Memorial Baptist Church
A place to call home. Pastor-Darrel Porche
9:30 a.m. Sunday School
10:30 a.m. Worship Service
6:00 p.m. Evening Service
6:00 p.m. Wednesday Night Service
F.U.E.L.
Program - We fix up snack bags for the under privledged children at Cumberland Hieghts during the school year to take home for the weekend. We are doing lots of fun things all the time while learning about Jesus and His wonderful Love for us. Feel free to come join us at anytime. You are always welcome.
Registration for VBS is now open! Can't wait to see you there! Click this link to register: https://www.mbctn.org/contact-8
"The world doesn't just need to see Christians trying to be good for God, they need to see something in us that only God can do."
Mike Blackaby (Experiencing God)
Join us for Celebrate Recovery starting Friday November 10th @ 6pm. 108 Wilson Hollow Rd
Indian Mound, TN. C U there đ
Click below to register your family for this years Vacation Bible School:
https://www.mbctn.org/
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 9: Profound and Confounding
Numbers 8â9; John 16:5â33; Psalm 9:8â20
Godâs provision in our lives is often hard to see. There are times when we follow His commandments and weâre able to visibly see His work. Such times are profound to the believer but can be confounding to the unbeliever.
The ancients practiced remembering these events. They built memorials (usually a stack of stones) in places where God had shown Himself to them, such as when He offered them a covenant or gave them a revelation of some kind. They also had recurring holidays for remembering Godâs providence in their lives. These types of traditions are nearly lost on us. Easter and Christmas are intended for this purpose, but they have become about something entirely different instead: bunnies and eggs, or a man with a red suit. Syncretism quietly sneaks into our lives, even though we would love to believe we would never let it happen.
In Numbers 9:1â14, we see Godâs command that His people celebrate the day He saved all the firstborn of Israel while issuing a punishment on Egypt. The Passover event was profound to the Israelites, but it was confounding to those who suffered the punishment: the Egyptians. Yahweh wanted them to remember what it was like to believe and to remember that He will rise up against those who oppress His people. All the commandments about the Passover occur just prior to Yahweh visiting them again (Num 9:15â23). Yahweh intends to dwell among them.
We as believers are called to know the wisdom of Yahweh: He sent Christ to be crucified for us and we can have new lives in the Spirit as a result (1 Cor 2:6â16). This event must be remembered among Christians, continually and daily, and we must live a life that honors Godâs work through Christ. Rather than synchronizing our lives to the calendars and objectives of those around us, we must show the profundity of Christâs message. We must let it be known that His work is confoundingâuntil you believe.
How is Christ profoundly affecting your life, and how should you react as a result?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 8: The Vine and the Branches
Numbers 7:48â89; John 15:1â16:4; Psalm 9:1â7
Jesus isnât simply a high priority or even the highest priority of our lives. He is the source of life. In the Gospel of John, Jesus teaches the disciples that they need to depend on Him for their very livesâboth in the present and for eternal life.
âI am the vine; you are the branches. The one who remains in me and I in himâthis one bears much fruit, for apart from me you are not able to do anything. If anyone does not remain in me, he is thrown out as a branch, and dries up, and they gather them and throw them into the fire, and they are burnedâ (John 15:5â6).
We rarely think in these terms today. However, the disciples faced persecution and even death on account of their faith in Jesus. Our lives, like theirs, will be held to the same measure. They are being held to the same measure.
Today, when you look at your life, and the lives of those closest to you, do you see fruit and abundance? Or do you see another picture? Are you like a dried-up branch, devoid of any good works that speak of a godly source? Do your relationships suffer because you are at the center, not Jesus?
Throughout the trials you faceâwhether big or smallâcling to Jesus as the source and giver of life. May you remain in His love. And may His love fill you with abundance and cause you to bear fruit for His kingdom.
How does your life bear fruit?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 7: Concerning Knowledge and Eating Meat
Numbers 7:1â47; John 14:1â31; Psalm 8:1â9
Itâs easy to equate knowledge with faith and then look down on new believers. Although we might not voice it, those who are less knowledgeable in their faith can seem weak. And sometimes, instead of practicing patience, showing love, and speaking carefully about the hope within us, we enroll them in Bible boot camp for dummies.
But Jesus shows that love is what leads to growth in faith: âIf anyone loves me he will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and we will come to him and will take up residence with him. The one who does not love me does not keep my words, and the word that you hear is not mine, but the Fatherâs who sent meâ (John 14:23â24).
Paul echoes this in his letter to the Corinthians: âKnowledge puffs up, but love builds up. If anyone thinks he knows anything, he has not yet known as it is necessary to knowâ (1 Cor 8:1â2). In reality, the opposite of what we believe is true: anyone who lacks love actually lacks faith (1 Cor 8:3).
Love defines our relationship with God and with each other. Christ died for both the knowledgeable and the weak, and both are caught up in His sacrifice (1 Cor 8:11). God has love and patience for the people whose own search for knowledge led us away from Him. And this should give us all the more love and patience for each other.
How can you practice humility and love with those who havenât been in the faith as long as you have?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 6: Signs and Satire
Numbers 6:1â27; John 13:21â38; Psalm 7:1â17
The images of judgment in Psa 7 are sometimes hard to take. We are so acquainted with a God of love that itâs difficult to understand a God who blinds eyes, hardens hearts, and âhas indignation every dayâ (Psa 7:11). While these passages paint a picture of a judging God, they also emphasize how foolish and evil people can beâspecifically focusing on those who push the boundaries of Godâs mercy and thus eventually find themselves outside of it.
In Psalm 7, God is preparing to judge the evil man. Suddenly, the psalm switches focus to the evil manâs situations: âSee, he travails with evil. He is pregnant with trouble, and he gives birth to deception. He makes a pit and digs it out, then falls in the trap he has madeâ (Psa 7:14â15). The evil manâs folly is directly correlated to Godâs just judgment. God is ready and willing to forgive those who repent. But the evil man dwells in evilâhe conceives it and is intimately connected to it. He gives birth to it. Whatâs more, he is willingly walking into his own punishment. His actions of digging a pit and falling into his own trap expose his foolishnessâthat he has effectively judged himself, as âHis trouble comes back on his head, and his violence comes down on his skullâ (Psa 7:16).
The same sentiment is expressed in the Gospel of John. âBut as many signs as he had performed before them, they did not believe in himâ (John 12:37). While they had ample opportunity to believe Jesusâ words, the Jewish people depicted in the passage chose not to believe in Jesus. They had even seen miracles. But because of their unbelief, they brought about their own judgment. And although they had an opportunity to believe, they abandoned it; thus, it was âtaken away.â
These passages illuminate the folly of the decision to disobey. The judgment brought on those who disobey is really their own doing. Itâs all the more reason to believe in the just God whose sacrifice defines what love is all about.
Are you hesitant in your commitment to Jesus? What is keeping you from devoting totally to Him?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 5: Oddities that Make Sense
Numbers 5:1â31; John 13:1â20; Psalm 6:1â10
Some of the Old Testament laws seem so odd theyâre difficult to understand. Itâs easy for us to see why, in a day before medicine, God would send people with âa rash ⌠a fluid discharge, and everyone ⌠[who had touched] a corpseâ outside the tribe for a period of time to prevent infection (Num 5:2). But why would God severely punish people caught in sins not (or hardly) related to possible medical issues (Num 5:5â31)?
I think itâs because God understands that a culture that allows for amoral behavior will become a culture that promotes such behavior. Considering that Jesus had not come yet and sin was not graciously atoned for, there was a need for a ritual that symbolized religious purity.
We are meant to hate the things that people in this life condoneâthings that may even seem right to us at the timeâfor the sake of loving Godâs work. When evil was present among His people, God had to take drastic measures to combat itâthus, He gave specific instructions. While today we have Christ, we must still devote ourselves to following Godâs calling and changing our evil ways for the sake of the gospel.
In what ways are you loving evil things instead of hating them? Be honest with yourself and God.
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 4: A Prayer for Guidance
Numbers 3:40â4:49; John 12:20â50; Psalm 5:1â12
When we feel downtrodden, itâs easy to lash out at those around us. Too often, caught in the injustice of our circumstances, we might begin to feel an unhealthy amount of self-justification. Itâs difficult to see where the lines of right and wrong fall when anger and hurt overwhelm us.
The psalmist presents an alternative to this: turning to the God of justice for guidance, protection, and insight. Psalm 5 records a heartfelt cry. This cry is directed at the God who acts justly in a world where evil seems to win (something not always easy to comprehend). Before making a judgment, the psalmist says, âI will set forth my case to you and I will watchâ (Psa 5:3). Rather than push forward with his own agenda, he calls out for Godâs justice because Yahweh is ânot a God who desires wickednessâ (Psa 5:4).
The psalmist acknowledges Godâs sovereignty and love, which is the basis for his confidence: âthrough the abundance of your steadfast love I will enter your house. I will bow down toward your holy temple in awe of youâ (Psa 5:7). Before calling out the evil actions of his enemies, he prays for direction: âlead me in your righteousness because of my enemies; make straight before me your wayâ (Psa 5:8). The psalmist prays; then, he acts with Godâs justice in view.
In John 12, Jesus states that utter and complete devotion to God and His kingdom should be the focus of our lives: âThose who love their life lose it, and those who hate their life in this world will keep it for eternal life. Whoever serves me must follow me, and where I am, there will my servant be also. Whoever serves me, the Father will honorâ (John 12:25â26).
How can you pray for guidance in a world that often seems cold and uncaring? How can you trust God to lead you to act in ways that please Him?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 3: It May Seem Bland
Numbers 3:1â39; John 12:1â19; Psalm 3â4
Letâs just admit it: genealogies and lists, like the one in Num 3:1â39, are the most boring elements of the Bible. But they do something for us that other formats cannotâthey give us a sense of history and lineage.
With a genealogy, we can do more than just trace people; we can map their relationships to others and to the events that happen through those relationships. We can also determine who was involved in those major events.
Genealogies and lists give us a small glimpse into Godâs providential work, even though we may not recognize them as such. God worked among the people in those lists. He chose to use them. They didnât deserve to be used by God in mighty ways, but they were. Some of the people in Num 3:1â39 were given seemingly insignificant tasks: âThe responsibility of the sons of Merari was the supervision of the frames of the tabernacle, its bars, pillars, bases, and all its vessels and all its service,â among other things (Num 3:36). If most of us were given this assignment, we would probably think it lame and ask for another. But the sons of Merari likely understood that anything God asks of us should be followed through with honor.
The people listed in Num 3:1â39 were likely selected because they believed they would see Godâs glory. God may ask us to do things that seem insignificant or crazy, but if we donât, we will miss out on seeing His glory.
What is God asking of you that seems insignificant or crazy?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 2: The Power and the Glory
Numbers 1:47â2:34; John 11:28â57; Psalm 2:1â12
In our day-to-day life, we acknowledge Godâs power and encourage others to believe in it. Yet sometimes it takes a trial for us to realize the extent and reality of our confession.
The disciples misunderstand Jesusâ reference to death and resurrection (John 11:11â12), so He displays His power through a trial and a miracleâthe death and raising of Lazarus. Before Jesus has raised Lazarus, Mary and Martha express, âLord, if you had been here, my brother would not have diedâ (John 11:21, 32). While their statement is a confession, it reveals their limited view of Jesusâ power. The crowd echoes Mary and Marthaâs sentiment: âWas not this man who opened the eyes of the blind able to do something so that this man also would not have died?â (John 11:37). Yet, they donât realize that Jesus has been planning for this moment to provide them with a chance to believe. (Of course, Jesus knows He could have come earlier; He chose not to so He could use this as an example.)
Jesus uses this miracle to challenge and encourage them while showing them that He is the source of life. The question He poses to Martha should be one we all consider: âI am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me, even if he dies, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die forever. Do you believe this?â (John 11:25â26).
What trials has God used to show you that He is the true life?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
March 1: A Bold God and a Bold People
Numbers 1:1â46; John 11:1â27; Psalms 1:1â6
Imagine a God so bold that He would say, âTake a census of the entire community of the children of Israel according to their clans and their ancestorsâ house ⌠from twenty years old and above, everyone in Israel who is able to go to war. You and Aaron must muster them for their wars. A man from each tribe will be with you, each man the head of his familyâ (Num 1:2â4). It wouldnât be easy to hear God tell you that you must be ready for war.
Yet our daily decisions to follow God are not so different than the decisions and preparations Moses had to make. Every day we have opportunities to choose Godâor not. Itâs easy to agree to this as a principle, but living it is an entirely different story. How often do distractions deter us from actually hearing God? Yet if we canât hear Him, we canât obey Him.
Itâs also easy to be distracted by sin, but following sinful ways will only make us like âthe chaff that the wind scattersâ (Psa 1:4). We must be a people constantly seeking God insteadâa people that makes His law our âdelightâ (Psa 1:2). We must âmeditateâ upon it âday and nightâ (Psa 1:2).
Weâre also distracted by wicked people prospering. Itâs easy to think, âWhy is that person moving up in the world while I seem to be falling back?â But we must remember that this world is not âthe dream,â and God will bring justice: âfor Yahweh knows the way of the righteous, but the way of the wicked will perishâ (Psa 1:6).
Whatâs distracting you from listening to God and following Him? What are you going to do about it?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 28: Neon Gods
Leviticus 26â27; John 10:22â42; Song of Solomon 8:10â14
Idolatry seems archaic. Who worships idols anymore?
We all know that in other countries, traditional idol worship of gold and wooden statues still goes on, but we often forget about our own idols. What does all our furniture point toward? Why do we care who is on the cover of a magazine? How do you feel if you miss your favorite talk show? If weâre really honest, what do we spend the majority of our time thinking about?
Idols are everywhere, and most of us are idol worshipers of some kind. When we put this in perspective, suddenly the words of Lev 26 become relevant again. The problem that is addressed in Leviticus is the same problem weâre dealing with today.
Leviticus 26 and its harsh words against idolatry should prompt each of us to ask, âWhat are my idols?â and then to answer with, âI will end my idolatry.â And if the temptation is too great with these things present in our lives (like the TV), we should say, âI will exile them from my home and presence.â
Itâs not put in these terms often enough, but it should be. The ânoiseâ of idols is keeping us away from God, and even more so, our worship of the noise is doing so. Likewise, our obsession with possessions and celebrities is standing between God and us.
In their song âThe Sound of Silence,â Simon and Garfunkel described the same situation in modern culture: âThe people bowed and prayed to the neon god they made.â
What neon god are you worshiping? And what are you going to do about it?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 27: Reality Can Bite
Leviticus 23â25; John 10:1â21; Song of Solomon 8:6â9
Reality shows are all about people who are known or want to be knownâthey have celebrity syndrome. The root cause of this obsession is probably, like most things, a disconnect from our Maker. As people disconnect from the God who made us, we seek affirmation from other sources. And as wrong as this desire may be, our culture makes it feel like second nature.
The Jewish people Jesus spoke to also felt displaced. They were a people who had lost touch with their guideâtheir shepherd. Jesus is the answer to their call.
Echoing Ezekiel 34:11â24, He says, âI am the good shepherd, and I know my own, and my own know me, just as the Father knows me and I know the Father.â But Jesus goes one step further by adding, âand I lay down my life for the sheepâ (John 10:14â15). Jesus promises that He will know us, and by echoing the very words of God, He is claiming that He is the God of IsraelâHe is the way God will know us. He offers the affirmation weâve been looking for; He essentially says, âI chose you.â
But lest we understand this passage only to be about Jesus fulfilling what God had promised to the Jewish people, He remarks, âAnd I have other sheep which are not from this fold. I must bring these also, and they will hear my voice, and they will become one flockâone shepherd. Because of this the Father loves me, because I lay down my life so that I may take possession of it againâ (John 10:16â17).
Jesus came as our good shepherd, as the one who guides us back to God. When we have the urge to obsess over those who are known to the world, or when we desire to be known ourselves, we can be assured that Jesus knows us. He knows you, and me, and He was still willing to die for us.
In what ways are you seeking to be known by people or obsessing over those who are well-known? What can you do to change that?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 26: Patiently Waiting
Leviticus 20:1â22:33; John 9:35â41; Song of Solomon 8:1â5
Delayed gratification is a foreign concept to our natural instincts. Our culture doesnât encourage patience or contentment; we would prefer to have our desires met the moment they arise.
The woman in Song of Solomon tells us that she is delighted in her beloved. She praises his attributes and tells of the wonders of their love. But throughout the poem, at seemingly random moments, she also warns the daughters of Jerusalem about love: âI adjure you ⌠do not arouse or awaken love until it pleases!â (Song 8:4).
This is not the first time she has âadjuredâ them to wait and have patience: the same refrain is found elsewhere in the poem, and it acts like an oath (Song 2:7; 3:5). Although the elevated poetry glories in love, delight, and fulfillment, it also warns about immediate gratification. The woman urges us not to force love. It is something that must be anticipated and protected, not enjoyed before itâs time.
It doesnât feel natural to wait and anticipate, but in many ways, staying faithful and being hopeful characterizes our faith. Waiting doesnât mean weâre not bold or risk-takers. It means weâre faithful to Godâweâre waiting for things to happen in His time. We know God has something planned for us that is beyond our expectations.
How are you patiently waiting and anticipating?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 25: The Fear
Leviticus 17:1â19:37; John 9:13â34; Song of Solomon 7:10â13
We often donât realize that weâre guilty of fearing others. At the time, it can feel definite and look legitimate. Fearing others can also take the form of a meticulous house, staying late at the office, or passing anxious, sleepless nights. When we hold someone elseâs opinions higher than Godâs, we suddenly find our world shaky and imbalanced.
Jesusâ healing of the blind man reveals that the fear of people is not a modern concept. The Pharisees had a stranglehold on Jewish life: âfor the Jews had already decided that if anyone should confess him to be Christ, he would be expelled from the synagogueâ (John 9:22). The blind manâs parents were victims of their mission, but they were willing victims. Even within the ruling ranks, though, opinions were divided, but the fear of people still ruled (John 9:16). John reports elsewhere that âmany of the rulers believed in him, but because of the Pharisees they did not confess it.⌠For they loved the praise of men more than praise from Godâ (John 12:42â43).
The blind man is the antithesis of all this. Perhaps, marginalized at birth, the opinions of others didnât hold as much weight for him. Under interrogation, he is bold, quick-witted, and over-the-top incredulous. He is enraged that the Pharisees do not accept the basic facts of the story: âI told you already and you did not listen! Why do you want to hear it again? You do not want to become his disciples also, do you?â (John 9:27). While he has yet to confess in Jesus, he knows what he has experiencedâhe was blind, and now he sees. And as far as he can tell, only one sent by God could perform such a miracle.
Fearing people involves holding their opinions higher than Godâs. At its heart, though, itâs an inflated opinion of our own selvesâself-protection or self-esteem. But the blind man was willing to proclaim the truth about the Son of Man who healed himâphysically, and then spiritually. He was willing to give up everything.
How are you guided by the opinions of others? How can you make decisions that are aimed at bringing glory to God?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 24: The Day of Atonement
Leviticus 15â16; John 9:1â12; Song of Solomon 7:5â9
When it comes to the cost of sin, the average person probably thinks in terms of âWhat can I get away with?â rather than âWhat does this cost me and other people emotionally?â These calculations arenât made in terms of life and death, but that is literally the case when it comes to sin.
The Day of Atonement is a beautiful, though horrific, illustration of this. It takes three innocent animals to deal with the peopleâs sin: one to purify the high priest and his family, one to be a sin offering to Yahweh that purifies the place where He symbolically dwelt (the holy of holies), and one to be sent into the wilderness to remove the peopleâs transgressions (Lev 16:11, 15â16, 21â22).
After the blood of the first two animals is spilled on the Day of Atonementâdemonstrating the purification of Godâs peopleâthe final goat demonstrates Godâs desire to completely rid the people of their sin. âAaron shall place his two hands on the living goatâs head, and he shall confess over it all the Israelitesâ iniquities and all their transgressions for all their sins, and he shall put them on the goatâs head, and he shall send it away into the desertâ (Lev 16:21).
The Day of Atonement symbolized Godâs desire for His people: one day, sin would no longer stand between God and His children. Like the goat, Jesus lifts the peopleâs iniquities (Isa 53:12). He fulfills this prophecy, becoming the ultimate ransom; no other sacrifice is ever needed.
As the author of Hebrews says, âFor the law appoints men as high priests who have weakness, but the statement of the oath, after the law, appoints a Son, who is made perfect foreverâ (Heb 7:28). He then goes onto say, âAnd every priest stands every day serving and offering the same sacrifices many times, which are never able to take away sins. But this one, after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for all time, sat down at the right hand of Godâ (Heb 10:11â12).
The price of sin may be great, but Christ has paid that price.
In what ways do you take Jesusâ sacrifice for granted? What can you do differently?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 23: Freedom
Leviticus 14; John 8:31â59; Song of Solomon 7:1â4
âEven though I know itâs wrong, I sometimes think, âIf I hadnât accepted Christ, I would have so much more freedom.â And then I venture down that road and realize just how terrible it is. It takes me to a very dark place.â
This deep, heart-wrenching statement by a friend made me realize there are countless people who probably feel this way about Jesus. And what if, unlike my friend, they hadnât figured out the latter part of this statement? They were probably walking a road closer to legalism than the road Christ envisions for our lives. Or they could be so far from actually experiencing grace and the empowerment of the Holy Spirit that they have yet to see how incredible a life lived for Jesus can be.
Jesus promises freedom: âThen Jesus said to those Jews who had believed him, âIf you continue in my word you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you freeâ â (John 8:31â32). What we often gloss over in this passage, though, is that Jesus is speaking to believers. If you havenât begun to fully trust in Jesus, the thought that He gives us freedom is difficult to understand. Someone could ask, âIsnât He creating a system that forces us to live a certain way?â The answer is no: Jesus is setting up what will be a natural response to His grace.
The context of this verse also makes me wonder if someone who hasnât yet truly sacrificed for Jesus, beyond just a simple tithe, would fathom what freedom with Him looks like. The Jews Jesus is addressing would have already been experiencing some sort of social ostracism for their belief in Himâthey would have understood that sacrifice brings spiritual freedom.
This concept isnât easy to grasp, but in the simplest terms possible, Jesus frees us from religious systems and gives us the Spirit to empower us to do His work. This Spirit guides us and asks us to make sacrifices for Him, but those sacrifices are minimal compared to the eternal life He gave us through the sacrifice of His life. These sacrifices donât become a system with Christ, but something we strive to do because we want to. Thatâs the freedom of the Spirit.
Have you experienced freedom in Christ? How can you seek the Spiritâs presence so you can experience more freedom?
JOHN D. BARRY
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 22: The Light of the World
Leviticus 12:1â13:59; John 8:12â30; Song of Solomon 6:11â13
âI am the light of the world! The one who follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of lifeâ (John 8:12). While some of Jesusâ âI amâ statements confused the Jews, the âfollowing the lightâ imagery would have been familiar. God had led the Israelites out of Egypt and through the wilderness with a pillar of fire so they could walk at night (Exod 13:21). They couldnât deflect or misunderstand this claim.
Jesus used this imagery to show the Jews that He offers clarity and meaning in a dark world. He offers life, grace, and spiritual awakening to those who are lost in the darkness. But the Pharisees couldnât comprehend the light; they misinterpreted Jesusâ claims and fumbled around in the darkness and the details (John 8:19, 22, 25, 27).
When weâve elevated ourselves in the darkness, itâs hard to humble ourselves in the light.
Even when we have inklings that tell us there is a better way, we donât want to sacrifice our own pride. We prefer to be contrary and comfortableâto dwell on the details and exert our own opinions. But if we never call out the darkness, weâll never experience the flooding of light.
Are you calling out the darkness in and around you?
REBECCA VAN NOORD
https://www.mbctn.org/2023-bible-reading-and-devotion/
February 21: Grace among the Graphic
Leviticus 9â11; John 7:53â8:11; Song of Solomon 6:6â10
âThen he slaughtered the burnt offering, and Aaronâs sons brought the blood to him, and he sprinkled it on the altar all around; and they brought the burnt offering to him by its pieces, as well as the head, and he burned them on the altarâ (Lev 9:12â13). There are graphic scenes like this throughout the Bible, especially in Leviticus. But they act as a reminder of what sacrifice looks like and what it really means.
Even though Jesus would ultimately make the greatest sacrifice of allâlaying down His life for the sins of othersâHe did not hold peopleâs sins against them. Although Jesus understood that He would be brutalized like the animals sacrificed during Aaronâs day, He chose to forgive people. When a woman âcaught in adulteryâ was brought before Jesus, He did not sentence her to death, as was demanded by the Jewish authorities and laws of His time. Instead, He said, âThe one of you without sin, let him throw the first stone at her!â (John 8:7). And Jesus says the same to us today. Only those without sin can throw a stone or cast judgment on othersâand thatâs none of us.
We shouldnât use this as an excuse, though. We shouldnât say, âWhat happens between you and God and between you and others is up to you.â Instead, we must call each other forward to follow Christ. Jesus has forgiven us, but this doesnât excuse our sins. Similarly, we canât use Jesusâ graciousness as an excuse to continue sinning.
We must remember grace and offer that grace to one another. Indeed, we must not judge, but we must not excuse sin in the process. In being gracious both to ourselves and others, we must remember why we have the ability to do so: Jesus died the brutal death of a sacrifice. It was His body that was torn apart and His flesh that was flung. (Itâs just as harsh as it sounds.)
I donât say any of this to make us feel guilty, but to remind all of us of the price Jesus paid for our freedom.
Jesus died so that we could be one with God, not so that we could continue to sin against the God He unified us with. As Jesus says at the end of this scene, after everyone had left, âNeither do I condemn you. Go, and sin no moreâ (John 8:11).
In what ways are you misappropriating grace?
JOHN D. BARRY
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2450 Highway 48
Clarksville, TN
37040
435 Madison Street
Clarksville, 37040
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