Monday, February 22, 2010

Isaiah 2, Bible reading and Daily Devotions

Max Lucado Daily: Love is a Fruit


Love is a Fruit

Posted: 21 Feb 2010 10:01 PM PST

“The Spirit produces the fruit of love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.” Galatians 5:22

Love is a fruit. A fruit of whom? Of your hard work? Of your deep faith? Of your rigorous resolve? No. Love is a fruit of the Spirit of God. “The Spirit produces the fruit of love” (Gal. 5:22, NCV).



Isaiah 2
Climb God's Mountain
1-5 The Message Isaiah got regarding Judah and Jerusalem: There's a day coming when the mountain of God's House
Will be The Mountain—
solid, towering over all mountains.
All nations will river toward it,
people from all over set out for it.
They'll say, "Come,
let's climb God's Mountain,
go to the House of the God of Jacob.
He'll show us the way he works
so we can live the way we're made."
Zion's the source of the revelation.
God's Message comes from Jerusalem.
He'll settle things fairly between nations.
He'll make things right between many peoples.
They'll turn their swords into shovels,
their spears into hoes.
No more will nation fight nation;
they won't play war anymore.
Come, family of Jacob,
let's live in the light of God.
6-9God, you've walked out on your family Jacob
because their world is full of hokey religion,
Philistine witchcraft, and pagan hocus-pocus,
a world rolling in wealth,
Stuffed with things,
no end to its machines and gadgets,
And gods—gods of all sorts and sizes.
These people make their own gods and worship what they make.
A degenerate race, facedown in the gutter.
Don't bother with them! They're not worth forgiving!

Pretentious Egos Brought Down to Earth
10Head for the hills,
hide in the caves
From the terror of God,
from his dazzling presence.
11-17People with a big head are headed for a fall,
pretentious egos brought down a peg.
It's God alone at front-and-center
on the Day we're talking about,
The Day that God-of-the-Angel-Armies
is matched against all big-talking rivals,
against all swaggering big names;
Against all giant sequoias
hugely towering,
and against the expansive chestnut;
Against Kilimanjaro and Annapurna,
against the ranges of Alps and Andes;
Against every soaring skyscraper,
against all proud obelisks and statues;
Against ocean-going luxury liners,
against elegant three-masted schooners.
The swelled big heads will be punctured bladders,
the pretentious egos brought down to earth,
Leaving God alone at front-and-center
on the Day we're talking about.

18And all those sticks and stones
dressed up to look like gods
will be gone for good.

19Clamber into caves in the cliffs,
duck into any hole you can find.
Hide from the terror of God,
from his dazzling presence,
When he assumes his full stature on earth,
towering and terrifying.

20-21On that Day men and women will take
the sticks and stones
They've decked out in gold and silver
to look like gods and then worshiped,
And they will dump them
in any ditch or gully,
Then run for rock caves
and cliff hideouts
To hide from the terror of God,
from his dazzling presence,
When he assumes his full stature on earth,
towering and terrifying.

22Quit scraping and fawning over mere humans,
so full of themselves, so full of hot air!
Can't you see there's nothing to them?


Our Daily Bread reading and devotion

Romans 5
Developing Patience
1-2By entering through faith into what God has always wanted to do for us—set us right with him, make us fit for him—we have it all together with God because of our Master Jesus. And that's not all: We throw open our doors to God and discover at the same moment that he has already thrown open his door to us. We find ourselves standing where we always hoped we might stand—out in the wide open spaces of God's grace and glory, standing tall and shouting our praise.
3-5There's more to come: We continue to shout our praise even when we're hemmed in with troubles, because we know how troubles can develop passionate patience in us, and how that patience in turn forges the tempered steel of virtue, keeping us alert for whatever God will do next. In alert expectancy such as this, we're never left feeling shortchanged. Quite the contrary—we can't round up enough containers to hold everything God generously pours into our lives through the Holy Spirit!

February 22, 2010
Short-Timers
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READ: Romans 5:1-5
Hope does not disappoint. —Romans 5:5

I served in the Armed Forces many years ago and have always been thankful that I was able to give those years to my country. I must say, however, that my most memorable time in the service was the brief interval when I was a “short-timer.”

Short-timers are soldiers who have but a few weeks before discharge. They spend their last days “mustering out”—visiting the commissary and the quartermaster’s office to clear accounts and return equipment. What I remember most about that period was my jaunty pace and the happy, carefree spirit with which I carried out my tasks. I had duties but few worries, for I knew I was going home.

Now that I’m an “old-timer,” once again I’m a short-timer. It won’t be long before I’m discharged from my duty here. Again, my pace is jaunty and my spirit is light for I know that very soon I’ll be going home. That’s the outlook that Jesus and His apostles called “hope” (Acts 24:15; Rom. 5:2,5).

Hope, in the biblical sense, means certainty and assurance. It is the firm, unshakable, indomitable belief that we will be raised from the dead (as Jesus was) and will be welcomed into our eternal home. That’s enough to put joy in our heart and a spring in our step this day! — David H. Roper

God has given us a life abundant
As we serve Him in this world below;
Though our time on earth is surely fleeting,
Hope of heaven makes our pathway glow. —Hess

The risen Christ will come from heaven to take His own to heaven.


My Utmost for His Highest, by Oswald Chambers

February 22, 2010
The Discipline of Spiritual Perseverance
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READ:
Be still, and know that I am God . . . —Psalm 46:10

Perseverance is more than endurance. It is endurance combined with absolute assurance and certainty that what we are looking for is going to happen. Perseverance means more than just hanging on, which may be only exposing our fear of letting go and falling. Perseverance is our supreme effort of refusing to believe that our hero is going to be conquered. Our greatest fear is not that we will be damned, but that somehow Jesus Christ will be defeated. Also, our fear is that the very things our Lord stood for— love, justice, forgiveness, and kindness among men— will not win out in the end and will represent an unattainable goal for us. Then there is the call to spiritual perseverance. A call not to hang on and do nothing, but to work deliberately, knowing with certainty that God will never be defeated.

If our hopes seem to be experiencing disappointment right now, it simply means that they are being purified. Every hope or dream of the human mind will be fulfilled if it is noble and of God. But one of the greatest stresses in life is the stress of waiting for God. He brings fulfillment, "because you have kept My command to persevere . . ." ( Revelation 3:10 ).

Continue to persevere spiritually.


A Word with You, by Ron Hutchcraft


How Nice People Miss Heaven - #6031
Monday, February 22, 2010


When people ask me why I'm not going on some roller coaster that goes upside down and around and around at some like 200 miles per hour, I don't want to just tell them I'm chicken. So, I tell them I'm not tall enough. You know that picture they have of a little person? They have them at the entrance to rides that are a little more challenging. You're supposed to stand next to it, and if you're not as big as that person, you're not allowed on that ride. I've got grandsons, on the other hand, who would love to get on some of those rides. They don't have the wisdom of my years and the survival instincts that I have, but they're not allowed on the ride. They just don't measure up.

I'm Ron Hutchcraft and I want to have A Word With You today about "How Nice People Miss Heaven."

If you don't measure up, you can't go - to heaven, that is. It's not that we don't try to stand on tippy-toe next to God's standard and do everything we can to measure up to it. Someone who's listening today is a really religious person, a spiritual person, a nice person. Your hope is that when Judgment Day comes - when, in a sense, you stand at the gates of heaven by the standard of the holiness of God - you'll be spiritually tall enough to get in. You won't be. Not if you're depending on your own goodness.

That is not my verdict. It's the verdict of the One you will meet the day you die; the One who decides whether or not you enter heaven. But, surprisingly, it won't be your goodness that He'll be looking at. It will be whether or not you have Jesus in your heart. And He will only be in your heart if you've abandoned all hope of being good enough for a perfect God and you've pinned all your hopes on His Son who died for your sin. You would have had to die for it if He didn't love you enough to do it.

The verdict of God on all of us rings down through the ages in our word for today from the Word of God. It's Romans 3:10 and then 3:23. God Himself says: "There is no one righteous, not even one." That's "righteous" by His standard of perfection. "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." We all fall short. I do. You do. Speaking of our best efforts to be good, God says in Romans 3:20, "No one will be declared righteous in His sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin."

God's standards are to show us how much we need Jesus. Think of the cumulative effect of all the times in your life that you've told less than the truth - you broke the commandment about bearing false witness; all the times you did less than honor your parents - you blew off the commandment to honor your father and mother. Think about all the times you've had lustful thoughts. Jesus said when we do, we mentally violate the commandment against "committing adultery." Think of all the selfish things, the proud things that have been, in God's eyes, violating His commandment to "have no other gods before Me."

But here's the good news. Romans 3:21 announces that God is ready to give you - now here's the word: "...a righteousness from God, apart from the law...through faith in Jesus Christ." That's because Jesus died to cancel from God's records every sin of every day of your life; erased by the blood He shed for those sins. "Faith in Jesus Christ" means telling Jesus that you're pinning all your hopes on Him and Him alone. You're going to drop your sin so you can grab Him with both hands as your personal rescuer from your personal sin. Then, at the gates of heaven, you'll walk in because you belong to Jesus. He's the only One who measures up, and you're with Him. I pray that today you'll make the move from being religious to being rescued. If you're ready to get this settled, tell Jesus that right now. "Lord, You are my only hope. I am Yours. You died for the sin that I could never pay for with all my goodness."

And there's a lot of information that's helped people at this turning point in their life at our website. And I'd encourage you to check it out as soon as you can today - YoursForLife.net.

If there was any way you could measure up to get into God's heaven, believe me, Jesus would not have hung on that cross. There is no way except Him. Today the Savior can become your Savior.

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