to his disciples and says, “Already you are clean because of the word that I have spoken to you.” In the original language there is a play on words. The word “clean” sounds the same as the word for “pruned.” Jesus is saying to his disciples, you’re already pruned and in the vine, you already have new life because of the words about me that I’ve spoken to you. (See John 3:16; John 5:23-24; John 11:25-26)

Spiritual Fruit Continues Only in Jesus
This passage is very concerned with bearing fruit.

  • Verse 2: “Every branch in me that does not bear fruit he takes away, and every branch that does bear fruit he prunes, that it may bear more fruit.”
  • Verse 4: “Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me.”
  • Verse 5: “I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.”
  • Verse 8: “By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples.”

Bearing fruit is an essential part of genuine spiritual life. Living things reproduce. If you are united with Jesus and have his life in you then there will be tangible results of this life growing out of your life. You will bear fruit.

What does verse 6 mean when Jesus says branches that don’t bear fruit get tossed away? It doesn’t mean that genuine Christians can lose their salvation. What it does mean is that people who falsely claim to be Christians and demonstrate no evidence of new life in Jesus will eventually be revealed as dead branches. Jesus’ teaching here is meant to sober us. It calls us to evaluate our lives. Saving faith is not merely a matter of having prayed a prayer years ago. It’s not about church attendance. It’s not just about getting baptized and getting your ticket to heaven. If we are united with Jesus, then there will be fruit in our present day life.

What is the spiritual fruit that Jesus is talking about? Verse 7 tells us that spiritual fruitfulness is closely tied to prayer. When we begin asking for and desiring the priorities of God, God powerfully grants our requests, and spiritual fruit and life spills out of our life. Verse 8 tells us that spiritual fruitfulness is defined by being like our Master. When we live and act like Jesus—when we love, sacrifice and serve like Jesus—this brings praise to God. Verse 16 ties fruit to the mission of telling others about Jesus.

How do we bear fruit? Jesus says “abide in me.” To abide means to live in, to dwell with Jesus. The NIV translates it “remain in me.” Spiritual life and fruit only comes by staying close to and not moving on from Jesus. Just as a branch can only live while it’s attached to the vine, so we only live and produce fruit through ongoing dependence on Jesus. When we think about what it means to abide in Jesus, our temptation is to ask for checklist. But abiding is not a “to-do” list, a program, a methodology or a technique. Abiding is a relationship. Abiding is what desperate people do who realize that they have no life, no power, no inward resources of themselves. The secret to abiding is simply being desperate for Jesus and believing that apart from Jesus you can do nothing.

Too often, we don’t really believe that we can do nothing apart from Jesus. We think we have enough principles and practical tips to parent our kids. We think we have enough experience and advice to enjoy a good marriage. We think we’ve been in enough small groups to know how to help others grow. We think we’ve learned enough evangelism techniques to make converts. We think we’ve done church long enough to safely say we can build a strong congregation. Activity and programs and techniques cannot replace real fruit. We can accomplish nothing of lasting spiritual value apart from Christ. Apart from dependence on him, apart from daily reliance on his gospel and his resurrection power working in us, our activity is nothing more than dead religion. Real spiritual fruit only grows when we abide in Christ.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

“Ask, Seek, Knock”

At church today, senior pastor Joshua Harris preached on Luke 11:1-13. Part 2 of my church’s new series, “Desperate,” Josh answered what is would mean for us to live desperate and what it would look like for us to live aware of our dependence on God.

Here is a summary of the message by Josh, titled “Ask, Seek, Knock.”

The Holy Spirit’s presence and power in our lives is the best of God’s good gifts. (verses 11-13)

Jesus compares earthly fathers to our Heavenly Father and makes an argument from the lesser to the greater. If an imperfect, evil earthly father is able to give good gifts, how much more will a perfect, righteous and faithful Heavenly Father give good gifts to his children? Jesus is encouraging our confidence and faith to bring our requests to God. And he does this by reminding us of God’s character. When we ask for something we need, he won’t give us something evil. In particular, the Father will give himself in the person of the Holy Spirit. Jesus is saying, “Think about the best thing you could ask and seek for—it’s nothing compared to the gift of the Holy Spirit dwelling in your heart.”

  • The Holy Spirit glorifies Christ.
  • The Holy Spirit gives us spiritual life.
  • The Holy Spirit enables us to believe and trust in Jesus.
  • The Holy Spirit works to conform us to be like Jesus.
  • The Holy Spirit sustains us and enables us to persevere.
  • The Holy Spirit gives us power to overcome spiritual forces of evil with the gospel of Jesus Christ.
  • The Holy Spirit gives us boldness to proclaim the gospel to the lost.

Is there any “good gift” from God that we want more than the Holy Spirit? Is there anything else on the top of our prayer list? More than we need money, we need God’s Spirit to give us contentment and faith for what we have. More than we need a change of circumstances, we need God’s Spirit to enable us to persevere. More than we need another person to change, we need God’s Spirit to give us supernatural love and patience. More than we need a title or a position, we need God’s Spirit to be assured that we are children of God.

Desperate people ask, seek and knock in their pursuit of more of the Spirit. (verses 5-10)

Jesus tells a story of a neighbor persistently asking for bread late at night to feed a guest. Again and again, this neighbor asks until his request is granted. What is Jesus’ point? He tells this story to teach us that we should bring our requests to God with the same boldness, born of urgency. In the same way that the man was desperate to borrow bread for his guests, we should be people who are desperate for the Holy Spirit.

In verses 9-10, Jesus exhorts us to ask and keep asking, knock and keep knocking, seek and keep seeking. This isn’t describing a technique that we employ to manipulate God. This is a description of a person who realizes his or her need. The boldness in prayer Jesus is calling us to is born of desperation. When we abandon self-reliance, when we see how much we need the Holy Spirit, we ask and seek and knock because we have no other option!

Are we desperate in our pursuit of God’s Spirit? Do we realize how much we need the empowering work of the Spirit in our life—to be a father, a mother, a disciple, a witness? Do we think we can live the Christian life on our own? Can we come to church and get insight and apply truth on our own? Can we grow and change and fight sin and lead our family and parent our kids by ourselves? We need the empowering of the Holy Spirit every moment of our Christian lives.

God gives us his Holy Spirit to enable us to accomplish his purposes. (verses 1-4)

In the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus teaches us to align ourselves with God’s purposes. These are the categories that Jesus says we should be concerned about:
  • The glory and exaltation of God—that his name would be honored and respected and worshipped (verse 2a).
  • That the reign and rule of Jesus would spread—that his kingdom would be established in the hearts of more and more people (verse 2b).
  • That we would depend on him for our basic needs and trust him (verse 3).
  • That we would know his forgiveness and extend this forgiveness to others (verse 4a).
  • That we would turn from temptation and honor him. (verse 4b)

We should never separate being filled with the Spirit from the priorities outlined in the Lord’s Prayer. And we should never attempt to fulfill the priorities outlined in the Lord’s Prayer apart from the power of the Holy Spirit.

Monday, October 25, 2010

October

"I cannot endure to waste anything as precious as autumn sunshine by staying in the house. So I spend almost all the daylight hours in the open air." ~ Nathaniel Hawthorne

I took these photographs over the past two days. They were all taken either on my property or down the street from my property.




The stillness of October gold
Went out like beauty from a face.
E. A. Robinson

"Even if something is left undone, everyone must take time to sit still and watch the leaves turn." ~ Elizabeth Lawrence
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"Beauty is one of the rare things that do not lead to doubt of God." ~ Jean Anouilh


How innocent were these trees, that in
Mist-green May, blown by a prospering breeze,
Stood garlanded and gay;
Who now in sundown glow
Of serious color clad confront me with their show
As though resigned and sad,
Trees, who unwhispering stand umber, bronze, gold;
Pavilioning the land for one grown tired and old;
Elm, chestnut, aspen and pine, I am merged in you,
Who tell once more in tones of time,
Your foliaged farewell.
Siegfried Sassoon, October Trees



All still when summer is over
stand shocks in the field,
nothing left to whisper,
not even good-bye, to the wind.

After summer was over
we knew winter would come:
we knew silence would wait,
tall, patient calm.
William Stafford, Tragic Song


October is nature's funeral month. Nature glories in death more than in life. The month of departure is more beautiful than the month of coming - October than May. Every green thing loves to die in bright colors. ~ Henry Ward Beecher


Colors burst in wild explosions
Fiery, flaming shades of fall
All in accord with my pounding heart
Behold the autumn-weaver
In bronze and yellow dying
Colors unfold into dreams
In hordes of a thousand and one
The bleeding
Unwearing their masks to the last notes of summer
Their flutes and horns in nightly swarming
Colors burst within
Spare me those unending fires
Bestowed upon the flaming shades of fall.
Dark Tranquility, With the Flaming Shades of Fall

Just before the death of flowers,
And before they are buried in snow,
There comes a festival season
When nature is all aglow.
Author Unknown




The milkweed pods are breaking,
And the bits of silken down
Float off upon the autumn breeze
Across the meadows brown.
Cecil Cavendish, The Milkweed
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"Bittersweet October. The mellow, messy, leaf-kicking, perfect pause between the opposing miseries of summer and winter." ~ Carol Bishop Hipps


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