Dave Dishman

Guidance from Overlooked Men and Women of the Bible

Page 32 of 451

Sending Light and Truth

If there’s one thing we need in a world of mass marketing, conspiracy theories, social media mobs and ceaseless yelling from left, right and center, it’s truth and light.

The psalmist prayed, Send out your light and your truth; let them lead me; let them bring me to your holy hill and to your dwelling!

All truth is God’s truth. If a belief or philosophy or stance fails to align with the Scriptures then it betrays a falsehood. I subject my societal beliefs to standards found in the Bible. To ignore the teachings of Scripture, or to fail to wrestle with their outcomes, compromises my sense of truth—of right and wrong.

Then the Holy Spirit illuminates. Jesus said, The Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you all things and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you. Not all bright ideas or shiny modern theologies pass down from the Lord. Paul reminds us that even Satan disguises himself as an angel of light. Ask the Holy Spirit to flood your life with his light.

Light and truth from the Lord. The Holy Spirit and the Holy Book. The end result? Greater knowledge of God and worship on his ground. All light and all truth, if legitimate, leads us closer to the Lord, not farther away.

It’s a good prayer to pray for ourselves and our friends: Lord, send out your light and your truth; let them lead me closer to you.

Amen and keep the faith.

Psalm 43:3; John 14:26; 2 Corinthians 11:14

Photo by Leo Wieling

Wages, Tips & Gifts

My wife and I enjoyed lunch at an Asian-Mexican fusion place recently. We paired a chips/queso/salsa appetizer with a bowl of ramen and ginger-glazed chicken. The food tasted fabulous, the fusion working to perfection. Our waiter, a young man, stayed attentive and helpful. We left him a generous tip. In my mind he earned a good tip due to his excellent service. On one hand a tip is a gratuity, but on the other a tip rises or falls based on the quality of service. Tips are seldom free gifts.

When I go to work I’m not after a gift, but what I feel I earn. A gift often arrives out of the blue, undeserved and unexpected. To be handed a free gift, one I know I did nothing to warrant, feels both exciting and humbling.

Paul discussed earnings and gifts in his letter to the church in Rome. He summed up his argument with this famous verse: For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Our ways of life and the inherited nature of our beings lead us to a type of slavery to our sins. Our choices to move away from God earn bitter wages. Eventually our physical death and spiritual death combine—a grievous tip on top of lifetime earnings.

But God offers an alternative. If we choose to reverse our trajectory and turn towards him, to kneel before our Creator, then God offers freedom from the old pay scale. He replaces dark fruits of no value with the gracious gift of life.

God’s gift remains totally free. An abundant, eternal life. A bounty of freedom. Not a wage or a tip based on good service, but an undeserved and unexpected endowment waiting for me and you. Take Jesus as Lord, and the gift is yours.

Romans 3:23

Photo by Sam Dan Truong

The Paradox of Generosity

I’m a slow giver. Or you might say I’m a thoughtful giver. I don’t quickly hand over cash, but first evaluate both the need and the receiver. While I give and even give cheerfully at times, I tend to measure carefully.

Which skates the edge on Biblical giving. Proverbs tells us: One gives freely, yet grows all the richer; another withholds what he should give, and only suffers want.

That’s the paradox of generosity in the Lord’s kingdom. The one who gives openly and without constraint gains wealth. The tight-fisted suffer.

Of course this applies to far more than money. As I give of my time, talents, labor and influence, I find myself refreshed. I gain energy, I add friends, I build emotional reserves. Proverbs adds: Whoever brings blessing will be enriched, and one who waters will himself be watered.

Of course, no greater example exists than our amazing God, who lavishly pours out his grace upon all peoples of the world. Generous in love and forgiveness, the Lord doesn’t measure so carefully. Ask and ye shall receive.

My tendency is to hold back. But when I lean into the paradox of generosity, I enjoy the multiplied gain of God’s kingdom. My life overflows (through little effort of my own) due to the magic of living within God’s values.

Proverbs 11:24 & 25

Photo by Joanna Kosinska

Transformation vs Conformity

I use a couple of online Bibles as I study and write. I find these invaluable when searching for a verse or researching a topic. Plus, I copy and paste without misspelling any words! Super helpful for one whose fingers get lost on the keyboard.

But I notice that one of the sites I like comes with ads. I ignore them as most of us have learned to do. Like billboards along a highway, internet ads form the background of our lives. But each one vies for my attention, hoping to conform me to a habit of consuming their product.

Indeed, much of this world sets out to remake my image, to capture my attention, to colonize my thinking. Our culture is good at enticing and wooing. It’s easy to fall in line and trust the prevailing narratives.

But God offers a radically different path. Paul wrote: Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Transformation differs completely from conformity. As God works through his Word and his Holy Spirit, my mind awakens. Revitalized as it tunes with the Lord’s perspective, this modification shifts my intellect towards fresh powers of reasoning. Instead of allowing my outer shell—my looks, my body, my speech, my thoughts—to slide with prevailing philosophies, God remolds me. Conformity is a costume. Transformation is radical heart surgery.

How do we enter this path of transformation? Paul gives a clear answer, and in it lies a problem: I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God.

Transformation requires we turn over all our being. The Lord asks for you and me to give ourselves up, to willingly follow him with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. It’s really simple and really scary. The Lord wants everything we have and everything we are.

In the meantime, the world squeezes and shapes. Only by presenting myself to the Lord might I begin to navigate with his guidance. Filled with God’s Spirit I learn to discern with greater clarity and insight. More often than not I avoid the broken and profane and enjoy the goodness found in the Lord. It’s challenging yet real. Transformation overwhelms conformity, if I allow the Lord’s way in my life.

Romans 12:1-2

Photo by Jamie Ginsberg

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