John 4: 36, 39, and 48 And he that reapeth receiveth wages, and gathereth fruit unto life eternal: that both he that soweth and he that reapeth may rejoice together.
And many of the Samaritans of the city believed on him for the saying of the woman, which testified, he told me all that ever I did.
Then said Jesus unto him, Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will not believe.
There are three types of believers highlighted in this chapter. The first set are believers who hear the message from a secondary, but authentic source--an eyewitness, or a creditable reference. The Sychar city dwellers heard the woman's testimony. Either their personal knowledge or their experience with her was enough to create faith in them to believe. Never underestimate the power of a personal testimony!
The second group consisted of scientific believers. These needed to have primary experience; they needed hard evidence. They must see and hear Jesus for themselves. So when the Sychar woman gave them her testimony, they requested a personal interview with Jesus. That interview turned into a two-day revival service at the end of which they said to her: "Now we believe, not because of they saying: for we have heard him ourselves, and we know that this is indeed the Christ, the Savior of the world.
The third type of believers is the superstitious kind who need a demonstration of signs and wonders. The nobleman represented this set. His son was practically dying, but Jesus' word was not good enough for him. He wanted the Lord to make a personal visit to his house. Jesus had performed the turning water into wine miracle in the area; still that was not enough. But Jesus would not yield to the nobleman's lack of faith. After the nobleman pleaded one more time, Jesus told him to go home--that his son was alive. He went home and found his son healed at the very time Jesus told him the previous day. Not only did the nobleman become a believer, but his entire household as a result.
Are you one of these three types of believers? To be sure, it depends on whom you are believing. Jesus told Phillip, his disciple, of a fourth type when he said, "Blessed are those who see not, but yet believe." Do you have faith to take Jesus at his word? Or do you need hard evidence? Fortunately for us, Jesus is patient and loving and meets us at any point of our incredulity. But for your own sake, take a leap of faith today and whatever you are believing for, believe Jesus. He is the Way, The truth, and the Life.
Savior, I believe that your word means what it says. It transcends time and space. You said ask anything and you will do it. I ask you today for: ____________________________________________________________________________.
Thank you for being faithful to your word. Amen.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
9. No Honor Among Your Own
John 4: 44 For Jesus himself testified that a prophet hath no honor in his own country.
It is a curious occurrence that the people who know us best often tend to fail to give us due honor. Perhaps we are too ordinary, too familiar, or even too successful or talented as in the case of Jesus. They refuse to give us the credit we earned or deserved.
Matthew fills in the details for us. Jesus was too familiar: "Is not this the carpenter's son? We know his mother--Mary, and his siblings--James, Joses, Simon, and Judas. We also know all his sisters. They live right here in Nazareth. Where did he get all this education from? Who does he think he is?" (Matthew 13: 54-57). Matthew concludes sadly that "he did not many mighty works there because of their unbelief." Consequently, Jesus removed himself from his haters and took his gifts to Galilee.
Are you trying hard to prove yourself to people who should believe and trust you but refuse to accept you or your ministry? You may need to remove yourself from them and take your message to another audience. It is interesting how you never find Jesus forcing himself on anyone. He advised his disciples to shake the dust off their feet and move on when they came to a home that rejected them.
Don't waste time. Don't get into unproductive arguments and fights. Move on, just as Jesus did. You might not be the one called to sow in that field. Your field may be elsewhere. Pray and be certain that you are where God planted you.
Lord, my people are not accepting of the message you gave me. Show me where to take it, where souls are awaiting the message of salvation, deliverance, and life everlasting. Amen.
It is a curious occurrence that the people who know us best often tend to fail to give us due honor. Perhaps we are too ordinary, too familiar, or even too successful or talented as in the case of Jesus. They refuse to give us the credit we earned or deserved.
Matthew fills in the details for us. Jesus was too familiar: "Is not this the carpenter's son? We know his mother--Mary, and his siblings--James, Joses, Simon, and Judas. We also know all his sisters. They live right here in Nazareth. Where did he get all this education from? Who does he think he is?" (Matthew 13: 54-57). Matthew concludes sadly that "he did not many mighty works there because of their unbelief." Consequently, Jesus removed himself from his haters and took his gifts to Galilee.
Are you trying hard to prove yourself to people who should believe and trust you but refuse to accept you or your ministry? You may need to remove yourself from them and take your message to another audience. It is interesting how you never find Jesus forcing himself on anyone. He advised his disciples to shake the dust off their feet and move on when they came to a home that rejected them.
Don't waste time. Don't get into unproductive arguments and fights. Move on, just as Jesus did. You might not be the one called to sow in that field. Your field may be elsewhere. Pray and be certain that you are where God planted you.
Lord, my people are not accepting of the message you gave me. Show me where to take it, where souls are awaiting the message of salvation, deliverance, and life everlasting. Amen.
8. Not Unlike Ghostwriting
John 4: 38 I sent you to reap that whereon you bestowed no labor: other men labored and ye are entered into their labors.
Not unlike ghostwriting, is what Jesus demonstrated with the Sychar woman and what he expects of us as we relate to people in our daily living. The ghostwriter writes a speech, an essay, a story for another person with the expectation of giving all the credit to that person, often in return for payment. Church circles often reflect a similar experience, in which persons may labor diligently for weeks, months, or even years only to find that somebody else gets the credit. It is especially painful if that person is new, and the laborer worked for gratis.
Occasionally, the benefactor of such service may express gratitude to the one who labored without getting the glory. There are even people who would say that they paid for the product, hence, like buying and wearing a wig, it became their personal property. It seems as if Jesus had a different view about ghosting. He separated the sower from the reaper, acknowledging that both are essential to God's kingdom. To him, the person who lays the foundation is just as valuable as the person who builds upon it. Someone sowed into the Sychar woman's life in order that the witness Jesus did of himself could have the positive effect it had.
If you are a sower, keep on sowing. You may or may not live long enough to reap your harvest on earth. The writer of Hebrews reminds us that the prophets of old did not live to see what they prophesied about Jesus. That did not discourage them. They prophesied anyway. If you are a reaper, keep on reaping. Don't get carried away with the credit because you may later discover that the kudos have to be shared with others. Stay humble, because the Emmy's are on the way, and will be a time of rejoicing that no one has yet witnessed. Your current anonymity will one day break forth into a well deserved "Well Done, thou good and faithful servant! Enter into the joy of your Lord."
Father, keep my eyes focused on You. Let my undergirding goal be to please just You. Let me not become weary in well doing, because I will reap in due season, if I do not faint. In Jesus' name I pray. Amen.
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
7. Equal Work, Equal Pay
Jesus again emphasizes the punchline here, and we interpret: Go any distance, break any convention, dare any bigot--if it means saving a soul from hell. Harvest time for soul-winning is now. It is a glimpse of how Jesus sees people. they are at the top of his agenda.
Are you available and ready to work? you may enlist as a sower, or a reaper. The Lord makes it very explicit that there is a life after this life called "eternal life." That is where all we do in Time counts. We will receive equal pay for equal work. If we are wise, we would vigorously engage in fruit-gathering, because "he that reapeth receiveth wages" (v. 36).
It makes me think of earthly awards ceremonies, such as the Emmy and the Tony Awards. Heaven's awards will be a time of rejoicing. Your service to others will be recognized. Get busy!
Father, thank You for employing me in Your service to lead people into Your kingdom. Teach me the wisdom of how to win souls. Give me the patience and endurance it takes to be a harvester of excellence. I count it a great honor to serve You. I pray in Jesus' name. Amen.
6. Hidden Meat
John 4: 32 But he said unto them, I have meat to eat that ye know not
of.
This is the punchline of the whole Sychar message: having spiritual eyes. The disciples, being concerned over their master's welfare, went into the city to buy meat. Upon their return, they met him talking with the Samaritan woman just at the point when Jesus told her that he was the Christ. The woman then left her water jar and went and spread the news to the men of the city that she met Jesus, the Messiah. She, a woman of notoriety, had turned evangelist overnight, inviting them all to go see him. While she was gone, the disciples implored him to eat something. that was when he gave them the punchline.
They could not readily understand what Jesus meant. Did she...somebody else...give him food to eat while they were gone? It was lesson time for them! Jesus taught them that there were priorities in life. Winning souls for God's kingdom was one. It was at the same time a rewarding task. There were two categories of employees--sowers, and reapers. Evidently, someone sowed into the Samaritan woman's life. That served as a setup for Jesus to bring the Word of Life that she received. She in turn, by her testimony, sowed into the lives of her old associates, some of whom came to hear him and believed (vv. 39, 31-41).
Father, open my mouth to speak boldly for Jesus. Let me see people with Your eyes. Empower me by Your Holy Spirit to seek and find the hidden meat--people who need to discover the wellspring of everlasting life. Help me make that a priority above my natural food. I pray in Jesus' name. Amen.
Friday, April 26, 2013
5. Why Are You Talking to Her?
Picture by http://inspirationalchristiansfortoday.com
John 4: 27 And upon this came his disciples, and marveled that he talked with the woman: yet no man said, What seekest thou? or Why talkest thou with her?
The writer, John, takes us into the minds of the disciples. The emphasis is on "YOU" and "her." They thought this, but didn't have the nerve to say it. We only know it because John, the eyewitness tells us.
I have witnessed people acting ashamed of other people. I have seen children acting ashamed of their parents who were not attractively dressed, or who lacked certain social graces, such as good grammatical speech. I have witnessed husbands who ducked from their wives because of obesity or lack of attractiveness when in certain company. I have seen employers who snub employees and so-called friends who pretend they didn't see their friends. I must confess that at some stage of my life I may have been guilty of snubbing someone else. What a shame! Because we read in Hebrews 2: 11 that this same Jesus, Creator of the universe, who sat on Sychar's well just to talk with a despised woman, is "not ashamed to call [us] brethren." He claims us as kin! Isn't that wonderful?
Listen to him talking about his disciples: "Ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you. Henceforth I call you not servants; for a servant knoweth not what his lord doeth: but I have called you friends." Some people would gladly put a mop and a pail in your hand and call you a servant because of your ethnicity, age, lack of education, country of origin, appearance, poverty, family background, whatever; but Jesus takes the servant tools out of your hands and calls you a friend.
To know that you are special to Jesus is awesome. He made a special trip to meet you. He made a special request of you. He knew all your negatives; yet chose to offer you life's best. That is good enough to keep you from drowning yourself in depression. It is sad that many people commit suicide not knowing the depth of Jesus's love. Jesus is not ashamed of you. He doesn't avoid you when his friends come around. He doesn't even try to excuse himself. To Jesus, you are somebody special!
Thank You Father, for talking to me. Thank you!
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
4. An Unfillable Proposition
John 4: 16 Jesus saith unto her, "Go call thy husband, and come hither."
Don't get offended when Jesus gets deep down into your business. He is reaching after your thirst to save your soul. The woman of Sychar was popular among the men folks, perhaps; but not with the women, having discarded five of the men in the city as left-overs for them. Even the one she lived with at that time was not her husband. He could have been somebody else's, or a single man who shacked with her. Can you hear the inference of disapproval in Jesus's voice?
The Sychar woman was lonely. She didn't even want to go fetching water (v. 15). You can guess her joy at the prospect of never having to go water-fetching again, ever. But when Jesus presented her with that hope, she was thinking naturally, while he was thinking spiritually.
He told her to go bring her husband. That was an impossible proposition, but it was the revelation that made her recognize the divine in him. In order to take her to another level, he had to get up into her business. His divine insight brought out the religion in her. She changed the conversation to spiritual matters. That enabled Jesus to address the issue of how to worship God.
"God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth." Once that recognition was established, then and only then, Jesus pressed the message of salvation. The woman knew about God. She believed in the Messiah. All that was left was for her to acknowledge him: "I that speak to thee am he."
She accepted because she left her water-pot and went her way into the city to tell others about him.
Father, I confess my wrong choices. Forgive me for hurting You. Forgive me for hurting people I met in life. I want to live a clean life. Save me, Lord, and I'll live for You forever. In Jesus' s name I pray. Amen.
Don't get offended when Jesus gets deep down into your business. He is reaching after your thirst to save your soul. The woman of Sychar was popular among the men folks, perhaps; but not with the women, having discarded five of the men in the city as left-overs for them. Even the one she lived with at that time was not her husband. He could have been somebody else's, or a single man who shacked with her. Can you hear the inference of disapproval in Jesus's voice?
The Sychar woman was lonely. She didn't even want to go fetching water (v. 15). You can guess her joy at the prospect of never having to go water-fetching again, ever. But when Jesus presented her with that hope, she was thinking naturally, while he was thinking spiritually.
He told her to go bring her husband. That was an impossible proposition, but it was the revelation that made her recognize the divine in him. In order to take her to another level, he had to get up into her business. His divine insight brought out the religion in her. She changed the conversation to spiritual matters. That enabled Jesus to address the issue of how to worship God.
"God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth." Once that recognition was established, then and only then, Jesus pressed the message of salvation. The woman knew about God. She believed in the Messiah. All that was left was for her to acknowledge him: "I that speak to thee am he."
She accepted because she left her water-pot and went her way into the city to tell others about him.
Father, I confess my wrong choices. Forgive me for hurting You. Forgive me for hurting people I met in life. I want to live a clean life. Save me, Lord, and I'll live for You forever. In Jesus' s name I pray. Amen.
3. God's Gift to You
John 4:10 If thou knewest the gift of God, and who it is that saith to you, "Give me to drink," thou wouldest have asked of him and he would have given thee living water.
Have you ever been given an unusual gift for your birthday or some other anniversary? Can you recall the joy of that experience? Imagine yourself standing in front of Jesus and hearing him say these words to you: "If you only knew the gift of God!" That's exciting to me--to realize that God the Father has given me a special gift--eternal life--a BFF (Best Friends Forever) relationship with Him!
Just when I begin to absorb the fact that Father God sent me a gift, I open up a second layer to discover that the gift is a "who." It is a gift in a gift. Jesus is propositioning me to give him myself.
Then as I begin to comprehend the depth of this mystery gift, I discover that there is a third layer--the real core--living water that springs up into life eternal. Wow! I will never thirst again! If I yield to him my life, that is, give him a drink, then he springs up within me and for me a hopeful, vibrant experience that would extend throughout time into eternity with the Father the original Giver.
The Sychar woman did not miss it. She got it. Did you get it? She exclaimed: "Sir, give me that water!"
You can pray that too.
Father, thank You for that unspeakable gift. I accept it. I receive Jesus today. Give me that water so that I will never thirst again. In Jesus' name I pray. Amen.
A Strategic Position
2. A Strategic Position
John 4: 5-6: Then cometh he to a city of Samaria, which is called Sychar, near the parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph. Now Jacob's well was there. Jesus therefore, being wearied with his journey, sat thus on the well: and it was about the sixth hour.The special trip that Jesus made was at a cost. It was a wearisome journey. He was tired; possibly hungry, because his disciples went into the city to buy food. This gave him the opportunity for a personal and private consultation session with a woman who came with her pitcher to draw water. The noonday sun along with the walk both culminated into a tired Jesus, so he sat on strategically on the well.
As those who know his workings, his timing was perfect. Here she comes to draw water, not early in the morning before the sun got hot; not later in the afternoon when the heat cooled down; but around high noon when traffic was light with fewer eyes to see and mouths to gossip about her. She had to be a soul who had grown accustomed to lonesomeness.
He positioned himself strategically for an unavoidable confrontation. "May I have a drink of water?"
You can guess her shock. [Jesus is bold and direct. You have no doubt who he is when he confronts you].
She answered from her heart: "Why are you, a Jew, talking to me, a Samaritan?" She had no idea of the gift she was about to receive as a result of his request.
Has Jesus positioned himself strategically on the well of your life? Surely, you can't miss him! Has he asked of you a drink of water? Be assured it is not so much because he is tired or thirsty, but because he has a special gift for you--a whole well springing up for you unto everlasting life. Invite him into your heart as Lord of your life.
Father in heaven, I thank You for helping me to see and hear Jesus. I am grateful that he has strategically positioned himself in my life circumstances so that I couldn't miss him. I yield myself o him and invite him as Lord of my life today. Amen.
Saturday, April 20, 2013
1. A Special Trip
John 4: 4 Tells us that “he
must needs go through Samaria.” The “he” is Jesus Christ, of Nazareth, of course. He left Judea and headed
north on the way into Galilee. But he was
pressed to pass through Samaria,
of all places, where no honorable Jew would enter, because “the Jews had no
dealings with Samaritans. They looked down upon them because of their history
and ethnicity. But Jesus intended to make this special trip that special day to
set a captive woman free.
While He was cooling the temperatures down with the Pharisees who
were growing resentful at his increasing popularity (he baptized more disciples
than John the Baptist), he set out purposefully to a despised city to talk to a
woman of ill repute who needed him. He also wanted to demonstrate to his
disciples that he was a barrier-breaking liberal who loved mercy more that
sacrifice.
Have you been challenged to take such a trip—that
breaks conventions and eliminates barriers? Were you ever required to shake
hands with an enemy, wipe the brow of someone with a fatal disease, talk across
the fence cheerily with a neighbor of a different culture, or smile cordially
with a person of ill reputation or strange persuasion?
Are you willing to go openly through Samaria where your sphere of influence could
witness your unconditional love?
Father, as I
worship You today, cleanse my heart of all its prejudice, bigotry, and fear.
Give me the strength and wisdom to dare to break away from conventions that do
not attest to Your unconditional love. Let my life reflect the loving
acceptance Jesus demonstrated by taking that special trip through Samaria to set a captive
free. Make me a liberator for Christ. In his name I pray. Amen.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)