Thursday, March 8, 2012

That I May Know Him




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We all have our favorite authors or celebrities that we admire.  I know I have favorite authors, actors or personalities that inspire me, and I do enjoy reading the brief biographies printed on the book covers, or found online. 

Still, sometimes, don't you wish you could just sit down, face-to-face and talk with these people?  Wouldn't you like to hear the brilliant thoughts they write or speak directly from their lips in conversation? Wouldn't you like to laugh, wonder, discuss, share in their life - even if it's just for just a moment?  In fact, the more you learn about them, the more you want to know the person who inspires you and who elevates you beyond yourself!

You have heard this common question: If you could meet and talk with any one historical figure, dead or alive, who would it be?

Do you know that the number one answer to this day is, Jesus? For various reasons - not all of them necessarily affectionate - people want to meet Jesus.

For believers though, if we say we want to know Him and draw closer to Him - and we mean it - then perhaps as an example, we need to look at someone who genuinely prayed and lived that request.

Knowing Him 

That I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable unto His death.” (Phillipians 3:10)

It amazes me every time I read this prayer from the apostle Paul, that this 'seasoned' believer, with the most amazing track record of any man that has ever lived except for Jesus himself, and who happened to write the majority of the New Testament prayed:

               1.    that he would know Jesus;
               2.    that he would know the power of His resurrection;
               3.    that he would know the fellowship of His sufferings; and
               4.    that he would be made conformable unto His death.

May this be our prayer during the Lenten season when followers of Christ contemplate the death, and celebrate the resurrection and life of Jesus.

Please know, this is not a prayer for non-believers, though, if you are a non-believer I hope that you do come to know Him sometime.  Rather, this is an exercise in humility for those of us who have followed Jesus for quite some time, and who want, as Paul did, to have a fuller revelation of the person of Jesus.  

I want to know Him.

Christianity 101 teaches much about the historic Christ. Yet, Paul was after something much more; he didn’t just want a biographical knowledge of Jesus, he wanted to know Him personally.

He didn’t just want to know about the life of Christ, he wanted to know Christ as the Life.

He didn’t just want to know about the event of His resurrection, he wanted to know Christ as the Resurrection.

He didn’t just want to know the words Jesus spoke, he wanted to know Jesus as the Word.

I would venture a guess that Paul would have been beside himself, if during one of his times of fellowship with Jesus, Christ would have said to Paul as He said to Phillip in John 14:9:

"Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and yet you still don't 
know who I am?”

May this be the cry of our hearts as believers: I want to KNOW Him! I don’t just want to know about Him, I want to know Him; His heart, His thoughts, His motives, His personality.  Not just as an historical character, nor as a great story or a legend or a character, but I want to know Him personally - like I know my dearest friend or closest relative. Not just the things He did, but what motivated Him to do them! Sure, we've heard about God’s love, but oh, that we might know the very heart of such love and the One who makes it possible for us to experience such love and mercy and grace and abundance of life!

There is no formula. No "5-steps to Knowing Jesus Better." No methodology to follow. Just spend time with Him. As believers you know how to do that.

Life has been very busy (in a wonderful way), and admittedly over the past year I have too often neglected my personal journey to “know Him” more.  So it is the result of our humanity, that in our spiritual life we often have to grieve the breaks, and failures, and intervals that simply prove to us that there is something lacking that prevents us at times from knowing Him more fully.

My guess is, I am not alone. Dear reader, if you find yourself approaching this Easter season in the same condition as you were last year, or perhaps worse than you were a year ago, then let's declare with Paul:

I'm not saying that I have this all together, that I have it made. But I am well on my way, reaching out for Christ, who has so wondrously reached out for me. Friends, don't get me wrong: By no means do I count myself an expert in all of this, but I've got my eye on the goal, where God is beckoning us onward—to Jesus. 
I'm off and running, and I'm not turning back! 
(Phillipians 3:12-14, The Message)


May we never, ever be satisfied with thinking that we know him; hoping that we know him; knowing Him as an acquaintance or as an historical figure; or knowing Him through someone else's experience or knowledge. 

Instead, may we have fuller revelation of Him affectionately, experientially and personally!




Next Post: The Power of His Resurrection



Sunday, December 4, 2011

He Visited Us to Put His Beauty On Us





Have you ever noticed that all of the shopping, decorating, Christmas parties, traveling, yes, even entertaining family and friends never seem to meet our soul’s deepest longing at Christmas?  Usually, we end up feeling varying levels of dissatisfaction. For a holiday that was meant to remind us of the most joyous announcement ever made; news of the greatest gift ever given to mankind, somehow we still miss it and end up longing for more.

So what is it about Christmas that we miss year after year? While it is a happy and joyful time for most, why do some find it the most depressing, lonely time of the year? Can we make it so that happiness and joyfulness last longer than a few weeks and perhaps even bubble out throughout the following year?

Perhaps the key is within the story of Christmas itself.  The birth of Jesus was the advent of a whole new way of life for mankind...peace with God. Let’s take a moment to ask one thing… exactly why were those angels so happy when they announced His birth?  What was the temporal and eternal meaning of that event for us? In a word: reconciliation.  Reconciliation between God and man, and mankind to one another.  A very basic definition of reconciliation is to bring into harmony or make compatible, things which were once opposed.

God visited us to put His beauty on us.

Isaiah 1:6 tells us that, since the fall of man in Adam, the heart of natural man in the eyes of God looks like this:

“From the sole of the foot even unto the head there is no soundness in it, but wounds and bruises, and putrefying sores: they have not been closed, neither bound up, neither mollified [soothed] with ointment [oil].” 

Fallen man has become an object of abhorrence to God and needed to be reconciled by the death of His Son.

Think of the headlines these days.  You can’t open a newspaper, watch television, surf the internet or watch television without hearing about one of the top three headliners:  Coach Bernie Fine, who served as the assistant basketball coach at Syracuse University for 35 years, and was fired in November over allegations that he sexually abused boys; or Jerry Sandusky, Penn State Defensive Line Coach charged with sexually abusing young men; and in Colorado’s own backyard, Arapahoe County Sheriff Patrick Sullivan, who was once known for his no-nonsense style and a concern about teenage drug use, now stands accused of using meth to solicit sexual favors from men, along with getting former drug users back onto drugs for the same.

Ugly. Dark. Disgusting. Repulsive. “What an abhorrence!” we declare, and rightly so.  It is terrible what we are seeing being played out in the media of late. Atrocious acts against innocents, and what is even more disheartening is the caliber of people who once were “decent folk”, visited their own darkness and somehow got stuck there. 

Yet, according to scripture, that’s how God viewed ALL of mankind without Jesus.  Face it.  Everyone has had moments of darkness in their lives.  Even if you have never acted on it, you have thought it.  Everyone is guilty because anything that is contrary to the perfect will, purity and holiness of God, is sin. Whether in thought or deed. 

God knows this.  He knew it from the beginning.  And His answer was Jesus.

That is why the song of heaven the night of Jesus’ birth was the song of RECONCILIATION:

And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying: 
“Glory to God in the highest, And on earth peace, goodwill toward men!” 
(Luke 2: 13-14)

The angels declared that God visited us to put His beauty upon us.

God’s response to the darkness of mankind born through sin was this:

Because you say, ‘I am rich, have become wealthy, and have need of nothing’ - and do not know that you are wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked - I counsel you to buy from Me gold refined in the fire, that you may be rich; and white garments, that you may be clothed, that the shame of your nakedness may not be revealed; and anoint your eyes with eye salve, that you may see. (Revelation 3:17-18).

The greatest need we have is reconciliation to God (God’s good will toward man) and to one another (peace on earth).  Peace with God and peace with each other.  Only when we attain that are our souls truly content. Since the fall of Adam, we have been broken and damaged in relationship to God and one another.

God sent Jesus to heal that breach and to bind up our spiritual wounds. 

He visited us to put His beauty on us.

So, what is the greatest gift we can ask for and expect to receive this Christmas that will satisfy the longing of our souls and bring temporal and eternal contentment in our lives?  Reconciliation.  Being reconciled to God through Jesus and reconciled to each other. The great exchange. The ongoing process of exchanging our darkness for His light and our sin for His righteousness. 

God sent Jesus to satisfy the legal penalty for the sin of mankind, past, present, future; big or small; yours and mine, and yes, even Sullivan’s, Fine’s and Sandusky’s.

That is the message of Christmas.

Dear readers, the best gift I can offer you this holy/holiday season is not an eloquent writing, or clever anecdotes on timely topics... but simply... Jesus.  The business of life is messy.  So, I challenge you to do that little exercise of considering the worst thing you ever did and the worst thing you ever thought of doing... and one step further... the worst thing that has ever been done to you; then invite the beauty of God, which is peace, reconciliation and forgiveness wrapped up and offered freely in the person of Jesus, to visit and rest upon you this Christmas and always!


Thursday, November 24, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving!



A HUMBLE THANKSGIVING PRAYER
 
"Thank you, dear God
For all You have given me,
For all You have taken away from me,
For all You have left me."
(unknown)



Friday, November 11, 2011

HAPPY VETERAN'S DAY!

Many thanks for your service to our country and many thanks to the families of our veterans and soldiers!