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Saturday, 11 October 2008
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James Bible Study
(Sorry this is a day late.)
James 2:1-13
1My brothers, as believers in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ, don’t show favoritism. 2Suppose a man comes into your meeting wearing a gold ring and fine clothes, and a poor man in shabby clothes also comes in. 3If you show special attention to the man wearing fine clothes and say, “Here’s a good seat for you,” but say to the poor man, “You stand there” or “Sit on the floor by my feet,” 4have you not discriminated among yourselves and become judges with evil thoughts?
5Listen, my dear brothers: Has not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom he promised those who love him? 6But you have insulted the poor. Is it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are they not the ones who are dragging you into court? 7Are they not the ones who are slandering the noble name of him to whom you belong?
8If you really keep the royal law found in Scripture, “Love your neighbor as yourself,” you are doing right. 9But if you show favoritism, you sin and are convicted by the law as lawbreakers. 10For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it. 11For he who said, “Do not commit adultery,” also said, “Do not murder.” If you do not commit adultery but do commit murder, you have become a lawbreaker.
12Speak and act as those who are going to be judged by the law that gives freedom, 13because judgment without mercy will be shown to anyone who has not been merciful. Mercy triumphs over judgment!
Showing favoritism. I don’t know about you, but I sure have been guilty of that before. And for what purpose? Nearly every instance I can remember came from somehow trying to promote favoritism of myself a.k.a. sucking up.
In this case, James speaks of showing favoritism to the rich, but it certainly isn’t the only application. What is one thing the world has taught us about money? Money = Influence = Power. Who are we most likely to suck up to? Someone with influence or power. It can be on a large or small scale. For example, a student may suck up to the teacher who has power over his or her grade. Or we could glance at the shady world of politics for a larger scale model.
James says in verse 5 that God has chosen the poor to inherit His kingdom. Let’s take a quick look at Matthew 5:3 – Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Neither Matthew nor James is referring exclusively to people with little or no money. “Poor in spirit” is a term that is used (according to my footnotes, once again) to contrast the spiritually proud and self-sufficient. Basically, what they both are saying is that the kingdom is not something you can earn. It is a gift. It is a gift that God will give anyone who asks, be they rich or poor, sick or healthy, man or woman. “…the kingdom he promised to those who love him,” (v.5).
By showing favoritism among ourselves (Christians) we are opening a can of worms that we really don’t need. James says in response (v.4), “…have you not discriminated among yourselves and become judges with evil thoughts?” Don’t we get that enough from people outside Christianity? Why bring it in? What’s the point? Having an in with someone who has worldly power isn’t going to impress God whose power is unfathomable.
That doesn’t mean scorn the rich/influential/powerful/whatever you’re not and wish you were. Then you’ll be showing favoritism the other way. We are equal in the eyes of the Lord. He treats us equally so we should treat each other the same.
The same applies to “the royal law found in Scripture,” (v.8) Violating one part of the law is violating God’s will and thus the whole law. Breaking one commandment is not worse than breaking another. Just as we are equal in the eyes of God, so is sin. None of it is good and none of it is welcome in His house.
A reminder: We ALL are sinners.
By freaking out at someone because of his sins, we are discriminating against him. Instead, we should show mercy. Be loving and accepting of the person. Help him fight the sins. We’re in the same boat. It wouldn’t be very nice to chuck him overboard and beg for our own rescue. That might make God frown.
Check out those last two verses again. James reminds us that we are going to be judged, too, so we should keep that in mind when we speak and act. As believers we know our eternal destiny lies with the Lord. That’s not being questioned. He is referring to when the Father asks what we have done with our lives as Christians.
“…”
Personally, I don’t want the divine crickets to be chirping. James says if we show mercy to others, mercy will be shown to us. Be nice to people!
What are your thoughts? Should we suck up to the wealthier people in the congregation in hopes they will put more in the offering plate? Is all sin equal?
Thursday, 09 October 2008
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Fruits of the Spirit
Love: There are some people I have a difficult time being loving toward.
Joy: No matter what James says, taking joy in my trials will continue to be a struggle.
Peace: Will this world ever be at peace?
Patience: The light turned red as I pulled up. I had to wait a whole minute and a half.
Kindness: Sometimes I have to bite my tongue. My thoughts are not always kind.
Goodness: I walked past three people today that I could have stopped to help with small tasks.
Gentleness: I once brought a Marine to the fetal position (true story).*
Faithfulness: I find myself relying on myself when I should be relying on the Lord.
Self-Control: Sometimes the cupboard doors get slammed a bit when I'm upset.
Even though we may completely disagree with one another, I still love you.
The joy of the Lord really is my strength.
The world may not be at peace, but I am.
Time is rarely as important as I make it; I will wait patiently.
Though I may struggle with my thoughts, I can still be kind to you.
I strive to be an example of the goodness and mercy Christ shows.
When he fell I was gentle, rubbing his shoulder and sitting with him until he could stand.
The Lord is faithful to me, and I shall endeavor to be faithful to Him.
When I am upset, I will control myself and pray for help.
I find some fruits of the Spirit to be easier than others. Do you struggle with any of them?
*It was an accident, but my lack of (physical) gentleness played a part in it. And I still laugh when I think about it - not so gentle or kind...it's a work in progress. *giggle*
Wednesday, 08 October 2008
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A Challenge
Sunday morning I woke to a sink full of dirty dishes.
I had been too tired to take care of them the night before. As I began to tackle them I decided to try and make it a spiritual exercise. Every item I began to clean (that’s right, no dishwasher!) I tried to find a metaphor to fit and turn the whole chore into a prayer. For example, the first thing I picked up was a fork. “You placed a fork in the road before me, Lord,” I said, “and either path may have been good, but I saw more blessings down this path. You left the choice up to me, which path to choose. Thank you, Lord, for freedom and guidance in my life.” The serving spoon: “Let me serve you, Father, by serving others.” And so on. Sometimes it wasn’t easy to find a really great metaphor, so I would just use the image of washing away the grime as an example of Christ washing away my sins.
The dull chore didn’t feel so much like a chore and I felt blessed when I finished.
I challenge you to make a chore into a prayer today!
Tuesday, 07 October 2008
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Explicit Content
There has been a lot of talk on Xanga and Revelife about pornography. There are people that strongly oppose it and people who don’t believe it’s really that bad. I am writing this to everyone. To the people who think porn is alright, see how it can tear the soul and drive a person mad. To the people who are strongly opposed, I warn you not to be judgmental of those who watch porn. They may be sitting right next to you in church, wishing they could kick the addiction. Your hateful words may be hurting them deeply, giving them more reason not to share their burden and ask for prayers.
My first experience with porn was back in the day when the Internet was still kind of new and filters were pretty much nonexistent. I was a child, and had either accidentally or naively clicked a button that I should have stayed well away from. Suddenly a large image popped up in the middle of the screen of a cucumber being abused in a way that had, until then, been inconceivable to me. I stared in fascinated horror for a moment before gathering hold of myself and trying desperately to close the box. The Internet would have none of it. There were still images loading, each more enlightening than the last. Click! Click! Click! The screen would not be budged. I heard my mother’s footsteps on the stairs. I tried just minimizing the window. Nope. Closing it still wasn’t working. I completely freaked out and jabbed the power button on the monitor. I nervously tapped my fingers and gave my mother an overeager smile as she walked by. I pretended the computer was restarting – the darned thing was just moving so slow! Eventually she went back downstairs, thankfully not kicking me off the computer. I would have died of mortification if she had seen that. By the time I turned the monitor back on and beheld the human body in all of its many creatively athletic glories, the Internet had decided it didn’t mind me X-ing out of the screen. I couldn’t look at cucumbers for months without feeling like I had been horribly naughty and needed to take a scalding shower.
Fast forward to college. I was in my room, alone, surfing Xanga. Someone had a video on her site. It looked like Youtube, but not. I clicked on it. Definitely not Youtube. My mind spun back to the cucumber. There were no cucumbers here, but there was action as opposed to a still picture. I turned down the volume and watched, horrifically fascinated until the end. I had never heard of this website that was a perversion of one of my favorites. I typed it in the browser, expecting the site to be one of those “Join now and download free videos!’ things. Instead, it was very much like Youtube. Just click and watch. This is wrong. My conscious said. Yeah, but I’m curious what sex is like, I thought back to myself. I had heard people talk about it. I had actually heard it going on, thank you College Roommate Number One. But I had never been anywhere close to sex, myself. I wasn’t entirely sure I knew what an adult penis looked like. I knew there were different Positions, but I couldn’t quite figure out, mentally, how they worked. Guess what, Tiger, that sucker’s more flexible than it looks. A “hard on” or a “stiffy” doesn’t mean it’s stuck in one direction. That was new to me, a sheltered naïve twenty-something.
Living with an emotionally unstable roommate who could come home and walk in the room at any moment kept me from checking out the site too often. I felt dirty, but I was an adult, I could handle it. Besides, wouldn’t I feel deliciously dirty when the day came that I actually, you know, did it? I wouldn’t want to be a total loser would I? I hadn’t French-kissed a guy until college, and even then I didn’t really know what I was doing. I felt like such a dork. Girls in Junior High were getting more action than I’d ever had. I didn’t want to be a total loser on my wedding night. Right?
The next year I managed to score a dorm to myself. I never had to worry about someone walking in on me. Gloriously wonderful. I didn’t immediately hop over to that site. In fact, it didn’t even cross my mind for a while. I honestly don’t remember what it was that made me think of it and convinced me to head back over. I eventually did, though. I watched video after video out of sheer curiosity. How does ______ work? What does ______ mean? How can she have two guys at once? Three holes? OH. Ew. Weird. At some point I had to have seen it all. Yet I kept coming back. Do they have anyone who can actually act without giggling or looking like she’s going to eat the camera? Does anyone on here have a larger vocabulary? Meanwhile I began to feel more comfortable with my own body. Before, I was locking the bathroom door while I took a shower and would knot a robe around myself before emerging. Now I would wander around my room naked, comfortable and slightly turned on. Wasn’t that a good thing? To be comfortable with my own body?
Once I was comfortable with myself and could even sleep in the nude, I began to be curious about my private areas. I wondered what I felt like and what it would feel like to be felt. It kind of hurt. Tampons really aren’t all that big, especially compared to some of those Internet guys. Jeepers! There was no way one of those would fit in there! Physical exploration made it a little easier to imagine what it would be like to really have sex. I could imagine two slender fingers becoming something thicker and longer. I could imagine the pain of my body stretching to accommodate it. I could imagine the feeling of being part of a rhythm, now that I knew what that was all about. I never was able to imagine it in a loving situation, though. I felt worthless.
When life called me away from the computer, I would find myself wondering what people looked like without clothes on. Wondering if they had sex or if they were virgins. Wondering what kind of sex they had. I felt humiliated and rotten and yet I kept going back. Why? My body wanted to try it, but my morals were still hanging on for dear life. So if I couldn’t try it, I could at least see it and hear it. I tried to stop. And sometimes I would for a while. Then I’d feel horny and wander back. I progressed (or regressed) to going to a new website, chatting with people. I discovered cybersex. I didn’t do video chats, but I did post pictures. Never without my panties, but provocative enough to keep men coming. “I have to clean up before my wife comes home,” one man wrote. Oh my gosh. What was I doing??? I felt convicted in church that Sunday. I came home and immediately deleted that account and email account with it, never to return.
I didn’t go back to the video site, either. One evening, I was feeling those sexual urges again, happened (by accident) across another site, and ended up setting up yet another account and another email address. I chatted again. Some guys had live video feed. I could see them though they couldn’t see me. It was that horrifying fascination all over again. I received hundreds of emails, requests for chats, pictures of yucky things (for the record, I still don’t understand why guys think that turns girls on), and so on.
I had recently seen and felt God really moving in my life. I felt absolutely putrid before Him. I could literally feel His disappointment. I struggled to stop. When I got the urge, I would open my Bible and turn to Song of Solomon, reading about sex in the pure form it was intended to be. Sometimes I found myself back at that ugly site. I couldn’t find a terminate account button. I felt that if I could find one, I would be done and never come back. Maybe that would have been true. However, I never found such a button. I hid my profile so I wasn’t inundated with suggestive emails and chat requests. That made it easier to break away. Meanwhile, my Bible, still lying in a corner, open to Song of Solomon, was staring at me, emanating waves of conviction and self-guilt that even the best mother can’t match.
Finally. Finally, I broke away. I laid myself bare before God. I cast my sins at the feet of my Lord and begged Him to take it from me. I don’t want any part of this! I could feel that God has something in mind for me. He wouldn’t mess with my life like He did without a reason. I was holding myself back from being a part of his plan, though, by giving in to fleshly desires. Christ’s words, “But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart,” pierced my soul. I was an adulterer. My heart ached for a man’s wife I had wronged. My soul ached for a Savior I had wronged.
Christ’s love is so great that He kneeled down next to me and said, “I forgive you, child. I love you. Get up and sin no more.” I am not sinless. I will continue to struggle. Even now, I am curious about that un-deleted account. But I will not bow to sin so easily. The Bible is my bread, and Christ is my living water. When I feel temptation I cry out to my master. I quickly find something to distract myself with and I pray, “Lord, deliver me from evil.”
He is always there for me. He is always there for you. Just ask for His help and He will give it freely.
Monday, 06 October 2008
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Studying James
Hello, friends. As I mentioned earlier, I am going to continue my study of the book of James on Mondays and Fridays. Today is Monday, so here I go!
Come, join me.James 1:19-27
19My dear brothers, take note of this: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, 20for man's anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires. 21Therefore, get rid of all moral filth and the evil that is so prevalent and humbly accept the word planted in you, which can save you.
22Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. 23Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror 24and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like. 25But the man who looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what he has heard, but doing it - he will be blessed in what he does.
26If anyone considers himself religious and yet does not keep a tight rein on his tongue, he deceives himself and his religion is worthless. 27Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.
Quick to listen, slow to anger. I don’t know about you, but I’ve heard this phrase before, and many variations of it, frequently. It’s one thing to think it and reflect on it now, while I have nothing to be angry about. It’s quite another when the lava has built up and Mt. Breath over here is about to erupt.
I like what James says in between those two phrases: "[be] slow to speak..." He is reminding us to take a moment to gather our thoughts before opening our mouths.
Let's try to avoid this.
How many times have you misunderstood someone? How often have you been upset over something only to find out later that it had never been as it seemed? When you feel your temper starting to stir, take a moment to really think about the facts of the situation. Do not even open your mouth until you're sure you won't verbally slaughter someone. Be slow to speak.
James tells us that man's anger does not bring about the righteous life that God desires. God's anger is righteous, ours is not. Often, our anger is not even directed properly. God knows the facts of the situation and can even do one better - he knows the intentions behind peoples actions and words. He knows their very thoughts. Let Him take care of the situation as He sees fit.
I enjoy watching Dog, the Bounty Hunter. In fact, I like it so much I got his autobiography. In the book, Dog gives an excellent example of letting go of one's anger and letting God take care of it. A man that had been one of his friends ran off with his wife and children. Dog carried a lot of anger and bitterness toward him for years, but finally let go of it and gave it up to God. Later, Dog heard that man saw his own mother commit suicide. He had wanted the man to pay for what he did, but that was such a hard blow, Dog begged God to cease His mighty vengeance against his former friend.
God knows when we have been wronged. He does not want us to carry around the anger, becoming bitter. That is why James tells us to get rid of all moral filth and evil. I know that when someone really lights my fuse, I tend to want to think nasty thoughts about him or her, which is exactly what I shouldn’t be doing. Instead, I should humbly accept the word of God that is in me, deferring to the Holy Spirit and letting the Father do as He sees fit.
Why do I keep saying “let” God take care of it? He’s God! He doesn’t need my permission! No, He doesn’t. However, I think He would rather wait until my heart is in the right place. If God struck my antagonist with lightning right away, I might say, “Ha! Serves you right!” Does that seem like the right frame of heart and mind? Not at all. If, however, He waits until I am humble, I will probably feel more inclined toward forgiveness. We should forgive our enemies, just as Christ forgave us. Before His sacrifice, our sin made us like enemies to God.
Regarding verse 22, have you ever tried to offer someone advice and he seems to be listening and agreeing with you, but then he completely ignores it later on? Isn’t that exasperating? Don’t you just want to shake him and say, “I told you that was a bad idea!”
God’s word comes in many forms. It is the message in our Bibles. It is the Holy Spirit dwelling in you and in me. It is Christ and it is the Father. John 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. How precious that He gives us Himself, the beginning and the end of all things. Yet when we listen and nod our heads and then go and completely ignore His message to us, we become like our friend who chose not to take the good advice. Completely exasperating to our Master.
God’s blessings are truly wonderful. Why not take His advice and be blessed along the way? James says to “look intently into the perfect law that gives freedom.” Since when do laws equal freedom? Well, if you think about it, what happens when you break the law? You go to jail. That, to me, seems like a significant lack of freedom. Breaking the perfect law means to sin. When we sin, we lack the freedom that God gave us through His Commandments and that Christ perfected through his sacrifice.
So, stick to the Ten Commandments, listen to God’s word and act on it, let Him deal with those who wrong us, and give yourself a moment before biting someone’s head off.
But wait! There’s two more verses! Verse 26 says, “If anyone considers himself religious and yet does not keep a tight rein on his tongue, he deceives himself and his religion is worthless.”
My Bible references Psalm 39:1 I said, "I will watch my ways and keep my tongue from sin; I will put a muzzle on my mouth as long as the wicked are in my presence."
If we publicly pray, go to church, and do other things that make it obvious we are “religious,” we completely undermine ourselves when we speak with a sharp tongue, lie, or say something nasty. How can we demonstrate the good Word when our own are rotten? However, if we place God first, help those around us, and don’t let ourselves be sucked in to the world of rebellion and alienation from God, we are practicing His true religion that is pure and faultless.
What are your thoughts? What is your interpretation of this passage? Do you find yourself struggling, as I do, to keep your mouth shut sometimes? Can acting on the word be difficult in this world?
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