1 Corinthians 3:10-11 – What is your faith built upon?

According to the grace of God given to me, like a skilled master builder I laid a foundation, and someone else is building upon it. Let each one take care how he builds upon it. For no one can lay a foundation other than that which is laid, which is Jesus Christ.
1 Corinthians 3:10-11

What is your faith built upon? When you build a building the first thing that needs to be done is to have a proper foundation laid. One you don’t go and build a wall here, place furnishings, or set up the roof until the foundation is laid. That is because the foundation is what everything else rests on. Without a foundation it is like the man who built a house on the sand where it is not able to stand up to the elements. The same can be said about a faulty foundation, if the proper foundation is not set for the environment and type of house that is being built again the building will eventually fall due to structural problems.

Our faith works much in the same way. We need to be careful on what we base our faith off of. It needs to be firmly placed in Christ and rooted in Biblical truth. There are many teachings out there where we can hear it doesn’t matter what you believe as long as you are sincere. Then there is also the thought that all religions ultimately lead to God, or that since God is love He won’t send anyone to hell. The problem is that these teachings build a faith that is on an inadequate foundation, much like having a mansion built on a fault line, an earthquake comes and that house will eventually fall. When Christ returns if our faith is not right, if we aren’t rooted in Christ and Christ alone then what we have our faith placed in will eventually fall as well. So what type of foundation is your faith built on?

 

Table Talk – Episode 97 – Who in Whose Image?


June 16, 2017: This week we went deep and touched many topics but most importantly do we make a god in our own image or do we live like we are made in God’s image?

Table Talk is a weekly gathering of men in the Pinellas Park area from different denominations and backgrounds. We meet every Friday morning from around 6:30-8:00 at the Egg Platter restaurant. It is located at 6767 US Highway 19 North in Pinellas Park. If you happen to be in the area feel free to come out and join us for a time of fellowship and Bible study.

John 3:36 – What is Belief?

Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life; whoever does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains on him.
John 3:36 ESV

I will admit this is a tricky verse to look at, because in many translations the word obey is also translated into believe. I will say that in my opinion trust would be a good word to have in both places although believe and obey is the better option. You see our Christian faith is a combination of belief and obedience that stems out of our trust in God. What I mean is that our belief in God goes beyond just the intellectual to a deeper trust in God that leads to obedience. For example let’s look at our regular relationships, when we were kids I am sure we all scraped our knees at one time or another. Now often our parents would tell us that we would be okay and that we would live while in that moment we would feel like our world was coming to an end, but because we believed in our parents, we trusted them, we knew what they were saying was true and it would help comfort us.

We do this because we know that our parents have our best interest in their mind, even when they are disciplining us they are doing it out of love. Even though we may not like it at the time our belief in our earthly parents has us obeying them because we trust that they have the best intentions for us in the long run. God is the same way, we may not like what we are going through or may feel like obedience to God is killing our fun, but in the long term obedience to God will lead us to eternal life. Our pride will often say that intellectual belief is enough, that obedience is not needed, but remember we are told many times that our belief and obedience goes hand in hand. So how deep is your belief in God, is it the surface level intellectual belief or is it the deeper trust that leads to obedience?

Matthew 6:34

Therefore don’t worry about tomorrow, because tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.
Matthew 6:34 HCSB

Worry, it seems to be a fact of life. There are many things in our lives which we tend to worry about; finances, health, and relationships are some of the big areas where we encounter worry. The question is who has ever benefited from worrying about something. I usually find the opposite to be true, the more I worry about one thing the more time and energy is taken away from something else. Let’s say I am worrying about my finances and where I am going to get the money to pay my rent among all my other bills, that takes time effort and energy that I could be using to focus on producing content and working on a number of podcast and other multimedia projects I am involved with.

You see Satan uses worry as a way to draw first our attention away from God, but also to foster doubt into our minds. When we worry we are often, though not intentionally, stating that we don’t think God has as much control over His creation as He does. It is a subconscious belief that we need to be in control, worry is essentially just another form of pride. When we worry it is because as I mentioned we want to be in control and our worry is because we feel like we aren’t in control and that makes us uncomfortable.

What Jesus wants us to do is to give control over to Him. That is because if we place our trust in Him and let Him take control we have no need to worry. If we are willing to focus our time and energy on God and let Him worry about everything else, everything else will essentially fall into place. So what are you worrying about today? Why don’t you give it over to God and trust Him to take care of it.

Galatians 5:22-23

“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law.” Galatians 5:22-23 (ESV)

 

This is one of those verses that almost every Christian knows, but is probably one in which many of us don’t fully understand. There is often the question that some will ask of how many fruit are there, or some people may state that they don’t understand why fruit is singular. If you were to ask me I think the reason why it is singular is more to indicate how these 9 qualities are part of a whole. If fruit was plural indicating multiple fruit of the spirit then we would want to pick and choose which fruit we wanted, much like with a fruit plate if you don’t like strawberries or pineapple you can just ignore them and eat the blueberries, bananas, and cantaloupe.

 

I think that is why many of us look at this verse and want it to be talking about multiple fruit. Some of the qualities are easier to exhibit than other, so we want to pick and choose which qualities we exhibit ourselves. I mean often times kindness, goodness, and faithfulness are easy to exhibit, and depending on the person we can probably show love with no problem. It is when you look at the qualities of patience and self-control that it becomes hard. We at times want to say can’t we just focus on five out of the nine? Isn’t that good enough?

 

How we should look at the fruit of the spirit is more like one fruit with these nine aspects. Take a Fuji apple for instance; it has a specific taste, sweetness, tartness, texture, smell, nutrition value, etc. It has a number of characteristics and aspects that differentiate it from a strawberry or even a Red Delicious or Granny Smith apple. So much like the different parts that make up an apple, the fruit of the spirit are the different aspects that make up our spiritual life, that as they are brought to fullness we become more of the person God has created us to be.

 

So you see there is a reason why Paul said “the fruit of the spirit is” and not the “fruits of the spirit are;” because it is basically all or nothing. As a believer each of these nine qualities that Paul mentions should be expressed in our lives as it shows the Holy Spirit working in and through us. It is a litmus test of sorts for a changed life, I mean an unbeliever might be able to exhibit many of these qualities, but a believer will exhibit them all. I mean a Jolly Rancher is sweet and often tastes just like different fruit; and a plastic fruit may have the shape, color, and general look of real fruit; but they are imitators and not the real thing as they do not have all of the qualities that make up the fruit they are made to taste or look like.

 

So examine yourself, ask God to come and help develop all aspects of the fruit of the Spirit in your life, to help you grow spiritually into the person He has created you to be.

1 Peter 1:6-7

1 Peter 1:6-7
“In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ.”

One of the biggest misconceptions we face as Christians is that once we come to Christ life will be easy. That if we just have enough faith we will never have any problems. The issue is when we look at Scripture we are never told this, in fact we are told quite the opposite many times. Jesus himself told us many times to expect persecution for being a Christian and here in James, and the sentiments are mirrored in 1 Peter, that we are to not just expect problems, trials, tribulation, or persecution but we are to take joy in it. We see it in James 1:2, “Count it all joy,” and Peter tells us in 1 Peter 1:6, “In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials,”

You see there is a reason for trials, in that much like physical growth we have to encounter some pain. Peter tells us it tests the genuineness of our faith. Peter uses the imagery of  refining gold, this is a process where the gold ore is melted down, or in Peter’s time a combination of acidic substances and heat were used to melt away the impurities from the gold. No matter which era you were refining gold in it is a process that put the ore through some harsh treatment in order to get as much of the impurities out of the gold as possible.

The problem is that no one likes to go through trials, I know some of the classes in college I hated the most were the ones that challenged me the most. It was because they were not easy, but it was also in those classes that I probably learned the most. Much like in our Christian lives we all want that mountain top experience, and we never want it to end. We enjoy that feeling when we are close to God, and everything seems to be going right. The problem is with our spiritual life in that state, much like on the top of a mountain, nothing grows. It is in the valleys where the growth happens. So when you go through the valleys take joy and remember that God is still working on you to help you grow and purify your faith.