God’s word tells us He is love and that love hardly even
notices when others do it wrong. It’s what keeps us from the stumbling block of
offense. So, it nearly escapes my
notice as I’m shaking it off and counting my blessings that four of the five
new reviews for my book ranked it with 5 stars.
My email was courteous. Is there something I could have done
to earn 5 stars for the fifth review? The reply was, “No. It was fine,” followed by a brief explanation. “I only give five-star ratings to those books that will
end up in my personal library, to be read again and again.”
For a minute or ten, I contemplated a polite return email stating
that I would probably not be adding the book I’d read in exchange to my
personal library, to be read again and again, since it was a book for fourth
graders, yet I gave it 5 stars because it was a good book.
I decided to give place to the life of Christ in me instead. My expectation
is from Him and He will be my supply. So, moving on to Facebook, a post on a timeline
caught my attention: an article renouncing two high profile ‘false gospel of
prosperity’ ministries. Being familiar with one of the two ministries in
question, I looked for some Biblical principle to support what was being said. Even
though the author claimed to be well versed in the Bible as well as proficient
in Hebrew and Greek translation, there was no such support.
It seemed a bit ironic to find on the same timeline, first a prayer request, then a hopeful comment about the prayer, then, finally, a sarcastic remark about the prayer not being answered yet.
Make no mistake; I’ve been in a lot of tight spots, on a
very strict budget, round the mountain a time or two. No shame in needing a
miracle. But if you don’t believe that God wants to bless you or prosper you (3
John 1:2), what is there to pray for? It seems a little conflicted. Kind of
reminds me of what James, the Lord’s brother, wrote: “…ask in faith, never
doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave of the sea, driven and tossed
by the wind; for the doubter, being
double-minded and unstable in every way, must not expect to receive anything
from the Lord” (James 1:6-8).
I shook off the first of these two challenges. It was
personal.
I’m no match for a Bible scholar with a seminary degree, in
fact, I have my own ‘marks’ from the religious leaders of my day, but I do know
the love of God. A world of
lost and hurting people is waiting for us to get our act together and to start
doing what Jesus told us to do, and it’s not go out and preach to them about
repenting from sin. It’s loving one
another as He loved us, and by this all people will know WE are His disciples. If, in fact, we are.
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