Shalom Aleichem...
Reflections is a weekly Christian Teaching Ministry. Each week we will talk about the Bible and lessons we can put to use in our daily life. We will try to, on a weekly basis, provide to you stories, thoughts, and just easy ways to live your life on a straight path.
THIS WEEK'S TEACHING....September 23, 2019
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We continue our look at characters in the Old Testament. This week, we look at Daniel who was someone of great integrity in his life. He never wavered in his belief in God or his friends.
What is integrity?
The dictionary defines integrity as: "the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles; moral uprightness. The state of being whole and undivided."
The last part of that definition refers to that fact that the word, "integrity" comes from the same Latin root as integer and implies a wholeness of person. Just as we would talk about a whole number, so we can talk about a whole person who is undivided. A person of integrity is not divided. They are not a different person depending on their circumstances.
It's been said that "Integrity is what a person is in the dark." That is, they are the same whether or not they are in public or in private. But a person of integrity not only passes the privacy test; they will pass the peer test, as well. As we see with the example of Daniel.
God had placed Daniel in a difficult circumstance. He'd been ripped out of his comfort zone. He was a leader in the king’s court in Israel, but King Nebuchadnezzar took over Israel and made the high officials in Israel slaves in Babylon. So Daniel, who was a very wealthy official living in his comfort zone, suddenly found himself a slave.
Nebuchadnezzar did something interesting. He told one of his palace officials to pick the best and brightest and let them live in the palace and eat the king's food. So he brings in Daniel and his friends and they're chosen to live in the king’s palace. Now, they are still slaves, but they get to live in the king’s palace and eat the king’s food. The only problem was Daniel would violate God’s dietary requirements. In other words, the king's food wasn't kosher.
So, Daniel went to the official and said, "Why don’t you let some of our group eat the king’s food and why don’t you let me and my friends eat according to God’s dietary laws for ten days and see who is the strongest?" And at the end of ten days, Daniel and his friends were healthier than those who ate the king’s food.
As I said, Daniel not only passed the privacy test; he passed the peer test as well. That's why Daniel is a great portrait of integrity.
"I know, my God, that you test the heart and are pleased with integrity." - 1 Chronicles 29:17 (NIV)
This verse says God is happy when we live a life of integrity. That God actually smiles when we choose to do the right thing, based on the right beliefs, at the right time. Well, certainly the actions of Daniel in our passage for today, must have made God smile.
As a child of God, I want to live in such a way as to make God smile, too. Don't you? Let's see what can we learn from Daniel's example.
1. Know what you believe.
Now, when we talk about belief today, we're talking about belief in truths that will enable those who profess to be children of God to live well. Where should a child of God look to discover what to believe?
A. We can look to ourselves.
This is where many today look for truth. In fact, a popular phrase used by some is "I need to discover 'my truth.'" According to this view, truth is purely subjective and there is no such thing as "absolute truth."
Ironically, however, statements like "All truth is relative" or "Absolute truth doesn't exist" are themselves claims of absolute truth, which proves that absolute truth does exist. Besides, every individual is limited in their knowledge and experience. Which means that something you may think does not exist, might exist outside of the realm of your knowledge or experience.
It's like the atheist's claim that God doesn't exist. Do they know or have they experienced everything? Obviously, not. Therefore, if they are honest, they must admit that God could exist, and that they simply have yet to know or experience Him.
The point is, since each of us is limited in knowledge and experience, none of us is qualified to determine on our own what to believe.
B. We can look to others.
But when we look to a bunch of other people who have the same limitations on their knowledge and experience we do, we simply multiply the same problem we have with our looking to ourselves for truth.
Zero X 100 is the same result as zero X 1. Zero.
C. We can look to God.
God is the perfect, omnipotent, omniscient, originator of the universe. That’s quite an impressive resume. It sounds like He might be a good source to ask for truth to live by.
We can live life according to our rationalization or according to God's revelation. And where do find His revelation of how to live? It is found in His Word and in His Son.
"Long ago God spoke many times and in many ways to our ancestors through the prophets. And now in these final days, he has spoken to us through his Son." - Hebrews 1:1-2a (NLT)
God's Word gives us the ultimate explanation of how to live; and God's Son gives us the ultimate example of how to live.
"Yes, if you cry out for insight, and lift up your voice for understanding; If you seek skillful and godly wisdom as you would silver and search for her as you would hidden treasures; Then you will understand the [reverent] fear of the LORD [that is, worshiping Him and regarding Him as truly awesome] and discover the knowledge of God." - Proverbs 2:3-5 (Amplified)
“We must be the same person in private and in public. Only the Christian worldview gives us the basis for this kind of integrity.” - Chuck Colson
2. Trust what you believe.
Obviously, if what I believe is based on the revelation of the perfect, omnipotent, omniscient, originator of the universe, then I can trust it to be correct. It is hard to order my life according to what I believe to be true if I do not think it trustworthy.
If what I believe is based on the revelation of God, then what I believe is as reliable as God.
"Real satisfaction comes . . . in understanding God's character, in trusting in His promises, and in leaning on Him and resting in Him as the Sovereign who knows what He is doing and does all things well." - Joni Eareckson Tada
3. Live what you believe.
It is impossible to have integrity if we don’t live what we believe. If we know it and trust it then we have to take the step to live it. Belief without action is hypocrisy. Hypocrisy is the opposite of integrity.
Daniel made the hard decisions he needed to in order to remain faithful to his beliefs. He made them over and over and over again. We see this in the story of his experience with the lion's den.
Do you know why Daniel ended up in the lion's den?
It was because he passed the privacy test of integrity. The king had foolishly issued a decree at the urging of officials who were jealous of Daniel, that no one was to pray to anyone but him for 30 days. Well, do you know what Daniel did? The same thing he always did.
"But when Daniel learned that the law had been signed, he went home and knelt down as usual in his upstairs room, with its windows open toward Jerusalem. He prayed three times a day, just as he had always done, giving thanks to his God." - Daniel 6:10 (NLT)
Why was Daniel able to face death in the lion's den? Because he died to himself everyday and sought to live by what God said was right.
I believe that the day is coming when it will really cost us to live as a Christian in this country. How do I know I have what it takes to lose my friends, or my job, our my standing in the community, or my life for my faith? I can know it if I am seeking to daily live a life of integrity. If I am seeking to be in private who I say I am in public; then I will still be faithful to Christ among those who will oppose me as I am among those who encourage me.
The real question for each of us today, however, is not, "Could I pass the test when . . .? But am I passing the test now?
The pastor of a London church got on the trolley Monday morning to go to his study downtown. He paid his fare, and the trolley driver gave him too much change. The pastor sat down, looked it over, and counted it several times. He realized things were tight that week and this was about what he would need for his lunch.
He wrestled with himself all the way. Finally, he came to his stop, he walked up to the trolley driver, and said, “Here, you gave me too much change.” The driver said, “It wasn't a mistake. I was in your church yesterday, and I thought I would put you to the test.”
Fortunately, the pastor passed the test. Do you pass the test when unbelievers look at your life and wonder if the Gospel is true?
“Few things are more infectious than a godly lifestyle. The people you rub shoulders with everyday need that kind of challenge. Not prudish. Not preachy. Just cracker jack clean living. Just honest to goodness, bone – deep, non-hypocritical integrity.” - Chuck Swindoll
DID YOU EVER WONDER???
Toddler Property Laws
1. If I like it, it's mine.
2. If it's in my hand, Its mine.
3. If I can take it from you, it's mine.
4. If I had it a little while ago, It's mine.
5. If it's mine, it must never appear to be yours in any way.
6. If I am doing or building something,all the pieces are mine.
7. If it looks like mine, it is mine.
8. If I saw it first, it's mine.
9. If you are playing with something and you put it down, it automatically becomes mine.
10. If it's broken, it's yours.
BOOKS OF THE BIBLE...A TEACHING
We
We look this week, at 2nd John
Who wrote the book?
John did not identify himself by name in this letter, but he did adopt the term “elder” for himself (2 John 1:1). There has been some debate about whether an author named John the Elder wrote this letter (as well as 3 John, which is addressed the same way) or if John the apostle was using a different title for himself. However, the earliest church tradition from the second century on testified in unison that this letter and its companion, 3 John, were written by the apostle, not by a mysterious and unknown elder. In fact, an apostle using the term “elder” for himself was not at all unprecedented—Peter did that very thing in his first epistle (1 Peter 5:1).
Where are we?
John offered little in the way of detail in the short letter we call 2 John. Nothing in the circumstances John discussed in the letter would lead a reader of the time to think that it did not go to the same churches that received 1 John. The apostle addressed the letter “to the chosen lady and her children,” a mysterious phrase that has been much debated (2 John 1:1). It either refers to an actual woman or serves as a metaphor for a church. In either case, whether to a smaller family group joined by blood or to a larger one joined by confession, the application of the letter should remain unchanged. With this letter’s thematic similarity to 1 John, it is best to suggest that John wrote from Patmos in about AD 90.
Why is Second John so important?
Second John makes clear what our position should be regarding the enemies of the truth. Whereas 1 John focuses on our fellowship with God, 2 John focuses on protecting our fellowship from those who teach falsehood. The apostle went so far as to warn his readers against inviting false teachers into the house or even offering them a greeting (2 John 1:10). Such practices align the believer with the evildoer, and John was keen on keeping the believers pure from the stain of falsehood and heresy.
What's the big idea?
John began his second epistle proclaiming his love for “the chosen lady and her children,” a love he shared with those who know the truth (2 John 1:1). From the reports he had received, he understood that these believers were following the teachings of Christ. He summed up this kind of lifestyle in the exhortation to “love one another” (1:5), a clear reference to the great commandments of Jesus—to love God and love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36–40; John 13:34).
In other words, those who walk in the truth should be people who love others. But they should be cautious whom they love. Deceivers and false teachers had infiltrated the church—people who taught falsehoods about the person of Jesus, teaching that He was not truly a man but only appeared to be one. This early heresy, called Docetism, required the strongest possible response from John. So the apostle warned the true believers away from these false teachers. John’s encouragement, then, was not simply to love but to love others within the limits that truth allows.
How do I apply this?
John’s strong encouragement to the believers in 2 John involved loving one another. However, John did not leave love undefined but described it as walking “according to His commandments” (2 John 1:6). This echoes the teaching of Jesus in John’s gospel, where the Lord told His followers, “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments” (John 14:15).
Our love is dependent on our obedience. When we don’t obey, we don’t love. Often we get in the mind-set that our obedience to God affects only ourselves. But that simply is not true. Our actions, whether obedient or disobedient, have ripple effects far beyond our own limited vision of a circumstance.
Consider your own life. In what ways might your obedience or disobedience impact those in your immediate circle of relationships? Second John reminds us not only of the dangers of falling away from the truth but also of the importance of making obedience a priority in our lives—for ourselves and for those most important to us.
HAVE A SAFE AND BLESSED WEEK:)
Ho'omaikaʻi ka Pua iā kākou
We look this week, at 2nd John
Who wrote the book?
John did not identify himself by name in this letter, but he did adopt the term “elder” for himself (2 John 1:1). There has been some debate about whether an author named John the Elder wrote this letter (as well as 3 John, which is addressed the same way) or if John the apostle was using a different title for himself. However, the earliest church tradition from the second century on testified in unison that this letter and its companion, 3 John, were written by the apostle, not by a mysterious and unknown elder. In fact, an apostle using the term “elder” for himself was not at all unprecedented—Peter did that very thing in his first epistle (1 Peter 5:1).
Where are we?
John offered little in the way of detail in the short letter we call 2 John. Nothing in the circumstances John discussed in the letter would lead a reader of the time to think that it did not go to the same churches that received 1 John. The apostle addressed the letter “to the chosen lady and her children,” a mysterious phrase that has been much debated (2 John 1:1). It either refers to an actual woman or serves as a metaphor for a church. In either case, whether to a smaller family group joined by blood or to a larger one joined by confession, the application of the letter should remain unchanged. With this letter’s thematic similarity to 1 John, it is best to suggest that John wrote from Patmos in about AD 90.
Why is Second John so important?
Second John makes clear what our position should be regarding the enemies of the truth. Whereas 1 John focuses on our fellowship with God, 2 John focuses on protecting our fellowship from those who teach falsehood. The apostle went so far as to warn his readers against inviting false teachers into the house or even offering them a greeting (2 John 1:10). Such practices align the believer with the evildoer, and John was keen on keeping the believers pure from the stain of falsehood and heresy.
What's the big idea?
John began his second epistle proclaiming his love for “the chosen lady and her children,” a love he shared with those who know the truth (2 John 1:1). From the reports he had received, he understood that these believers were following the teachings of Christ. He summed up this kind of lifestyle in the exhortation to “love one another” (1:5), a clear reference to the great commandments of Jesus—to love God and love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36–40; John 13:34).
In other words, those who walk in the truth should be people who love others. But they should be cautious whom they love. Deceivers and false teachers had infiltrated the church—people who taught falsehoods about the person of Jesus, teaching that He was not truly a man but only appeared to be one. This early heresy, called Docetism, required the strongest possible response from John. So the apostle warned the true believers away from these false teachers. John’s encouragement, then, was not simply to love but to love others within the limits that truth allows.
How do I apply this?
John’s strong encouragement to the believers in 2 John involved loving one another. However, John did not leave love undefined but described it as walking “according to His commandments” (2 John 1:6). This echoes the teaching of Jesus in John’s gospel, where the Lord told His followers, “If you love Me, you will keep My commandments” (John 14:15).
Our love is dependent on our obedience. When we don’t obey, we don’t love. Often we get in the mind-set that our obedience to God affects only ourselves. But that simply is not true. Our actions, whether obedient or disobedient, have ripple effects far beyond our own limited vision of a circumstance.
Consider your own life. In what ways might your obedience or disobedience impact those in your immediate circle of relationships? Second John reminds us not only of the dangers of falling away from the truth but also of the importance of making obedience a priority in our lives—for ourselves and for those most important to us.
HAVE A SAFE AND BLESSED WEEK:)
Ho'omaikaʻi ka Pua iā kākou