Tag Archives: obedience

Why Do You Love God?

You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the first and great commandment.

Matthew 22:37-38, NKJV

Jesus made this statement in response to a lawyer’s question about the greatest commandment. In His response Jesus actually condensed all of the ten commandments into two: love the Lord and love your neighbor. If we obey these two commandments then we obey all ten. The first four commandments speak of our relationship with God, and the last six of our relationship with others.

The question I would like to address is seen in the title of this blog: why do you love God? Jesus said we are to love him with our whole being: heart, soul, and mind. And I feel quite sure that any Christian, in response to the question, “Do you love God?”, would respond with an immediate “Yes”. But if this question was followed by another, “Why do you love Him? “, we might get different responses.

Let’s think of our response in correlation with our relationship with our children. Most Christian parents would probably admit that, for some period of time, they taught their children to love and obey them by using fear as a motivation. We would develop certain rules, both spoken and unspoken, to instill in our children a sense of obedience. We might even use conditional phrases to convey this concept to them. They may come in the form of “If…but” phrases. “If you obey then… But if you disobey…”

We actually see God using this tactic in His relations with Israel in the Old Testament. He made certain unconditional promises to individuals such as Abraham and David, but He also made conditional promises to the nation as a whole. This was to serve as a deterrent for the nation, as they realized that their actions of obedience and disobedience had consequences – serious consequences.

We as parents use this same tactic with the hope that it will serve as a deterrent with our children. We actually teach them to obey us out of a certain level of fear of the consequences if they disobey.

But we don’t want them to continue in this state of fear. We want them to grow in their relationship with us to the point where they obey us out of love. This could actually be thought of as fear in reverse. Parents desire that their children grow to the point that they obey not out of the fear of punishment, but out of the fear that to disobey would hurt the parent.

This is an amazing transition to witness. Children make it as they realize that their actions have consequences for their parents. Parents want the best for their children and invest so much time, energy, and resources into this endeavor. They desire that their efforts will eventually result in their children truly responding to them in love – even in the fear that to do otherwise would hurt the parent(s).

Have you made that transition? First, in your relationship with family relationships. Do you, as a parent, invest in the lives of your children out of your love for them? And do you, as a child, display a sincere love for your parents in striving to show your love by your life of obedience?

And then think about your relationship with God. Do you obey Him out of a sense of fear, or of love? Certainly, we are to maintain a reverential fear of God simply because of who He is, but we should obey Him out of our deep, abiding love for Him and what He has done for us. Have you grown in your relationship with Him to the level of love, or are you still languishing in a groveling fear because you have not yet grown to love Him with all your heart, soul, and mind? He certainly deserves our love, worship, adoration, and obedience.

Until next time:

Blessings!

Passing a New Way

There shall be a space between you and it [the Ark of the Covenant], about two thousand cubits by measure. Do not come near it, that you may know the way by which you must go, for you have not passed this way before.

Joshua 3:4, NKJV, emphasis added

This passage of Scripture amazes me every time I read it. The scene is the banks of the Jordan river. The characters of the story are Joshua and the masses of Israel. They have just spent 40 years wandering in the wilderness of Sinai. Moses, their leader for all those 40 years, is now dead. Joshua has been commissioned to be Moses’ successor, and his first major assignment is to lead the masses across the Jordan, which, by the way, is at flood stage.

So what does Joshua instruct the people to do? Stay back! Keep the Ark in clear sight, and don’t do anything until you see what the priests carrying the Ark do. In essence, wait for God’s guidance. Wait for God to show the way. Wait for clear direction from God. Don’t act presumptuously.

Earlier in the book of Joshua, God had given Joshua the following instructions:

This book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate in it day and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success.

Joshua 1:8, NKJV

Joshua was instructed to stay in the Word of God – to meditate in it day and night. It would result in Joshua and the people experiencing prosperity and success. Their source of instruction, which would lead to their experiencing God’s best, would be found in God’s Word.

As we move into a new year, we are passing a way that we have never been before. We are like the Israelites preparing to go across the Jordan into the promised land, having no idea what awaited them there. They would soon discover that in passing this new way they would encounter blessing and prosperity, but they would also encounter hardship and adversity. Enemies were on the other side of the river. Obstacles of varying degrees of difficulty would be their lot. They were facing uncertainty on every hand.

So how were they to know what to do? They were to keep their eyes on the Ark, which represented the very presence of God. As we pass from 2023 into 2024, in this present cultural climate of discarding the teachings of Scripture and embracing the shifting sands of cultural relativism, we need to constantly remind ourselves that we need, we MUST, keep our eyes on the Word of God. It is only then that we will have the necessary instructions in how to face the uncertainties that lie ahead, and to maneuver through the morass of the current liberal fight against the truths of Scripture.

Joshua and the Israelites were about to enter a land where the people worshiped other gods. They were not to embrace the teachings of those religious systems, nor were they to try to synchronize the worship of God with the worship of those false gods. So how are they to know the difference? They were to keep their eyes on the teachings of God. They were to meditate in His Word day and night. Then they would experience the manifold blessings of God.

And, one final word, we must remember that success and prosperity from the Biblical standpoint is not about good health and financial prosperity. It is about submitting ourselves to the will of the Father, and accepting whatever comes our way as His plan for us. He will lead us, just as He did the Israelites as they crossed the Jordan into the promised land. It would be a land flowing with milk and honey, but it would also be a land filled with obstacles that stood in the way of attaining those blessings. All of it was part of God’s plan.

As we prepare to enter 2024, as we prepare to pass a way we have never been before, let’s keep God’s word, and a desire for God’s will, ever before us. And let us embrace every eventuality in the coming year as opportunities to bear witness to His glory. Let’s let our light shine before others so that God might receive the glory. And let us seek His will above and beyond all else. It is then that we will prosper and have good success. I pray that each of us will experience His grace, His goodness, and His endurance for the adventures and the challenges that lie ahead in this new year.

Until next time:

Blessings!