Editor’s Note: The AMI QT Devotionals from March 7-13 are provided by Kate Moon. Kate has been serving the Lord in E. Asia for nearly 15 years.
Devotional Thoughts for Today
Acts 7:29-32a:
“When Moses heard this, he fled to Midian, where he settled as a foreigner and had two sons. 30 After forty years had passed, an angel appeared to Moses in the flames of a burning bush in the desert near Mount Sinai. 31 When he saw this, he was amazed at the sight. As he went over to look more closely, he heard the Lord’s voice: 32 ‘I am the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.’”
In some ways, all of the Kung Fu Panda movies are about the lead character Po’s search for identity. In the first, we know from the moment he calls a goose “Dad” that he is going to have to deal with this question of where he “really” came from some day. In the second, he begins to have flashbacks of seeing his panda mother, and in the third, he meets his biological father for the first time, and the recognition is immediate. They have the same coloring, build and appetite, and as his panda dad takes him back to the village to meet more of his species, we can feel with Po his sense of wonder, happiness and joy at discovering there are others like him.
Moses, like Po, was adopted. He had lived in his father’s house for only three months (v. 20) before he was set adrift in the river. Moses grows up neither fully belonging to the Egyptian palace where he was raised nor to the enslaved race to whom he was related by blood. As he flees from a major conflict where his two worlds would have collided, we can imagine him finding solace and a semblance of peace as a complete foreigner in the land of Midian. Not having to be between two worlds was in some ways easier, but it also meant that he had given up on belonging anywhere at all. It is in this place that God comes to look for him, finds him, and tells him who he is. God tells him that his fathers were Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and that He was their God. Moses belonged to Him.
“Where did I come from? Who is my father?” Such questions are important to us because they have to do with our sense of identity, knowing who we are and where we belong, knowing that we are not alone and that our existence has some greater context and therefore meaning. Do we have peace, joy and security in who we are today because we know full well who our Father is?
Prayer
God of heaven, thank you for being my Father. Thank you for coming to find me to tell me who I am. I am your beloved, your creation, your child. Help me to live like a child of yours ought to live today. In the name of Jesus through whom I’ve become your very own I pray, Amen.
Bible Reading for Today: Revelation 18
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Lunch Break Study
Read Acts 17:24-29: “The God who made the world and everything in it is the Lord of heaven and earth and does not live in temples built by human hands. 25 And he is not served by human hands, as if he needed anything. Rather, he himself gives everyone life and breath and everything else. 26 From one man he made all the nations, that they should inhabit the whole earth; and he marked out their appointed times in history and the boundaries of their lands. 27 God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us. 28 ‘For in him we live and move and have our being.’ As some of your own poets have said, ‘We are his offspring.’ 29 “Therefore since we are God’s offspring, we should not think that the divine being is like gold or silver or stone—an image made by human design and skill.”
Questions to Consider
- Why did God create the world and everything in it, including human beings (vv. 24-27)?
- Who is God to us (vv. 28-29)?
- What quality do we share with God and what is the significance of this fact (v. 29)? What are we treating as divine (i.e., worshipping or turning to as our source of help) today?
Notes
- He created us so that we would seek him and find him. What does it mean to “find” God but to experience him, come to know him, and have a relationship with him?
- God sustains our very existence, our every moment and every breath. He is the answer to our question, “Where did we come from?”
- Both we and God are spiritual beings. Because we are spirit, in our search for God, we won’t be satisfied until we see someone else who is spirit like us. Along the way, we may temporarily mistake created things for him, but because we are spirit, worship of created things will never truly satisfy.
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Evening Reflection
“Who am I, that the Lord of all the earth, would care to know my name, would care to feel my hurt? Who am I, that the bright and morning star, would choose to light the way, for my ever wandering heart? Not because of who I am, but because of what You’ve done; not because of what I’ve done, but because of who You are. I am a flower quickly fading, here today and gone tomorrow, a wave tossed in the ocean, a vapor in the wind. Still You hear me when I’m calling, Lord, You catch me when I’m falling, and You’ve told me who I am: I am Yours.”
~ Casting Crowns, “Who am I” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7k81rDx448
Sometimes when children of immigrants visit the countries their parents originally came from, it can be both exhilarating and traumatic. They often go to visit because they are looking for their roots, a sense of belonging, but sometimes they end up being rejected by the very people they are longing most to find connection with. When they walk into a store and can’t speak the language quite correctly, people wonder what is wrong with them. If they inadvertently say or do something rude, people assume it was intentional and react accordingly. Through such experiences, they discover things are more complicated than they’d imagined.
“Don’t you even have any eyes?” It was an immature response from an immature person (I was maybe around nine or ten), but it came from a very real sense of frustration at a perceived injustice. An adult had “accused” me of not closing the screen door properly when I came into the house, but I obviously had – if the person had any eyes, she could see for herself that it was closed. I knew I was being a little out of line, but I thought that maybe when she saw that she was the one in the wrong, she’d see my frustration was justified and let it pass, maybe even laugh. Unfortunately, some nuance was lost in translation in the bilingual household I was growing up in (apparently the adult heard the word for “eyes” as something more like “brains,” and apparently, in her culture, calling into question an adult’s possession of brains was a particularly disrespectful expression), and I got into huge trouble. It wasn’t about the door anymore but what I’d said to an adult, at which I felt even more frustrated, because I hadn’t said “brains,” I’d said “eyes.” It just ended up being a terrible, mixed-up, no good day.
Jesus’ call to love our enemies has largely been swept aside as a utopian fantasy that is unrealistic in the real world. I recently heard a joke that highlights this point. A pastor was preaching to his church about loving their enemies and he decided to take a quick survey of his congregation. He asked how many of them could count 10 or more enemies in their life. A few guilty hands went up. Then he asked how many of them had 5-10 enemies and a few more repentant hands went up. Then he asked who had at least one enemy and this time nearly all the hands were raised. Finally the preacher asked, “Who has no enemies?” After a moment, the pastor saw the hand of one elderly man being raised and, wanting the church to hear the counsel of this godly man, he asked, “What is your secret to having no enemies so late in life?” The man replied, “I thank God all those jerks have died!”
Before becoming a full-time pastor, I spent a number of years in the corporate world as a biochemist. I spent the bulk of my time working in two companies. One was a publicly traded company, which relied on secular investors; and the other, a private firm owned and operated by Christian businessmen. On the surface, you would think that the company run by Christian ownership would have a better atmosphere, culture, and work environment, and that they would treat their employees better than a company without any sort of Christian ethic. To my surprise, it was the non-Christian ownership that was better on most of these counts. Unfortunately, this is a trend that I see as I compare the majority of Christendom to the world. The world organizes better, sings better, motivates better, administrates better, builds better, and leads better. The main reason for this is the fact that the world doesn’t accept mediocrity, while the church—in the name of God’s grace—is perfectly fine with the mediocre. While I was working at my first company, one of my co-workers sent me a pretty funny email about laziness in the workplace:
In his farewell speech to the disciples, Jesus states clearly, “No servant is greater than his master and if they persecuted me, they will persecute you.” As we are faced with the suffering of Christ and the call to pick up our cross and follow Him, an important question arises: What does it mean for us, surrounded by all of this affluence and comfort, to suffer for the sake of the gospel?
As Christians, our courage was meant to come from our identity in Christ. So much of the timidity that we experience in life comes because we feel like we are not good enough. When we get a job that is well beyond our qualifications, we struggle with being unsure of ourselves. When we fall for someone who seems to be out of our league, we find ourselves stumbling over our words trying to communicate. In fact, whenever we are in the presence of people who seem smarter, richer, or more talented than we are, we feel our insecurities rising to the surface and all of our confidence leaking out. But when you truly come to believe in Christ, your sense of identity doesn’t come from yourself— it comes from the One who died for you. And when you begin to see the world from the perspective that everyone is a sinner in need of a Savior, a wonderful thing happens: you find yourself free from crippling self-consciousness.
George Ladd, who was a renowned professor of New Testament at Fuller Seminary , taught that the kingdom of heaven is the dynamic reign of God and that the present reality of the kingdom is manifested through various signs such as the forgiveness of sins, care for the poor, healing for the sick, deliverance from evil spirits, miracles over nature, and the raising of the dead. Jesus began the rule of God through His life, death, and resurrection but Satan is still the god of this world (according to 2 Corinthians 4:4) and will not be completely defeated until the second coming of Christ. For John Wimber, this became the foundation on which he built the healing ministry at Vineyard through a theology of both power and pain. It was a way of believing that healings will happen but also a way to explain why it doesn’t always happen.
Editor’s Note: The AMI QT Devotionals from February 29 to March 6 are provided by Pastor Mark Chun of Radiance Christian Church in S. F. Mark, a graduate of University of California, San Diego, and Talbot School of Theology (M.Div.), has been married to Mira for 20 years; they have two children, Jeremiah and Carissa.
As we look again at the judgment incurred by Ananias and Sapphira, we see the clear warning given by Peter against testing or lying to the Spirit of God. We may not consider this sin very often, but it is more common than we realize. Tom Constable, a theologian at Dallas Seminary describes this particular sin as follows: “Lying to the Holy Spirit is a sin that Christians commit frequently today. When Christians act hypocritically by pretending a devotion that is not there or a surrender of life that they have not really made, they lie to the Holy Spirit. If God worked today as he did in the early Jerusalem church, undertakers would have much work.”