March 13 Day 72 The Importance of Boundaries I remember, years - TopicsExpress



          

March 13 Day 72 The Importance of Boundaries I remember, years ago, a football match that had been arranged involving twenty-two small boys (including one of my sons, aged eight at the time). A friend of mine called Andy (who had been training the boys all year) was going to referee. Unfortunately, by 2.30pm he had not turned up. The boys could wait no longer. I was press-ganged into being the substitute referee. There were a number of difficulties with this: I had no whistle, there were no markings for the boundaries of the pitch, I didn’t know any of the boys’ names, they did not have colours to distinguish which side they were on, and I did not know the rules nearly as well as some of the boys. The game soon descended into complete chaos. Some shouted that the ball was in. Others said that it was out. I wasn’t at all sure, so I let things run. Then the fouls started. Some cried, ‘Foul’. Others said ‘No foul’. I didn’t know who was right. So I let them play on. Then people began to get hurt. By the time Andy arrived, there were three boys lying ‘injured’ on the ground and all the rest were shouting, mainly at me! But the moment Andy arrived, he blew his whistle, arranged the teams, told them where the boundaries were and had them under complete control. The boys then enjoyed a great game of football. Were the boys more free without the rules, or were they in fact less free? Without any effective authority they could do exactly what they wanted. The result was that people were confused and hurt. They much preferred it when the game was played according to the rules. Within these boundaries, they were free to enjoy the game. The rules of football are not designed to take away the fun of the game. They are designed to enable the game to be enjoyed to the full. God’s ‘rules’ are his boundaries for life, given out of his love for us. Keeping God’s ‘rules’ is the way to life in all its fullness. His boundaries are not designed to restrict our freedom but rather to give us freedom. Like the rules of football, they do not stop the enjoyment of the game. Rather they enable the game of life to be enjoyed to the full. In each of the passages today we read about God’s boundaries. 1. Understand that God’s boundaries are given out of love Proverbs 7:1-5 The Queen does not issue invitations, she commands. God does not invite us to follow his laws, he commands. But these are not the commandments of a dictator, they are the commands of love designed to ensure justice, peace and fullness of life. The writer of Proverbs is like a parent encouraging their children and passing on God’s commands to them. He urges his children: ‘Store up my commands within you’ (v.1); ‘Keep my commands and you will live’ (v.2a); ‘Keep my law ... as the apple (the pupil) of your eye’ (v.2b, AMP); ‘Write them on the tablet of your heart’ (v.3b). This is what the Holy Spirit does. He writes God’s laws on our hearts and gives us the ability to keep them (Jeremiah 31:33–34). God’s commands bring ‘wisdom’ – and wisdom should be our ‘intimate friend’ (Proverbs 7:4, AMP). They bring ‘insight’ (v.4), and they keep us out of trouble (v.5). Loving Spirit of God, you have written your rules in my heart. Help me to keep your boundaries and live life in all its fullness. 2. Study the example of those who live within God’s boundaries Luke 1:1-25 One of the things that has helped me most in my life is the inspiring example of others. Sometimes it has been older people who, like Zechariah and Elizabeth, have lived their life ‘walking blamelessly in all the commandments and requirements of the Lord’ (v.6, AMP). Other times it has been young people, who like John the Baptist, had been filled with the Holy Spirit and power. Anyone, at any age, can be an inspiring example to other people. Luke was an educated man, an historian and traditionally thought to have been a doctor. He is the only Gentile in an all-Jewish cast of New Testament writers. This is the first volume of his two-volume work, ‘Luke – Acts’. Luke made a careful investigation of the events surrounding Jesus (v.3) and wrote them down for Theophilus (possibly a person with that name or, more likely, simply referring to those who were ‘lovers of God’ – which is the literal translation of ‘Theophilus’). He writes them down so that we ‘may know the certainty of the things you have been taught’ (v.4). We can have a certain confidence about the life, death and resurrection of Jesus. He starts his account with the birth of John the Baptist. In particular, he begins with John’s parents, Zechariah and Elizabeth. ‘Both of them were righteous in the sight of God, observing all the Lord’s commands and decrees blamelessly’ (v.6). (It is worth noting in passing that there is absolutely no suggestion that Elizabeth was barren because of some sin in their lives – quite the contrary.) Finally, their prayer was heard (v.13). When we pray God hears more than we say, answers more than we ask, gives more than we imagine – in his own time and in his own way. They waited a long time for their prayer to be answered. If God makes you wait you are in good company. God granted their request for a child – who brought them joy and delight. John the Baptist was ‘filled with the Holy Spirit even before he [was] born’ (v.15). He was ‘to turn the hearts of the parents to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous’ (v.17). God’s desire is to set the world back to the wise ways of living and away from the chaos that comes from disobedience to his commands. Jesus is the one who makes this possible. John the Baptist came to prepare the way for Jesus. Thank you, Lord, for the inspiring examples from the Bible and in society today of those who live within your boundaries. Help us to turn the hearts of parents to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous. Lord, transform our society. Restore marriage and good parenting, we pray. Fill me today with the Holy Spirit. 3. See the consequences of not keeping within God’s boundaries Leviticus 26:14-27:34 God loves you. He does not want you to get hurt and mess up your life and the lives of other people. That is why he gives you his instruction manual and warns of the dangers of living outside of his boundaries. The last verse of Leviticus summarises what the whole book is about: ‘These are the commandments that God gave to Moses on Mount Sinai for the People of Israel’ (27:34, MSG). Today’s passage describes the disastrous results when God’s people ‘will not listen to [him] and carry out all these commands’ (26:14). ‘If you reject my decrees and abhor my laws and fail to carry out all my commands and so violate my covenant, then I will do this to you …’ (v.15). We see the chaotic world that results from ‘stubborn pride’ (v.19). The relationship with God is broken. Prayers do not get through. God says, ‘I will … make the sky above you like iron’ (v.19). Disobedience is draining, ‘Your strength will be spent in vain’ (v.20). However successful we are materially, it does not satisfy: ‘You will eat, but you will not be satisfied’ (v.26b). These are described literally as ‘the curses of disobedience’. God gives every possible opportunity to repent. He puts all kind of obstacles in our way to persuade us to turn back to him (vv.18,21,23,27). In his faithfulness, and in spite of continual rejection, God is always ready to receive us back if we confess and humble ourselves (vv.40–42). This all points forward to Jesus. The sad thing about all these commands is that no one is able to keep them. It is clear in these verses that God knows that the people will break them and bring all these curses upon themselves. Yet that is not the end of the story, God promises that even then he will act to save and redeem his people (vv.42–45). Ultimately God did this by taking the curses of the law on to himself. It is only as we see the background to all of this that we understand quite how amazing the cross is and how much Jesus took on himself by becoming a curse for us, and the extraordinary blessing of being justified by faith and receiving the promise of the Spirit (Galatians 3:10–14). God’s Holy Spirit changes us as he writes his commands on the tablets of our hearts. As Paul says, ‘Live by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh’ (Galatians 5:16). God’s Spirit produces within us the fruit of ‘love, joy, peace’ and much more besides (v.22). The commands were given out of love. Jesus summarises the commandments, ‘Love the Lord your God ... and ... love your neighbour as yourself’ (Matthew 22:37–40). ‘We love because he first loved us’ (1 John 4:19). In love, he died for us and now he gives us his Holy Spirit to enable us to follow his commandments by living a life of love. Lord, thank you that, through Jesus, you forgive my failure to keep within your boundaries. Thank you that now you give me your Holy Spirit to help me to keep your commands and to live a life of love. Pippa Adds Luke 1:13 ‘The angel said to him … “your prayer has been heard.” ’ Zechariah must have been praying to have a child for decades and had probably long since given up praying that particular prayer. It’s encouraging that God does hear even if he doesn’t seem to answer. God’s timing was perfect for John’s arrival in the world. We don’t always see the big picture.
Posted on: Fri, 14 Mar 2014 07:08:32 +0000

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