Saturday, September 24, 2011


25 “For this reason I say to you, do not be worried about your life, as to what you will eat or what you will drink; nor for your body, as to what you will put on. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothing? 26 Look at the birds of the air, that they do not sow, nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they? 27 And who of you by being worried can add a single hour to his life? 28 And why are you worried about clothing? Observe how the lilies of the field grow; they do not toil nor do they spin, 29 yet I say to you that not even Solomon in all his glory clothed himself like one of these. 30 But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, will He not much more clothe you? You of little faith! 31 Do not worry then, saying, ‘What will we eat?’ or ‘What will we drink?’ or ‘What will we wear for clothing?’ 32 For the Gentiles eagerly seek all these things; for your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. 33 But seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be added to you. 34 So do not worry about tomorrow; for tomorrow will care for itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.” (Matthew 6 NASB)

This passage teaches us not to worry about our finances. Jesus refers to those who worry as those of “little faith.” Faith is the cure for worry. Small faith results in great anxiety. A large faith is the key to inner peace which is much more valuable than great wealth. Note that Jesus wants those with small faith to grow and increase in their faith.

Faith can be strengthened through meditating on a line of reasoning or teaching. Jesus seeks to increase their faith by making simple arguments that anyone can understand. By meditating on these arguments and repeating them over and over again you can grow in faith. These are some of the things that you can and should be saying to yourself.

“God feeds the birds of the air even though they don’t plan ahead and work to guarantee their food supply. God will provide me with food because I am much more important than the birds. God is willing to clothe the flowers, even though they only live for a very short period of time. God is willing to clothe me. I am more valuable than a flower.”

“Worry doesn’t do any good. I can’t add one single hour to my life by worrying. On the other hand, I can waste many hours of my life by worrying. If I put God’s kingdom first in my life God will provide for my basic necessities.”

Teachers in the “faith movement” place a strong emphasis on confessing your faith. They say that you can go from a weak faith to a strong faith by confessing a promise of God over and over again, preferably out loud. On the basis of Matthew six I think we would have to say that the faith teachers are right on this one. Jesus is giving us arguments that we can repeat to ourselves over and over again so that we can grow in faith and inner peace.

We should note that there is no promise here that God will give me luxuries. There are other passages that would seem to indicate that God will help us financially to do better than the simple necessities of life, but first we must have our hearts right before God. Paul echoes what Jesus is saying in Matthew six when he exhorts us in I Timothy 6:8, “But if we have food and clothing, with these we will be content.”

We live in times of tremendous financial uncertainty. There are those who fear that we may actually slip from a recession into a worldwide depression. It would be a very good thing for every Christian to confront this fear with bold and biblical thinking.

What would happen if I were to lose my job and be unable to find another? What would happen if I were to lose my cell phone, my cable TV, and my internet access? What would happen if my computer and my X-Box were to break (as they inevitably will) and I would be unable to replace them? What if I could no longer afford a car and had to rely on my bicycle, walking, and public transportation? What would I do? How would I survive?

I would be just fine. I would put God first and trust Him to help me with the real necessities of life. The sun would continue to rise and set. And my personal happiness would continue to be in direct proportion to the amount of time I spend seeking God. With more stuff or less stuff, my personal happiness seems to be dependent on the whole God inside thing and how much time and attention I give to Him.

I can’t close without making one final point. Those who want to say that man is just a part of nature and that a man is not intrinsically more valuable than an animal are in direct disagreement with Jesus Christ. He says I am more important that a bird or a flower. I am a created being made in the image of God. I have a right to be here. I have a right to thankfully (and responsibly) use the resources of this planet. If someone wants to argue that point (and in these days, many do) don’t argue with me; argue with Him.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

It's just a bump in the road


So here's the deal.  My dad just went into a nursing home.  He's 89.  And I guess the smart money would say that he probably won't be able to rehab to the point where he can go back home to live with my stepmother.  So how do you deal with that?  How should I feel about that?

This is my coping mechanism.  I'm planning to go on a wilderness canoe trip.  With my dad.

We used to do that every year when I was growing up and in my early adult years.  My dad was a very strong guy.  After I got married Nancy went on two of these trips with us.  On the first trip, while Nancy was carrying a pack in this swampy area, she suddenly found one of her legs sinking into the mud too deeply to get out.  I mean she was absolutely stuck.  Going nowhere.  And wondering how she was going to get herself out of this.  And here comes my dad, probably in his early sixties at this point, coming down the trail behind her.  He has his own pack on.  And without breaking stride he grabs the corner of her pack with one hand and all of a sudden Nancy and her leg are being levitated out of the mud.

Not only is my dad strong, he is a great fisherman.  One year I decided to mimic him the whole trip.  When he fished, I would fish.  I would try and throw my lures in the same general area where he threw his.  I would use the exact same bait he used.  By the end of the week he was more than 20 fish ahead of me.  I have no idea how he did that.  On the second trip we took together he asked to be let out of the canoe so he could go up this creek that was emptying into the lake we were on.   I thought the creek was way too shallow to have anything interesting in it, but about a half hour later he comes out with three big bass on a stringer.

So how do you take a man who is confined to a nursing home on a canoe trip?  Obviously you don't.  I'll have to wait until after he's dead.  And then I'll have to wait a little longer until after I'm dead.  And then I'll have to wait until the resurrection.  And then we'll go on the canoe trip.  Accompanying us will be my younger brother who used to take these trips with us.  He has a bad case of MS and, barring a miracle of divine healing, won't be taking any more canoe trips in this life.  (I neither predict nor rule out such a miracle.)

The lakes will probably still be there, but we'll need a new map and we'll have to start from scratch in terms of learning exactly where the best fishing holes will be.  I would expect the topography to be radically transformed.  There is this major event that will happen (in my theological opinion) immediately after the resurrection of the Christian dead (the rapture) but before we (the resurrected Christians) actually return to this planet.  "And the stars of the sky fell to the earth … and every mountain and island were moved out of their places."  (Revelation 6:13, 14)  This may be the most terrifying physical event in human history and I would expect it to dramatically rearrange those wilderness lakes.

Nancy and I just got back from our 24th Rocky Mountain Honeymoon.  We've been on 25 trips to the Rockies, but one of those trips involved other people, so it doesn't count as a honeymoon (hi Scott & Linda!).  To count as a honeymoon trip is has to be just the two of us.  When I was a younger man I put together a string of about 25 wilderness canoe trips.

So how many trips can we expect to take after we're dead and brought back to life?  Well, the Bible speaks of Christ returning to the earth and ruling the planet for 1,000 years.  If that is a literal 1,000 years I would hope to put together a string of about 1,000 mountain trips and 1,000 canoe trips (I'll be taking at least two trips a year!).

Can I tell you a little secret about our just completed mountain trip?  We took it easier than we used to.  For the first time, instead of disappearing into a wilderness area carrying everything we need on our back for a week we took two small trips of three nights each.  That means we only had to carry half the food at one time.  And instead of driving home non-stop (one drives while the other sleeps) we drove part way and spent the night in a nice motel, almost the kind of thing you would expect normal people to do on their vacations.

We're getting older.  The day may come when we won't be able to do anything but car camp.  And then the day may come when we won't even be able to do that (I'll pitch a tent in the back yard of the nursing home!).  And when that day comes it will be time to start planning the next 1,000 trips.

Here is an amazing statement, one you should spend a lot of time meditating on.  "I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us."  (Romans 8:18)  The man who wrote that statement had been whipped so many times that he couldn't have had one square inch of skin on his back that wasn't pure scar tissue.  Over the course of his ministry he had received 195 lashes on his back as a punishment for preaching the gospel.  Every single one of those strokes would have broken the skin (this was over the course of five different whippings).  He was also beaten with rods three times (I don't know how many strokes) and stoned once.  He survived three shipwrecks, and in one of those he spent 24 hours clinging to a wooden plank in the middle of the ocean.  In addition to this he experienced "many sleepless nights, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in cold and exposure."  (See 2 Corinthians 11) 

And after enduring all that he said that there was something waiting for him after he died that would make all of the suffering seem like it was nothing.  It would be like someone offering you a brand new Porsche for $25.00.  The sufferings of this life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is to be revealed to us.

So my dad's body has finally failed him and he's in a nursing home.  But that's not the end of anything that really matters.  It's just a bump in the road.  Join me as I write (in advance) one of the trip notes from a trip that won't even happen until after the resurrection. 

"Our first evening in the wilderness.  We had a rugged day of travel to get to this lake, and we've found a decent campsite on a small island.  The topography is all different and we are going to have to find campsites and fishing holes from scratch the way we always have when we travel into a new wilderness area.  While Dad and my brother Wayne and our two sons set up the tents I cooked supper over a wood fire.  Then we headed back out in our canoes with our fishing poles."

"As usual, Dad just knows where the fish are.  You would think that I should be able to figure this out by now but I still don't have a clue.  There is something so beautiful about the way the fishing line undulates out off the end of the rod as the bait goes flying across the water.  As we fished we were serenaded by the eerie cries of a loon at the other end of the lake.  We brought back five Walleye for breakfast.  Day one.  Trip one.  999 trips to go.  Thanks be to God."

Monday, August 15, 2011

Faith #3


To have faith is to be absolutely sure that something is going to happen before it actually happens.  The classic Biblical definition is found in Hebrews 11:1.  "Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen."  If you are assured of something it means that you are certain about it.  It means that you are absolutely confident about it.  It means that you have no doubt about it.  Faith is absolute confidence without any doubts.

Jesus taught us to "have faith in God.  Truly I say to you, whoever says to this mountain, 'Be taken up and cast into the sea,' and does not doubt in his heart, but believes that what he says is going to happen, it will be granted him."  (Mark 11:22, 23)  You can see from this that my definition of faith is taken almost word for word from the words of Jesus.  Faith is being absolutely sure that something is going to happen before it actually happens.  Jesus said that the person must believe "that what he says is going to happen." 

Jesus then goes on to violate good grammar.  "All things for which you pray and ask, believe that you have received them, and they will be granted you."  (Mark 11:24)  "Believe that you have received them" is past tense.  "And they will be granted you" is future tense.  Jesus is saying, "Once you believe with absolute conviction that you are going to receive what you have asked for, it's as good as yours.  From that point on, consider your prayer to have been answered, even though the answer is not visible yet."

Jesus said that the man "who does not doubt in his heart" will see his prayer answered.  His younger brother James says virtually the same thing.  "But he must ask in faith, without any doubting."  (James 1:6)  "The one who doubts … ought not to expect that he will receive anything from the Lord."  (James 1:6, 7) 

One of the real keys to understanding Biblical faith is to see that faith is a heart (spiritual) thing, not a purely mental (intellectual) process.  Jesus said that he "must not doubt in his heart."  You may (or may not) have nagging doubts in your mind, but if in your heart, in the core of your being, you believe without any doubting, then what you are believing will come to pass.

A story is told about a woman who sat in church and heard a sermon on Luke 17:6 where Jesus said, "If you had faith as a mustard seed, you would say to the mulberry tree, 'Be uprooted and planted in the sea'; and it would obey you."  This woman had a mature oak tree on the left side of her back yard that provided a beautiful patch of shade  -- to her neighbor's back yard!  For many years she had wished that the tree could be replanted on the right side of her yard so that the shade would fall on her yard instead of her neighbor's, but you can't really move a mature oak tree.  Or so the woman thought until she heard the sermon on Luke 17:6!

So one day, as the woman was doing the dishes and looking out the kitchen window at her back yard, she decided to use faith to move the tree from one side of the yard to the other!  If you could use faith to transplant a mulberry tree from the ground to the sea, why not an oak tree from one side of the yard to the other?  So she closed her eyes and began speaking to the tree.  "Oak tree, move to the other side of the yard!"  Over and over again she said it.  Doubt tried to enter her mind but she blocked it out.  "Oak tree, move to the other side of the yard."  Over and over again.  Using will power she was blocking all doubt from her mind.  Once she was sure that she had blocked all doubt, she said one last time, "Oak tree, move to the other side of the yard!" and opened her eyes.

And there was the oak tree, still stuck in the ground on the wrong side of the yard.  The woman stared at the tree and muttered something under her breath.  What she muttered under her breath came out of her heart.  Everything else that had come out of her mouth had come directly from her brain, but this comment came straight from her heart.  "I knew it wouldn't work!" she muttered. 

Faith isn't something in your head; it's a conviction in your heart.  Let me put it to you this way.  To have the kind of faith that would enable you to move a mountain, or even a tree, would require a miracle.  I call it the pre-miracle miracle.  Unless the Spirit of God does a miracle in your heart you can't believe without any doubting that your mountain will actually move.  More on that next week.

Some concluding observations.

It is possible to "move mountains" by faith.  Jesus wouldn't have told us to do it if it wasn't possible.

It's not as simple as you might think the first time you read Mark 11:22-24 or else everyone would be doing it.

Understanding the difference between believing with your head and believing with your heart is absolutely vital.

Exercising this kind of faith is itself a supernatural thing that can't be done apart from the operation of the Spirit of God.

And last but not least, since it all has to be done in harmony with God, no miracles get done, or mountains moved, apart from His will. 

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Faith #2


I have two ideas that I want to get across to you today, two rather simple ideas.  God's wants to answer our prayers.  And God wants to answer our prayers because God is good.

"Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.  For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened."  (Matthew 7:7, 8 NASB)  Now if that was the only passage in the Bible that taught us about prayer, and you were a new believer just reading that passage for the first time, you would probably expect every single prayer you offered to be answered.  If you've been a Christian for awhile you know it's not quite that simple; but that shouldn't weaken the message that the Son of God is attempting to communicate in this passage.  Jesus knew exactly what He was saying.  He said it the way He said it for a reason.  He wanted to give us the impression that God wants to answer our prayers.  God intends to answer our prayers.  We should expect God to answer our prayers.

"If you abide in Me and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you."  (John 15:7 NASB)  In the passage in Matthew we didn't have any conditions mentioned for answers to prayer.  In John 15 Jesus introduces a condition.  We have to abide (live) in Christ and His words need to abide (live) in us.  If we can somehow fulfill this condition we can ask whatever we want and it will be done for us.  I'm not asking you to focus on the condition today.  We'll talk about living in Christ and having His world live in us later.  The emphasis I want to make is that God wants to answer our prayers.  He intends to answer our prayers.  He is telling us that we can get to the point where we can have anything we want ("ask whatever you wish and it will be done for you").

If you don't agree with the underlined sentence then you don't have a problem with my teaching; you have a problem with the teaching of the Lord Jesus.  Just to be clear, a person who lives in Jesus and who has Jesus words living in Him (the condition for getting whatever you want) is going to want different things that the person who does not live in Jesus and have Jesus words living in him.  A person who lives in Jesus is going to be flowing in beautiful harmony with the mind and will of God.  How does you heart respond to the statement underlined in the previous paragraph?  If somewhere deep in your heart you find yourself saying "that simply can't be true," that my friends is unbelief.  And it has to be dealt with.

What is it about God that makes Him so generous?  Both Jesus and His younger brother James direct our attention to the goodness of God when teaching about prayer.  James teaches us that "God … gives to all generously and without  reproach."  (James 1:5  NASB)  Jesus tells us that "if you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give what is good to those who ask Him?"  (Matthew 7:11  NASB) 

As I was meditating on those verses I began to get a sense of the all of the goodness in the heart of God.  God doesn't just want to bless us, He yearns to bless us.  He is very passionate about His desire to do good to us and for us.  The goodness of God is like Niagara Falls.  The force of gravity pushing that water over the falls is tremendous.  God's goodness is like the force of gravity and His blessings are like the water.

But did you know that we can turn Niagara Falls off?  A certain percentage of the water is diverted into a hydro electric power station.  If they want to they can divert all of the flow of the water.  They can turn Niagara Falls off.  I suppose they do this by flipping a switch.  They flip a switch and a door in the bottom of the river bed opens and all of the water flows down the hole and into the power plant.

There is a switch inside of each one of us.  The off position is labeled "unbelief."  The on position is labeled "faith."  As we learn to get the switch moved into the "faith" position we are going to begin to get very, very wet with the blessings of God.  When most people teach about faith they put the emphasis on the switch.  We have to have faith.  We sometimes come perilously close to teaching people to have faith in faith.  But we aren't supposed to have faith in faith; we are supposed to have faith in God.  And our ability to have faith in God is only as great as our sense of who and what God is. 

So this week I would encourage you to begin to let some of God's words live inside of you.  I would choose this simple phrase.  "God gives to all men generously and without reproach."  Write it down.  Say it to yourself over and over again while walking, driving to work, or doing the dishes.  Think about that Niagara Falls illustration and the goodness of God.  Think about the love and goodness of God coming rolling over the falls and splashing down all around you.  And as you think about it, pray and ask God to give you a revelation of His goodness in your heart.

God's wants to answer our prayers.  And God wants to answer our prayers because God is good.
 

Monday, July 25, 2011

Faith #1


One of the most significant developments in North American Christianity in the last forty years has been the growth of the faith movement.  Word of faith preachers teach that it is God's will for us to experience physical health and financial prosperity and that if we are not experiencing these things it is due to a lack of faith on our part.  This rapidly growing movement is very controversial with many prominent teachers labeling parts of it as being heretical.  The greatest controversy seems to be centered on three main areas:  to what extent does God want us to prosper financially; to what extent does God want to heal us physically; and to what extent are we to be considered "gods" (note the small "g") because we are created in the image of God.

My purpose in writing today is not to enter into controversy in any of these three areas.  My purpose is to examine what the faith movement is teaching about faith itself and to apply it to areas of the Christian life other than prosperity and healing.  I believe that the doctrine of faith is one of vital importance to both the church of God as a whole and to individual Christians.  Faith is the key to receiving everything that God has for us.  Without faith it is impossible to please God.  Faith is the key that brings the promises of God to life and causes the power of God to be manifest in our lives.  Faith has applications far beyond physical healing and financial prosperity and we can learn a great deal from the word of faith teachers about how a Christian can grow and develop their faith.

I can't think of a better place to start studying faith than by sitting at the feet of Jesus' younger brother.  In the first chapter of the Epistle of James he wrote, "but if any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all generously and without reproach, and it will be given to him."  (James 1:5 NASB)  The promise seems simple and clear; in fact he sounds very much like his older brother.  "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you."  (Matthew 7:7 NASB)

James and Jesus both base their expectation that you will receive an answer to prayer on the goodness of God.  James points out that "God … gives to all generously and with reproach."  Jesus tells us that "if you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give what is good to those who ask Him?"  (Matthew 7:11) 

I think that there are two important lessons we need to learn at this point.  The first lesson is that we need to be very careful to keep our hearts and minds clear from anything that would cause us to doubt the goodness of God.  When trials arise it is so easy for us to begin to doubt the goodness of God.  A clear understanding of God is essential to strong faith.  In fact, I think a lot of faith teachers sort of misplace their emphasis in this area.  We don't have faith in our strong faith, we have faith in God.  I would say that a man's faith is just as great as his knowledge of God, and no greater.

The second lesson is that God will answer prayer, but He will only answer by giving us that which is good.  "Your Father who is in heaven" will "give what is good to those who ask Him."  Real Biblical faith operates in harmony with the will of God.  There is no promise in the Bible that will enable you to claim something in faith that is contrary to the will of God.  I might think that it would be "good" for me to win the Publisher's Clearing House Sweepstakes right now, but God may not see it that way.  God knows that "the love of money is the root of all sorts of evil" (I Timothy 6:9 NASB) and that a good man should be "free from the love of money" (I Timothy 3:3 NASB).  He knows that it would be harmful for me to have more financial prosperity than soul maturity (3 John 2).  So He might decide that winning that money wouldn't be "good" for me and because of that He might not answer that prayer.

But then James goes on to expand upon the prayer process with an emphasis on faith.  "But he must ask in faith without any doubting."  (James 1:6 NASB)  Once again He sounds remarkably like his older brother who told us that we could move mountains with our words, but only if the man speaking in faith "does not doubt in his heart."  (Mark 11:23 NASB)  Jesus goes a step beyond James by locating the part of our being where faith is exercised:  the heart.  Satan may be attacking, putting thoughts of doubt in your head, but when you have the full assurance of faith your heart remains untroubled by these thoughts as it rests on the promises of God.

James adds this critical information.  A man who doubts "is like the surf of the sea, driven and tossed by the wind.  For that man ought not to expect that he will receive anything from the Lord."  (James 1:6, 7 NASB)  Have you ever noticed that before?  Faith doesn't just apply to prosperity or healing; it doesn't just apply to receiving wisdom or moving mountains; a man with doubts in his heart should expect to "receive anything from the Lord."  If I can't receive anything without faith then faith must be the key to receiving everything that God has to give me.  Faith is critical.  Faith is central.  Faith is important.  Faith is a really, really big deal.

How can I grow in faith until I reach the point where I can ask God for something without doubting in my heart?  That is the question that is before us and that is the question we shall seek to answer in the days to come.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Quotation of the day

Happiness is nothing but that inward sweet delight, which will arise from the harmonious agreement between our wills and the will of God.—From the book "Joy and Strength," quoted in Tozer on the Holy Spirit

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Where do we think we're going? (Part 4)

We've been talking about being heavenly minded and receiving heavenly rewards.  By way of review, here is the basic
concept.  If you are a Christian every single good thing you have ever done has been permanently recorded and you will receive a reward for it in the life to come.  Now you may be wondering, "Why would God make a big deal out of little acts of kindness?  Why would God reward me for reading my Bible or praying or going to church?  I should be doing those things anyway!"

The answer to the question has to do with what's inside of us and where we live.  What is inside of us is a nature that has been contaminated by the power of sin.  It's easy to be bad.  Imagine what would happen if you just let yourself go, if you started to live by impulse alone without self control.  Most of us would be in jail before the end of the week. 

And if that weren't bad enough we have to contend with what the Bible calls the world and the devil.  The "world" is the society you live in with it's lifestyle and values.  Trying to live for God on this planet is like standing waist deep in a stream while trying to walk against the current.  There is a relentless pressure pushing you in the wrong direction.  And then there is the devil.  He really exists.  He has minions.  And they do tempt you.  They attempt to mess with your mind and twist your thinking.  And they have had thousands of years of practice in the manipulation of human souls.

You've got all of that going against you.  So this is how I would sum it all up.  For a human being, born with a sin contaminated nature, and having to struggle against the devil and the world, goodness requires a gritty determination that is very precious in the sight of God.  (Yes, I know that we can't overcome these forces on our own and that we have to rely on Him for the strength to do right.) 

So how, exactly, is this going to work?  How is He going to acknowledge and reward us?  I can't tell you exactly because I don't know exactly, but here are a couple of ideas.

Every time you meet someone for the first time in heaven God could introduce you to that person by doing a "data transfer" directly into your mind.  What kind of data would God be transmitting to you?  Think about a grandparent raving about their new grandchild. Imagine what it would be like if, when the new grandparent showed you pictures of the new grandchild, you were actually able to feel exactly what the grandparent was feeling for that child.  Imagine what it would be like if you could share those emotions along with the pictures.

God has recorded every single thing good thing that you have ever done because this information is important to Him.  It pleases Him.  And so when you meet someone for the first time you might get a sudden revelation of every single good thing they ever did and with that information you would also feel exactly what God feels when He thinks about that information.  You would actually feel the love, the tenderness, and the pride God feels when He thinks about that other person.  And they would have the same experience as God "introduced" you to them!

Here's the other idea:  reality TV!  John said that everything was being written down when he wrote the Revelation.  I wonder, if he was writing it today, if he would say that everything was being filmed?  Please keep in mind that every single thing that has ever happened could, very easily, be reproduced as a film from the mind of God who sees everything and remembers everything.

A few weeks ago a young man I know was at a wedding.  That evening, after the wedding, another wedding guest made a "move" on him.  This woman knew he was engaged to be married but apparently that didn't matter to her one bit!  They were staying at the same motel and it was only by saying "No!" repeatedly and forcefully that he was able to keep this woman out of his room (not to mention his bed).  To which we might be tempted to respond, "Ho hum!  Okay, he did the right thing, but was it really that big a deal?  Do we need to give him a Merit Badge or something?"

But that's not the way that God looks at it.  To God, every act of goodness is an important moment.  He records it.  He cherishes it.  He will reward us for it.  That reward could include something very much like our reality TV.  God might honor us by taking episodes out of our lives and turning them into entertainment in the life to come.  Wouldn't it be cool to be able to see the demon perched on this woman's shoulder (if there was one at that moment, there is no way to know for sure) whispering in her ear?  And to be able to see the thing jump over to the young man and whisper in his ear?  And then to see the young man, a committed follower of Jesus Christ, say "No!" not just to the young woman, but to his own sinful desires, to the way most of the world operates, and to the evil spirit behind the whole thing?  That episode of reality TV could then go on to explore the implications of how the young man's life turned out.  It could show the impact of the sin (had he committed it) on his later life and on his family.  Would this sexual sin have opened the door to further infidelities?  Would it have been the first step on a course that would have eventually lead him down a path that would have resulted in dishonor to God and the life long emotional scaring of his wife and children?  Then the TV program could go on to record the way his life did turn out.  We'd be able to see the whole incident from God's point of view.

In some way God is going to acknowledge us and honor us for the good we do in this life.  The actually process by which He does this will probably be much cooler than either of the two ideas that I have suggested.

God is recording the fact that you are reading this blog right now.  He knows what else you could be doing with this time.  He knows how many millions of web sites there are and how you could, if you wanted to, be spending your time on something entertaining instead of trying to saturate your mind with His truth.  (Although I would like to think that some of my wilder ideas might also be at least a little bit entertaining.)  It's not wrong to read for entertainment on the web; I do it all the time.  But when you give that time to God instead of using it for something frivolous you are taking a small piece of your life and giving it to him like an offering.  He notices and He remembers.

Let me sum up by sharing with you the words of a morning prayer that I wrote.

Heavenly Father, it is my sincere desire to live for the praise of Your glory this day. 

I want to please You in everything I do. 

I want to do all my work for You. 

Make me ever mindful of the fact that You are keeping score and that seemingly insignificant actions will bring future rewards. 

Help me to understand that there are no insignificant actions - that the cameras are on and the film is rolling

My life is my ministry. 

Every day is a sermon.

Every human interaction is a witness. 

Every moment counts.