Friday, July 30, 2010

Blinded By The God of This Age

"Whose minds the god of this age has blinded, who do not believe, lest the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine on them."  2 Corinthians 4:4


"When you are blinded, you cannot see things as they really are, even though others around you see them clearly.  You cannot experience the full reality of all that is around you.  You may feel you are experiencing all that there is to life, yet you may be unaware that you are missing what God desires for you.  You may even be in danger because of your blindness and not know it.


Paul warned that the "god of this age" can blind you to the reality of Jesus Christ.  Christ's presence can make a significant difference in your life.  However, if Satan convinces you to doubt that Christ can do what He promised, he will have blinded you to the reality of what your life is really like and to what it could become.  Others may see what your unbelief causes you to miss, but you will be unaware of it.  Your life may be steadily moving toward disaster, but you will be oblivious to it.


Christ comes to you as light (John 1:4-5, 9).  He illuminates your sin so that you see its ugliness and destructiveness.  He reveals Himself so that you can appreciate the glory of His person and the marvelous riches He brings.  His presence lights your path so that you can see impending danger.  Don't let the god of this age distort your spiritual vision.  Don't be fooled into thinking that everything is as it should be when, in fact, you are missing out on so much that God wants to do in your life.  Ask Christ to illuminate your life and let you clearly see your spiritual condition."

Experiencing God Day by Day, Henry Blackaby & Richard Blackaby

Monday, July 5, 2010

Devotional ~ Is There Someone You Need to Forgive?

"Forgiving one another...even as Christ forgave you."  Colossians 3:13


"The greatest power you have over anyone who hurts you is the power of forgiveness.  When you say, "I forgive, and no longer hold it against you," both sides are set free from the negative bond that exists between you.  But there's more:  we also free ourselves from the burden of being the "offended one."  As long as we don't forgive those who've wounded us we take them with us, or worse, carry them like an albatross around our neck.  One of our great temptations is to cling in anger to our enemies, then define ourselves as being wounded by them.  Forgiveness, therefore, not only liberates the other party, it liberates us too!  It's the way to true freedom.  Now, forgiving doesn't always mean forgetting.  Though we forgive somebody, the memory of what they did might stay with us a long time.  We can carry it in our emotions as a scar, or even in our bodies as a physical sign.  But forgiveness changes how we remember.  It turns the curse into a blessing.  When we forgive our parents for their divorce, our children for their lack of love, our friends for their unfaithfulness in times of need, our counselors for their bad advice, or our boss for treating us unfairly, we no longer have to experience ourselves as the victims of events over which we have no control.  Forgiveness allows us to take back our power and not let the events embitter, limit, or destroy us.  Is there someone you need to forgive?"

Devotional - June 5, 2010