Wanted: A Few Good Men & Women!

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“Keep your conduct among the Gentiles honorable, so that when they speak against you as evildoers, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day of visitation.”  1 Peter 2:12

How do we do this as Christ followers?  How do we keep our conduct honorable despite the pressures that seem impossible to resist?  I suppose the question we must ask ourselves first is, “what is honorable?”  If you were to look at a dictionary some of the similes of the word ‘honorable’ are: “Blameless, upright, virtuous, moral, righteous, principled.”   Therefore, if we are to be honorable disciples of Christ we have to possess these qualities as disciplines in our words and our deeds.  The hypocritical notion of “do as I say not as I do” cannot apply to us.

Someone is watching you!

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I love that classic Michael Jackson song “Somebody’s watching me” , it’s perhaps a bit paranoid but the truth of the matter is that if you profess to be a Christian then you better act like a Christian in your actions!  Why?   Because there are people looking at you and looking to you as an example what it means to live an upright life!  If you blow it and display something opposite of what you are professing then guess what?  It’s not just you failing it’s the identity of Christ in you that has been poorly misrepresented.  I hate to point fingers and I rarely will, but when churches like the Westboro Baptist church goes out and spews hatred and condemnation, what they are doing is poorly representing Christ to a lost world.  Their idea of Christ isn’t something I embrace and in fact they do more harm than good with their protests and divisive signs.

You see the world is looking for blameless, upright people!  The world has far too few of them.  I’m not just talking about being an honorable GOOD person; I am talking about godly examples of Christ in our world today.  This may sound harsh but there are a lot of Christians in this world who talk a good game but bring very little of it home with them in the way that they conduct themselves.   My place isn’t to shift the blame on anyone, but if truth be told I too struggle with this in my own life as well.   1 Peter 2:12 tells us that not only ought we be honorable so that others see us do good, but that they too might see God and glorify Him!  It’s a double edged sword here.  On one side we are to live upright principled godly lives for ourselves and because it brings glory to God, and on the other side others are watching and innately they too want to find this truth for themselves.  So that when others see these good deeds displayed in God’s people, they too want what we possess which the indwelling of His Holy Spirit and a transformed life.

How is your soul today?  How is your life?  Are you living for God or are you talking a good game, but there is very little evidence of Him in your life?  I want to first encourage you when I say that God has great expectations for us.   He knows what we are capable of and the potential that we already possess to do good in our own world for Him!  He believes in you!  He loves you!  And our calling as Christ followers is to live this life out loud so that others might see Christ through us.

Secondly, this passage reminds you and me that there is so much more at stake here than just our reputations.  If we’re wearing the cross on our bodies and as bumper stickers on our cars then shouldn’t we be wearing a transformed life as well?  I don’t know about you but I don’t want to be another Christian casualty on the spiritual highway wrought with moral car wrecks!  I doubt you do either.

So what?

Live what we say, and say what we live!  And may God be visible in every capacity and fiber of our being!

God is looking for a few good men and women to service Him in the trenches of life.  Are you up to the task?  He believes in you…do you believe in you?  Do you believe in Him?  Get on with it then!  Blessings on you this day and May you live for Him in word and deed!  Amen & amen!

“On your mark…get set…”

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Philippians 3:14-16 (MSG)
14 I’m off and running, and I’m not turning back.
15 So let’s keep focused on that goal, those of us who want everything God has for us. If any of you have something else in mind, something less than total commitment, God will clear your blurred vision—you’ll see it yet! 16 Now that we’re on the right track, let’s stay on it.

You’ve seen it before, athletes staring down the track, or focusing on the ball and not idly chattering with others before the game or competition.  They are visualizing the finish line, the victory, the means to get from point A, where they are now, to point B the completion.  Every step of the runner is considered.  Every eventual or possible play by the sports star is thought through.   The journey to the finish line is not easy.   A lot of preparation beforehand must be made.  To simply show up at the competition without first preparing the mind and body will most likely lead an athlete down the track of failure.

Within the preparation of the athlete, not only are the possibilities of each footstep or play considered, but also the dangers.  There are risks involved in competing.  Injuries can occur. One false step or hesitation could lead to a devastating injury of the athlete.  If the mind of the athlete is not prepared to engage in split second, total commitment then mistakes and second thoughts could lead to bodily harm.

The athlete must be prepared to engage in battle, so to speak.  They prepare themselves for the opposing force.  A good athlete studies his or her adversities, weaknesses, and those he or she is competing against.  When this knowledge is secured, 100% is given to the effort of success, anything less than full commitment is unacceptable.  It has been said that an athlete leaves it all on the court, meaning they give it their all nothing less than everything.

Is that how our relationship with Christ is?  Are we committed 100% to this allegiance?  Or are we crucified with Christ only on the weekends or just certain holidays?  We short change the power of God and His moving in our lives if we aren’t fully committed to Him daily.  Like an athlete that the Apostle Paul describes, we have to focus and press on towards the goal.  Becoming like Christ, following in His footsteps take real courage and commitment!  We can’t be fair weathered about it.  If we are fair weathered Christians then we aren’t fully engaged in this forward motion of becoming like Christ!  Just as the athlete who flinches or hesitates mid-step the consequences could be devastating to our forward progress.

The message version of the above passage says in verse 15, “If any of you have something else in mind, something less than total commitment, God will clear your blurred vision—you’ll see it yet!” Note that God can and will guide us in the spiritual discipline of obedience.  We can’t be amateur athletes of faith all of our lives.  He wants more from us.  God knows what we’re capable of even beyond what we know of ourselves.  We cannot feast on spiritual baby formula for the rest of our earthly lives.  God wants us to grow, mature and develop in us a deeper understanding of this faith that He gives us.  In so doing we will realize, like Paul, the ultimate goal is Christ-likeness the prize is the eternal reward but we can live it today!  We can live as eternal children of God today, but it requires our full commitment and obedience to His promptings and guiding of our lives.  Anything less than a full or total commitment will cause us to doubt.  A halfhearted commitment will cause us to doubt ourselves, our initial motivations, even our salvation.  Halfhearted commitment will also have us question the relevancy of God in our lives and that of His power and might.

We cannot afford to be halfhearted in our focus and our aim as Christ-followers.  It’s all or nothing.  We too must leave it all on the court.

If any of us are lacking focus or commitment today, first of all know that you’re not alone!  Every one of us struggles from time to time with our faith.  Sometimes our old selves causes us to hesitate and also trips us up along the way.  But it’s what we do next that counts.  Get back up and keep running, keep our focus on the prize, the model of holy living: Christ himself.  There’s a prayer chorus that says this;

All there is of me, Lord,

All there is of me,

Time and talents, day by day,

All I bring to thee;

All there is of me, Lord,

All there is of me,

On thine altar here I lay

All there is of me.”

Get back out there and run and don’t look back!  Get on with it!

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