He Gives More Grace
“For we all stumble in many ways,” James wrote (3:2). Amen to that. Most Christians I know are painfully aware of the many ways we fall short. Some failures are obvious; others are tucked away in the corners of the heart where no one else sees. But we know. And God knows. If you’ve spent any time in James 4, you’ve noticed he doesn’t exactly ease into things. He comes out swinging. He accuses his readers of wanting what they…
Cheating on God
If you’re squeamish about a little PG-13 spiritual honesty, you might want to bail now. James didn’t exactly specialize in soft landings. He called things what they were, with no euphemisms and no polite throat-clearing. And he certainly wasn’t afraid of hurting feelings if it meant waking people up. Case in point: this line probably stung like a slap in the face, and James knew it would: You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is…
Why God Might Not Be Answering
Most of us would like to believe that God says yes to all our prayers. But he doesn’t, at least not in the way we want or when we want. You’ve felt that, right? James says one of the reasons is uncomfortably simple: You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your pas-sions (James 4:3). I can look back on specific seasons when I felt like God was ignoring me. I begged him for…
Vincent
Imagine you walked into my house and on my wall was an original Vincent Van Gogh painting. You would probably assume I was either very wealthy or I was an art thief because Van Gogh’s paintings are virtually priceless. You might also assume that Van Gogh enjoyed a life of fame and riches. But that wasn’t at all the life he enjoyed. During his lifetime, Vincent was basically unknown. His parents ridiculed him for his failures. He almost never became…
The Difference that Love Makes
The parable of the Prodigal son in Luke 15 is special partly because it is one of the passages that gives us a direct glimpse into the kind of Father God is. The son decided he would rather have the riches that he would one day have inherited from his father than to live in his father’s presence. So, he took his things and left. But somewhere along the way, he realized the difference that love makes. When in the…
Can I help you get that out of your eye?
This passage has always convinced me that Jesus had a sense of humor. If what he’s saying wasn’t so completely serious, it’d be downright hilarious. Try to visualize the image he paints: Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you. Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that…
March 2021 Philippines Mission Work Newsletter
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February 2021 Philippines Mission Work Newsletter
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No tears
Back in the summer, I heard about a little baby who died after accidentally being left in a sweltering car for three hours. That poor child. And that poor family. I can’t even fathom how overwhelming their grief is, how much guilt they feel, how many tears they’re shedding. It’s a reminder—if we needed one—of how many struggles there are in the world. How many people are suffering? How many tears they’re crying. When’s the last time you wept? It’s…
Penniless
I was getting off the interstate a while back when I saw a man at the bottom of the exit ramp holding a “NEED FOOD” sign. I’m always stirred by different feelings when I see this—compassion, a bit of guilt, curiosity, shame. Why doesn’t he have food? Should I give him money? But it’s also interesting to recognize that this is the image Jesus used to start the most famous sermon ever preached. Most people in his nation thought the…
Be Kind
Several years ago one of my kids was withdrawn and quiet—a reasonably rare occurrence at our house in those days—so I asked him what was wrong. He hesitated, then with a little prodding told me that it was because I had spoken harshly to him earlier that day. I wish I could say it was a case of childish hypersensitivity on his part, that he was wearing his feelings on his coat sleeves, that he needed to toughen up .…
Seeing through the fog
It was a fog-shrouded morning on July 4, 1952, when Florence Chadwick dove into the chilly waters of the Pacific Ocean. She intended to become the first woman ever to swim from Catalina Island to the California coast, but after she had been swimming for over fifteen hours she became exhausted, cold, and discouraged. She asked her trainers in the boat beside her to take her out of the water. They pleaded with her, telling her they could see the…