Weeds
Sometimes
I like to randomly post on Facebook a true confession. It’s just a weird little
quirk of mine, I think it dates back to my childhood in the catholic
church. Here are a few of my recent true
confessions:
“confession
time: I just hit the 'buy' button on grey shellac nail polish to go with my
Easter outfit.”
“True
Confessions; I've had "I Love You Like a Love Song" by Selena Gomez
in my head all evening. Sometimes I'm such a teenage girl!”
Tonight
I want to make a confession to you guys, but you have to promise not to hold it
against me. I got married at 18 for a reason. Not the reason you are thinking
of. I got married to change my maiden name. It was pretty much the worst last
name you could think of. My last name was “Klapp”. Which, if you didn’t know
it, was the street name for gonorrhea.
My
poor dad taught high school biology for years. One day one of his students raised his hand in front of
the whole class and asked him..
“Mr.
Klapp, are you a disease?”
The
reality is that we all have a disease. It’s an incurable disease; doctors have
no antidote. It’s highly contagious, in fact everyone has it to some degree,
there’s no vaccine. As this disease progresses, it will eventually annihilate
your system. This disease always ends in death. Some die quickly, others take
years.
You
are probably looking around the room thinking, “I don’t feel like I’m sick. My
friends don’t look sick!”
We
are all suffering from a disease called sin. Sadly a lot of people don’t even
realize they are infected, but regardless of your understanding, the wages of
sin are death. That’s a Biblical fact. Life lived apart from God equals death
apart from God. Death apart from God equals hell.
This
disease, Sin, destroys our relationship with God. Isaiah 1:15 paints this
picture for us. “When you spread out your
hands in prayer, I will hide my eyes from you, even if you offer many prayers,
I will not listen. Your hands are full of blood; Wash and make yourself clean.
Take your evil deeds out of my sight. Stop doing wrong, learn to do right!”
This
verse tells us very clearly that sin in our lives will cause God to turn away
from our prayers. Hopefully you have all made the choice to accept Christ as
your savior. A miraculous thing happened in your life the moment you did. As we
read on in Isaiah, we can see what Christ did for us with this sin issue.
“Come now, let us reason together, says the Lord. Though
your sins are like scarlet, they shall be white as snow. Though they are red as
crimson, they shall be like wool.”
Isaiah
1:18
God
is a reasonable God. He did not want to condemn and destroy His people. In His
perfection, in His love for us, Jesus covered our sins. He was the blood
atonement – the only cure for our sin problem. We were spiritually diseased and
dying, but Jesus made a way to restore us, to heal us spiritually.
When
we accept Jesus and His restorative work in our lives, we are made new, whole
again. We’ve experienced spiritual healing, God sees us as He sees Jesus;
sanctified. Sanctified is another $10,000 Bible word - it means made holy.
Sanctification is the process of being made holy.
Sanctification
is an incredible miracle especially because it works in three ways; past
present and future.
Sanctification
works in the past because it covers what you already have done. When you accept
Christ, you are instantly sanctified, meaning if you died in that moment, you
are seen as perfect and sinless, because Christ’s blood covers you. All your
old stuff (skeletons in the closet) is covered by Christ’s sacrifice. You have
been sanctified.
Sanctification
is also present tense, meaning it’s happening right now. You and I are being
sanctified. It is a daily process. Each day we make choices towards or against
Christ. We choose to swim upstream (towards God) or float downstream (away from
Him) every day. When we choose God, when we make an effort to grow in our
relationship, we are becoming more like Him. We are being sanctified. You will
never ‘arrive’ at sanctification in your own strength. But that brings us to
the last stage of sanctification, the future stage; you will be sanctified.
One
day you will pass away or be raptured. I will too, it’s kind of a bummer if you
are super attached to this life. But as Christians, we know that this life is
just the preface in a really good book. Our real future is with Jesus in
heaven. So that day, when you will die or be raptured and stand before God. He
will look at you and see Jesus. In that moment, you will be sanctified, made
perfectly holy before God. (I am really looking forward to that moment because
I am generally a mess!) You will be sanctified – future tense.
So
we will be sanctified. What do we do in the meantime, now that we know that we
have received this spiritual healing from Jesus? How does that change our
today?
Let’s
concentrate on that ‘present’ stage of sanctification, since that’s where most
of us are at in our walk with Him. How do we live holy lives in a fallen,
sinful world?
Isaiah
tells us that God wants us to repent, to put aside evil, to strive to do what
is right and obey His word. The sad truth is, when we cling own rebellious
ways, we will be destroyed.
Leviticus
19:2 tells us “Be holy because I, the
Lord your God, am holy.” This is a pretty high standard, right? Have you
achieved holiness yet? I certainly have not.
We
can only be holy when we depend on God to make us holy. Further on in the book
of Leviticus God promises multiple times to make us holy. The thing is that we
need to surrender to the process.
We
started this message with true confessions. I have another one for you.
I’ve
had a rough week. I’ve been stressed out this week. Things have just been
coming at me really fast, I have a lot of important deadlines and a lot of
people counting on me. Can anyone relate?
I’ve
shared before that worry and anxiety are pet sins of mine.. Meaning sins that I
pick back up frequently and easily, comfort sins if you will. We all have pet
sins. For some of you it’s eating, or pornography, or cutting, or anger.
Anxiety is my sin of choice.
So
on Monday morning my quiet time was about weeds of sin in our hearts and
allowing the Father to pull them. I was very discouraged while reading it,
asking God, “Why are we pulling these same weeds? My particularly stubborn
weeds of anxiety, fear, and self-reliance. I have struggled with this sin for
decades now, when will I be free of it?”
And
then Holy Spirit reminded me that a prize garden needs to be weeded daily. The
thing about weeds is that they are prolific; they grow quickly and spread
rapidly. We need to daily allow the Master Gardener to come in to our heart and
pull weeds. It can be an uncomfortable process, especially the larger we’ve
allowed the weeds to grow, the deeper the root system is. If the Gardener
hasn’t been allowed in the garden in a while, imagine how overgrown it would
be? What a process to right the situation!!
The
truth is that you and I cannot successfully navigate righteousness on our own.
We need the daily tending of the Gardener, of God. We must allow Him to till
our hearts each day to keep us on the right track. And yes, you will get tired
of the same weeds growing back again, but picture His patience and faithfulness
as He tends to your heart each day. The more attune to His weeding you are, the
quicker you will spot those new weeds, and even temptations as they begin to
take root.
We
join together with God in the process of present sanctification. We can’t do it
on our own, but we work with God by allowing Him daily access to our hearts.
And through that time, He performs spiritual healing, making us more like Him
day by day.
Tonight
it’s time to identify weeds in your heart. Figure out what sins have a tendency
to overgrow and crowd your life. For me it’s anxiety and fear and worry. For
you it might be lust or greed or coveting (wanting what someone else has). It
might be dishonesty or stealing. It might be low-self worth, that you don’t
value what God has created in you. You might be considering suicide or self
harm. It might be that you have disrespect
towards authority. It might be independence, to the point that you can’t see
your need for God. It might be that you struggle with anger and defiance.
We
all have an inborn tendency towards sin. And I personally believe that each of
us has a particular sin or group of sins that we gravitate towards – a bent. I
don’t want you to leave this place without identifying that sin.
We
are going to take two minutes of quiet here to ask God to reveal in your heart
what your particular weeds are. If you already know, begin praying about how to
start the process up pulling up those weeds.
[two
minute of silence]
Now
that you know your area of weakness, I want to spend two minutes seeking God
about that area of your life. Ask Him to uproot the sin that threatens to
overtake your heart. Commit to surrendering yourself to daily weeding. Pray
hard, like your life depends on it, because those pet sins are the most likely
to destroy you.
[two
minutes of prayer]
1 comment:
And winners like to receive prizes for their rolex replica uk efforts, don't they? What better prize than a Rolex? At least, that is the idea Rolex has been successfully perpetuating for rolex replica uk decades - and it just simply works without controversy. What Rolex has been able to do is make everyone out there who wears one feel like part of that winners club. I've interviewed a lot of Rolex retailers over the years asking "what do customers talk rolex replica sale about when shopping for a Rolex?" The responses aren't all that different. New job, raise, bonus, anniversary, graduation... achievement, achievement, achievement... It is a trend I see time and time again. Even as some steeped in the nitty-gritty of replica watches the watch industry, I am not immune. When I got a Rolex for myself, it was to celebrate something. With replica watches uk that said, we can return to sunny summer days on golf courses examining priceless replica watches sale automobiles and their owners.
Post a Comment