Wednesday, January 23, 2019

"Lip Service" January 23 Readings: Genesis 47–48, Matthew 15:1–9, Psalm 14:4–7, Proverbs 3:13-18



Today's ReadingsGenesis 47–48, Matthew 15:1–9, Psalm 14:4–7, Proverbs 3:13-18


Devotional - Lip Service


A while back, there was a well-known athlete who made the news for all the wrong reasons. His on-court behavior was causing a lot of problems. If you went to his social media, it was filled with Bible verses and indications he is a committed Christian. His verbal testimony was not being lived out during games.

Have you ever known someone like that - someone who pronounces publicly that he or she is a Christian but does not back the words up in their walk? It's cool to say you follow Jesus, but the difficulty comes when we have to make those tough choices of obedience.

Can you remember back to children and youth camps when someone started a chant on one side of the cafeteria to be mimicked on the other side? "We love Jesus, yes we do. We love Jesus, how 'bout you?" It is great for those who are followers of Jesus to announce their love for him in any way they can.

But in Matthew 15:8 Jesus quotes the prophet Isaiah as he analyzes the spiritual standing of the people of Israel.
"These people honor Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me." 
In context, this refers to people who give preferences to the traditions of man over the actual commands of God. But there is a universal principle at work behind this instance. God is more concerned with our inner devotion to him that our outward words.

It is great to honor Christ with our tongues, to sing his praise, to proclaim his goodness, but that is not enough. We must honor him with more than just our lips. He demands that we honor him with our hearts.

Frankly, it is a lot easier for me to SAY I love Jesus than it is to truly love him with a pure and unadulterated devotion. It is easy to sing praises with my voice than it is with my heart. But God is never impressed with empty words that come from impure hearts.

True spiritual change, true spiritual growth; it comes from a work of Jesus that begins on the inside. The process is spelled out in Romans 12:1-2.

God is at work to transform us. He doesn't just want to help us break a few habits, go to church a little more or be a nicer person. He wants to radically change us, to make us like Jesus Christ. He wants to break the hold of sin and cause the righteousness of Christ that has been given to us through the work of Christ in our hearts to be displayed in our lives daily.

He does that through the "renewing of (our) minds." It's not about behavior modification, but about changing the way we think, the way our minds work. How do our minds change? The most important aspect there is the inculcation of the Word of God into our sinful minds.
The Spirit of God uses the Word of God to do the Work of God in the People of God. 
So, when the Spirit of God takes the Word that we read and study, and renews our minds to be like Christ's, then we are changed, no longer conforming to the ways of the world, but being transformed to be like Christ.

There is nothing easy about the process, but it is not a mystery either. Get into the Word of God and seek him in prayer. As you do that, over time, God will bring changes to your thinking that will transform the way you live.
Father, keep me in your word, that your Spirit might remove the lies of the evil one from my thought process and replace it with your truth. Make me more like Jesus every day, so that I will praise you not just with words, but with a pure heart!

Think and Pray

Which of the readings spoke most powerfully to you today?
Is the Spirit of God moving you to repent of something you are doing, to begin something new, or to change something about your life as a result of your readings? What?

Is your talk about Jesus matched by your walk with Jesus?
Are people who hear you talk about Jesus drawn to him by the life you live in obedience to him?



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