Thursday Morning Devotion 1/4/07

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Again you have heard that it has been said by the ancients, “You shall not swear falsely, but you shall fulfill your oaths to the Lord.” But I say to you, “Don’t swear at all, neither by heaven, for it is God’s throne, nor by the earth, for it is his footstool, neither by Jerusalem, for it is the city of the great king, neither shall you swear by your head, because you cannot make one hair white or black. But let your word be clearly yes or no. Everything more than that is from the evil one.” — Matthew 5:33-37

I have to confess that sometimes my word doesn’t live up to these texts. Sometimes my word is so complicated that nobody can understand it. Sometimes I think I can do more than I really can accomplish and so my word comes through late. Sometimes I simply forget. All of these things fall short of the mark.

In Old Testament times the answer to people’s unreliable speaking was the oath. God used oaths in communicating with people. Hebrews 6:16 tells us that all argument is ended by an oath. But Jesus is telling us that oaths are not the ideal thing.

Now note that Jesus is not telling us it’s OK to violate oaths. Rather, he’s telling us that our everyday word, the way we speak all the time, should be just as true and inviolable as an oath was. He’s telling us to let our speech be straightforward and then to live up to what we say. This would truly be a way of “taming the tongue” (James 3:8)!

I think most of us have to admit we aren’t there yet. I know I’m not. So how do we head this way?

First, we can be careful what we say. Is it accurate? Is it well-thought out? Can we live up to the promises we make or even imply? Too often we pop off with opinions that are poorly thought out and then feel that we have to stick with them in order to be consistent. A little thought beforehand would be good. But God has provided us with the path of repentance to use when we fall short.

Second, we can quit giving ourselves so many excuses for our failures. We all know the excuses. We each have our favorites. Enough said!

Third, we can make truthfulness a key priority in all that we say and do. Letting our speech be “yes, yes and no, no” or as I translated it “clearly yes or no” means that we don’t get to be rulebook lawyers. We don’t get to twist the wording to make ourselves look better. Instead, we pursue truth and integrity in what we say and what we do.

It’s one of the commands of Jesus. Perhaps we should give it some priority!

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Wednesday Morning Devotion – 1/3/07

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When you go to war against your enemies, and you see horses, chariots, and a people greater than you, don’t be afraid of them, because YHWH your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, is with you. — Deuteronomy 20:1 (TFBV)

Deuteronomy 20 provides some rules of war for the Israelites. They’re an interesting set of rules, especially when compared to the standards of warfare that were pretty general at the time. But in those rules, I find a plan of attack that can be used in facing whatever sort of difficulties in our temporal or spiritual lives. I’m learning by analogy here. There’s no doubt the chapter was written precisely for the purpose it appears to serve—a set of rules for the conduct of war.

You might want to read the entire chapter.

Now here’s the outline:

First rule: Don’t be afraid (20:1-4)

This is the first rule of dealing with almost any problem. There are moments went a fear reaction is physiologically helpful. That spurt of adrenaline is useful in giving extra strength. But in most situations fear makes us do stupid things, or makes us freeze up. Now I don’t think the idea here is not to feel any fear. Rather, the idea is to be able to act in spite of whatever fear one may feel, to overcome it, and to act rationally and appropriately.

But the scriptures give us the key reason not to be afraid—God is fighting on our side. If we can remember that, we can face whatever troubles may come.

Second rule: Go with those who can fight in unity (8)

The rule about fear is so important that those who cannot overcome their fear are to be left behind. Often when we are approaching a task we try to force as many people to get involved as possible, whether they want to be involved or not, and whether they believe God has called them or not. But it’s more important to work with those who can work in unity than it is to have lots of people. The best team is the called team.

Third rule: Go with those who are no distracted (5-7)

Distracted people don’t do that well in combat, spiritual or physical. The focus needs to be on the battle and on what needs to be accomplished. Let those who don’t have the right set of priorities go on about their business.

Fourth rule: Consider your enemy–be as tough as you have to (10-18)

Sometimes we act as though in spiritual situations, or in our day to day work life strategy is a bad word. But making a plan and applying the right approach to the right situation can be the key to victory.

Fifth rule: Consider the future; be prepared to rebuild (19-20)

Living by faith doesn’t mean living without consideration for the future. Keep in mind where you’re going next. The folks you’re offending today could be the folks you need to work with tomorrow.

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Jody’s Devotionals

This blog is created to replace the Yahoo! mailing list for Jody’s Devotionals. Users there will be notified to unsubscribe and subscribe here. We will cross-post tomorrow (1/3/07) through Friday (1/5/07), but will assume by then that everyone who wants to has subscribed.

Why the new location?

First, it gives people better opportunities to subscribe than an e-mail list, using RSS, e-mail, or simply going and viewing the blog.
Second, unlike Yahoo!, which has the RSS and direct viewing options, it is hosted on one of our own domains and thus will not have lots of random advertising that we don’t control.
Third, readers will now be able to respond online. With Yahoo! we could either permit everyone to contribute, which would change the nature of the list from a once per day devotional to a discussion list, or we could limit the contributions to our own. Here you can subscribe to the devotionals, but comments attached to them will not be included in your e-mails.

We (both Henry and Jody Neufeld) apologize for the inconvenience of changing format yet again, thank you for your patience, and hope you have a blessed New Year!

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