Showing posts with label disappointment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disappointment. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Monday, October 7, 2013
Let patience have her perfect work
Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience. But let
patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire,
wanting nothing. (James 1:3-4)
We often overlook the fact that
temptation and patience are opposites. Temptation is demanding immediate
gratification of a desire; patience is but to except God’s delay. Yet
temptation is set as a handmaid to the godly mind identifying the need
for patience in the tempted area. Paul says on another occasion, "the
resisting of temptation builds character". It is no different than
weight-lifting or resistance training as an athlete. The heavy lifting
of maintaining a Christ-like disposition creates spiritual muscle.
Temptation masquerades as a short-cut to a legitimate desire. The answer
to temptation is patience. A little patience will beget more patience
for a greater blessing. Yet patience is not waiting in a vacuum; rather,
it is preoccupied with both theology and prayer; that is, studying
God’s ways and acquiring His wisdom. For what God desires to give you in
all things is Himself and that through patience. Realize there are no
short-cuts and let patience have her perfect work.
Yuri Solomon - Devotional 100713
Thursday, October 3, 2013
They shall be His people, and God Himself shall be their God
And I heard a great voice out
of heaven saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell
with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself shall be with them,
and be their God. (Revelation 21:3)
Herein is the ultimate
definition of heaven, a perfect relationship, mutual in character on both ends.
Heaven is less a place than it is the presence of a person: God, Himself. Heretofore
we were absolutely God's people, yet there is that sense in which God was not
absolutely our God. In our immaturity, we
still harbored alternative gods. The first commandment, thou shall have no
other God before me, is violated again and again before we are glorified. But
at that time sanctification will give way to glory, and we will know even as we
are known: actuated, actualized, not positional but practical, not merely
credited righteousness but personal righteousness. Matthew Henry describes the
new human capacity, “and then He will fully answer the character of the
relation on His part, as they [humans] shall do on their part.” For the first
time in our relationship with God, without ambiguity or abstraction, without
sin’s interruption, in both mind and body, He shall be our God.
-Yuri Solomon 100313
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