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The Beauty Of The Breastplate (3)




ā€œTherefore, to you who believe, He is precious.ā€ 1Pe 2:7 NKJV We learn from looking at the breastplate worn by Israel’s high priest that: (a) we are precious to God; (b) we are close to His heart; (c) He will never turn His back on us. You say, ā€œIf God will never turn His back on us, does that mean we can live any way we please?ā€ No, and here’s why. As a redeemed child of God, not only are you precious in His eyes, He is also precious in your eyes. So you will value your relationship with Him above all else and protect it from anything that threatens it. Question: When you realize how valuable and precious you are in God’s eyes, does that make you want to go out and sin, or continue living in sin? Of course not! On the contrary, your thoughts will run more along the lines of: ā€œThis is not how a believer who is precious to the Lord behaves.ā€ A precious diamond doesn’t belong in the mud, grime, and filth of sin. Its rightful place is close to the heart of God where it sparkles and shines. Knowing your true, righteous, and precious-to-God identity in Christ elevates you above the desire to give in to sin. It makes you want to walk and live as a child of the King. Indeed, holy living is the result of seeing yourself as God sees youā€”ā€œin Christ.ā€ Instead of giving in to temptation, you’ll ask yourself, ā€œWhat would Jesus do in this situation?ā€ Then you’ll draw on His strength and do the right thing. A true understanding of God’s grace doesn’t prevent holiness, it produces it.

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The Beauty Of The Breastplate (1)

Ā Ā Ā Ā 

ā€œTwelve stones…engraved…according to the twelve tribes.ā€ Ex 39:14 NKJV As you look at the breastplate worn by Israel’s high priest, you see how precious you are in God’s eyes as His redeemed child. The Bible gives us very detailed information about what the high priest wore, and there are no insignificant details in God’s Word. As we examine this breastplate we see something wonderful about the way the Lord sees us. There were twelve stones on it, each with the name of one of the twelve tribes. And since Jesus is our great High Priest, let’s look at this breastplate and see what we can learn. These were precious stones. God didn’t use common rocks and pebbles found in abundance in Israel; He chose the most costly, rare, and precious gems such as sapphire, topaz, emerald, amethyst, diamond, onyx, and jasper to represent us. Note the word precious. The Bible says you are ā€œpreciousā€ in God’s sight (See Isa 43:4). It also says that you were redeemed with the ā€œpreciousā€ blood of Jesus (See 1Pe 1:19). How do you establish the value of something? By the price someone is willing to pay for it. So here’s a truth you must keep in mind when you have blown it and Satan is condemning you because of your sins and shortcomings. With full knowledge of all your sins—past, present, and future—God loves you so much that He sent His Son to redeem you by shedding His precious blood. And as long as you are trusting in Christ, your value in God’s eyes never diminishes. Why does God think you are precious? Because at all times He sees you ā€œin Christ.ā€

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Anger Management (4)

Don’t use…abusive language.ā€ Eph 4:29 NLT

Ā 

The Bible says: ā€œDon’t use foul or abusive language. Let everything you say be good and helpful, so that your words will be an encouragement to those who hear them. And do not bring sorrow to God’s Holy Spirit by the way you liveā€ (vv. 29-30 NLT). Notice, when you lash out in anger you not only hurt the other person, you grieve the Holy Spirit. Have you considered that? As followers of Christ we’re called to try to understand what the other person needs. That means not bringing up previously confessed offenses, dragging in other people, or using wisecracks about someone’s weight, color, IQ, or physical, mental, and emotional limitations. Don’t bring up things that cloud the issue and keep you from finding a solution. And don’t raise the decibel level in order to intimidate or manipulate. God made you with a capacity for anger because when handled right it can be the fuel needed to bring positive change and the medicine that heals. So: (1) Seek a solution, not a ā€œvictory.ā€ Name-calling and ā€œdiagnosingā€ others just makes things worse. Your focus shouldn’t be on what they did, but what you can do together to resolve it. (2) Acknowledge your flaws and ask for forgiveness. Admitting your imperfections makes it easier for the other person to admit theirs. (3) For every difficulty you address, give a sincere compliment. Instead of criticizing, try saying, ā€œI’m sure this wasn’t easy for you to hear. Thanks for listening to me so graciously.ā€ Being solution-focused instead of blame-focused gives people something to live up to, not down to.

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Anger Management (2)

My inmost being will rejoice when your lips speak right things.ā€ Pr 23:16 NKJV

Ā 

When it comes to practicing anger management, here are two important Bible principles: (1) Don’t blame people and things. Blaming is a way of evading responsibility while pointing your finger elsewhere. ā€œIf only you’d arrive on time, I wouldn’t have to nag you,ā€ or ā€œIf you’d quit nagging me, maybe I’d start being on time.ā€ Words like that don’t help, they just antagonize the other person, perpetuate your anger, and fail to get the results you want. (2) Don’t use words as weapons or a form of control. Instead keep your emotions in check and express them in a healthy way. Remember, your goal is to solve the problem and strengthen the relationship, not leave wounds that fester. Is this easy to do? No—that’s why you need God’s help. The Bible says that your words can crush the other person’s spirit (See Pr 18:14), break their heart (See Pr 15:4), and destroy the relationship (See Pr 18:21). Solomon said that angry words ā€œgo down into a man’s inmost partsā€ (Pr 26:22 NIV). What you say can live in the memory of another person their whole life—all the way to the grave. Is that what you want? Surely not! On the other hand, anger properly managed never needs to be regretted or repented of. Learn to discern the difference between the anger you feel and the words you speak. Anger can reveal what needs to be changed in the relationship. So ask God to show you what needs changing—first in yourself, then in the other person.

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Born Again!

Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.

John 3:3

Born again. Do you know what Jesus had in mind when He said those two words to Nicodemus? He was talking covenant talk. He was telling Nicodemus what it meant to have a covenant with God.

Let me paint the picture I believe was in Jesus’ mind. Imagine a baby, a little baby born of an unwed mother. No one knows who its daddy is and no one wants to know. He is a child no one wants. He doesn’t belong to anyone.

Now, picture the best kind of family you can think of. A family that loves God. The man has a good job. They’re blessed financially. They’re givers and lovers of people, and they fall in love with this baby. Before long, they adopt it.

What’s happened? That baby was reborn. He got a new set of parents. Through adoption, he has now become an heir. Why? Not because of anything the baby has done. Those parents didn’t say, ā€œI want you to look at that baby. I’m so impressed with all that that child has done for us. He has certainly earned our love and respect.ā€

No, it’s a baby. It couldn’t have done anything to earn its new life. This man and this woman agreed together out of the love in their hearts and bestowed grace on that child. Now he has access to everything they have. When they offer him a bottle, he doesn’t knock the bottle away and say, ā€œI’m so humble and undeserving. Just give me water.ā€

Of course not. That baby acts like part of the family—and not just part of the family but the best part of the family. Because in Jesus’ day a covenant or adopted child had the same birthright as the firstborn son.

That’s what Jesus was talking about when He said, ā€œYou must be born again.ā€ He was talking about grace. He was talking about a new relationship of favor. A new family. A new authority. A new power.

If you feel unworthy to receive the rich blessings God has for you today, think about that. Meditate on it, so instead of worrying about and struggling with the needs in your life, you can just walk boldly into the throne room of your Father and receive help to get those needs met.

Discover what it really means to be a blood-bought child of Almighty God with a big brother like Jesus. Discover what it means to be born again!

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We Know God’s Truth Through Careful Consideration

ā€œCarefully consider the path for your feet, and all your ways will be establishedā€ (Proverbs 4:26 HCSB).

When you tell God, ā€œI want the truth more than anything else,ā€ he will reveal his truth to you in a variety of ways, such as through creation or your conscience and also through careful consideration.

In other words, truth is knowable. You can test it. You can experiment with it. You can prove it.

If I want to go to San Francisco and I follow a map that takes me to San Francisco, and the next week I follow the same map to San Francisco again, eventually I figure out that the map is true.

The same is true of the Bible: If you follow its map again and again, you’ll find it to be true. It always takes you where it says it’s going to take you. You may not always like where it takes you, but it always takes you where it says it’s going to take you.

Often people say, ā€œWhy won’t God just write it in the sky?ā€ Why would God do that? He gave you a brain. But most people never slow down long enough for such careful consideration. Most people just drift through life.

The Bible tells us, ā€œCarefully consider the path for your feet, and all your ways will be establishedā€ (Proverbs 4:26 HCSB).

Spend some time in careful consideration and thoughtful observation, and ask yourself: ā€œAm I on a true path?ā€

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You Belong To God

ā€œFear not, for I have redeemed you…You are Mine.ā€ Isa 43:1 NKJV When God redeems you, He owns you. And what He owns, He protects! This is illustrated in the story of Belshazzar. The Bible says: ā€œKing Belshazzar held a great feast for his one thousand nobles…heady with the wine, [he] ordered that the gold and silver chalices his father Nebuchadnezzar had stolen from God’s Temple of Jerusalem be brought in so that he and his nobles, his wives and concubines, could drink from themā€ (Da 5:1-2 TM). Now, if they’d just abused some worthless old cup it might not have mattered, but God valued these sacred vessels too much to let them be mishandled. So out of the invisible sleeve of the night, the finger of God wrote the fate of Belshazzar on his palace walls. ā€œThat same night…Belshazzar was murdered…Darius the Mede succeeded himā€ (vv. 30-31 TM). As a redeemed child of God, here’s an unchanging principle you can stand on: ā€œHe permitted no man to do them wrong…saying, ā€˜Do not touch My anointed onesā€™ā€ (1Ch 16:21-22 NKJV). You may have to fight on foreign soil, work at home in a difficult situation, or endure hardship for your faith. But you can be sure of one thing—God has too much invested in you to let you be destroyed. And any time Satan tries, God will interrupt his party and say, ā€œThis vessel is off limits—it took Me too long to teach this woman to pray…I’ve invested too many years training this man how to overcome…They’ve endured too much for My name’s sake for Me to let you harm them. Take your hands off them; they’re Mine!ā€

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Write It Down—Then Tear It Up!

ā€œForgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead.ā€ Php 3:13 NKJV There will always be people who speak ill of you. ā€œShe’ll never amount to anything… His parents were nothing, his grandparents were nothing, and he’s going to be nothing too!ā€ The question is: Who are you going to believe, God or your critics? According to Scripture: ā€œAnyone…in Christ…is a new creation; old things have passed away…all things have become newā€ (2Co 5:17 NKJV). God says that by His grace you’re going to prove your critics wrong, so stop listening to their negative predictions. Stop believing the family members, schoolteachers, employers, and so-called ā€œfriendsā€ who try to put you down. Turn a deaf ear to racism and sexism. Jesus said, ā€œYou will know the truth, and the truth will set you freeā€ (Jn 8:32 NIV). Renew your mind daily with the truth of God’s Word (See Ro 12:1-2). You may have been abused, misused, rejected, and neglected, but it’s time to forget those things that are behind and start reaching forward. When God speaks a word over your life, as far as He’s concerned it has already been accomplished; it’s ā€œa done deal!ā€ Now it’s your job to believe it, speak it, and walk in the reality of it each day. When someone says something that leaves a scar on your heart and mind, do this: (1) Write it down on a piece of paper. (2) Ask God to help you forgive them and to erase the scar. (3) Tear up the paper, toss it into the garbage, and ā€œpress toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesusā€ (Php 3:14 NKJV).

Š§ŠøŃ‚Š°Ń‚ŃŒ ŠæŠ¾Š»Š½Š¾ŃŃ‚ŃŒŃŽ…

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Don’t Give Place To Envy

ā€œLord…you guard all that is mine.ā€ Ps 16:5 NLT Have you allowed envy to form a ā€œstrongholdā€ in your life? Do you find yourself avoiding or feeling resentful of certain people because of their success? The Bible says, ā€œEnvy rots the bonesā€ (Pr 14:30 NIV) and the New Living Translation paraphrases it this way: ā€œJealousy is like cancer in the bones.ā€ If you find yourself constantly criticizing someone and craving what they have, read these words and think about them carefully and prayerfully: ā€œI know the plans I have for you, says the Lord. They are plans for good and not for evil, to give you a future and a hope. In those days when you pray, I will listenā€ (Jer 29:11-12 TLB). In essence, envy says to God, ā€œYou made a mistake when you made me like I am. I want to be like that other person, and have what they have!ā€ No, God has a unique calling and destiny for you. So instead of giving place to envy, let it motivate you to become the best possible ā€œyouā€ā€”the person God intended you to be. If you’re fighting a losing battle with envy, here’s a prescription from God’s Word you need to take every day: ā€œLord, you alone are my inheritance, my cup of blessing. You guard all that is mine. The land you have given me is a pleasant land. What a wonderful inheritance! I will bless the Lord who guides me; even at night my heart instructs me. I know the Lord is always with me. I will not be shaken, for he is right beside me. No wonder my heart is glad, and I rejoiceā€ (Ps 16:5-9 NLT).

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Spend Time Alone With God
ā€œBe still, and know that I am God!ā€ Ps 46:10 NLT God can speak to you anytime, anywhere, through anybody, by dropping a thought into your mind (See 1Co 2:16). But because that thought can be crowded out by busyness, He says, ā€œBe still, and know that I am God.ā€ In stillness you can hear God more clearly. ā€œJesus used many…illustrations to teach the people as much as they could understand…but afterward, when he was alone with his disciples, he explained everything to themā€ (Mk 4:33-34 NLT). In High Call, High Privilege, Gail MacDonald writes: ā€œThe ancient desert fathers used to commit themselves to a disciplinary creed: silence, solitude, and inner peace. Only after adequate amounts of time listening, did they consider themselves ready to speak…Today there’s a strange logic that spiritual resource and renewal are found in constantly seeking new voices, attending more meetings…to exchange half-thought-out opinions…We fall into the trap of believing God is most pleased when we’ve maximized our information, our schedules, and our relationships. Disengagement means silence before God…a time of heavenly discussion during which we listen more than we speak. And silence demands solitude.ā€ In waiting quietly before God, your spiritual ear is trained to know His voice. Sylvia Gunter writes: ā€œI understand why David had to command his soul to be still…Being quiet is difficult…almost impossible for some of us. But I’ve discovered that my soul and spirit have been starving for stillness for a long time, and now that I’ve given my soul a taste of stillness again it will not be satisfied unless it’s a regular part of my day.ā€

Š§ŠøŃ‚Š°Ń‚ŃŒ ŠæŠ¾Š»Š½Š¾ŃŃ‚ŃŒŃŽ…

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How Change Happens (4)

ā€œJacob called the place Peniel, saying, ā€˜It is because I saw God face to face.ā€™ā€Ā Ā  Ā 
Ge 32:30 NIV

Change happens through cooperation. God started changing Jacob the moment he admitted who he was and began to cooperate with His plan. Jacob named the place where he wrestled with the angel ā€œPeniel,ā€ meaning ā€œthe face of God.ā€ Each of us must eventually come face to face with God, and when we do He can change us. In essence God told Jacob, ā€œNow we can get down to business. Cooperate, and trust Me. I’ll make the changes you want, and I’ll bless you.ā€ Notice: God didn’t say, ā€œTry hard and use your willpower to become perfect.ā€ That doesn’t work, and God knows it. Willpower alone doesn’t bring lasting change in our lives. It just deals with the outward circumstances. Internal motivation brings about lasting change, and that’s what God works on. He told Jacob, ā€œYour name will no longer be Jacob, but Israelā€ (v. 28 NIV). Jacob would never be the same. Once you have a personal encounter with the living God, He changes you. He changed Jacob from a ā€œcheaterā€ to a ā€œprince.ā€ God saw his potential. He looked beyond the tough exterior of a guy who portrayed himself as hardened and worldly-wise. God saw all Jacob’s weaknesses, but He also saw beneath the surface: ā€œThat’s not the real you, Jacob, you’re actually an Israel—a prince.ā€ And the same goes for each of us: ā€œWe are…heirs…and joint heirs with Christ…that we may…be glorified togetherā€ (Ro 8:16-17 NKJV). In the words of Paul: ā€œHe who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christā€ (Php 1:6 NIV).Ā 

Ā 

Change happens through cooperation. God started changing Jacob the moment he admitted who he was and began to cooperate with His plan. Jacob named the place where he wrestled with the angel ā€œPeniel,ā€ meaning ā€œthe face of God.ā€ Each of us must eventually come face to face with God, and when we do He can change us. In essence God told Jacob, ā€œNow we can get down to business. Cooperate, and trust Me. I’ll make the changes you want, and I’ll bless you.ā€ Notice: God didn’t say, ā€œTry hard and use your willpower to become perfect.ā€ That doesn’t work, and God knows it. Willpower alone doesn’t bring lasting change in our lives. It just deals with the outward circumstances. Internal motivation brings about lasting change, and that’s what God works on. He told Jacob, ā€œYour name will no longer be Jacob, but Israelā€ (v. 28 NIV). Jacob would never be the same. Once you have a personal encounter with the living God, He changes you. He changed Jacob from a ā€œcheaterā€ to a ā€œprince.ā€ God saw his potential. He looked beyond the tough exterior of a guy who portrayed himself as hardened and worldly-wise. God saw all Jacob’s weaknesses, but He also saw beneath the surface: ā€œThat’s not the real you, Jacob, you’re actually an Israel—a prince.ā€ And the same goes for each of us: ā€œWe are…heirs…and joint heirs with Christ…that we may…be glorified togetherā€ (Ro 8:16-17 NKJV). In the words of Paul: ā€œHe who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christā€ (Php 1:6 NIV).Ā 

Ā 

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How Change Happens (2)
ā€œI will not let you go unless you bless me.ā€ Ge 32:26 NIV

Change happens through commitment. When Jacob realized he was wrestling with the angel of the Lord, he said, ā€œI will not let you go unless you bless me.ā€ That’s what it takes—commitment. Jacob was committed and persistent; he stuck with it until he worked his way through it. He didn’t like where he was any more than you do. It was frustrating and it was getting him down. But he was totally committed to sticking with it until God turned it around for his good. When God gets our attention through a crisis, He doesn’t always solve it immediately; sometimes He waits to see whether we really mean business. We’re so conditioned to instant everything—instant food, instant Internet access, instant success—that when we don’t get an immediate answer to our prayer or an instant turnaround we say, ā€œForget it, God.ā€ The fact is you didn’t get into this mess overnight, and you won’t get out of it overnight. Sometimes God has to remove our weaknesses layer by layer. Experts tell us it takes six weeks of doing the same thing every day before it becomes a habit. Think of that in terms of developing the habit of praying and reading your Bible each day, or relearning to love your spouse. That’s six weeks…forty-two days…over a thousand hours…and Satan will fight you at every turn. So what should you do? Spend time with God. ā€œThey that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faintā€ (Isa 40:31).

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The Qualities Of A Spiritual Leader

ā€œLet the elders who rule well be counted worthy of double honor.ā€ 1Ti 5:17 NKJV

To be a spiritual leader worth following: (1) You must be accountable to someone. Someone who knows you well enough to pray with you, strengthen you in your vulnerable areas, and counsel you on important decisions. Authority without accountability inevitably leads to disaster. (2) Your personal priorities must be in order. Priorities have a way of slipping. Too many of us become successful at the cost of a broken home and failing health. Why? Because we allowed our priorities to slip. (3) Your walk with God must be consistent. David said, ā€œYour word I have treasured in my heart, that I may not sin against Youā€ (Ps 119:11 NAS). A disciplined daily walk with God is your best protection against sin. If instead of spending time with God you’re spending it on things that have become more important, it should alarm you. Pay particular attention to the word ā€œtreasured.ā€ It means to value and protect something, and let nothing threaten it. Take time to pray and read your Bible every day—and guard that time with your life. Give God your mind every morning when it’s fresh. And if you’re a pastor, your first calling isn’t the building project, the board, or the budget, it’s ā€œfeed my sheepā€ (Jn 21:16). If Saturday finds you searching for a sermon outline on the Internet, make some changes. Delegate secondary things and get back to putting first things first. ā€œSeek out from among you…men…whom we may appoint over this business; but we will give ourselves continually to prayer and…ministry of the wordā€ (Ac 6:3-4 NKJV).

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How To Maintain Your Peace

ā€œSearch for peace, and work to maintain it.ā€ Ps 34:14 NLT

You can maintain a peaceful state of mind wherever you go and whatever you do. ā€œHow is that possible?ā€ you ask. The Bible says, ā€œSearch for peace, and work to maintain it.ā€ To enjoy a life of peace, you must first recognize what’s stealing your peace. Satan uses the same tactics on everyone, but we each have particular issues. For example, one person may be disturbed by having to do two or three things at the same time, while another may be energized by fielding several projects at once. We’re all different, and we must learn to know ourselves. Satan studies you carefully and knows which buttons to push. One Bible teacher writes: ā€œI can endure things better when I’m not tired…so [Satan] waits to attack until I am worn out. I learned by pursuing peace, what Satan already knew about me; now I try not to get overly tired because I know I’m opening a door for him when I do. It will be virtually impossible to enjoy a life of peace if you don’t study yourself, and know what your ā€˜peace stealers’ are. Keep a list of each time you get upset. Ask yourself what caused the problem, and write it down. Be honest with yourself or you’ll never break free.ā€ In the middle of life’s storms you can be anchored by God’s peace. But He won’t just drop it into your lap; you have a part to play. You must ā€œseek, inquire for… crave peace and pursue (go after) it!ā€ (AMP). So if you’ve lost your peace today—go after it and get it back.

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The truth about marriage (3)

ā€œThe amount you give will determine the amount you get back.ā€ Lk 6:38 NLT The truth about the container: When the offering plate was passed in church, a lady didn’t put anything in. When she complained all the way home about how poor the service was, her little boy said, ā€œMom, that proves if you don’t put anything in, you won’t get anything out.ā€ Marriage is like an empty container—you get out what you put in. This truth frees you to make your relationship rich and rewarding by becoming a giver rather than a taker. Some people think the container comes filled with romance, sexual fulfillment, and being served in the style to which they’ve become accustomed. They think they can take whatever they want from a never-ending supply—instant, low maintenance, satisfaction guaranteed! Then one day they dip in and come up empty. Shocked, disappointed, angry, despairing, and hopeless, they conclude that their partner failed, fooled, or forsook them. Why else would the container be empty? Then they go looking for a new container. The truth is, it’s your responsibility to make enough deposits every day to guarantee sufficient withdrawals for a rich relationship. Jesus said, ā€œThe amount you give will determine the amount you get back.ā€ Ask yourself what you’d like to have in the container, and how much. Then deposit enough to generate that amount. J. Allan Petersen said: ā€œThere’s no love in marriage; love is in people, and people put it into marriage. There’s no romance in marriage; people have to infuse it into their marriages. A couple must form the habit of giving, loving, serving, praising—keeping the box full.ā€

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The Beauty Of The Breastplate (2)

ā€œWe have a great High Priest…Jesus the Son of God.ā€ Heb 4:14 NLT Notice two more things about the breastplate worn by Israel’s high priest: (1) It was close to his heart. Once a year, on the Day of Atonement, he went into the ā€œHoliest of Holiesā€ where God’s presence was, in order to obtain forgiveness for the people’s sins. And he wore different things, each signifying different truths. But of all the garments he donned, the breastplate was the closest to his heart. This speaks of how much God loves and values you, and His desire to be close to you. Today He’s saying to you: ā€œI will not in any way fail you nor give you up nor leave you without support. [I will] not, [I will] not, [I will] not in any degree leave you helpless nor forsake nor let [you] down (relax My hold on you)! [Assuredly not!]ā€ (Heb 13:5 AMP). What a wonderful promise! (2) The name of each tribe was not merely written on the breastplate, but engraved on it (See Ex 39:14). When something is written, it can be erased or accidentally blotted out, but not when it’s ā€œengraved.ā€ There are two ways you can sin. First by deliberately choosing to, and second by stumbling through weakness. And God will chastise and correct you in order to get you back onto the right path, but He will never turn His back on you or throw you away. No, you’re too precious to Him. He remembers the price He paid for you and He says, ā€œI will not blot out [your] name from the Book of Lifeā€ (Rev 3:5 NKJV). As long as you are trusting in Christ, you can be sure of God’s love and acceptance.

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Anger Management (5)

ā€œThose who are trustworthy can keep a confidence.ā€Ā Ā  Ā 
Pr 11:13 NLT

If you’re serious about managing your anger, here are two things to keep in mind:Ā (1) Don’t hang out your dirty laundry in public.Ā Keep it in the laundry room. When you’re hurt and angry, spreading gossip about your offender comes naturally. Don’t do it. The Bible says, ā€œA gossip goes around telling secrets, but those who are trustworthy can keep a confidence.ā€ Dirty laundry generally gets aired in two ways: (a) Embarrassment: You say things when you know others will hear them. (b) Subtlety: You make jokes about their appearance, their friends and family, their personal hang-ups and habits in order to belittle them. This results in embarrassment for the other person, widens the gap between you, and makes reconciliation virtually impossible. The Bible says, ā€œLove covers all sinsā€ (Pr 10:12 NKJV).Ā (2) Don’t act in an un-Christlike way.Ā For example, don’t say, ā€œHe brought it on himself, so let him get over it.ā€ That may be true, but as a follower of Christ, don’t walk away and leave wounds to fester and become infected. ā€œForgive, even as Christ…has forgiven youā€ (See Eph 4:32). How did Christ forgive you? Was it after you’d acknowledged, confessed, repented, and earned grace? No. Paul says, ā€œWhen we were enemies we were reconciled to God through the death of His Sonā€ (Ro 5:10 NKJV). Just as God took the initiative, you are called to extend grace to other people before they ask for forgiveness. And even if they choose to remain your enemy, you must forgive them anyhow. Only then will you have peace, your wounds will be healed, and you will be able to put it behind you.

Ā 

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Anger Management (3)

"Out of the overflow of his heart his mouth speaks.ā€ Lk 6:45 NIV

What you store on your computer’s hard drive can be recalled by touching a key. Jesus said: ā€œThe good man brings good things out of the good stored up in his heart…the evil man brings evil things out of the evil stored up in his heart. For out of the overflow of his heart his mouth speaks.ā€ And when you download old resentments you grow bitter. When you’re angry, deal with it quickly. Don’t walk around on a ā€œslow boil.ā€ And don’t sit around hoping the other person will see the light and apologize to you. What if they never do? Jesus said, ā€œIf your brother sins against you, go to him and try to make things rightā€ (See Mt 18:15). What do you value most—your point of view, or the relationship? When you ā€œstuffā€ your anger and refuse to deal with the issue in a healthy way, you add another skeleton to your emotional closet. Imagine what that does to you. Doctors say resentment eats at your stomach lining, attacks your immune system, and predisposes you to heart problems, cancers, and other physical, social, and emotional disorders. And that’s not all! It preoccupies your mind, drains your energy, and cripples your creativity. It strains your fellowship with God, your family, and friends, as well as denying your offender an opportunity to clear their conscience and make things right with God and with you. Until you deal with the issue, you’ll drag it around like a ball and chain. Refuse to live that way! Ask God for the humility and courage to deal with the issue—today.

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Anger Management (1)

Don’t sin by letting anger control you.ā€ Eph 4:26 NLT

Ā 

Here’s a Bible plan for growth that includes anger management: ā€œLet the Spirit renew your thoughts and attitudes. Put on your new nature, created to be like God—truly righteous and holy. So stop telling lies. Let us tell our neighbors the truth, for we are all parts of the same body. And don’t sin by letting anger control you. Don’t let the sun go down while you are still angry, for anger gives a foothold to the devil…Don’t use foul or abusive language. Let everything you say be good and helpful, so that your words will be an encouragement to those who hear them…Get rid of all bitterness, rage, anger, harsh words, and slander, as well as all types of evil behavior. Instead, be kind to each other, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven youā€ (vv. 23-32 NLT). God gave you every emotion you have, including anger. But He wants you to handle it the right way. Note the words ā€œlet us…tell the truth.ā€ When you’re angry, instead of denying it, use it to bring about positive change. Saying, ā€œI’ve been feeling angry because I value our relationship and I’d like to talk about it,ā€ brings healing and solutions. Pretending you’re not angry when you are is basically dishonest. So is exaggeration. ā€œYou never listen to me…You always ignore my wishes…Nobody does anything around here except me.ā€ Such generalizations are untrue and serve only to aggravate and polarize, guaranteeing the problem gets obscured and goes unsolved. God’s will is for you to control your anger rather than letting your anger control you.

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Having the Courage to Stand Up for God

ā€œDon’t worry about how or what you should speak. For you will be given what to say at that hour because you are not speaking, but the Spirit of your Father is speaking through youā€ (Matthew 10:19b-20 HCSB)

ā€œDo not be afraid; keep on speaking, do not be silentā€ (Acts 18:9b NIV).

As you search Scripture for God’s truth, it’s important to understand what the Bible says about three controversial issues. I mention these three because they are the ones you need the most courage to speak up about. Why? Because not only will many people disagree with you about these topics, they will also be very passionate in their argument.

It takes an uncommon courage to stand up against that kind of pressure.

There are a lot of parts of the Bible that people don’t have a problem with, like ā€œYou must help the poor.ā€ Nobody disagrees with that. But there are three areas related to sanctity that some Christians avoid talking about. They are:

The sanctity of life: God has a purpose for every unborn child. God planned your life before you were born: ā€œYou saw me before I was born. Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passedā€ (Psalm 139:16 NLT). We are to speak up for those who can’t speak for themselves — the unborn, the 70 million Americans who would be here if they hadn’t been aborted. If I claim to be a Christian, then I must believe that every life is sacred.
The sanctity of sex: Sex is only for marriage. Sex was God’s idea. It isn’t dirty or wrong; sex is holy. ā€œMarriage should be honored by all, and the marriage bed kept pure, for God will judge the adulterer and all the sexually immoralā€ (Hebrews 13:4 NIV). God’s instructions never change: Premarital sex is unacceptable to God. Living together without being married is unacceptable to God. Adultery is unacceptable to God. Pornography and the objectification of women are unacceptable to God.
The sanctity of marriage: One man and one woman for life. That is God’s intended, original design. A lot of people ask, ā€œWell, what about all the polygamy in the Bible?ā€ The Bible doesn’t approve everything it reports the Bible. So why do we call it a ā€œholyā€ Bible? Because it tells the truth, and it is very clear on the issue of marriage: ā€œAt the beginning the Creator ā€˜made them male and female,’and said, ā€˜For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh . . .’ So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separateā€ (Matthew 19:4-6 NIV).
There are many issues of life where people of goodwill can disagree. For example, there’s no economic recovery plan in the Bible, and Christians can disagree on that. But if you call yourself a disciple of Christ, you need to line yourself up with what God says about the sanctity of these three things. And you need to have the courage to stand up for them, even and especially when it’s not the popular or politically correct thing to do.

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Focus On What Really Matters

ā€œLife is not measured by how much you own.ā€ Lk 12:15 NLT One day a man was talking to an angel. The angel said, ā€œWhat can I do for you?ā€ The man said, ā€œShow me the Wall Street Journal one year from today. This way, I’ll know where to invest my money and become a multimillionaire.ā€ So the angel snapped his fingers and out came a Wall Street Journal dated one year in the future. The man flipped the pages of the newspaper, studying the listings and observing which stocks would be high and which ones would be low. But in the midst of his joy, tears began to roll down his cheeks. Why? Because when he looked over the obituary column, there was his face. God is not opposed to you acquiring and achieving things in life. But He wants you to know that this life can only offer so much, and unless you live each day in the light of eternity, you’re going to waste your time on the wrong things. It’s okay to enjoy temporal things, as long as your main focus is on eternal things. Paul said: ā€œMy life is worth nothing to me unless I use it for finishing the work assigned me by the Lord Jesus—the work of telling others the Good News about the wonderful grace of Godā€ (Ac 20:24 NLT). In the UK if you live to be one hundred, you may receive a ā€œCongratulationsā€ card from Buckingham Palace, signed by the Queen of England herself. But it doesn’t compare to the ā€œwell doneā€ you’ll receive from God for fulfilling the assignment He has given you here on earth.

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Set Goals For Your Life

ā€œWrite the vision and make it plain.ā€ Hab 2:2 NKJV Only when you’re clear about your personal goals, can you measure your personal growth. Here are eight proven principles that will help you to establish the right goals for your life: (1) Begin with prayer; otherwise the ladder you’re climbing may be leaning against the wrong wall. ā€œMany are the plans in a man’s heart, but…the Lord’s purpose… prevailsā€ (Pr 19:21 NIV). (2) Think on paper. God told Habakkuk, ā€œWrite the vision and make it plain.ā€ Writing your goals down gives them a sense of permanency, plus it energizes you. (3) Set deadlines. ā€œThe vision is yet for an appointed timeā€ (Hab 2:3 NKJV). Without a definite beginning and ending, it’s easy to procrastinate and get nowhere. (4) List the steps you need to take. Then keep the list before you at all times; it will show you the path to follow. (5) Prioritize the steps in order of importance. What do you need to do first? What can you do later? An organized plan is always better than trying to carry stuff around in your head. (6) Take action—now. ā€œBe very careful, then, how you live—not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunityā€ (Eph 5:15-16 NIV). A mediocre plan that’s implemented always beats a brilliant plan that isn’t. (7) Do something each day to move you forward. For example, read systematically through the Bible in a year…call a specific number of clients every week…engage in physical activity every day. (8) Have goals you’re willing to devote your life to. The Psalmist said, ā€œTeach us to number our days aright, that we may gain a heart of wisdomā€ (Ps 90:12 NIV).

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Get The Mix Right!

In order for cement to become concrete, it must be mixed with sand and water. If you don’t get the mix right, the cement will never become concrete. And just as your body needs good nutrition each day, your soul needs to be fed on God’s Word. But you can’t stop there. You must act on what you hear and read. Faith is acting like God is telling the truth! If you don’t act on God’s Word, it won’t do you any good. ā€œThe message they heard did not benefit them, because it was not mixed with faith (with the leaning of the entire personality on God in absolute trust and confidence in His power, wisdom, and goodness) by those who heard it.ā€ To get the results God’s Word promises, note what you must ā€œmixā€ in: ā€œConfidence in his power, wisdom, and goodness.ā€ Why do you go to church and sit down on a pew? Because you are confident that the pew will hold your weight. The reverse is also true. You may say you believe the pew can hold your weight, but if you never sit down on it, you’re not exercising faith—because you’re not acting on what you say you believe. What does it mean to ā€œactā€ in faith? (1) To agree with God’s Word and refuse to say anything that contradicts it. (2) To wait patiently, allowing God to fulfill His Word in His own way and on His own schedule. ā€œFaith is the substance of things hoped forā€ (Heb 11:1). Note the word ā€œsubstance.ā€ Your faith must be based on something substantial—and that ā€œsomethingā€ is the tried, proven, unfailing truth of God’s Word.

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Shout It From The Housetops

ā€œLet the redeemed of the Lord say so.ā€ Ps 107:2 NKJV No matter how badly you have failed, God will give you another chance. After Jonah had disobeyed God, spent three days in the belly of a whale, and been regurgitated on the shore at Nineveh, the Bible says, ā€œThe word of the Lord came unto Jonah the second timeā€ (Jnh 3:1). King David’s sins were front-page tabloid material. Yet God restored him, and he wrote: ā€œHe…brought me up out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay…set my feet upon a rock, and established my steps. He has put a new song in my mouth—praise to our God; many will see it and fear, and will trust in the Lordā€ (Ps 40:2-3 NKJV). When God restores you, it doesn’t matter who’s fighting against you. When He raises you up, no one can keep you down. If God has redeemed youā€”ā€œsay so.ā€ Nobody else can tell your story. Nobody else knows what God has done for you. Nobody else knows how far you’ve come. Nobody else knows what you’ve been through. But you do—you know it was only by God’s grace that you survived. So don’t allow the Devil to steal your testimony. It may have taken you longer than everybody else, but God has given you the victory. The Devil would love to silence you. Why? Because when you tell people what God has done for you, someone else will be set free. The Bible says, ā€œLet the redeemed of the Lord say so, whom He has redeemed from the hand of the enemy.ā€ So the word for you today is: Shout it from the housetops!

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How Change Happens (5)

ā€œAnd he was limping because of his hip.ā€ Ge 32:31 NIV The Bible says, ā€œThe sun rose above [Jacob] as he passed Peniel, and he was limping because of his hip.ā€ That’s significant, because the thigh muscle is one of the most powerful muscles in the human body. In order to get Jacob’s attention, God touched him at a point of strength. Once we start thinking, ā€œThis is what I’m really good at; this is where I’m really strong,ā€ God may have to touch that very thing to get our attention. Jacob’s limp served as a lifelong reminder that he was no longer to trust in his own power, but in the power of God. He was no longer to live in his own strength, but in God’s strength. And in so doing he became a much stronger person. Think about it: Every time Jacob got in a mess, his first response was to turn tail and run. Sound like a familiar pattern? Do you do that? So God finally said, ā€œI know how to take care of that—I’ll put a limp in his walk!ā€ And for the rest of his life Jacob would have to stand and face his problems head-on, not in his own strength but in God’s strength. How about you? What’s the one thing you’d most like to change about your life? Do you want God to help you? He will—in His own way. He will use the process of crisis, commitment, confession, and cooperation. And when God does the changing, it will be permanent. You won’t have to worry about willpower and sticking with it because you’ll be cooperating with God, relaxing, and trusting in Him alone.

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How Change Happens (3)

ā€œThe man asked him, ā€˜What is your name?’ ā€˜Jacob,’ he answered.ā€ Ge 32:27 NIV

Change happens through confession. When he identified himself as ā€œJacob,ā€ which means ā€œdeceiver,ā€ Jacob was acknowledging his character flaws. This is an important part of God’s process for changing us, because we never change until we honestly face and admit our faults, sins, weaknesses, and mistakes. We need to say, ā€œLord, I have a problem, I’m in a mess and I admit I made it.ā€ Then God can go to work. Ever notice how easy it is to make excuses? We become experts at blaming others and saying things like, ā€œIt’s not my fault, you know. It’s the environment I was brought up in—my parents are to blame.ā€ Or, ā€œThe situation I’m in at work is because of my boss.ā€ Why do we act and talk this way? Because it’s hard to admit our personal faults and failings, and it can be scary to ask for help. Why do we need to confess our faults to God? To let Him know what’s going on? No: He already knows that! When we tell God we’ve sinned, it is no surprise to Him; He knew our problems all along. We confess to Him because He wants us to say, ā€œYou’re right, God; I have a problem. I’ve blown it.ā€ It is humbling to admit our mistakes, but once we do, God gives us access to His power to help change us for the better. And at that point we start to become the person we’ve always wanted to be. The truth is: God loves you just the way you are—but He loves you too much to leave you that way.

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How Change Happens (1)

ā€œWe are changed into his glorious image.ā€ 2Co 3:18 NLT

Change happens through crisis. God changed Jacob’s name, which means ā€œdeceiver,ā€ to Israel, which means ā€œa prince with God.ā€ And He did it through crisis. Realizing he had to go home and face the wrath of his brother Esau, whom he’d mistreated, Jacob became desperate. That night in his tent he wrestled with the angel of the Lord. And the change in his life didn’t come quickly or easily, because we’re told he wrestled until daybreak. But suddenly it dawned on Jacob that he was wrestling with God, and it was a fight he couldn’t win. Likewise, God will let you wrestle with an issue you can’t resolve, to get your attention. He’ll bring you to the place where you must concede, ā€œI can’t handle this situation. It’s too big for me. I need God!ā€ If that’s where you are today, you’re on the cusp of a breakthrough. If you’re asking God to make you comfortable in the mess you’re in, forget it—it’s not going to happen. ā€œAs an eagle stirs up its nest…so the Lord alone led himā€ (Dt 32:11-12 NKJV). A mother eagle will upend her nest and push her children off a cliff to teach them how to fly. Can you imagine what they’re thinking? ā€œIt’s my mother doing this to me!ā€ And God will do the same to you. He’ll allow a crisis in order to get your attention. He knows you won’t change until your fear of change is surpassed by the pain you’re experiencing. Bottom line: ā€œThe Lord—who is the Spirit—makes us more and more like him as we are changed into his glorious image.ā€

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God Is Your Unfailing Source

ā€œThe brook dried up.ā€ 1Ki 17:7 NIV

The Psalmist wrote, ā€œJoyful are those…whose hope is in the Lord their Godā€ (Ps 146:5 NLT). One author writes: ā€œSometimes when there’s not enough money to make ends meet, people tell us to budget and we chuckle. We look at the situation and say, ā€˜No way.’ That’s the time to trust God. Your possibilities aren’t limited by past or present circumstances. If there’s not enough to pay legitimate expenses, do your best and then let go. Trust God to supply your need, then look beyond your wallet. Look to your source. Claim a divine, unlimited supply. Do your part. Strive for financial responsibility in thought and action. Ask for wisdom, and listen to God’s leadings. Then let go of your fears and your need to control. We all know money is a necessary part of living—and so does God.ā€ F. B. Meyer said: ā€œThe education of our faith is incomplete till we learn that God’s providence works through loss…There’s a ministry to us through the failure and fading of things. The dwindling brook where Elijah sat is a picture of our lives! ā€˜Some time later the brook dried up’ (1Ki 17:7 NIV) is the history of our yesterdays and the prophecy of our tomorrows. We must learn the difference between trusting in the gift and trusting in the giver. The gift may last for a season, but the giver is eternal. If the Lord had led Elijah directly to the widow at Zarephath, he’d have missed something that helped make him a better man—living by faith. Whenever our earthly resources dry up, it’s so we may learn that our hope and health are in God.ā€

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Today Share Your Faith With Someone
ā€œA woman of Samaria came to draw water.ā€ Jn 4:7 NKJV

One day Jesus met a woman who’d come to draw water from a well. After five failed marriages, her trust in men was zero—and her self-esteem was minus zero! But after her encounter with Christ, she left the well radically changed. When it comes to sharing our faith, we learn three important lessons from her story: (1) Jesus sees the best in everybody. ā€œThe Pharisees…complained, saying, ā€˜This Man receives sinnersā€™ā€ (Lk 15:2 NKJV). And when it came to the woman at the well, they were right. She’d been through five divorces and was the talk of the town because she was living with another man. Yet she was the first person to whom Jesus introduced Himself as the Messiah. Why didn’t He do that when He called His disciples? Or performed His first miracle? Or interviewed Nicodemus? Because Jesus doesn’t measure you by your past or your pedigree—but by your potential. (2) Jesus changes you, then He uses you to change others. This woman was the first person to share the gospel in Samaria, and ā€œmany…Samaritans…believed in Him because of the word of the womanā€ (Jn 4:39 NKJV). Out of your brokenness, God can use you to make others whole. (3) Jesus doesn’t need you to explain Him, just to introduce Him. He speaks for Himself. The Bible says: ā€œMany more believed because of His own word…They said to the woman, ā€˜Now we believe, not because of what you said, for we ourselves have heard Him and we know that this is indeed the Christā€™ā€ (vv. 41-42 NKJV). Today share your faith with someone.

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The Truth About Marriage (3)

ā€œThe amount you give will determine the amount you get back.ā€ Lk 6:38 NLT The truth about the container: When the offering plate was passed in church, a lady didn’t put anything in. When she complained all the way home about how poor the service was, her little boy said, ā€œMom, that proves if you don’t put anything in, you won’t get anything out.ā€ Marriage is like an empty container—you get out what you put in. This truth frees you to make your relationship rich and rewarding by becoming a giver rather than a taker. Some people think the container comes filled with romance, sexual fulfillment, and being served in the style to which they’ve become accustomed. They think they can take whatever they want from a never-ending supply—instant, low maintenance, satisfaction guaranteed! Then one day they dip in and come up empty. Shocked, disappointed, angry, despairing, and hopeless, they conclude that their partner failed, fooled, or forsook them. Why else would the container be empty? Then they go looking for a new container. The truth is, it’s your responsibility to make enough deposits every day to guarantee sufficient withdrawals for a rich relationship. Jesus said, ā€œThe amount you give will determine the amount you get back.ā€ Ask yourself what you’d like to have in the container, and how much. Then deposit enough to generate that amount. J. Allan Petersen said: ā€œThere’s no love in marriage; love is in people, and people put it into marriage. There’s no romance in marriage; people have to infuse it into their marriages. A couple must form the habit of giving, loving, serving, praising—keeping the box full.ā€

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