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Lives of Spiritual Opulence

It's Friday! I hope you are all expecting a great weekend and a blessed Sunday. Our Sunday will start with a wonderful breakfast provided by the Gilmore family, Sunday School, and worship. Also, from 6-8 pm we will be at the Ash Grove swimming pool for an all-church pool party. What a wonderful weekend to bring a friend to church! The message Sunday will be "What am I Getting Out of This? The text will be Jeremiah 2:4-13. What quick decisions do we make to get ahead only to end up causing us harm? Come and see..... Sunday School begins at 9:50 and worship starts at 10:50. And don't forget the pool party!


Here is today's devotional from "Connect the Testaments."


August 26: Lives of Spiritual Opulence

Isaiah 52:1–54:17; Luke 20:41–21:24; Job 12:1–12


The Pharisees upheld a faulty religious system. They were supposed to be the Jews’ spiritual leaders, but they were more interested in making themselves the religious elite. They loved “greetings in the marketplace and the best seats in the synagogues and the places of honor at banquets” (Luke 20:46). Their ministry was built on the backs of the poor.

In contrast, the widow depicted in Luke 21 chose to give all she had. Because she had so little, her generosity was sacrificial. Those who gave out of abundance didn’t feel the loss of income like she did. But the contrast between the widow and the Pharisees shows us much more. Luke says that spiritual wealth can be present where we least expect it—that things aren’t always as they appear.

Although Jesus is the long-anticipated Messiah, following Him is never going to bring a life of glory and fame. Jesus is ushering in a kingdom like a mustard seed (Luke 13:18–19) or yeast (Luke 13:20–21). It will grow and swell through perseverance rather than praise. It requires a life of sacrifice like the widow’s, not the glory-seeking of the Pharisees.

Through these examples, Jesus warned his disciples to look beneath the shiny veneer for something more valuable. It would have been tempting simply to follow those in charge—in some ways it would have been much easier. But piety that pleases God isn’t found in striving after position or place. Following Jesus means sacrifice and service.


How are you serving God with everything you have?


REBECCA VAN NOORD


John D. Barry and Rebecca Kruyswijk, Connect the Testaments: A One-Year Daily Devotional with Bible Reading Plan (Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2012).


Have a great weekend and I will see you Sunday!

Pastor Joe

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