Showing posts with label childlike faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childlike faith. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

I am gentle and lowly in heart[.]

Matthew 11:29

I am gentle and lowly in heart[.] Matthew 11:29b

I continue my study of The Character of Jesus.  For this morning, I focus on chapter 20: The Humility of Jesus where I highlighted in my Kindle version the following excerpts:

  • "[Matthew 11:29] is unique in the Gospel.  There is nothing else at all like it....here for the first time [Jesus] calls attention to one of his characteristics....[and he uses this moment] to teach [his followers] humility."
  •  "Possibly no other virtue in the catalogue of Christian virtues is so misunderstood as this one. No other one has been so often erroneously defined, no other grace has been so persistently counterfeited and caricatured. What do we mean by humility?...We know that Jesus was humble, we know also that he demands humility of us, we know that he took the ancient word and cleansed it and made it a lovely word, and yet when asked to define the meaning of it, how difficult it is to do."
  • "Jesus gave his disciples three great lessons on the subject of humility" [from] Matthew 18:1-5, Matthew 20:25-28, and John 13:4-17.
  • In Matthew 18:1-5, Jesus exhorts the disciples to become like little children.  "It is teachableness, docility, willingness to learn. A child is eager for knowledge, he is everlastingly asking questions, he is always bent on investigation, he pries into everything. He wants to go to the roots of everything....Not only is he free from self-sufficiency, but he is free from vanity. A little child is not vain of the belongings of its parents. It cares nothing for diamonds or silks, brown stone, or carriages. It plays with perfect contentment with a child in the street whose parents have [nothing]."
  • "It was because the Pharisees did not have it that he criticized them and condemned them. They were not teachable, they knew everything. Nobody could tell them anything. They were vain, they blew trumpets and called attention to their decorations. They loved salutations. They were ambitious, they were always pushing themselves forward, taking the chief places at the feasts."
  • "We get just a glimpse of him at the age of twelve, so hungry for knowledge that he will not go home, but lingers behind to ask the big teachers in the Temple just one more question. Always was he teachable. There is no trace of arrogance in him, no spirit of assumption. He is constantly talking to God, asking him questions, praying for new light. He cannot live without prayer. Prayer is the language of humility. Only the docile in heart ever pray. When we say that Jesus was a man of prayer, we say he was meek and lowly in heart."
  • In Matthew 20:25-28, Jesus shares with His disciples that "humility is...a willingness to serve.  A humble man is a man who is ready to make himself useful....He did not underestimate his powers, or make himself small, or feel himself to be unworthy; he simply came down to where men were in order to do them good. That is Christian humility."
  • In John 13:4-17 Jesus washes His disciples feet. "Knowing their dullness of understanding he goes on to explain the meaning of his action, telling them, just as he has been willing to do the work of a slave in order to serve them, so they also must be willing to serve one another. Here, again, we see what humility really is. It is laying aside one's dignity, it is making one's self of no reputation, it is a willingness to come down, it is a delight in rendering service...[I]t was because [Jesus] knew his divine origin and his divine destiny, and was conscious of his lofty position that he was willing to take the basin and the towel and do the work of a slave. This is the secret of humility everywhere and always."
  • "It is because we do not know that we have come from God, and forget that we are going back to Him that we make such an ado about our dignity, and prize so highly our reputation, and are so lordly and so lofty minded, and take such delight in putting on airs. Only he who is sure of God possesses the secret of humility."
  • "The humility which Jesus wants, and which he exemplified in his life, is a form of strength. Only the strong man can be really humble. It is willingness to lay aside one's rights, it is a refusal to use one's power, it is a readiness to come down and to make one's self of no reputation. Jesus was always giving up his rights, he was always refusing to use his power. Repeatedly he had the opportunity to wreak vengeance on his enemies, but he would not do it because he was so humble."
  • "Notwithstanding his exalted position, Paul reminds his Philippian converts that Jesus "made himself of no reputation and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. And therefore hath 'God highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow, and every tongue confess that he is Lord indeed.'"

Great words from Charles Jefferson indeed.  The author's words and the Holy Spirit this morning remind me of words from John 3:30 where John the Baptist shares that he must decrease and Jesus must increase.  It is humanity's nature to find worth, value, and significance from the world - of course this hinders an expression of humility defined in scripture.  Yet believers must recognize that our identity, worth, value and significance comes from Jesus - who sees us as worthy of salvation and justified (free from the charge of condemnation as a result of our sin).  Once we recognize our identity as a new creation in Christ, where we see our worth, value, and significance in Jesus, it becomes increasingly clear that we exist not to bring glory to ourselves but instead to glorify God.  It is from our strong conviction of who we are and to whom we belong where we become humble in God's eyes. 

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My Prayer: Father God, You are an awesome God that sees me as worthy of salvation and I am justified in Your eyes.  And You continue to pour out mercies that are new every morning that never cease.  Thank You Jesus!  I am not deserving of such blessings.  My sin is great and it continues...daily.  Please forgive me Jesus and help me overcome and turn from my sin towards You.  Help me love You with all of my heart, soul, and mind and love others as You love me.  Help me grow in my faith.  Give Lisa and myself wisdom and strength.  Please continue to heal Lisa of her cancer and from the side effects of chemo.  Help us lead Zach and Dustin to You Jesus and for them to choose You as their Lord and Savior.  Please provide Godly friends and spouses to Zach and Dustin.  Help me serve You, my family, my church, and others.  Help me understand, be obedient to, and apply Your message for me today and every day. 

Tuesday, January 28, 2025

“Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven."

Matthew 18:3

“Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven." Matthew 18:3

I continue pause my study of Zechariah and of the last four books of the OT (complete: Zephaniah, Haggai; to complete: Zechariah, Malachi) - using the Christ-Centered Exposition Commentary volume for this book.  Today, my preparation to lead Sunday school at my church, where our class is doing a study on prayer based on the book by A Praying Life, moves along.  Picking up where I left off in chapter 3 Become Like a Little Child [In Prayer], the book refers us to Matthew 18:3. Our prayer life should be without pretense or masks, acknowledging how life is messy and how children behave - impulsively, selfishly, unable to stay focused, etc.  We are encouraged to pray exactly where we are - authentically - even in the midst of how messy and chaotic our hearts and lives may feel. Whatever you are feeling - bring that to God - be real.  In chapter 4, Learning to Talk with Your Father, the book encourages us to ask persistently like a child (are we there yet?) and to believe like a child.  We are pointed to Luke 7:1-10 where a centurion seeks out Jesus to heal his servant and says to Jesus that all He needs to do is say it will happen and it will and Jesus commends the centurion for his faith.  As adults we become more cynical about others' commitments - we need to return to child-like faith and this will animate our prayer life.  As the chapter continues, we encouraged to see how we are to avoid focusing our prayer life as an exercise of smooth and eloquent speech when scripture shares how often it is not - see Ephesians 1 and 3 and Paul's prayer there is halting and scattered.   Chapter 4 winds down by emphasizing how we must understand that we have the Holy Spirit to guide us in our prayers - see Galatians 4:6

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My Prayer: Lord Jesus, You are an awesome God that gives me the Holy Spirit and I can never be separated from Your love.  Thank You that I can always come to You in prayer.  Guide me in prayer and give me more of a heart in prayer to bring whatever is in my heart to You.  I know You will take me however messy I am.  I am undeserving of such love.  My sin is great and it continues...daily.  Please forgive me Jesus and help me overcome and turn from my sin towards You.  Help me love You with all of my heart, soul, and mind and love others.  Help me grow in my faith.  Give Lisa and myself wisdom and strength.  Please continue to heal Lisa of her cancer and from the side effects of chemo.  Help us lead Zach and Dustin to You Jesus and for them to choose You as their Lord and Savior.  Please provide Godly friends and spouses to Zach and Dustin and help them choose You as their Lord and Savior.  Help me serve You, my family, my church, and others.  Help me understand, be obedient to, and apply Your message for me today and every day.

Monday, January 27, 2025

But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.”

Mark 10:14-15

But when Jesus saw it, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the children come to me; do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.”

I once again pause my study of Zechariah and of the last four books of the OT (complete: Zephaniah, Haggai; to complete: Zechariah, Malachi) - using the Christ-Centered Exposition Commentary volume for this book.  This week, I am preparing to lead Sunday school at my church, where our class is doing a study on prayer based on the book by A Praying Life.  This Sunday, our focus will be in Part I: Learning to Pray like a Child, chapters 7-8.  To start my preparation, I do some review, going back to chapters 1-2.

Chapter One looks at a nagging questions believers sometimes have with persistent prayer that appears unanswered, certainly not answered the way we seek it to be.  The question of course is what good does prayer do? This begins to move us in the direction of where our prayer should be - in that if we are frustrated or angry about our perceived lack of response from God, we should express this because God wants us just as we are - this is true for prayer just as it is with salvation.  When we were saved, we were saved despite our messy and sinful our lives are.  Similarly, as the book describes this as perhaps a more acute problem in the U.S. then elsewhere, we are distracted and uncomfortable with silence and halting speech.  This is OK in prayer again because God wants us where we are - we are a mess and that is OK.  Come to Him anyway!  As the book pivots to start describing what prayer is, we are encouraged to see prayer as an intimate time with friends.  We don't worry about how we talk with friends because it comes naturally.

Chapter Two picks up on this theme of prayer like time with friends and expands on this by being more present in the moment, pausing in the busyness of life to share our heart with God.  We can train ourselves to pray more by acknowledging how God works in all the moments of life - and by praising Him.  Similarly we can slow down to see the needs of others and lift them up in prayer throughout the day.  

Chapter 3 dives deeper on the details of how to pray and it starts by sharing how we are to become like a child.  Several key reasons why this is so is they are real, unfiltered, bold, persistent, and completely dependent - all attributes of how we should pray.  The author points to Mark 10:14-15. 

Lord Jesus, help me have a heart for You such that I see You as Father and I become more like a child in prayer life - real, unfiltered, bold, persistent and utterly dependent.  

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My Prayer: Lord Jesus, You are an awesome God who loves me and who is full of amazing grace - saving me while an enemy and hostile to You, ignoring the messiness of my life and sin...and in fact cleansing me!  Thank You Jesus!  I am not deserving of how You save and cleanse me from sin.  My sin is great and it continues...daily.  Please forgive me Jesus and help me overcome and turn from my sin towards You.  Help me love You with all of my heart, soul, and mind and love others as You love me.  Help me grow in my faith.  Give Lisa and myself wisdom and strength.  Please continue to heal Lisa of her cancer and from the side effects of chemo.  Help us lead Zach and Dustin to You Jesus and for them to choose You as their Lord and Savior.  Please provide Godly friends and spouses to Zach and Dustin.  Help me serve You, my family, my church, and others.  Help me understand, be obedient to, and apply Your message for me today and every day.

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven. And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.

Matthew 18

Therefore, whoever takes the lowly position of this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.  And whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me. v4-5

Jesus wants us to cultivate a relationship with Him such that we are like children: completely dependent on Him for all our needs, curious and passionate about learning about Him, and humble.

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.  Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.  Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth.  Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. Matthew 5:3-6

My Prayer: Lord Jesus, You are an incredible God who loves me, and provides for all of my needs - thank You Jesus!  I am not worth such love and blessings.  I worry, I am quick to anger, I gossip, etc. among my many sin.  Please forgive me Jesus and help me overcome and turn from my sin towards You.  Help me love You with all of my heart, soul, and mind and love others as You love me. Help me grow in my faith.  Give Lisa and myself wisdom and strength.  Please heal Lisa of her cancer and from the side effects of chemo.  Help us lead Zach and Dustin to You Jesus and for them to choose You as their Lord and Savior.  Please provide Godly friends and spouses to Zach and Dustin.  Help me serve You, my family, my church, and others.  Help me understand, be obedient to, and apply Your message for me today and every day.