Lent 2022 | Day 3: Light

One of the many challenges we face in faith is learning to trust God.

Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.

James 1:17 KJV

God is light. The very notion of this strikes us as confusing. The reason is that as people with bodies the idea of our bodies giving off light makes no sense. And yet this is one of the key descriptors of God’s being given to us in Scripture. What are we to make of it?

Even if we were to accept that God is light in a literal sense we should not be surprised by this. For God is purity itself.

It is both terrifying and comforting to think of God as being light. It is terrifying because it means there is nothing that can remain hidden from him. It is comforting because there is nothing that can remain hidden from him.

The comfort we have in knowing that God knows all it is that God is not surprised by what we bring to him.

One of the many challenges we face in faith is learning to trust God. The description of God as light should increase our trust because it means there is nothing we should try to hide from him. We might feel shame in confessing it out loud because it means admitting the truth to ourselves, but that is far less difficult than living under the burden of the truth we’re trying to hide from the world.

The description of God as light should increase our trust because it means there is nothing we should try to hide from him.

The longer we wait the more difficult it becomes. The more accustomed we become to its presence in our lives. The more we fear its revelation to the world.

And so as we begin the season of Lent I think it’s appropriate for us to take time to consider what things in our lives we should allow God’s light to shine upon. This does not mean some form of public confession needs to be made. Although that is not necessarily excluded. But it does mean making a clear and unequivocal confession to God, seeking his forgiveness with a sincere heart.

It is Well – Melody Joy Cloud

IT IS WELL // (worship cover + original verse)

NOTE: Original Verse by Melody Joy Cloud

LYRICS:
When peace, like a river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,
It is well, it is well with my soul.

My sin—oh, the bliss of this glorious thought!—
My sin, not in part but the whole,
Is nailed to the cross, and I bear it no more,
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord, O my soul!

It is well with my soul,
It is well, it is well with my soul.
It is well with my soul,
It is well, it is well with my soul.

Though chaos is rampant,
I’ll carry your peace
All lies will be silenced as You speak
I see it even now
Oh, the enemy will bow
At the feet of Jesus my King

Praise the Lord, oh my soul
Praise the Lord, oh my soul
Praise the Lord, Praise the Lord, oh my soul!

Lent 2019 | Day 4: The Comfort of Grace

The Church may have its problems, but the Church is not the problem!

I grew up in church. As the son of a minister, I have spent virtually every Sunday of my life attending a church service of some kind. Even when I go on vacation I try to find a local assembly where I can gather with other believers and join in the corporate worship of God our Heavenly Father and our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.

It may sound odd, but I have always felt at home in the church. I have always found peace and comfort in the church. I know that there are some aspects of the church that we would all change. Things that we wish may be done a different way, but in the end, the Church is the plan God established and that Jesus commissioned for the work of taking the Gospel to the ends of the earth.

As I have gotten older, I find myself thinking about a comment my father made several years ago. He said, “The greatest evidence for the existence of God is the existence of the Church. Only God could sustain the Church throughout the centuries when you considered the kind of people that make it up.” He is right. The Church may have its problems, but the Church is not the problem!

The Grace that God gives to the world in a common way, or to his redeemed people in a special way, gives me comfort when the circumstances of life are not unfolding as I would like. God’s grace is a balm for the many hurts we experience at the hands of our neighbors. Even if that neighbor is a family member.

When we wake up each morning and we open our eyes, we have to choose to remember that we have been forgiven. We have to choose to take hold of the promise that God is faithful to his word. God will not fail to complete that which he has started. This is grace. Leaning into the truth of God’s grace brings comfort. Remembering that God’s word will not return void and that it is effective to accomplish what he has purposed is how we hold on while we press on.

Remember to remember that God’s grace is a comfort as we march toward Resurrection Sunday!

Video Spotlight | “God Himself” by Matthew Smith

The promise of God’s comfort is so wonderful that it really is beyond description.

"God Himself" | Matthew Smith | OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO

I found this song simple and beautiful. Take a few minutes and meditate on the message.

The promise of God’s comfort is so wonderful that it really is beyond description. I love the way this song points to it without trying to explain it.

Lyrics:

In the day when silent sorrow
Seems to shake me to the core
Then I hear the heavenly comfort,
“You will weep no more.”

God Himself will dry your tears
God Himself will soothe your fears

In the day when earthly weakness
Weighs your weary spirit down
All around you seems a burden
All above you seems a frown

God Himself will dry your tears
God Himself will soothe your fears

In the day when sin oppresses
And the battle rages strong
When the victory seems doubtful
Or triumphant seems the wrong

God Himself will dry your tears
God Himself will soothe your fears
God Himself will dry your tears
God Himself will soothe your fears

Oh I hear the heavenly comfort,
“You will weep no more.”

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