Christian Holiness Journal https://christianholinessjournal.com a record of struggle and victory to know the mind of Christ Thu, 08 Aug 2019 18:12:38 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.21 https://christianholinessjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-CHJicon-32x32.png Christian Holiness Journal https://christianholinessjournal.com 32 32 67641945 The Test https://christianholinessjournal.com/2019/08/08/the-test/ Thu, 08 Aug 2019 15:00:48 +0000 https://christianholinessjournal.com/?p=2197

Genesis tells us that God created humans (male and female) in His image and likeness. The words “image” and “likeness” are poetic parallels conferring the same meaning: we were created to be imagers of God.

In fact, a thorough reading of the Creation Story tells us that we humans had a unique and short-lived relationship with God and the rest of His creation. We walked with God, talked with Him and – indeed – reigned with Him over the rest of His creation. Many Hebrew scholars even go so far to propose that God’s spiritual children, (angels and other heavenly creatures) and God’s physical children (the first man and first woman) shared God’s edenic dwelling with Him.

It was God’s divine will in His wisdom that humankind co-rule with Him on this world. Humans, decided to, instead, trust in their own will. As a result of that rebellion, mankind was barred from God’s earthly dwelling place and found unworthy to rule with Him. But God didn’t give up on humankind. Throughout history, He tested us to prove one worthy.

The Bible speaks of many whose faith was tested, just like Adam and Eve. Yet no human was found worthy to co-rule the earth with him.

God did find many who came close to such worthiness. Enoch walked with God until, one day he walked away with God. Noah was put to the test and passed it; he relied on God’s wisdom and was chosen to help save mankind. In the end, though, he fell back on human wisdom.

Abraham and Sarah were found worthy to be put to the test. They failed, though and did not have the faith to wait on God’s timing. God had promised them innumerable descendants. In a tale that reminds us of the creation story, Abraham trusted the voice of his wife more than he trusted promise of God. Later, Abraham passed the test by yielding to God’s voice on the mountaintop. Still, he was not worthy to co-rule with God in His creation.

Moses was perhaps found to be the most worthy among humans. He met God on the mountain and received His instructions. Being exposed to the glory of God changed him so much that he was forced to cover his face. His outstretched arm by which he parted the waters was called the arm of God. Still, his faith faltered and he would not co-rule on earth with God.

David was called a man after God’s own heart, but he often mistrusted God. Solomon passes the test and asks for God’s wisdom over money and power. At the same time, though, he seeks sexual pleasure and pride. He, too, was not worthy to co-rule God’s creation.

In the midst of exile, Daniel is shown a peek into the future and sees a human ascending to heaven where he will sit on a throne next to the Ancient of Days, God the Father. That man is Jesus.

Because of a sinless life on earth… Because He – the Son of God made human – surrendered his life to His Father in the ultimate test of faith… because He rose from the dead and ascended into heaven… we can once again be imagers of God.

If we trust in God’s wisdom instead of man’s, and if we die to our own will and instead live in the will of God as found in His Holy Word, then we too will reflect His image. We will be a part of The Kingdom of God ruled by Jesus Christ on earth.

For myself, I could never pass the test. But Christ who lives through me gives me strength and faith to take the test and endure. He lives in me eternally. I surrender to him constantly. He passed the test for me.

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The book of Hebrews tells us that it is our faith that saves us, not our actions. In fact, it was by faith that Abraham was made the founder of an innumerable nation. No matter what we do, we can never be found worthy to co-rule with God. That is why he sent His Son to be born as a man, to live and grow and learn and experience life as a frail human who is tempted and tried and everyday dies. It is only because we trust in His wisdom and His sacrifice that we may live as part of His Kingdom.

God tested each of these people and recorded their stories for eternity so that we would see that no one is worthy but His Son Jesus Christ.

What part will we play in His Kingdom? Only God knows, but what part does a child of God play, anyway? We are God’s adopted children, brothers and sisters of King Jesus.

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Unfailing Love https://christianholinessjournal.com/2019/05/23/unfailing-love/ Thu, 23 May 2019 03:29:08 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=2115 His unfailing Love will catch is in the end. I have endured many physical ailments, including winning the battle against a fairly rare cancer called myxofibrosarcoma, endured colon cancer, and suffered a bad back that has plagued generations of my family. One ailment for which I have never sought treatment is one that the doctors found during a pre-surgical evaluation four years ago. I have spinal stenosis in my neck, which makes it hard to stay vertical.

I used to describe it as being dizzy, but it is not dizziness, not vertigo, not like an ear infection, not like getting out of a chair too quickly. I am simply not able to stay completely upright at times, and it is affected by the position of my neck and head. Consequently, I am often told that I walk funny, with my head held a certain way and tiny little shuffles instead of long, manly strides. It’s sometimes difficult to hold my head up normally. It’s impossible to sit in a straight-back chair if I cannot slouch. I lose my footing and fall.

I say all that to say this, though the writer of the 94th Psalm spoke metaphorically, I have no problem thinking about slipping and falling literally. My wife knows the injuries I’ve suffered and has confessed that she fully expects me to fall and crack my skull, and bleed-out long before cancer ever takes me.

Either way… No matter how I meet my Maker, I am ready. His unfailing love has caught me (literally and metaphorically) so often when I fall that I have no doubt His love will catch me at that final fall.

Psalm 94:17-18 NIV –

When I said, “My foot is slipping,”

your unfailing love, Lord, supported me.

When anxiety was great within me,

your consolation brought me joy.

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The Remnant https://christianholinessjournal.com/2019/05/18/the-remnant/ Sat, 18 May 2019 16:06:01 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=2107 The remnant

For several years I’ve been reading stories of the miraculous things happening in the persecuted Church: stories of Christ appearing to Muslims in dreams and visions; stories of Christians protected by angels; stories of lions appearing to rescue Christians about to be beheaded. Many more such stories have been told. Are they believable? I believe that God is working in miraculous ways.

I have communicated with a handful of Christians native to persecuted areas. Many have now vanished from social media and email. I know this about them: they felt abandoned by the Church in the West, if not by God; they felt alone.

It is in our nature to sometimes feel alone in the struggle of righteousness, even here in the US. It is both easy and self-serving to believe we are the only ones standing against the post-Christian version of Baal worship. In truth, the Church in the West may be fooling itself into believing we are a part of the Church at all. Our faith paddles in comparison to the faith of Christians in Africa.

We in America may be a type of Church of Pergamum while the Church in Africa and the Middle East is the Church at Smyrna (see Revelation 2:8-17).

Yet, know matter how often or to what degree any of us feel abandoned, we never stand alone. God always has a remnant. Just as Elijah knew nothing of his 7000 contemporaries who had not bowed down to Baal, Christians worldwide are refusing to bow to the false gods of this world. We are not alone, even when we stand unto death.

Christ said, “For I am with you always, even into the end of the earth.” He is with us, and there is always a remnant.

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Gospel of the Kingdom https://christianholinessjournal.com/2019/04/10/gospel-of-the-kingdom/ Wed, 10 Apr 2019 19:32:58 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=2018 Take up your cross and follow Me..Consider yourself blessed if you truly understand the cost of Christianity. You see, the cost of following Jesus is not often preached on Sunday mornings. I could list countless red-letter verses where Jesus warned those who would follow Him of the cost. In fact, I have already done so in previous blogs. For the purpose of this blog, I will quote but one such verse (MT 16:24 NIV):

Then Jesus said to his disciples, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me.

In our last blog, we discussed that Jesus fully understood the cost of our salvation. Fully God yet fully man, he chose to endure a gruesome beating and tortuous death to pay the price for our sin, but He was tempted to turn away. What man wouldn’t be fearful? How could the thought of running away not occur to Him?

No, it is not sacreligious to speak of the temptation of Jesus during His Passion. Too often we emphasize only His godly perfection and relegate the temptation to His wilderness experience. The point of His birth as a man was to overcome the sinful nature  inherent in man. He came to redeem mankind, to conquer sin and death, to restore us to the image of God, and to make us worthy to rule with Him in Glory (Daniel 7:27). Only One who bore both the nature and frailties of man and the nature and power of God could be found worthy serve as sacrifice of the cumulative sins of mankind.

As Christians we are told to deny ourselves and take up our own cross and follow Him. The clause “to take up your cross” explicitly implies that we should suffer the death of our carnal, sinful, nature. It implies also that we should consider Christ of such great value (and ourselves of such little value) that we are ready to die physically for Him if asked.

The Apostle Paul understood just that. While we learn theology through Paul’s letters, we learn his bio in the work of Luke that we know as the Acts of the Apostles. The wonderful thing about Luke is that he wrote two works, one of which is a sequel to the other. We learn about the birth, life, death, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus in the Gospel of Luke. We learn about the birth, growth, persecution, and scattering of the Church in Acts.

There are many other parallels in the literary styles of the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles, but only one that we will note here. In Luke, we view six trials of Jesus before His crucifixion. The writer makes clear in his narrative that Jesus is innocent in all six trials*. The powers that be – the governors of Judea and Galilee – find that Jesus had broken no laws. Nonetheless, Christ is punished unto death.

In Acts, we see that Paul also endured six trials. In each, he too was found to have broken no laws. He was brought before Porcius Festus and Marcus Antonius Felix, governors of Judea. Like Pontius Pilate before them, both men allowed the sentiment of the ruling class Jews and the public to sway them. Festus sends Paul to Rome where the apostle would – tradition tells – face the Emporer Nero who eventually condemns the apostle to death**.

Is Luke making out Paul to be a replacement for Christ, a new messiah? Not at all. He is emphasizing that, like Paul, we must bear our cross and be willing to follow Christ to our deaths. Paul says in Acts 20:20-24 (NIV), Paul declares,

“You know that I have not hesitated to preach anything that would be helpful to you but have taught you publicly and from house to house. I have declared to both Jews and Greeks that they must turn to God in repentance and have faith in our Lord Jesus.

“And now, compelled by the Spirit, I am going to Jerusalem, not knowing what will happen to me there. I only know that in every city the Holy Spirit warns me that prison and hardships are facing me. However, I consider my life worth nothing to me; my only aim is to finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me —the task of testifying to the good news of God’s grace.

A few paragraphs later, he reiterates the same sentiment:

Then Paul answered, “Why are you weeping and breaking my heart? I am ready not only to be bound, but also to die in Jerusalem for the name of the Lord Jesus.” – Acts 21:13 NIV

Paul’s eyes were open wide and he knew exactly what awaited him in Jerusalem,

And, he went anyway.

Would you? Would I? I would like to think so. It is that kind of faith – the kind that says, “Lead me to the cross” – that Christ expects of us.


* Six may significant in that it represents man in the Bible.

** Many scholars believe that Paul won his appeal to Nero and, afterward, ministered in Spain, a journey that was not recorded in Acts. Later, he was again arrested and condemned to death in Rome.

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Godspeed https://christianholinessjournal.com/2019/01/15/godspeed/ Tue, 15 Jan 2019 18:23:47 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=1938 We often grow impatient with God. We fear He has forgotten us. We convince ourselves that our sins are so great that God no longer loves us.

We must remember: God’s love is perfect; His timing is impeccable. His ways are above our ways, and we cannot comprehend.

Only Trust Him.

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There Will Be No Turning Back https://christianholinessjournal.com/2018/08/10/there-will-be-no-turning-back/ Fri, 10 Aug 2018 05:13:32 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=1744 There will be no turning back President Ulysses Grant has, in recent years, become a hero of mine. Many 20th Century historians painted the Civil War general and 18th president through the lens of politicians and military men who were jealous of him and biased against him. They called him a drunkard, and a naive politician. Newer biographers rely on the accounts of those who knew him best and from their research emerges a portrait of a diminutive, unassuming, self-confident, brilliant, pragmatic, and determined strategist.

Grant never sought command over the armed forces Union. He sought only a role commensurate with his West Point training and experience. He was certainly not pro-slavery, but had never taken a stand against it prior to the war. He had – in fact – worked his Missouri farm using slaves that were given to him by his father-in-law. Early in the war, though, he was compelled to take a radical stand. Long before Lincoln freed the slaves, General Grant declared that the nation could remain united only if all men were free. He sought only to lead his troops, but because of his dogged determination and brilliant mind, he soon led the North into new hope and onward toward victory.

Even before Grant defeated Lee, he became a hero. The press followed him everywhere. His likeness appeared on front pages from Washington to Maine. Both Democrats and Republicans talked of nominating him for President in 1864. Congress reinstituted the rank of Lieutenant General to honor him, a rank that was retired after George Washington died. Abraham Lincoln, who had ascertained that Grant abhorred the idea of running for president, concurred with Congress and made Grant General of the Army of the United States. If Grant did not seek greatness, it was certainly thrust upon him.

Though his life is largely forgotten by generations of Americans who can barely describe the Civil War or identify Lincoln, and though his life has been misrepresented in the media, I have to wonder what made him great. Why was Grant a hero and hailed as our country’s savior before he had even set upon the task of vanquishing the Confederate Army in the East?

While one can hardly reduce his appeal to one aspect, the man did possess one quality that stands out in every biography, good or bad, old or new. Even those histories that wrongly portray him as a drunkard mention this one quality as a key to his success. He never gave up.

In the Battle of the Wilderness, in early 1864, Grant – for the first time – faces off in battle against Robert E. Lee. Lee, as brilliant and cunning and determined as Grant, has the advantage of fighting at home. He knows the country, and the terrain. The people of Virginia are Lee’s family and neighbors. They support him. Grant is the invader, far from home, unfamiliar with the country, and faces odds that seem insurmountable. Lesser men than Grant would have fallen back. In fact, other Generals had encountered Lee had previously won victories in the same part of Virginia. Many Union Generals were wary of Lee; all of them respected him. Grant, though, was determined. It was his determination that at him apart from all others and accounted for much of his mass appeal.

Sure, other Union generals were determined, but Grant never faltered, even when the cards were stacked against him. One incident in the Wilderness Campaign illustrates that point. Grants armies were facing off against Lee’s in what is better described as a jungle than a wilderness. Old growth trees, impenetrable undergrowth, unfamiliarity with the lay of the land, fog and smoke were as much an ememy to Union troops as the Confederate soldiers. After initial setbacks, Grant regrouped and began again.

Grant had purposefully been silent, telling Lincoln little about the progress of the battle. One day, though, he discovered a reporter had decided to sneak through the lines to Washington to file a story. Grant called him aside and, in a hushed tone, said, “If you see the President, tell him for me, that whatever happens, there will be no turning back.”

That determined attitude, the short that resolves “No Turning Back,” is one thing missing in the lives of many Christians today. Determination… Discipline… And Faith are all a part of the walk with Christ. If we truly seek the heart and mind of Christ, we must first repent of our sins, trust in Jesus, allow His Spirit to live through us, allow Him to discipline us, and finally determine to follow Him. No turning back.

Paul puts it this way in 1 Corinthians 15:58 (ESV)

Therefore, my beloved brothers, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.

An old hymn is worth recalling:

I have decided to follow Jesus;

I have decided to follow Jesus;

I have decided to follow Jesus;

No turning back, no turning back.

 

Tho’ none go with me, still I will follow,

Tho’ none go with me still I will follow,

Tho’ none go with me, still I will follow;

No turning back, no turning back.

 

My cross I’ll carry, till I see Jesus;

My cross I’ll carry till I see Jesus,

My cross I’ll carry till I see Jesus;

No turning back, no turning back.

__________

__________

Holiness is, perhaps, the most misunderstood concept in Christianity. Anyone who has striven to follow the life of Christ can likely tell you that it is impossible to do. No one can match His love, His grace, or His compassion. For no one but Jesus is perfect. Once the believer is filled with and empowered by the Holy Spirit, though, he or she is filled to the brim with the love of Christ, and desires nothing more than to please God and follow in Christ’s steps. The love of sin is gone. In its place is a love and passion for others. That is Christian Holiness. This is Christian Holiness Daily.

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Fear Not 365 – Only Believe (Mark 5:36) https://christianholinessjournal.com/2017/01/10/fear-not-365-only-believe-mark-536/ https://christianholinessjournal.com/2017/01/10/fear-not-365-only-believe-mark-536/#respond Tue, 10 Jan 2017 08:55:54 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=773
One never knows when tragedy will strike; it usually arrives without warning. 20 years ago, I was at work on a slow, rainy day, staring out the window at a parade of first responder vehicles racing down the highway. Little did I know they were headed toward an auto accident six miles down the road, one in which my wife had been hit head-on. 

Jairus had no warning when tragedy struck his house (Mark 5). He was a man of some importance, a ruler in the synagogue, which is more or less like the chief administrator at the church. Life had been good to him. He was prosperous.  He had a family. What could go wrong?

For most people, though, something usually does go wrong. Jairus’s daughter fell ill, very ill. He was desperate. This girl was the love of his life, his reason to live, as any daughter is for any good father. She was obviously dying and there was nothing that any doctor could do for her. 

Then, Jesus arrived on the shores of his town. He begged Jesus to heal her, and Jesus immediately headed to his house, followed by a throng of people. On the way there, though, Jesus stopped. 

“Who touched me?” said Jesus. 

Jairus panicked. His daughter was deathly ill. There was no time to waste. He must have thought Jesus crazy, for He was surrounded by hundreds of people, each vying for His attention, yet the Master had asked who touched Him?

In his mind, Jairus screams, “Come, hurry, Jesus. There’s no time for this…” Only the dignity of his position prevents him from grabbing the Master by the arm and dragging him to his daughter’s side. 

No sooner does Jesus bless and heal the woman that had touched Him, than Jairus sees his servants rushing into the crowd. They need not speak. He could tell by their expressions that his daughter had passed. 

When the servants did speak and confirm his deepest fears, he lost it. Tears welled in his eyes. His lips quivered. His hands shook. His heart sank. Death had called on his home, and taken his daughter. Oh, that he could take her place. If only the woman hadn’t distracted the Master. If only… 

The Master, though, had heard the servants and took pity on Jairus. “Do not be afraid. Only believe.”

Jairus heard those words and looked into the eyes of the Master and saw not death, rather he saw eyes full of life, light and love. What he felt as he did so compelled him to believe. For when Jesus spoke, the ruler of the synagogue understood this: no one loved his daughter more than he, except the Master. And, at that very moment, Jairus knew that whatever he found when he arrived home, all would be well because his home was in the hands of the living God. 

Oh, that I had understood the lessons of Mark 5 twenty years ago, when the sheriff called my office and asked me to meet him at the scene of my wife’s accident. I would have saved myself a world of grief had I trusted in God like Jairus.

So long as we listen to the words of Jesus, keep our eyes on Him, and invite Him into our home, all will be well. No matter what tragedy strikes, it is but a small bump in an eternal road; God will provide us the strength to endure whatever besets us. “Do not be afraid. Only believe.”

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Change of Plans… https://christianholinessjournal.com/2016/08/24/change-of-plans/ https://christianholinessjournal.com/2016/08/24/change-of-plans/#respond Wed, 24 Aug 2016 03:00:44 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=460
Bad enough that he was a Samaritan, an outsider, shunned, looked down upon, the dregs of society, lowest of the low. More than that, he was a leper. 

Levitical law separated the leper from the rest of society; lepers lived at a distance, never again to touch their loved ones, or to speak with them intimately. Never again could they hug their children or kiss their spouse. 

Leprosy is highly contagious, and is spread by skin contact and through water droplets, like a cough or sneeze or a runny nose. Leprosy attacks the central nervous system, but its symptoms appear as tumors and disfigurement of the flesh and bone. Fingers twist in unnatural ways; hands become claws, and arms and legs become useless over time. The life of a leper is a painful and sad. 

Lepers suffered so greatly that people in the time of Jesus naturally assumed that the afflicted must be paying for some terrible sin. And, why wouldn’t they think that? Two thousand years later, many of us still believe that way, to some extent. 

It was near the end of His ministry when Jesus, passing through an unnamed village between Samaria and Jerusalem, was called on by ten such lepers. In keeping with the Law, they called from a distance.  “Master, have mercy on us!”

His answer may seem strange to us, but that is only because we don’t live under the Law. “Go, and show yourselves to the priests.” Before a leper could rejoin society, he or she must have been certified to be free of the disease by a priest. 

The Bible doesn’t say for sure, but I imagine an expression or two of doubt on the faces of the lepers, and perhaps a few questions amongst them. Still, they obeyed Him. 

And he said unto him, Arise, go thy way: thy faith hath made thee whole.

– Luke 17:19

The healing must have been slow and progressive, rather than instantaneous. Before the lepers arrived at the Temple or synagogue, they found themselves healed. One of them – just one – was so grateful that he turned back to thank Jesus before he had made it to see the priest. 

So grateful was he that he fell at the Master’s feet and worshipped Him. 

“Didn’t I heal 10 people?” said Jesus. Of course, He knew the answer. “Where are the other 9? Only one has found it in his heart to return and praise God, and He is a Samaritan.” Christ once again reminded His followers that their prejudice against their neighbors is simply wrong. 

“Get up, He tells the Samaritan. “Arise and go your way. Your faith has made you whole.”

The leper’s mission had changed. Before turning around to express his gratitude to Jesus, his mission had been to go see the priests. Now, healed and made whole, he received new inductions from Christ… to go his own way.  

“You are made whole.”

And, here’s my point. Those who experience a real encounter with Christ are made whole, spiritually whole; theirs lives are renewed and made complete and they simply cannot continue to go on living like they once had. They are compelled to follow Jesus. Their missions change. Christ directs them in a different direction. They receive a change of plans. Theirs hearts have changed. Their entire lives change. 

Have you been made whole? If not, you only need ask. Fall at His feet and praise Jesus. Ask Him to change Your heart. Your life will change. Forever. 

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THE SELF WE WERE INTENDED TO BE https://christianholinessjournal.com/2016/08/18/the-self-we-were-intended-to-be/ https://christianholinessjournal.com/2016/08/18/the-self-we-were-intended-to-be/#respond Thu, 18 Aug 2016 03:00:20 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=435
Our lives here on earth pale in comparison to what we were intended to be. Our lives are corrupted by sin, detoured by our own free-will, and perhaps even tortured by devils. The life of the rare saint, one who is entirely striving to please God, reveals but a glimmer of the life that is in store for us after this life. 

There’s an old joke about a Sunday school teacher who asks her students if they want to go to heaven. Everyone raise their hands but little Tommy. The teacher asks why he doesn’t want to go to heaven, he responds, “I do. I just thought you meant right now.”

Most of my life, I felt that way. I wanted to go to heaven, but not yet. When I was a child, my Sunday school teacher was also my first and second grade school teacher, Mrs. Alice Ada Orrell. I thought she was ancient, but she was only about 60. She taught nearly 20 more years after teaching me. She played piano when called upon, organized Vacation Bible School, and was always ready to testify when given the opportunity. I remember many times she testified that she was ready to “go home.” She meant that if she were to die that very day, she would be happy, for the life that awaited her on the other side would be far superior to this life, weighed down by the burdens and cares of this world. 

I didn’t understand that then. I do now. I am ready. I am ready end the battle against sin and death. I am ready to be done with health issues. I am sick of the struggle of wondering where my next meal is coming from, and wondering if I will make enough money to pay my bills next month. I am sick of the aches and pains of an aging and abused body. I am ready to go home, and ready to be the person God intended me to be. 

That’s not to say that I will be discontent to stick around until God calls me home, even if it is many years in the future. My prayer is for God to continue to sanctify me, lead me into holiness, and allow me to continue to feel His presence on a daily basis. Still, I let Him know that I am ready. 

The Apostle Peter tells us that Christ has prepared us a new life in heaven…

according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you, who are kept by the power of God through faith for salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. 

1 Peter 1:3-5

Are you ready? We never know when we will be called home. 

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Daily Devotion for 12 August 16 – Standing Alone? https://christianholinessjournal.com/2016/08/12/daily-devotion-for-12-august-16-standing-alone/ https://christianholinessjournal.com/2016/08/12/daily-devotion-for-12-august-16-standing-alone/#respond Fri, 12 Aug 2016 04:00:38 +0000 http://christianholinessdaily.com/?p=414
There are few people in history like Job. He lost everything, his livestock, his servants, and his  ten children. Later, he loses his health; his body is covered in boils. 

He shaved his head, ripped his clothing and went into mourning. His three closest friends mourned with him, sitting silently for seven days. 

When Job finally spoke, he cursed the day he was born. His friends, however, had their own ideas about Job’s problems. One believed that Job was being punished for unrepented sin. Another believed that Job had exhibited evil behavior and should have endeavoured to be more righteous. Still, another believed that Job likely deserved far greater punishment than that which he had already received. With friends like that…

Job defended his innocence to his friends and proclaimed that there is a Redeemer in heaven who would vouch for him (Job 16:19, 19:25).  He longed for an intercessor, someone to speak to God on his behalf. Amazing, isn’t it, that this man of God, who lived perhaps 600 years before Christ, could so succinctly sum up the role of Christ, who now sits at the right side of His Father. 

There are many lessons and insights to be gleaned from the book of Job, and one that is often overlooked is this: Job turned to his friends for help, and they were no help at all; instead, they frustrated him. Yet, he stood beside them, and reminded them that he was a better friend to them than they were to him. In the end, Job stood alone and even defended his friends before God. 

Job’s patience is often the topic of discussion, but it is his faith that we should learn from. He trusted in God before there was a Bible to read. He believed in a Redeemer before mankind had been redeemed. And, he had faith that if he trusted in God, God would remain faithful to him. 

We worship a God of infinite might and never-ending mercy, and His Spirit lives in the heart of every one of His children, given to us so that we may experience firsthand that for  which Job could only long. He is our Comforter, our never-failing, True Friend. With Christ in our hearts, we never really stand alone. 

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