Honey for the Heart

Honey for the heart, by Rosie moore

The Bible is like honey for the human heart. I will always remember how my dad read the Bible to me every night before bedtime. He did not pick and choose random quotes that he thought suitable for a child, but simply read Scripture as a narrative, picking up each day where we left off. It was the sweetest time of my day. The way he read the words, asked me questions and connected it to our lives showed me that Scripture was credible and alive to him. It also showed me that he cared for me. The Bible was not just an old book to take to church once a week, but an infallible source of truth, wisdom and comfort for all of life.

In Psalm 19, David meditates on the limited parts of God’s Word which he had in his possession—the Torah. He delights in God’s infallible Word, not as a set of rules or shackles to keep us from having fun, but as God’s gracious self-revelation to us. This is the beautiful poetry David wrote after contemplating how God reveals Himself to us through the skies:

“The law of the Lord is perfect,
reviving the soul;
the testimony of the Lord is sure,
making wise the simple;
the precepts of the Lord are right,
rejoicing the heart;
the commandment of the Lord is pure,
enlightening the eyes;
the fear of the Lord is clean,
enduring forever;
the rules of the Lord are true,
and righteous altogether.
10 More to be desired are they than gold,
even much fine gold;
sweeter also than honey
and drippings of the honeycomb.
11 Moreover, by them is your servant warned;
in keeping them there is great reward.

12 Who can discern his errors?
Declare me innocent from hidden faults.
13 Keep back your servant also from presumptuous sins;
let them not have dominion over me!
Then I shall be blameless,
and innocent of great transgression.

The God who speaks.

When I consider that the Bible was written by over forty human authors over a timespan of fifteen hundred years, it crosses my mind that God was not obliged to speak to us. He could have chosen to remain silent, leaving us in our ignorance and confusion. But instead, God went to great lengths to speak to us through words that show us who He is, what He’s like, and how we can know Him.

God’s Word is tangible proof that the Creator of the universe loves us and wants a personal relationship with us. He befriends us through this extraordinary collection of inspired books that we call the Bible, which David called the Law. He beckons us to come in and taste his words of truth.

But familiarity breeds contempt. We risk losing awe when we become too used to seeing the Bible collecting dust on our bookshelves, or when we’re in the habit of consuming only what pastors, Bible apps and podcasters have mediated for us. Sometimes we need to take a step back and remind ourselves of what God’s Word is and does, so that we will be excited to read the raw text for ourselves.

What Scripture does and is.

David says that Scripture revives the soul and makes the simple wise (Ps 19:7). It gives joy to the heart and enlightens the eyes (Ps 19:8). When we take time to read, digest and obey it, the Bible is more valuable than any treasure money can buy. It’s more wonderful than any pleasure invented by man (Ps 19:10). Scripture is perfect, trustworthy, right, pure, true and righteous. Best of all, it teaches us to rightly fear the God who made us (Ps 19:9).

Moreover, because the Bible is God’s standard of right and wrong, it warns and convicts us of sin (Ps 19:11-13). Every word of Scripture is flawless (Ps 12:6119:60Prov 30:5-6John 10:35). It speaks to all areas of life and knows no cultural or age barrier. It is eternal and always relevant (Ps 119:89Isa 40:8Matt 24:35).  Jesus himself affirmed that God’s Word is truth (John 17:17), so when properly interpreted, the Bible will never lead us astray.

We can trust Scripture as reliable because it is breathed out by God, and God is altogether trustworthy (2 Peter 1:20-21). These are extraordinary claims to make about any book, especially one that has been read and loved for millennia. But like honey, the Bible needs to be savoured and digested. It is not a medication to administer or a snack to wolf down.

What a gift!  As receptive readers, if our thinking is daily corrected, renewed, warned and trained to see as God sees, we will be transformed through Scripture. It will thoroughly equip us for every good work that God has in mind for us (2 Tim 3:16-17). It doesn’t get more comprehensive that that.

Sources of wisdom.

God has not left us to flounder in our foolishness but has come to us offering wisdom. As Solomon wrote, “Wisdom cries aloud in the street, in the markets she raises her voice” (Prov 1:20). When Jesus became flesh, “He became to us the wisdom from God” (1 Cor 1:30). And because the Bible is all about Christ from beginning to end, it is the only reliable source of wisdom. It is a firm foundation on which to build our lives.

Biblical wisdom is in stark contrast to cultural ideologies, the internet, AI and social media, even Church tradition. As Paul warned the Colossian Christians, he warns us too: “See to it that no one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deception, according to the tradition of men, according to the elementary principles of the world, rather than according to Christ” (Col 2:8). If we build on the foundation of human wisdom rather than on Christ and his Word, we will be as precarious as a house built on sand (Matthew 7:24-26).

If the last ten years have shown us anything, it’s that overuse of digital media produces a sickly tree with dry leaves and shrivelled fruit. This is because the internet creates endless content which is shallow, alluring and ever-changing. Like a giant Nutri-bullet blitzing a smoothie of Fanta and sweets, it leaves consumers with a stomach ache, feeling empty, anxious and addicted. Our brains crave more and more, but mere content cannot satiate our appetite for what is real and true.

We live in an age of information gluttony but wisdom malnutrition. Information is constantly changing, while our brains are overstimulated and distracted. Research shows that our smartphones are making us increasingly unhappy, lonely and mentally ill. Even our physical health is suffering. Souls are more weary and desperate for revival than ever.

In contrast, David likens the Bible to a stream of water that nourishes a fruitful tree (Psalm 1:2-3). It contains the eternal wisdom of God, the Logos, who became flesh in the person of Jesus Christ ,“in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge” (Col 2:3), “a secret and hidden wisdom of God, which God decreed before the ages for our glory (Col 2:7).  Without the Jesus of the Bible, we will have no salvation, no truth to anchor us, no wisdom for life.

Wisdom will grow in us when we are humble enough to let the Bible instruct us, contradict us, and show us where we’re wrong. Unlike a stock response on Chat-GPT or a Tik-Tok video, God’s wisdom is not something we can download or generate in seconds. Wisdom is accumulated over time and enjoyed by those who have found the hidden treasure of the gospel and are diligently applying God’s Word to their lives, day-after-day (Matt 13:44-46; James 1:22-25). Like a seed, wisdom flourishes in those who “receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls” (James 1:21).

Honey for the heart.

Having read the Bible from childhood and seen how powerfully the Holy Spirit ministers to people’s hearts through its words, I am convinced that whatever is written in Scripture is wiser and better and truer and lovelier and more powerful than anything we can invent by our own wisdom. I have been amazed by stories of unbelievers who felt drawn to read the Bible and were born again as the truth dawned on them. Because it is God’s breaking news of the gospel, it is honey for the heart.

For those with a deep longing for God and his eternal wisdom, there is a way to flourish in an increasingly unstable and malnourished culture. We need to become hungry Bible readers again, convinced that “Christ is the meat, the bread, the food provided by God for [our] soul” (John Owen). We need to become confident doers of the Word, because we love God and long for our lives to be shaped by His wisdom.

Like honey, which makes everything else taste better (think tea, porridge and toast), we need a steady stream of God’s Word to transform how we see everything else. Let’s treasure the nourishing honey that God has given us, by delighting in His Word, meditating on it and memorising it, because that is how we will taste and see that the Lord is good (Ps 34:8). Let’s diligently teach it to our children, because God tells us this is good (Deut 6:6-7).

Wisdom that saves.

Of this we can be confident: When God’s Word goes out in the power of the Holy Spirit, it is a sword that pierces (Heb 4:12-13); a mirror that reveals (James 1:23); a seed that reproduces (1 Peter 1:23); a fire that consumes and a hammer that shatters (Jer 23:29). It is milk that nourishes (1 Peter 2:2); a lamp that illuminates (Ps 119:105), and a living stream that supports human flourishing and fruitfulness (Psalm 1:2-3). Because it contains the message of the cross, it’s the only wisdom that saves and transforms (1 Cor 1:18-21). No internet feed, ideology or human wisdom can accomplish any of these things.

“For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. For it is written: “I will destroy the wisdom of the wise; the intelligence of the intelligent I will frustrate” (1 Cor 1:18).

Trusting God in the Eye of the Storm

Series: Don’t waste your waiting

“The Lord is faithful to all his promises and loving to all he has made. The Lord upholds all those who fall and lifts up all who are bowed down” (Psalm 145:13). 

Unlike us, God never makes a promise that He doesn’t keep. His promises are always dependable and true, because they are founded on his unchangeable character, moral perfection and sovereign power. God cannot lie. His promises are like a secure anchor for believers, providing security and stability even when circumstances are hard and hopeless. In contrast, false promises are disappointing no matter how firmly one believes them. They are like eating soup with a fork. You get a taste but no satisfaction.

False promises.

It makes me sad when sincere Christians cling for dear life to ‘promises’ that God has not made to them, instead of clinging to God’s Word which is always trustworthy. One woman told me that thirty years ago a man of God had prophesied over her and her husband. According to this alleged prophet, God had promised them that her husband would rise to become a prominent businessman, “a king among men,” a “leader in Christ’s kingdom.” He would have a mighty ministry.

In reality, the man spent his working life earning a modest salary before being retrenched in his late fifties. He struggled just to make ends meet. He was not a successful evangelist or ministry leader by any stretch of the imagination, just a faithful husband, father, and friend. However, he and his wife remained ever hopeful that their “big breakthrough” was just around the corner. Sadly, disappointment set in because they lived their lives based on a false promise.

In Leviticus, God warns his covenant people, “You shall not swear falsely by my name and so profane the name of your God. I am the Lord.” (Lev 19:12). In their casual promises of healing and success, false teachers are no better than the false prophets of Jeremiah’s day, “prophesying false visions, divinations, idolatries and the delusions of their own minds” (Jer 14:14). God takes it seriously when people put words into his mouth, especially false promises.

Many false prophets also claim that they’ve deciphered God’s word in such a way that they can match their Bible with people’s destinies or world affairs. They pluck verses out of context, scattering them like confetti. This causes Christians to put their trust in some other place than Jesus and his Word.

In the New Testament, the word ‘hope’ does not mean a sincere wish, but an absolute certainty. Unlike false promises, God’s promises have a 100% fulfillment rate. There are three distinguishing marks of God’s promises in the Bible.

Three marks of God’s promises.

Firstly, God’s promises bring about hope, perseverance and sanctification in the life of a Christian. God’s promises are never about our earthly glory or greatness, but about our godliness and growth, especially during suffering. God’s promises are not carnal. Like the persecuted Christians of the first century, we need to trust God’s “very great and precious promises” daily, as we seek to live a godly life connected to Christ.

To the scattered Christians all over the Greco-Roman world Peter writes,

His divine power has given us everything we need for a godly life through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness. Through these he has given us his very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature, having escaped the corruption in the world caused by evil desires.” (1 Peter 1:3-4).

Secondly, God’s promises are all about Him, not us! They are about God’s character and the wonderful things that He has done. They are based on His attributes, power, and glory, shown through mighty acts on behalf of His people. They are God-centric promises, not man-centric.

Thirdly, God’s promises are anchored by the salvation which Jesus achieved for His people in His life, death, and resurrection. Christ is the thread woven through all God’s Old Testament promises (Isa 53; Isa 49:6Gen 3:15Gen 12:3). As Psalm 22 records, “They will proclaim his righteousness to a people yet unborn—for he has done it!” (Ps 22:31). Jesus is the Promised One of the Old Testament (Luke 24:25-272 Cor 1:20). He is the anchor of all God’s promises to His people.

Applying God’s promises.

How can we go about trusting in God’s promises in our daily lives? There is no shortcut or hotline to heaven. We cannot read little bits of Scripture and take away inspirational promises. We must humbly submit to God’s Word daily and study it in context to understand the big picture of what God has done and is doing in the world. Since Jesus is the fulfilment of all God’s promises, we need to read God’s promises through the lens of the cross and the resurrection.

Having said this, one of the habits that I have cultivated over the years is to write down and personalise God’s promises as I read through Scripture in my quiet time. I keep those promises in a box, to meditate on, memorise, and pray over so that I become an effectual doer of the Word and not a forgetful hearer (James 1:22-25). I want to stake my life on God’s sure promises and preach them to myself often, because I am prone to forget. When the waves of adversity break over my head and I am in the eye of the storm, I want to be anchored by God’s sure promises to His people. Christ and His Word is my only stable anchor.

Memorising Scripture may seem like an overwhelming task, but if the passage is broken down into small sections, it can be memorised fairly easily. The rewards of having a special passage hidden in your heart will be worth the effort. It will be an anchor when your sails are torn.

Every chapter of the Bible is full of God’s promises to all who have repented of their sin and trusted in the Lord Jesus, but Romans 8 is one of my favourites. Next week we will look at ten great and precious promises from Romans 8. Read the chapter on your own and join us next week as we record, personalise, and believe God’s promises together.

Listen to “Eye of the Storm”.

A Prayer for Resurrection Sunday

Easter Sunday prayer, by Rosie Moore.

Gracious Father, how we praise you for your love, demonstrated so powerfully on the cross. ‘This is love, not that we have loved you, but that you loved us and sent your Son to be the atonement for our sin.’ Thank you for sending your beloved Son, who was despised, rejected, beaten, mocked and crucified. He sacrificed his innocent life, so that we might be freed from sin’s bondage.

But we also praise you that death did not have the last word. Thank you for raising Christ from the dead, and for preserving many eyewitness accounts of the resurrection, so that we can be sure that Jesus is no longer in a tomb in Jerusalem, but sitting at your right hand in heaven. Having perfectly satisfied every demand of your holy justice, He is the eternal King on your throne.

It is Christ who brought us out of guilt and into forgiveness, out of darkness into light, out of our rebellion into your love, out of death into life, out of this evil world into your glorious kingdom. We magnify him today!

Father, we share the joy of Mary Magdalene and the women at the empty tomb, the disciples and the crowds who saw, heard, and touched your resurrection body; the fishermen who ate breakfast with you on the beach; Paul on the road to Damascus. Every one of them fell at your feet and worshipped you as their Lord and their God, as we do too.

We worship with Job who, at the lowest point in his life, said,

“FOR I KNOW THAT MY REDEEMER LIVES, AND THAT IN THE END HE WILL STAND UPON THE EARTH, AND AFTER MY SKIN HAS BEEN DESTROYED, YET IN MY FLESH I WILL SEE GOD. I MYSELF WILL SEE HIM WITH MY OWN EYES—I AND NOT ANOTHER. HOW MY HEART YEARNS WITHIN ME!”

Father, thank you that your beloved Son has defeated sin, Satan, and death. Thank you that the resurrection proved that you accepted Christ’s sacrifice, so that believers will not perish due to our sins. We praise and thank you that because Jesus was raised, all believers are given a new life, with power to defeat sin and live fruitful lives. We thank you for the sure hope that we too will be raised from the dead one day!

“Therefore my heart is glad and my tongue rejoices;
    my body also will rest secure,
10 because you will not abandon me to the realm of the dead,
    nor will you let your faithful one see decay.” (Ps 16:9-10)

Father, we long to love you with a love like yours, despite how cold our love often is. Melt our hearts with your grace, so that we can see and feel and convey to others the astonishing beauty of Christ our Saviour. Lord Jesus, take every part of our lives and make us more holy and useful to you. Fill our hearts with gratitude, and may our lives overflow with joy, so that all who see us may honour you as LORD AND KING too.

In the name of Jesus Christ we pray, Amen.

A husband’s leadership

God has entrusted to mere men the awesome privilege and responsibility of loving, leading, nurturing, and cherishing an imperfect woman in the same way that Christ loves his church. A loving husband finds ways to let his wife shine and creates space for her to develop her strengths. He makes it easy for his wife to submit, follow and respect him. Jonathan Leeman describes how a husband is to view his authority in the home:

 “The husband cannot demand respect or submission! His job is to draw his wife towards oneness. He woos her in a compelling, loving, gentle, patient, understanding way. Song of Solomon gives us a picture of the compelling nature of a husband’s authority. You are to win your wife with the compelling power of your love for her and care for her and tenderness for her as you seek to rule the earth together, as God instructed in Genesis 1. How tragic it is when a husband uses his authority selfishly for his own gain. We are called to rule and lead like Christ rules—a beautiful, tender, gentle Saviour.”

Lead like Jesus.

“Therefore, a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh. This mystery is profound, but I am referring to Christ and the Church” (Eph 5:31).

God’s original plan envisages a husband who is a lifelong lover, leader, and learner.

  1. Lover. Loving his wife is by far the most important responsibility of a husband. Paul summarizes, Husbands, love your wives and do not be harsh with them” (Col 3:19). The beautiful gospel story is enacted when a husband truly, unconditionally loves his wife, over and over and over, daily laying down his life and his desires/needs/wants for her good.

Paul likens a husband’s love to Christ’s love for the church: “Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the Church and gave himself up for her” (Eph 5:25).

A husband’s love is a choice (Eph 5:25a). His love embraces feelings, but does not depend on them. Just as Jesus chose to love us even though we were unlovable, a husband’s love ought to be unconditional. A husband’s love is also sacrificial. Christ’s example shows that love is about what a husband gives, not what he gets.

 A husband’s love is exclusive. Although a Christian man is called to love all people, clearly, he is to love his wife as no other. It is a unique love, like Christ’s special love for his church. A husband’s love is other-person focused, not self-focused (Eph 5:28-32). He is to treat his wife in the same way or better than he treats himself.

Love is a perishable commodity.

A husband may protest, “But my wife knows that I love her. Nothing has changed since I stood at the altar and swore undying love.” But love is a perishable commodity. Yesterday’s love must be renewed and expressed to your wife every single day. A husband who does not actively love his wife will wake up one day to discover a distant wife and a marriage that’s withered into a lifeless stick.  A husband who does not intentionally love his wife will progressively become more independent, critical, harsh, and self-centred.

Do the things you did at first.

Another husband may complain, “We’ve fallen out of love. We no longer even like each other.” But in Revelation 2:4-5, God accuses the first century Ephesian church of lovelessness, “You have forsaken your first love. Remember the height from which you have fallen! Repent and do the deeds you did at first.” The role of a loving husband is to do the things you did at first when your relationship with your wife was sweet and intimate. Keep doing those things for as long as you have life in your body.

2. Leader. The husband is to lead his wife, as he submits to Christ. “But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God” (1 Cor 11:3). This is God’s order for the relationship. It has nothing to do with competence or equality. A godly husband needs to learn to lead his wife well. He cannot abdicate this responsibility by passively standing by and expecting his wife to take the reins, as Adam did in the Garden.

3. Learner. A godly husband seeks to learn and know his wife deeply, so that he can love and lead her better. Peter writes, “Husbands, in the same way, live with your wives in an understanding way, as with someone weaker, since she is a woman, and show her honour as a fellow heir of the grace of life, so that your prayers will not be hindered” (1 Peter 3:7).

An understanding husband is an observant learner, not for the purpose of criticizing his wife, but in order to praise, encourage, and help her become the woman that God designed her to be. He takes joy in her progress.

A dozen practices of a loving leader.

  1. Take the initiative and bear responsibility for important decisions. Never make an important decision without getting your wife’s input.
  2. Take an active role in teaching and disciplining the children.
  3. Be completely committed to your wife in thought, word, deed, and sexual purity. She should know that you are a man of one woman, and she is that woman! Make your wife feel cherished like no other.
  4. Do your best to provide financially (1 Tim 5:8), care for your wife emotionally, and provide what you know will be good for her. However, provision does not mean wealth and extravagance. It is better for your family to enjoy your presence than your presents.
  5. Bring out the best in your wife (Eph 5:26-27). Allow her to shine.
  6. Be actively involved in her spiritual life and provide spiritual leadership for the family. Do everything you can to help her see Jesus more clearly through the witness of your own life. Faithfully pray for her, that Jesus Christ may be glorified in her and that she might know his love and grace. As a couple, write down goals for how you want your marriage to honour God. Initiate devotions and encourage active service in church.
  7. Trust your wife (Prov 31:11). Love believes the best and makes the most charitable assumptions when she makes a mistake.
  8. Order your lives and finances so that she can focus her attention on her home and family (Titus 2:5). Relieve pressure from her shoulders.
  9. Regularly praise, encourage, and affirm your wife (Prov 31:28-29). Everyone responds better to praise that to criticism. Gratitude not expressed is not gratitude. Honour not expressed is not honour. Each time you say the words, “I love you”, you are expressing three profound truths: “I choose you. I am committed to you. I delight in you.”
  10. Show her tender affection with loving touches (holding hands, putting arms around her waist, kissing her goodnight (Song of Solomon 1:2). Affection expressed solely for sexual purposes is not affection.
  11. Protect her from attacks from outside (John 10:27). Be a good shepherd to her.
  12. Creatively find ways to nurture companionship and intimacy (Gen 2:18). Since God created marriage for lifelong, one-flesh union, a loving husband removes all obstacles to this unity. Plan date nights and share the happiest and saddest moments of your day. Find fun activities you both enjoy doing and schedule them into your week. Pray and read the Bible together. The saying is true: “Couples who play and pray together, stay together.”

Five practices of a learner.

  1. A learner regularly reads good books on marriage to develop better skills. Other than Christ, nothing is more important to him than learning how to grow his marriage.
  2. A learner studies his wife’s unique personality, goals, joys, and frustrations. He creates a haven for his wife to share personal things with him. A wife will close down if her husband fails to give her his full attention; makes snide or flippant remarks; cross-examines her like a prosecuting attorney; or gives solutions to her problems but shows no concern for how she feels.
  3. A learner will notice his wife’s strengths, weaknesses, and pressures. A loving husband tries to understand the details of his wife’s life, to help and encourage her. He does not notice her faults to criticize her, but to stretch mercy over her failures.
  4. A learner finds out what makes his wife happy (Deut 24:5). In the Old Testament, a husband was not allowed to do military service for a year after his wedding, as he was to stay at home and bring happiness to the wife he married!
  5. A learner understands the obvious differences between men and women. A loving husband does not treat his wife as a male buddy. Most women feel loved when they’re pursued and when their husband initiates romance. A learner realizes that men and women are different sexually and communicate differently—men give summaries while women want the whole story! A learner honours these God-given differences.

An honourable man.

Peter wrote that if a husband dishonours his wife and doesn’t live with her in an understanding way, his prayers will be hindered (1 Peter 3:7). This is a sober warning to husbands. An honourable man treats his wife with the dignity normally reserved for someone above him in authority. Honour is not a highly rated characteristic in our culture, but it is highly regarded by God.

An honourable man is considerate and humble in leading his wife. He is prepared to sacrifice his own comforts, privileges and desires for his bride, as Christ did when He gave up heaven to become a mere man, to lay down his life for his people (Phil 2:5-11). He has the same attitude as Jesus Christ, considering his wife as more important than himself.

An honourable man values and cherishes his wife simply because she is a woman. There is something inherent in manhood and womanhood that requires men to treat women with gentle consideration, understanding, and protectiveness (1 Peter 3:7). Feminists may disagree, but male chivalry finds its roots in biblical truth.

An honourable man does not raise his voice or use harsh or profane words with his wife. A husband who honours his wife listens patiently, speaks kindly, and expresses thanks and courtesy, even when he disagrees with her. As Solomon reminds us, “Whoever is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he who rules his spirit than he who takes a city” (Proverbs 16:32)

A daunting task.

“In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself.  After all, no one ever hated their own body, but they feed and care for their body, just as Christ does the church—”(Eph 5:28-29).

If you are feeling inadequate as a husband, this is a good place to be! God has indeed entrusted to mere men the awesome role of loving, leading, nourishing, and cherishing an imperfect woman in the same way that Christ loves his church. This is more than a daunting task; it is impossible in our own strength. But with God’s perfect love and limitless grace at a husband’s disposal, he can set out each new day seeking to trust, obey and glorify Christ in his marriage by loving, serving, honouring and leading his wife. No matter how inadequate a husband may feel, there is perfect sufficiency in God’s grace and his great and precious promises (2 Cor 1:20). Through Christ’s resurrection power, God has promised to give Christian men everything required to be honourable husbands and to build God-honouring marriages (2 Peter 1:3-4). In Christ, you lack nothing.

Confronting with redemption in mind

Series: Blessed are the peacemakers, by Rosie Moore. (Part 4)

Although many offenses committed against us should be overlooked to promote peace and unity, some problems are too important and need to be discussed before great harm ensues. But talking to a person face-to-face about a contentious issue is an unpleasant experience for most of us. It’s easy to sidestep the problem for so long that tensions build until they reach bursting point. Eventually we explode and bring out a long list of every offense under the sun, real and imagined. Worse still, we complain and gossip about the person, which fuels bitter divisions and deep hurt. A failure to speak the truth in love to our neighbour inevitably leads to a toxic war of words. Many precious relationships are lost this way, but the Bible gives us the framework for redemptive confrontation. Here are four verses that describe the nature of redemptive, rather than destructive, confrontation:

“Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit should restore that person gently. But watch yourselves, or you also may be tempted (Galatians 6:1).

“If your brother or sister sins, go and point out their fault, just between the two of you. If they listen to you, you have won them over” (Matt 18:15).

“Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who is the head, that is, Christ” (Eph 4:15).

“Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen” (Eph 4:29).

Overlook or confront?

Love covers a multitude of sins (1 Peter 4:8). But how do we know when an offense can no longer be overlooked and we need to confront someone? Here is a four-fold test that Ken Sande applies in his book “The Peacemaker.”

  1. The sin is visible enough to affect a Christian’s witness. It dishonours God to continue to overlook it.
  2. A sinful pattern is damaging your relationship with the offender.
  3. The sin is hurting others, leading people astray, or causing division between believers (1 Cor 5:1-13Titus 3:10).
  4. The sin is hurting the offender, either by direct damage, or by impairing their relationship with God or others. Leviticus 19:17 says: “Do not hate your brother in your heart. Rebuke your neighbour frankly so you will not share in his guilt.”

In any of these circumstances, it is loving to personally confront your neighbour.

Direct confrontation.

Christians have a duty to address serious sin directly, especially in a fellow believer. Many texts relating to reconciliation involve a personal conversation as a starting point (Matt 5:23-24Luke 17:3). Proverbs 27:5-6 says “Better is open rebuke than hidden love. Wounds from a friend can be trusted, but an enemy multiplies kisses.”

Many Christians object to direct confrontation, saying that correction is judgmental and unloving. They prefer to be a soft presence in someone’s life, allowing the Holy Spirit to do His work of conviction. But even in Matthew 5:1-5, Jesus is not forbidding personal correction. Rather, Christ teaches that once you have removed your own logs, “you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye”. God does not require Christians to be peacekeepers, but peacemakers. This often requires personal confrontation. The Bible narrates many stories of disastrous consequences when believers delay or avoid direct confrontation involving genuine confession and forgiveness. None is so tragic as the rebellion and civil war that sprung from David’s refusal to meet in person with his son, Absalom, to confront him with his sin and pursue genuine peace (2 Sam 14:24; 2 Sam 15-18).

Superficial agreements that beat around the bush and avoid direct confrontation do not bring about genuine reconciliation. God often uses His people to speak the words that a sinner needs to hear to lead them to repentance, as in the case of Nathan the prophet’s direct confrontation with King David (2 Sam 12:1-13).

Restorative confrontation.

God also calls us to be restorative in our confrontations, just as He is with us. In Galatians 6:1, Paul has in mind a Christian brother who is caught, overtaken, or surprised by sin, someone in need of help because their problems have become so serious that they are unable to free themselves. It is not loving to stand by and watch someone be destroyed by their sinful choices. Instead of ignoring him, the Galatian Christians were to “restore him gently”.

Similarly, in Matthew 18:15-17, Christ said that if someone has sinned against you, you must take the initiative to clear the matter up and restore peace. The starting point is to discuss things in private, just between the two of you (Matt 18:15). The desired goal is to “win your brother back”.

However, if that person will not listen to you, seek the help of one or two other believers to confirm disputed facts (Matt 18:16). These facts may reveal your own misunderstanding, or they may confirm the offence. If the wrongdoer will not listen to them, tell it to the church and ask the elders to rule on the matter. This is the process for church discipline (Matt 18:17).

Matthew 18:15-17 is not about compiling a grievance list and forcing the other person to admit they are wrong. This distorts Christ’s meaning. It is set in the context of Christ’s redemptive story about a loving shepherd who goes to look for a wandering sheep and then rejoices when it is found (Matt 18:12-14). It is followed by Christ’s teaching on lavish forgiveness and the parable of the unmerciful servant (Matt 18:21-35). Thus, the aim of the confrontation process is to establish the truth, using all possible means to show the wrongdoer his sin and restore him to Christ.

Gracious confrontation.

Instead of using shame to scold someone, the Bible teaches us to be gracious and kind in our approach, holding out the good news that God wants to free us from sin and help us to grow more like Christ. In writing to the timid young pastor, Timothy, Paul describes how God uses His people to graciously pierce the heart of another person to bring about repentance. Our confrontation may actually lead a sinner to come to their senses, as the prodigal son did (Luke 15:17):

“And the Lord’s servant must not be quarrelsome but kind to everyone, able to teach, patiently enduring evil, correcting his opponents with gentleness. God may perhaps grant them repentance leading to a knowledge of the truth,  and they may come to their senses and escape from the snare of the devil, after being captured by him to do his will” (2 Tim 2:24-26).

Similarly, Paul urges the Colossian Christians to put on Christ-like virtues which promote peace: “Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience, 13 bearing with one another and, if one has a complaint against another, forgiving each other; as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive (Col 3:12-13).

Christ’s gracious restoration of Peter is a perfect example. Peter could be restored to ministry only if his professed love for Christ was real, so Jesus asked him about the nature of his love (John 21:15-17). In Peter’s own letter to Christians decades later, he describes God’s restoring of those who have suffered, making them “strong, firm and steadfast” (1 Peter 5:10). The end goal of gracious confrontation is genuine repentance, so that Christ can mend broken people and restore them to usefulness in His kingdom.

Wise confrontation.

If there’s one thing I’ve learned in inter-personal relationships, it’s that there’s no one-size-fits-all formula!  It’s risky to confront someone. What if we offend them and turn them off God forever? But God promises to give us wisdom when we ask and assures us that a wise rebuke can be very helpful to others: “Like an earring of gold and an ornament of fine gold is a wise reprover to a listening ear” (James 1:5-6Prov 25:11-12). We need to trust God enough to risk offending our brother or sister.

Wise confrontation may include confessing our own sins, teaching, instructing, reasoning with, encouraging, correcting, warning, admonishing, or rebuking (Matt 5:23-24Luke 17:3Acts 17:17). Our approach will depend on the urgency and intensity of the wrong, as well as our relationship and role. It is wise to take a gentle approach first and to get firmer as is necessary (1 Thess 5:14). It is also wise to choose the right time and place to talk openly, without either person being exhausted or distracted.

In the case of a Christian wife living with an unbelieving husband, wise confrontation may require respectful and submissive behaviour, not words. Her “gentle and quiet spirit” may ultimately win him over to Christ (1 Peter 3:1-5). In confronting a person in authority, such as an employer or church elder, you will need to choose your words carefully so that you speak in a respectful manner, recognising that person’s authority. Daniel provides a good template for confronting a leader (Daniel 1:11-14).

In confronting wrongdoing, we can serve the person by offering helpful advice and creative solutions. We can learn from Christ’s encounter with the woman at the well by asking probing questions that led her to think and assess her own life (John 4:1-18). We can learn from Queen Esther, who took two days and two banquets to confront the King about his genocidal decree against the Jews (Esther 5-7)! It may be wise to involve other people right from the start, eg, when one person has been abused by the other and the abuser may use a private confrontation to manipulate or silence the victim.

Paul instructed Timothy to deal with people appropriately: “Do not rebuke an older man but encourage him as you would a father, younger men as brothers, older women as mothers, younger women as sisters, in all purity.” (1 Tim 5:1-2). At the same time, Paul instructed Titus to take a blunt approach with “empty talkers and deceivers” in the church: “Therefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith, not devoting themselves to Jewish myths and the commands of people who turn away from the truth” (Titus 1:13).

This illustrates the need for wisdom and discernment in confronting people.

Speaking the truth in love.

Finally, our words play a vital role in every confrontation, for “reckless words pierce like a sword, but the tongue of the wise brings healing” (Prov 12:18).  We are to always speak the truth in love to one another, even to those who have wronged or mistreated us (1 Peter 3:9Rom 12:141 Cor 4:12-13). Regardless of our personality, Christians must learn to communicate the truth in a manner that promotes peace.

Speaking the truth means that we must lay aside all falsehood and never bear false witness against our neighbour (Ex 20:16Eph 4:25Prov 12:22). We must also speak the truth in love, not harshly (Eph 4:15Prov 15:1). Marriages and relationships in families, churches and communities are regularly razed to the ground by the fire of an untamed tongue (James 3:5-12).

When we lecture and hammer people with what they have done wrong, dwelling on their failures, we create a chasm between us and the person we are confronting. Similarly, when we are slow to listen, quick to speak, and prone to angry outbursts, we will never achieve God’s redemptive purposes (James 1:19-20). “He who answers a matter before he hears it, it is folly and shame to him” (Prov 18:3). On the other hand, when we speak the truth in love, carefully choosing words which build up rather than break down, we will become skilled peacemakers.

Communicating the truth in love means that we keep our remarks as objective and factual as possible. We do not use opinions or exaggerations like “you always”, “you never.” We do not misuse Scripture to manipulate others. We do not judge people’s motives or accuse them falsely. We do not hurt our neighbour by gossip and careless talk (Prov 11:11-13). We speak clearly and ask for feedback to make sure that we have understood accurately.

As Ron Kraybill, a successful Christian mediator has observed, “effective confrontation is like a graceful dance from supportiveness to assertiveness and back again.”

In Ephesians 4, Paul shows us how to bring the gospel into all our communication:

“Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will grow to become in every respect the mature body of him who is the head, that is, Christ…

Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbour, for we are all members of one body.  “In your anger do not sin”: Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry, and do not give the devil a foothold…

Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen. And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.  Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice.  Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.” (Eph 4:1525-31)

Christmas greetings!

I wish you all a blessed Christmas and many opportunities to showcase the gospel with your family and friends! With Christ’s help, may you pursue peace and harmony in all your relationships, remembering to mind your own logs, confess your sins and lovingly confront with redemption in mind. May the Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace give you peace and rest this Christmas season (Isa 9:6).

“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid” (John 14:7).

Source:

Sande, Ken. The Peacemaker—A Biblical Guide to Resolving Personal Conflict.

Baker Books, 1991.

A Wise Wife

If you are a Christian wife, at some point you have probably felt confused in understanding your role, purpose and identity as a married woman. You may have succumbed more than once to the ‘comparison trap’ after scrolling through the glamorous posts of other wives who seem to have it all. I know I have.

In the book of Proverbs, Solomon writes about two kinds of wives. One is foolish, one is wise:

The wise woman builds her house,
    but with her own hands the foolish one tears hers down. (Proverbs 14:1)

 Wise wives.

A big part of being a Christ follower is growing in wisdom. Wisdom is not a one day game. It entails digging daily into God’s Word, and asking the Holy Spirit to renew our thinking and transform our ways. Ideally, the wisdom that a Christian wife needs to build her house is passed down from generation to generation, as well as through teaching and mentorship in the local church.

Paul describes this kind of discipleship in his letter to Titus, a young pastor. Older women are called to teach younger wives how “to love their husbands, to love their children, to be sensible, pure, workers at home, kind, submissive to their own husband, so that the word of God will not be dishonoured.” (Titus 2:3-5) How many strong, wise women have inspired you in your role as a wife?

Given the number of broken families and marriages around us, we can assume that few are building their houses according to godly and wise principles. Sadly, even Christian men and women have been more heavily influenced by feminist ideology than by the Bible. Like our ancestor Eve, we have been seduced by many lies of the Enemy, especially relating to marriage.

Lies women believe.

Here are ten lies (or half truths) that women believe relating to marriage. They are adapted from Nancy Wolgemuth’s book, Lies Women Believe and The Truth that Sets them Free).

I have to have a husband to be happy.

It’s my job to change my husband.

My husband is supposed to serve me.

If I submit to my husband, I’ll be a miserable doormat.

If I submit to my husband, nothing will get done. I’ve got to take the initiative.

I have a low sex drive and my husband must accept that.

My children are my number one priority.

I can’t control my emotions or help the way I am. My hormones made me do it!

My work at home is not as important as my job outside the home.

I have my rights!

In contrast, here are four wisdom principles from God’s word to re-shape our thinking as wives:

1. A wise wife stands on Scripture.

A wise wife stands on the Scriptures that God has given to her as a married woman, instead of conforming to the pattern of this world. She knows that a human idea that contradicts God’s Word is “a way that appears to be right, but in the end it leads to death” (Prov 14:12).

Because a wise wife fears the Lord, she stands on the authority of the Bible rather than on cultural practices or her own ideas. She embraces God’s order and priorities for her life (Eph 5:23Titus 2:3-51 Tim 2:151 Peter 3:3-6Prov 31:10-31).

A wise wife makes it her daily practice to “demolish strongholds and every pretention that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ” (2 Cor 10:4-5). She allows no one to take her captive through “hollow and deceptive philosophy, which depends on human tradition and the elemental spiritual forces of this world rather than on Christ” (Col 2:8).

A wise wife allows God’s Word, not culture, to shape every aspect of her daily life, especially in how she relates to her husband, how she raises her children and prioritises her household. She is sanctified by the truth of God’s Word (John 17:17).

2. A wise wife worships Christ.

A wise wife knows that there is only one perfect husband, one Rock, and one Shepherd. His name is Jesus Christ! She clings to her Saviour when hard things happen in her marriage. Instead of dwelling on her husband’s shortcomings, she focuses on God’s unchanging promises and purposes. She fears the Lord before all else (Prov 31:30).

She finds her ultimate companionship, hope, wisdom, rest and strength in Christ alone, knowing that marriage is a stewardship from Him and for Him. At the centre of her marriage is her relationship with Christ, and she actively depends on Him to meet her needs and be her source of truth and happiness. Like Mary of Bethany, she is first and foremost devoted to Jesus (Luke 10:38-42).

And so, a wise wife doesn’t make an idol of her husband or demand from him the perfection that no human being can give. She knows that there is only one Saviour who can satisfy the aching abyss of her heart. She gains vital nourishment from Christ through regular Bible reading and prayer, the Holy Spirit’s guidance and comfort, wisdom from mature believers, and obedience by faith to God’s commands.

A wise wife knows that no husband, no matter how diligent, can unfailingly meet her needs for love, security and companionship. No husband can live up to her ideals. No husband can be perfectly patient and compassionate as she pours out her 20 000 words to him per day! No husband can ever make his wife’s dream of a perfect, romantic love come true.

Therefore, a wise wife does not try to control, coerce or cling to her husband, but realises that she is married to an imperfect man for whom Christ died. She gives her husband freedom to be Christ’s, loving and accepting him for who he really is, not as a means to an end. She does not place intolerable burdens on her man, but looks to Jesus to supply the perfect, never-ending love for which her heart was created.

And even if a wife is married to a persistently bad husband, one of the most emotionally demanding and difficult situations, a wise wife does not depend on the quality of her husband’s love or leadership. God’s wisdom is still wise. The apostle Peter says that women who are married to ungodly husbands are to imitate Jesus’ attitudes and actions when the human leadership over Him failed and was unfair (1 Peter 2:21-23). A wise wife continues to look to Christ for her worth and identity, especially when her husband is not the man God calls him to be. She continues to entrust herself and her husband to a just God, while praying to win him over without words, by her godly life (1 Peter 3:1-5).

3. A wise wife submits to her husband.

Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Saviour. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything (Eph 5:22-24).

A wife’s submission is a wildly counter-cultural idea, but we cannot simply reject what Paul says because it makes us feel uncomfortable. We need to surrender our cultural and family baggage as we seek to understand what submission means and doesn’t mean.

Paul’s phrase ‘as to the Lord’ reminds us that submission does not mean obeying a husband who leads his wife into sin. In this case, she must obey her higher authority, the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 5:29). Nor does submission mean that a wife never shares her opinions or concerns with her husband. After all, she is his “helpmeet”, a valuable part of the husband-wife team (Gen 2:8).

Eph 5:33 defines what submission is: A wife must ‘respect’ her husband, regardless of whether he is worthy of her respect. After all, Jesus is the only husband who is always worthy of our respect. A respectful wife makes her husband feel worthwhile, honoured and admired. She gets to know her own husband to find out what she can do and say to show him honour. ‘In everything’ (Eph 5:24) isn’t selective or conditional submission. It touches every aspect of our lives and calls on a wife to treat her husband better than he deserves.

A wise wife confronts her husband gently and disagrees with him respectfully. She is not quarrelsome or argumentative, like a constant dripping on a rainy day (Prov 27:15-16Prov 19:1321:925:2427:15.)

Peter describes the attitude of a “gentle and quiet spirit” that is of great worth to God (1 Peter 3:4). Submission is an inner quality of gentleness and respect that actively affirms her husband’s leadership in both action and attitude. Thus, a wise wife responds positively when her husband initiates.

The Gospel is key to understanding submission. Submission stands against the backdrop of a wife’s submission to Christ (Eph 5:22), and the Church’s submission to Christ (Eph 5:24), and Christ’s submission to his Father (Matt 26:39). There is nothing subservient or humiliating about any of these three relationships. They are ordered and beautiful, having nothing to do with competence or unequal value.

If a wise wife submits to her husband, as she submits to Christ, the logical question is, “How do we submit to Jesus?”

We follow Jesus gladly. We learn from Him. We are led by Him. We make sacrifices for Him. We are vulnerable and open with Him. We invite Him to influence the direction our lives take.

Ironically, what a wife wants most out of life—love, stability, peace, and God’s approval—comes through submitting to her husband in all these ways, not through resisting or controlling him. When submission is in response to a loving husband’s leadership, it is not burdensome, but more like a harmonious dance.

Like all God’s commands, submission has many benefits. By imitating Jesus’s submission to His Father in heaven, a wife glorifies Christ. Secondly, submission is an opportunity for a wife to worship Christ, the ‘invisible man’ in the relationship. Thirdly, submission protects a wife. It is a shield against rude or manipulative people, and against interfering parents or extended family. Fourthly, submission shelters a wife from the stress of being responsible for a family. And fifthly, submission builds faith. Faith grows stronger in a woman who trusts God to guide her husband, rather than trusting herself to control him.

Many problems in marriage come from this basic role reversal. A wife who refuses to submit becomes controlling or complaining, while a husband who feels disrespected may become more passive or tyrannical. Since men are wired to lead their wives, a submissive wife is a blessing to her husband and her marriage.

4. A wise wife blesses her husband.

A wife of noble character who can find?
    She is worth far more than rubies.
Her husband has full confidence in her
    and lacks nothing of value.
She brings him good, not harm,
    all the days of her life (Proverbs 31:10-12).

Through all the risk and wonder, the joy and sorrow of marriage, a wise woman converts the biblical descriptions of love into action (1 Corinthians 13:4-7). After thirty-one years, I’m still finding it hard to do these few simple verses in my marriage. Love is not a feeling. Love is small acts of blessing, performed over and over again, to bring good to our husbands, all the days of our lives. The wise wife builds her house, day by day, moment by moment:

A wise wife extends grace to her husband instead of criticism.

She expresses thanks by ministering to his needs.

She writes a letter telling him what she loves and admires about him.

She guards her heart against tearing him down, in her words, thoughts or attitudes.

She blesses him with the gift of lovemaking.

She builds him up verbally, from the heart–

“I’m happy to see you!”

“Thank you for sharing your life with me.”

“Let me know how I can help you.”

“I’m so glad I married you!”

“I thank God for bringing you into my life.”

“Wisdom has built her house” (Prov 9:1)

Prayer

Lord, may your peace continually fill and surround our marriage. Protect us from the evil one, so that the devil may never gain a foothold in our home. Lord, I ask that you help me to bless my husband through all the days of our life together. Thank you for joining us together as one in the Lord Jesus. By the power of the Holy Spirit and the truth of your Word, give me wisdom, joy and grace, that I may respond to my husband according to your design for us. Lead me, good Shepherd, with your strong hand as I follow you moment by moment, that I may live each day in a way that pleases you. In Jesus’s name, Amen.

Resources:

Love that Lasts: When Marriage Meets Grace, by Gary and Betsy Ricucci.

Blessing your Husband, by Debra Evans.

10 Things I Want my Husband to Know…and how to tell him, Annie Chapman.

The Love Dare, by Steven and Alex Kendrick.

7 Things He’ll Never Tell You, but you need to know, by Dr Kevin Leman.

The seven A’s of confession

Series: Blessed are the Peacemakers. By Rosie Moore.

For a Christian, the gospel provides the model, the motivation and the power to resolve conflict and learn the skills of peacemaking (Col 3:13Rom 13:13-14Eph 4:1-3). In my previous two devotions “Called to Peace” and “Mind your own logs”, we saw that if God has made peace with us, Christians are called to promote peace, harmony, and unity, loving one another earnestly from the heart (1 Peter 1:22-23). While conflict may feel like a painful ordeal that induces stress, anger, or anxiety, it is also an opportunity to put off the deeds of the flesh which destroy peace and harmony, and put on Christlike traits which promote peace (Gal 5:19-20Col 3:1812-13). Conflict is an opportunity to seek genuine reconciliation and showcase the gospel.

The gospel models confession.

The gospel not only shows us how grievously we have sinned against God and others, but also offers us freedom from our past wrongs. Sadly, many people never experience this freedom because they have never learned to confess their sins honestly and unconditionally, either to God or to the people they have wronged. In my experience, failure to humbly confess sin is a leading cause of broken relationships, especially in marriage. One or both parties are simply too proud to admit their own part in a conflict, and choose instead the path of criticism, contempt, escape, defense, or sulking.

But since God desires “truth in the inward parts” (Ps 51:6), reconciliation is impossible without genuine confession of sin. Although our sins are ultimately committed against God (Ps 51:4), we are also called to confess our sins to one another so that our relationships may be healed and restored (James 5:16). Interpersonal confession is implied in many passages of Scripture (Luke 17:3-4Eph 4:32Col 3:13).

Confession is like the wind in the sails of forgiveness and reconciliation. It brings freedom and healing to relationships, first vertically and then horizontally.

Confession to God.

Confessing our sins to God paves the way for us to receive His mercy promised in Proverbs 28:13: “Whoever conceals his transgressions will not prosper, but he who confesses and forsakes them will obtain mercy.”

In Psalm 32, David contrasts the physical and emotional toll of unconfessed sin, with the peace and freedom produced by honest confession and forgiveness:

“When I kept silent about my sin, my body wasted away through my groaning all day long,

For day and night your hand was heavy upon me;

My vitality was drained away as with the fever heat of summer…

Then I acknowledged my sin to you and did not cover up my iniquity.
I said, “I will confess my transgressions to the Lord.”
And you forgave the guilt of my sin…

Blessed is the one whose transgressions are forgiven,
 whose sins are covered. Blessed is the one
 whose sin the Lord does not count against them
 and in whose spirit is no deceit (Ps 32:3-51-2).

Unless we first ask God for mercy with no conditions attached, as the tax collector did in Luke 18:13-14, we stand no chance of reconciliation with God or with the neighbour with whom we are in conflict. But once we have confessed to God, it is time to consider the person that we have wronged.

Confessing to our neighbour.

Is conflict eating away at your marriage, your home or your relationships at work and with extended family members? It’s likely that you need to admit your part in the conflict and say sorry.

James 5:16 clearly says, “Confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed”. Genuine reconciliation in relationships happens when we learn to humbly confess our sins to one another, frankly and unconditionally. Our willingness to confess brings our sin into the light of day and shows how serious we are about restoring the strained relationship. Honest confession shows that we are not fighting to win, but fighting to reconcile.

In the heat of conflict, it is easy to mutter a half-hearted admission, “I’m sorry if I hurt you, but you attacked me first”, or “I suppose I may have been partly to blame”, or “I got angry with you because I’m so stressed and tired”. But true confession does not shift blame or lessen the offensiveness of our actions or attitudes. Sincere confession sounds something like this:

“I have sinned against God and against you by using harsh and reckless words. I have injured you with my uncontrolled tongue and slander…There is no excuse for using my words as a weapon against you. Please forgive me.” (James 3:5-68Prov 12:18Prov 13:317:28)

“The Bible reminded me that I have had a similar struggle as you, and failed miserably in it. Yet I’ve acted self-righteously towards you. I have nursed anger and malice towards you (Eph 4:31-32). Worst of all, I dragged other people into my sin (Prov 16:28). I forgot God’s mercy towards me and have asked Him to forgive me. I trust that He will give you grace to forgive me too.”

“Please forgive me for my grumbling and complaining. I have discouraged you and been critical of all that you do for us. I have taken my eyes off the good things that God and you do for me every day. I am so sorry that I’ve been ungrateful and discontent”. (Phil 2:14James 5:9)

“As your boss, God has shown me that I have been self-serving in trying to increase my own power at your expense. I have refused to listen to your perspective. I was quarrelsome instead of being gentle, kind and patient towards you (2 Tim 2:24-26Eph 4:32). I did not diligently serve, lead, and look out for your well-being like a shepherd should (1 Peter 3:75:1-3Eph 5:25-33.) I am truly sorry for misusing my authority and even threatening you.” (Eph 6:9)

The practice of using biblical words to describe our sin to one another shows that we want to please God more than we want to save face or get our own way. We are taking our sin as seriously as God does.

In his excellent book titled The Peacemaker, Ken Sande lays out seven A’s that characterize true confession to others. I have found these seven elements of confession useful to remember when I am trying to mind my own logs and reconcile with someone I disagree with:

Seven A’s.

1.Address everyone involved. Because all sins offend God, the first person to address is God himself, as David does in Psalm 32 and 51. As a general principle, we should also address every person who has been directly affected by our wrongdoing. Slandering, stealing, lying, or failing to love someone should be confessed directly to the offended person.

2. Avoid if, but and maybe. We must take full responsibility for what we have done or failed to do regardless of the other person’s actions. A confession that excuses or minimises our sin is merely a token apology designed to deflect blame or avoid consequences. Genuine forgiveness and reconciliation is thwarted by T’s and C’s like, “Maybe I should have waited to hear your side of the story.” “I’m sorry I lost my temper, but I was so tired and stressed.” “I’m sorry if I hurt your feelings, but you really pushed my buttons.” It is better to be blunt and biblical than a lawyer in search of a loophole! “I have been an angry, hot-tempered man and have stirred up strife in our relationship! Please forgive me.” (Prov 29:2230:33).

3. Admit specifically what you have done, said, thought, or failed to do, using God’s own vocabulary from His word. Being specific helps us identify the behaviour and attitudes that we need to change. It also opens our eyes to see our sin as God does, not the sugarcoated version our culture presents. Do not use worldly categories, but confess specific heart sins like selfishness, ingratitude, envy, bitterness, hatred, stubbornness, vengeance, self-justification, pride, greed, lust, discontent, partiality, the love of money, ungodly fear of what others think, rebellion against God-given authority, good things that you want too much. These are biblical descriptions of sin. Confess specific actions or omissions by using biblical words like sexual immorality, laziness, gossip, slander, rage, deceit, gluttony, theft, adultery, lack of self-control, unwholesome talk, unkindness, failure to show deep and sincere love. General confessions are worthless, but specific, biblically-based confessions promote reconciliation.

4. Acknowledge the hurt. It is important to express genuine sorrow for how we have hurt other people by our actions, words and thought life. We should be grieved when we fail to follow the golden rule given by Jesus (Matt 7:12). We should be marked by the Christian virtues of “sympathy, brotherly love, a tender heart, and a humble mind” (1 Peter 3:8-94-8). Here are two examples of how this can be done:

“I really hurt and embarrassed you when I laughed at you with everyone in the office and failed to stand up for you. I saw you tearing up and did nothing to comfort you. I’m so ashamed that my fear of man caused you such pain.”

“As a husband called to love you as myself, I have not only sinned against God, but also hurt and defrauded you over and over again by watching pornography. I have been sexually immoral by not mastering my body in keeping it pure for you. I can only imagine how betrayed you must feel. You are justified in your distress. I deeply regret what I have done and am willing to do whatever it takes, in Christ’s strength, to overcome these sins that have enslaved me.” (1 Thess 4:4-8John 8:342 Peter 2:19)

5. Accept the consequences. Genuine repentance is demonstrated by our willingness to accept the consequences of our sinful actions and to make restitution if necessary. This is the pattern followed by the prodigal son when he confessed his sin to his father and added, “Make me like one of your hired men” (Luke 15:19). Likewise, Zacchaeus’s confession was accompanied by an eagerness to repay four times the money to those he had defrauded (Luke 19:8).

If we are unwilling to accept consequences, our confession is empty. “For godly grief produces a repentance that leads to salvation without regret, whereas worldly grief produces death” (2 Cor 7:10). Conversely, the more eager we are to repair the damage we have caused, the more credible our confession will be.

Here are two examples of how one would accept consequences:

“Beginning from today, I will call each and every person I have spoken to and admit that the things I said about you were not true statements. I will tell them that I have slandered you. I will put the record straight.”

“You have every right to lay a criminal charge against me for the money I have stolen, and I wouldn’t blame you if you did. But whether or not you lay charges, I will see to it that I repay you every month when I receive my salary, starting from this month.”

6. Alter your behaviour. Genuine repentance is always accompanied by a change of mind and actions, empowered by the Holy Spirit. John the Baptist called these changes “fruits of repentance” (Luke 3:8-14). Genuine change happens as we take our eyes off ourselves and focus them on Jesus and what he has done and is doing on our behalf. But the fight against temptation and sin is not passive. We must be willing to take drastic measures to forsake sin and move forward. As Jesus said, “If your eye offends you, pluck it out” (Matt 5:27-30). If your sin has contributed to a conflict or broken relationship, you could start by explaining to the aggrieved person the concrete commitments you are making with God’s help. And you could agree to meet with a church leader to hold you accountable for these changes.

 You could write out a commitment plan, prefaced with the words, “With God’s help, I commit to….” This plan would contain goals, objectives and accountability for the planned changes. Genuine reconciliation is more likely when the aggrieved person is presented with hard evidence of change, especially if the offense has been ongoing, such as angry outbursts or drug/porn use.

 7. Ask for forgiveness and Allow for time. If we have followed the previous six steps, the aggrieved person may readily forgive us, but it is always wise to ask, “Will you forgive me?” This shifts the conversation to the other person. But if we have hurt someone deeply, they may need time to process their feelings. It is unwise to pressurize someone into granting forgiveness and better to ask, “I know that it must be hard to forgive me for what I did to you, but I hope you can forgive me soon because I very much want to be reconciled with you. In the meantime, I will pray for you and do everything I can, with God’s help, to make things right between us. If there is anything else I can do, please let me know.”

“Go and be reconciled.”

If someone has something against us and our relationship is strained or broken, Jesus places the onus on us to take the initiative and become reconciled. It is even more urgent than being in church on Sunday (Matt 18:15).

But an essential part of Jesus’s command to “Go and be reconciled” is learning to deal honestly with our contribution to a conflict, however small or big. The seven A’s of confession are not an empty ritual or formula for peace, but rather a framework to ensure that Christians glorify God and minister to others whom we have wronged. Confession is a necessary step in striving to live peaceably with everyone, so far as it depends on us (Heb 12:14Rom 12:18).

Irrespective of the other person’s response and contribution to the conflict, true confession shows our commitment to repair any damage we have caused and to pursue peace and mutual upbuilding (Rom 14:19Rom 15:5-7).  God takes delight in seeing his children living together in unity! (Ps 133:1-3) This should be our delight too.

Source:

Sande, Ken. The Peacemaker—A Biblical Guide to Resolving Personal Conflict.

Baker Books, 1991.

Minding our own logs

Series: Blessed are the Peacemakers, by Rosie Moore

In my previous devotion, “Called to Peace”, we saw that if God has made peace with us, we are called to be faithful stewards of every conflict we face. God rarely provides an eject button to deliver us from difficult relationships. We need to ask ourselves, “As far as it is possible with me, how can I live at peace with this person?” (Rom 12:18). Peace isn’t always possible, but God is pleased with our efforts to be reconciled with everyone.

You may currently be embroiled in an ongoing conflict. You may feel that you have been mistreated and are harbouring anger, resentment, or hatred over a broken relationship. You may be so fearful of conflict that the mere thought of Christian reconciliation looms large in your mind. It is a painful crisis to avoid at all costs.

But every relationship is an opportunity to showcase the love and power of Jesus at work in your life. Conflict presents a challenge to throw off worldly ideas and fleshly instincts, to renew our thinking and put on the new nature of a peacemaker, “to be made new in the attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness” (Eph 4:22-23). Conflict invites us to “put off falsehood and speak truthfully to [our] neighbour, for we are all members of one body”. God challenges us to deal with anger quickly, lest we give the devil a foothold in our lives (Eph 4:26-27).

The problem is that many Christians have only witnessed poor examples of communication and conflict resolution in their lives. Moreover, most Christians have only a general understanding of what the Bible teaches on peacemaking. In this series, I hope to explore some of the principles and practical applications of Biblical peacemaking. The underlying assumption is that conflict is not an accident, but a God-given stewardship for the purpose of sanctifying us. Here are seven biblical practices of a true peacemaker:

  1. Mind your own logs.
  2. The heart of conflict.
  3. The A’s of confession.
  4. Go and be reconciled.
  5. Quick to hear, slow to speak.
  6. Speak the truth in love.
  7. Gently restore.

Today I will deal with the first two practices of peacemaking.

Mind your own logs.

On the sermon on the Mount, Jesus instructed His disciples, “Do not judge, or you too will be judged.  For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you. “Why do you look at the speck of sawdust in your brother’s eye and pay no attention to the plank in your own eye? How can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when all the time there is a plank in your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye” (Matt 7:1-5). 

We all have a tendency to be blinded by the massive logs of sin in our own eyes. That’s why the first practice of a peacemaker is to first to examine ourselves, then offer sincere help and correction to brothers and sisters struggling with sin. Matthew 7:6 is Christ’s book-end to this instruction on godly correction: “Do not give dogs what is sacred; do not throw your pearls to pigs. If you do, they may trample them under their feet, and turn and tear you to pieces.” Verse 6 is a warning not to suspend all discernment, but rather to evaluate situations and people carefully. It is sometimes wise not to engage with an unbelieving mocker or fool bent on our destruction (Prov 26:4-5Prov 9:7-8). Jesus himself illustrated this discernment with those who opposed Him (John 2:24). Nevertheless, the main point of Christ’s teaching is to mind our own logs.

When my children were young, their fighting sometimes drove Pete and me crazy, especially on thirteen-hour car trips with six of us crammed into our Fortuner. As boredom and mileage increased, the bickering intensified. It usually reached a crescendo in the Karoo, when the weather got particularly hot and the 4am start unravelled in grouchiness. “You’re breathing on me! Why do I always have to sit in the back? I hate the smell of boiled egg sandwiches! Why do you always get to choose the music? I’m sick of being in charge of the cooler box!” The arguing and moaning went on and on.

I prayed earnestly about the quarrelling and decided to teach our kids the seven habits of peacemakers outlined above. I thought I had done a pretty good job with the peacemaking curriculum until one day, as I glanced out the window, I saw our eldest daughter sprinting across the lawn, howling for help, with her younger sister in hot pursuit. The pursuer was in full war mode, wielding a cricket bat and yelling, “Mind your own logs, Jessie, mind your own logs! Mmmommmm, tell Jessie to mind her own logs! She won’t listen to me!”

The irony of quoting Jesus’s instruction in Matthew 7 was lost on the warring duo! It was a stark reminder that all conflict finds its source in our sinful human hearts. Without a new heart of flesh from the Holy Spirit (Ezekiel 36:26-27Gal 5:16-23), our best attempts at peacemaking will be mere window dressing. Unless our heart is regenerated and given new desires, we will never be able to uproot the weeds of conflict that thrive in the soil of selfishness.

The heart of conflict.

When offended, our flesh rises up in revolt against everything Christ says in Matthew 7:1-5. As Solomon observed, the human heart is “deceitful above all else, and desperately sick. Who can cure it?” (Jer 17:9). Jesus taught his disciples in Matthew 15:19: “Out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony, slander”. James confirms that the heart is the source of all human conflict, not external circumstances or other people’s actions:

“What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that battle within you?  You desire but do not have, so you kill. You covet but you cannot get what you want, so you quarrel and fight.” (James 4:1-3).

James’s assessment is accurate. Have you observed how the love of money or material possessions can translate into envy? And envy can lead us to be obsessed with financial security; it can tempt us to lie or mistreat employees; work compulsively; or fight with a spouse or business partner over finances; or sue siblings over an inheritance? (1 Tim 6:10Acts 5:1-3Matt 6:24)  Longings for respect, acceptance, approval, comfort, and success can be the source of bitter conflict if we allow them to rule our hearts. I have noticed that family conflict is often borne out of parents’ desire for peace at all costs, leading to a failure to discipline or shepherd their children in the ways of the Lord.

When our desires are not met, we instinctively feel angry, bitter, or disappointed. We demand, judge, or punish one another. Pride and the desire to always be right can make us defensive, blind to our own wrongs, slow to accept correction and quick to find fault with others. We need supernatural help not to destroy our relationships when conflicts arise!

True peacemaking is impossible without the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit in our lives. But once we commit to follow Jesus, we are new creatures in Christ. Our new Master does not give us the option of indulging our desire to escape or attack when we disagree. Instead, He gives us a humorous analogy—

“Mind your own logs, so that you can see clearly to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.”

In owning our own role in a conflict, there are two types of fault to watch out for: The first is having an ultra-sensitive attitude which causes us to be offended too easily. The second fault is our own sinful actions or reactions. Both sinful actions and attitudes are logs which need to be removed.

If we think back to the Fall, minding our own logs is a reversal of what Adam and Eve did in the garden when they hid from the Lord, and then blamed each other for their own disobedience. The process of removing our own logs is a powerful remedy against two of the most insidious tendencies of our sinful hearts: Hiding and blame shifting.

Remedy against hiding.

Instead of hiding our guilt as Adam and Eve did, we are inviting the Lord to search our hearts and expose “any offensive way in [us]” (Gen 3:10Psalm 139:23-24). Removing our own logs means that we do not hide our sin as we are prone to do.

Firstly, we do this by prayerfully studying the Bible and asking God to show us where our attitudes and actions have not lined up with His ways (Heb 4:12). His living and active Word is sharper than a two-edged sword, able to convict and uncover the sinful thoughts and idols of the hearts. Scripture is like a mirror that reveals who we truly are (James 1:23-25). It is God’s instrument to show us our own heart. And so, we cannot remove our own logs without regular time with the Lord, in which we submit to His Word and pray to Him who knows our thoughts before even a word is on our tongue (Ps 139:1-5). We cannot remove our own logs without coming out of hiding and confessing our sins to God (Prov 28:13), allowing Him to cleanse and free us from it.

Secondly, we remove our own logs whenever we ask a godly friend or mentor to counsel and correct us, to candidly show us our role in a conflict. If we do not want to be blinded by hypocrisy, or to conceal, deny or rationalize our wrongs, an objective Christian brother or sister can help us to see the truth about ourselves.

“Faithful are the wounds of a friend” (Prov 27:6).

Remedy against blameshifting.

Instead of blameshifting as Adam and Eve did (Gen 3:12-13), Christ commands us to forsake our own logs, regardless of what the other person may do. When we take the plank out of our own eye, we are also challenged to confess to the person who has offended us. We need to use the Bible’s own language to describe our sinful actions and attitudes, instead of euphemistic words that excuse our sin — “I was frustrated with you…” A Christian who has removed his own logs takes full responsibility for his sin. She sees her sin as God sees it and corrects others as a forgiven sinner:

“God has shown me how wrong I have been in holding onto my hatred and anger against you for what you did to me. Yes, you committed a terrible sin against me, but I have been murdering you in my heart for too long…”

God uses conflict to help us see, confess and forsake our sinful heart desires. Only when we have removed our own logs are we ready to gently correct and restore a Christian brother or sister caught in sin (Gal 6:1Matt 18:15). Conflict may be an opportunity to be as merciful to others as God is to us (Matt 18:21-35). If God is sovereign and promises to work all things for good in the lives of those who love Him, surely every conflict allows us to showcase the gospel and follow the example of Christ, who did not take revenge but kept entrusting Himself to the One who judges justly?

When we face offense and conflicts, believers need to ask ourselves a straightforward question from the outset:

“How can I show Jesus’ work in me by taking responsibility for my contribution to this conflict?”

Whatever happened to love?

By Rosie Moore.

Another Valentine’s Day is upon us! You may be excited about your plans for romance, or the day may be just another reminder of the growing chasm separating you from your spouse. Perhaps you both feel as if love, once a blazing fire, now lies extinguished, leaving behind cold ashes. Whatever happened to the love?

You started out as great companions, united in everything. You nodded when the preacher at your wedding quoted Jesus’s words, For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife,and the two will become one flesh.’ So they are no longer two, but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, let no one separate.” (Mark 10:7-9). Intimacy and companionship were once your mutual goals. Separation wasn’t even on your radar.

It all seemed so romantic at first, but then life happened. Now you struggle to find anything to say to each other, apart from syncing hectic schedules and arguing about how to manage the kids. Companionship has been replaced with bored silence, mindless scrolling, and hurried arguments about who’s doing what chores this week. You may be thinking, “Whatever happened to the love?”

Rekindling love.

The good news is that even lost love can be rekindled and fanned into flame. Love is not a feeling, but where true love is expressed, feelings soon overflow.

Sometimes we buy into our culture’s lie that love is a feeling that comes and goes. But love is actually a decision to do good to another person no matter what. It is a steadfast and faithful commitment to act lovingly in action and attitude, without expecting anything in return. “Love is love” is a myth, since God has defined what true love is, especially in the context of marriage (1 Corinthians 13:4-8; Matt 19:4-5).

In God’s economy, love is not a transaction between two people. When I was in the law profession, we applied the ‘reasonable person’ test to assess whether a person acted negligently to harm someone or not. We would ask, “What would a reasonable person have done in the same circumstances?” But real love does not apply the reasonable person test. Real love is more than a social contract between two people who promise to act ‘reasonably’ and fill each other’s emotional cups. Real love is more than the feeling you get when your husband or wife meets your needs.

Whatever our culture may believe about love, marital love is a lifelong commitment between a man and a woman to be kind and faithful to each other over a lifetime. Companionship lies at the heart of that commitment because God said, “It is not good for a man to be alone. I will make a helper suitable for him” (Gen 2:18).

Seek intimacy with God first.

Inevitably, a lack of companionship in marriage follows a lack of intimacy in our relationship with the God who created us and invented marriage. It is only the Lord of love who can empower a sinner to persevere in loving an imperfect partner over a lifetime of ups and downs. Love will burn hotter and brighter over the years, as we experience more of the love of our heavenly Father and the undeserved gift of his beloved Son, who laid down his life for us (John 3:16; Rom 5:6-8). It is this vertical relationship with the Lord that fuels the love of our horizontal relationships.

And so, if you recognize that your love for your spouse is lukewarm or getting ready for the ash heap, there’s no time to waste. Pursue an intimate relationship with the Lord as your first priority. The divorce statistics are not in your favour and Eskom will not ignite the fire of your love! It’s time to learn how to love each other by returning to God’s original design for marriage and the redemptive gospel picture that it represents. The truth is that marriage operates best when God’s plan is followed—with the husband as the loving leader and the wife as the respectful completer. When a wife’s submission is in response to a loving husband’s leadership, it’s not hard. It’s a joy.

Intimacy is a byproduct, not a goal.

Ironically, a ‘happy’ marriage comes to those who focus on pleasing God rather than themselves, on giving love, rather than receiving it. If you pursue an intimate marriage as an ultimate end, you will fail and be disappointed. Your marriage will become just one more idol on the throne of your heart. But if you seek to love your spouse in the way that God loves you, your cup will be full and you’ll never be disappointed.

At times, you will still be hurt by your spouse’s sins. You will fail to be the husband or wife that you know you ought to be. Your relationship will still be rocked by the pressures of life. But over the long term you will be transformed and intimacy will steadily grow in your marriage. Intimacy is the natural byproduct when a husband and wife are loving God first and finding their needs met in Him.

As Christopher Ash writes, “Paradoxically, the most secure and happiest marriages are those that look outwards beyond their own (often stifling) self-absorption (or introspective ‘coupledom’) to the service of God and others in God’s world, through love of God and neighbour.” That was always the point of marriage (Gen 2:18-25; Gen 8:16-18; Gen 9:1-3).

A bigger vision of love.

What if God designed marriage to make us holy more than to make us happy?

What if God gave us marriage to expose the sin in us so that we could begin to learn how to love and to grow in becoming more like Christ?

What if every married Christian has the privilege and responsibility to showcase the love relationship between Christ and the church?

No wonder marriage is under such attack today! Even faithful Christians are feeling the pressure to accept, affirm and celebrate every kind of twisted ‘marriage’ the imagination can conjure up, for fear of being called hateful bigots or self-righteous pharisees. The image of the gospel in marriage is at stake. One of the things that Satan hates most is a marriage which displays the selfless love of the gospel. And one of the things that Satan loves most is seeing an ugly parody of the relationship between Christ and his bride.

The image of the gospel of grace.

“Therefore, a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh. This mystery is profound, but I am referring to Christ and the Church” (Eph 5:31).

Marriage points us to our hope of Christ returning to claim his bride, the church, making marriage a living picture of the gospel of grace. Marriage is designed to demonstrate God’s redeeming love for his people and Christ’s restorative power to bring beauty from the ashes of sin and brokenness.

The Gospel, God’s answer for sin in this world, provides both the model and motivation for lifelong love and intimacy between a husband and a wife. For those who trust in Christ as their Saviour and Lord, the Gospel is the key which God has given to unlock closed doors between Himself, husband, and wife. The Gospel of grace empowers us to treat each other with kindness, to forgive, and to build trust, intimacy, and companionship year after year, not just on Valentine’s day.

The Gospel of grace ignites and fans into flame selfless marital love. It is the bridge between husband and wife who instinctively do things that create distance in their marriage. Genesis 3 explains why the flames of love tend to become embers overnight. The natural trajectory of marriage is to transition from a harmonious, one-flesh union to a state marked by distance and animosity:

The root of distance and disharmony.

Satan deceived Eve through a clever combination of outright lies, half-truths, and falsehoods disguised as truth (Gen 3:1-6). She listened to the serpent instead of to God and her husband. Adam was a passive bystander who failed to actively lead his wife into righteousness. Instead, he followed her into sin. Roles were reversed and disorder ensued.

When Adam first eyed his beautiful wife, he started out exclaiming, “This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh!” But he ended up blaming God and the woman you put here with me (Gen 2:23; Gen 3:12).  The loving husband and wife who once lived in blissful harmony, “naked and unashamed”, ended up hiding in the shadows, with fig leaves to cover their guilt.

Doesn’t the Fall narrative expose the heart of every argument and every cold, estranged marriage?

A distracted heart is too busy to love. A disappointed heart gives up on love. A hard heart doesn’t know how to love anybody but itself. A rebellious heart finds God’s ways too restrictive. An idolatrous heart clings to its spouse like a saviour. There are so many black holes of sin that swallow love alive. But change begins when we recognize our need for the mercy, power, and love that we don’t have.

We need Jesus to forgive us and enable us to choose our spouse’s good over our own. God’s redemptive power is most clearly seen in marriages where Christ is revered as Lord.

Reverence for Christ.

In Eph 5:22-25, Paul gives us the blueprint for a loving and intimate marriage, fueled by the renewable energy of the gospel and reverence for Christ as Lord. Notice how many times Christ is mentioned, the invisible man in every interaction between husband and wife. The Lord Jesus is the heartbeat of every instruction Paul gives about marriage:

“Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ. Wives, submit yourselves to your own husbands as you do to the Lord23 For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Saviour. 24 Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything.

25 Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her 26 to make her holy, cleansing  her by the washing with water through the word, 27 and to present her to himself as a radiant church, without stain or wrinkle or any other blemish, but holy and blameless. 28 In this same way, husbands ought to love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. 29 After all, no one ever hated their own body, but they feed and care for their body, just as Christ does the church— 30 for we are members of his body. 31 “For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and the two will become one flesh.” 32 This is a profound mystery—but I am talking about Christ and the church33 However, each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband.”

Your spouse does not always ‘deserve’ your best, but reverence for Christ means that love covers over a multitude of sins. After all, “We love because [God] first loved us” (1 John 4:19). God’s love sprung out of pure grace, as there was nothing good in us to commend us to Him. So, when it feels hard to show love to your spouse, remember that it wasn’t easy for God to send Jesus to die for you either.

Jesus modelled how a husband should love his wife– by dying to his own needs and desires, laying down his own rights to pursue the optimal good of his bride. The onus to initiate this kind of sacrificial, selfless love falls on the husband, who is the head of his home, as Christ is the head of the Church: “The Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve and give His life as a ransom for many.”

Both the husband who doesn’t lead in love, and the wife who doesn’t submit, respect and complement her husband are ultimately rejecting Christ as their Lord. But Paul says, “Remember what God did for you in Christ! Remember that God sought to reconcile you with himself, at ultimate cost to himself! Remember that he acted for your good even when it cost him everything. Now go and do the same in your marriage!” A life centered on the Lord Jesus will enable us to freely love our spouse without demanding anything in return. He is the the ultimate Groom who fans the flame of marital love.

A prayer for marriage.

Lord, help me to see that the more I learn to love like Christ, the more joy, contentment, intimacy, and happiness I will have in my marriage. Teach me to love you with all my heart and to love my nearest neighbour as myself. Give me fresh eyes to see the gospel of grace, so my life will be marked by the attitudes and actions of love: Help me to be patient and kind in my marriage, not jealous of others or my spouse. Keep me meek, so I will not brag, nor speak arrogantly or rudely to my spouse. Keep me humble, so I will regard my partner as more important than myself and seek opportunities to do good to him/her every day. Rescue me from my stubborn selfishness! In the heat of conflict, give me self-control, so I will not be easily angered nor embittered by my spouse’s past wrongs. As husband and wife, may we refuse to rejoice in unrighteousness, but rather rejoice in the truth of your Word. Lord, impart to us your unfailing love for each other– a love that bears all things, believes all things, endures all things. Remind us daily that our greatest achievements, services, and sacrifices are worth nothing without love.  Thank you that your love never fails, even if ours does. In Jesus’s name, Amen.

(1 Corinthians 13).

Tale of Two Trees

Do you long to be fruitful, like a well-watered tree in unsettled times? Do you wish for strength in the time of crisis, and even more to share with others as you bear fruit for the Lord?

On the brink of war and captivity, the prophet Jeremiah used classic Hebrew poetry to tell the tale of two trees planted in the desert: One represents a person who keeps trusting God, one doesn’t. The trusting individual is vital and fruitful, nourished by a healthy root system connected to a stream. This resilient tree grows and adapts to change without fear or anxiety, even when the heat and drought of the desert are intense. This man’s confidence is in the Lord, not his environment.

In contrast, the other tree is dehydrated, fatigued and barren, “like a bush in the wastelands…in a salt land where no one lives.” It is a stark and solitary image of a burnt-out, joyless, empty and disconnected man, blind to “prosperity when it comes” (Jer 17:6). He doesn’t notice everyday blessings. Two people respond differently to the same heat and drought of the desert.

Jeremiah wept over the fate of his beloved country, Judah. He predicted the destruction of Jerusalem and the terrible events following Jerusalem’s fall when God’s people would be captured by the Babylonians. A national calamity loomed. Yet, even in those unsettled times, God’s faithful remnant would be blessed if they kept trusting Him, instead of turning their hearts away from the Lord.

Blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord.

“This is what the Lord says:

“Cursed is the one who trusts in man,
who draws strength from mere flesh
and whose heart turns away from the Lord.
That person will be like a bush in the wastelands;
they will not see prosperity when it comes.
They will dwell in the parched places of the desert,
in a salt land where no one lives.

“But blessed is the one who trusts in the Lord,
whose confidence is in him.
They will be like a tree planted by the water
that sends out its roots by the stream.
It does not fear when heat comes;
its leaves are always green.
It has no worries in a year of drought
and never fails to bear fruit” (Jeremiah 17:5-8).

The weeping prophet.

Jeremiah is known as the weeping prophet, but he was also the blessed man described in verse 7 and 8. I wonder how this message must have ministered to him personally?

Jeremiah’s audiences were usually hostile or apathetic to his messages. He was ignored, his life was often threatened. He saw both the excitement of spiritual revival and the sorrow of the nation returning to idolatry. Apart from Josiah, Jeremiah saw one king after another ignore his warnings of God’s judgment and lead the people away from God. He saw his fellow prophets murdered and he himself was severely persecuted. He was even thrown into an empty cistern and left for dead. By most standards, this was a deeply disappointing life.

I don’t think any of us can imagine how disheartened and sorrowful Jeremiah must have felt to know God’s deep love of his people, yet to see their rejection of that love. The nation invited disaster because of their callous disregard and disobedience of God. But even when he was tempted to give up, Jeremiah knew that he had to keep going. God had told him, “You must go to everyone I send you to and say whatever I command you. Do not be afraid of them, for I am with you and I will rescue you” (Jer 1:6-8).

Jeremiah could not measure his success or faithfulness by whether people accepted or rejected him. He could not put his confidence in public opinion. God had called him to endure and to keep bringing His messages to the people, even when he was ridiculed and abused. He continued to do God’s work even when he suffered greatly for it. Of all people, Jeremiah knew the heat of the desert and the year of drought.

But Jeremiah is among those “commended for their faith, yet none of them received what had been promised, since God had planned something better” (Heb 11:29-40). He is the ‘blessed man’ described in Jer 17:7-8.

A tree planted by the water.

The prophet’s life is an example of the tree planted by the water. He is an encouragement to believers in all ages to remain faithful and keep trusting God, no matter how inhospitable the desert in which we are planted. The broken, groaning, sin-cursed world we inhabit has been a wilderness since Genesis 3.

The world today is a troubled place. Corruption, strife, illness, wars, immorality, cancel culture, cruelty, oppression, persecution, and financial pressures are bearing down on us. We need to take to heart the warnings and encouragements from Jeremiah’s poem.

The apostle Paul is a case study of how to flourish in the wilderness of a fallen world and through the heat of trials. In his letter to the Corinthian Christians, Paul warns his readers to be careful where they set their hearts. He urges them to learn from God’s Old Testament people as they journeyed through the desert on their way to the Promised Land (1 Cor 10:1-13).

A bush in the wastelands.

Like the Israelites, Christians will face many blessings and temptations in the heat and drought of the wilderness. Like them, we will be tempted to turn to idols, sexual immorality, ingratitude, doubt, and grumbling. Although we have everything we need for life and godliness (1 Peter 1:3), we will be tempted to turn our hearts away from the living God and to drink from empty cisterns. These leaky buckets will leave us dry and joyless.

Like the Israelites, we too will be tempted to test God’s goodness and may cynically ask:

“Can God prepare a table in the wilderness?” (Ps 78:19.) “Surely nothing will ever change! Surely the dry bones of this marriage can’t be redeemed!” Although we have the Holy Spirit and indescribable blessings, we tend towards unbelief.

Psalm 78 describes how easy it is to forget all that God has done for us and to willfully put God to the test by demanding the food [we crave]” (Ps 78:18). Despite a miraculous deliverance from slavery and daily provision of water, meat, bread, guidance and God’s presence, the Israelites complained bitterly: “True, he struck the rock, and water gushed out, streams flowed abundantly, but can he also give us bread? Can he supply meat for his people?” We don’t have to guess what the Lord thought of this entitled attitude. The Lord was furious with the Israelites, “for they did not believe in God or trust in his deliverance (Ps 78:20-22).

Like the Israelites, unbelief is crouching at the door of every believer’s heart, but we must master it.

Here are four questions to ask ourselves about our responses in the desert:

  1. Do we turn to false gods when we face hardship, as the Israelites did? (1 Cor 10:7Numbers 25:1-9). From whom do we yearn for approval and fear rejection? What makes us feel rich, secure, and prosperous? Where do we find comfort, hope, and safety? Honest answers will reveal our idols.
  2. Do we selfishly pursue sin or sexual immorality to distract us? (1 Cor 10:7-8).
  3. Do we complain and grumble instead of seeing God’s provision all around us? (1 Cor 10:10)
  4. Do we test God by doubting his sovereignty, goodness, and wisdom? (1 Cor 10:9)

Drawing strength from mere flesh.

Even as Christians, our human tendency is to rely on ourselves: our talents, wealth, health, business acumen, training, intuition, feelings, and goodness. We breathe in the air of independence and self-reliance. “I am the master of my fate, the captain of my soul”. We like to feel in control. But God calls this mere flesh. It cannot sustain us in the desert heat.

It is only when the sun beats down on us and the year of drought saps us of all our strength that we get to see if we are truly trusting in the Lord… or drawing strength from mere flesh. It is when we have a difficulty that is far beyond our ability to endure, a situation so desperate that we despair even of life itself, like Paul describes in 2 Cor 1:8-9, that we are forced to see if we are really relying on ourselves, or on God who raises the dead.

Far beyond our ability to endure.

Whatever the nature of Paul’s thorn in the flesh, he desperately wanted to get rid of it. It was no mere inconvenience. He longed for the eject button to escape the torment of his fleshly ‘thorn’. Yet, God allowed this adversity to remain, not only to curb any tendency for pride in Paul’s heart, but also to teach him to rely on Christ alone.

Paul had plenty of natural strength to draw from—intellect, knowledge of Scripture, Jewish pedigree, divine revelations, extraordinary insight, morality, and philosophical knowledge. But like you and me, the Apostle Paul had to learn to humbly depend on God’s grace and to delight in his weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Cor 12:10).

If God is going to use us, He will make sure that we know our dependence on Him. He will often remove the very thing we feel so confident in, so that we will see the empty fountain for what it really is. The desert will expose what food and drink sustains our lives and where we place life-anchoring, life-directing trust. Regardless of the faith we profess, God will show us where we functionally find refuge, safety, comfort, escape, pleasure, and security. Adversity is the crucible which forces believers to depend more on the Lord, in order that we will be more useful to Him.

Jesus said, “Do not let your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me…Apart from me you can do nothing” (John 15:5). Apart from our union with Christ and total reliance on Him, we can do nothing that glorifies God. We need to know our thirst.

A third tree.

Jeremiah spoke of two trees, but there is a third tree—the cross on which our Saviour died. Anytime we are tempted to doubt God’s love and provision for us, we need to look to the cross of Jesus Christ. We need to reason with ourselves:

If God loved me enough to provide his own Son to die for me when I was his enemy, surely he loves me enough to care for me now that I am His child? (Rom 8:32)

Didn’t He say that whoever trusts in Him will never be thirsty again? (John 4:13)

Hasn’t God given us his Spirit, so that we will overflow with streams to refresh others? (John 7:38-39)

Isn’t Jesus the Rock from which the water of life gushes? (1 Cor 10:4)

Is Christ not the good Shepherd who leads his sheep beside quiet waters and restores our thirsty souls? (Ps 23:2; John 10).

Isn’t He the Lamb at the centre of the throne, who will one day lead us to springs of living water and wipe away every tear from our eyes? “Never again will they hunger; never again will they thirst. The sun will not beat upon them, nor any scorching heat” (Rev 7:16-17).

Streams in the desert.

Even now, we have many streams in the desert to refresh us, most crucially, God’s Word, prayer, and fellowship with other believers. These are the streams of grace that God has provided to stay connected to Christ, our life source.

“Blessed is the man [whose] delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night. He is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in its season, and whose leaf does not wither. What he does prospers (Ps 1:1-3)…The Law of the Lord is perfect, restoring the soul” (Ps 19:7).

God’s sovereignty and love do not mean that we should not expect adversity. But God will never allow adversity that is not ultimately for the good of His children. He wants us to remain vital and fruitful amid the desert heat, promising that “His divine power has granted to us everything pertaining to life and godliness, through the true knowledge of him who called us by His own glory and excellence” (1 Peter 1:3).

If we depend on Christ, we will persevere in faith. We will be equipped for more effective service, so that we can come alongside others in their times of trouble (2 Cor 1:4). We will continue to produce the fruit of the Spirit—Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control (Gal 5:22-23). And our spiritual root system will strengthen, as we learn to drink deeply from the fount of every blessing.

This year, no matter what the conditions in the desert, let’s commit to be a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream.