Can These Bones Live?

I’m finishing up the book of Ezekiel today.  I gotta admit, it’s been tough.  I’m reading through the Bible chronologically, or in the order the stories actually occurred.  So, I’ve been reading the prophets, one after another after another, and it’s gotten very heavy.  I’ve been dreading the reading because I’m so overwhelmed with the people’s sins, and how broken the whole thing is, and how God is angry and broken-hearted at it all.

Then today, I hit Ezekiel 37.  It says:

1 The hand of the Lord was on me, and he brought me out by the Spirit of the Lord and set me in the middle of a valley; it was full of bones.2 He led me back and forth among them, and I saw a great many bones on the floor of the valley, bones that were very dry.

3 He asked me, “Son of man, can these bones live?”   I said, “Sovereign Lord, you alone know.” 

4 Then he said to me, “Prophesy to these bones and say to them, ‘Dry bones, hear the word of the Lord!5 This is what the Sovereign Lord says to these bones: I will make breath enter you, and you will come to life.

6 I will attach tendons to you and make flesh come upon you and cover you with skin; I will put breath in you, and you will come to life. Then you will know that I am the Lord. ’ ”

7 So I prophesied as I was commanded. And as I was prophesying, there was a noise, a rattling sound, and the bones came together, bone to bone.

8 I looked, and tendons and flesh appeared on them and skin covered them, but there was no breath in them.

9 Then he said to me, “Prophesy to the breath; prophesy, son of man, and say to it, ‘This is what the Sovereign Lord says: Come, breath, from the four winds and breathe into these slain, that they may live.’ ”

10 So I prophesied as he commanded me, and breath entered them; they came to life and stood up on their feet—a vast army.

11 Then he said to me: “Son of man, these bones are the whole house of Israel. They say, ‘Our bones are dried up and our hope is gone; we are cut off.’12 Therefore prophesy and say to them: ‘This is what the Sovereign Lord says: My people, I am going to open your graves and bring you up from them; I will bring you back to the land of Israel.13 Then you, my people, will know that I am the Lord, when I open your graves and bring you up from them.

This story turns the whole book around.  Ezekiel has been given dark message after tough message to tell the people.  But here, God is doing several things.  One, He is helping the prophet understand that the messages are meant to heal over all.  Second, even though the nation has turned it’s back on God, He still has a plan to heal them.  Third, there is always hope.

I am so grateful that when I am like the people of Israel, and I run my own course and ruin everything, that God is still there, even though He shouldn’t be.  So often I feel like I’ve messed things up so badly that there is nothing left of me but dryness and bones. Then He reminds me,  He always has a plan, always has a way, to turn things around.

It’s also encouraging that when I am speaking and doing what I am supposed to do, that God will use it.  Often I feel like the things I say and do for Him have little to no effect.  God reminds me, reminds us, that is never true.  He can bring life to any dry bones, anytime He wants.  We have to be faithful, and trust Him to carry out His plans.

I don’t know if you’re in either spot today, either in a mess and needing hope, or tired of serving and needing encouragement, but I hope you can take something from Ezekiel 37 and hear God telling you “It’s going to be okay.  Just trust me.”

It’s a LOT More Than a 90′s Worship Song

I was reading in Ephesians 1 today, and I came across verses 15-23.  Paul is telling the people in Ephesus about how he prays for them all the time, and then tells them what he prays for them.  He prays that:

1. God will give them the Spirit of wisdom and revelation
2. the eyes of their heart would be enlightened, so they could know
a. the hope God had called them to
b. the riches of their inheritance
c. incomparable power for those who believe

He goes on to say that this power is the same power God used to raise Jesus from the dead and re-appoint Him as King.

Ok, so none of this is really new information if we read the Bible much.  But what stood out to me is how all of this flows together.  When we ask the Spirit to give us wisdom and revelation, the book of James tells us God gives it to us freely, we are just responsible to use what he gives us.  So we ask, and God gives us wisdom.  As we let Him change how we love and change what we value (enlighten the eyes of our heart), we begin to understand that we are called to be people who hope.  It’s partially a choice to believe that.  We choose to become a person who hopes in God.  As we have this wisdom, God shows us what great things He offers compared to the stuff around us that rusts and disappears.  Our inheritance in God gives us reason to hope in what is c0ming.  The wisdom God gives us also lets us understand that He is willing to use power in our lives, the same power that was able to bring Christ back from the dead.  The uncomparably great power is used for us.  God leverages that power for me and for you.

So, if we take this passage seriously, we are being offered wisdom that will bring hope, promises of a valuable inheritance, and the protection of God’s power being leveraged in our lives.  That’s pretty amazing.  I mean, if we really believe that God will work in our lives the same way He did in Jesus’, then nothing can beat us.  When we are following God, living His way, chasing after Him, Satan can bring his worst.  Even if it seems that Satan is killing the plan God is working out in us, God can just resurrect it.  As long as we follow Him, we’re covered.  We are set free from wanting the “stuff” around us, and given a hope for a life that will matter for the long haul.  We are released from the fears that chain everyone down, and given the title of His Kids, sons and daughters of The King.  It’s pretty heady stuff.

What in your life, in my life, needs to be seen differently?  Where do we need to ask for God to give us wisdom, to open the eyes of our hearts to His plan, to His values?  What could change today in us if we will just ask Him to make us more like Him?

Following Jesus Is Tough Today

Sometimes it’s so hard being a Christian.  (Of course, it’s harder not knowing Jesus or getting to follow Him, but that line of thinking only makes it harder to feel sorry for myself.)  So many times, I want to do what I know is right.  I want to act like Jesus, I want to speak like Jesus, I want to love, forgive, hope, and pray like Jesus.  And, so many of those “so many times”, I don’t do any of those things.  I live for myself, I think about myself first, I protect myself, and dream of what I think is best for me.  Paul talks about all of this mess in Romans 7, which is in today’s Amazing Race reading.  He’s as confused about it as I am.  But as He goes on in chapters 8 and 9, he talks about when we have the Spirit alive in us, that we are given the power to live for Jesus.

Ok, I see that.  But why then is it STILL so hard to do the right things?  If we’ve moved from dark to light, bad to good, evil to Jesus, why do we, why do I, still struggle?  No, seriously, this part of following Jesus drives me nuts!  I want to have it all move to good, all the time.  As someone who loves Jesus, I really, truly, desperately want to be just like Him.  I’m convinced His way is best, I believe He knows better than I do, I hear His voice tell me how to live and what to do.  But, somehow, I still choose to go my own way.  Stubbornly, selfishly, destructively go my own way.  Why?

Why does it have to be this way?  I want a different system.  I read in Romans 8 that if Jesus is for me, then who can be against me?  I’ll tell you who… me.  I am against me so much of the time.  I want it to be over.  To be free.

The only comfort I have in this is Paul’s discussion in Romans 8:22 ff where he gets into the whole “waiting in childbirth” example.  He says that “… in this hope we are saved.”  This hope for something more, something better, something truly free.  That’s the challenge, the struggle of this world.  We have met the King, the Prince who brings Freedom.  We see touches of His power, we hear whispers of His voice, we feel the hope of his love and care.  But we are not yet completely free.  Not in the sense that we will be one day.  We have to fight.  Fighting is hard.  It’s tough.  It hurts.  It gets tiring.

But it is our calling.  Fight the good fight today, love everyone around you, and hold on for tomorrow.  While the Kingdom of God is here, Jesus says, it’s coming tomorrow in an even better way.  So, yes, we fall.  Alot.  We come up short of even what we want to be as Jesus’ followers.  Just don’t quit.  Don’t stop.  One foot in front of the other, and we will get there.

Ok, I can do that.  I’ll keep moving.  And hoping.  The freedom is coming.  I can just feel it.

Wanting What We Want VS. Wanting What We Want

If you’re following along in the Amazing Race that our church is doing, you’re reading John 6:22-7:53.  The story is starting to get a bit crazy as Jesus is moving towards the cross.  The crowds are tense, and dividing over what they believe about who Jesus is.  The religious leaders keep trying to arrest Him, but can’t.  Jesus knows that His time is coming to an end.  The tension just keeps building and building.

One of the conversations Jesus has can be found in John 6:26 and following.  Jesus feeds the five thousand the fish and bread in a miracle.  Then He disappears, and the crowd has to go looking for Him.  When they find Him, they want Him to feed them again.  It makes sense.  Many of them are poor, they are hungry, they’ve left home to find Jesus, they are faithful to Him, and it doesn’t seem to be much work for Him to feed them.  He prays, and the food shows up.  So why wouldn’t they ask for food?

Jesus goes off on this crazy tangent about how HE is the bread and wine.  He tells them that the food they want isn’t what they really want.  What they really want is food that lasts forever.  They agree.  Then He tells them that His skin and blood are the food that lasts forever.

Ok, stop just a minute and think about that.  Imagine you are standing there and hear that.

No, really, think about it.  Don’t think about communion on a Sunday morning.  Think about the fact that you ask Jesus for food, and His answer is for you to eat his skin and blood.

Yeah….

……

……

Sometimes God gives us an answer that we don’t want.  At least we think we don’t want it.  Consider the discussion Jesus is having with his potential disciples.  They want to be fed.  Full tummies.  Temporary happiness.  For four or five hours.  Jesus wants them to be healed.  To live a life of joy, peace, and obedience to what they were hardwired for.  Most of the time, when we hear an answer from Jesus that we don’t like, it’s because we are living too short sighted.  We are looking at today, He is looking at today, tomorrow, and forever.

Jesus probably hasn’t told you to eat his flesh and blood in a shocking way lately.  But what IS He telling you that is hard to hear?  What answer is He giving that seems like He isn’t even listening to what you’re asking?  Where is He pushing you?  Trust Him in it.  If He isn’t pushing you right now, then that is what you need to ask for.

What are your thoughts?