Psalms 103:1-5 ESV
“Bless the Lord, O my soul,
and all that is within me,
bless his holy name!
Bless the Lord, O my soul,
and forget not all his benefits,
who forgives all your iniquity,
who heals all your diseases,
who redeems your life from the pit,
who crowns you with steadfast love and mercy,
who satisfies you with good
so that your youth is renewed like the eagle's.”
Bless the Lord
To bless the Lord is to worship, to adore, to give praise
to, and to bow the knee to him. And, that he is Lord, means that he is owner-master
of our lives, he is sovereign, he is God, and he is the ruler of all. And to
bless him with our souls is to praise him with the very essence of who we are.
And that thought continues by saying that we are to bless
him with ALL that is within us – with our whole being. And that means we give
him praise with our lips, with our obedience, with our submission to him as
Lord, with our repentance, and with our minds, hearts, wills, attitudes, and
actions.
For, to worship the Lord and to give him all our praise is
to give ourselves to him wholeheartedly as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing
to him, which is our acceptable worship of him, and for us to no longer be
conformed to the ways of this sinful world but to be transformed in mind of the
Spirit of God.
Jesus, Our Healer
Jesus, when he walked the face of this earth, healed many
people. I don’t know if they all had faith in him. They had enough faith to
believe that he would heal them, it appears, though it was the faith of other
people that healed them, at times, too. So, God may physically heal many people.
But, as those who believe in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior
of our lives, Jesus is not only our Savior and Lord, but he is our healer. I think
many people forget that, and without even praying for healing they immediately
run to the doctor and/or to the medicine cabinet for every pain.
I’d like to share with you, though, that Jesus should be the
first and only one we run to for our healing, and we should pray to him for
guidance in what choices to make, instead of bypassing him. For, he still heals
miraculously. And he will lead us in what direction we should go.
Jesus led me to stop taking pharmaceuticals 13 years ago,
and I trust him for every illness and every pain. I will use natural remedies,
though, such as tea tree oil for bug bites and aloe for burns. And I will use
heat and ice for pain and swelling. But I no longer pop pills to relieve pain
and suffering.
He Forgives Our Iniquities
First of all, who is this benefit for? Forgiveness is
offered to all. Jesus Christ died on that cross for all people that all would
come to repentance and to have eternal life with God. And repentance involves
leaving our lives of sin behind us to follow our Lord Jesus in obedience to his
will for our lives.
So, there is a criterion here to receive this forgiveness.
Yes, we have to believe in Jesus as our Lord and Savior, but belief isn’t some
words we repeat or some acknowledgment of what he did for us. Jesus defined
faith in him as leaving our old lives of sin behind us and following him in
obedience.
And that faith which is required for salvation from sin
originated with Jesus, and is perfected by Jesus, and is persuaded by God, and
is gifted to us by God, and thus it submits to Christ as Lord, and it follows
him in obedience, and it forsakes our former lives of sin to live holy lives,
pleasing to him.
Also, believing in Jesus Christ is not just past tense. It
is present tense, and it is active faith that is still dying daily with Christ
to sin and is living daily with Christ to his righteousness. By faith in Jesus
Christ, we walk no longer according to the flesh, but now according to the Spirit.
And it is those who are believing in him (present tense),
who are dying with him daily to sin, who are daily walking according to the
Spirit, who are walking (in practice) in obedience to his commands, and who are
loving God, and who are loving others, who are the inheritors of eternal life.
Who Redeems Your Life
For, our salvation from sin is not just about being forgiven
our sin, being delivered from the punishment of sin (hell) and having the hope
of heaven when we die. Jesus shed his blood for us to buy us back for God (to
redeem us) so we would now be God’s possession and we’d honor him with our
lives.
For, Jesus Christ died on that cross that we might die with
him to sin and live to him and to his righteousness. He died that we might no
longer live for ourselves but for him who gave his life up for us. And he died
to deliver us from our slavery to sin so we would now be slaves of His
righteousness.
Thus, being delivered from the pit isn’t just being
delivered from hell, but it is being set free from our bondage (addiction) to
sin which weighs us down and which ruins our lives and destroys our
relationships with others and with God. And it is about freeing us to walk (in
conduct) in our Lord’s holiness.
It is also freeing us from the control of sin and Satan, and
it is freeing us to now come under the control of God’s Holy Spirit, so that
our lives now belong to the Lord to do what he pleases, to be all that he wants
us to be, to go where he sends us, and to say whatever he commands us to say.
And this is for the salvation of human lives and for the encouragement
and strengthening and maturity of the body of Christ that we be the people of
God he designed us to be for his purposes, and for his glory, doing what he
called us to do and ministering in the gifts and ministries he provided for us.
He Satisfies You with Good
All this is for our good and for the good of others. It is
God’s love for us which restricts us, and which sets reasonable boundaries for
us, and which gives us standards we are to live by. It is God’s love for us
which teaches us that we must say “No!” to ungodliness and fleshly passions and
to live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives while we await his soon
return.
The Lord is not trying to spoil all our fun. He is not
trying to make us miserable. He loves us, and therefore he desires what is best
for us. And he knows that what is best for us is that we die with him to sin
and live to him and to his righteousness, not that we continue living in sin without
guilt.
For, freedom is not lawlessness nor freedom from moral
standards nor from reasonable safety boundaries. It is not freedom to disobey
our Lord deliberately, habitually, and premeditatedly. We are free to NOT sin,
because Jesus set us free! Sin no longer holds us in its chains. Amen!
So, don’t buy into the lies that tell you that salvation
from sin is freedom from having to obey the Lord and that it is freedom from the
guilt of your willful disobedience. For, if we continue living in deliberate,
habitual, and often premeditated sin against God, we will NOT inherit eternal
life with God, but we will die in our sins. Heaven is, thus, NOT our eternal
destiny.
[Lu 9:23-26; Jn 6:35-58; Jn
15:1-11; Rom 6:1-23; Rom 8:1-17; Eph 4:17-24; 1 Jn 1:5-9; 1 Jn 2:3-6; 1 Pet
2:24; 1 Co 6:9-10, 19-20; 2 Co 5:10, 15; Gal 5:16-21; Eph 5:3-6; Gal 6:7-8; Rom
2:6-8; Tit 2:11-14; 1 Jn 3:4-10; Rom 12:1-8; 1 Co 12:1-31; Eph 4:1-16; Jn
6:44; Eph 2:8-10; Heb 12:1-2]
In
the Garden
Lyrics
and Music by Charles A. Miles, 1913
I come to the garden alone,
While the dew is still on the roses,
And the voice I hear falling on my ear
The Son of God discloses.
He speaks, and the sound of His voice
Is so sweet the birds hush their
singing,
And the melody that He gave to me
Within my heart is ringing.
I’d stay in the garden with Him,
Though the night around me be falling,
But He bids me go; through the voice of
woe
His voice to me is calling.
And He walks with me, and He talks with
me,
And He tells me I am His own;
And the joy we share as we tarry there,
None other has ever known.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lv6q6ZZLHw0
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