Tag Archives: advance yeoman

The Friend of Sinners | Bible Gleanings | December 28-29, 2024

Blasphemer. Drunkard. Glutton. Servant of Satan. King of the Jews. The negative nicknames hurled at Jesus during His earthly ministry dripped with scorn. But one rose above the restโ€”a name intended as an insult, but embraced by the Savior who came for sinners: โ€œa friend of tax collectors and sinners!โ€ (Matt. 11:19b).

Jesus shared supper with social outcasts, misfits, and rejects on multiple occasions. Once, after answering the call to follow Jesus, Matthew (also called Levi) held a banquet for His Lord and invited all kinds of sinful folk (Luke 5:29). Reclining at the dinner table were gamblers, moneylenders, thieves, prostitutes, and the worst of them all: tax collectors. โ€œHas He lost His mind?โ€ the scribes and Pharisees must have wondered. After all, this was not the best approach for gaining street credibility for a newly-launched ministry. Dining with such detestable delinquents would actually destroy His ministryโ€”that is, if His ministry was focused on numbers and fame instead of sinners who need grace and mercy.

Therefore, the religious leaders questioned, โ€œWhy do you eat and drink with tax collectors and sinners?โ€ (Luke 5:30b). Ask and you shall receive, and they received quite an answer, as Jesus wisely responded, โ€œThose who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentanceโ€ (Luke 5:31-32). In other words, Jesus was saying, โ€œThe kind of people you criticize and despiseโ€”I came for them. The people that make you shriek in your phony pietyโ€”I came for them. The people you believe the world would be a better place withoutโ€”I came for them.โ€ Jesus came to seek and save the sin-sick, not the self-righteous.

The lesson Jesus taught by eating with evil people is that all sinners are invited to His table. And if you consider yourself to be one, there is good news: Jesus welcomes you to His table of salvation, where you may feast on the blessings of redemption freely. He has saved a seat for every repentant sinner, especially โ€œthe poor, the crippled, the lame, [and] the blindโ€ (Luke 14:13). The banquet of everlasting life is not for great saintsโ€”it is reserved for great sinners who recognize Christ as a great Savior. Jesus is a Friend and Savior to those who see themselves as Godโ€™s enemies in need of salvation, not those who falsely presume that they are on โ€œgood termsโ€ with God and do not need saving.


The devotional column above is taken from my newest book, 40 Days with Jesus, which is a forty-day daily devotional focusing on the life, teachings, and miracles of Jesus. This book is available in hardcover on Amazon:

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Better Than Santa | Bible Gleanings for Advent | December 14-15, 2024

Santa Claus is slightly judgmental. He only brings presents toย goodย boys and girls. Those who misbehave are on the naughty list and will receive only coal in their stockings. As J. Frederick Coots and Haven Gillespie wrote inย Santa Claus is Cominโ€™ to Town: โ€œHeโ€™s making a list, heโ€™s checking it twice, heโ€™s gonna find out whoโ€™s naughty or nice.โ€ Only youngsters most deserving of gifts can expect to find presents underneath the tree.

Jesus is the polar opposite of Santa: He gives the greatest gift to those who are the least deserving. He came to grant salvation and eternal life to evil people, not good people. As He Himself said, โ€œI have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentanceโ€ (Luke 5:32). Furthermore, He came to erase your name from the โ€œnaughty listโ€ and write it in His book, the โ€œLambโ€™s book of lifeโ€ (Revelation 21:27). 

The fact that shepherds were the first to hear the good news of Jesusโ€™ birth embodies Christโ€™s mission to save the undeserving (Luke 2:8-13). The glad tidings were announced by the exalted angels of heaven, not to kings or emperors, but to some of the most insignificant people in Judean society. Shepherds were thought to be insignificant and contemptible. Jews considered them to be unclean, deceitful, and uneducated. Nonetheless, they were the first to hear the wonderful news that the Savior had been born.

And the Gospels reinforce the idea that Jesus came for the low-ranking people of the world. The first disciples were fishermen. Jesus healed social outcasts: lepers, paralytics, and the demon-possessed. He ate with tax collectors and sinners. He cared for widows and the sexually immoral. There is no question about itโ€”Jesus came to save the least qualified.

You do not have to be outstandingly competent to receive His gift of eternal life. The Lord Jesus will grant salvation to you, no matter who you are or what you have done. Eternal life can be yours even if you are sexually immoral, idolatrous, adulterous, greedy, or addicted (1 Cor. 6:9-11). Jesus is the significant Savior who came for insignificant people. Thatโ€™s another reason why Jesus is better than Santa.

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Let It Snow | Bible Gleanings for Advent | December 7-8, 2024

Nothing is more enchanting than waking up to a blanket of snow covering the neighborhood on Christmas morning. Nearly everyone dreams of a white Christmas because snow makes it feel like Christmas. Without snow, there are no snowmen, snowball fights, or โ€œdashing through the snow in a one-horse open sleigh.โ€ Christmas and snow go together like hot cocoa and marshmallows. 

Snow is also a biblical symbol for righteousness and purity. Snow was the purest form of white to the Jewsโ€”nothing was as perfect and pure. Not to mention, the fluffy flakes covered the filth and dirt of the earth. It is no wonder that people in Scripture sought to be as pure as snow, such as David, who prayed, โ€œPurge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snowโ€ (Psalm 51:7). The prophet Daniel also used this imagery to describe God who is uncompromisingly pure and holy: โ€œAs I looked, thrones were placed, and the Ancient of Days took his seat; his clothing was white as snowโ€ (Daniel 7:9a).

The Lord reminded His people in Isaiah 1:18 that they were not as white as snow: โ€œCome now, let us reason together, says the LORD: though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall become like wool.โ€ Their sins were like โ€œscarlet,โ€ which is as red as red can be. They were stained, and the sin that colored their lives needed to be washed away. And God promised that they could be made white like snow if they turned to Him in repentance (cf. vv. 19-20). Despite being engulfed in sinโ€™s filth, they could be snow-white by the Lordโ€™s thorough washing. 

You also need the Lord to cleanse you of sin. Paradoxically, the blood of Jesus Christ is the only sufficient means of being purified from sinโ€™s crimson stain. As John the apostle said, โ€œThe blood of Jesus his Son cleanses us from all sinโ€ (1 John 1:7b). His death makes you whiter than snow in the sight of God because He clothed Himself in the filthy rags of your sin and, in exchange, gives you the white robes of His righteousness (2 Cor. 5:21). You receive this cleansing when you repent of your sins and trust completely in Christ alone for your salvation (Acts 17:30; Ephesians 2:8-9). 

Unfortunately, sin will still make you muddy every now and then. And Jesus will continue to wash you when it does. That is why, whenever you sin, you must plead the words of James Nicholsonโ€™s hymn, โ€œWhiter Than Snowโ€

โ€œLord Jesus, for this I most humbly entreat,

I wait, blessed Lord, at Thy crucified feet;

By faith, for my cleansing I see Thy blood flow,

Now wash me and I shall be whiter than snow.โ€

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Miracles in the Mundane | Bible Gleanings for Advent | November 30-December 1, 2024

Miracle on 34th Street is a classic Christmas film that families have cherished since its premiere in 1947. โ€œKris Kringle,โ€ a kind-hearted elderly man, is hired to play Santa Claus by the local Macyโ€™s, and he gradually persuades New Yorkers that he is the real Santa Claus. At first, little Susie is reluctant to believe in Santa Claus because her mother raised her not to. โ€œYouโ€™re just a nice old man with whiskers, like my mother said. And I shouldnโ€™t have believed you,โ€ Susie contended, believing the department store Santa to be a fraud.

But after Kris Kringle proves himself to be the embodiment of Santa Claus, even her mother eventually admits, โ€œI was wrong when I told you that, Susie. Faith is believing in things when common sense tells you not to.โ€ And, ordinary New Yorkers learned that there is nothing wrong with believing in extraordinary thingsโ€”they might even be right in front of your eyes.

Mary and Joseph eventually understood this, too. Everything appeared normal as they traveled to Bethlehem to pay taxes for the census (Luke 2:1-3). It was an ordinary trip to an ordinary place to conduct ordinary business. However, God was accomplishing something extraordinary right before their eyes. By His providence, the Lord used an ordinary decree to bring them to Bethlehem, the prophesied birthplace of the Messiah.

The prophet Micah foretold that the Christ would be born there: โ€œBut you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, who are too little to be among the clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose coming forth is from of old, from ancient days (Micah 5:2). Micahโ€™s prophecy was in jeopardy, however, because Mary was on the verge of childbirth in Nazarethโ€”not Bethlehem (Luke 2:4). Thus, to fulfill this critical prophecy, God stirred in Caesarโ€™s heart to issue a census requiring Jews to return to their homeland to pay taxes. And Josephโ€™s hometown just so happened to be Bethlehem. In accordance with biblical prophecy, Maryโ€™s water broke when they arrived at Bethlehemโ€™s gates: โ€œAnd she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the innโ€ (Luke 2:7). 

God has a way of using ordinary people and events for extraordinary purposes. He often works miracles in the mundane. He will use whatever it takes to fulfill His perfect planโ€”even things that are completely normal. God is active in the ordinary things of your life, too. Do not underestimate what He may do in the day-to-day happenings that appear humdrum.

As John Piper said, โ€œGod is always doing 10,000 things in your life, and you may be aware of three of them.โ€  Who knows what He might do through the ordinary things in your life? Have faith in His providenceโ€”even if common sense tells you not to.

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

It’s All In Your Head | Bible Gleanings | November 23-24, 2024

Without firing a single shot, eleven stouthearted soldiers who were skilled skiers secured victory for the Allies during World War II. The Nazis were promptly producing their own atomic bomb, utilizing a heavy water plant that was isolated in the icy hills of Norwayโ€”therefore, Operation Gunnerside was initiated in February of 1943 to neutralize it. After British troops were captured, tortured, and executed in an earlier attempt to demolish the facility, the Allies tried again, this time with Norwegian commandos who knew how to sneak around in the snow. The small squad jumped from a plane on the frigid night of February 16th, and after eleven days of strenuous snow-trekking, they quietly infiltrated the plant. While there, they patiently and painstakingly planted charges, disappeared without a trace, and sighed with relief when they heard explosions from a safe distance. 

The Allies were well-aware that winning the war required not only major victories like D-Day, but small-scale successes in places where the enemy appeared less threatening. As the Norwegian Army Colonel in charge of the effort rightfully remarked to those troops, โ€œI cannot tell you why this mission is so important, but if you succeed, it will live in Norwayโ€™s memory for a hundred years.โ€ He was right. Although Operation Gunnerside was relatively minor compared to other hard-fought battles, its effects were substantial. Although this seemingly insignificant mission was not a full-scale fight, it was a battle nonethelessโ€”and it contributed to the end of one of historyโ€™s deadliest wars.

Similarly, there is another battle often downplayed and disregarded that has eternal ramifications: the battle in every believerโ€™s mind. Even though there are no gunshots, the war waging in the Christianโ€™s mind decides whether victory is won or lost in both temptation and tribulation. Indeed, every believer engages in daily formidable fights with the idolatry of the world, the iniquities of their flesh, and the instigations of the devil. However, a real rough-and-tumble is occurring in every Christianโ€™s mind, where sin is constantly working on a mental nuclear bomb to destroy love for God and hatred of evil. Therefore, every saint must sabotage sinโ€™s mind-operations by detonating truth-bombs which come from Godโ€™s wordโ€”truth which renews the mind and fills the mind with holy thoughts which evict evil ones (Rom. 12:2; Phil. 4:8-9).

Believers are admonished to do precisely that in 2 Corinthians 10:5, where Paul commanded, โ€œtake every thought captive to obey Christ.โ€ Likewise, the apostle Peter exhorted: โ€œPrepare your minds for actionโ€ (1 Peter 1:13a, NLT). Believers must arm themselves with the sword of the Spirit for this mind-war because sin will not easily give up the mental territory it once dominated with ease. Every Christianโ€™s mind was once the devilโ€™s playground and sinโ€™s stomping ground, and neither will relinquish control without a fight. The bottom line is that if you know Christ, what you think mattersโ€”and it matters more than you think.

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Excited for Christmas, or looking for a way to worship the Christ of Christmas during advent? If so, you may enjoy this 25-day daily devotional, written by Brandon for exactly this reason. Grab your copy today before December 1st to get started!

Guidance from the Grave | Bible Gleanings | November 9-10, 2024

Scores of smiling graduates suddenly began to stare soberly when Steve Jobs (February 24, 1955โ€” October 5, 2011), founder of Apple, stated something startling during a commencement speech at Stanford University in 2005:

โ€œRemembering that Iโ€™ll be dead soon is the most important tool Iโ€™ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life.โ€

And as astonishment filled the atmosphere, Jobs continued,

โ€œBecause almost everythingโ€”all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failureโ€”these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important. Death is the destination we all share. No one has ever escaped it.โ€

Jobs did not believe in God, but he did believe in the grave and the necessity of learning lasting lessons from lifeโ€™s last stop.

And this king of technology unknowingly echoed the words of the king of Israel, Solomon, who shockingly said, โ€œIt is better to go to the house of mourning than to go to the house of feasting, for this is the end of all mankind, and the living will lay it to heartโ€ (Eccl. 7:2). If you are still alive, you need to attend more funerals and less feasts. But why should we choose a depressing funeral over a party with family, friends, and good food? Because funerals are ugly and unpleasant reminders of the inevitability of death. All funerals are a preview of our own, and they prevent us from pretending that we are immune from death.

Furthermore, death compels us to stop playing pretend so that we can live for what truly matters. You know what you donโ€™t think about at funerals? Trivial and transient things like money, possessions, careers, sports, and presidential elections. All of lifeโ€™s โ€œside issuesโ€ take a back seat in the funeral home when someone you know is up front in a coffin. Funerals force you to think, โ€œOne day, it will be my turn. Am I ready to meet my Maker? What legacy will I leave behind? Will those in attendance have to say nice things to cover up the odor of my bad reputation, or will I leave behind a good name that glorifies the name of Christ?โ€

Death is the great priority-rearranger. As Jobs later remarked in his speech, โ€œDeath is lifeโ€™s change agent.โ€ Indeed, the more we think about it, the more we should reconsider and reshape our goals, attitudes, hopes, dreams, prayers, and longingsโ€”and thatโ€™s the point of Solomonโ€™s counsel. The living should โ€œlay it to heartโ€ that they will not live forever on earth, and thus, all of the living should prepare for eternity and live a life on earth that counts for the glory of God. The grave will give us guidance for life, if only we will listen.

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Pick up a copy of Brandon’s latest book, Fundamentals for the Faithful, which explains the importance of all the basics which every believer should know:

The Snare of Spiritual Slumber | Bible Gleanings | November 2-3, 2024

Exhausted from battle, Sisera catnapped beneath a rug, believing he was safe from dangerโ€”and he awoke with a tent peg lodged in his head (Jud. 4:17-21). Samson slept in Delilahโ€™s arms without a care in the world, and she shaved his locks, sapping him of strength (Jud. 16:19). David swiped Saulโ€™s spear while he obliviously slumbered on the ground (1 Sam. 26:12). When there is danger afoot, you cannot afford to carelessly fall asleepโ€”you might wake up hairless, weaponless, or even dead. That is why Paul the apostle admonished all Christians to, โ€œBe on the alertโ€ (1 Cor. 16:13a, NASB).

Believers must be wide-awake, wary, and watchful for spiritual danger. Disciples of the Lord must keep their eyes peeled for spiritual danger lest they become blindsided. Soldiers in Christโ€™s army must keep their ears to the ground for spiritual threats so that they donโ€™t end up on the ground in defeat. Saints must stay on their toes so that their feet will not slip into temptation. Victory in spiritual warfare requires vigilance, but sleeping on the job results in vulnerability and being vanquished.

And the threats believers should watch out for are the Tempter and temptation. Peter exhorted believers in 1 Peter 5:8, โ€œBe sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.โ€ If you are a believer, you must stay sharp because Satan is always stalking you. Similarly, Jesus commanded Christians: โ€œWatch and pray that you may not enter into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weakโ€ (Matt. 26:41). As a believer, your only defense against temptation is keeping your eyes peeled for the things which seduce you, and keeping your eyes on the Lord in prayer.

The Scripture tells us that the threats presented by Satan and posed by our own flesh are so cunning and crafty that we must watch for spiritual danger even while we pray. As Paul said in Colossians 4:2, โ€œContinue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving.โ€ Thus, like a soldier during the night-watch, we must stay awake and remain aware of Satanโ€™s illusions and inducements, and our own fleshly inclinations to wander into wickedness. We must watch our surroundings and watch our souls. We must look around for the devilโ€™s deceptions and look within, diligently watching our hearts which are prone to many seductions and lusts.

It is when we get caught napping that we fall into trouble. The great Puritan, William Gurnall, who wrote an impressive volume on spiritual warfare, said as much when he warned,

โ€œThe saintโ€™s sleeping time is Satanโ€™s tempting time; every fly dares venture to creep on a sleeping lion. Thus, the Christian asleep in security may soon be surprised so as to lose much of his spiritual strength.โ€

Sin and Satan never sleep, so neither can we.

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Pick up a copy of Brandon’s latest book, Fundamentals for the Faithful, which explains the importance of all the basics which every believer should know:

A Soft Answer | Bible Gleanings | October 26-27, 2024

The vile voicemails and pestering phone calls wouldnโ€™t stop. Michael Weisser was the newly installed rabbi of the oldest Jewish congregation in Lincoln, Nebraska, and a local KKK leader tried to run him out of town by harassing him over the phone. As the intimidation intensified, Michael and his wife started receiving hate mail with messages such as, โ€œThe KKK is watching you, scum.โ€ They even received unsettling packages with white supremacist brochures and pamphlets. The Weissers didnโ€™t know what to do, until Michael got an idea: return good for evil.

After doing some research, Michael learned that the manโ€™s name was Larry Trapp, and he began leaving Trapp voicemails as wellโ€”but not the kind youโ€™d expect. On one occasion, Weisser left a message, saying, โ€œLarry, thereโ€™s a lot of love out there. Youโ€™re not getting any of it. Donโ€™t you want some?โ€ One day, Larry answered the phone angrily, and Michael responded to the wheelchair-bound KKK leader, โ€œI know youโ€™re in a wheelchair and I thought maybe I could take you to the grocery store or something.โ€ The fervor of Trappโ€™s fury subsided and he replied, โ€œThatโ€™s nice of you, but Iโ€™ve got that covered. Thanks anyway.โ€

Michael eventually got through to Larry through similar conversations and acts of kindness. According to the New York Times, Larry resigned from the Ku Klux Klan on November 16, 1991, and he and Michael became good friends. The Weissers even converted their living room into a bedroom for Larry when his health declined, and he died in the same loving home that he once threatened. Although Michael didnโ€™t believe in the Old Testamentโ€™s book of Proverbs, he certainly believed in the effectiveness of what Solomon wrote in Proverbs 15:1, โ€œA soft answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.โ€ Michael also unknowingly practiced the words of Proverbs 25:15, which says, โ€œWith patience a ruler may be persuaded, and a soft tongue will break a bone.โ€ 1

This Jewish rabbi exemplified what all Christians should do: speak softly to the spiteful. Someone with a fiery spirit of fury will only be fueled if we respond with the same level of anger. However, someoneโ€™s anger can often be extinguished by the water of a soft answer. Believers can diffuse distressing situations with hostile persons by choosing their words carefully and remaining calm. When a believerโ€™s speech is โ€œseasoned with salt,โ€ it may often smother flames of hostility (cf. Col. 4:6). 

The greatest Jewโ€”Jesusโ€”also exemplified this. During His unjust trial before Pilate, Jesus never lost His cool (Matt. 27:11-14). When Peter rashly cut off the guardโ€™s ear, Jesus calmly told him to put his sword away (Matt. 26:52-54). Even while being crucified, Christ did not pray a curse upon His enemiesโ€”He prayed for their forgiveness (Luke 23:34). Try responding to the scornful with a soft answer, and you may be surprised by the results.

  1. This story has also been told in Jonah Berger’s insightful book, How to Change Anyone’s Mind on pp. 51-60. โ†ฉ๏ธŽ

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Pick up a copy of Brandon’s latest book, Fundamentals for the Faithful, which explains the importance of all the basics which every believer should know:

Slack in Zeal | Bible Gleanings | October 5-6, 2024

It definitely wasnโ€™t music to my earsโ€”quite the opposite, as a matter of fact. I tuned my guitar strings as low as possible to slacken them and make them easier to remove. But just for fun, I attempted to play a song on the loosened strings, but they were too relaxed to strike a chord. The low hum of the strings sounded like two growling dogs squabbling with three yowling cats. Despite its beauty and value, the guitar was useless because the slackened strings frustrated it from fulfilling its fundamental function: producing a lovely sound.

Likewise, what rings true in the Scripture is that the believerโ€™s primary and paramount purpose is to glorify the Lord by producing a life-song that causes Him to rejoice with singing (Zeph. 3:17). The Lord wants His people to compose a beautiful and blended โ€œmelodyโ€ of faith, hope, love, and joy, along with all other virtues required for a God-pleasing harmony (cf. Psalm 19:14). And zeal is to Christian living what tuned guitar strings are to music: without it, the rhythm is ruined. Unfortunately, a believerโ€™s life sounds like a broken record when zeal and passion are slackened. That is why Paul said that a saintโ€™s zeal must be tuned up and turned up in order to live a life that is like music to Godโ€™s ears: โ€œDo not be slothful in zeal, be fervent in spirit, serve the Lordโ€ (Rom. 12:11).

Zeal, which is the devotion and diligence with which we serve the Lord, should never smolder or be smotheredโ€”it should always burn blazing hot. Whatever we do for the Lord should be done with all of our might, with fervent enthusiasm and passionate haste, not with laziness or lethargy (Eccl. 9:10). The Lord wants us to be โ€œzealous for good worksโ€ (Titus 2:14), meaning that we should be eager and excited about doing good things in His name and for His glory. He even commands us to be zealous in our repentance, to be gleeful instead of gloomy when wholeheartedly turning away from our sins (2 Cor. 7:11; Rev. 3:19). And most importantly, the Lord wants us to be like Christ, who was consumed with zeal for the Lordโ€™s house (John 2:9).

Thus, every believerโ€™s constant prayer should be something like the opening two stanzas of O Thou Who Camest From Above, a timeless hymn written by Charles Wesley (1707-1788), which says:

โ€œO thou who camest from above the fire celestial to impart, kindle a flame of sacred love on the mean altar of my heart! There let it for thy glory burn with inextinguishable blaze, and trembling to its source return in humble prayer and fervent praise.โ€

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

Pick up a copy of Brandon’s latest book, Fundamentals for the Faithful, which explains the importance of all the basics which every believer should know:

Whimsical Worship | Bible Gleanings | September 28-29, 2024

God rejected Cain because of it (Gen. 4:5). It caused Nadab and Abihu to be incinerated by holy flames (Lev. 10:1-2). According to 2 Chronicles 26:19, it was the cause of Uzziahโ€™s sudden and swift leprosy. It is why the earth split open and swallowed up Korah, Dathan, and Abiram (Numb. 16:31-35). What was it? Careless worship.

The Scripture is replete with stories of those who vainly attempted to โ€œworshipโ€ God on their own terms, and scorched spots on the ground where people once stood reveals how the Lord feels about it. Many irreverent worshipers in the Bible approached the Lord of glory recklessly and rashly, with no recognition of His remarkable resplendenceโ€”and they paid the price. With too low a view of God and too high a view of themselves, they offered worship to God which was not in line with His character or commands. They were cursed by their own carelessness when they tried to worship the Lord in ways He had not prescribed, and with an indifference He had prohibited. Thus, the testimony of Scripture could not be clearer: God cares about the way in which we worship Him. 

God wants our worship to be sincere, submissive, and Scripture-alignedโ€”and He values that over merely outward expressions. He doesnโ€™t care about lip-service as much as He cares about heart-surrender (Isa. 29:13). The authenticity of our worship matters more to God than the amount of our worship. One heart which fears and adores Him is worth more than thousands of hypocritical and half-hearted offerings: โ€œWhat to me is the multitude of your sacrifices? says the LORD; I have had enough of burnt offerings of rams and the fat of well-fed beasts; I do not delight in the blood of bulls, or of lambs, or of goatsโ€ (Isa. 1:11; cf. Amos 5:21-25). The Lord even tells us that He would rather receive no worship than receive negligent, nonchalant, or nonsensical worship: โ€œOh that there were one among you who would shut the doors, that you might not kindle fire on my altar in vain! I have no pleasure in you, says the LORD of hosts, and I will not accept an offering from your handโ€ (Malachi 1:10).

All of these stories and stern strictures sound forth one sobering and sanctifying truth: God is holy, and worshiping Him is serious business. The Lord is not the โ€œman upstairs,โ€ a cosmic grandpa, or a spiritual Santa Clausโ€”He is a consuming fire (Heb. 12:29). Because of this, worship is not a game nor something we should enter into lightly. Rather, the Lord should be worshiped with utmost awe, vigorous obedience, and maximum reverence. Because of the gravity of His presence, the greatness of His character, and the glory of His name, our worship of Him in public and private must be wholehearted, not whimsical.

Brandon is the pastor of Bandana Baptist Church in Bandana, Kentucky, where he lives with his wife, Dakota, and their three dogs. Brandon and Dakota previously served as foster parents through Sunrise Children’s Services of Kentucky. Brandon is also a published author and his Bible Gleanings columns are featured in over sixteen publications throughout Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, and Indiana. He is also a devotional contributor for Kentucky Today, a news publication of the Kentucky Baptist Convention, and an editor at Reforming the Heart.

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