Isaiah 59:7 talks about the tendency to rush into sin. What is it about doing the right thing that is so difficult to stick with it?
Isaiah 59:7 talks about the tendency to rush into sin. What is it about doing the right thing that is so difficult to stick with it?
Today’s Haiku Friday is about gift-giving, so I thought I would cross-list my entry:
Caked with biscuit dough,
still – she never took it off:
A grandmother’s ring.
Depression-era
sacrifice to cherish dear –
till death did they part.
Passed down to a bride
who wore it for fifteen years.
(Rings outlast marriage.)
And so, the band waits
for love to find it again –
bare hand to adorn.
If sin always came with immediate consequences, would we do it? Why, then, do we let ourselves become enticed by deferred consequences?
One question I ask my kids when they bicker is: “Was it worth it?” It would behoove us to ask the same of our pet sins: Was it worth it?
How have you turned your back on God (willfully or perhaps subconsciously)? How will you stay more in tune with him, in the future?
Isaiah 59:7-8 tells us what NOT to do in order to live a peaceful life. How can you take that passage and apply it to your life today?
Being a peacemaker is a character trait, not just a fleeting moment. What are you doing today to develop that trait?
Sin masquerades as a very appealing option. How will you stay in tune to the Holy Spirit’s prompting to keep you out of trouble today?
My high school offered a speed-reading course as an elective, which I thoroughly enjoyed. I believe it helped me prepare for the huge reading load in college, because I learned how to identify key concepts at a glance and skim over the fluff. Consequently, I tend to skip repetitive sections when I read, but there is an interesting pattern in the book of Judges that caught my attention. In chapter 3:11-12, 5:31-6:1 and elsewhere, the author describes a good leader who ruled for a period of time (often decades!), and “the land was at peace” during that person’s reign. But then, that leader died, and the very next verse says that the people turned their backs on God … again.
It doesn’t take long for us to forget God’s ways, does it? Check out this passage from Isaiah 59:7-8 (NIRV): “They are always in a hurry to sin. They run quickly to murder those who aren’t guilty. Their thoughts are evil. They leave a trail of suffering and pain. They don’t know how to live at peace with others. What they do isn’t fair. They lead twisted lives. No one who lives like that will enjoy peace and rest.”
Sin often feels good, in the moment, or else we wouldn’t be tempted to do it. I would wager, however, that when Christ-followers sin, the Holy Spirit tugs at our hearts to try to talk us out of it. We can ignore those promptings, of course, and continue on our merry way, but the nudge to do what is right still lingers.
During his dialogue about traits we ought to emulate, Jesus said in Matthew 5:9 (MSG), “You’re blessed when you can show people how to cooperate instead of compete or fight. That’s when you discover who you really are, and your place in God’s family.” I think that’s what the leaders in Judges did – they set an example for those around them to follow. Unfortunately, we – as followers – become accustomed to being told what to do, when, where & how that we risk failing to develop those traits within ourselves to become leaders. Consequently, when our leaders are gone, we turn back to our so-called natural tendencies and follow our old, sinful ways.
What would it take for us to move from Follower to Leader?
The refining process removes impurities as heat is applied. Are you willing to let God refine your heart & mind, even if it’s uncomfortable?