Category Archives: Relationships

Blogs in this category deal with relationships between ourselves and God, family members, other Christians, and the lost.

Separating real salvation from the fake

bible-sepiaToday I want to ask you if your salvation is real. Before you answer or get offended, I want to share a part of my life with you. I once prided myself in being saved in August of 1988; I do not remember much about the day besides having a conversation with Dr. Whittman, a man who sincerely believed in the Lord and who was genuinely concerned with the well-being of my soul. Sure, I walked down the church aisle the next Sunday and made my profession of faith known to all who were there. That evening I was baptized. Surely, having undergone all this I must be saved. If only that were truly the case. Although I had the head knowledge of Jesus there had been no great transformation, no real change in my heart.

The apostle Peter wrote, And beside this, giving all diligence, add to your faith virtue; and to virtue knowledge; And to knowledge temperance; and to temperance patience; and to patience godliness; And to godliness brotherly kindness; and to brotherly kindness charity. For if these things be in you, and abound, they make you that ye shall neither be barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But he that lacketh these things is blind, and cannot see afar off, and hath forgotten that he was purged from his old sins. Wherefore the rather, brethren, give diligence to make your calling and election sure: for if ye do these things, ye shall never fall (2 Peter 1:5-10). Although Peter is writing to Christians and are encouraging and reminding them of the importance of salvation, he reminds us about the changes that happen within the heart of the believer. Any Christian, or rather any real believer in Christ, should have the characteristics that Peter discusses. The problem is when we claim to be a Christian and do not have these traits we actually have a false salvation.

From 1988 until 2006, I really believed I was saved, after all, I had been baptized and was even regularly attending church. According to the world’s standard I was behaving exactly the way a Christian was supposed to behave. There was no struggle with the flesh because I would try to appease my sin nature and really felt no guilt. This is the danger of having a false salvation – it becomes easy to justify committing sins under the guise of “God understands” and “I can always ask for forgiveness.” While the Bible does teach that God will forgive sins it also teaches we are to avoid the situations that would easily allow us to yield to the temptation to sin. Since my spiritual life was fake and real salvation was not what I had, I felt no guilt about the lifestyle I was living. The only time I felt shame or conviction was when I was afraid that someone in the church where I was attending might find out what I was doing. In fact, I thought that every Christian felt like that and I was simply fighting the same battles as everyone else. What I didn’t understand was that not only was I lost, but the conviction and shame I was feeling was the Holy Spirit moving within my heart and mind.

When I finally gave my life to the Lord and accepted Jesus Christ as my personal Savior on August 21, 2006, I knew there was something different – I told the Lord I was giving my life to him, rededicating myself to following His teachings. For a while I simply thought I had rededicated my life to Christ and began to fight the guilt and tremendous shame I felt for the way I lived between 1988 to 2006. This was nothing more than Satan trying to distract me from what had actually happened – I had become a new creäture through Christ, freed from the burdens of sin, reborn in His image! Satan began using those years where I believed I had been saved to keep me from the blessings and joy of the Lord. As I began to grow in my faith and learning the joys of real salvation, I began watching the control that Satan had on my life weaken. Now, please keep in mind that I am not perfect. In fact, I still struggle with temptation, but now have an understanding to avoid the temptations and situations that cause me to stumble.

A busy life, no time to rest?

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© Maria Shevchenko | Dreamstime Stock Photos

There is an old saying that idle hands are the Devil’s workshop. While this adage may be true, the Devil also knows that a busy life can be just as effective in keeping our focus away from the things that truly matter. One of the things I enjoy doing is hiking in the many state and national parks within the tri-state area. When I first began taking hikes, I would notice there were benches along some of the main hiking paths. Each park had them. Occasionally, I would pass by people sitting at the benches as if to take a break from the rigors of the hiking trail. It seemed that on some of the trails, the benches were roughly a quarter-mile apart while others had no rhyme or reason for their frequency. Inside I laughed; it was a hiking path and anyone needing to sit and rest that often surely didn’t need to be on the path to begin with.

One afternoon, as I was hiking along one of the longer trails in Giant City State Park in southern Illinois, I walked past one of the benches when an older couple called out to me and asked me to take their picture as they sat together on the bench. After taking their picture and returning the camera, the old man told me there was a tradition that he and his wife had started long ago – when they were on a hiking trail that had benches, they would sit for at least five minutes on the bench to see why the park felt it was so important to have a bench right in that spot. I asked him if he and his wife had learned something from doing it, not really expecting the answer she gave me: “Some of the benches were there to enjoy the scenery and some benches were there to rest before you proceeded to what awaited you up the trail.” He added that the benches were there to “make sure we aren’t so busy with the hiking that we forget what else is along the trail…” I no longer see those benches along the trail the same way.

God gives benches for a reason

That lesson is one that I often forget and need to be reminded of time and again. It is easy with everything that I feel needs to be done to get so busy that I forget to enjoy God’s blessings the way and when he intended for me to enjoy them. We often read the verse written by the apostle James, Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away (James 4:14) and we correctly apply it to the condition of our immortal soul; however, there are other applications. Even David, considered a man after God’s own heart, wrote, For my days are consumed like smoke, and my bones are burned as an hearth (Psalms 102:3) as a testimony that time waits for no one. When we become so busy that we put off enjoying the blessings of the Lord because we simply don’t have the time, we are actually forsaking the blessings of the Lord.

It is easy when we are busy to bypass the benches God provides for us. Just as those state parks had some benches just so that visitors could rest before tackling the trail that was ahead, God gives us benches where He wants us to stop, rest, and prepare for what lies ahead of us. I think of what the Lord told Moses during the exodus from Egypt: And he said, My presence shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest (Exodus 33:14). God knew that Moses, with all the trials he would face, would need physical, emotional, and spiritual rest. God knows that about us as well. He knows what awaits us just as He knew what awaited Moses. He wants to go along with us and even provides us with opportunities for true and satisfying rest. Just as with anything else the Lord provides for us, we must accept the rest He offers and not focus on how busy we must stay to get everything done. In fact, the Lord even provided a day of rest each week: Six days shall work be done: but the seventh day is the sabbath of rest, an holy convocation; ye shall do no work therein: it is the sabbath of the LORD in all your dwellings (Leviticus 23:3). I will be the first to admit it is hard to take a day to just do nothing especially when there is so much to be done. It is easy to get busy with a whole host of leisure activities on Sunday and still not be able to get the rest we need.

Just as with the hiking trails, the second reason God gives us benches is so we can appreciate what He has done for us – in other words, to enjoy life’s scenery. Nothing lifts the soul more than seeing God’s love and compassion given us when we are weary. David knew this feeling quite well and was led by the Holy Spirit to write, Be still, and know that I am God: I will be exalted among the heathen, I will be exalted in the earth (Psalms 46:10). Think back to a time when you were forced to rest and then, amid your frustrations, you were able to see something that reassured you that God does still care. Sometimes that scenery are the people in our lives that simply love us unconditionally and are there for us. Sometimes its a simple pleasure, like seeing the beauty of nature, or listening to the chirping of cardinals on a spring day that serves to remind us that God is still there. When we are busy walking the trail it is easy to forget to look at the scenery.

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The sincerity of the cross

sincerity of the crossThe sincerity of the cross is something I have been thinking a lot about since the beginning of March as Palm Sunday approached.  Within the various strands of Christendom this week is known as “holy week.” Beginning on Palm Sunday, Christians around the world pause their busy schedules and focus on the love that Jesus had for all people – But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:8). This morning, as I was watching some local news, there was a segment on how some Christians spent Palm Sunday and there were two things that immediately stood out – the number of people who are only sincere about their faith around this time of the year and how the world marvels in their misguided understanding of the cross.

The cross demonstrates the sincerity of God’s love

There’s an expression that we often hear both in politics or when we are involved in any team activity that goes “we all must have some skin in the game…” We all understand what that expression means and how right it is to many things in life. A marriage will not work unless both the husband and wife are committed, have the same goals and vision, and are willing to work together. There also must be demonstrations of the sincerity of love and compassion within the marriage that not only shows the level of commitment but the seriousness that both man and woman have within the marriage relationship. The cross is that demonstration of God’s sincerity; it is the greatest demonstration of God’s love for man. There are a few verses in the Bible that help convey this level of love that God has for mankind: Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends (John 15:13), Hereby perceive we the love of God, because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren (1 John 3:16) and of course, And walk in love, as Christ also hath loved us, and hath given himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweetsmelling savour (Ephesians 5:2).

No matter how the world tries to distort the message or cloud the meaning of the cross, the sincerity of the cross always wins out. The cross is the demonstration of a sacrificial love that I can scarcely comprehend. I think of what Paul wrote to the Christians in Rome: For when we were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly. For scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die. But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more then, being now justified by his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him. For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life (Romans 5:6-10). Paul is exactly right; how many of us would be willing to sacrifice ourselves or our children for a neighbor, even if we thought that our neighbor was a righteous person? We are often willing to sacrifice an afternoon to help a neighbor we thought was deserving of our help; we do not waste our time on those we do not think are worth the effort. We’ve all heard the expression, “I wouldn’t give them the time of day…” yet not only did God do just that, he sent his Son to take our place and to atone for our sins. The sincerity of God’s love, when we truly understand what the cross means, becomes incontestable. God was demonstrating His love for us through the sincerity of the cross.

The cross demands our sincerity

This time of the year, right before Easter, there are people who will be attending church for the first time since Christmas. As my pastor often jokes, many of these claim to be faithful Christians who attend every Christmas, Easter, and Mother’s Day, yet they sadly miss what has been paid for by the cross. While I do believe that salvation is by grace through faith in the shed blood of Christ, I understand that many who claim to be Christians simply do not understand their new relationship that their acceptance of Jesus as their savior brings. In some cases, I do not believe they have accepted in their heart what the head claims to know, and this can be equally dangerous. In the latter case, there is no salvation through Christ if it has not become heart knowledge; in the former case, there is no true joy and spiritual growth in the life of the believer. Just as a strong marriage depends upon a sincere commitment between a man and a woman to make it work, our relationship with God takes a sincere commitment between God and ourselves to enjoy the richness of our relationship and faith. A person can be a Christian, fully trusting in the Lord Jesus Christ as their only hope for Heaven and yet can miss out on the blessings and true joy of the relationship with the Lord because they are not committed and sincere.

God has already demonstrated His commitment and sincerity to us through the cross; we now have a responsibility to sincerely commit ourselves to the relationship we have with Him. Even Jesus taught this very thing as he said, If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love; even as I have kept my Father’s commandments, and abide in his love (John 15:10) and He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him (John 14:21). If we want to show our commitment and sincerity to the Lord in honor of His sacrifice, then we should be willing to live a life that demonstrates our love for Him. We should desire to keep His commandments, not out of some sort of legalistic attitude as had the scribes and Pharisees and even some Christian groups today, but simply because we want to please the Lord with our lifestyle. I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service (Romans 12:1) is how Paul described how we should see doing this very thing of living a lifestyle that is pleasing to the Lord. He calls it “our reasonable service” because it is. No matter what we do, our sincerity and commitment will never rival Jesus’ death on the cross but it should be the very best we have to offer to Him.

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