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I Want To Be More In Love With Jesus

What you love determines what you feel shame about. If you love for others to applaud you, you will feel shame when they don’t, but if you love for men to make much of Christ you will feel shame when His name is belittled on your account.
–John Piper

We often crave the applause and admiration of others. We serve with the hope of getting a pat-on-the-back, a “job well done,” or an “attaboy” so that we feel good about ourselves. We become people-pleasers so that we can please ourselves by their applause. But as a follower of Christ, I should not be concerned about pleasing anyone but Jesus.

Unfortunately, I love myself too much.
So this sometimes becomes a seemingly impossible task.

I want to be more in love with Jesus.

More of Jesus, less of me.
He must become greater, I must become less.
He must increase, I must decrease.

I hope that with each passing day, I will love for Christ to be exalted more and more. I want to “love for men to make much of Christ.” I hope that I will love Him to a level such that I feel shame anytime His name is belittled on my account… meaning anytime that I commit any sin or refuse to obey Him as He tells me how to live for Him.

May we live in such a way to please Him and do nothing that would be out of character for Christ Himself.

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What Level of Christianity Have You Reached?

Wouldn’t that be weird – having different levels of Christianity that we could identify? We could place them on a badge and at church people could see that I had made it to level 6. I could puff out my chest around all those who were level 5 and below, but I’d probably feel a little inferior when I stood around someone who was wearing a level 7 badge or above.

While we may be able to reach different levels in games, in work, or in other areas of life, Christianity doesn’t have levels:
“[Different] levels in Christianity” is not a concept built on the gospel of Christ. Levels are only possible if there are levels of righteousness. And those levels simply do not exist, because we all possess the same amount of righteousness — none. The only righteousness any of us have is the righteousness God freely gives to us in Christ.
–Matt Chandler

It has been said another way both in sermons and in songs:
“The ground is level at the foot of the cross.”

And I am so glad that it is!

We don’t have to compare ourselves to one another to determine who is more righteous or more deserving… for all of us stand on the same level ground. We are guilty of sin. We are deserving of wrath. But instead of having to endure it, Jesus was lifted up on the cross drawing us to Himself, and He drank every last drop of the cup of wrath that I deserved. Therefore, He is the only one who is righteous, and I am so glad that He made a way for me to receive forgiveness and stand in His righteousness.

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God is a God of Love AND Wrath. Both are Necessary.

Would a God who took as much pleasure in evil as he did in good be a good God? Would a God who did not react adversely to evil in his world be morally perfect? Surely not. But it is precisely this adverse reaction to evil, which is a necessary part of moral perfection, that the Bible has in view when it speaks of God’s wrath.
–J. I. Packer

We don’t like to talk about God’s wrath. We only want to focus on God’s love. But a God of love necessarily must also be a God of wrath towards anything that attempts to hurt those He loves. It is the same in our own lives. We love our families, but if someone attempts to harm them, then we have a wrath that rises up within us against the attacker. God is no different, in fact, He is the ultimate expression of this as He is ultimate love. Because He loves me so much, He has intense wrath toward any sin I might do because that sin harms both me and others.

Stop trying to argue away God’s wrath, and instead embrace an understanding of His wrath as being a function of His great love for you and for all of His creation. As sin and evil attempt to harm His creation, His wrath rises up against them due to His great love!

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Seek the Kingdom of Heaven through Contempt of the World

This is the greatest wisdom — to seek the kingdom of heaven through contempt of the world.

  • It is vanity, therefore, to seek and trust in riches that perish.
  • It is vanity also to court honor and to be puffed up with pride.
  • It is vanity to follow the lusts of the body and to desire things for which severe punishment later must come.
  • It is vanity to wish for long life and to care little about a well-spent life.
  • It is vanity to be concerned with the present only and not to make provision for things to come.
  • It is vanity to love what passes quickly and not to look ahead where eternal joy abides.

    Often recall the proverb: “The eye is not satisfied with seeing nor the ear filled with hearing” (Eccl 1:8).

    Try, moreover, to turn your heart from the love of things visible and bring yourself to things invisible.

    –Thomas à Kempis

    Seek the things of God and of His character and of His kingdom.

    It is a hard battle to say no to the things that this world says are important. The peer pressure is strong to bend and conform. But God will give us the strength to stand up in Him and for Him. Turn your heart toward the love of God and the invisible things that are important in His kingdom.

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    Sanctification versus Sophistication – which do you have more of?

        Sanctification is the process by which a man becomes normal in the context of the kingdom of God. The more sanctified you are, the more the fruit of the Spirit will grow freely, and the more normal you will seem to other Christians.
        Sophistication, on the other hand, is the process by which a man becomes normal in the context of the world. The more sophisticated you are, the more normal you’ll look to the pagans. You’ll fit right into their world. The fruits of sophistication include lust, faithlessness, selfishness, self-absorption, and the love of money. The fruit of sophistication rots the fruit of the Spirit.

    –Stephen Arterburn & Fred Stoeker

    The fruit of the Spirit is:

  • love
  • joy
  • peace
  • patience
  • kindness
  • goodness
  • faithfulness
  • gentleness
  • self-control

    Be sure that you are growing the right fruit through sanctification.