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I love the idea of someone who has "put on Christ". Is Christ a garment? A piece of jewelry? Not at all. He is a person - He is God. So how can you "put on Christ"? Simple - by becoming more like him and embodying what he was about. This is what baptism should lead to. So many people are thankful for salvation, but never strive much to "put on" Christ. We have built up the importance of salvation as a goal to the degree we have failed to teach people that there is something more. As a Protestant, I find our churches seem to shy from wanting to recommend that there might be something to give up to follow Jesus. Can we not even teach the basics anymore? Justification is one thing - sanctification another. Both are part of salvation. Sanctification is the discipline by which we "put on" Christ. The people Paul talks to here in Galatia were apparently all "putting on" Christ. There were many other good compliments Paul had for the Galatians. It sounds like they got it! There is action that has to be put to our faith. James says faith witout works is dead. The 2 are completely entertwined, like body and soul. You can't have a thought or feeling without acting on it - that's wasteful!
Are you going to "wear" Christ? What do people see when they look at your actions? Are you doing things that make people want to know Christ, or just telling people about how much you know Him? The latter is exactly what the Pharisees were guilty of. The former is what defined the early church - so much so that their icons were not the cross, but the fish...the shepherd carrying a lost sheep. The things that took work to do!
3:27 For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.
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I never lose faith knowing that my Father is looking at me from within. Not that I've ever thought much of how my outward appearance is perceivd by others, but everytime I read this verse it makes me just as peaceful. To know that what I'm doing inside is what counts, that can lift me out of any pit. For I struggle inside to be perfect. How sad to think that many people on this earth have little passion for developing their insides, when this verse makes it clear that it is such a priority to God!
16:7 But the LORD said to Samuel, "Do not look on his appearance or on the height of his stature, because I have rejected him; for the LORD sees not as man sees; man looks on the outward appearance, but the LORD looks on the heart."
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5:17 "Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfil them. Interesting, I was thinking about this passage earlier this week. I have heard people in Jewish circles say that "abolish the law" and "fulfill the law" are Jewish idioms. Whether or not that's true, or just what they're taught these days (which is not always what was taught in the past) - I find it interesting to dwell on. Supposedly, to "abolish the law" meant you were mis-interpreting a passage. To "fulfill the law" meant you were nailing it right on.
So we look at it this way - in Matthew 5, Jesus gives the beatitudes. He then gives his audience some advice - not to hide from the world what God has given in you. Then we come to this verse, which starts a discourse on obedience to the law, and the demand of righteousness for entering heaven. Jesus is basically assuring his audience that the law still has a purpose, and uses this verse to affirm his authority on the law. From there, Jesus goes on to help explain simple ways people fail obedience to the law, clarifying how easy it is to break. This must have been a scary time for his audience. (Thankfully, in Chapters 6 and 7 he provides examples of things we can do to help) Jesus was making it clear that God's standards are for obedience to the law without compromise. People must have been reminded not to claim too much righteousness on their own behalf. Jesus "fulfilled the law" with this interpretation.There must be perfect obedience, and that is not easy to do. In short, Jesus sets his audience up to later understand the value of his sacrifice - his perfect obedience was the only possible way his blood could be a worthy sacrifice in our place! (sweet, these thoughts tie in with what Todd Agnew was talking about last night)
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In the dryness of summer, in the discomfort of heat - I find myself weary. Heat is my enemy, I often find myself believing. I hate to sweat, hate to tire and hate feeling like a heating pad. And so, I drink water for my thirst, eat ice cream for my tongue and crank up the AC to keep my skin comfortable. All summer long, I maintain habits to keep thoughts of chill on my mind and beat the heat. But there is a dryness and heat that none of these things helps. Just as I struggle to endure the physical heat, so my spirit struggles to endure the dry spell brought by seeking temporary pleasures. And like the other things, there is a simple fix - pure and simple spiritual discipline. But surrending to it is what seems so difficult after years of faithfulness. So I fail to relinquish selfish desires, I fail to keep Christ-minded. I fail to really focus on others, and fail to even speak with my Father. And why? I fail because I want life my way, just for a little while.So it is no surprise that David's thirst for God is one I know all too well! And yet David, like Christ, brought nothing on himself as we sometimes do. So I ponder again - how fitting this psalm is for me at this point in the summer? Even more so, I wonder - how many others are suffering from heat exhaustion? How many know where to find the water? How many will face the heat of the refiner's fire and fail? The more I dwell on these, the more I realize how silly my selfishness is. 63:1 A Psalm of David, when he was in the Wilderness of Judah. O God, thou art my God, I seek thee, my soul thirsts for thee; my flesh faints for thee, as in a dry and weary land where no water is.
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This is a scriptue that Christian disciples and evangelists should hold dearly. We must always remember that God has built in to each person an understanding of good, and that all cultures have survived (almost instinctively) on being good to others who are good to us. But doing good to those who hate us - that is what still wins 99% of people to the gospel even today. Field research and interviews with secular people has proven this - people need time and a consistent display of grace demonstrated to them to come to Christ. After all, is that not how we came to His mercy? Think about your conversion experience...and you will know it's true. 6:33 And if you do good to those who do good to you, what credit is that to you? For even sinners do the same.
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