Thursday, April 18, 2013

How to trap a Fruit Fly


Confession: lately we have had an infestation of fruit flies in our kitchen.  I must say that there is little that I find more annoying than fruit flies!  The things multiply like crazy and claim any sort of sweet food that is not actively guarded within a matter of seconds.  And on top of it, they just make you feel gross, like you have a dirty house and contaminated food.  So needless to say, we have been making every effort to get our little fruit fly problem under control quickly.  I have been cleaning and sanitizing our kitchen like it is a hospital and quickly picking up food that is not being eaten (which is surprisingly often with a 3 year old). 

In addition, we have set out a number of fruit fly traps.  If you’ve never seen a fruit fly trap before, it is surprisingly easy to make.  Rather than actively pursuing and hunting down to fruit flies, the traps work by slowly luring them in.  We set out a few bottles with apple cider vinegar and a little piece of really ripe banana.  The flies are immediately attracted to the bottle, but it takes them a while to venture down inside.  They sit around the rim of the bottle for quite some time.  After about a day or so, they start to get a bit more comfortable and go down into the bottle.  As you can guess, they can’t get back out and wind up drowning themselves in the alluring death trap awaiting them.  I know this sounds a little harsh, but did I mention just how annoying these little bugs are?

Surprisingly, the Lord used these fruit fly traps to teach me a very important lesson about sin and death.  He showed me that just like these fruit flies, the most effective way that we are lured in and trapped by sin is slowly and subtly, and that ultimately we are being seduced to death.  Let me give you a few examples of what I mean.

The enemy doesn’t catch many of us with the allure of going and killing someone right off the bat.  We know better than that.  Rather, he uses the slow, seductive trap of bitterness, resentment, unresolved anger, unforgiveness.  These smell sweet to us.  We can justify them, and find ourselves being sucked in by a very convincing lie.  In our bitterness and resentment, we believe the lie that we are justified in our anger.  Someone has wronged us, and we believe that it is our right to be angry with that person who has not asked or sought out our forgiveness.  Yes, we know that the Bible says to forgive up to 70 x 7, but this is different…do you know what they did to me…they clearly don’t deserve that sort of forgiveness and surely Jesus would agree with us if he knew the specifics of our situation.  And so we sit on the rim of the trap, just stewing there for a while.  After sitting there long enough, we become comfortable.  I’m fine, I’m not in any danger here…maybe I’ll just take a little peek inside and go a little deeper.  And so we are lured in, the end ultimately being death. 

 

In the garden when Satan tempted Eve and the Adam to eat the forbidden fruit and disobey God, they did not experience physical death immediately.  But death was certain and did in fact come, for them and for all people.  In the same way, we may not experience the death from our sin immediately, but ultimately all sin does lead to death.  The Bible says that “the wages of sin is death.”  There is no sin that does not lead to death. 

Here are a few more “fruit fly” traps that I feel we can easily get sucked into and the lies that we believe, luring us in…

-Sexual impurity….”It’s just today’s culture to have sex before marriage and is not realistic to think that people will be virgins when they marry.  Don’t be so old fashioned.”

-Overindulgence (materialism and gluttony)…”I deserve it.  I don’t want to wait for later, I want it now.”

-Pride…”God didn’t give me this, I earned it, I did it.”

-Selfishness….”They owe me.  When they ___, then I’ll ___. ”

-Harshness, unkindness, irritability…”They made me act that way.  I had no choice, did you hear the way they treated me?”

 

These are just a few areas where the Lord showed me we are so easily lured in to death.  We sit on the rim, justifying our behavior even though we know that the Bible teaches us contrary.  We know what  the Bible teaches us about forgiveness, purity, self control, humility, selflessness, and lovingkindness, etc, but often times what we don’t realize is that the reason God commands us to abide in these is to lead us to life!  Jesus said, “The thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy. I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly.” (John 10:10)

 

My prayer for you today is that the Lord will show you if you are sitting on the rim of a trap and lead you you life instead of death.  One more observation that I will share with you about my fruit fly traps is that the fruit flies are never sitting there alone.  They always have company sitting on the rim with them.  Don’t look around at the others in your life to see if you are “safe” from sin and death.  Rather, look up.  Look at the Lord, seek to see what His Word says knowing that it is there to lead you unto life, and ultimately to life found in Jesus Christ. 

May God bless you richly.

 

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Power Source

The other day, my almost 3 year old was helping me with the laundry…a task I will most certainly encourage!  After throwing the clothes in the dryer together, he wanted to push the buttons to start the dryer "all by himself".  He wanted to push the red button first (which was the stop/pause button) and I tried to explain to him that unless he pressed the power button first, all of the other buttons were useless.
This is a very familiar concept to us in our power laden culture.  We rely heavily on electrical power, battery power, etc.  It is common sense to us that if the cell phone is powered off, then it cannot make or receive calls, send texts, take pictures, or do anything else that we do with our phones today.  If the lamp is not first plugged in, it will not work.  We even see this principle to be true in our bodies and the way we are made.  Our spinal cord is like the power cable to the rest of our body.  In cases where the spinal cord is severed, even though the arms and the legs have no problem in themselves, they become completely useless if their power source has been cut off. 
As I meditated on this concept, the Lord showed me that the same principle is very  much true in our spiritual life as well.  If we do not first plug into the power source, every other attempt to do any work in our own strength is useless and ineffective. 
How often do we jump up and attempt to start the day and forget to connect to our power source?  Do you find yourself frustrated, feeling like you can never get it all done, inefficient, ineffective?  Are you drained, weary, continually tired feeling like you have no energy to tackle the tasks before you?  I would propose that maybe it is time to recharge your battery, maybe you need to remember to switch on your power.
But what is this power source?  Let’s see what the Bible has to say:
1 Cor 1:24 Yet to those who are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ is God's power and God's wisdom
Acts 10:38 “…God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, and … he went around doing good and healing all who were under the power of the devil, because God was with him.
Luke 1:35 The angel answered, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God.
1 Thes 1:5 because our gospel came to you not simply with words, but also with power, with the Holy Spirit and with deep conviction. …
Acts 1:8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.
Rom 15:13 May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.
Isaiah 40:29 He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.
John 15:4-5 Abide in me (Jesus), and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit by itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in me. I am the vine; you are the branches. Whoever abides in me and I in him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing.
There are so so so many more verses I could keep listing about power, but I believe a few things have been made clear. 
1.    God is power. 
We see in these verses all three parts of the Trinity as the source of power.  The Most High God, the Father, is the source of power and thus endues and anoints with power.  Jesus Christ, the son of God and God Himself, is the Power of God.  The Holy Spirit, who is the Spirit of God and the third person of the Trinity, is the power of God poured out on us.
2.    The Gospel is Power. 
 
The Gospel is not merely something to be shared with someone once to bring them to salvation in Christ.  The Gospel is more than just good news for unbelievers.  The Gospel is greater than just words.  The Gospel is power!  The Word, or the Gospel, has always been (John 1:1-2) and always will be (1 Peter 1:24-25).  When we receive and abide in the Word of God, we receive and abide in Power.
 
3.    The Power of God is made available to us.
 
It is amazing to me to think that not only is God powerful and the source of all power, but that God makes that power available to us through Himself.  He does not hoard it and keep it all, He doesn’t Lord it over us as a cruel master, He is not corrupted by it.  But rather, in fullness of power He invites us to come to Him and tap into His limitless power.  He invites us to abide in Him.  He offers up His Holy Spirit to come and to dwell in us and anoint us with power from on high. 
 
Wow, what an offer!  My question of response to you is, are you taking Him up on this offer?  Are you tapping into God, the source of all power, by abiding in His presence, His Word, and receiving His Holy Spirit?  I will leave you with one final thought that I read from my Streams in the Desert devotional this morning:
“We are able to have as much of God as we want.  Christ puts the key to His treasure chest in our hands and invites us to take all we desire.  If someone is allowed into a bank vault, told to help himself to the money, and leaves without one cent, whose fault is it if he remains poor?  And whose fault is it that Christians usually have such meager portions of the free riches of God?”
I pray today that you will tap into the limitless and powerful presence of God.  I pray that you will indulge deeply in the free riches of God.  And indeed, as Paul writes in His letter to the Romans, “May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.”