Monday, October 31, 2022

God Will Sustain Us

 

Photo of a beach with a Scripture verse superimposed


“Even to your old age and gray hairs
I am he, I am he who will sustain you.”
—Isaiah 46:4a

“Getting old is not for the faint of heart!” So said an older friend of mine more than two decades ago. As I have reached the golden age of 75, I have found my friend’s words to be very true.

Even if you are reading this and you still feel the vitality of youth, let me assure you that your day of decline is coming. In a blink of an eye, you will soon begin to feel the aches and limitations of aging. Health is so very important. Everyone takes health for granted until something happens that affects our well-being.

Fortunately, God has promised to care for us throughout the various seasons of our lives. His love doesn’t stop when we reach old age. In fact, the Prophet Isaiah recorded these words of promise in Isaiah 46:4:

Even to your old age and gray hairs I am he, I am he who will sustain you. I have made you and I will carry you; I will sustain you and I will rescue you.

No matter what our age, we can rest in the promise of God’s provision for our lives. His love endures forever. He continues to extend His grace and mercy in every time of storm or blessing.

Let’s begin this day with thankfulness that God has promised to love and care for us every moment of this day. We can step out into our workaday world knowing that the King of Kings has our back—and all the rest of us, too.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Friday, October 21, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Friday, October 28, 2022

Never Too Old To Learn

 

Photo of a group of old men-


“Teach the older men to be temperate, worthy
of respect, self-controlled, and sound
in faith, in love and in endurance.”
—Titus 2:2

At 75 years of age, I have reluctantly reached the point in my life where I must acknowledge that I am an old man. In fact, a dear friend from college calls those of us who have reached our dotage “geezers.” I rather like that term. It still means “old man.” But, the word “geezer” has a sort of irreverent elegance to it.

On thing about geezers is that they do not like to admit they don’t know something. This is particularly true about anything mechanical or electrical. They may not grasp all the technical details about the latest technology with quite the same sharpness as their grandchildren—or, in my case, grand-nephews and grand-nieces. Nevertheless, they still believe that they have learned quite a lot over the course of their lives.

It is interesting, then, that in teaching Titus—the minister that Paul had sent to the Island of Crete with the specific task of “amending what is defective”—the Apostle Paul gives very specific instruction regarding the teaching of old men. This instruction is found in Titus 2:2:

Teach the older men to be temperate, worthy of respect, self-controlled, and sound in faith, in love and in endurance.

That’s quite a list of new things for old men to learn. In their walk with Jesus, even geezers need to continue on a path of ever-increasing maturity. Notice the particular items in this list:

  • Temperate—not only in the imbibing of alcoholic beverages, but this word in the Koine Greek applies to all areas of life. It means taking a very balanced, middle-of-the-road position with regard to anything that might spark an overriding passion. It could mean everything from watching sports to voicing political opinions. Since balance is an important part of spiritual formation, it is not at all surprising that Paul would mention this item first.

  • Worthy of respect—most geezers want to be treated with respect. But, respect must be earned. So, Paul urges Titus to make certain the older men in his congregation learn how to earn the respect they so very much want others to give them.

  • Self-controlled—maintain control over one’s self. This might seem obvious, but I know many people, including me, who sometimes become so agitated about something that it’s all-to-easy to relinquish control of one’s emotions.

  • Sound in faith—making certain these older men have anchored their faith to the solid rock of Jesus Christ. Instead of trusting in their own wisdom, knowledge, and understanding, Paul wants to make certain that these men have developed a real faith, based on a growing relationship with God through the Lord Jesus Christ.

  • Sound in love—Since love is the basis of our relationship with God, Paul wants to make certain that the injunction of the Hebrew Scriptures to “love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength” becomes true in the lives of these older saints. And, Paul wants to see an outward-working of that love in the way these older men treat all those who cross their pathway.

  • Sound in endurance—with age comes greater peril. These older men would increasingly find themselves weaker in body, perhaps even weaker in their minds—so Paul wanted to make certain they were prepared to endure the trials that would surely come in the days ahead. By practicing the kinds of spiritual disciplines that build up and support endurance, Paul knew these men would reach toward always-greater maturity that would enable endurance.

We geezers have a definite need to continue to experience the fullness of God’s grace in our lives. It is good to know that God has arranged for us to have Titus-like ministers in our lives to help us in our quest to be God’s men, even as we move through our sunset years.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Thursday, October 20, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Lead Us On Level Ground

 

Photo of a steep rural road


“Teach me to do your will,
for you are my God;
may your good Spirit lead
me on level ground.”
—Psalm 143:10

Whether you’re a walker or a bicyclist, you do not like going up hills. As a child, I well remember those times when I had to hop off my bike and walk alongside it, pushing it up a hill. Even with a three-speed transmission—Yes! Only three speeds!—I still could not negotiate all the hills around my little city of Bradford, Pennsylvania.

Walking was no better. In fact, walking up hills and walking down hills offered equal peril. I could either fall down walking up a hill because I would lose my footing, or fall down walking down a hill because the steepness robbed me of my balance. In either case, my efforts resulted in skinned knees and ripped pant legs.

In our spiritual lives, we constantly face both hills and valleys. Oh, how we long for level ground. We wish every day would only offer a steady forward motion, with no crisis too steep to navigate or a valley to deep to contemplate. Apparently, we are not alone. The Psalmist also greatly desired level ground. In fact, the Psalmist breathes this prayer in Psalm 143:10:

Teach me to do your will, for you are my God; may your good Spirit lead me on level ground.

In our world today, we can long for this same loving care from God. We can ask Him to teach us His ways through our study of His precious written Word. We can ask the Holy Spirit to lead us on level ground. Surely the Spirit will help us navigate the hills and valleys of our daily lives. In fact, on this new day, let us prayerfully ask God to reveal His perfect will for us and, by His Spirit, equip us for our walk with Him.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Presented Fully Mature

 

Photo of a cross with a Scripture verse superimposed


“He is the one we proclaim, admonishing and
teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that
we may present everyone fully mature in Christ.”
—Colossians 1:28

The Apostle Paul felt a great responsibility for those whom God had placed under Paul’s care. We can see this clearly as we read the various letters that Paul wrote to the new churches that had sprung up throughout the then-known world.

Paul writes with concern, passion, humility, as well as with boldness and admonition, when he feels a correction is needed to the people’s behavior. He had forged a relationship with most of these new Christians. He wanted to make certain they were on the right pathway and that they stayed true to the good news he had shared with them.

Even in writing to the church at Rome, at a time when Paul had not yet had the privilege of visiting with them, he uses the kind of pastoral language and sensibility that would have likely warmed their hearts upon reading his letter.

In writing to the church at Colosse, Paul demonstrates a zeal for their maturity. He very much wants them to grow into the kind of men and women who will honor Christ the King through their daily walk along the pathway that the Holy Spirit had laid out for them. Notice these words recorded in Colossians 1:28:

He is the one we proclaim, admonishing and teaching everyone with all wisdom, so that we may present everyone fully mature in Christ.

Paul has a central focus: the person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ. There is no question that nothing else mattered to Paul. He only wanted to exalt the Lord Jesus. He wanted to nurture the Colossian Christians in such a way that their growing maturity would honor their role as ambassadors to a troubled and needy world.

So it is for us today. God has given us His written Word and the blessed presence of the Holy Spirit. They proclaim His truth to us in a startling way. The only reasonable response for us to make is a response of obedience. Following the pathway declared in God’s written Word and laid out for us by the in-dwelling Holy Spirit will lead us to more and more maturity in our walk with Jesus.

As we begin another day, let us hold fast to the truth that God has given us in His written Word. And, let us prepare ourselves for His service. He has planted us in particular places at this particular time. We are where we are for a reason. We are His Light-bearers and Salt-givers. Let us move forward into greater maturity in our walk with our Lord.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Love and Obey

 

Photo of a sunrise with a Scripture verse superimposed


“Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching.”
—John 14:23a

Love exists as both a feeling and also as a deep, spiritual connection. We English-speakers have a deficit in trying to express “love” because we only have one English word. The ancient Greeks devised four separate and beautifully special words for our English word “love”: agape, phileo, storge, and eros.

Agape (ah-GAH-pay) love is God-breathed love. It comes to us as a spiritual gift from God and touches the very core of our being. Phileo (fill-EH-oh) is the feeling of affection that one has for a dear friend. Storge (STOR-gay) is familial love felt for brothers, sisters, parents, and their children. Eros (AIR-ahz) is intimate sexual love driven by passion.

In the Koine Greek language—the principal language of the New Testament Scriptures—each of the words used for the particular type of love is closely tied to some responsive action. In other words, love does not exist in some type of ethereal vacuum. Rather, love demands an active outward response.

It is no wonder, then, that when we Christians tie love with obedience, we do so quite appropriately. Take notice of these words of our Lord, recorded in John 14:23:

Jesus replied, “Anyone who loves me will obey my teaching. My Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them.”

In this case, the Koine Greek word for “love” is agape—God-breathed love—for it is God who gives us the gift of His love and enables us to return our love to Him. This makes the transactional relationship between us believers and God quite one-sided. He gives us His love and He enables us to love Him in return. It is all His doing.

What is our part, then? It is to obey His teachings, as revealed in His written Word, the Bible. That is why we must read, study, and meditate upon God’s written Word. And, that is why we should not foolishly pretend that His written Word doesn’t matter, insofar as the way we choose to live our lives.

God’s love evokes a response of obedience to His written Word and to His divine and perfect will for us. Truthfully, that is very good news for this new day.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Monday, October 17, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Monday, October 24, 2022

Make Disciples

 

Graphic of a sign


“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations…”
—Matthew 28:19a

Literally volumes have been written down through the ages concerning the passage of Scripture where Jesus instructs His followers to leave where they are and go out into the world, in order to share the good news and make additional disciples. And, just as it is today, this is one of the most difficult tasks God has given those He loves.

Rather than launch out in a new adventure on behalf of our Lord and King, our natural bent is to want to stay in the comfort of our normal habitat. We like where we are. We enjoy the comfort of our surroundings where we can soak up what we are learning about God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit. We would much rather keep learning and avoid sharing what we’ve learned. But, the call of God to His people remains clearly in focus. We are to make disciples.

Now, let me suggest that the best way to do that is to determine to live in such a way that the sweet aroma of Jesus permeates every aspect of our beings. By simply living the Christ-Life wherever we go, we become beacons of God’s Holy Light to a troubled world. Notice what Jesus said to his followers in Matthew 28:18-20:

Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Let me suggest that, as we begin this day, we ask God to enable us to live in such a way that we will truly be His ambassadors. With a very humble spirit and with a gentleness that can only come from the Holy Spirit, let us set our minds and hearts on living for Jesus in such a way that those who cross our pathway will be prompted to ask us why we seem different.

In kindness and love, let us then share the wonderful joy that God has given us in Christ. With our sins forgiven and a new life before us, as the Holy Spirit enables us, let us fulfill the “Great Commission” in the best way that we can.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Friday, October 14, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Friday, October 21, 2022

Guard the Deposit

 

Graphic of a Scripture verse


“Guard the good deposit that was entrusted to you…”
—2 Timothy 1:14a

When someone gives you a valuable treasure, you want to do everything in your power to guard it. You may purchase a safe and have it installed in a fashion that no burglar can remove it or open it.

Several years ago, my wife called my attention to our back yard. Across the way, a neighbor had a crew of men laying down very heavy planking topped with thick plywood. Soon this group of six men appeared wrestling a very large safe across the lawn on a special skid-type dolly. It took them a long time to get the safe mounted onto the wooden pathway they had created. Then, they used a come-along to winch the safe up onto the back deck of the home.

Once they got it inside, we obviously lost track of their progress. But, when I went to McDonald’s for lunch, I noticed their truck was still there. On my way back, a concrete truck had extended its chute to one of the basement windows. Obviously, they were installing this safe in a fashion to secure it as permanently as possible.

It was interesting that within a few short months, this family moved. I imagine the new owners had a somewhat puzzling discovery when they found this very large safe in the basement of their newly purchased home.

The deposit that God has made in our behalf as “Christ’s-ones” surely requires us to guard that deposit with significant attention. At least that’s what the Apostle Paul wrote to his son-in-the-faith, Timothy, in 2 Timothy 1:13-14:

What you heard from me, keep as the pattern of sound teaching, with faith and love in Christ Jesus. Guard the good deposit that was entrusted to you—guard it with the help of the Holy Spirit who lives in us.

We all do well, at the beginning of another day, to guard the deposit of truth that God has given us, so that we can enthusiastically and graciously share this truth with all who may cross the pathway of our lives. We need not share our faith in an obnoxious way. But, we always need to be ready to humbly declare the wonderful news of the salvation that God offers through His precious Son, Jesus.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Thursday, October 13, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, October 20, 2022

Teaching What Is Best

 

Photo of a forest road with a Scripture verse superimposed


“I am the Lord your God, who teaches you what is best
for you, who directs you in the way you should go.”
—Isaiah 48:17b

Depending on the person or persons we tend to follow and emulate, we will either learn good of bad habits. You may have had the experience growing up where your parents objected to one or more of your playmates. “I think Larry is a very bad influence,” your mother or father may have said.

It didn’t really matter to you. You thought Larry was very cool. You liked his irreverent approach to life and especially his disdain for older people, like parents and teachers. In fact, it seemed as if Larry’s approach to life had much more fun and zing to it. Of course you were going to follow Larry and do what he did. After all, you, too, wanted to be a “fun person.”

Perhaps somewhere along the line, Larry got into serious trouble. In fact, you got into trouble, too, because of your association with Larry. And, this may have made you re-think your relationship with Larry just a bit. Yes, Larry was a fun guy. But, sometimes Larry’s idea of fun spelled trouble for himself and anyone who followed closely after him.

Even in our adult lives, we need to take note of the kind of people that we choose to follow. As a person who has abstained from drinking alcoholic beverages all throughout my life, I have often sat at business dinners and watched my companions become plastered. As the evening went on, they began to say things they shouldn’t have said, even revealing confidential information from their employers.

Now, I want to hasten to state that I am definitely not a better person than these folks are. I have my own long list of besetting sins. I’m just fortunate that, early on in my life, I decided to abstain from alcoholic beverages. It’s a habit that I’ve chosen to maintain throughout my life.

One time, after a particularly long dinner where everyone but me became quite inebriated, while we were walking back to our hotel, one of my colleagues said to me through a very slurred tongue, “You know, I don’t trust you. You don’t drink. I don’t trust anyone who doesn’t drink. It’s not natural.”

I started to chuckle. But, just as he finished his little speech, he tripped over a raised portion of the sidewalk, fell flat on his face, and simply couldn’t get up. Two of his drunken companions tried to help him up and soon joined him flat out on the sidewalk. Just then a police car came by. The police officers got out and helped get all three of my dinner companions on their feet and into the back of the police car. One officer got really close to me to try to smell my breath.

“Are you okay?” he asked.

“I’m fine,” I replied. “I don’t drink.”

“Good for you,” he said, as he got into the police car and drove the three drunks to the station house.

At the meeting the next day, the three dinner companions seemed very bleary-eyed and asked the rest of us to refrain from making any loud noises. I took note that two of these men normally did not seem to drink very much. However, on this one occasion, led on by the one true alcoholic in the group, they became entrapped in an incident that I imagine they regret. Or, maybe they don’t.

As recorded in Isaiah 48:17, the Prophet Isaiah made the following declaration to the people of Israel, and thus, to those of us who have been grafted into the vine of God’s chosen people:

This is what the Lord says—your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel: “I am the Lord your God, who teaches you what is best for you, who directs you in the way you should go.”

Following God puts us in contact with the One who always wants the best for us. He will not lead us astray. Instead, He will teach us what is best for us.

As we start another day, let’s rejoice that we have the opportunity to follow this God who loves us enough to set an example for us. If we follow after Him, we will not stumble or fall, and we will stay on the path that leads to true and everlasting life.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Filled With Love

 

Photo of some starfish with a Scripture verse superimposed


“The earth is filled with your love,
Lord; teach me your decrees.”
—Psalm 119:64

In some ways, the Scripture verse at the beginning of this blog post is startling to me. I have never particularly felt that the earth was filled with God’s love. Please understand, I’m not saying that the earth is not filled with God’s love. Rather, I’m stating that I can’t say that I have ever particularly felt that the earth was filled with God’s love. Obviously, my feelings are wrong—as they so often are.

Truth exists well outside the realm of our “feelings.” I learned that fact many years ago in the somewhat muddled experience of seeking one-on-one counseling from a psychiatrist in an attempt to get at the root of my “weight problem.” I’ve told that story several times on this blog. After eighteen months of once-a-week counseling, the psychiatrist fell asleep during one of our sessions. That was the end for me. Over many years I have come to realize that I often tell boring stories, but up to that point, I had never put anyone to sleep—at least as far as I know.

I did learn some very interesting things about myself during those sessions. They helped expand some of what I learned about myself during the mandatory group therapy sessions I had to attend in college, as a part of my Psychology major. One of the things that I learned in both counseling experiences is that I have a “love deficit” left over from the circumstances surrounding my birth. I will spare you the long and tortuous explanation as to why this is so. But, let me hasten to add that, in spite of the circumstances of my birth, I did grow up in a very loving and nurturing Christian home, where my adoptive parents showered me with their intense love.

My particular psychological anomaly has made me remarkably unsuited to getting along with most people—a problem that plagues me to this day. So, when I think of most of the circumstances of my life, I do not immediately think of those experiences as being marked by “love.” But, that’s actually a feelings problem, not reality.

Reality is that God has showered me with His love, just as He has showered every person that He has chosen to belong to Himself. From God’s perspective—and that’s the only perspective that really matters—the earth is filled with His love. We are the recipients of that God-initiated loving environment.

The only appropriate response to an earth filled with God’s love is to seek to learn what He has decreed and to make those decrees a vital part of our lives—thus, the admonition from the Psalmist. So, as we begin this new day, let us bask in the glory of God’s unfailing, undying love. And, let us seek to learn His decrees and follow them all the days of our lives.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Tuesday, October 18, 2022

Start Them Off Right

 

Photo of a small child praying


“Start children off on the way they should go, and
even when they are old they will not turn from it.”
—Proverbs 22:6

God never chose to bless my wife and me with children. While we take extreme delight in our nieces and nephews and their children, we never had that first-hand experience of raising children of our own.

Nevertheless, we have observed many other families over the years. Some of the most memorable were those families where the parents maintained a relatively stress-free environment. But at the same time, taught their children valuable lessons in self-discipline and good behavior. In all of these homes, God’s written Word, the Bible, played a very important role.

Instilling true Christian values in their children became a priority for these parents. While the lives of their children have not always moved along a straight and problem-free pathway, there was always a solid foundation to which the children could return. A lot of learning took place in seeing how their faith worked itself out in this challenging and very needy world.

King Solomon knew both great blessing and great trouble. His own two sons plotted against him. No doubt some of the experiences he had led him to write these words in Proverbs 22:6:

Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it.

I’m fairly certain that Solomon wrote this admonition as much as a lament as he did an imparting of wisdom. We can all learn from Solomon’s life. And, we can seek to employ his most excellent recommendations.

As we pray for the children that cross our pathway, let’s hold them up before the Lord and do all we can to share with them how our faith helps us deal with the challenges in our lives. We do well when we can set an example for children and youth. That is certainly what our Savior did, as recorded in Matthew 19:14, when He said:

“Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.”

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Monday, October 10, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Monday, October 17, 2022

We Are His People

 

Photo of man kneeling at the altar of a church


“Come, let us bow down in worship, let us
kneel before the Lord our Maker; for he
is our God and we are the people of his
pasture, the flock under his care. Today,
if only you would hear his voice…”
—Psalm 95:6-7

In quoting Isaiah 40 at the opening of his indescribably fabulous The Messiah, George Frideric Handel uses a tenor soloist to capture the heart and voice of God, when He instructs the Prophet Isaiah to:

“Comfort ye. Comfort ye, my people. Says our God. Says our God.”

Herein, God acknowledges that He has people who need comforting.

One hundred years later, Felix Mendelssohn carries this same theme into his great oratorio Elijah. Quoting Joel 2:13, Mendelssohn has another tenor soloist declare:

“Ye people rend your hearts, rend your hearts and not your garments.”

Again, the people of God need the comfort of God. And, they need to repent of their sin and receive God’s gracious forgiveness through the Savior not yet born.

Both of these great musical works celebrate the people of God—those whom He has chosen to belong to Himself. What a wonderful, even glorious, experience to sit in an audience and hear this tremendous truth proclaimed with such enthusiasm and skill.

We who belong to God through Christ are, of all people, most blessed. To have access to our loving Father through His Son, Jesus; to have the indwelling guidance of the Holy Spirit to direct our pathway; to experience overwhelming joy at knowing we belong to the very God of the universe—it simply boggles the mind and fills the heart with both humility and great celebration. The Psalmist declares in Psalm 95:6-7:

Come, let us bow down in worship, let us kneel before the Lord our Maker; for he is our God and we are the people of his pasture, the flock under his care. Today, if only you would hear his voice…

As we begin a new day, let us, indeed, celebrate the fact that we are the people of God. And, let us bow down and worship Him for He is our God and we are the people of His pasture.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Friday, October 7, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Friday, October 14, 2022

Fellow Citizens

 

Graphic of a sign


“Consequently, you are no longer foreigners
and strangers, but fellow citizens with God’s
people and also members of his household…”
—Ephesians 2:19

Looking back over the last several blog posts, I detect a certain theme in the Scripture passages chosen by the folks at Biblegateway.com. That, by the way, is my source for most of the Scriptures I use in these blog posts. I simply look at what those kind people have chosen and write about that passage.

In any case, the recent Scriptures seem to have an underlying theme of “belonging.” There is no doubt that one of the most potent realities of faith in God, through the sacrifice of His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, is that we now belong to God in a way that defies a simplistic description.

We, of the Reformed expression of the Protestant Christian theology, believe that, before the foundation of the earth, God chose us to belong to Himself. In due season, God sent His blessed Holy Spirit to reveal our sinful condition, to reveal our need of a Savior, and to reveal that God has already provided a sacrifice in His Son on the cruel cross of Calvary. As part of this “revealing,” God then irresistibly draws us to Himself through the wooing of the Holy Spirit, as the Spirit testifies about the redemptive power of the Lord Jesus Christ. With our growing comprehension, and upon our acknowledgement of what God has done in our behalf, we humbly receive His gift of love. The Holy Spirit comes to live in our hearts and offers His enablement, so we can walk the pathway of faith.

This process that may seem so dry and uninteresting, when expressed in theological terms, is actually filled with horror at the depth of our sin, relief at knowing God has already paid the penalty for that sin, and overwhelming joy that He loves us with His everlasting and unfailing love.

Our “belonging” becomes our present and future reality. We not only belong to God—which is, of course, the greatest thing—but we belong to every other person who has been chosen by God, just as we have been chosen. We have a whole new family of brothers and sisters in Christ. We belong to God and we belong to each other. The Apostle Paul expressed this great truth to the people gathered in the church at Ephesus by writing these words preserved for us in Ephesians 2:19:

Consequently, you are no longer foreigners and strangers, but fellow citizens with God’s people and also members of his household…

We are not foreigners and strangers in God’s Kingdom. No! We are citizens. We are a part of God’s people. We are members of His household. We are His dearly loved and tenderly cared for children. And that, dear ones, is news so wonderful that it is something to be genuinely joyful about at the beginning of this new day. As the song writer, Frederick Martin Lehman, has so eloquently put it:

Could we with ink the ocean fill,
    And were the skies of parchment made;
Were every stalk on earth a quill,
    And every man a scribe by trade;
To write the love of God above
    Would drain the ocean dry;
Nor could the scroll contain the whole,
    Though stretched from sky to sky.
O love of God, how rich and pure!
    How measureless and strong!
It shall forevermore endure—
    The saints’ and angels’ song.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Thursday, October 6, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, October 13, 2022

All Are One

 

Photo of Scripture verse


“There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither
slave nor free, nor is there male and female,
for you are all one in Christ Jesus.”
—Galatians 3:28

Over the past eighteen years, and even more particularly over the past fourteen years, here in the United States we have become a nation severely divided. At the same time, some individuals have fostered a strong push for the celebration of “diversity, equity, and inclusion.” This is a startling change from the days in which I grew up, beginning 75 years ago.

In those long ago days, we celebrated the fact that the United States was a “great melting pot” where people from a wide range of ethnic backgrounds had immigrated to this soil and, while retaining all of the best parts of their own cultures, had purposely and cheerfully melted into the woven fabric of our great nation, adding new, varied colored “threads” that enriched us all. We honored the past, but put far more emphasis on what the future might hold.

Part of that melting pot experience was an assimilation of each individual into the cultural fabric of the United States of America. Languages from the “old country” were dropped in favor of American English. People eagerly sought out the experience of tasting foods from the many traditions and cultures represented here. People no longer identified themselves by their former heritage, but excitedly became “Americans.”

Yes, there was always a bow of honor given to the land from which they had come. But, they seemed much more interested in becoming an American citizen. So, we experienced a definite ethnic recognition, but championed our new identities as belonging to the greatest nation on earth. My, how things have changed in these last few years.

As citizens of God’s eternal Kingdom, we “Christ’s-ones” sometimes forget that we have a new identity in Christ. While we will not forget from where we have come—a horrible pit of sin and death—we eagerly celebrate our new belonging. We are chosen by God to be His dearly loved children. We belong to His Kingdom. The Apostle Paul reminds those gathered in the church at Galatia of this very fact when he writes the words recorded in Galatians 3:28:

There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

Our new identify is fully in Christ. We belong to Him. He is our Sovereign and Lord. He is the King of All Creation and our King, too.

As we begin another new day, let us remember that we Christians are all one in Christ Jesus. We belong to Him and to each other. His shed blood has stamped us with His glory. He has forgiven our sins and made us new in Him. We belong! Yes, we belong! We belong to Jesus!

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Wednesday, October 12, 2022

Only Believe

 

Graphic of a Scripture verse


“The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.”
—John 6:29

Once, a dear friend told me:

“I was raised a Roman Catholic and became a Protestant during my college years. The one thing I miss about the Mass is the activity of standing, kneeling, and sitting that kept us alive and active all through the celebration. In the church I now attend, we stand sometimes, but we also sit a lot, too. I miss having something to do during worship.”

When my friend made the above pronouncement, I suggested he visit one of the more contemporary services of our local mega-church. I assured him that he would find ample opportunity for activity during that church’s rather high energy worship service. I also confess that his statement made me smile a bit. I remember the first Mass I attended. As a Fundamentalist Protestant, it was an almost frightening experience because I did not know what to do. Every other person was well-schooled in the Mass and I stood out because of my fumbling ways.

Now having experienced a much wider range of church services from an equally wide-range of Christian traditions, I am no longer uncomfortable with the beauty of liturgy and the activity of a liturgical service. But, my friend’s statement also made me realize that for some, a major impediment of the Christian faith is that there just isn’t enough for them to do.

We believe that our salvation rests solely with our Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ. There really isn’t anything we can do except to confess our sins and receive the pardon that He has already given us on the cruel Roman cross at Calvary. Our faith requires us to hold in our hearts the belief that what God has said is true. We respond in obedience to God’s will, as expressed in His written Word and through the nudging of the Holy Spirit who dwells within every person who believes. But, we cannot earn our salvation. The price was alread paid in full by Jesus. The Apostle John quotes Jesus Himself on this very matter in John 6:29:

Jesus answered, “The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent.”

As we begin a new day, let’s allow the Holy Spirit to powerfully enable our faith in a new and fresh way. As we consider the price that was paid to cover our sins with Jesus’ precious blood, let’s be truly humble and truly grateful for this great gift of love that comes to us from the God who, before the foundation of the world, chose us to belong to Himself.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Tuesday, October 11, 2022

Kept In Peace

 

Graphic of a Scripture verse


“You will keep in perfect peace
those whose minds are steadfast,
because they trust in you.”
—Isaiah 26:3

When I was a small boy, it was common to refer to police officers as “peace officers.” The idea was that the presence of a municipal policing authority would, by its very presence, tend to keep the peace. In fact, late at night, or early in the morning, when the taverns would close and the wee-hour-drinkers would spill out onto the sidewalks, the newspaper would often record incidents where this inebriated man or woman would be arrested for “breach of peace.”

Most of us would prefer to live in peace. Sometimes this drives some individuals to resist those times when the United States must deploy its military forces to bring some portion of the world back into a state of equilibrium. “Why do we always have to be the peacekeepers?” some ask. I guess that’s a fair question. But, with great power comes great responsibility. I happen to be one who believes that God has given our nation great power and, thus, He has also given us great responsibility.

Nevertheless, we certainly prefer to live in peace. That’s why the subject of lasting peace is so prominent in Scripture. That’s why God’s Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, is declared to be the “Prince of Peace.” Jesus is the ultimate source of peace.

Continuing the theme that he spoke about earlier in his prophecy, Isaiah shares these thoughts about God in Isaiah 26:3:

You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in you.

Peace comes from a resolute and unshakeable faith in God. If we focus our minds and hearts on bending our selfish human wills to God’s perfect will, He will grant us heavenly peace for our souls. We can rest at peace in His loving and caring arms.

As we go out into a needy world this day, let’s not forget that we are not only “Light-bearers,” we are also “Peace-bearers.” We who carry the very Presence of Christ, through the power of the indwelling Holy Spirit, can bring peace into every situation. And that, dear ones, is a very good mission for us this day.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Monday, October 3, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Monday, October 10, 2022

We Belong To Each Other

 

Photo of a cross with a Scripture verse superimposed


“For just as each of us has one body with
many members, and these members do
not all have the same function, so in
Christ we, though many, form one body,
and each member belongs to all the others.”
—Romans 12:4-5

One of the joys of being a “Christ’s-one” is that there is an enormous fellowship of believers. This fellowship exists within the local expression of the Body of Christ, the church. It also exists in a gigantic expanse of individuals within the Body of Christ, the Church—that is to say, the body of all Christian believers throughout the world.

We sometimes focus on our particular denomination. Some even think that their particular denomination is the only valid expression of Christian theology. They may be right. Or, they may find out when they stand before Jesus that neither they, nor the countless other denominations, got it exactly right. I prefer to think more globally about the Church and celebrate those beliefs that we have in common with each other.

I was raised in a relatively narrow expression of Protestant fundamentalism. I am ever so grateful for that upbringing. But, along the way of my life, I have found sweet fellowship with believers from many, many other denominations. I am grateful that God has brought into my life deeply committed believers who worship in a whole host of various denominational traditions: Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and an extensive list of Protestant denominations.

We all share a common faith in the life-transforming power of the Lord Jesus Christ. He is our Savior and Lord. No matter what other differences our various denominations may have imposed on our beliefs, we have a strong foundation of common ground in the very person of God’s precious Son, Jesus. So, when I read what the Apostle Paul wrote in Romans 12:4-5, I cannot help but rejoice:

For just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, so in Christ we, though many, form one body, and each member belongs to all the others.

We belong to each other because of Jesus. We have one faith, one Lord, one baptism, one God—in three Persons: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—Who loves us with His unfailing love. I don’t know about you, but I’m glad I’m a part of the worldwide Family of God.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Friday, September 30, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Friday, October 7, 2022

Stumble-free

 

Photo of a beautiful landscape with a Scripture verse superimposed


“Great peace have those who love your
law, and nothing can make them stumble.”
—Psalm 119:165

One of the more famous loss-of-life fires in U.S. history occurred in Boston, MA, on November 28, 1942, at the premier nightclub known as the Cocoanut Grove. A total of 492 people perished in this horrible tragedy. As with most large loss-of-life fires, fire protection engineers recognize that the consequences of this fire were both predictable and totally preventable.

Among the many fire protection problems of this facility that impacted the fire related to the exit passageway. During the panic that occurred immediately upon people realizing a fire was in progress, individuals trying to escape stumbled, fell, and became tripping hazards for other people trying to leave the building. Soon the exit was plugged with squirming bodies.

In designing modern buildings that will comply with the International Building Code, fire protection engineers make certain that the pathways throughout a building will remain stumble-free. In an emergency, this will allow people to escape without the danger of tripping and blocking the exit passageway.

In our spiritual lives, we have to be alert for the enticements of sin that might cause us to stumble and fall in our walk with the Lord Jesus Christ. While He is always willing to reach down and help us back on our feet, it is far better if we don’t trip and fall in the first place.

The Psalmist recognized the importance of having a stumble-free passage to spiritual formation when he wrote these words in Psalm 119:165, speaking to God:

Great peace have those who love your law, and nothing can make them stumble.

In our post-crucifixion and post-resurrection world, our obedience to God’s law involves us loving the Lord with all of our four human modalities: heart, soul, mind, and strength. And, with loving our neighbor as we love ourselves. Frankly, we all stumble and fall from time to time. That’s why it is so important to understand that Jesus has already paid the penalty for our sin. Therefore, we can tune our minds and hearts to follow a pathway of obedience, as we receive the enablement of the Holy Spirit to do so.

No one likes to stumble and fall. Fortunately, God’s love can keep us walking the pathway He has laid out for us in a stumble-free manner. And that, dear ones, is good news to cling to as we begin another day.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Thursday, September 29, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Thursday, October 6, 2022

Your Consolation Brings Me Joy

 

Photo of a field of flowers with a Scripture verse superimposed


“When anxiety was great within me, your consolation brought me joy.”
—Psalm 94:19

What is the source of joy in our lives? I’m not asking about “happiness.” I’m asking about “joy.” These are two very different and certainly most distinct qualities.

I once heard a pastor tell his congregation that “happiness” is a quality of a child that emphasizes feelings of the moment, while “joy” is a quality of a more mature person, who measures the qualities of life over a longer period of time. So, it seems that “joy” is a quality of life that is the result of a more extended period of time.

I ask again, “What is the source of joy in our lives?” Is it a nice house? Is it a particularly fine car or truck? Is it a worthwhile job? Is it a family consisting of a loving spouse and children or grandchildren? Is it a position of responsibility? What brings us true and lasting joy?

The Psalmist seems to look at joy in a much more spiritual way when he wrote these words recorded in Psalm 94:18-19:

When I said, “My foot is slipping,” your unfailing love, Lord, supported me. When anxiety was great within me, your consolation brought me joy.

God longs to give each of us His long-lasting and soul-filling joy. It’s good for us to remember this when we move out into each new day. God is our source of joy. His love and caring truly helps us overcome those things that might rob us of our joy.

Let’s start this day with thankfulness to the God who loves us with His unfailing, undying love. He is the one who gives us joy overflowing.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

His Song Is With Me

 

Photo of a peaceful river with a Scripture verse superimposed


“By day the Lord directs his love,
at night his song is with me—
a prayer to the God of my life.”
—Psalm 42:8

Do you remember the scene from a movie where a small boy finishes playing baseball as darkness falls over his neighborhood and he has to walk home in the dark? He walks past a cemetery and starts to feel a little spooky. So, he begins to whistle and to walk a little faster. As he walks faster and faster, the tune he’s whistling becomes faster and faster, too. It’s quite comical to see him turn to music to bolster his courage and get him past that scary plot of land.

As we travel the road of life, God has given us a new song in our minds and hearts. Whenever we face the scary times in our lives, it is the song of Christ that arises within us, by the power of the Holy Spirit, to give us courage to keep moving forward. The Psalmist celebrated this wonderful gift from God when he wrote the words contained in Psalm 42:8:

By day the Lord directs his love, at night his song is with me—a prayer to the God of my life.

Truly, the song of God in our hearts does strengthen us for whatever Satan may sling at us during the day. In those quiet hours, just before dawn, when we awake in the cool of the night and tremble a bit, God’s song of love will lift our spirits and enable us to face a new day.

Whenever we face difficult times, let’s remind ourselves of that wonderful new song of God’s love and grace. If we do, surely God will meet us at our point of concern and give us all we need to move forward into a new day.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

The Giver of All Things

 

Photo of a sunset with a Scripture verse superimposed


“He who did not spare his own Son, but
gave him up for us all—how will he not also,
along with him, graciously give us all things?”
—Romans 8:32

Are you fortunate enough to have a rich uncle who recently gave you a significant amount of money to enhance your way of life? No, me neither. But, it is interesting how many dramas and movies during really tough times had that event as a key element of the storyline. Everyone wishes that he or she had some rich relative who would give them an inheritance to make things in life a bit less stressed—at least from a financial standpoint.

Even at my advanced age, I still have a recurring dream that a rich great-uncle I never even heard of somehow has made a provision that when I reach a certain age I will receive the enormous sum of 856 million dollars. I have absolutely no idea where this dream comes from—no doubt extensive therapy might pry the source of such nonsense out of my feeble mind once and for all. Nevertheless, in my dream, I go about secretly giving a large part of that money away to help people in need and assure that some institutions—such as my Alma Mater—have enough funds to carry on their mission. Yes, I know how silly that dream really is. But, nevertheless, it is the stuff of which dreams are made—wouldn’t you agree?

In the world that really matters, the Kingdom of God, we already have a loving Father who graciously gives us everything we need in order to love Him and serve Him will all of our four human modalities: our hearts, souls, minds, and strengths. The Apostle Paul made this declaration in Romans 8:32:

He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?

Yes! The God who loves us with His everlasting love will surely supply all that we need. And, what He supplies will be good beyond all measure.

As we start a new day, let’s remember to thank our loving God for His gracious provision for this day. The truth is that all that we are and all that we have comes to us as a precious gift from God. Every breath we take and every beat of our heart comes at His divine pleasure. We have so very much for which we should be thankful. Let’s remember to tell God how much we appreciate all that He continually does for us. Okay?

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Monday, September 26, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.

 

Monday, October 3, 2022

Unshakable

 

Photo of a lush forest with a Scripture verse superimposed


“I keep my eyes always on the Lord. With
him at my right hand, I will not be shaken.”
—Psalm 16:8

Do you remember hearing the parable Jesus told about the two men who built houses? One man built his house on the sand. The other man built his house on solid rock. When the storm came and the waters raged, which house do you think stood firm? Why, of course, it was the house built on the rock. In fact, you may have learned the children’s song in Sunday School or Vacation Bible School about this very parable found in Matthew 7:21-28.

While Jesus told this story as a Parable of the Kingdom of God, urging those who followed Him to build their spiritual homes on the solid rock of faith in Him, there is more than a little truth about the need for a strong foundation when you are building a house. Have you seen any of the television programs about renovation or new construction where the builders faced a major problem with a poorly made foundation? That’s right. In each case, without an unshakeable foundation, the building was doomed.

This leads me to ask myself—and you—on what kind of foundation have we built our lives? Have we built our lives on the solid foundation of faith in the Lord Jesus Christ? Or, have we built our lives on some other foundation that may very well be all-too-easily shaken? The Psalmist offers these words of advice in Psalm 16:8:

I keep my eyes always on the Lord. With him at my right hand, I will not be shaken.

Keeping our eyes on Jesus—that’s really good advice. In fact, that’s exactly what the writer to the Hebrews urged us to do in Hebrews 12:2. We need a solid foundation for our spiritual lives. We can pretend that we don’t. In fact, we can scorn the idea that we need any spiritual dimension to our lives at all. But the truth remains, when the world crashes around us, without a solid foundation we will collapse, too.

Let’s begin this new day by setting our minds and hearts to the task of learning how to trust God for every aspect of our lives. Let’s keep our eyes on Jesus—follow His example by doing what He would do. If we do this, we will find we have a spiritual life that cannot be shaken. And that, dear ones, will make every other aspect of our lives unshakeable, as well.

 

Based on a blog originally posted on Friday, September 23, 2016

Copyright © 2022 by Dean K. Wilson. All Rights Reserved.