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a record of struggle and victory to know the mind of Christ

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You are here: Home / Archives for Daily Walk with Christ

He Who Began A Good Work…

June 29, 2018 by ChristianHolinessDaily

His will help us overcome sin
God will help us overcome sin…

What is your favorite sin? Come on. I know your have one. All but the most mature Christians always have a favorite sin, one that is always in the back of our minds, waiting until we are physically tired, spiritually weak, or in emotional turmoil to pounce and take control of our lives.

For many, it is uncontrollable anger or rage. For others it is sexual perversion or pornography. For some it is overeating. For some it is out-of-control spending. For someone else, it may be abusing drugs or alcohol. For a few it may be a combination of some of these or all of these things.

Truth be told Christians still struggle with sin – correction: most Christians still struggle with sin. But, why? Christ came to rescue us from sin and death, not just death! Why, then do we struggle? Is it because we have never been taught that Christ conquers sin? Is it because we have never heard of anyone overcoming sin?

We cannot fathom eternal life. Yet, we accept God at His word that we will live in His presence eternally. If we can believe that, then why can we not believe that He will presently free us from sin?

Holiness is perhaps the most difficult concept for a Christian to comprehend. It is a paradox. On the surface it is at once an

While we will NEVER be perfect while in this life, God will help us to overcome sin and fill us with His perfect love.

act of faith and an act of discipline. Our sins flee from the presence of God never to return, but then God reveals to us sins that are rooted even deeper in our lives and gives us the power to overcome even those. And He does this again and again. Holiness is not a goal to be reached only upon death, rather it is a journey that begins on the day of salvation and ends only at the foot of His throne.

Holiness is an act of mutual love. God loves us even in our sin, and he beckons us to come to Him. He loves us too much to let us continue wallowing in the filth of our sins. He demonstrates to us that we must fully abandon or sins.

Once we acknowledge those sins and ask Christ to rid us of them, then He will empower us with the power and love of His Holy Spirit, so that we may overcome those sins. As a result, we love Him too much to continue in sin. That is sanctification. It is at once an act of surrender: we surrender our life to God and lay down our sins on the altar of the cross. And it is an act of the Holy Spirit: He fills us with His love and gives us the power to walk away from those sins, never to return.

And it is a journey of discipline, for God’s Spirit moves into our lives. Daily we surrender our will to Him and ask that His love continue to empower us; we die daily.

We have God’s promise, though: He that began the good work in us will bring it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. He will never give up on you. So never give up on Him.


 

If the struggle you’re facing

Is slowly replacing your hope
With despair
Or the process is long
And you’re losing your song
In the night
You can be sure that the Lord
Has His hand on you
Safe and secure
He will never abandon you
You are His treasure
And He finds His pleasure in you
Chorus
He who began a good work in you
He who began a good work in you
Will be faithful to complete it
He”ll be faithful to complete it
He who started the work
Will be faithful to complete it in you

Steve Green – He Who Began A Good Work In You

Filed Under: Daily Walk with Christ, Holiness Tagged With: holiness, overcoming, sanctification, sin, surrender

I Am Free

June 27, 2018 by ChristianHolinessDaily

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.
Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.

It seems that we – meaning the collective American Culture – are in love with horror stories. This is nothing new; America has been scaring herself since the days of Edgar Allen Poe and Washington Irving. In the 1970s, our love of being frightened reached new heights with a movie that left many teenagers (and adults, too) sleepless for nights. That movie, The Exorcist, seemed very real to this 12 year old boy. Today, more blood and gore appear on our TV screens and phones than ever previously dreamed of. Vampires and ghosts are passé. Zombies, pandemics, and alien invasions are fashionable. Why this fascination with the death and the dead?

While I am no psychologist, I would guess that much of the appeal comes from the fact that the horror genre is so black and white (even the post-apocalyptic stories that are so popular right now). Safety is generally found only within your camp. Danger is everywhere. And, no one may be trusted outside your own people. Evil is easily identifiable as an alien, a plague, or the walking dead.

I spent too much of my life as a dead man, at least as the Apostle Paul describes it. In 2 Corinthians 5:17 (NKJV), he says this about life and death:

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new.

So what does it mean that old things have passed away or died, and that all things have become new or reborn. Paul explains this further in Romans 6:4, when he says “Therefore we were buried with Him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life” (NKJV).

First it means that we are no longer enslaved by sin. Think about the one temptation that you could never resist. Ponder the one thing that you could never overcome, no matter how bad it was for you, no matter how much harm it caused. When you are in Christ, it is no longer a temptation, because the old has passed away.

Remember how selfish you once were? How you were all about “ME,” “ME,” “ME?” When you surrender your life to Christ, you begin to care for Christ and others, and you care far less about yourself. All things become new. It is Christ for whom you live, and you express His perfect love in your love for others.

Yes, one day we will be transformed, in the twinkling of an eye, and we will receive a new body. Christ will create a new heaven and a new earth, but we don’t have to wait for that, for He has made in us a new heart – or He will, if you put your life in His hands.

After I became Christ’s, I was no longer dead, no longer a spiritual zombie, and sin no longer bound me. I was alive. I was free – I am free.

_________

 

Through you the blind will see

Through you the mute will sing
Through you the dead will rise
Through you all hearts will praise
Through you the darkness flees
Through you my heart screams
I am free
Yes, I am free

I AM FREE TO RUN
(I AM FREE TO RUN)
I AM FREE TO DANCE
(I AM FREE TO DANCE)
I AM FREE TO LIVE FOR YOU
(I AM FREE TO LIVE FOR YOU)
I AM FREE
(I AM FREE)
YES I AM FREE
(I AM FREE)

FURLER PETER ANDREW, EGAN, JONATHAN CHRISTIAN 

 

Filed Under: Daily Walk with Christ Tagged With: new heart, new life, surrender

When My Child Cries

June 25, 2018 by ChristianHolinessDaily

You put my tears into your bottle...
You put my tears into your bottle…

Those of you who have children will likely know what I mean when I say that raising boys is completely different than raising girls. It is true in many different ways. For example, when my boys misbehaved, they world rarely confess to doing anything wrong, even when caught red-handed. My girl, though, when corrected would always tearfully repent of her wrongdoing – whatever it was – and promise to change. As Christians, we should be more like my girl, ready to repent when we’ve sinned.

Repentance is perhaps the most important aspect of our relationship with God. Without true repentance, there is no salvation. Matthew tells us in chapter 4 that, from the beginning of His ministry, Jesus began to “preach and to say, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand'” (v. 17 NKJV).

On the Day of Pentecost, at the birth of the Church, Peter – filled with the Holy Spirit – preached a moving sermon. Everyone within earshot was cut to the quick. “What do we do?” They asked.

“Repent and be baptized in the name of Christ Jesus for the remission of sins,” Peter answered, “and you will receive the Holy Spirit.”

If repentance was message of Christ, and if repentance was the message of the Apostles, then what role should it play in our lives – me and you, 21st century believers?

Repentance should be central to our relationship with Christ. Paul said in 1 Corinthians 15:31 that he died daily. As for myself, before I get out of bed in the morning, I lay down my life before the Lord, telling Him that I am a weak and lowly sinner who, without the presence of His Holy Spirit, can never change. And I beg Him to fill me anew and provide the power to make it through another day.

And, if I do sin, I immediately confess it repent of it, and pray for more strength so that I don’t do it again. John, in his first epistle (2:1-2 NKJV) tells us that we should not sin, but indicates that he knows we will.

My little children, these things I write to you, so that you may not sin. And if anyone sins, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous. And He Himself is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the whole world.

And, that’s just it. We are liable to sin; we are only human. But if we fully surrender to God, He will live through us. If He lives through us, then we will find that those same old sins – those ones that always trap us in a snare – we’ll find they no longer tempt us.

Once God deals with the major sins in our life, then He will begin showing us sins that we thought we had kept hidden from Him, or that He didn’t care about. This is how we know that God loves us. He loves us too much to let us continue living in an manner that will rob us of His joy.

God is not a ruthless tyrant who restricts us from all worldly pleasure. On the contrary, He is a loving Father who desires only the best things for His children.

He loves us so much that He carefully watches over us. When we wander, he knows our every step, never letting us out of His sight. He collects all our tears like precious oils (Psalm 56:8).

God is like the dad who takes his child to the playground. He turns loose of the child so she may run and jump and climb and swing (how would she learn to grow, if he didn’t) but he never takes eyes off her, and he’s there to dry her tears if she falls.

I beg of you: confess and repent of your sins, and ask God to fill you with His Spirit, giving you the strength and the love to change, for we are unable to change on our own. He is not an abusive Father; He won’t be angry when you repent. He will try your tears, hold you in His arms, and fill you with the joy of His perfect love. What good father can resist hugging a crying child?


 

Filed Under: Daily Walk with Christ, repentance, Uncategorized Tagged With: child, confession, father, Jesus, Pentecost, Peter, repentance

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