2007 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on theScriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



February 9, 2012

Good morning, special ones.

I don't think it’s important to think you are MORE special than others, but “How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God!” (1 John 3:1).  Think of it.  So if you have responded to His great love you become very special…special in status, special in lifestyle, and special in destiny.  You’re special!

Rain is falling again.  I thought it was supposed to be a nice dry day. That is messing up some plans.  Oh well…so what else in new? Becki and I are about to go out and get in that rain and do a little walk/jog…with the dog…and maybe the neighbor’s dog.  The cats don’t seem to be much interested in that sort of thing.

The advertising quip for Fred Meyer is “What’s on your list?” Do you think I should tell them?  What’s on yours?

Love, Dad/Ray



9 February
Passage: Matthew 26:57-75
Focus: “He began to call down curses on himself…”  Matthew 26:74.

I can only imagine what kind of curses Peter was making on himself.  My hunch is that it went something like this: “I swear I don’t know this guy!  I’ve never seen him before in my life!  May my tongue be ripped out from my toenails if I’m not telling the truth! May the God of heaven squash me right now and mince me and fry me on an eternal skillet if I know anything about this jerk!”  He thought that surely those hanging around this exciting trial would leave him alone after a tirade like that.  But then the rooster crowed…and his mind cleared. Now he was really bothered.  Being guilty of some very wrong things, he now did a very right thing.  “He went out and wept bitterly”—before God—with confession and repentance.

Peter was actually wasting his breath when he went to calling down curses on himself.  He was already moving in the realm of the cursed.  If I’m reading my Bible correctly, everyone who denies Christ is automatically cursed.  It was only his repentance and his prevailing HEART AFTER GOD that freed him from that curse.  Jesus makes reference to this curse in the last story He tells in the previous chapter.  “Depart from me, you who are CURSED, into the eternal fire (which is something like an eternal skillet) prepared for the devil and his angels” (Matt. 25:41).  I can’t see that Peter’s denial was any lesser than Judas’ betrayal.  Their heart-level responses made the difference.

Consider a few other scriptures on the matter of curses.

Be reminded that we are touching on the very heart of the Gospel—that repentance and reception of Christ frees us from the built-in curse of sin and its consequences.  Be very careful to avoid disowning Christ in any way, shape, or form.

"The wages of sin is death; lets quit before payday."