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Do Not Depart

Encouragement and Tools to Abide in God's Word

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Don’t just think – drink!

December 7, 2011 by Lisa Burgess Leave a Comment

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Ever been really thirsty?

You get a glass of crushed ice, pour a cold Diet Dr. Pepper (that’s my favorite) on top.

You believe this will quench your thirst. So there. Thirst quenched? Not hardly.

Believing is more than thinking. It is picking up the glass and drinking.

Belief is not merely an agreement with facts in the head; it is also an appetite for God in the heart, which fastens on Jesus for satisfaction. “He who comes to me shall not hunger and he who believes in me shall never thirst!”

Therefore eternal life is not given to people who merely think that Jesus is the Son of God. It is given to people who drink from Jesus as the Son of God. “The water that I shall give him shall become in him a well of water springing up to eternal life” (John 4:14).

He is also the bread of life, and those who feed on him for nourishment and satisfaction live by him. “I am the living bread that came down out of heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he shall live forever” (John 6:51).

The point of these images of drinking and eating is to make clear the essence of faith. It is more than believing that there is such a thing as water and food; and it is more than believing that Jesus is life-giving water and food. Faith is coming to Jesus and drinking the water and eating the food so that we find our hearts satisfied in him.

~ John Piper, Future Grace

 

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For the month of December we are sharing posts and quotes to help us escape the Cycle of Try Harder, through Believing Better.

Read more Believing Better posts here.

Our First Problem

December 6, 2011 by Katie Orr 2 Comments

Our first problem is that our attitude toward sin is more self-centered than God-centered. We are more concerned about our own “victory” over sin than we are about the fact that our sins grieve the heart of God. We cannot tolerate failure in our own struggle with sin chiefly because we are success-oriented, not because we know it is offensive to God.

God wants us to walk in obedience—not victory. Obedience is oriented toward God; victory is oriented toward self. This may seem to be merely splitting hairs over semantics, but there is a subtle, self-centered attitude at the root of many of our difficulties with sin. Until we face the is attitude and deal with it we will not consistently walk in holiness.

—Jerry Bridges, The Pursuit of Holiness

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For the month of December we are sharing posts and quotes to help us escape the Cycle of Try Harder, through Believing Better.

Read more Believing Better posts here.
 

Calling All Sinners!

December 5, 2011 by Sandra Peoples Leave a Comment

Levi was at work, sitting in his tax booth, when Jesus walked by and said, “Follow me” (Mark 2:14). The Bible says Levi rose and followed Him. Then Jesus went to Levi’s house and many “tax collectors and sinner” were there, along with Jesus’ disciples. The scribes and Pharisees observed the scene and asked Jesus’ disciples, “Why does he eat with tax collectors and sinners?” Jesus heard them and answered, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I came not to call the righteous, but sinners” (Mark 2:17).

I think of Jesus’ words when I feel like I’ve done too much to ask for His forgiveness again.

I think of Jesus’ words when I think I’m not good enough.

I think of Jesus’ words when I want to give-up on praying for someone else to come to know Him.

Jesus loves sinners. He loves that moment you realize you are a sinner for the first time. That’s why He came—to call you into a relationship with Him that’s not based on your resume of good works, but your need for Him.

Jesus loves you even as you continue to sin. As you wrestle and struggle and try to do better, He continues to call you to Himself. He provides forgiveness and He also provides rest. In this passage in Luke, Jesus is hanging out, caring for the sinners and tax collectors. They are comfortable in His presence because they can feel His love for them. He loves them enough to call them to turn from their sin and follow Him, as He called Levi to do.

Jesus came to save sinners. Praise Him today for your salvation and for the continued process of sanctification in your life. Pray for those who still believe they are well and don’t have need for a physician.

Abiding Fruit :: Gentleness :: One Thing I Try To Remember

December 5, 2011 by Lara 11 Comments

I can pinpoint the sin of others really well — especially those closest to me. If they asked, I could give them a detailed, alphabetical list of exactly what’s “wrong with them.” Meanwhile I have this huge plank hanging from my own eye. It’s causing me to hemorrhage but I don’t notice.

That’s why I have to actively remember something.


We’re all in process. All of us. Including me. Especially me.





flickr photo credit: lauren rushing


Paul tells us to restore others in a spirit of gentleness, keeping watch of ourselves lest we be tempted. (Gal. 6:1) If I forget that I am in process, just like everyone else on this planet, then I start pointing fingers. If I forget that I’m desperate for the grace of my God, then pride tempts me.

Love sometimes gets a little messy. God sometimes calls us to confront the sin in another. But we’re to do it in a spirit of gentleness. To maintain a gentle spirit, especially when my emotions flare, I have to remember who I am in light of God. I have to remember that I too am in process.


How do you keep a spirit of gentleness when confronting the sin of another?

What spoke to you this week in the Abiding Fruit study?

Hiding His Word Link-up

December 2, 2011 by Katie Orr 6 Comments

Today is the day! Come and link-up your posts, vlogs and instagrams. Anything that shares your journey to make scripture memory a life-long habit!

 
In case you missed it, here are three reasons why I encourage you to recite your memory work to others.

Be sure to comment on a few posts, and encourage one another in our pursuit of Hiding His Word in our hearts! If you don’t have a blog, but are memorizing scripture and want to share about it, leave a comment to let us know how things are going, or share tips that have been helpful to you.

He Came to Proclaim

December 2, 2011 by Julie 3 Comments

visualbiblealive.com

Sometimes it’s easy to feel like we just here to do things like laundry, drive carpools, and empty the dishwasher.  People pull us into the black hole of meeting needs. Other times it’s easy to wonder why we exist at all. Do you know why you’re here? So much about Jesus’ coming was unique, including the fact that He knew exactly why He was on earth.

 

After healing crowds of desperate and hurting people, Jesus slipped away for some solitude and rest, apart from the black hole of needs. But they found him, longing for their Healer to stay with them. So relieved by His help, Capernaum wanted exclusive rights to Jesus. Even He faced pressure to keep His purpose the priority.

 “I must preach the good news of the kingdom of God to other towns as well; for I was sent for this purpose” (Luke 4:43).

It was necessary and right for the Messiah to announce the glad tidings that the Kingdom of God was coming. For people long focused on physical agony or even oppression by demons, the real life-changing news was the rule of Almighty God over all things. Unlike the words of prophets until that point, Jesus brought word that grace would reign because of the one time sacrifice of His life. By taking on human form without sin, Jesus provided for God’s mercy and rule. Though the crowds didn’t know it, hearing about the Kingdom and the news of salvation was the main message they needed.

 

Found in the solitary place by the grateful but greedy and needy crowds, Jesus did not waver in knowing why He came to earth.  “I was sent for this purpose,” to preach “the good news of the kingdom of God” to all. He was intentionally sent by God His Father to an appointed destination, earth, as Savior and Proclaimer to the world.

 

We’re here for so much more than laundry or shopping for presents or making cookies or addressing cards. Just as Jesus knew why He was sent here, we’ve been commissioned to “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15, NKJV).  Maybe we’ll use laundry or a gift or a cookie or a card to do it, but whatever we do, let’s do as Jesus did.  Let’s proclaim the good news. That’s why we’re here.

 

~ Is there someone in the “crowd” around you who needs you to proclaim good news to them this Christmas?

Believing Better

December 1, 2011 by Katie Orr 24 Comments

Think of a struggle you have. Lingering sin that just doesn’t seem to go away. Maybe it is a tendency towards fear and anxiety? Do you struggle with impatience? Laziness? Pride?

How do you typically try to fix the problem?

The Cycle of Try Harder

I notice a cycle many of us get caught in. I saw it in college students, when I worked with Cru. I see it in church ministry. I experience it in my own life.

It starts with a need to change behavior, a longing for victory over sin.

Do this. Don’t do that. Try this, and that Take a look around, and try what she does.

When all of that doesn’t work, go look for a “better” church with a “better” pastor. Try a conference. A retreat. Another Beth Moore Study. Find an accountability partner…

TRY. TRY. TRY.

People and tools certainly have a part to play in our personal growth (and I am in no way suggesting that you stop going to church, or doing your Bible study!) But, even the best preacher, the greatest tools, and our most sincere efforts cannot change our hearts.

Effort spent on the Cycle of Trying Harder leads to frustration, failure, and it does not produce true and lasting change. It is impossible to keep this “wheel” going; whether it takes weeks or years, failure comes, and it leaves us stagnant and feeling guilty.

Two Roads Leading to the Same Thing

Some use this guilt as fuel to try even harder. They jump back in—more resolved than ever to change—but failure comes sooner or later, and the cycle continues on. Many have managed to keep this wheel going their whole life; they are exhausted, prideful souls who don’t experience the grace of God in their day-to-day living.

Others eventually see the futility, and recognize that they will never be able to change. They usually give up the cycle altogether; they quit trying to change themselves, stop coming to church, give up reading their Bible and the pursuit of being good. They, also, do not experienced the grace of God in their day-to-day living.

The problem with the Cycle of Try Harder, is that our energies are focused on the wrong thing: our own effort.

Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh? —Galatians 3:3 ESV

Trying harder lacks the ability to bring true heart change. 

Don’t hear me wrong, the Christian life takes effort. It is hard work. And you and I can do the exact same “disciplines” but reach much different results.

The key to realizing “success” in the Christian life is not in trying harder; it is in believing better.

Believing Better

If we focus our efforts on responding to the character of God and His work and calling in our life, true and lasting change can occur. Problem is, most of us have incorrect views of God, ourselves, and the great gospel that gives us the freedom and ability to obey.

New Year’s resolutions are around the corner. Many of us look forward to a new year, a clean start, and hope for big changes in our life and behavior. Instead of continuing on the Cycle of Try Harder this new year, we invite you to focus on Believing Better.

For the month of December the common thread in our posts will be on Believing Better. Looking at who God is, who we are as His child, and how Believing Better about God and ourselves will drive us to obedience. Not out of a guilt-ridden pressure to perform, but out of a grace-laden freedom to worship the One whom we have encountered in a deeper way.

We would love for you to join us in this journey, so be sure to subscribe to get posts sent directly to your inbox.

Are You Stuck in the Cycle of Try Harder?

Do you see yourself in this cycle? Do you see the connection between what you believe about God and how you behave? Is there lingering sin in your life which you just can’t seem to get rid of? Are you weary from the try harder life?

We’d love to walk alongside you this month—leave a comment if this resonates with you!

Jesus Came to Obey the Father

November 30, 2011 by Stephanie Shott 11 Comments

There is a lot about God we just don’t understand. Like how He has always existed. No beginning. No end. Just always. Or like how He knows every thought of our hearts and the number of hairs on our heads. Nothing hid. He knows it all. Or like how He is Creator and Sustainer of all that is or ever will be. No one can trump Him. Nothing can stump Him and nothing can undo what He has done. He is all powerful.

Image from Photobucket

Yet, in Philippians 2:5-8 we are told – “Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross.” (Emphasis mine)

Can you fathom that?! The God of all creation demonstrated what obedience looks like when He placed Himself in a cradle to begin His journey to the cross.

As Kathy mentioned Monday, we know Jesus came to die. But He left footprints of obedience every step of the way – footprints of obedience left by a heart of humility.

In John 6:38, Jesus declared, “For I have come down from heaven, not to do my own will but the will of him who sent me.” (Emphasis mine)
And as the cross loomed largely over His earthly future, He said,“Now is my soul troubled. And what shall I say? ‘Father, save me from this hour’? But for this purpose I have come to this hour.” John 12:27 (Emphasis mine)
We all have to die. It’s just part of life. But Jesus didn’t have to. He didn’t have to come to a cradle. He didn’t have to clothe Himself with flesh. He didn’t have to tolerate those who persecuted Him. He didn’t have to endure the pain of the crown of thorns, the whips or the nails. He didn’t have to hang naked from a cross in agony as the soldiers mocked Him and those He was dying for gazed on Him with disgust.
But Jesus came to obey the Father’s will. John 4:34 says, “Jesus said to them, ‘My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work.'”
Jesus left a wonderful example of what obedience looks like when He went to the cross. It means we humble ourselves and die to what we want to do – even when it’s hard.
Jesus came to obey the Father – and that obedience took Him all the way to the cross. His obedience offers us hope, peace, joy and everlasting life and if He had not humbled Himself and became obedient unto the death of the cross, we would remain in our sins and we would remain without hope.
Aren’t you thankful Jesus came to obey the Father! As we approach this Christmas season let us not forget to importance of Jesus’ obedience.
Have you ever thought about the fact that Jesus came to be obedient? How should that affect our own obedience? 

Abiding Fruit :: Faithfulness :: Just stand

November 28, 2011 by Lisa Burgess 18 Comments

It was Pompeii.
AD 79.
As the story goes, the Roman sentry heard, saw, and smelled all of life crumbling around him. Vesuvius had erupted.

Yet he hadn’t been dismissed from his post.
So he stood.
Just stood.

Should we do any less?

There’s only one way—stay near the throne. It’s there we’ll receive mercy and find grace to stand firm (Hebrews 4:16).

Jesus showed us how. He was faithful to do his Father’s will (Hebrews 3:1-2). Tempted yet was without sin (Hebrews 4:15). Endured the worst to secure the best (Hebrews 12:2-3).

God keeps his promises.

So our confidence is in him. In his faithfulness. The only reason we can be faithful is because he is.

And our faithfulness—in big things and small things—will encourage others to stay in his presence too.

  • To be bold.
  • To love.
  • To do good works.
  • To do his will.
  • To receive rewards.

If we’ll stand.
Just stand.

What did you learn in your study of faithfulness? How can we encourage each other to be faithful?

 

Why did Jesus come?

November 28, 2011 by Kathy Howard 1 Comment

Every year at this time we begin counting the days until Christmas. Only 27 days left for shopping, cooking, and wrapping until the big day is here. Hopefully we also spend the days thinking about the reason for the celebration – the birth of Jesus.

Many churches and individual Christians observe the four-week season of Advent as a way to celebrate Christ’s birth. The word “advent” means a coming into view or arrival. For Christians, “Advent” specifically refers to the eager anticipation of the arrival of God’s long-awaited Messiah. Christian Advent officially began Sunday, November 27th. Observers may pray, fast, and read Scripture while waiting for Jesus’ “coming,” celebrated on December 25th.

With the busyness and commercialization of Christmas, Advent is a wonderful way to keep Christ in the forefront of our minds. However, we shouldn’t limit our reflection to the truth that Jesus came to earth; we should also remember why He came. That’s exactly what we’ll be doing for the next three weeks here at Scripture Dig.

Why did Jesus leave the glory of heaven to be born as a human in a stable in Bethlehem? Many times I’ve heard the statement, “Jesus came to die.” And that is true. But did you know that was only part of Jesus’ mission?

Jesus told us why He came. The Gospels record more than a dozen “I came” statements of Jesus. We will be exploring many of these over the next few weeks. Christmas took on a deeper and richer meaning for me after I first studied these statements of Christ several years ago. This year we want to share them with you. We pray God will use His Words to enrich your Christmas celebration and grow your understanding of Him.

What are some things you and your family do to help you stay focused on the true reason for the Christmas season?

 

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