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Posts Tagged ‘jesus’

Chatting with Jesus
Monday, December 2, 2024

Lord, you know me. Most of the time, it’s you and me, Jesus, living fully in your blessings. I’m joyful and pleasant, sharing your love and kindness with everyone. However, at times, the “other” me shows up, the irritable, grouchy me who everyone wants to avoid. As a Christ follower, this wishy-washy version of me should never be allowed out of its cage. No, you haven’t abandoned me when I act contrary to your Word, but my actions and words do make you look bad, and for that shame, I’m deeply sorrowful. I repent and ask your forgiveness.

As Christ followers, we’re commanded to love one another. For most believers, this is a challenge. We don’t know how. Jesus. teach us how to love as you love.

“So now I am giving you a new commandment: Love one another. Just as I have loved you, you should love one another. Your love for one another will prove to the world you are my disciples” (John 13:34).

Without doubt, if we could consistently see others as you see them, our love attitudes would change. You know their struggles with sinful issues that keep them batted down from being all you created them to be. You know their fears, anxieties. Our judgmental attitude prevents us from seeing their issues.

Help us remember when you went to the cross, you redeemed everyone, even those we find obnoxious and want to smack upside their head. Lord, open our eyes to see they may be praying the same prayer regarding us when we are hard to love.

Help us love one another so others will know we are Christ followers. Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus
Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Lord, are you sure you didn’t overlook me on this one? Why didn’t you give me the gift of discerning the true condition of someone heart? You can trust me to put those whose hearts are not fully devoted to you in their place. I’ll point out their errors while I punch their ticket for the guilt trip train. And how did you overlook the psalmist when distributing this gift? Like me, he would have been excellent at pointing out others’ faults.

Lord, forgive my sarcasm. I’m being foolish, mocking those religious critics who take it upon themselves to hold others to an unattainable higher faith. Only you attained that perfection while you walked among us.

Self-righteous people can be annoying. Their holier-than-thou attitudes belittle the grace you freely give. Fortunately, you have spiritual chainsaws that cut off the legs of their spiritual high-horses. Judgmentalism blinds us from seeing others as you see us. The psalmist viewed these misguided believers and took action to avoid joining that fraternity.

“But for me it is good to be near God; I have made the Lord God my refuge …” (Psalm 73:28 NLT).

Remembering the pain from his wandering, the psalmist vowed never to return to that spiritual wilderness. Keeping his mind continually on you guaranteed staying close to you. Fleeing to you for refuge, he found the peace he needed and the stability his erratic soul sought. Living in rebellion against you is no way to live.

For over 3500 years, this truth hasn’t changed. Lord, we pray those who call you Lord will find that same peace and stability for our souls, that we may be near you. Riding our judgmental high horse is such a bumpy ride.

Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus
Monday, November 18, 2024

Lord, reading the Psalms, I get the impression the psalmist’s life resembled a rollercoaster. One moment, he lived a godly life, serving you. Next, he wandered from faith and found himself surrounded by enemies, fighting for his life. One such psalm described his need for immediate divine assistance. Evidently, everything he tried failed to deliver. As he clung to the end of his proverbial rope, what other choice did he have but to call on you. Personally, the psalmist situation sounds familiar.

Most folks might not face the dangers the psalmist faced. Everyone has been broken at one time, some multiple times. We face mountains we cannot climb, walk around, or tunnel through. Mired in misery from one life’s disappointment after another, countless multitudes echo the psalmist’s prayer.

“From the depths of despair, O Lord, I call for your help. Hear my cry, O Lord. Pay attention to my prayer” (Psalm 130:1, 2 NLT).
No more denial. The time for complete transparency and honesty arrived. Scripture suggests the psalmist knew his problems rose from his sin. His hesitancy at repentance compounded his misery. In his pleading, he reminded you, and himself, of your merciful character.

“Lord, if you kept a record of our sins, who, O Lord, could ever survive?” (Psalm 130:3)

Stubbornly, an enemy still hung around. It’s true you may not have kept a record of his sins, however, the psalmist did. Every day, the devil reminded him of his sin record. Every day, your Spirit faithfully revived him. He wrote of your mercy.

“But you offer forgiveness, that we might learn to fear you” (Psalm 130:4)

Lord, your love allows all who believe the freedom to fearlessly love you with all our being. I wanna live like that. No more rollercoaster.
Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Lord, did the psalmist have a vision of society 3000 years in the future, or was he writing about the society he lived in? Psalm Chapter 11 describes the dangers when power falls into the hands of the ungodly. Having some degree of power challenged the psalmist convictions.

Would he remain true to his convictions, or would he compromise under persecution? Would he govern with a velvet glove or an iron fist? The psalmist made his convictions clear: “I trust in the Lord for protections. Why do you say to me, ‘Fly like a bird to the mountains for safety’” (Psalm 11:2). In other words, I stand by my convictions and I’m not going anywhere.

Lord, the psalmist knew who opposed his every move to remain faithful to you. The anti-God enemies, controlled by the prince of darkness, threatened to destroy not only the psalmist but anyone who believes in you. The devil has not ceased his plan to destroy the righteous. What the psalmist wrote could be today’s headline: “The foundations of law and order have collapsed. What can the righteous do?” (Psalm 11:3)

“What can the righteous do?” the psalmist asked. He had only one response. “[But] the Lord is in his holy Temple, the Lord still rules from Heaven (verse 11:4). Now, we echo the psalmist’s response. You, Lord, are in control of our destiny.

We witness society falling apart around us. Unchecked power has corrupted every level of government. Amid continual lying, how can we trust anything our leaders say. People foolishly believe they will get away with their corruption. “He [the Lord God] watches everyone closely, examining every person on Earth. The Lord examines both the righteous and the wicked,” (verse 11:5).

Lord, we might not understand all that is happening. Nonetheless, we trust you are in control and things are unfolding according to your plan. Therefore, we confidently stand with the psalmist: “I trust in the Lord for protection.”

Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus
November 1,2024

Lord, the psalmist finally understood how your act of grace wiped his many sins from his sin record. He must have felt the heavy burden of guilt lift from his soul. The exposure of his secret sins must have haunted his every waking moment. The fear his deceptions, his half-truths, his sins of omission now lay forever buried in God’s sea of forgetfulness. Such a relief to know his sin record held no evidence against him. After making restitutions with those he wronged, with a heart free of guilt and fear, he penned these famous words:

“Oh, what joy for those whose disobedience is forgiven, whose sin is put out of sight! Yes, what joy for those whose record the Lord has cleared of guilt, whose lives are lived in complete honesty!” (Psalm 32:1,2 NLT).

Honesty. Complete honesty. Countless times, the psalmist might have twisted the facts concerning his sin to justify his actions. With his record now wiped clean by your grace, the psalmist began his new life of complete honesty. Living in truth in all matters would bring the rewarding life of peace with you and others that the psalmist needed.

Lord, come to think of it, that is the kind of life I desire as well. As a former race car driver, a life of complete honesty is what I need. A non-worry life of complete honesty with you, others, and myself. No more half-truths. No more tangled webs of deceptions we cannot talk ourselves out of. Instead, more peace. More joy amid problems. More freedom to love you. More freedom to become who you created us to be.

Yes, Lord, that my life might honor you as I am determined to live in complete honesty. Amen, Jesus!

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Chatting with Jesus

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Lord, there hasn’t been a time when I wasn’t good. Growing up, I was good at lying to my parents, lying to my teachers. I worked at being good telling whoppers, making me appear as someone I was not. I was a good cheater. I’d do anything good or bad to win. I was good at manipulating the naive to get what I wanted. Yes, I was good alright—good at being bad.

Reading the psalmist’s story, he could have been the poster child of being good at being bad. As king, he had the power to do as he pleased, and for a period, he did. But as the psalmist found, as well as those who forsake goodness to embrace the bad have found too, that wandering path leads to heartaches, disappointments, and not to mention, opposition from you. What a sad way to live. You opened his spiritual eyes.

The psalmist repented, corrected the wrongs he could, and made amends to those he harmed. His famous Psalm 101 details his determination to live a changed life. Later, while reflecting on his faith journey, he recorded his breakthrough.

“You are good, and you do what is good. Teach me your demands” (Psalm 119:68).

The psalmist stated without doubt you are good. There is no darkness, no evil, no “badness” in you, nor ever will be. Lord, you heard his humble prayer and honored his plea: “Lord, teach me to be good as you are good.” I desire to be good at being good.

Might my prayer be the same as the psalmist. Teach me how to be “good as you are good.” Help me show your love and kindness and be your Light in this dark world. Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Lord, in the beginning when you created the heavens and the earth, you created man in your image (Genesis 1–3). Because you created us in your image, you placed deep inside each person a desire to know you.

While the psalmist meditated upon your glory, your Spirit inspired him to write “You made me and created me [in your image]. Give me understanding so I can learn your commands” (Psalm 119:73)

Lord, after creating us, you didn’t leave us alone to figure out this life thing. The psalmist’s understood how living by the Golden Rule—do unto others as we would have them do unto you—was essential to knowing you. That rule is self-explanatory. Of course, despots, tyrannical rulers, and corrupt folks throughout time have ignored the Golden Rule, but for the most part, people have abided peacefully with one another by this concept.

Your sovereign Word outlines how to live. If we want a peaceful and meaningful life, to persevere in pain, remain joyful amid suffering, comforted in despair—live according to your Word (1 Thessalonians 5:18).

Show us how we can know you and have a personal relationship with you. Give us understanding of who you are. What does your Word mean? How does your Word change us? You created us to know you. Teach us, Lord, to understand you are who you claim you are, and will do what you claim you will do. We might know about you, Lord, but we want to know you personally, just as you created us to desire you.

Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus

Monday, October 14, 2024

Lord, those close to the psalmist kept after him. “Man, what are you doing? Have you lost your mind?” His friends tried to reason with him. “Abandoning God’s ways isn’t working out for you, is it?” they warned. Those who loved him prayed he would come back to sanity and abandon his stubbornness. He was headed toward a cliff.

Like many believers, we go through a period of questioning our beliefs. Does God really care about me? Am I on the right track? Are my convictions really true? What am I missing out on by committing to follow you, Jesus?

Examining the psalmist up and down spiritual walk with you, we see how much we are like him. After all, like us, he was a believer. Maybe he took for granted that you would bless his actions whether they were in your plans or not. Often, Lord, you and the psalmist were not on the same page, or should I say, on the same scroll. That scenario so resembles me.

Scripture tells of the psalmist’s plight when he wandered from you. Everything that could go wrong went wrong. Lord, you loved him too much to allow him to continue down that destructive path. In mercy, You opened his spiritual eyes and he acknowledged his folly:

I pondered the direction of my life and turned to follow Your laws. Psalm 119:59

Lord, may I learn from the psalmist’s experience. When I ponder my life’s direction, forgive my wandering. Help me keep my mind steadied on you and your precepts. As the psalmist discovered, so have I. True happiness and contentment is found by living for you, Jesus.

Amen.

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Chatting with Jesus
Friday, October 11, 2024

Lord, how did we get bogged down in such a busy do-more/see-more lifestyle? We rush from one “must-do” activity and scurry to another “can’t-miss” event. Then we hustle off to another “must-attend” meeting. We know we need to slow down, but our busy lifestyle will not allow it. In all this busyness, we must ask ourselves if our participation in all these activities is necessary. For me, in my younger years, I thrived in such environments. Now older, and hopefully wiser, I enjoy a slower pace.

Media ads claim we’ll never have the quality of life we deserve unless we have the latest gadget. New miracle creams promise to keep us looking young well past our twilight years. Unless we have the latest cell phone, which comes with lunar rocket programming, how can we keep up with our friends? Madison Avenue is aware of our desire for the latest widgets. Their advertising keeps us focused on their client’s product. Why can’t we just live primitive lives without these latest marvels?

When the psalmist committed to live totally for you, the devil lost him forever. His only tactic was to disrupt the psalmist’s walk of faith. The psalmist wrote how these distractions, and the never-ending temptations, tried to lure him away from you.

“Turn my heart to your decrees … Turn my eyes from looking at what is worthless. Give me life in your ways: (Psalm 119:36, 37).

Lord, that I might pray the same. Help me keep my eyes on you and may I focus on fulfilling the plan you have for me. I’m thankful I find my purpose, joy, and contentment in you and not in man’s worthless marvels.

Amen, Jesus.

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Chatting with Jesus

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Lord, what did the psalmist need to be set free from? His pride may have caused him to stumble in his plight. Nothing to fear here, the psalmist may have told himself. No big deal. I got this. After all, I’m smart enough to figure things out.  But what probably started as a minor problem had evolved into a distressful situation

It appears his problem got out of hand. With his spiritual and emotional wellbeing disrupted, he recorded his situation to show what to do and not to do.

“In my distress I prayed to the Lord, and the Lord answered me and set me free” (Psalm 118:5).

Lord, you’ve seen the countless times I reacted the same as the psalmist. How many times have I ignored a problem, thinking it’s so minor it will solve itself, or just fade away. No need to bother you, Lord, since you have much more to do in the universe. How many times have you proved me wrong?  Too many times I’ve allowed the enemy of our soul, the devil, take an issue and blow it up into an overwhelming distressful situation? How did it get to this point?

Your answer is simple: “Why didn’t you bring me your problem in the first place? I’m for you. I’m on your side. Read my Word:

“The Lord is for me, so I will have no fear.  What can mere people do to me?” (Psalm 118:6).

Lord, as I’m doing life here, help me bring my molehills to you before they become mountains I cannot climb. Help me not fear what others may think. There is no fear while you are in control of my situations, Jesus. Amen.

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