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On Doing All for the Glory of God

So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God.

— First Corinthians 10:31

QUESTION: I am in government service and deeply dislike my work. I feel that I am not accomplishing anything worthwhile. Is it right for me to pray to be led into a different kind of work? It is always right to take our problems to God in prayer. He has promised to bring the blind by a way that they knew not (Isa. 42:16), and He assures us that if we keep Him in our thoughts our path will be directed (Prov. 3:5,6). We should not, however, allow ourselves to get wrought up about anything. It is the consensus among superior souls (as revealed in their books of devotion) that the Spirit leads without agitation, while the enemy, when he tries to imitate the Spirit, usually whips us up to a state of confusion and mental distress. The best rule is to pray, trust God fully and then follow His providences.

Do not insist upon an earthquake or a whirlwind as the only evidences of divine guidance. God may lead you by a still small voice or by quietly arranging a set of circumstances so ordinary as to seem commonplace. Faith accepts quiet guidance; only unbelief demands a miracle. QUESTION: I am a university student and my problem is this: If I study enough to pass my tests I have a feeling of guilt for having neglected my prayer life. If I pray enough to satisfy my heart I neglect my studies. What shall I do? I think you are creating a problem where none exists. You have fallen into the common error of living a divided life, counting prayer as sacred and study as secular. God?s will never contradicts itself; neither does He lay upon us duties that conflict with one another.

Here is my advice: Consecrate your studies to God as a living sacrifice. Ask Him to accept your intellectual labors as an offering of love. To the spiritual man everything is sacred; nothing is secular. William Law says, ?Miranda does not divide her duty between God, her neighbor and herself; but she considers all as due to God, and so does everything . . for His sake.? Begin to think of your college work as intellectual worship acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. This will make the dullest subject enjoyable and, incidentally, it will sharpen your brain so you can grasp difficult ideas a lot more easily. The notion that prayer is to be made in retirement only is erroneous. That prayer which consists of an address to the Deity (which the Pharisees made on the street corner and which our Lord said should be made in the closet) is only one kind of prayer. A well-lived life is a prayer if it is lived in the faith of Christ.

The hands may pray by doing honest work, the feet by carrying us to that work; sleep can be prayer when it refreshes us to serve our fellow men and eating may be prayer if it is done with thanksgiving. There is no reason to doubt that your college studies are an acceptable form of spiritual service. Of course, you should spend as much time as possible in prayerful retirement; only don?t get under bondage to it. ?So whether you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God? (1 Cor. 10:31).

thought

Doing all for the glory of God is the essence of Spirit-filled living. What is included in all may require drastic revision on our part. But the most menial tasks may be done as an offering to God.

prayer

Forgive me, Lord, for grumbling about the tiresome, menial tasks assigned to me. Teach me to do them all for Your glory.

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Prayer for Personal Desires

May he give you the desire of your heart and make all your plans succeed.

— Psalm 20:4

QUESTION: Can one pray to have a personal desire fulfilled and still be fully surrendered to God?s will? A personal desire, yes, but not a selfish one. There is a difference. A prayer may be personal and still have no element of selfishness in it. The motive is everything. To be free from selfishness a prayer must be (a) according to the will of God as that will is revealed in the Scriptures; (b) for the honor of God rather than for the mere fulfillment of carnal ambition; (c) made in unaffected love for God and men. Of course this rules out covetousness, competition and all evil desire. A few Biblical examples of personal requests which were honored by the Lord are found in the prayers of Abraham, David, Hannah, the woman of Shunem, Jabez, Hezekiah, Ezekiel, the leper in Matthew 8, Bartimaeus and Paul.

QUESTION: You warn against ?using God? and ?trying to employ Him to achieve our own ends.? Would not asking God for something personal be an attempt to ?use? Him? A truly spiritual man will be so united to Christ that he will have no desires apart from Him. If we Christians lived in the Spirit as perfectly as we should and could, our common interests would touch not only ourselves but the honor of God and the welfare of mankind as well. In answering a ?personal? prayer God would then be helping the individual, blessing mankind and bringing glory to His own name all in one act. We need not hesitate to ask God to help us to achieve ends that lie in God. Our difficulty comes from asking Him to help us to reach ends that lie outside of Him.

thought

Before asking God to give us the desire of our heart, it is wise to ask Him to form the desire of hour heart according to His will. That will mean heart desires that glorify Him not us and that is to our best interest.

prayer

Father, will You change and revise the desires of my heart so that they conform to Your will. It is Your will that is the very best for me.

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Whatever Happened to Repentance?

Peter replied, 'Repent and be baptized every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.'

— Acts 2:38

The idea that since the emergence of Christ into our world there is no longer any sin problem is completely preposterous, and not less so is the notion that the approach of the lost man to God is theological instead of moral. Yet this is what the not-the-sin-question thing has taught the religious world to believe. This idea has been expanded, extended and illustrated in how many thousand sermons over the last fifty years till it has become part of the total belief of evangelical groups all over the world. I have personally heard earnest men tell their hearers that they need never fear being sent to hell because of their sins; that the only thing that could possibly condemn them is their failure to ?accept? Christ. Thus the whole terrible sin question has been reduced to a theological technicality, and sin itself, that damning and destructive enemy of God and men, has been whitewashed and rendered tolerable, contrary to the whole spirit and mood of the Scriptures and to the beliefs of Christians since the days of the apostles.

Regardless of what men may say, we are still face to face with the sin question, and no man who has neglected to deal with his sins can even remotely understand the question of the deity of Christ and the mystery of the Godhead. Until the sinner has been brought before the bar of God and convicted of personal guilt, any notions he may have about Christ are bound to be academic, nothing more, and wholly unrelated to life. One deadly result of our failure to face up to the fact of sin is the widespread moral insensitivity which characterizes Christians these days. Because there is only a Son question and not a sin question at all, there is little or no repentance required as a preparation for saving faith. The new convert accepts Christ and adopts a certain easy code ? a bit above that of the irreligious world, to be sure, but infinitely below that of the New Testament. The nerve has died in the Christian conscience and the sin that would have driven our Christian fathers to their knees in a paroxysm of repentance leaves us almost untouched. It?s lots easier to shift the whole thing over to the ?Son question? and escape the pains of repentance. Lots easier, but extremely dangerous, and this latter is what we appear to have forgotten.

thought

To repent is basically to change one's mind. It involves both intellect and will and has to do with turning from sinful actions, attitudes, thoughts. Repentance results in life change.

prayer

Lord, forgive me for tolerating sin in my life when I ought to be repenting of it. May I not treat lightly that which caused Christ's death for me.

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Forgiven or Unforgiven

Blessed are they whose transgressions are forgiven, whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man whose sin the Lord will never count against him.

— Romans 4:7-8

A generation ago when the deity of Christ was under attack from several directions at once and was being stoutly defended by Bible-believing Christians everywhere, a little aphorism was often heard uttered with emphatic finality: ?It?s not the sin question, it?s the Son question!? This was a short way of saying that the great problem before the human race was not its sin but its opinion of Jesus Christ, and that the disposition of the individual soul on the final day would be based not upon its relation to sin but upon its having accepted the deity of Christ as an article of faith. If we take into consideration that this saying was a blunt sword forged for the heat of theological battle we can understand its popularity and sympathize with those who swung it so boldly against the enemies of truth; nevertheless we need not overlook its weakness nor accept it as a complete truth, which it certainly is not. One count against this aphorism is that it is an aphorism.

If great truth could be compressed into an epigram we have several hundred pages of Scripture to account for that need never have been written. I shy away from every effort to expound difficult doctrine by means of a pious quip; it?s just too neat and at best can present only one facet of the truth, leaving the other two or ten or fifty facets hidden from view. We?ll pass over the alliteration, which is of course wholly artificial and only one degree removed from a pun, and state simply that the whole thing is false to the facts. Granted that solid truth might once in a rare while get itself crammed into an epigram, and even that the epigram might conceivably contain a pun, this ?not the sin question but the Son question? is still not true. It dismisses too lightly something that God takes mighty seriously; viz., the fact of human sin and the solemn responsibility of every man for the sins he has committed.

thought

How blessed is the person whose sin is forgiven and will never count against him or her. But what about unconfessed, unforgiven sin ? ours?

prayer

Spirit of God, how faithful You have been in exposing my sin to me. May I quickly confess and abandon it and know the blessing of forgiveness.

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Hidden with Christ in God

Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of God. . . . For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God.

— Colossians 3:1, 3

It is of great practical importance to us to know that the Christ who lived again still lives. ?Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Christ? (Acts 2:36), said Peter on the day of Pentecost; and this accorded with our Lord?s own words, ?All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me? (Matthew 28:18), and with the words of Hebrews, ?The point of what we are saying is this: We do have such a high priest, who sat down at the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in heaven? (8:1). Not only does He still live, but He can never die again. ?For we know that since Christ was raised from the dead, he cannot die again; death no longer has mastery over him? (Romans 6:9). Finally, all that Christ is, all that He has accomplished for us is available to us now if we obey and trust. We are more than conquerors, through our Captain?s triumph; Let us shout the victory as we onward go.

thought

Faith identification with Christ in His death and resurrection provides enablement for Christlike living right now. Are we experiencing that life or living as if Christ never arose from the dead?

prayer

Lord, teach me more and more of what it means to be dead with Christ and alive with Him.

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Resurrection Results

He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification.

— Romans 4:25

In spite of the tomb and the watch and the seal, in spite of death itself, the Man who had been laid in the place of death walked out alive after three days. That is the simple historical fact attested by more than 500 trustworthy persons, among them being a man who is said by some scholars to have had one of the mightiest intellects of all time. That man of course was Saul, who later became a disciple of Jesus and was known as Paul the apostle. This is what the church has believed and celebrated throughout the centuries. . . . Granted that this is all true, what does it or can it mean to us who live so far removed in space from the event and so far away in time? Several thousand miles and nearly two thousand years separate us from that first bright Easter morning. Apart from or in addition to the joy of returning spring and the sweet music and the sense of cheerfulness associated with the day, what practical significance does Easter have for us?

To borrow the words of Paul, ?Much in every way!? (Romans 3:2). For one thing, any question about Christ?s death was forever cleared away by His resurrection. He ?through the Spirit of holiness was declared with power to be the Son of God by his resurrection from the dead? (Romans 1:4). Also His place in the intricate web of Old Testament prophecy was fully established when He arose. When He walked with the two discouraged disciples after His resurrection, He chided them for their unbelief and then asked, ? `Did not the Christ have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?? And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself? (Luke 24:26-27). Then it should be remembered that He could not save us by the cross alone. He must rise from the dead to give validity to His finished work. A dead Christ would be as helpless as the ones He tried to save. He ?was raised to life for our justification? (Romans 4:25), said Paul, and in so saying declared that our hope of righteousness depended upon our Lord?s ability to beat death and rise beyond its power.

thought

Christ died for our sins and was raised to life for our justification. If no death, then no sin-debt payment for us. If no resurrection, then no justification. The crucified Christ is the risen Christ who gives life to us!

prayer

Father, thank You for forgiveness and new life through the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ!

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Resurrection Reality

We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.

— Romans 6:4

The celebration of Easter began very early in the Church and has continued without interruption to this day. There is scarcely a church anywhere but will observe the day in some manner, whether it be by simply singing a resurrection hymn or by the performance of the most elaborate rites. Ignoring the etymological derivation of the word Easter and the controversy that once gathered around the question of the date on which it should be observed, and admitting as we must that to millions the whole thing is little more than a pagan festival, I want to ask and try to answer two questions about Easter. The first question is, What is Easter all about? and the second, What practical meaning does it have for the plain Christian of today? The first may be answered briefly or its answer could run into a thousand pages. The real significance of the day stems from an event, a solid historical incident that took place on a certain day in a geographical location that can be identified on any good map of the world. It was first announced by the two men who stood beside the empty tomb and said simply, ?He is not here; he has risen? (Matthew 28:6), and was later affirmed in the solemnly beautiful words of one who saw Him after His resurrection: But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.

For since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man. For as in Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive. But each in his own turn: Christ, the firstfruits; then, when he comes, those who belong to him (1 Corinthians 15:20-23). That is what Easter is about. The Man called Jesus is alive after having been publicly put to death by crucifixion. The Roman soldiers nailed Him to the cross and watched Him till the life had gone from Him. Then a responsible company of persons, headed by one Joseph of Arimathea, took the body down from the cross and laid it in a tomb, after which the Roman authorities sealed the tomb and set a watch before it to make sure the body would not be stolen away by zealous but misguided disciples. This last precaution was the brain child of the priests and the Pharisees, and how it backfired on them is known to the ages, for it went far to confirm the fact that the body was completely dead and that it could have gotten out of the tomb only by some miracle.

thought

Because Christ rose from the dead there is hope beyond the grave for those who trust in Him. But there is more! We may experience His resurrection life today! Are we?

prayer

O Christ, You are risen from the dead and, as I trust You, the power of sin is broken and new life is mine.

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O For an Elijah

Do not put out the Spirit's fire; do not treat prophecies with contempt. Test everything. Hold on to the good.

— 1 Thessalonians 5:19-21

In the Old Testament it is recorded that after years of bad leadership had brought Judah to her knees, a new king, Hezekiah, came to the throne. Immediately he called the priests and Levites together and said to them, ?Listen to me, Levites, consecrate yourselves now and consecrate the temple of the LORD, the God of your fathers. Remove all defilement from the sanctuary.? The priests went into the sanctuary of the LORD to purify it. They brought out to the courtyard of the LORD?s temple everything unclean that they found in the temple of the LORD. The Levites took it and carried it out to the Kidron Valley (2 Chronicles 29:5, 16).

It took a week to get rid of the junk, but when they had obeyed God there followed immediately a sunburst of revival; and the good effects lasted nearly thirty years. I do not wish to draw too close a parallel between conditions under Ahaz and conditions in the churches today, but every enlightened soul can see how we languish for fearless leaders and bold reformers who will dare to pass holy judgment upon the unscriptural goings on that are being substituted for New Testament Christianity in the majority of our churches. Somewhere there may be a freckle-faced stripling as yet unknown who will hear the call of God and go forth in dauntless love to become a conscience to the churches. Too many prophets of Jehovah these days are hiding in their caves, but somewhere there may be an Elijah. The bloodless softlings will say at first that he is uncharitable and harsh, but when he gets the prophets of Baal on the run they will tag along behind him, trying to look as if they had been on his side all the time. Well, he can?t come a day too soon.

thought

A major prophetic function is the evaluation of the present by looking into the past and peering into the future. O for prophets today who can see where the church is and give direction from God as to where to go; who can discern trends and see their outcome!

prayer

Lord, will You raise up prophets in Your Church ? those leaders enlightened by Your Spirit ? to diagnose our present state and lead us into what You desire us to be and in what direction You want us to go.

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The Problem of Church Music

It is ironic that the modernistic churches which deny the theology of the great hymns nevertheless sing them, and regenerated Christians who believe them are yet not singing them; in their stead are songs without theological content set to music without beauty.

Not our religious literature only and our hymnody have suffered from the notion that love to be true to itself must be silent in the presence of any and every abomination, but almost every phase of our church life has suffered also.

Once a Bible and a hymnbook were enough to allow gospel Christians to express their joy in the public assembly, but now it requires tons of gadgets to satisfy the pagan appetites of persons who call themselves Christians.

verse

Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom, and as you sing psalms, hymns and spiritual songs with gratitude in your hearts to God.

— Colossians 3:16

thought

Older ones of us greatly value some of the old hymns because they were especially meaningful in certain critical times in life and still are. May today's younger ones find such treasures in their music!

prayer

Enable me, Lord, to lovingly disagree when needed. I have difficulty with the love factor.

https://cmalliance.org/devotionals/tozer/

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