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I am – the Eternal, Almighty God

December 8, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment


Within His three-year ministry on earth, Jesus spent a great deal of time in the Temple, and this is where we find Him in John 8. Of course, any time Jesus is in Jerusalem, He is confronted by authorities looking to discredit or kill Him. It is on this particular occasion, in fact, where Temple authorities attempt to back Jesus into a corner by presenting Him with the conundrum of the woman caught in adultery. 

If Jesus agrees that she should be stoned to death, they will go to the Roman governor and accused Jesus of usurping the authority of Caesar. If He shows leniency, they will pronounce Jesus a heretic. Instead, Jesus simply puts the conundrum back on them. “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.” In the end, of course, no one throws a single stone.

“Go, and sin no more,” He tells her. He then turns to those who remain and proclaims Himself to be the Light of the World. 

The Pharisees are angry at such a pronouncement. How dare He? “Who bares witness to your claims?”

“The Father,” answers Jesus, telling them that they are from below, while He and the Father are of above, and that they can never know the Father because they have never known the Son. “If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also.” 

Here I can imagine Jesus clapping his hands, as if to brush off the dust, and turning His back on the Pharisees to leave. “I am going away, and you will seek Me,” He says, “and will die in your sin. Where I go you cannot come.”

The Pharisees laugh. “He’s mad.” “A lunatic.”  “He has a demon.” “He’s going to kill Himself.”

The discussion goes on, with the Pharisees working very hard to entrap Jesus and Jesus challenging them to name just one way in which He had sinned, just one – even the tiniest – sin. 

Jesus, though, is sinless, and – of course – they cannot. 

“I have no demon,” says Jesus. “I simply glorify my Father. It is He who judges.” At this, the Pharisees must be looking back at the woman caught in adultery and wondering if they are any better than she. 

“Only my Father is judge, but if you keep My words, you will never taste death,” He says. And it goes unsaid, but He could continue and say, “and never face the Judge.”

“Are you greater than our Father, Abraham, who is dead?” The Pharisees are dumbfounded at the claim of Jesus, but not as shocked as when they hear Him continue…

“Before Abraham was, I am.”

With those five words, Jesus declares Himself to be the Eternal, Almighty God, Yahweh. 

Note that He does not say, “I was.” He says, “I am.” He uses the same words that the translators of Exodus had used when they quote God telling Moses that His name is I Am.

One cannot believe that Jesus is just a good man. He is either who He says He is (God), or He was a lunatic. 

He is the Eternal, Almighty God, Yahweh. I  am.

Filed Under: Christology, Uncategorized Tagged With: Abraham, i am, Jesus, Pharisees, Yahweh

The Christian Fast

December 5, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

While we’ve talked for a few days about fasting, we have never really explained fasting. So, how exactly does one properly fast?

The Christian fast is a period of time during which one forgoes food and, instead, uses mealtime to pray. 

The traditional purpose of the fast has been to ask God to intervene in our lives in a miraculous way. We have learned, however, that God encourages His children to fast so that they may grow more like Jesus, grow closer to God, and demonstrate love for the less fortunate. 

A great deal of Internet space is used up explaining whether to totally abstain from food, whether or not to drink juice or water during a fast, and whether abstaining from other things counts as a fast.  

Here’s my answer to that: it’s between you and God. The Bible mentions abstaining from sex for the sake of growing close to God. If you wish to abstain from other things, ask God. 

When you fast, do so privately. When you pray, do so privately. Fasting and prayer is designed to nurture your relationship with God, not your standing in the church. Seek to be like Jesus. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

To What Purpose, Fasting?

December 2, 2016 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

We noted yesterday that a fast that pleases God is one that combines depriving yourself with loving your neighbor. One cannot demonstrate love for God and disdain for his neighbor. If we love God, then we will love one another. 

Why fast in the first place. I asked several Christian friends about their fasting habits and most said they hadn’t fasted ever, or in years. It seems they had no need to fast. I think they don’t completely understand fasting. 

They understand fasting like this: Christians fast when they have a dire need of an action or answer of God. That is true, as far as it goes. Moses fasted on the mountaintop, awaiting God’s word, the Ten Commandments (Exodus 34:28). Samuel and all of Israel fasted before facing the Philistines in battle (1 Samuel 7:6). The early church fasted before sending out Paul and Barnabas. 

So, why does one need to fast when we have an urgent petition before God? Is it to prove to God that we mean business? Is it a bargaining chip? 

No. God knows our needs before we ask. Often, we receive more abundantly from Him than wet would have dared to ask. 

Then why fast? Two reasons. Firstly, we fast because Christ both commands it and sets the example for it. Secondly, we fast because it allows us to spend dedicated personal time with the Master. Urgency may dictate a fast, but it is not the only reason to fast. 

Don’t have time to pray? That’s funny… We almost always have time to eat…

Have a dire need? Skip a few meals. Draw close to God and tell Him all about it. 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: fast, Fasting, prayer

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