Let Your Light Shine

Our Scripture for today is Matthew 5:16

“Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.”

When one reflects on a this verse it is easy to think it is talking about trying hard to act like a Christian before others. Well, that is not wrong, but there is more.

I was remind of this when I read the story that showed the attitude of one older Christian lady. Stuck in her house, she was suffering from arthritis and watched the passing traffic outside her front window and remarked, “I don’t know what I’d do without that traffic to keep me interested.”

Sometimes later, she was relocated to a room at the back where the window no longer allowed her to see the traffic. “I think this is better,” she said. I can see the cutest little kids playing in the backyard next door.

She was finally relocated to the city’s shantytowns. “Come and see my beautiful view,” She told a friend, “My beautiful view of the sky.”

Letting your Christian light shine is not just a matter of intention, but a matter of how one naturally lives, of what you are inside.

A Christian can be in a hard place and still be grateful. A Christian can be in a good spot and be thankful. Letting your light shine means you can see the good, no matter what!

Lonnie Davis

The Yak-Yak Life

Our Scripture for today is Proverbs 14:23

“In all labor there is profit, But mere talk leads only to poverty.”

We’ve all got that special person in our life. You know them because of what they are “going to do” someday. I call these people the “Yak-Yak” People.

In today’s verse, the wise man warned about leading the Yak-Yak life. Let me translate that verse into our language, “if all you do is talk about what you are going to do, then you will be poor.”

If others lead that kind of life, what do we do… stay away from them? Yes, because that friend with the yak yak habit will live in pain AND bring pain to those around them. We also note that life by the yak yak rule is one of underachieving.

But the scary thing is that sometimes we also live with the yak yak rule. Sometimes it is me. Sometimes it is you.

So how can I tell if I live by the yak yak rule? Here is how: make a list of all the good plans you were going to do but never got around to it. Look at all the projects you started but never finished. If that list is long, then they are pretty good indicators of a yak yak personality.

The poet wrote:

We shall do so much in the years to come,
But what have we done today?
We shall give our gold in a princely sum,
But what did we give today?
We shall lift the heart, and dry the tear,
We shall plant a hope in the place of fear,
We shall speak the words of love and cheer,
But what did we speak today?
– Nixon Waterman

What is the antidote? Start something and get it done. See it through to its completion. The antidote for the Yak-Yak life is today. Do something today. Do not wait for someday. Do something today so that the tomorrow you will be happy about it.

Lonnie Davis

Hard Hearted?

Our Scripture for today is Exodus 10:20

“But the LORD hardened Pharaoh’s heart, and he did not let the children of Israel go.”

We know the story of Moses going before the Pharaoh and demanding that he let the Hebrews leave Egypt and go worship God in the desert. Each time God would motivate the Pharaoh by sending a plague upon Egypt: water turned to blood, frogs, gnats, flies, pestilence, etc. Time after time, the pharaoh would agree and then renege on his word. 

Six times the Bible would then add, “The Lord hardened Pharaoh’s heart.” Skeptics have used this to prove that the Pharaoh wasn’t the bad guy. It was God who was making him change his mind.

This is foolish reasoning. God never leads us to do evil. 

One writer explained how the Lord hardened the Pharaoh’s heart.

Take a piece of wax, a piece of meat, some sand, some clay, and some shavings, put them on a fire. Each of them is acted upon by the same agent, yet…the wax melts, the meat fries, the sand dries up, the clay hardens, and the shavings blaze.

Another version of this is to imagine taking a pound of butter and a pound of clay and put them both on a sidewalk in 100 degree weather. What would happen? The same sun that dries and hardens the clay would melt the butter.

What happens depends on the essence of the butter and the clay. 

In life, the same circumstances makes one person better and one person bitter. One person hears the Word of God and is made better.  Another hears the same word and is made angry. 

It is not what is done to us, but what we do, that determines our destiny. 

Lonnie Davis

Lessons from a Hard Journey

Facing a Hard Journey?

Our text today is  Luke 2:1,3

“In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. And everyone went to his town to register.”

Simple words, but these words turned the world upside down. The decree required Joseph to take his young, pregnant wife, Mary on an eighty-mile trek from Nazareth to Bethlehem. The trip was a hard week’s journey over rough and dangerous terrain. They would not return for more than two years and when they did, their world and our world would be changed. These words begin the story of the birth of Jesus Christ. 

Reading the story of this journey teaches me that even hard journeys can have great lessons. Here are three:

 First. God works behind the scenes.

Since the Son of God was to be born on earth, don’t you think He would come in some grand scene on the most famous stage on earth? Perhaps he would be born in a palace to parents who were royalty. I might have worked it that way, but God often works in small places and in little ways. He had His son born in a tiny village called Bethlehem to a carpenter and his teenage wife.

Second: Don’t judge too soon.

Can you imagine the consternation of Joseph when he heard that he had to make the difficult journey with a pregnant wife? Mary could not have been excited either. Though now we know that the trip was necessary, they certainly thought it was a bad idea. Don’t judge the trip too soon. God knew what was best. He still does.

 Third: God’s will, will be done.

Joseph and Mary didn’t complain. They obeyed and did the will of God. When faced with hard circumstances, one only needs to make sure what God’s will is and then do it. God never asks you to do a thing without giving you the means to do it. That was true for Joseph and Mary and it is true today.

Are you facing a hard journey? Remember the journey of the carpenter Joseph and teenage Mary. As He was with them, He will be with you.

Lonnie Davis

Can Smart People Believe in God?

Our scripture for today is Genesis 1:1.

“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.”

This verse is only ten words long. Atheists rail against these ten words. Why? Because if you establish these words as true, then what else can you deny? If God created the universe, if he spoke it into existence, then surely he can heal the sick, make the blind see, or even raise the dead at the end of this world.  

I enjoy hearing bright people, learned people explain why we can have faith in God. One of these men is Dr. John Lennox, a scientist and mathematician. Sometime back, he was speaking to a group of professors and students at Oxford University in England.

One of the unbelieving professors said that God is like Santa Claus and that one day everyone would find out.

Dr. Lennox objected. God is not like Santa Claus. He asked the group of 2,000 adults who were in attendance, “How many of you came to believe in God after you became an adult?” Hundreds of hands went up. Then he asked, “How many of you believe in Santa Claus?” No hand went up.

He then added, “Your assertion is an insult to the intelligence of the people here. When an adult studies the question, he is often led to believe in God, never in Santa Claus.”

It is sad that people who think they are brilliant conclude that smart people can’t possibly believe in God. Really?

Let me list a few people who believe in God. 

1. Isaac Newton – Physicist and mathematician known for developing the laws of motion and gravity. He said, “This most beautiful system of the sun, planets, and comets could only proceed from the counsel and dominion of an intelligent and powerful Being.” In a word, God.

2. Galileo – An astronomer who played a major role in the scientific revolution. He believed science and religion could coexist. 

3. Louis Pasteur – Pioneering microbiologist who made groundbreaking discoveries in germ theory and immunization. He was a devout Believer.

4. Francis Bacon – A philosopher and scientist known as the father of the scientific method. He believed science was a way to understand God’s creation.

I could expand this list with hundreds of examples. May we never be intimidated by someone who thinks they are too smart to believe in God. Maybe they are just too blind.

Lonnie Davis

What is Love?

Our text for today is 1 Corinthians 13:5

1 Corinthians 13:5 (NKJV)

Love “does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil.”

Everyone says we need to love one another, but that statement begs the question of “what is love?” To answer that vital question, God has given is 1 Corinthians 13. In verses 4 though 8 of that chapter, we have the great definition of love. It is important to note that the these verses do not define love, except that they define what love does. Those who say they love you but do not treat you with love, do not love. I don’t mean that we don’t sometimes act temporarily in a non-loving way, but rather that love has a long view of how we treat one another.

One of my favorite verses on defining what love does is verse 5.

I call your attention to the last three words of this great verse. It says simply, love, “thinks no evil.” What does it mean to “think no evil?”

I was reminded of this behavior of love recently when I called my sweet sister-in-law back because I had asked a personal question and did not want to be offensive. Her response warmed my heart. I’ll quote it. No, I “know you asked only because you care about my well being. Thank you for asking.”

Too many times when we hear something that might be either offensive or caring, we jump to the worse way we can take it. Love doesn’t do that!

One time my former youth minister told me that he had commented to our secretary that even when he did not agree with me, he knew that I only wanted what was best for him. That too warmed my heart.

The people who take everything you say or do in the worst way it can be understood, do not really love you. They may say they do, but according to the Holy Spirit, love “Thinks no evil.”

To love someone means to look for the best way to understand. When that six-month old baby cries in the night, no loving parent things the baby is being mean. We know they are hungry, or scared, or hurting. We look for the best. To love others means do the same thing for them.

Lonnie Davis

Do It Now

Our text for today is Acts 8:26:

Now an angel of the Lord spoke to Philip, saying, “Arise and go toward the south along the road which goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.” This is desert.

It seemed like a simple command to just go to a certain road. There was no “I have a person for you to talk to,” or “there you will lead someone to Christ.” Later, God did give Philip the opportunity to tell someone about God, but when the command came, it was a “just do it” thing. Just go!

 Philip did “just do it.” There were many human reasons why he should not have gone. (1) He was doing a great work of evangelism where he was. (2) Where God told him to go was out the middle of nowhere. Surely he could do more good with all the people where he was. (3) It was an 80-mile trip and he had to walk.

Being a follower of God sometimes means doing what we do not understand. This was one of those times. For all the good that Philip did while he was converting people in Samaria, we know nothing of their stories. Because he went to this deserted place, we have this great story of the conversion of the Ethiopian eunuch. For 2,000 years, people have proclaimed this story and led people to Christ.

Contained in this story is the real secret to being a great Christian. The secret? Whatever God wants you to do, just do it!

Over the years, I have reminded Christians of one great law: “When you know what God wants you to do, then the decision is over.” After that, everything else is how, not what! 

 Lonnie Davis

Does God Give Up on Us?

Does God Give Up on Us?

Romans 1:28 

“Even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind.”

Does this verse tell us that God gives up on us? No! God does not give up on us, but he will not force himself upon us. 

One modern translation captures this thought well by translating it as “Since they thought it foolish to acknowledge God, he abandoned them to their foolish thinking.” God does not force you into a reprobate mind, but rather he just sadly leaves us where our mind has already gone.

One can tell this has happened when reprobate things no longer trouble us. Isaiah 5:20 warns, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil.”

Years ago I worked for a large company that would send us out to work as teams. This meant we were all far from our families. Many of the “family men” who found themselves far away from their families would go to bars at night and give themselves over to a “reprobate mind” and do things they ought not to do. I have my own flaws, but that was not one of them. I would stay in my hotel room alone and study. One night one of the other men came back early. He stopped by my room to say hello. He was a former minister and a family man. He talked about how he had been successful with women that night. I asked him, “Doesn’t it bother you to do these things?” He thought for a second and then said, “What bothers me is that it doesn’t bother me.” 

God will never give up on us and push us away, but he will give us our free choice. Choose wisely.

Lonnie Davis

Does God Give Up on Us?

Our Text for today is Romans 1:28 

“Even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind.”

Does this verse tell us that God gives up on us? No! God does not give up on us, but he will not force himself upon us. 

One modern translation captures this thought well by translating it as “Since they thought it foolish to acknowledge God, he abandoned them to their foolish thinking.” God does not force you into a reprobate mind, but rather he just sadly leaves us where our mind has already gone.

One can tell this has happened when reprobate things no longer trouble us. Isaiah 5:20 warns, “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil.”

Years ago, I worked for a large company that would send us out to work as teams. This meant we were all far from our families. Many of the “family men” who found themselves far away from their families would go to bars at night and give themselves over to a “reprobate mind” and do things they ought not to do. I have my own flaws, but that was not one of them. I would stay in my hotel room alone and study. One night one of the other men came back early. He stopped by my room to say hello. He was a former minister and a family man. He talked about how he had been successful with women that night. I asked him, “Doesn’t it bother you to do these things?” He thought for a second and then said, “What bothers me is that it doesn’t bother me.” 

God will never give up on us and push us away, but he will give us our free choice. 

Lonnie Davis

Christian Mavericks?

Our Scripture for today is John 13:34-35.

“A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” – Jesus

Samuel Augustus lived from 1803 to 1870. He was a Texas lawyer, politician, land baron and signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence. 

That is a great resume, but it gets more interesting. As a land baron, he was also a rancher. Either he did not believe in branding his cattle or else he was just forgetful. While all his rancher neighbors branded their cattle, Samuel usually did not. The neighbors finally got used to his strange ways and when they found his cattle mixing with theirs, they knew which were his and didn’t complain. They just referred to an unbranded cow as “Mavericks.” You see, Samuel’s last name was Maverick and the unbranded cows were considered to be “Maverick’s.” 

This idea stuck and even today is applied to people who go their own way and do their own thing. They are sometimes called mavericks.

I thought this was interesting because in Christianity there should be no “mavericks.” 

Oh, we are uniquely ourselves, but as Christians, we all have characteristics that show we are Christians. That is what Jesus said in today’s scripture reading, “By this everyone will know that you are my disciple.” 

Pauls recognized this and said, “I bear on my body the marks of Jesus.” (Galatians 6:17). 

We also need to live our life in such a way that people can see that we are disciples of Jesus.

Lonnie Davis