Dress, and other odd reasons for false confidence

13 09 2011

Reading Phil 3 today.  This jumped out at me:

For it is we who are the circumcision, we who worship by the Spirit of God, who glory in Christ Jesus, and who put no confidence in the flesh   -Phil 3:3

I don’t worship by my flesh. I worship by the spirit of God and I glory in Christ Jesus.  This seems like it’s detached from what we do in America, but I don’t think it is. Paul is saying that those who are of the circumcision think they have some extra access to worship God because of their physical circumcision. This is just funny to think about. They think because the end of their penis doesn’t have the extra skin from birth, that they have extra favor with God. Weird. But to give them credit, it made sense in their day. It was a sign of a covenant between them and God. But what about now? Paul says that WE are the circumcision(the people who have a covenant with God) because we worship by the spirit of God and glory in Christ Jesus.

It’s all about who is “special” to God. Who gets his attention. Who he notices more. Who he favors. Who’s “in”.

And we are still concerned with this today. And there is nothing wrong with wanting to be near to God and wanting his favor.  It’s how we go about getting it that can get twisted. See, the jews of the day followed all the religious laws and thought that they were earning favor with God.  What about today?  What do we do to earn favor with God?

The first thing that comes to mind (because I lead a worship service every week) is church clothes. There is nothing wrong with signs of honor, I do it everytime I go on a date with my wife, but there IS something very wrong when we genuinely believe God sees or favors us more because of our clothing.  We are coming before the God of the universe. Do we really think that a collar on our shirt or a crease in pants is going to earn us enough points to enter into his presence.

No way Jose. Ain’t happenin’.

He’s God. He’s holy. You can’t come before him just because you cleaned up a bit. And without the blood of Jesus, you would be utterly consumed in His presence (and not in a good way).  Thinking our clothes or hair is going to somehow earn us favor or even saftey in the presence of God is like jumping into a shark tank with your “briar proof” jeans. It just ain’t gonna cut it.

But “It is we who are the circumcision [figuratively], we who worship by the Spirit of God, who glory in Christ Jesus, and who put no confidence in the flesh” that can enter into his presence freely.  James 4:6 says that God opposes the proud and gives grace to the humble. That’s why that 20 something that just came to Christ (you know the one, he doesn’t know that the “F” word is not an acceptable adjective anymore) encounters God in incredible ways while the prideful, albeit nicely dressed, church folk seem to struggle to hear from God at all.

So in the end, it’s not about dress or not dress. That’s just an example. We strive to earn God’s favor in countless other ways: work, language, good deeds, being nice, etc.  But what God is after is a heart change. A humbling before the incredible work of his son Jesus and a realization that only be His sacrifice do we have access to God.  And only by the Spirit of God can we worship the father at all (remember John 4?).

So, today I don’t want to feel like I need to measure up to come before God.  I want to worship by the Spirit of God. I want to glory in Christ Jesus, not myself, because, lets face it: I don’t have all that much to glory in on my own. Oh, but in Jesus, nothing is impossible. He can use me and mold me and give me an incredible destiny. Thank You Jesus.





Pentecost Songs

4 05 2010

If your church celebrates Pentecost with a special sunday service, here are some great song suggestions:

1. All Consuming Fire - Kim Walker (ITUNES LINK) – Very simple song that connects perfectly with the heart of pentecost.

2. I need you more - Kim Walker (ITUNES LINK) – Our need was the primary factor that kept the disciples praying for the spirit after Jesus left. ghe told them they needed it and they agreed.

3. Fire Fall DownHillsong (ITUNES LINK); Chris Quilala (ITUNES LINK)

4. Drink in DeepJake Hamilton (ITUNES LINK)

5. It is YouNewsboys (ITUNES LINK)

6. Freedom ReignsJason Upton (ITUNES LINK)

7. We are hungry - Steve Fee (ITUNES LINK) – This one is really great to tie into the bridge of “Fire Fall Down”

8. Spirit Fall - Phil Wickham (ITUNES LINK)

9. Rain DownJesus Culture (ITUNES LINK)

10. Open UpCole Jennette (LINK)

11. Open Up the SkyDeluge (ITUNES LINK)

12. SendingCharlie Hall (ITUNES LINK) – Great sending out song. “send us with fire to go love the world”

13. Burning OnesJesus Culture (ITUNES LINK)

What did I miss? Fill in ideas in the comments.

Cole





Wilderness Power

17 03 2010

After Jesus was baptized in the Jordan by John, it says in Luke 4:1 that he left “full of the Holy Spirit” and entered the wilderness.  After his time fasting and being tempted in the wilderness, it says He returned in the “power of the spirit” to Galilee (Luke 4:14).  His time in the wilderness, alone with God and dealing with the temptation produced a Jesus that was not just full of the spirit, but powerful in the spirit. Cool? Yep.  But what’s even cooler is that Jesus returned to that same place (figuratively, not literally) time and time again in his ministry. 

Luke 5:16 says that Jesus would often “withdraw to desolate places to pray.”  The word for “desolate places”(Eremos) is same word used for the wilderness in Luke 4.  He was returning to place of power and instruction.  And even more interesting is that most times when He slipped away to those secret places with the Father, it was in the midst of incredible ministry (Mark 1:33-37; Luke 4:42; 5:15-16; Matthew 14:13).  If Jesus made this a priority, we should too.  

But what happens so often is that we see how a person like Aaron Keyes leads worship or how Francis Chan teaches and we immediately try to emulate what we see.  So we grow cool hair, get an acoustic guitar, expand our vocab, talk with conviction, become asian.  We try to imitate the things we see in them because we admire and respect them. This in itself is great.  The problem is, you generally won’t see the hours upon hours that Aaron spends in the presence worshipping, or the countless hours Francis Chan spends praying and listening for God’s voice.  But those times that we DON’T see are the keys to their power and wisdom.

Let me put it this way.  In high school I played baseball.  I wanted to so badly to be Mike Piaza.  I wanted to drive the ball to right and to have a throw to second base in under 2 seconds.  But I couldn’t just walk out onto the field at Grayson High school and do it. Nope, I would fail miserably.  If I wanted to be like Mike Piaza, I needed to do the things I DIDN’T see him doing on TV.  I needed to spend years perfecting my eye, my timing, and my strength.  I needed to spend countless hours working on hitting outside pitches in soft-toss drills.

The same is true with those of us who so desperately want to be Jesus:  who want to heal and love and teach the way He did.  If we are going to be like Him, or even be like those we admire, we have to be diligent in spending time in the presence: praying, listening, worshipping.  When that is in line, THEN we will begin to see public success.(Matthew 6:6)

I love what Kris Valleton of Bethel Church says (loosely quoted):

“You have to have personal victories with the Lord before you have public ones.”

Blessings,
Cole 








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