Initial Sacrifice Confirmed (Lent 32, 2024)

It’s easy to see the Image of God that He placed in us is of tremendous worth by this undeniable fact: God sacrificed all to save it.  He did that in Jesus Christ and His shed blood.  But that wasn’t the first sacrifice, in a sense; it simply confirmed it.  The first sacrifice was God’s humility and love to instill mankind with such dignity as to place His Image upon us and within us from the moment of our creation.

God didn’t do that with any other member of the Animal Kingdom. 
Only mankind. 

Exercise:  Read the following Scripture and reflect on the humility of God and the sacrifice He made in making mankind in His Image.  Consider how this gives Him the right to judge us and the sacrifice He made to judge us with love and justice.

===

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

With Us in Suffering and Joy (Lent 31, 2024)

God is with us in both suffering and joy. He feels our circumstances deeply.

Reading that passage from the perspective of Jesus, whatever we did for others, we did for Him.  Reading that passage from the perspective of the person who is hurting, we can see that Jesus feels it when we’re the ones who are hurting.  When we’re in pain, He feels it because He is Love, and we bear His Image.  He grieves with us, suffers with us, and rejoices with us when others minister to us in our pain.

Exercise:  Is there anyone in your circle of acquaintances that could use a friend right now? Looking at your life and circumstances, what types of things make it difficult in modern culture to “do for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine?”  Do financial donations to organizations minister to others as a stand-in when circumstances are too remote for our personal involvement? What about danger? To what extent is the admonition to be “shrewd as snakes and innocent as doves” (Matthew 10:16) applicable here? Helping others is not a one-size-fits-all program but we each do what we can for the sake of Christ.

===

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

Grace for When We Fail (Lent 30, 2024)

A God who judges justly would be a deathly dangerous combination (all-powerful God, all wise and knowing even what’s hidden in our hearts, and perfectly just in His judgments) were it not for grace.

The Ten Commandments were not suggestions … or His Truth vs. our truth … or antiquated ideas for unenlightened people.  They were commands for how best to live … in love toward God and toward our fellow man. Our culture is filled with people who don’t know (or even want to know) how to live that way, honoring God: to be freely choosing love, knowing grace, and receiving the power of forgiveness.

The Ten Commandments were intended to be an impossible standard to achieve with total perfection … apart from God. They were designed to draw us closer to God and receive His grace for when we fail (which is inevitable and unavoidable in a fallen world).

Exercise: Read this Scripture and reflect upon the impossibly high standard of living in love. Experience gratitude for His grace for when we fail. 

===

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

The Nature of Love (Lent 29, 2024)

Yes, God could condemn us, and yes, He knows all about us, but He chooses to love anyway.  It’s the nature of love to feel deeply, and God’s Image is so important to Him that He went to the most extreme lengths to rescue it.  He sent Jesus.

For us, as Image-bearers, it is the nature of love within us to feel, to know, and to choose.  It’s why Adam and Eve weren’t created to be puppets and slaves. They had been given a glorious gift by God of freedom to feel, freedom to know, and freedom to choose.

God’s nature of love gave us freedom because that’s what love does.  Love doesn’t command.  Love invites.  But isn’t that the problem of freedom?  That some people will choose to use it in ways we hate?  Or maybe we recognize that we use it in ways we will hate someday?

Exercise: Think back over how you’ve used your freedom.  Acting upon your desire to feel something, or know something, or choose something, and whether willful or in ignorance of what the consequences would be someday, would you have done it anyway? Then you know something of what Adam and Eve felt when they judged for themselves instead of relying on the love and grace of our God who judges justly. There are people who want to take away the freedom God gave you. What does that do to the nature of love?

===

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

Crossing Over from Death to Life (Lent 28, 2024)

God may be angry at sin, but He is Love and desires every human to be saved if only they’ll willingly cross over from death to life.  He has done everything necessary for us to freely make that journey of faith.

If God’s pure and selfless love is itself pure life, but sin’s selfishness leads only to death, why would anyone choose sin and death over salvation by God’s selfless love?  Could it be they just don’t believe Him when He outlines life and death?

Exercise: Imagine a road before you that splits in two directions.  One branch is clearly labeled as a path to “Life” and the other labeled as the way to “Death.”  Now picture it labeled “Live by the God’s Grace” and “Do What You Want.”  It forms the classic meme of “It’s the same picture.” Everything has been done so you can cross over now. Believe.

===

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God (Lent 27, 2024)

Fire and brimstone preaching at its most classic form is found in “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God,” a sermon written in 1741 by renowned theologian Jonathan Edwards during the First Great Awakening.

There are modern people who hate the idea that God is angry at sin.  A while back, prolific women’s ministry writer Beth Moore attacked Jonathan Edwards for his style on Twitter (now X) and was ratioed, even seemingly “Community Noted” to the nth degree before they were called Community Notes.

In particular she hated, The God that holds you over the Pit of Hell, much as one holds a Spider, or some loathsome Insect, over the Fire, abhors you, and is dreadfully provoked; his Wrath towards you burns like Fire; he looks upon you as worthy of nothing else, but to be cast into the Fire; he is of purer Eyes than to bear to have you in his Sight; you are ten thousand Times so abominable in his Eyes as the most hateful venomous Serpent is in ours. You have offended him infinitely more than ever a stubborn Rebel did his Prince: and yet ‘tis nothing but his Hand that holds you from falling into the Fire every Moment.”

Her warm and fuzzy lovey God who could be “alright” loving you, giving you dignity as a sinner, and that YOU are “worth saving” is precisely the kind of Christian-Lite Barneyesque, “I love you, you love me, we’re a happy family” that totally misses how truly condemnable we all are on account of our sin.  Yes, Beth, condemnable… in God’s eyes.

Seriously, why does Hell exist if God only sees pretty good people in simple need of dignity?  Why would any experience Hell?  Doesn’t the mere existence of Hell speak to how God feels about sin in rebellious, rejecting, reviling sinners? Or does she deny the existence of Hell as some theologians do? Big mistake to underestimate how much God hates sin.

He hates sin enough to punish it and banish it from His presence (Psalm 5:4-6, 9-10).  Eternally. But He loves His Image in us to have done everything (not just everything in His power implying it’s insufficient for the task), but everything necessary so that we would never have to experience Hell.  His favor is upon the righteous (Psalm 5:7-8,11-12). That’s the eternal, infinite power of grace.

ExerciseA story came out recently about various car brands (GM, Ford, Subaru, Honda…) sending driving data to LexisNexis which reports it to your insurance companies which raise your rates depending on what it reports.  God doesn’t need an electronic tattler to report our infractions.  What if all of us lived such good lives that our infractions were nearly non-existent?  We’d still need the covering of Christ to avoid Hell because falling at any one point in our lives is enough sin to make us sinners.

===

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

Our Most Basic Need (Lent 26, 2024)

Food, shelter, clothing, social connections, health care, education, cell phones, TVs, a car, and air conditioning.  These are among the things listed in a search of Americans living in poverty and what they can yet access.  There are presently about 11.4% of American households falling into this category.

As important as these things are, our most basic need is missing off those lists. 
That is the need to have our condemnation covered.

You see, we’re all impoverished when it comes to freedom from condemnation.  We can go to heaven hungry or without a cell phone.  We can end up in hell with lifestyles of the rich and famous.  The critical factor will have been: was our condemnation covered?

Adam and Eve tried the do-it-yourself program by sewing fig leaves together to hide their nakedness and shame (Genesis 3:7).  God gave them something better.  He clothed them.

We may try all kinds of ways to earn heaven—a DIY of fig leaves—but God gave us something better.  He offers to cover our most basic need: covering our condemnation with His forgiveness in the shed blood of Christ.

Exercise: Think of the DIYs you have tried in the past and ask if you have your most basic need covered. 

==

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

An Unconditional Non-Condemning Love (Lent 25, 2024)

Frankly, none of us have experienced unconditional non-condemning love in our lives apart from God.  Even the best parents, spouse of the year, or Hallmark family can’t perform to the level of unconditional love, all the time.  But God can.

Loving people is hard work.  We’re a pretty unlovable lot.  Motivated by self-interest and agenda, influenced by politics and culture, and sucked into petty disagreements and rapid-fire judgments, we fall short every time.

If there’s one thing about the modern church that I do not like, it’s that some churches teach that God accepts you just as you are and there is no change required, no sin you have to give up, no cost to you whatsoever in your lifestyle or actions, and you can enter heaven as a brazen, unrepentant sinner because God loves you and wants to you to be happy, rich, and in the club. That’s a lie. 

Being a disciple of Christ costs you everything. 
Deny yourself and follow Me, Jesus says. 
Every Gospel states it, so take it to the bank. There’s no wiggle room.

Exercise: Read the following Scripture and contrast it with what some churches are teaching. 

==

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading

Healing (Lent 24, 2024)

There is nothing in this world more healing to the soul than being fully known—for all your sins, flaws, mistakes, bad judgments, poor decisions, lifestyle choices, the deepest, darkest secrets that you don’t want anyone to know—and yet amazingly, to be fully loved with infinite, unconditional love because God created you in His Image. 

The Samaritan woman knew it (John 4:18); the “sinful woman” (Luke 7:37-50) did too.  But this healing is not just for women.  Zacchaeus understood it (Luke 19:2-10).  So did Peter who denied Christ (John 21) and needed Christ’s clear commission to heal his struggles with failure in leadership.

Seeing God’s Love with New Eyes means
acknowledging the healing He offers by His Love. 
He already fully knows us.  He already fully loves us.

Exercise: Think about the thing in your life you really wouldn’t want anyone to know about who you are, what you’ve done, how you’ve been, etc.  Remind yourself that God knows it with crystal clarity since the moment in which you were choosing to do it.  Now bask in the healing touch of the love of our God who knew all that about you and would choose to die for you anyway.  Turn to Him and be healed.

==

If you’re already signed up on my Home Page sidebar to receive posts, you’ll get the 2024 Lent Devotionals automatically. Or you can “Like” Seminary Gal on Facebook and they’ll be delivered to your Facebook news feed. If you haven’t signed up, today is a great day to do so. Advent and Lenten devotionals remain among my most popular offerings. You don’t want to miss this encounter with God to prepare your heart for Easter! Understanding that prior years’ devotionals continue to minister, you may want to have access to a full series ahead of time:

Continue Reading