Thursday, January 2, 2020

Mighty to Save


“We don’t know what to do, but our eyes are on you” (2Chr 20:12).

     Jehoshaphat uttered this prayer when faced with annihilation by opposing armies. His enemies were so powerful he was confident that his soldiers didn’t stand a chance against them unless God intervened. Though he felt afraid as he realistically assessed the seriousness of the situation, he resolved to put his trust in God’s sovereign rule over all the kingdoms and praised Him for His greatness, love and power (2Chr 20:6). 
Realistic Assessment
     Like Jehoshaphat, we have to face the reality of our circumstances in order to see our great need for God’s help and ask for his provision and deliverance. God isn’t overwhelmed or frustrated by the scope of our problems. In fact, He takes pleasure in coming to our aid and cares about all the details of our lives (Ps 37:23). He’s not just concerned about the big stuff life like wars and kingdoms, but promises that He’s numbered the hairs on our head and knows when a seemingly insignificant sparrow falls to the ground.
     We often assess the difficulty we’re in with a sense of shame and fear – shame that we’re not able to rescue ourselves and fear that God will not help us. Our tendency, like Adam and Eve’s, is to hide and try to use our own resources to solve the problem. But we never have to.
God has provided everything we need in Christ to overcome. If we’re in Christ, we’re adopted into His family (Eph 1:5), counted as righteous and at peace with God (Rom 5:1-2). We can confidently come before Him and “receive grace and mercy in our time of need” (Heb 4:16). Since God’s wrath has been forever removed from those in Christ, we have His undeserved favor, mercy and love (Mic 7:18), so much so that He calls us His daughters and sons (1Jn 3:1). We are His beloved!
Resolve to Trust and Praise Him
     Sometimes God delivers us with sudden victories like He did with Jehoshaphat and his army. The opposition falls before us, toppling like dominoes. Doors that were once slammed shut are flung open by His mighty hand. In the blink of an eye hope springs to life where despair once dwelt, and we stand in awe of God’s unstoppable power. Other times His deliverance comes more gradually in ways we’d never even considered. The armies of life blast through and plunder everything in sight, leaving us with sparse supplies of joy and a sense of confusion. We’re tempted to think that God hasn’t heard us or that He doesn’t care, but His promises guarantee the opposite.
     Vital to living by faith, especially in hard times, is remembering His Word and praising Him for those promises, in Christ, to do everything He said (2 Cor 1:20). Our praise isn’t necessarily that God will quickly eliminate our current struggle, because many times our greatest blessings come from standing firm in Christ through the hardest battles. But our praise flows from hearts that recognize His absolute, unchanging goodness. We can be certain that every one of His thoughts and actions toward us are always good, and that He will work out our current situation, and all future trials, for our ultimate good and the glory of His name (1Jn 1:5, Rom 8:28).
     This commitment to stand firmly on the foundation of God’s unchanging character and all-powerful love, enables us to face the unknown with faith that He alone is in control. The battle we’re in may end quickly or rage on for much longer than we wanted or expected. Either way, we do not have to give way to fear or dread. Like Jehoshaphat, we can worship our Father God with confident, unashamed hearts, knowing that He has heard every prayer and will act on our behalf at just the right minute (Ps 116:1).

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Putting on the Breastplate of Righteousness


For many years I remained relatively confused about what it meant to “put on” the armor of God and appropriate it by faith. While I understood how to incorporate certain parts of the armor when praying and facing struggles, I didn’t understand how these pieces were interconnected and most importantly how they formed my new identity in Christ.  I began to see that each piece represents a part of God’s strength, his very nature, that he extends to us when we become his children. This helped me realize that putting on the armor was about standing by faith on what God has done for me in union with Christ and living out by the power of the Holy Spirit.
After coming to know Christ as Savior and Lord in my 20’s, I remember very clearly understanding that my sins had been forgiven– that the old was gone and the new had come and that I had become a new creation in Christ. There was no doubt in my mind that I was born again and that my life was now joined to Christ by the Holy Spirit. However, I began to struggle as a believer when I would sin and do something I knew was not pleasing to God. I would try confessing and then would end up repeating the sin again and again. My solution, which was not God’s solution, was to practice what some refer to as sin management and Priscilla Shirer calls perfection righteousness and comparison righteousness. I would strive to be perfect in my own strength and keep the Law by my own good works. At other times I would give up and compare myself with others in order to find encouragement. Neither way of trying to achieve righteousness worked and instead led to pride when I felt like I was successful in keeping God’s Law or shame and regret when I felt like I failed. But worse than that, it left what seemed like a rift between me and God. Because I was trusting in my own ability to be righteous, I sometimes felt afraid of God and even hesitant to draw close to him, to confess and repent of sins. This fear led to an underlying sense that I was not accepted by him even though I knew in my mind what he said in his word about me.
Looking back, I understand that I was failing to put on the full armor of God so that I could walk in and live out my new identity in Christ. Though I read and studied the Truth I was not doing what it said in some key areas and though I believed in the righteousness of Christ, I was not appropriating it to my own life. On a practical level, I was allowing sins to remain, and I was not dealing with them. Because I was not wearing the Belt of truth and at many times not believing what God said about certain sins that were sometimes normalized in culture, I was an easy target for condemnation and accusation. For example, when I experienced a conflict with someone in my family I felt the freedom to say hurtful things within some parameters mainly because I wanted to reserve my right to tell them what I thought. This, of course, would be followed by a time of deep sorrow and repentance, but would happen again and again and again without much sign of growth. I knew God’s Word said not to let any unwholesome talk come out of my mouth, but I was not fully committed to listening to, trusting and following his truth on this. I also had a faith commitment to saying what I wanted, which made me double minded, according to James 1. While this pattern of sin did not change my righteous standing before God it grieved his Spirit and opened the door for the flesh and the enemy to bring condemnation and accusation. It was a major chink in my armor.
As I began calling on the Lord for help in this struggle against what felt like defeating sin and condemnation, he began to point me to the truth about my righteousness in Christ. I began praying through the Ephesians 6 passage in the mornings with my husband and meditating on other passages that addressed my new identity in Christ. My husband was also praying almost daily and asking the Lord to open my mind and heart to understand this truth about my identity in Christ.
In this process of learning and growing in grace, Romans 6 has become a key passage the Lord is using to show me the vital connection between knowing and standing in my identity in Christ as the one who is declared righteous, holy, and forgiven and then walking in the Spirit instead of fulfilling the desires of the flesh. This passage reminds me that when I came to faith in Christ I died in my inner person with him and was raised from the dead with him so that my old self was crucified, and I have been freed from sin so that I am no longer a slave to it (6:5-7). Instead my obligation as a daughter of the King is to live in the new way of the Spirit to count myself as dead to sin (vs. 11) and to offer myself to God as an instrument of righteousness because I am now alive in Christ (vs 13). One of my favorite verses that speaks about this is “You have been set free from sin and have become slaves to righteousness (Rm 6:19).
Remembering that Christ’s righteousness has been imputed or credited to my account and believing it by faith changes everything. Instead of waking up each day and believing the lie that I’m destined to be overrun by certain sins, I can believe what God says about me and my new identity in Christ – that in him I have the very righteousness of Christ because Christ dwells in me and I in him (Gal 2:20). All of my sins, past, present and future have been nailed to the cross and I have been accounted as having perfect obedience to God. I can also trust that while I will still struggle against sins because I’m still living in a fleshly body, I have the ability in Christ to resist in the Spirit and walk in the truth of his Word. Knowing about and resting in his righteousness provides the foundation and motivation to walk in the light instead of in darkness.
I’m thankful for what the Lord is teaching me about my identity in Christ, his perfect righteousness and the call to offer myself as a living sacrifice to him.  At the same time, I know that I have so much more to learn and so many areas to keep growing. The great news is that I don’t have to try to fight the battle or walk in my own righteousness anymore. I can rest in the perfect righteousness of Christ that has been credited to my account and rely on the Spirit’s wisdom and power to walk it out. When I do sin, I can run to the Father knowing that there is never going to be any condemnation waiting for me there. Jesus Christ has already paid the satisfaction of God’s wrath, and he lives to intercede for me as my defense attorney (Jn 2:1-2, Rm 3:24-26).
Ephesians passage prayer:
Dear Heavenly Father, I present myself to you today as a living sacrifice, one who is alive from the dead. I offer every part of myself as an instrument of righteousness and ask that you would be honored and glorified in everything I do, say and think. By faith, I put on the belt of truth and declare that your Word is loving and true – it’s been purified by the fire 7 times and is perfect. I put on the breastplate of your perfect righteousness which was given to me in Christ. I thank you that you have declared me holy, blameless and righteous in Christ and that there is now no condemnation for me. I put on shoes fitted with the good news of the Gospel of peace and go out with the desire to speak your truth in love. I take up the shield of faith in your faithful love and trust that you and your promises will never fail or forsake me. You promise that you are my shield and my exceeding great reward. I hold up this shield against all the fiery darts of the enemy. I put on the helmet of your sure salvation and thank you that I have been given an eternal inheritance that can never perish spoil or fade. I commit by faith to taking thoughts captive throughout the day to the obedience of Christ and casting down every imagination and idea that tries to exalt itself against the knowledge of God. I take up the sword of the Spirit, which is the spoken word of God and I ask that when I open my mouth you’ll empower me to boldly make known the mystery of the Gospel as I ought. And lastly, I commit myself by faith to pray in the Spirit on all occasions for others with all kinds of prayers and requests. I pray this all in Jesus’ name.