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Ecclesiastes 3:22, Hebrews 11:6

Living By Faith

Solomon reaches a profound and refreshing conclusion in Ecclesiastes 3:22 after examining all the activities under the sun. He writes, “So I saw that there is nothing better than that a man should rejoice in his work, for that is his lot.” Someone once summarized the secret of a satisfying life with three simple ingredients: someone to love, something to look forward to, and something productive to do. Jesus gives us the first and greatest commandment—to love God—and the second, to love others. There’s our “someone to love.” He’s also given us something marvelous to look forward to: eternal life beyond the grave. Finally, as Job reminds us, we were each shaped in our mother’s womb for a purpose—to serve God’s mission of love in the world around us. The world may withhold fame, riches, and comfort, but it cannot rob us of these three essential treasures. They are heaven’s recipe for true contentment. Alexander the Great once visited Diogenes, who was sunning himself. Alexander, in all his royal generosity, said, “Ask any favor or any possession of me, and I will give it to you.” Diogenes simply replied, “Please move out of my sunlight.” Alexander, stunned, said, “If I could be anyone other than Alexander, I’d want to be Diogenes.” That’s contentment with a suntan!

Contentment, Solomon reminds us, is not found in possessions or prestige but in God’s presence. It’s a gift He gives to those who please Him. The angel’s announcement in Luke 2:14 puts it beautifully: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men…”—but don’t skip the last part—“…to men with whom He is pleased.” That raises the question: what pleases God? Grand gestures? Elaborate sacrifices? Spiritual gymnastics? Hebrews 11:6 answers plainly: “Without faith, it is impossible to please God.” Faith is God’s favorite language. It’s not complicated, but it is powerful. It keeps us steady when the world spins off its axis and brings peace where worry once bloomed.

I remember a group discussion where someone asked, “What makes God happy? What moves Him to act in people’s lives?” The consensus was clear—it’s faith! Faith prompted Jesus to heal the paralyzed man lowered through the roof. Faith moved Him to restore the centurion’s servant. Faith healed a woman after twelve years of misery and persuaded Him to feed a persistent pagan woman. And when His disciples faltered, His most repeated rebuke was, “O ye of little faith.” The religious leaders once asked for the secret to doing God’s works. Jesus answered in John 6:29, “The work of God is to believe in the one He has sent.” Faith is both the work and the reward. When we live by it, we discover what Paul declared in Philippians 4:11: “I have learned to be content whatever the circumstances.” Now that’s a life well-planted under the sun.

Galatians 6:7-8

Don’t Kid Yourself!

Here in Nebraska, we all understand the law of seedtime and harvest. We know when to plant and when to reap, and we certainly know what to plant if we want a particular result. You don’t need a Ph.D. in agriculture to know that if you plant corn, you’ll get corn—not cantaloupes. If you plant beans, you’ll get beans, and if you plant wheat, you’ll get wheat. God’s laws work the same way. Ken Boles once observed, “God’s moral and spiritual laws work in the same way. You cannot sow sin and reap righteousness, or indulgence and reap health, or strife and reap peace. You cannot sow ‘the works of the flesh’ and reap ‘the fruit of the Spirit.’” As simple as that sounds, I confess that I sometimes plant one thing and expect something entirely different to grow. Spoiler alert—it never does! My dad had a favorite saying for such moments: “Don’t kid yourself.” That’s exactly what Paul says in Galatians 6:7: “Do not be deceived: God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap.” Growing up—and growing wise—means learning to live by that unbending truth.

We grow exactly what we plant, but there’s more to this farming metaphor than meets the eye. Not only do we reap what we sow, but we also reap more than we sow. One kernel of corn produces hundreds of kernels at harvest time. Paul reminds us of this in 2 Corinthians 9:6: “…whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows bountifully will also reap bountifully.” Unfortunately, this principle applies to both good and bad crops. If we plant weeds of selfishness, bitterness, or gossip, we shouldn’t be surprised when our garden looks more like a thistle patch than a flowerbed. Galatians 6:8 puts it bluntly: “For the one who sows to his own flesh will from the flesh reap corruption, but the one who sows to the Spirit will from the Spirit reap eternal life.” The size of the harvest always outpaces the size of the seed—so choose your seeds carefully!

The return is always greater than the investment. That’s why the old saying, “Sow the wind and reap the whirlwind,” rings so true. It comes from Hosea 8:7: “For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind.” The New Living Translation puts it this way: “They have planted the wind and will harvest the whirlwind.” That’s quite a return on bad seed! Thankfully, the reverse is also true. When we sow to the Spirit, we harvest a crop of eternal life. The flesh instinctively sows to self-gratification—it ruins people and relationships alike. But the Spirit sows love, which blossoms into genuine, abundant life. It’s a harvest that begins now and lasts forever. So take it from both Paul and my dad: Don’t kid yourself!

Romans 12:1-2, Ephesians 5:22-25

Marriage Takes Effort & Prayer

Today, Kathy and I are celebrating fifty-six years of marriage. It’s only by the grace of God that we’ve managed it. I often joke and say, “Yes, it’s a miracle that I’ve been able to put up with her for all these years!” But the truth is probably more along the lines of her putting up with me. Marriage is not for the faint of heart; it’s a team sport with daily practice and plenty of overtime. Everyone has warts, and some of us have whole collections! We all have our rough edges, and learning to bend and flex according to the needs and desires of the other person is the secret art of staying married. Dr. David Jeremiah put it beautifully when he wrote, “Marriage doesn’t get better by itself. Many people think that the joy of dating and the joy of the honeymoon will just continue unabated for years to come. That is totally unrealistic. There is what I call a gravitational pull on couples which is constantly pulling them down from the heights of the honeymoon. In other words, marriage takes work—lots of hard work.” Those words ring truer after five decades than they did on our wedding day.

Successful marriages are built on commitment, obedience to God’s Word, and a healthy sense of humor (especially when you’re both trying to remember why you walked into the kitchen). Jeremiah reminds us that if we don’t resist the gravitational pull of selfishness, we’ll eventually crash. He writes, “If we don’t resist the gravitational pull, and by the power of the Holy Spirit do that which is supernatural, we will not do that which will keep marriages together.” It’s all about that “renewing of the mind” Paul talks about in Romans 12:2—deciding daily to yield to God instead of our natural desires. Without that hard work, marriage can rust faster than an abandoned pickup left out in a rainstorm. Jeremiah adds, “When someone says to me, ‘I just don’t love her anymore,’ what I hear is, ‘I’ve decided not to obey God anymore.’ They have confused love, which is an act of the will, with the emotional and romantic feelings which follow obedience to God.” Feelings are wonderful, but they make a lousy foundation for a lifelong commitment.

I’d also argue that prayer is like the oil that keeps the marriage engine running smoothly. As old-fashioned as it sounds, I still believe that a family who prays together stays together. We need to pray for our own marriages and for others who are struggling. I once received an email after posting a devotion on the importance of family. The writer said, “This devotion especially touched my heart. I continue to experience heartache caused by divorce and pray for anyone who is struggling in their marriages. I see the pain in my son’s life caused by his divorce—and of course, in his children’s lives. So, I will continue to pray for people to work diligently on keeping their marriages growing.” That simple note reminded me that love, like faith, survives best when it’s watered daily—with patience, laughter, forgiveness, and a whole lot of prayer.

Deuteronomy 16:16-17, Romans 12:1, Psalm 100:1

Happy Thanks – giving!

Deuteronomy Chapter 16, beginning in verse 9, gives instructions regarding the Feast of Weeks. It is also called the feast of the harvest. It was a celebration of God’s gracious provision of the harvest. It was to be a joyous celebration. And not a little polite clapping either. The celebration was also to last for a week. That is serious rejoicing. I like to think of Thanksgiving in our country as a similar celebration. We do not do it for a week, but its purpose is similar and its results are the same. The Israelites took a whole week to celebrate the goodness of God, and I suspect they did not have to worry about whether the cranberry sauce came from a can with ridges in it. They celebrated God’s abundance with singing, dancing, shared meals, community, and story telling. It was not a day marked by turkey-induced naps in front of a football game, but by the recognition that God was not merely a Provider. God was their Provision.

The Feast of Weeks required farmers and families to physically go to the place God would choose and rejoice there. It was not a “celebrate from home” holiday. It was a pilgrimage. There is something about stepping out of the routine and going somewhere special to celebrate that transforms the experience. God wanted Israel to physically go into His presence and celebrate. Of course, today, most of us have a hard time getting the family to agree on where the Thanksgiving dinner will be held, let alone traveling a hundred miles by foot to celebrate a harvest. And it is humorous to imagine that ancient Israel did not debate the proper temperature for pumpkin pie or whether sweet potatoes need marshmallows on top. They knew the harvest did not come from their cleverness. It came from the hand of God.

Charles Spurgeon said, “When we bless God for mercies we prolong them, and when we bless Him for miseries we usually end them. Praise is the honey of life, which a devout heart sucks from every bloom of providence and grace. We may as well be dead as be without praise; it is the crown of life.” I love that phrase. “Praise is the honey of life.” You can almost taste it when he says it. Israel took seven days to taste that honey. They savored God’s goodness and thanked Him publicly for it. When Thanksgiving comes around, I often think Israel had the right idea. Maybe our problem is not that Thanksgiving is a holiday. Maybe our problem is that Thanksgiving is just a day.

2 Corinthians 8:12, Acts 11:29

Ability Giving

As Thanksgiving approaches, I always return to the idea that the word itself is really Thanks – Giving. You cannot separate gratitude from generosity. The subject of giving, however, has sparked lively debates in Christian circles. Mention the word tithe and half the congregation nods in agreement while the other half starts looking for the nearest exit. Some argue passionately for tithing as a binding guideline for Christians today; others say it was part of the Old Testament law and no longer applies. Personally, I have always favored the tithe as a starting point. Maybe it is my inner accountant, but I appreciate the simplicity of a consistent percentage—call it the biblical version of a flat tax. Jesus even commended the Pharisees for tithing (Matthew 23:23), although He reminded them that giving without compassion and mercy is hollow. But tithing is not the only biblical model.

Scripture also advocates what Jeff Anderson calls “Ability Giving” in his book Plastic Donuts. This type of giving is based on capacity, not percentages. In Acts 11:29, each disciple gave “according to his ability.” That principle echoes throughout the Bible. Paul writes in Second Corinthians 8:12 that a gift is “acceptable according to what a person has, not according to what he does not have.” Moses told Israel in Exodus 35:5 to bring an offering “from what you have.” Ezra, rebuilding the temple, encouraged people to give “according to their ability” (Ezra 2:69). David said, “With all my ability I have provided for the house of my God” (First Chronicles 29:2). And Moses was crystal clear in Deuteronomy 16:16–17: “Each of you must bring a gift in proportion to the way the Lord your God has blessed you.” Ability Giving recognizes that God blesses each of us differently—and expects us to give accordingly.

For over fifty years in ministry, I have heard every giving question imaginable: “Do I tithe on my gross or my net income?” “Do I have to tithe if I am in debt?” “Do I tithe on Social Security?” “What about mileage reimbursements and expense checks?” I used to think the real question was whether people should give ten percent. Now I am convinced the deeper question is why only ten percent? Many of us are able to give more. Jeff Anderson describes a moment when he and his wife were wrestling with giving more than their usual amount. He wrote, “Ultimately, we determined to give the greater amount for one simple reason: because we could. We had the ability.” That is the heart of Thanksgiving—giving back to God because we can. That is not law. That is love.

2 Corinthians 9:7, Hebrews 11:4

An Acceptable Gift

With Thanksgiving coming up this week, my focus naturally turns to—well—Thanksgiving! Not just turkey, football, and whether or not Aunt Mildred’s mystery casserole is safe to eat, but real thanks + giving. The word itself is a combination of two actions: expressing gratitude and giving something in return. Scripture ties those together repeatedly. And when it comes to giving, the Bible is very clear—not all gifts are created equal. Some are acceptable to God…and some are not. Exhibit A: Cain and Abel. Cain brought God an offering and got a cosmic thumbs-down. Abel brought his by faith, and God—a much tougher judge than Simon Cowell—accepted his gift (Hebrews 11:4). Paul echoes this principle when he praises the Philippians for their generous support, calling their gift “a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God.” So apparently, God does not give out participation trophies—He cares about what we give and how we give it.

One of the first questions most people ask about giving—especially when sermons turn in that direction—is, “Okay, but how much?” We want specifics, maybe even a chart or an app. But God intentionally leaves the amount up to each of us. King David once refused to give God something that cost him nothing. He said, “I will not offer burnt offerings to the Lord my God that cost me nothing” (Second Samuel 24:24). That is a powerful principle: an offering that costs us nothing means nothing. Jesus backed this up in Matthew 6:21 when He said, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” You can put it this way—if you want to know someone’s priorities, skip the social media profile and take a peek at the checkbook. Our giving reveals the direction of our hearts.

But here is what often surprises people: God never forces giving. He invites it. In Exodus, when Moses took up an offering for the Tabernacle, he didn’t twist arms or guilt-trip the Israelites. Instead, he received contributions only from “everyone whose heart moved him to give.” Paul teaches the same principle in Second Corinthians 9:7: “Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion.” You decide the amount. God is not a tax collector—He is a Father who desires willing children. He will not pry open your hands to make you give; He waits until gratitude opens them. That is Thanksgiving. Real giving flows from a grateful heart. And a grateful heart always wants to give—because love always does.

Galatians 6:6

My Thanksgiving!

I have always appreciated Galatians 6:6 because it speaks directly to the often-overlooked relationship between spiritual teachers and those they serve. Paul writes, “Let the one who is taught the word share all good things with the one who teaches.” That verse deserves to be framed on the wall of every church boardroom—right next to the thermostat, which no pastor has ever been allowed to touch. Paul understood a simple truth: quality teaching takes time, and time requires support. Preachers do not live on sermons alone—there must also be groceries. Jesus affirmed this in Matthew 10:10 when He said, “The worker is worthy of his wages,” and again in Luke 10:7. Paul reinforces this principle in 1 Corinthians 9:14, “Those who proclaim the Gospel should get their living by the Gospel,” and once more in 1 Timothy 5:18, “The laborer deserves his wages.”

Kenneth Boles captures the heart of this when he notes that supporting teachers of the Word is more than charity—it is recognition that biblical instruction is valuable. Good preaching does not fall out of the sky on Sunday morning like manna. It takes study, prayer, preparation, reflection, and usually an extra cup of coffee or two. If we want strong spiritual leaders, we must give them the time and resources to become strong. Otherwise, pastors spend their best energy juggling side jobs while their calling is treated like a hobby. Unfortunately, some churches still think Paul was talking about starving their pastor, not supporting him.

Paul’s instruction goes beyond survival-level support. He uses the phrase “share all good things”—a phrase rooted in the idea of fellowship. Not communism, as some critics argue from Acts 2, but mutual care. Fellowship means shared life. That includes shared resources. If a congregation enjoys a reasonable standard of living, why should they expect their pastor to live on canned ravioli and instant noodles? Real fellowship means shared burdens, shared blessings, and shared beans—preferably not from a dented can.

The truth is that faithful pastoral ministry requires time, energy, and maturity—none of which come pre-packaged. No one is born a pastor. Ministry skills are forged in prayer, preaching, tears, laughter, and the glorious chaos of church life. That journey takes years—and a supportive church family. I have personally been blessed far beyond what I deserve. I have served congregations who saw my flaws, watched me fail, picked me back up, and never stopped loving me—or supporting me. Like Paul in Philippians 4, I feel profound gratitude for generous believers who “shared in my troubles.” As Thanksgiving approaches, I find myself thanking God not just for His blessings, but for His people—who shared “all good things” with me so I could share His Word with them.

Galatians 6:2-4

Bearing Each Other’s Burdens

We all carry burdens, and some days it feels like we are auditioning for the role of Atlas—only without the muscles, or the Greek mythology paycheck. One person wrestles with a difficult boss who must have graduated from Pharaoh’s School of Management. Another faces heartache at home. Some wage war with bank statements that look like horror movies—every time you open them, something inside you screams. Others battle relational conflict with people who should be their closest allies. Still others silently wrestle with habitual sins that drain joy like a slow leak in a tire. Then there are those who carry emotional scars from abuse—either given or received—that keep sleep far away. Into this heavy world, Paul speaks a simple but life-changing command in Galatians 6:2: “Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.” Paul has been arguing that the law of Christ is love, and love is not a Hallmark card slogan—it is sweaty, inconvenient, shoulder-to-shoulder help.

Christianity was never designed for solo survival. As Chuck Colson used to say, Christians are not lone rangers—and even the Lone Ranger had Tonto. André Hugel once wrote, “Behind every saint stands another saint.” John of the Cross agreed: “The virtuous soul that is alone is like a lone burning coal—it will grow colder rather than hotter.” Or as George Swinnock put it, “Satan watches for those vessels that sail without convoy.” Charles Wesley must have gotten the memo when he wrote:

Help us to help each other, Lord,
Each other’s cross to bear,
Let each his friendly aid afford,
And feel his brother’s care.

But helping others is hard if you secretly believe they deserve their misery. I confess I have struggled with that attitude. It is easy to assume that people are just reaping what they sowed—so why should I get involved? Paul saw that coming and goes straight for the ego in Galatians 6:3: “For if anyone thinks he is something, when he is nothing, he deceives himself.” My dad used to say, “Don’t kid yourself.” Paul says the same thing—just with apostolic authority and fewer dad jokes. We are not better than the people we are tempted to judge. We are fellow strugglers.

Then Paul delivers the knockout blow to our pride in Galatians 6:4: “Let each one test his own work… and not compare himself with his neighbor.” Pastor Craig Larsen explains it beautifully: some Christians are 25-watt bulbs, others shine at 50 watts, and a few at a dazzling 200 watts. But when you hold all those bulbs up to the sun, the differences become laughable. Compared to God, we all look dim. Comparison is pointless. We all have burdens—and we all need each other.

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