Guilt or Gift?



… I died to the law, so that I might live to God.  Gal 2:19

Paul speaks here of dying to the notion that we can please God through works of the law (i.e. obedience to a set of rules).  Also, of relieving oneself from the law as a taskmaster and, ultimately, a tool of death.

Living to God arises out of the realization that our standing before Him (and our ability to live unto Him) arises not out of our performance and obedience, but out of faith and grace.  Out of freedom, not force.

Through faith in Christ…

We are relieved from… striving… failure… guilt… bondage… condemnation… separation.

And invited into… rest… grace… peace… freedom… justification… communion.

A few verses later, Paul writes… “Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?  (Gal 3:3) 

How foolish we are sometimes! Trading confidence in the unchanging grace of God for dependence on our temperamental flesh.  Let us be fools for Christ, but never duped by the flesh.
Where are you living today?  In the guilt?  Or in the gift?

Lessons from Psalm 23 - Fill in the Blank


 
“Even when I walk through the valley of deep darkness,
I will fear no evil, for you are with me;
Your rod and your staff reassure me”
Psalm 23:4

Tests are a fact of life.  From elementary school through graduation to the next life, life is full of them.  Spelling tests, math tests, science tests, driver’s tests, personality tests, blood tests, eye tests, tests of character, tests of strength, tests of faith.  The list is endless.  
Though we generally don’t like tests, we often have a style we prefer.  What’s yours?  Essay? Multiple choice? True-False? Fill in the blank?
Like you and like me, David faced all kinds of tests.  How he did in Hebrew school no one can say, but history records his diploma from the School of Hard Knocks.  It was there he did some of his best work – writing masterful essay after essay in what would later be called the Book of Psalms. 
David was a master of pen and poem.  This most know.  But a closer look reveals David’s  mastery of the fill-in-the-blank as well.
In our previous discussion of Psalm 23, we noted (and likely coveted) David’s statement of confidence:  “I will fear no evil.”  We also noted the source of that confidence – a critical phrase at a pivotal peak in the Psalm.  Two Hebrew words. The source of David’s confidence:  “You.  With-me.”[1]  [Psa 23:4]
David kept a mental 3x5 card in his hip pocket for tests of courage and faith.  A cheat sheet of sorts.  It contained two Hebrew words and one blank.  “You _______ with-me.”  When doubt, despair, danger or death looked David in the eye, the card came out.  “You _______ with me.”
It worked like this… David speaking to God.  “God, there is a lot I don’t know.  I don’t know what you are going to do or how you are going to do it.  But this much I know:  You have been with me, so I can say with confidence that you are with me.  Even when I can’t see you.  Even in the deepest darkness.  You with me, God.  In the past.  In the present.  And into the future.”  God’s past faithfulness gave David present and future confidence.
Maybe you need a mental note card in your hip pocket today.  (Cheat sheets are allowed here)  Maybe you’ve been wondering where God is in your current circumstances.  He is with you.  Maybe you’re wondering if you can handle an uncertain future that looms ahead of you.  Where will God be then?  With you.  His presence is not bound by any single verb tense – past, present or future.  He has been.  He is.  He will be.  Always.  With you.
Make a note card today with three simple words as a simple but profound reminder:  God with you.  Write it on your mirror -- or your hand.  Wherever you’ll see it when you need it most.
And remember:  The confidence you need today and tomorrow is found in the faithfulness of God in all of your yesterdays.


[1] See previous blog entry “Lessons from Psalm 23: David’s Confidence” for an explanation.  English requires three words to render the same.