23 Feb 10
Buenos dias, special folk.
It's
getting late...I need to meet a logger friend...go together to meet a
landowner...and try to sort out a strategy for doing a job that will
include milling. So...until tomorrow at this same time and
station, may God continue to bless you and turn lights on in your head
and heart. --- Ray
23 February 2010
Passage: Acts 7:54-8:8
Focus: “But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God…” Acts 7:55.
Don’t you just love these wonderful Jewish religious leaders!
They were such upstanding role models…the kind you would want to live
next door to…the kind of men you’d like your daughters to meet.
NOT! The fact is they were on a par with Al-Qaeda…with an
attitude that says, “Agree with us or we will kill you!” Little
wonder that Jesus warned His disciples, “…do not do what they do, for
they do not practice what they preach” (Mtt. 23:3).
Do you see the dramatic contrast in views presented here? While
the Jewish leaders were looking down on Stephen, he was looking
up. “But Stephen, full of the Holy Spirit, looked up to heaven
and saw the glory of God.” It’s a contrast of horizontal versus
vertical. It’s possible that Stephen was remembering the words of
the Psalmist at that point, “My help comes from the Lord” (Ps. 121:2;
144:7). That’s up and above everything else. In harmony,
Paul says, “Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your
hearts on things above, where Christ is seated at the right hand of
God” (Col. 3:1).
This scene also presents a contrast
in fullness. Stephen was full of the Holy Spirit. What were
they full of? Don’t say it. But to be sure, everyone is
full of something all the time. Jesus made the principle of
fullness clear when He said, “The good man brings good things out of
the good stored up in his heart, and the evil man brings evil things
out of the evil stored up in his heart. For out of the overflow
(fullness) of his heart his mouth speaks” (Lk. 6:46).
I think it’s a
good testing and training exercise for my own faith to play a kind of
WHAT IF game in my mind in response to dramatic real life stories I
read or hear concerning victorious believers. So in this case I
ask myself, “What if you were there in Stephen’s shoes (or
sandals)? How would you deal with that set of
circumstances? What kind of faith would you demonstrate?
Where would you be looking?—up or down?” I make it my aim to be a
LOOKING UP believer.
Now you and I may never be “rocked to sleep”
like Stephen. We may never be chased like David, or face the
lions like Daniel, or be beheaded or tortured or shot like many other
serious followers of Christ down through the ages. But be assured
that somewhere along the line you will meet hard times, you will be
tested and persecuted, you will stand before the firing squad of social
rejection, you will face the inescapable decision to choose “to be
mistreated along with the people of God rather than to enjoy the
pleasures of sin for a short time” (Heb. 11:25). “In fact
everyone who wants to live a godly life in Christ Jesus WILL be
persecuted” (2 Tim. 3:12). You can bank on it. Are you
prepared? Are you, like Stephen, remaining full of the Holy
Spirit and looking up? Such an attitude is far more important
than American Express: DON’T LEAVE HOME WITHOUT IT!