Devotional for Friday May 12th

Good Morning Everyone,

 

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

 

Our Bible verse for today: “But do not forget this one thing, dear friends: With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day.” 2 Peter 3:8 (NIV)

 

Our thought for today: “You have more time than you realize.”

 

Yesterday we considered the truth that God is self-existent and eternal. This is important in our understanding of who God is and what He is like, so I want to explore it a little further today. To help us understand what it means for God to be eternal, C.S. Lewis once offered a famous illustration. Lewis suggests that we think of a sheet of paper infinitely extended – a pure white field that extends in all directions as far as the eye can see. For the sake of this illustration, that would be eternity.

 

Then in the middle of that paper draw a short line to represent time. The line representing time begins and ends within the vast expanse of eternity. Time is something God invented for us and it doesn’t apply to Him. Time is the construct within which human history plays out. But God is outside of time. He is not contained in time and He therefore is not restricted by time. He is eternal, and just as eternity exists outside of time, so does God.

 

Since all of time is part of God’s creation and is contained within the vast expanse of eternity, God sees all of time in a single glance. He sees the beginning, He sees the end, and He sees everything in between. That’s why Peter says that to God a day is like a thousand years and a thousand years is like a day. It’s all the same to God.

 

The good news for us though, is that God created us to join Him in eternity. Although we have not existed in eternity past, as human beings we do exist for eternity from the moment of our conception onward. The Bible clearly teaches that God has created us as eternal spirits and that once this mortal life ends, we each go on to spend eternity somewhere – either with God in heaven, or separated from Him and in hell. If you know His Son Jesus as your personal Savior, then you have the promise of eternity in heaven.

 

This is a crucial understanding. God is eternal, and now we are too. Not in the same way He is, He has always existed and always will. We have not always existed, but now that we do, we will continue to exist for all eternity as well. The only question is where that eternity will be spent.

 

The promise of eternity in heaven is a future hope for us, but it can also be a great practical help now. The days of our mortal lives are brief, but the days of our eternal existence are endless. In this life we’re prone to get stressed about time and consequently we spend much of life in a hurry. So it would be helpful to remember that this life is not all we have to work with. In reality we are just at the beginning of an eternity with God that stretches out before us endlessly. With that perspective firmly in place, hopefully we can all lighten up and relax a little. You have more time than you realize. Along with God, you have eternity in front of you.

 

God Bless,

Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:
Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Thursday May 10th

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “God replied to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM. This is what you are to say to the Israelites: I AM has sent me to you.” Exodus 3:14 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “God has always existed”

Sometimes when we talk about creation we speak of what is called “The Big Bang”. It’s a reference to the moment when God spoke creation into existence. God spoke and “Bang!” it happened. But what existed before the big bang? The answer is that God existed. Before there was a creation, there was God. But then we have to ask, “But where did God come from?” And the answer is that God didn’t come from anywhere, He has always existed.

This is what theologians call “The self-existence” of God. He is eternal. He simply exists. He has always existed and He will always exist. (Did I mention that God is mostly incomprehensible to the human mind? Yes, I guess we covered that in some previous devotionals. Good thing too, because here we are again considering a fact about God that we don’t have the brain power to really understand.)

“I AM” is the name for God that points to His self-existence. The editors of the Holman Christian Standard Study Bible explain it this way, “God’s statement is worded with a finality that sometimes appears at the end of a conversation, typically to put an end to debate without volunteering information.” In other words, God was telling Moses, “I AM. Period. I exist, I have always existed, I will always exist, and you just have to take it on faith.”

The human mind, being a created thing, is naturally uncomfortable with the notion that there could be something or someone that was uncreated. This is outside the boundaries of our understanding and experience. Therefore humans typically deal with this discomfort about God by trying to bring Him down to our level of understanding. We try to make Him more manageable by describing Him in terms we can understand, or by creating images intended to represent Him (an idol). But doing so not only gives us an inaccurate understanding of God, and not only does it make Him in our minds something less than He really is, but it also robs us of some of the mystery surrounding God. And as was pointed out in a previous message in this series, the mystery of God is a good thing not a bad thing. It’s the mystery that keeps us yearning and seeking and searching after Him. It’s the adventure of being drawn deeper into the mystery that’s so exciting to us.

God is self-existent. He is eternal. Spend some time this morning sitting quietly before Him. Think about His eternal nature and allow Him to draw you deeper into the mystery.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Wednesday May 9th

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “Listen, Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.” Deuteronomy 6:4 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “God is a Trinity.”

It’s a good thing that we have already come to terms with the truth that God is mostly incomprehensible to us, because now we have to deal with the fact that He is a trinity – one God and yet three persons. This is part of the divine mystery of God that is simply beyond the capacity of our human brain to fully grasp.

Some people deny and reject anything they can’t explain. Therefore since it doesn’t make sense in human understanding for God to be one and three at the same time, they conclude it is impossible. But this is where faith comes in. Faith requires that we believe even when we do not understand, and even when cannot prove something to be true. Believing without understanding is the essence of faith. (Everyone has faith by the way, the believer and the non-believer alike. Every person goes through life accepting a wide variety of things that they don’t really understand and which they cannot fully explain. It’s just a question of what we have faith in.)

Although the term “Trinity” is found nowhere in the Bible, the concept of the Trinity is plainly taught in both the Old and New Testaments. In theological terms, Trinity simply means “three in one”. God is one God who consists of three co-equal persons, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Sometimes we try to explain God’s Trinitarian nature by saying that He is one God who shows Himself to us in three different ways and for three different reasons. He is God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, and in each manifestation He shows Himself to us in different ways and for different reasons. While there is an element of truth to that explanation, it still doesn’t really fully capture the essence of the Trinity. It makes it sound as if each person of the Trinity is not a different and distinct person, only one person acting in three different ways. And that is not true – each person of the Trinity is an individual person but yet, somehow, all three together are still just one.

And so this morning, in our attempt to know God better, we have to be content with marveling at a mystery we are incapable of fully understanding. The human brain simply doesn’t provide us with the ability to truly understand how one could be three, and three could be one, separate and distinct, and yet one and not divided.

Spend some time this morning marveling at the mystery of the Trinity and simply worship Him in faith for who He is.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Tuesday May 8th

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “For his invisible attributes, that is, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen since the creation of the world, being understood through what he has made.” Romans 1:20 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “An attribute helps us to know God.”

In his great little book “The Knowledge of the Holy”, A.W. Tozer explains, “An attribute of God is whatever God has in any way revealed as being true of himself.” So an attribute of God is something that is true of God and which we are able to conceive of and understand. God’s attributes are ways in which He shows Himself to us so that we can begin to comprehend who He is and what He is like.

God has many attributes and He has chosen to reveal some of them to us, such as love, mercy, compassion, righteousness, justice, etc. Each attribute reveals to us something that is true of God and it therefore helps us to understand Him a little better. The attributes He has chosen to reveal to us are on display first and foremost in the person of Jesus Christ. Second, they are described in the Bible. And third, as Paul stated in Romans 1:20, many of God’s attributes (such as His majesty), are even clearly seen in the creation itself.

The way in which we can most benefit from God’s self-revelation of His attributes is to take them one at a time, study the attribute and mediate on it. We do this by choosing an attribute of God (perhaps mercy, as an example), find passages of Scripture which display or describe that attribute, consider the context in which the passage showcases that attribute for us, and then think prayerfully and meditatively about what it teaches us about God. This is what we will do in the days to come through these devotional messages.

God has created us with a deep, innate desire to know and experience Him. He then has revealed truth about Himself in multiple ways. We can come to know Him and experience Him to ever-increasing degrees, but the joy of that experience is reserved for those who want it and who will seek it. This requires time and effort from us. The great Christian poet Frederick Faber once described the meditative seeking of God in this way:

Only to sit and think of God, Oh what a joy it is! To think the thought, to breathe the Name, Earth has no higher bliss.”

I encourage you to spend some extra time thinking about God today. Choose just one of His many attributes and prayerfully consider what it teaches you about God.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Monday May 7th

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.” Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NIV)

Our thought for today: “God has created us with a desire to know Him.”

It may seem odd to you that in these first few days I have begun our discussion about “knowing” God by saying that He is incomprehensible. In other words, He is unknowable. To a very great extent that is true, but not entirely. He has chosen to reveal to us some things about Himself – just enough to keep us desiring more.

In a previous message in this series I referred to this as the great adventure of living the Christian life. We can and should be in a constant process of learning more and more about Him, and therefore growing in spiritual maturity. In that same devotional I left you with a quote from author Jim Peterson which explained that however much we have learned about God, there is always more to learn. He is always beckoning us to go deeper with Him. Today I want to conclude our thinking about the incomprehensibility of God by exploring that idea just a little more.

In Ecclesiastes 3:11 Solomon tells us that God has created human beings with a sense of eternity in our hearts. In other words, deep down inside every person knows intuitively that there is more than just this physical world and that this life is not all there is. That’s why virtually every culture that has ever existed has had a belief in the supernatural. They have had gods that they worshipped, and they have believed there were means available to them by which they could interact with the spirit world.

More than 1500 years ago the great Christian writer Saint Augustine expressed it like this: “You have created us for yourself, oh God, and our hearts are restless, searching, until we find our rest in you.” A thousand years later the French philosopher Blaise Pascal expressed it this way: “There is a God-shaped vacuum in the heart of man that can only be filled by God.” In Psalm 42:7 the Psalmist described this great desire of the human heart to connect with God as “deep calls out to deep”.

God created us with a natural inborn desire to want to know Him. Our responsibility is to respond to that innate desire and to actually seek Him. When we do, we will find Him. In Jeremiah 29:13 He told us: “You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all of your heart.”

God is mostly incomprehensible, but not entirely. He has created us with a natural desire to know Him and to connect with Him in a deep way, and He has promised that if you will seek Him you will find Him. So I encourage you to seek Him this morning. Spend some extra time exploring the deep mysteries of God.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Saturday and Sunday May 5-6

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “I have sought you with all my heart; don’t let me wander from your commands. I have treasured your word in my heart so that I may not sin against you.” Psalm 119:10-11 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “God is incomprehensible and yet He can be known.”

This morning I want to continue our discussion from yesterday about the incomprehensibility of God. As we learned yesterday, there is far more to God than our human understanding can possibly come to terms with. There is much about Him that is, and which will remain, a mystery to us. But for all the reasons explained yesterday, the mystery is a good thing not a bad thing. God delights in progressively revealing more and more of the mystery about Himself to us as we continue to seek Him.

The primary way God reveals Himself to us is through the Bible. The Bible is more than just words on paper. It is a supernatural book divinely inspired by the Holy Spirit and infused with insights which can only be discerned spiritually. Part of the ministry of the Holy Spirit in our lives is to give us spiritual understanding so that as we seek God, as we diligently study His word, our mind will be opened and we will gain deeper glimpses into the person of God. Therefore how often and how effectively we study the Bible determines to a very great degree how much, how well, and how accurately, we come to comprehend God.

The great Bible teacher J.I. Packer offers these four simple guidelines for effectively using the Bible to progressively learn more and more about God:

  1. Pray. Remember that you are in the presence of God, reading the Word of God, and you need the Spirit of God to give you understanding. So pray before, during, and after your Bible reading.
  2. Read the whole Bible. Packer urges us to be familiar with what he calls “the full landscape of the Bible”. Read it everyday, read it cover-to-cover, and when you’re done, read it again.
  3. Give special attention and focus to the richer books. All the books of the Bible are important and helpful, but not all the books are equally important and helpful. Leviticus is helpful to us for a variety of reasons, but it pales in compassion to the importance of the Gospel of John. Packer urges us to read the entire Bible, but to give special attention to the Gospels and to the Psalms.
  4. Linger in those books that have a special resonance with you at this time in your life. If you’re struggling with maintaining sound doctrine, then you will want to spend extra time in Romans. If you need to put some feet to your faith, then go visit James for a while. If you just need some extra time in worship, the Psalms would be a good place to spend some time.

God is incomprehensible to a very large degree. But He has revealed Himself to us in different ways and to varying degrees. His primary means of self-revelation is through the Bible and so that’s where we need to spend most of our time looking for Him.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Friday May 4th

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “Call to me and I will answer you and tell you great and incomprehensible things you do not know.” Jeremiah 33:3 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “God delights in revealing mysteries.”

God is incomprehensible. There is much more about Him than we can possibly begin to understand. God far exceeds the limits of the human brain’s ability to process and understand. Think about it, if God could fit into my little pea-brain then He wouldn’t be much of a God because He would have to be something less than the limits of my brain. But the truth is that He far exceeds me and my ability to understand. All of creation cannot contain Him, much less the limits of my brain.

Since that is the case, when we think about God we find ourselves wrestling with concepts and ideas that are beyond our ability to fully comprehend. This is the mystery of God. But the mystery isn’t a bad thing, it’s a good thing. First of all it means that God is the greatest reality that exists. There is no one and no thing greater than God. Second, His very greatness makes all of His other attributes possible. As we will see in days to come, in addition to being incomprehensible He is All-powerful (Omnipotent), All-knowing (Omniscient), and All-present (Omnipresent) – just to name a few of His other attributes.

Another reason the mysteries of God are so important and so helpful is that discovering new truths about Him is a big part of the adventure of living the Christian life. This is what He was telling us in Jeremiah 33:3. If we call to Him, and if we come to Him, and if we prayerfully and devotionally apply ourselves to learning about Him, He will reveal to us great, divine, spiritual mysteries that we did not know.

Tomorrow we will think a little more about how the revelation of mysteries happens but to close today, I want to share with you one of my all-time favorite observations about this marvelous adventure of spending a lifetime learning more and more about God. It comes from author Jim Peterson in his book “Lifestyle Discipleship”. Jim writes,

“One of the greatest gifts God has given us is the infinite opportunity for spiritual growth. But however much we have matured, there is always more beyond. It is in this that we find the adventure of living. There will always be new, unexplored dimensions of His person beckoning to us. The possibilities go off the chart.”

Spend some time this morning with God. Ask Him to reveal to you something new about Himself that you didn’t know before.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Thursday May 3rd

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and the knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.” Proverbs 9:10 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “Knowing God as He really is changes us.”

Tomorrow we will begin exploring some of the most important attributes of God. We will then begin to see how it is that gaining a better understanding of Him has a direct impact on the quality of our lives. But before we get to that, I want to spend one more day thinking about why it’s so important for us to think rightly about God.

In Proverbs 9:10 Solomon says that right thinking about God is the beginning of true wisdom, and gaining knowledge about Him is the beginning of true understanding. Why is that so important? A.W. Tozer offers this thought: “We tend by a secret law of the soul to move toward our mental image of God.”

This is what I was talking about in yesterday’s devotional with respect to having a high or low view of God. Having a high view of God helps to keep us in awe of His majesty, and it helps us to maintain a sense of reverence in His presence. That impacts our thinking and our conduct. A low view of God leads us to be casual in our thinking about Him, and it also leads us to minimize and rationalize sinful conduct.

The person who achieves right thinking about God is relieved of a thousand earthly problems, because right thinking leads to right conduct. This is the reason we must elevate our understanding of who God is and what He is like. We must also then teach that higher view of God to others – especially to the younger generations. The greatest service we can do for our children and grandchildren is to pass on to them a high view of God.

The fear (awe and reverence) of God is the beginning of true wisdom. Accurate knowledge of who He is and what He is like is the beginning of true understanding. Right thinking leads to right conduct.

Seek God this morning. Ask the Holy Spirit to help you see Him high and mighty, exalted and honored, magnified and supreme. Then spend some time worshiping Him.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord seated on a high and lofty throne, and the hem of his robe filled the temple. Seraphim were standing above him; they each had six wings: with two they covered their faces, with two they covered their feet, and with two they flew. And one called to another: Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of Armies; his glory fills the whole earth.” Isaiah 6:1-3 (CSB)

Our thought for today: “God is majestic”

A.W. Tozer once wrote, “What comes into our mind when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” I believe he is right. What you think about God will ultimately determine everything else about you.

So what is the first thought that comes into your mind when you think about God? Many people think of God in irreverent ways like “The big guy in the sky”, or “The man upstairs”. Some think of Jesus as their good buddy, greeting Him with the equivalent of a fist-bump and a pat on the back. Many others think of God as a celestial scorekeeper and a stern disciplinarian. He’s always watching you, He’s keeping score, and when you get home He’s going to give you a good spanking.

I’ve always loved the passage in Isaiah chapter six. I’m deeply grateful that early in my Christian life my pastor directed my attention to it, because it helped to form my initial understanding of God. Over the years since then I’ve learned about many of God’s other attributes, like His love and mercy, His compassion and kindness, His goodness and grace, but one of my earliest impressions of God came from Isaiah’s image in this passage of God as majestic – high and holy, lifted up and exalted.

Isaiah’s vision helps us to remember that when we approach God’s throne of grace it is indeed a throne we are approaching, and the One upon that throne is the mighty and majestic God of the universe. We are welcome at that throne because we are His children. He loves us deeply, He is kind and gracious, and He takes great pleasure in our presence there with Him. So we need not cower or crawl on our bellies, but let’s also not be casual about it.

One of the great tragedies in modern Christianity is our low view of God. We have become entirely too casual in His presence. Tozer contends that that low view of God is the cause of a thousand lesser evils. When you have a low view of God you will easily minimize and excuse sin. If you have a high view of God you will see Him as majestic, exalted, holy and lifted up, and that high view of God will change a lot of things in the rest of your life.

I encourage you to spend some extra time this morning slowly reading Isaiah 6:1-6. Mediate on it, pray over it, and ask the Holy Spirit to help you see God the Father as He really is.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571

Devotional for Tuesday May 1st

Good Morning Everyone,

Our theme for this month: “Knowing God”

Our Bible verse for today: “Be still, and know that I am God.” Psalm 46:10 (NIV)

Our thought for today: “We need to know God as He really is.”

A.W. Tozer (1897-1963) was a Christian and Missionary Alliance Pastor. He was also a popular conference speaker, retreat leader, and the author of more than thirty books. His most important work was written and published in 1961 and was called “The Knowledge of the Holy”. It’s a small book written for the average Christian and it is intended to help us get a better understanding of God’s basic attributes, as well as what those attributes mean for us in a real and practical way as we live our everyday Christian lives.

It’s essential for us to know God as he really is; that’s a critical factor in living the Christian life well. Unfortunately, many Christians today have a distorted and inaccurate understanding of God.  To a large extent our Christian culture has formed a god in our own image and to our own liking. Many people have ideas about God which bear little resemblance to the God of the Bible. Tozer writes, The Church has surrendered her once lofty concept of God and has substituted for it one so low, so ignoble, as to be utterly unworthy of thinking, worshiping men.”

Even in our day we are still technically a “religious” people. Even considering how far our culture has drifted from God, we still have lots of “religious” activity in America. In many towns there is a church on almost every corner. The airwaves are filled with Christian radio and television broadcasts. There are Christian bookstores. Bibles are easily available to anyone who wants one (or two, or ten, or twenty). There are Christian concerts, and Christian conferences, and Christian bowling nights. We have bumper stickers, fish symbols, a dashboard Jesus, and John-the-Baptist soap-on-a-rope. Quantity isn’t the problem. Quality is.

Tozer goes on, The words ‘Be still, and know that I am God,’ mean next to nothing to the self-confident, bustling worshiper in the middle period of the twentieth century.” What was true when Tozer wrote those words in 1961 is even truer today in 2018. Our knowledge of God is too often superficial and inaccurate.

This month we will take the time to get to know God as He really is. We will consider some of God’s most important attributes, we will talk about what those supernatural truths mean for us, and we will think about how they impact our everyday lives.

We need to know God as He really is. We won’t have full knowledge of God until the day we arrive in heaven, but the Bible reveals enough about Him that we can know Him now, much better than we do.

God Bless,
Pastor Jim

Copyright © 2018 Oak Hill Baptist Church, All rights reserved.

Our mailing address is:

Oak Hill Baptist Church

3036 Genesis Road

Crossville, Tn 38571