Blog

Better

…He is the mediator of a better covenant, which was established upon better promises. [Hebrews 8: 6]

If there’s one word that sums up the book of Hebrews, it’s the word BETTER. Everything here is better. Better priesthood, better sacrifice, better living, better intercession, better promises. What once was good, now it’s better.

In Old Testament, we saw some snapshots of God at work in the course of human history. In the New Testament, we find Jesus in physical form, walking the streets of Jerusalem.

In the Old Testament, we saw the symbols of God, shadows of His nature like a poor replica of the real thing. In the New Testament, we see the real thing in the person of Jesus Christ.

Often we forget the significance of this simple fact: God came down, walked among us and rubbed shoulders with us. He came to touch our base existence and turn it into something heaven-worthy. He turned the mundane into glorious, the filthy into something holy, the hopeless to a life full of hope and promise, the sinner to a life that is free and forgiven.

He came to make our lives better.

When God Is Silent

That doesn’t happen, actually.

There is no such thing as non-talking, non-hearing Jesus. Heaven will never, for all eternity, have a sign at its door saying it’s Out of Order or that its communication lines are jammed. The times when you feel like God is silent, it’s because you are seeking His voice only from the usual places- your feelings.

For some reason, many people often forget that there’s a place where God’s guidance is always available any time of the day- the pages of the Scriptures. The Bible is a guide. It contains precepts and principles on Christian living.

Precepts are clearly stated imperatives, like abstaining from sexual impurity or not committing murder. As Charles Swindoll says, it’s like a speed limit of 100 kph. Anything beyond 100 kilometers is wrong.

Principles are general guidelines that need discernment and maturity. Issues like confronting a superior or ratting out an office mate who is stealing company resources aren’t found in the Bible. But principles on relationships are plenty.

When God doesn’t seem to answer your prayer for guidance, it doesn’t mean that He is not answering. You don’t need a burning bush experience whenever you ask God to show you the way. A simple verse will do.

Go, read your Bible.

Human Masks

The older brother in the story of the prodigal son is the epitome of a hardworking, model citizen. He took care of his father’s business, we could categorically say he was honest, and he was never irresponsible. He was the guy who was self motivated. If we are to look at him, he is the type who would probably win the number one outstanding young man award.

But Jesus sees things we don’t. Underneath this veil of “perfection,” He saw a man who was just as lost as the wayward prodigal son, a man who needed the same dose of grace and the same love from the father.

Don’t think for a second that those who look okay on the outside are really okay on the inside. When Samuel lined up Jesse’s sons to anoint the one who will succeed king Saul, even he was impressed with the physical stature of David’s older brothers. God had to rebuke him and remind him that He is more interested in what goes on in the heart of the person.

Not judging the book by its cover is more than just a cliché, it is a spiritual reality that we have to learn and relearn everyday.

Prosperity Gospel

I have one problem with prosperity gospel- some people equate it with getting rich. The worst I heard from the lips of a prosperity believer is that if you are a Christian and still not rich, then there is something wrong with your faith. You might as well be an unbeliever. They quote verses from around the Bible to prove their point and the damage they inflict on other believers simply appall me.

Try to reason with them and they’ll say you lack the vision and the drive to succeed, that you’re far too accepting of your present condition, that you are not fully realizing your God-given potential and that you don’t have what it takes to be on top. You’ve probably heard all that before and believed it to some extent. Don’t. It’s time to wake up to the truth.

The Bible says that God will meet our needs (Phil. 4:19), that He will make us rich in every way so that we can be generous (2 Cor. 9:11) and bless others as a result (Gen. 12:2). But nowhere does it say that our bank accounts should be the yardstick of our spiritual lives. The prophets Elijah and Elisha both went through periods of famine, Jacob’s family had nothing to eat that they went down to Egypt and became servants after Joseph died. If the modern prosperity preachers are to be believed, these mighty men of God would be spiritually deficient.

A balanced understanding of God’s blessings and sovereignty is necessary to understand financial issues in the lives of Christians. God does bless us, but He also allows us to be tested spiritually, relationally, financially. Your financial condition today is not the thermometer of your relationship with God.

Forgiveness

Sometimes we think that our action is a retaliation of the wrongs we suffered from others. We often say, “Sure, what I did was wrong, but didn’t he deserve it?” Well, maybe so, but don’t we all deserve punishment?

The behavior of others is really not an excuse for our own. Those who wronged us will ultimately be held accountable for their wrongdoing.

The Bible says that vengeance belongs to God. Our responsibility is only for our own behavior. As long as we harbor bitterness and unforgiveness in our hearts, we will continue to be tormented by our fears and painful memories.

Excerpted from John Barbour’s 12 Steps to Serenity Album

New Generation

If I have a passion with regard to discipleship, it is that tens of thousands of young leaders will outshine, outpreach and outperform me. [Steve Murrell, Accidental Missionary]

This is NOT normal. Only secure leaders can say this with real conviction. It is easier to build a ministry, put your name on it, and act like you own the whole operation.

Our natural tendencies tell us to be wary of fast growing leaders, to look at the newcomers with suspicion, especially those who have the potential to outperform us. Who do they think they are?

So we hold on to our names, our output, our finished products. We fear that we’ll be forgotten, that nobody would remember that we were the ones who broke the frontiers.

We’ve forgotten that this is the church, that God is a God of justice and that He will never forget to reward those who labored for Him. And we’ve mostly forgotten that this is how it’s supposed to be. When the early apostles gave way to Paul’s ministry, the gospel spread by leaps and bounds.