Archive for January 2010

Living Hope | 1 Peter 2:2-3 | Devotional

Posted by ronmoore on January 29, 2010

1 Peter 2:2-3
Like newborn babies, crave pure spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation, now that you have tasted that the Lord is good.

The first year Lori and I were married, we lived at 1-1 South University Place, married student housing at Oklahoma State University. I had graduated from college and was teaching and coaching. Lori was finishing up her last year. A couple miles from our little apartment was a Braum’s Ice Cream store, where cones were 50 cents a scoop. I won’t lie…there were nights we craved, longed for, yearned for a Braum’s Ice Cream cone. We would scour our apartment for coins until we scrounged up a dollar and two cents and then happily head to Braum’s. With a cone in our hand and a smile on our face, we sat on a bench by the front door and determined if those entering really needed the calories. “Ding. Ding. Ding.” meant the person could handle the cal’s and a buzzer sound, “Neerrnnt,” meant the person should probably head back to the car. Admittedly, it wasn’t a very nice thing to do, but we sure had fun doing it.

As we yearned for ice cream, believers should long for the nourishment that comes from the Word of God. But the sustenance that comes from Scripture is nothing like a sugar high that comes from a 50 cent cone. We don’t open the Word to find a quick fix that temporarily meets our fleshly needs. God’s Word is real spiritual food that allows us to grow up in our salvation and mature as followers of Jesus.

When, by consistently reading you develop a taste for the deep truth, no-nonsense challenges, and desired promises of Scripture, you can say with the believers through the ages—“This is really, really good!!”

Lord, encourage those who regularly read your word. Convict those who do not. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

 

The Journey | January 29, 2010

Posted by admin on January 29, 2010

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Living Hope | 1 Peter 2:1 | Devotional

Posted by ronmoore on January 28, 2010

1 Peter 2:1
Therefore, rid yourselves of all malice and all deceit, hypocrisy, envy, and slander of every kind.

On my last trip overseas, I was determined to get everything in one midsize suitcase. No way was I going to lug two suitcases and my backpack around airports, hotels, and missionaries’ homes. So I had to make some decisions. After my first packing attempt, I needed a do-over. There was some stuff I had to leave behind. After my second attempt, I needed a do-over-over. Finally, the bag shut without looking like the zipper was going to break apart and I was good to go.

The journey of life calls for us to travel light. There are some things we must leave behind. Forget the weariness that comes with the extra weight, the things mentioned in today’s passage will bring you to a spiritual halt.

  • Malice: the desire to inflict injury, harm, or suffering on another.
  • Deceit: distorting the truth in order to mislead someone.
  • Hypocrisy: from the Greek hypokrisis—play acting.
  • Envy: coveting the advantages, success, or possessions of others.
  • Slander: attacking the reputation of someone with your words or writing.

These things must be left behind. They cannot be part of the journey.

Father, show us if we have malice, deceit, hypocrisy, envy, or slander in our lives. After you point them out, please give us the strength to get rid of them. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

 

The Journey | January 28, 2010

Posted by admin on January 28, 2010

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Living Hope | 1 Peter 1:24-25 | Devotional

Posted by ronmoore on January 27, 2010

1 Peter 1:24-25
For, “All men are like grass, and all their glory is like the flowers of the field; the grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of the Lord stands forever.” And this is the word that was preached to you.

It matters not how strait the gate,
How charged with punishments the scroll,
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.

Those words, from the last stanza of the poem Invictus (Latin for Invincible), were written by the English poet William Ernest Henley in 1875. Henley described the mindset, owned by many, that men and women are in control of their destiny. But, in today’s passage, Peter presents a different philosophy.

Quoting the prophet Isaiah, Peter reminds us that man’s life is as fleeting as the grass and flowers of the field. Some masters and captains we are…stuck in the process of withering and fading. But there is a place we can go for help, a place that is living and enduring, a place that stands forever in contrast to our temporal existence.

So, is your hope in personal ability to master your fate and captain your soul? Or is your hope settled in the truth and promises of God’s word that lives and endures and stands forever? Just so you know, hope in yourself dies with you. Living Hope carries you home.

Father, I turn the position of Master and Captain over to you. You lead and I will follow. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

 

The Journey | January 27, 2010

Posted by admin on January 27, 2010

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Living Hope | 1 Peter 1:23 | Devotional

Posted by ronmoore on January 26, 2010

1 Peter 1:23
For you have been born again, not of perishable seed, but of imperishable, through the living and enduring word of God.


The Book of Eli
is an apocalyptic story set thirty some years after an event that decimated the earth and left a small population wallowing in depravity. While the story line of the movie does not fit into the Bible’s description of the end times, there is a powerful theme of the “living and enduring word of God.” The Book of Eli is the last remaining copy of the Bible and his mission from God is to take it “west.” Nothing will stop him, not even his nemesis who understands the power of Scripture and wants it for less than noble purposes.

One does not have to see the Book of Eli to understand that power of God’s word. Through history the Bible has been banned and burned. It has been criticized and written off as outdated. And yet the Bible endures not because it is just a book, but because it is the word of God. The French atheist Voltaire died in 1778. He predicted that within 100 years after his death, Christianity would be swept from existence. Voltaire wasn’t much of a prophet. In fact, fifty years after his death, the Geneva Bible Society used his press and his house to produce stacks of Bibles.

It is through this living and enduring word that we have been born again. It is through the Bible that we grow. It is through the Scripture we learn that God wants us to do something! And it is in Scripture we learn what God wants us to do. So, what are you waiting for…take out your Bible and read it!

Father may we be like Ezra who set his heart to study your word, apply it to his life, and then teach it to others. Help us to “teach” it with our lips and with our lives. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

 

The Journey | January 26, 2010

Posted by admin on January 26, 2010

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Living Hope | 1 Peter 1:22 | Devotional

Posted by ronmoore on January 25, 2010

1 Peter 1:22
Now that you have purified yourselves by obeying the truth so that you have sincere love for your brothers, love one another deeply, from the heart.

Christian love is both vertical and horizontal. It begins with love for God. This love begins by our “obeying the truth” of the Gospel. The resulting new birth purifies us from the inside out. This love begins and ends in God. We love him only because he first loved us (1 John 4:19).

The horizontal love is harder. Someone described two porcupines needing warmth from each other on a cold night—“They needed each other; even though they needled each other.” We sometimes feel the same way. But Peter calls us to a love that is sincere (genuine, without hypocrisy), deep (fervent, constant), and from the heart (the center of our emotions, desires, and will).

Maybe today there is another believer who has not received a sincere, deep, and heart-felt love from you. In fact, maybe they have experienced the opposite. So you really want to follow Jesus? You know what you have to do. Get out your phone and make the call.

Father, may our love be more than lip service. Make us men and women of action, even when it is hard. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

 

The Journey | January 25, 2010

Posted by admin on January 25, 2010

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