Wheels of Glory! Blog

Hope, Peace and Joy in the Holy Spirit – VOTD.02.13.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | February 13th, 2018 | by Wheels of Glory

… so that you will abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. Romans 15:13

I want to tie up some loose ends today: The Holy Spirit is the one that produces His holiness in us as we walk in dependence on Him (Gal. 5:16-23; 1 Cor. 6:11). The Spirit opens our minds so that we can understand the truths of God’s Word (1 Cor. 2:9-13). These are some of our first baby steps in the Spirit.

The Spirit confirms our adoption as children of God and helps us as we struggle to pray (Rom. 8:15-17, 26). The Spirit strengthens us with power in the inner being so that Jesus dwells in our hearts through faith (Eph. 3:16-17). The Holy Spirit seals every believer so that we are kept for the day of redemption (Eph. 1:13-14; 4:30).

So it’s not surprising that as time goes by, we find that the Holy Spirit is the power who produces in us His fruit, like Peace and Joy as we trust in Him, so that we abound in Hope.

This requires a shifting in how we think – how you and I perceive reality. We’re either going to limit our thinking to the natural, living in that place of limitation, or we’re going to open ourselves to the Spirit and enter into a Joy and a Peace that culminates in a life-attitude of Hope. (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Hope, Peace and Joy in Troubled Times – VOTD.02.12.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | February 12th, 2018 | by

Everything we could ever need for life and complete devotion to God has already been deposited inside us by his divine power. For all this has been lavished upon us through the rich experience of knowing him … As a result, he has given us magnificent promises … so that through the power of these tremendous promises we can partner with the God’s own nature.  1 Peter 1:3-4

This may sound so obvious you’d wonder why I bother mentioning it at all. But there are far too many Christians who, when reminded that they are supposed to be walking in joy and peace and hope, feel a sort of despair, or else they feel a huge burden – “I know I’m supposed to be that way and I try and try.” So I think it’s worth mentioning the obvious.

If we want joy, peace, and hope, the way to get it is by prayer, seeking God, and worship. There is no formula that can compare with this because God is the God of Hope, He’s the God of Peace, He’s the God of Joy. Outside of Him, it’s practically cruel to expect ourselves to have any of these fruits (results) of the Holy Spirit’s presence.

But God promises us Hope, Peace, and Joy. And like all of God’s promises, they come by us focusing on Him: A lot of God’s promises are found right in the Bible. Write them down on a list or memorize them so you can recite them over and over…especially when you aren’t feeling very peaceful, joyful or hopeful. The point isn’t the method, it’s that we meditate on God’s promises and focus on Him and His promises often.

Secondly, we need to change our minds about joylessness, grumbling, complaining, hopelessness, and peacelessness. They are not just unfortunate, they make us miserable and miserable to be around. They are the prayer language of hell. They are accusations against our God that He’s doing a bad job. Rather than bringing us closer to Jesus, which is the solution to all of this, they drive us further away.

When we feel overwhelmed with despair or depression, we need to use that as our cue to talk ourselves toward hope: Tell yourself again and again to hope in God. The depressed psalmist did this repeatedly: (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Joy in the Wilderness – VOTD.02.06.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | February 6th, 2018 | by

Blessed are those whose strength is in you, whose hearts are set on pilgrimage. As they pass through the Valley of Baka (tears), they make it a place of springs; the autumn rains also cover it with pools. They go from strength to strength… For the Lord God is their sun and shield; the Lord bestows favor and honor; no good thing does he withhold from them… Psalm 84:5-11

Jesus is faithful. In fact, His name is “Faithful and True” (Rev 19:11). And He promises to withhold no good thing from us as we walk in communion with Him. For “the lovers of God who chase after righteousness,” Proverbs promises, “find all their dreams come true: an abundant life drenched with favor and a fountain that overflows with satisfaction” (21:2).

…But in the wildernesses of life (pilgrimage), when we’re stuck in the valley of tears (Baka), we can’t see how God will ever bring His promises to pass.  When we aren’t even certain we have a promise in the first place, it can be difficult to rest in Him, and find the joy of the Lord, even in our wilderness.

We all find ourselves in the valley of tears or sorrows. Yet God enables us in those times and place to dig deep springs in our wildernesses; and He fills our efforts with pools of water as we are energized by Him (from strength to strength). We find Him to be the Giver of good gifts (sun-the source of energy and warmth) as well as our shield (protector).

But too often our focus is in the wrong place – when we spin-in on all our troubles, we miss the joy that is in His presence. Maybe we neglect the opportunity to rejoice in Jesus because the atmosphere isn’t very conducive to being joyful. We don’t feel like it. But if keep putting it off until the promise is fulfilled, there’ll be another promise we need fulfilled just around the corner that we will wait for… and the result is that we’ll never find rest and we’ll never be joy-filled.

Joy in the wilderness requires faith in the Lord of the wilderness. Faith will always be needed as long as we live in this world where we face trouble, and we need to know how to be joyful and rest, even in our wildness. That joy and rest come from deeper communion with Jesus, rather than our finding solace in our immediate circumstances… to discover by experience that “in His presence there is fullness of joy” (Ps. 16:11). (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Confidence in the Wilderness – VOTD.02.05.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | February 5th, 2018 | by

Do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. Hebrews 10:35-36

Last time we talked about the God of hope filling us with all joy and peace as we trust in Him, so that we overflow with hope (Rom 15:13). Getting to know God and His ways builds trust and hope within us because we know Him personally, we know His character, we personally experience His love and care.

I sometimes call this experiencing Jesus first hand: Through the ups and downs of life, we grow in the knowledge and experience of His nature and character. By experiencing His grace over and over in all kinds of situations, He shows us what is really important, shifting our focus away from ourselves and our problems, desires, and priorities onto Him, His faithfulness, and His abundance.

And it is in this every-day experience – this receiving His comfort in the trials, his enablement to stand against certain defeat – walking with us through victories and setbacks (we don’t like setbacks, but He uses those, too), learning from experience “the secret of being content in any and every situation” whether in plenty or in need, that we can do all this through Him who gives us strength (Phil 4:12,13).

When our circumstances seem to be the opposite of God’s promises and hope is hard to find amid the distractions and bewilderment of loss and disappointment, desperation breeds further revelation of Jesus in us, the hope of glory (Col 1:27). The main and most foundational revelation that we need is finding Him not only as Lord and Savior but as our truest friend and bridegroom. Paul speaks of this in 2 Corinthians. In fixing our attention on Him, we are transformed into His image from glory to glory (3:18). (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Hope, Peace and Joy in the Holy Spirit – VOTD.01.30.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | January 30th, 2018 | by Wheels of Glory

Now may God, the inspiration and fountain of hope, fill you to overflowing with uncontainable joy and perfect peace as you trust in him. And may the power of the Holy Spirit continually surround your life with his super-abundance until you radiate with hope! Romans 15:13

Today’s verse is what Paul prays for every believer to experience. When we read a verse like this, it can either fill us with excitement over what we have and the possibilities of where we can go from here, or it can be a bit daunting. “Does that verse even come close to describing me? Does my life is filled with all joy and peace in believing? Do I abound in hope?”

To varying degrees we all fall short of experiencing the uncontainable joy and perfect peace and life-radiating hope that Paul prays for each of us. But considering the dullness of many Christians’ faith-experience, it makes sense to seriously seek God to fill us with all joy and peace, so that we will abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.

So in a sense today’s verse is one of the most practical passages in the Bible for us all as we navigate life in a world where we are promised trouble (Jn 14:33). Firstly, if we face discouragement and disappointment, the place to go is God. He’s the source or supplier of hope. In fact, He is also the focus of our hope. Paul describes Him in 15:33 and 16:20 as “the God of peace.” He gives peace to His people. If we lack hope or peace or joy, the first place we should look for it in God, who is the source of all three.

Secondly, while the foundation for this abundant is hope found in Jesus, the structure of hope that is built on that foundation is being filled with all joy and peace. And Paul doesn’t pray that we will have a little bit of joy and peace trickling into our lives now and then. He piles up these superlatives to show us that God’s method of building on the foundation of hope is to fill us with all joy and peace so that we will abound in hope. (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

I Told You So – VOTD.01.29.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | January 29th, 2018 | by

I TOLD YOU all of this so that the peace which is in me will be in you and will give you great confidence to rest in me. For in this unbelieving world you will experience trouble and sorrows, but you must be courageous, for I have conquered the world!” John 16:33

Jesus has taken away the power this world has to defeat us and has conquered it for us. The peace He promises is resting in his victory rather than being anxious about all that is happening around us.

In context, Jesus has been talking about two things: The sending of the Holy Spirit to dwell within us and the persecution His true followers should expect from the religious institution under whose domineering practices they lived. The two are connected:

Jesus is preparing His followers for a radical shift in their reality. They are about to move from the domination of human leadership which was both tyrannically self-serving and devoid of God (no matter how much they talk about Him), to an intimate relationship with Himself, enabled by the Holy Spirit dwelling within them. These two realities would be at war over their allegiance and their souls.

You see, Jesus had already told them this on several occasions, but in John 8 He makes it clear that His Father was God, and their ‘father’ was the devil. Not surprisingly, these two weren’t going to coexist very well. (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Hope and Disappointment – VOTD.01.23.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | January 23rd, 2018 | by

Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us. Romans 5:5

Last time we looked at the later life of John the Prophet. In Matthew 11:2-6, John is arrested and thrown in prison, which seems really strange to those who believe the successful Christian life is all mountaintop vistas with sugar-gum trees. I mean, here’s John, the one who correctly understands himself to be the frontrunner of Jesus the Messiah. He has been faithful. In fact, even Jesus would say that there is not a greater man born than John…Then he’s thrown in prison…Then he’s executed.

One of the take-aways from the history of the Israelites is that the relationship between Hope and Disappointment. Same in the New Testament and church history: If we don’t want to be disappointed, forget about hope. Disappointment is always rooted in hope deferred or crushed. (Prov 13:12). We can’t be disappointed if we didn’t first hope that something in the first place. And none of us are exempt. Every one of us has had a plan, a dream, a vision of what we want to happen in our lives that doesn’t work out the way we had hoped at some level.

When that happens, disappointment is natural, certainly not sinful. But disappointment can be the tip of a mean-spirited iceberg if we let it. When our shattered dreams and plans erode our confidence… Our confidence in ourselves, our confidence in our ability to hear God correctly, and even in our God, Himself.

“So do not throw away your confidence, for you are destined for a great reward! You need to reveal God’s will and then you receive the promise in full (Heb 10:36,37) God is working a plan in each of our lives, and that plan is a good plan, but it will almost always play out differently than we think it will…maybe differently than we think it should.

So, here are some things we need to do if we were going to thrive (or at least survive) in the sometimes slower-than-we’d-like revelation God’s good, right plan playing out…even in ways that are also sometimes confusing and don’t seem to make sense [and, at times, if we’re really honest, disappoint us]. (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

When Jesus Doesn’t Meet our Expectations – VOTD.01.22.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | January 22nd, 2018 | by

Now, while John the Baptizer was in prison, he heard about what Christ was doing among the people, so he sent his disciples to ask him this question: “Are you really the one prophesied would come, or should we still wait for another?” “Give John this report,” Jesus said: “‘The blind see again, the crippled walk, lepers are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised back to life, and the poor and broken now hear of the hope of salvation!’ And tell John that the blessing of heaven comes upon those who never lose their faith in me—no matter what happens!” Matt 11:2-6

Today, we know that Jesus was and is the Messiah. Jesus knew that, and John the Prophet knew that, too. However, after John had been imprisoned for many weary months, be began wondering whether Jesus was in fact the promised Messiah after all. Clearly Jesus’ activities didn’t align with John’s idea of what the Messiah’s ministry would be like. And so John sent messengers to Jesus to find out who He was, or perhaps to cajole Jesus into revealing who He was.

Now before we get into this, I want to point out that when John’s faith was under siege…he went to Jesus to get answers. He didn’t wallow in his doubt while he languished in a very unpleasant prison. He went straight to Jesus.

So often, when believers have doubts, we don’t go to Jesus for answers. We get stuck with our questions and our doubts because we don’t take them to Jesus for answers. We may go to friends and Christian books and counselors (and these things are good), but we don’t go to Jesus and examine our doubts in light of Who He is and the revelation we already have of Him.

But moving on, it’s critical to understand how Jesus answered the question about his Messiah-ship. He didn’t just tell the messengers, “Sure I’m the Messiah; John knows that.” Instead He put on a demonstration. In Luke’s account, we read:

“Before He answered (the messengers), Jesus turned to the crowd and healed many of their incurable diseases. His miracle power freed many from their suffering. He restored the gift of sight to the blind, and he drove out demonic spirits from those who were tormented. Only then did Jesus answer the question posed by John’s disciples. ‘Now go back and tell John what you have just seen…’” (7:21,22).

The prophetic message of John was one of repentance; he may have been expecting Jesus to continue on that foundation he had laid. But the message of Jesus was demonstration and declaration of the arrival of the Kingdom of God. (more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Removing the Arrows Life Sticks in Us – VOTD.01.16.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | January 16th, 2018 | by Wheels of Glory

<same as last time> But this one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. All of us, then, who are mature should take such a view of things. Philippians 3:13-15

Last time we looked at living every day of our lives instead of reacting and existing and wondering where the time went. Today, I want to look at how Paul tells us how he lives every day to the fullest: He does this in 3 thoughts:

1. Forget Yesterday; Don’t Stop
“Forgetting what is behind” – That is hard to do. Yet life is less than what it can be if we keep carrying around all of our yesterdays. Even if our past is stellar, it weighs us down. Paul isn’t telling us to press the ‘Delete’ button on the past from the tablet of our minds (and there’s no ‘Undo’ button in life). He meant that the past is not a place to stop—it’s a place to build upon.

Paul didn’t let his past failures or successes obstruct his present running of God’s race set before him. Like it says in Hebrews 12:1 …let us let go of everything that hinders, and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with perseverance the race that is set before us.

The literal translation, when it tells us to ‘let go of everything that hinders,’ is “get rid of every arrow tip stuck in us.” The implication is carrying an arrow tip inside, a wound that weighs us down and keeps us from running our race with freedom.

We’ve been in spiritual battles. Let go of the wounds. The race is now. Forget Yesterday.

2. Live Today with Eyes Fixed on Jesus
“This is the day the Lord has made, therefore be glad in it” (Ps 118:24). Live today. It is a gift from the God who loves us. Live it to the fullest. How do we live today? Hebrews tells us that we can “run with perseverance the race marked out for us” by “fixing our eyes on Jesus.”

Only Jesus can give our lives purpose. He is the One who created you and me in the womb. He is the One who birthed us as individuals and we will only find our purpose in Him (Jer 29:7). He is the source of abundant life, and the goal of living.

3. Trust Tomorrow into God’s Hands
Trust Tomorrow – there is victory here. “Take therefore no thought for tomorrow: for tomorrow will take thought for the things of itself” (Matt 6:34). Refuse to worry about tomorrow. Refuse to count on tomorrow. Instead we need to trust our tomorrows to God.
(more…)

Wheels of Glory! Blog

Living Every Day of our Lives – VOTD.01.15.18

Posted in Verse of the Day | January 15th, 2018 | by

But this one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. All of us, then, who are mature should take such a view of things. Philippians 3:13-15

How many days of 2017 did you and I really live? How many days did we live out, rather than exist through? Or did we wander the corridors of the unchangeable past? How many days did we live within, rather than obsessing over tomorrow’s potential problems?

Or maybe it’s just pace. We can live fully alive, aware, and appreciative of all the moments we are experiencing, or at frantic pace, or glued to our phones, tablets, or TVs?

Don’t get me wrong, we can’t be 100% present all the time. Life in our world doesn’t allow very many people that luxury. But all the same, it’s easy to get distracted and lose days and weeks without coming up for air…without taking a fresh look at living…and we end up reacting rather than living.

Especially in the Christian faith that has historically championed discipline and duty, we can get so spun in on the tasks at hand that we lose track of what really matters. Family, friends…doing things that are rewarding, something fun – something fully today.

The Apostle Paul had found the key to living today. For all the ways he could commend himself, he knew his value was not in his past achievements. For all the ways he could obsess over his past failures, he didn’t do that, either. Considering his bleak future, he could have obsessed on that. And as for his present circumstances, he wrote today’s verses from a miserable jail cell.

Yet Paul seemed to live every day to its fullest. “My heart overflows with joy …” He writes in the following chapter, “for I have learned to be satisfied in any circumstance. I know what it means to lack, and I know what it means to experience overwhelming abundance. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation …I can do all this through him who gives me strength.” (Phil 4:10-13). (more…)

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »