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Spiritual Development - January

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“10 Questions to Consider as You Enter the New Year” by Deepak Reju

As the New Year begins, there is yet again a chance to face life’s opportunities and challenges. New aspirations. New hopes. New resolutions. New goals. New dreams. Lose some weight next year? Maybe run a marathon, or start running in the first place? Read your Bible more? Pick up a new hobby? Spend more time with your kids? Consider these 10 questions as you enter into the New Year….

1. How can your relationship with Christ grow more? Consider the weakest parts of your spiritual life. Do you struggle to read your Bible, or pray, or fast, or go to church, or serve, or love, or trust, or forgive? Take your weak point, and focus some time and energy on it this upcoming year. Is there someone who can walk alongside you to help you fight for faith?

2. How can your love for God’s Word increase? Maybe you need to implement a realistic reading plan? Realistic is the key word. If it is unrealistic, you’ll fall behind quickly, you’ll get discouraged, and won’t do it anymore. Maybe you read God’s Word, but you still need to grow in your depth of understanding. If you read a lot of the Word but don’t retain much, maybe you should slow down and meditate more?

3.
How much do you pray?  Talking with God matters. We need to pray. It’s fundamental to what it means to be human—to talk with the One who made us. Learn to pray the things that matter to God. Maybe you can grow in prayer by starting to pray with someone?

4. 
Do you need a renewed resolve to fight against your habitual sin? If there is sin that you’ve been battling for a long time, what would it take to finally put it to death?  If you are discouraged, disenfranchised, disappointed, or despairing about your sin, always remember: there is more mercy in Christ than sin in you.

5.
How is your fight against your respectable sins? Maybe you don’t struggle with the high-handed, habitual sins. But we are all sinners, so the “respectable” sins—pride, impatience, anxiety and worry, ingratitude, discontentment, judgment of others, envy, coveting, jealousy—we each face daily.

6.
Is there a relationship that needs some work? Maybe in your pride, there is a relationship you have not dealt with? Does someone have a grudge against you? Or do you hold a grievance against someone? Are you not willing to forgive?

7. 
Is there a gospel risk that you need to take?  Is there a risk you can take for the sake of Christ? Maybe there is someone in your life that needs to hear the gospel? Don’t let your fear of man get in the way of your loved one hearing the truth.

8. 
How much does church matter to you? How about going to church consistently? For some, that’s an important starting point. The word church means gathering or assembly. You start to value church more if you simply start going. You need to be at church more so that the congregation can get to know you and you can get to know them.

9. 
How do you do handle suffering and weakness? What if you go through a season of difficulties, hardships, pain,frustrations, disappointments, persecution, or health issues? Are you ready? How will you do? Suffering strips away our happy dispositions and tests what we really believe. When you suffer, you often find out who or what you trust. If suffering were to come, are you prepared?

10. What surprises does God have in store for you? Every year brings new challenges, new hopes, new disappointments, and new dreams. What does the upcoming year have in store for you? If God’s providential hand delivered something unexpected, how would you take it? Do you trust the Lord enough to accept with open hands what He might offer you? 

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Spiritual Development - December 2019

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                                       Persevere in the New Year!

Over the last few weeks, we have listened to sermons from the book of Hebrews and have encountered the repeated themes of perseverance and maturity. These are themes that relate to every Christian at every stage of maturity. We all must keep our focus on Christ by persevering in faith until the end of our lives (Heb. 3:14, 5:9). That can seem like a lot of pressure if we don’t also acknowledge that God is actively preserving the faith of His children as they persevere (John 10:27-28; Rom. 8:38-39; 1 Pet. 1:5; Phil. 1:6). Because Jesus is our Sabbath rest (Heb. 4:9-11) we can trust that the perfect work of Christ has secured our place in the rest that only God can give.
 
But as we are resting in Christ, we must also grow up into Christ (Eph. 4:15), abide in Christ (John 15:5), and sacrifice for the sake of Christ (Rom. 12:1-2). We do this because we now love our Savior more than we love ourselves. Many times, however, we find ourselves lacking in our demonstrations of love to our Savior. Maybe your affections for God have grown cold as of late. Or maybe you are in the strongest state of spiritual assurance you have ever been. Regardless of where you might find yourself, the advice of Scripture is the same for all of us this next year:

 Persevere!

But how? The principles of persevering in faith have not Changed since the founding of the church. The process is summarized in Matt. 16:24-26: “Then Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul? Or what shall a man give in return for his soul?” We must deny ourselves, be willing to suffer for Jesus’ sake, and follow Him wherever He leads you to go. Easier said than done, right? But this way of living leads to our greatest possible delight. We were created to worship God in all aspects of our life, to have fellowship with Him, and to reflect His glory in all creation. Our purpose in this life is to be faithful to Jesus above anyone or anything else, no matter what the cost.

But  what does this practically look like? In this new year, you will have 1,440 minutes every day. If you started giving 1% of your day exclusively to time spent with God, you would spend almost 15 minutes each day in time alone with God. I don’t know of many other areas of our life where we think of a 1% increase as unreasonable. So work to prioritize at least 1% of every day to time spent alone with God, and increase it over time. What will you do in this time? Begin writing down prayer requests and people that you need to share the gospel with and use this time to pray for them. Find a Bible reading plan for the new year. Spend time reflecting on the ways that you specifically need to grow in your godliness and find Scripture that encourages you to grow in those areas. Review the text from the Sunday sermon and ask God to help you apply to your life what was preached . If you begin incorporating these spiritual disciplines into the rhythm of your day, you will quickly find that 1% is definitely attainable. So, make it your goal to persevere this new year!

Recommended ResourceCSB Day-by-Day Chronological Bible -Many people are unfamiliar with the stories of the Bible and how they fit together into the grand narrative of God's Word. God gave us the Bible to reveal great truth about himself and about our lives, and he wants to draw us into the ongoing story of what he is doing in the world. The CSB Day-by-Day Chronological Bible features a clear narrative approach to the Bible, arranging the complete text into a fresh chronological reading plan with daily readings guided by Dr. George Guthrie.

Ideal for daily Bible study or reading, this chronological study Bible is thoughtfully arranged so readers can track the story of Scripture, day-by-day, from beginning to end, and understand the flow of events and how the grand narrative of Scripture applies to everyday life. My family and I will be using this Bible in 2020 for our annual reading plan. Consider joining us in using this resource to know God and His Word more faithfully in this upcoming year. I pray it is a blessing to you. This reading plan can also be found online at csbible.com/read-the-csb/reading-plans/

 

 

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