Thursday, February 27, 2014

In a Spirit of Humility

J.A. Matteson

A servant of Jesus Christ is faithful to cast the light of truth in dark places, motivated by love of his neighbor, delivered with an earnest desire that he not miss heaven by coming under divine judgment. "It is not lawful for you to...." (Mk. 6:18). Cultural norms and laws change, societal values void of the law of God reflect the depraved fallen nature of humanity. This is increasingly so as a society turns its back on Jesus Christ. The king was brazen in his sin of adultery, John was faithful to the LORD to call him out on it; not with a spirit of meanness, but of genuine love for his neighbor, knowing the severity of God's wrath toward lawlessness upon those who remain unrepentant. The tenor of John's rebuke was caring, but firm. Sin blinds moral perception and clouds mental decision making. A servant of Jesus Christ must first make sure his own eye is clear, check his motives before the LORD to ensure that malice and hatred of the sin is not projected upon the sinner. Only then can he be used of God effectively to bring the light of the gospel into another persons life. In response the darkness generally seeks to extinguish the light, employing any means to silence the voice of truth. The winds of carnality howl against the wick of righteousness; faithful servants of Jesus Christ, knowing of the dreadful day of the wrath of God that will visit the unrepentant, persist in their preaching of the King and His kingdom. The salve they apply is done gently, in a spirit of humility, confessing that but for the grace of God they too would be in danger of judgement.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Reality is the Will of God

J.A. Matteson

Beware of drawing conclusions on a matter apart from inquiring of Jesus Christ. "They began laughing at Him" (Mk. 5:40). What appears definitive is not reality; reality is the will of God in the matter. Both Abraham and Sarah laughed at the proclamation of God concerning a future heir only to be proved foolish nine months later with the birth of Isaac (Gen. 17:17, 18:12). A matter is not settled, regardless of how conclusive or permanent it may appear. The God of miracles is immutable, willing, ready, and able to intervine when it is His good pleasure to do so, and in response to the petitions of His children (Jas. 4:2). Pleasing to the LORD are eyes of faith that continue to hope and pray until the Spirit confirms God has settled a matter. Only then is it time to put the matter behind you and move on.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Monday, February 24, 2014

The Terror of the Test

J.A. Matteson

There are stark moments when our incomplete understanding of who Jesus Christ is finds itself juxtaposed against His revelation of Himself to our conscience awareness. "Who then is this….?" (Mk. 4:41). Those moments generally come in times of personal crisis; God governs over them as tests. The circumstances are real, their toll if unchecked is real. It is in them Jesus Christ reveals more of Himself to us. If it were not for the terror of the test our understanding of His power and grace would be stunted. Here, Jesus intended to reveal Himself as the God over the created order; the One whom they were familiar with through the Torah, but whom they did not know personally (Ex. 14:21). To Martha and His disciples Jesus purposed in the death of Lazarus to reveal Himself as the resurrection and the life (Jn. 11:45). Peter's mother-in-law lie sick, Jesus reveals Himself as the God who heals our infinities (Lk. 4:38-39). Some of His disciples walk along the road to Emmaus after His crucifixion, Jesus approaches and reveals Himself as the One who makes His word known to His elect (Lk. 24:45). In each instance the recipients of Jesus' self-disclosure were blessed, forever changed. Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever (Heb. 13:8). As His child, expect Him to reveal more of Himself to you when the tempests of life appear threatening.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Friday, February 21, 2014

The Unction of His Spirit

J.A. Matteson

Beware of filling your mind with the bias of men rather than the word of Jesus Christ as you go about ministry in His name. "...that they would be with Him...." (Mk. 3:14). Moses was forty days on the mountain; for the first six days he waited on the LORD, on the seventh day He spoke. God's servant tarried patiently, receiving from God, in His time, that which he was to know. The twelve tarried with Jesus night and day for three years. Impatience before God is a ministers downfall. It will invalidate your ministry if what you convey to those under your care is not His word to them, but the opinion of men. Ministers must become the incarnation of the word in the sense that it must first be pressed through them by the Spirit, becoming their personal experience with Jesus Christ, otherwise what is communicate lacks life. It is an exacting and deliberate act of the will to surrender your idea of urgency and wait on God. We would much rather seek out a detour, a shortcut. Spiritual immaturity itches to find another way to be a minister of grace, so by our choices our lives become packed with activity and commitments, all in the name of the Lord; we do not have time to wait on God. So we defiantly bypass God's way in pursuit of mans, reaching for the opinions of others in the form of books, CD's, DVD's and seminars, anxiously hoping to find inspirited truth. Rest assured, beloved, those under that form of guidance know that you have not been with Jesus Christ because what you proclaim lacks the unction of His Spirit. Both you and they know it is an act. Your words comes across as academic, lifeless, rather than Spirit infused transformational truth. If we want to be used much by God as ministers of His word there are no shortcuts, no bypass routes, we must ascend the mountain and spend as much time before Him as He deems necessary to instill within our hearts His message for His people. Any other preaching and teaching is a charade and of minimal spiritual benefit to those listening. If you find your self protesting, "Have you seen my schedule? I just don't have time." Then you have a decision to make, do you not? Get alone with Jesus for His guidance.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Going Out

J.A. Matteson

Our deepest transformational encounters with Christ are always accompanied by intense personal discomfort, be it emotional, physical or spiritual. "Immediately the Spirit impelled Him to go out...." (Mk. 1:12). Our setting changes abruptly or subtly, circumstances become hostile to our communion with Christ, foreign, we have not been this way before. Inwardly we sense the overpowering nudge of the Spirit driving us out, away from the familiar and comfortable, away from the emotional company of others to a solitary place, away from our dependence on self and into the everlasting arms of divine grace. And most surprising to us is this inner compulsion to go out often takes place in the ordinary confines of our daily experience. It is in that setting, in that venue, Satan comes to tempt us as we depend on Christ to deliver us from evil. We are surrounded by familiar faces and things, those near and dear are unaware that inwardly we are in a desert place, a war is raging between the flesh and the Spirit, having been impelled to go out, to be purified by the Spirit through our triumph over satanic temptation. And no one on earth can comprehend the fire through which you walk, adding to its solitary experience. Conferring with flesh and blood is not advised or profitable, Jesus Christ bids you to confer with Him; He is your counselor, your wisdom, your comfort, your strength, your friend. The time will come when the test ends; grace has made you wiser, stronger, the fruit of the spirit more abundant. The gladness of your heart is filled to overflowing. You have been alone with Jesus in a desert place and prevailed by His hand, overcoming the devil, to the praise of His glorious name.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Monday, February 17, 2014

Fulfilling His Commission

J.A. Matteson

To be used as a redemptive instrument of God through the Gospel is a natural effect of our abiding; too often we confuse evangelism and discipleship as being an act we perform. "I am with you always" (Matt. 28:20). In every occasion and location Jesus is with you, in you, and the intimacy of your relationship with Him is the foundation of effective ministry (Col. 1:27). If your paradymn of witnessing and discipleship is rooted in anything other than your relationship with Jesus Christ your activities will disappoint those you seek to influence, because you have yet to be influenced by the Spirit of Christ yourself (Jude 1:12); come to Him first, abide with Him, then you will hear clearly how to reach and build others up in Christ (Acts 8:29). We cannot impart what we do not posses, and a sincere inner intimacy with Jesus Christ is the quickening agent God uses to awaken the dead (Acts 4:13). To be greatly used of Jesus Christ in fulfilling His commission demands we first spend much time with Him and remain with Him as we move through the unique providential settings He engineers daily. With spiritual eyes open, in a perpetual state of inner prayer, Jesus Christ will reveal to you where He is working, gently illumining your awareness as He is speaks to you in each setting; get ready for His directive, obey immediately and completely (1 Sam. 3:10), and you will be empowered by His Spirit in that moment to fulfill what He purposed in eternity concerning the person with whom you are interacting, to the praise of His glorious name.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Friday, February 14, 2014

Godly Sorrow for Sin

J.A. Matteson

Sin exposes the true spiritual state of the soul, its response to it being either a worldly remorse terminating in satanic condemnation or a godly repentance leading to eternal life. "...he went away and hanged himself" (Matt. 27:5). Peter and Judas both sinned against the Lord Jesus Christ, yet their responses to their errors was notably different and illustrates clearly the difference between the redeemed and the reprobate (Matt. 7:20). Both men upon realization of their sin are said to have "gone out" to a solitary place. But that is where the similarity between these two men ends. The Holy Spirit within the children of a God convicts of sin, redeems from bondage, restores to holiness, and in all ways makes the heart joyful and glad. The focus of conviction leading to godly grief is in the absolute horror and disgust in the sin that so easily entangles us (Heb. 12:1); the aim of the Spirit is the condemnation of sin, not the sinner redeemed from it (Rom. 8:1). The outcome of godly conviction is always towards life and further growth in grace (Jn. 15:2), bringing to fruition the promise of redemption of the elect, sealed by their great confession of faith (Eph. 1:13), which God in eternity purposed in accordance with His good pleasure, loosing none (Jn. 10:28), but bringing to glory all those foreknown to Him (Rom. 8:30). The fruit of worldly sorrow is markedly different, for its fruit is satanicly inspired, the bitter condemnation from the prince of darkness emanating in the putrid depths of hell. Its focus is antithetical to life, death is its aim, eternal misery its outcome. The spirit of worldly condemnation compels the wretched soul toward its master, satan, the father of lies. The Spirit of godly conviction compels the blessed redeemed toward the lover of their souls, the Lord Jesus Christ. O how wonderful is the godly sorrow for sin in the children of God, and how awful is the worldly spirit of condemnation in the offspring of the devil who do not hear the sweet invitation of salvation found in the Lord Jesus Christ (Jn. 10:26).

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Thursday, February 13, 2014

Following Jesus Closely

J.A. Matteson

Can a branch abide in the vine remotely? Is it possible for grapes to grow detached from the vine? Are the words spoken by another heard best at a distance or in close proximity? "But Peter was following Him at distance...." (Matt. 26:58). When Jesus invites us to follow Him, He expects us to remain with Him, come what may (Jn. 6:67). How easy it is to follow Him closely, to openly associate with Jesus when our present company speaks well of Him (Matt. 21:9). It is quite different when we find ourselves in the company of those who are opposed to Christ, openly decrying His holy name (Acts. 8:1). In that setting do we seek to hide our identity in Christ in order to avoid persecution, to be accepted in the company of the group? In a moment of weakness Peter feared the disapproval of men more than the displeasure of God. We can all identify with Peter at some level. Fortunately the grace of God is astounding, and through the gift of repentance God gently restores us to fellowship, abiding, following Jesus closely. Difficult moments will come again, testing your allegiance to Christ. The surest way to follow Jesus close at the time of testing is to daily beseech the Lord to enable you to stand when the occasion arrives. And He who called you is faithful to strengthen you, to the praise of His glorious name (Jude 1:24-25).

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Rightly Abiding

J.A. Matteson

Be careful not to impune the motives of another's devotion to the Lord, for in so doing He make rebuke you. "Why do you trouble the woman?" (Matt. 26:10). One persons excess is another's joyful gift of love. With a critical heart we may examine the ministry of another, reasoning thus, "I would have done such and such." Do we see the root of our objection as pride? We may find ourselves with a critical spirit scrutinizing the ministry of another, and when we listen carefully we may also hear the words of Jesus asking us, "What is that to you?" (Jn. 21:22). When we are focused on criticizing others we are unable to gaze upon Christ, for it is impossible to fix our gaze on two separate objects simultaneously. When we are rightly abiding in Christ the ministry of others exalting Him in truth is our joy, regardless of its display, and we do not entertain demonic suggestions of ill intent, but interpret all things through the spiritual filter of love (1 Sam. 16:7). The whole earth is the Lords, all praise and honor and worship are due Him. Worship the Lord in spirit and truth in your own context as moved by the Spirit, affording others the grace to do likewise.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Friday, February 7, 2014

Dead to the External

J.A. Matteson

We may spend time with Jesus on the mount in prayer, behold His glory, enjoy His sweet fellowship throughout the day, and can still miss the orientation of His heart. "...His disciples came up to point out the temple buildings to Him" (Matt. 24:1). How easily we become entangled in the apparent significance of religious trappings rather than the spiritual truth they are intended to represent. Great time, energy, material resources and money are dedicated to them, when God would have us dedicate the focus of our lives on cleaning the inside our our cup, rather than being impressed with its external beauty (Matt. 23:25). Jesus was dead to external religious pretense, and so must His disciples be. By contrast Jesus was well pleased with the inner spiritual beauty of a ransomed soul, those often rejected by the religious (Lk. 7:39). If we are to be of service to Jesus Christ we must get close to Him until His perception of worldly things becomes ours. To love and rejoice at the inner beauty of a soul bringing forth the fruit of the Spirit is much preferred over the external appearance of the temple the Spirit resides within. The Jerusalem temple was an architectural wonder, but one filled with spiritual lawlessness. Jesus was unimpressed, He focused on the spiritual condition of its use, His disciples were preoccupied with the physical. Externally the Pharisees appeared beautiful in their religious attire, inwardly they were filled with wickedness. We must continually strive to perceive the spiritual reality of a setting as Jesus did; "you will know them by their fruit" (Matt. 7:16). If our house of worship is transforming souls who are increasingly bringing forth the fruit of the Spirit, Jesus is well pleased. If our house of worship is filled with lawlessness Jesus is not only unimpressed, but His judgement will in time visit that congregation (Rev. 2:20). Only with the light of Christ will we correctly discern His heart in our situation and be able to respond in a manner pleasing to Him (Matt. 16:3).

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Of No Consequence

J.A. Matteson

To be noticed by men for good works or to be in a position of honor among the saints is not sin. Seeking to be noticed by others or coveting position in order to be honored by men is pride, that is sinful. "But they do all their deeds to be noticed by men" (Matt. 23:5). Oh how subtle is the flesh and Devil to draw saints into this temptation. To desire that others speak well of you, to desire validation of you efforts and to inwardly feel misused when "Thank you" or "Well done" is absent. Develop the habit of not looking back for approval or praise. Refrain from searching out sources and places where others may express their opinion of you as to your ministry. It should be of no consequence to you how others view your ministry when all that you do is done for the glory of God (Col. 3:23). The intent of our heart should be pleasing Jesus Christ, to go unnoticed by men in ministry, decreasing that He might increase, in secret laying out the intent of your heart before Him (Matt. 6:1-4). Cut away all things that draw your attention to yourself before men. Starve the remnant of human pride until all that remains in view is Jesus Christ lifted up.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Trust Him in Every Situation

J.A. Matteson

To sojourn with Jesus is to be awakened to that which He ordained for you before the foundation of the world. "This took place to fulfill what was spoken...." (Matt. 21:4). Too often we misinterpret events as unrelated to our sanctification, when in reality all things bare directly upon it (1 Thess. 4:3). Before you took your first breath all your days were lovingly crafted by your Heavenly Father to present you to the Son of God acceptable and perfect when you meet your Lord face to face in heaven (Ps. 139:16). Knowing it is written that each day of our lives are ordained, and that as a child of God our circumstances are engineered to bring about our sanctification, we may continue along our pilgrim pathway with confidence, knowing that all of God's revealed promises in His word are "yes" for those in Christ Jesus (2 Cor. 1:20). How easy it is for us to get bogged down in the minucia of our daily experience, burdened over this, anxious over that, taking our focus off the entirety of the tapestry of our lives God is weaving together. We focus on the individual knots as the rug is weaved, God's attention is on the completed product. We stir over His means while He lovingly pursues His end. It is not God's will that His children be filled with fear and anxiety, but that they rest moment by moment in Him (Matt. 11:28). In this regard you may embrace each day, every trial, all temptations and storms as ordained by God to further your sanctification. You may trust Him in every situation, even when you do not understand. Interpret the situation in light of His end, your sanctification. In it He will walk with you, never leaving nor forsaking you (Heb. 13:5). He may not directly cause trying circumstances, but may allow secondary causes to bring them about. And in the midst of them you also know with absolute certainty, for it is written, that He has your welfare in mind (Rom. 8:28). "All things," these are the knots in the tapestry of your life experience God has ordained for you. "Work together for good", this is the beautiful end product of your sanctification God will complete (Phil. 1:6). Rest, beloved, in knowing that whatsoever comes to pass in your life this day it is to fulfill that which has been spoken, your sanctification.

Copyright © 2014 Immutable Word Ministries ("…the word of our God stands forever.") Isa. 40:8