Skip to main content

How great

How great you are, O God!
written September 21, 2008

How great is your faithfulness!
How great is your love!
How great is your mercy!
How great is your truth!
How great is your creation!
How great is your kingdom!
How great is your truth!

All things point to your goodness, Father.
Jesus, help me to fix my eyes on you. You are my everything.
May I count everything as rubbish except for the pursuit of knowing you, Lord!
Use me to do your work for I am but your humble servant.
May my life reflect everything that you are, Jesus.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Convicting And Compelling Gospel

Which adjective in the title more closely aligns with your predisposed way of thinking about and speaking the gospel to yourself and others?   Are you more likely to present a gospel that is heavy on the convicting realities of sin, righteousness and judgment?   Or do you find yourself more readily appealing to the benefits of following Jesus?   If you think about it, neither adjective fully encapsulates the message of Jesus.   It’s right to compel people using the promises of God and the joy filled benefits of a life submitted to Jesus.   But it’s also right to warn of the consequences of rejecting Him.   Since we’re all naturally inclined to emphasize one, we need to allow the other to constrain us, to balance us from taking our natural disposition to the extreme, which may confuse the gospel and the Jesus we wish to present.   Let me attempt to illustrate one example of an unconstrained leaning toward each in turn.   A compelling gospel that is...
  “Where grace exists, it reigns.”   C. H. Spurgeon I’m scared of grace.   And this realization comes in the midst of a journey I’ve been on that has the fingerprints of God all over it.   If we were to gather 50 Christians in the same room and invite people to share adjectives that come to mind when trying to describe “grace,” I doubt “scary” would be anyone’s answer.   (It probably wouldn’t be mine either, in case anyone is thinking I’m exalting this term in some sort of holier-than-thou way.)   We’d hear things like amazing, undeserved, free, kind, love.   Of course, it’s inevitable that the crucifixion of Jesus is vocalized in some way.   Essentially, we’d have a huge list of very positive and affirming adjectives that rightly depict the wonderful activity and riches of God’s grace.   What if we asked a slightly different question?   How would we answer, “how does a person obtain grace?”   I’m guessing we’d start throwing out an...

God’s Heart For All People

I’ve been camped out in Acts 10-11 for almost a week now, which is pretty rare for me to spend more than a couple of days on a particular text before moving on.   But it’s been so rich that I’ve wanted to linger.   It’s God’s heart for all people that has provided the savory reflections on Acts 10-11.   These chapters reveal, in narrative form, God’s heart for all people, and there is something particularly compelling to me seeing Peter’s perspective change and align with God’s.   To provide a short recap, Ch. 10 begins with this Roman centurion named Cornelius, a God-fearing man, receiving a vision that commands him to send for the Apostle Peter to hear what this man is proclaiming (about Jesus).   The story then moves to Peter receiving a vision of a sheet carrying all kinds of “unclean” (to the Jew) animals descending from heaven.   God commands Peter to “rise, kill, and eat” to which Peter, as a devout Jew, refuses to do.   This t...