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Daily Devotion for Monday, 8 August 2016 – Taking up the Cross

August 8, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment


Following in the footsteps of Christ is no easy task. Christ tells us right up front that we will face persecution, for He was persecuted. He tells us that He had nowhere to lay His head, and that we must be prepared to take up our crosses. 

That last challenge, to take up our crosses, is difficult for many  21st century Christians to understand. At least, it is difficult for us to understand it in the same way that first century Christians understood it. 

The cross was more than a symbol of shame; it was the ultimate shame and disgrace. Criminals were put to death on the cross. Traitors were hung on a cross, and enemies of the state. Unlike contemporary capital punishment, like the electric chair or lethal injection, the cross was not a quick death and certainly not merciful. It created a tortuous and lingering death, one that was excruciatingly (the word excruciating, in fact, means “of the cross”) painful, and designed to make a public spectacle, an example. 

To take up our crosses means to deny ourselves of our carnal desires. It means to rid our hearts of its perverted, sinful nature and fill it with the nature of Christ. To take up our crosses means to be willing to lay down our lives for Christ, and in a more practical sense, it means to give our lives to Christ. 

What’s more, we are to deny ourselves and take up our crosses daily. This willingness to give our lives to Christ and for Christ is the key to following in Christ’s footsteps. The journey is a day-by-day, hour-by-hour, minute-by-minute, and breath-by-breath surrender to God. 

When we walk daily in absolute surrender to Christ, our hearts reflect His heart, and our desires are to grow ever closer to God. 

To paraphrase Dr Charles Stanley, before we can live, we must be prepared to die. 

Filed Under: Daily Walk with Christ, Holiness Tagged With: cross, daily walk, footsteps of Christ, surrender

Daily Devotion for Sunday, 7 August 2016 – It’s About Time

August 7, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

No one knows what Judgement Day will look like. I have seen Chick Tracts, which I very much love and appreciate for their direct, evangelistic approach, that portray the Judgement Day as a recounting of our lives on a large movie screen for everyone to see (here). I don’t know if this is right, but I do believe God will reward His children. 

Jesus made this clear in a series of parables recounted in Matthew 24 and 25. The Parable of the Talents demonstrates clearly to us that God has given each and every one of His Children a gift – our lives, and that one day, we will be asked to account for what we have done with that life. 

Many lessons can be learned from this parable An excellent summary of five of those lessons may be found here. Yet, while I have heard many men of God equate this parable to our gifts and talents, and many more who say this parable clearly teaches us to be good stewards of our money, I have heard few – if any – who apply this parable to our time. 

How much time do we spend daily in service or devotion to God?

How much time do we spend in service to God? I think this is a legitimate question. I don’t mean how much time do we spend in church (less than one out of three Americans attend church in any given week, and those that do so spend an average one hour there. On the other hand, Americans spend approximately 31 hours a week in front of a television, more if one counts computers and video games.). I mean, how much time do we spend with God daily, including prayer, Bible study, devotions, or church… those sort of things? 

There are no surveys to completely answer this question. George Barna reports that only one in three Americans read the Bible at least once a week. Half of Americans read the Bible at least once a month. 

The Washington Post (here) claims that most Americans spend around eight minutes a day praying, with Montana spending only about two minutes daily on their knees and Southerners spending about 17 minutes each day praying. 

The average church-going Christian in America spends over thirty times more time in front of a TV than in front of a pulpit. Will God point this out to us on Judgement Day? I don’t know, but I do know… I feel… we should be as accountable for our time as we are our money. 

If we believe in tithing 10 percent, should we not also give to God 10 percent of our time? This, to me, is a no-brainer. 

2.4 hours a day spent in communion with or service to God. “It’s about time” I try this. 

__________

Note: I understand that the common conception of Judgement Day is that only those who never accepted Jesus as their Savior will face Judgement. I use the term generically in this devotion to refer to that day when Christian will exchange their works for a crown. 

Filed Under: Holiness Tagged With: end of days, end of time, judgement day, stewardship

Daily Devotion for Saturday, 6 August 2016: Walk in Love

August 6, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

One of my favorite memories growing up was the annual broadcast (yes, I grew up in the era of broadcast TV) of The Wizard of Oz. I had eagerly read the Oz novels, and to see the broadcast of that movie was like a book coming to life. I felt the same way as an adult, watching The Lord of the Rings and The Lion, Witch, and the Wardrobe. Yet, watching Oz, at such a young age, will always be special.

Sometimes, following Christ can be much more difficult than simply following a Yellow Brick Road
Sometimes, following Christ can be much more difficult than simply following a Yellow Brick Road

The movie predates me, having been made about thirty years before I remember watching it on television. Before I watched it on my console color TV, an entire generation had been thrilled at the movie theaters, their imaginations whisked away by a twister from the bleak, black and white plains of Kansas to the Land of Oz, so rich and full of color. As a child, I thought that Oz must represent heaven and Kansas must represent our life before salvation. The journey was, to me, our Christian walk. I know now that neither the author nor the producers held such beliefs.

As a Christian, though, I often feel a lot like Dorothy must have felt. At once I am intrigued and dismayed on my daily journey to meet Christ. Daily, I encounter obstacles, my own version of flying monkeys and witches on broomsticks.

My fellow travelers are often frightened, display no courage, and little sense, and far too often rely on me for their strength. Yet, I am no stronger than they.

And, many times there is a fork in the road, in my proverbial Yellow Brick Road, and I have no idea which way to turn. Will one way lead me to danger? Will I fall asleep, or become distracted?

Therefore be imitators of God as dear children. 2 And walk in love, as Christ also has loved us and given Himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling aroma.

Following Christ in a daily journey requires much time spent in prayer, much time spent studying His word, and much time simply trusting Him, walking in faith, so that we may be strong enough to fight against daily challenges. We must love Him enough not to become distracted by the things we see in our journey.

It is, though, a much more rewarding journey – and one full of more fun – if we take travel companions along with us. So, rely on Christ, and find  both a mentor and a protege. Find a Christian who is much more mature than you, and make a true friend of him or her. Find a younger, less mature Christian, and make a true friend of him or her. It will make your journey much more exciting.

Filed Under: Daily Walk with Christ, The Quest Tagged With: daily journey, daily walk, mentor, oz, protege, wizard of oz

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