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| Photo by hüsamettin_alpaslan 2011 |
WEEKLY CHRISTIAN BIBLE STUDY AND DEVOTIONAL FROM GOD’S WORD, FOR THE NEWLY SAVED AND MORE SEASONED BELIEVER, AND FOR OTHERS SEEKING TRUTH. OUR PRAYER IS TO ENCOURAGE YOU AND STRENGTHEN YOUR FAITH IN GOD’S INFINITE MERCY, LOVE AND GRACE, AND IN THE GOSPEL OF THE DEATH, BURIAL AND RESURRECTION OF HIS SON JESUS CHRIST, THAT ALL WHO SEEK HIM HAVE ETERNAL, ABUNDANT LIFE.
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| Photo by hüsamettin_alpaslan 2011 |
As many prepare to celebrate Valentine’s Day, we think
about romantic love, and the joy of committing our lives to our beloved and
anticipating the same in return. But true love is not reserved for one day a
year, but should be in our hearts continually, regardless of the circumstances.
Many couples began their marriage by promising to love one another for better
or for worse, in sickness and in health, for richer or poorer, until parted by death.
Most of us believe that we love our spouse, children, and
family deeply, as they do us. We hope that should the need arise, we would
sacrifice anything for their good – even our life if circumstances demanded it.
But we pray to God that we would never have to find out whether our love or
theirs would meet that standard.
In contrast, God’s love is infinite, which means He can’t
love us any more than He already does, nor could He love us any less. What a
relief to know that we don’t need to work at earning His love, for we are saved
by His grace through our faith (Ephesians 3:8-9) in the death,
burial and resurrection of His son (1 Corinthians 15:1-4) as the
only Way to Heaven (John 14:6).
And similarly, we don’t need to walk on eggshells for fear
of losing His love when we sin, for if we confess our sins, He forgives us (1
John 1:9). Infinity plus anything, or infinity minus anything, is still
infinity.
We can’t begin to wrap our heads around the concept of how
much God loves us. God Himself is Love (1 John 4:8). He loved us
so much that He gave Jesus, His only begotten Son, to suffer and die in our place (John 3:16) so that those who trust Him would live forever.
Jesus Christ, the sinless Lamb of God, loved us so much
that He willingly died for us on the cross to pay the sin debt we could not
begin to repay. He loved His earthly mother Mary so much that in the midst of
His agony, He arranged for His beloved disciple John to take care of her for
the rest of her life (John 19:26-27). He loved those who
crucified Him so much that He asked His Father to forgive them (Luke 23:34).
On the cross, Jesus was covered in blood, oozing wounds,
sweat and tears, devoid of physical beauty, His human body brutally disfigured beyond
recognition (Isaiah 53:2). Not the lovely, frilly sentimentality of a
Valentine, but the gut-wrenching, all-consuming fire of self-sacrificing love
that knows no bounds.
His death satisfied the demands of God the Father, Who is
perfectly holy and just, while His resurrection allowed all who trust Him to
live forever with Him in Heaven. How can we begin to comprehend that God
Himself, Creator of all, Love incarnate, loved us, regardless of how much or
even whether we loved Him? (1 John 4:9)
God has loved each of us since before the beginning of
time. He has loved us even while we were His enemies and children of the devil
(Romans 5:8). But once we are saved, we become God’s children and
friends, and God then loves us as members of His own family (Matthew 12:
49-50).
Because God is Love, His love enters our heart along with
the Holy Spirit at the moment of salvation (1 John 4: 16). His
love in our heart replaces not only hate, but also fear that keeps us from
sharing His love and His Word with others. We love him, because he first loved
us (1 John 4:17-19).
As humans, we experience different kinds of love. We may
say “I love chocolate!” but that means a craving, preference or desire – not
actual love. There are three Greek words for love. “Eros” means physical
or sexual attraction. “Phileo” means brotherly love, or love that we
have for our family, friends and like-minded people. Generally this type of
love means that we have expectations of the ones we love – we treat them well,
and we hope they treat us well in return.
But the Biblical word for God’s love is “agape,”
which means self-sacrificing love.
The apostle Peter boasted that he would follow Christ even
to the death, but when Jesus was arrested and crucified, Peter denied Him three
times. But Jesus, because of His infinite love, not only forgave him but gave
Peter three opportunities to express his love to Christ once He rose again.
Three times He asked Peter, “Do you love me?” using the word “agape,” or
self-sacrificing love. But each time Peter replied, he used the word “phileo,”
or brotherly love (John 21:15-17).
Jesus told Peter that if he indeed loved Him, he should
feed His sheep. If we love Christ, we can show it and please Him by sharing His
love and His Word with others.
God loves us unconditionally, not in exchange for anything
we could give us, because He needs nothing from us (Psalm 50:10).
He loves us even when we sin or rebel against Him. His mercy spares us from the
punishment our sins deserve, and His grace gives us blessings we don’t deserve
(Romans 5:20-21)
Not only does God love us infinitely and unconditionally – He
loves us eternally. He has loved us since before the beginning of time, when He
conceived a special and perfect plan for each of us who would become His
children (Ephesians 2:10; Jeremiah 29:11).
He loves us throughout our lifetime, saving us through His
mercy while we were still sinners, and allowing us to sit in heavenly places
with Him once we are saved. God will love us forever, “that in the ages to
come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us
through Christ Jesus (Ephesians 2: 4-7).
The love of Christ, shown to us in His mercy and grace,
lasts forever. Each of the 26 verses of Psalm 136 ends with “for
his mercy endureth for ever.” It’s as if God really wants to emphasize that
He will love us throughout eternity!
Once we are born again, God gives us eternal life in Heaven
and promises to give us glorified bodies at the Rapture, so that we will live
with Him and experience His perfect love, joy and peace forever. Once we are
truly saved by making a heart decision to follow Christ, we can never lose our
salvation nor God’s love (Romans 8:39).
In 1 Corinthians 13, known as the “love
chapter,” the apostle Paul describes the attributes of perfect, divine love. It
is patient, kind, long-suffering. It is not envious, rude, proud, self-serving,
or easily provoked. It “rejoices in the truth; bears all things, believes
all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails.”
Paul goes on to say that of faith, hope, love, the greatest
of these is love. Why? Because in Heaven, we will no longer need faith, for our
faith will have become sight. We will no longer need hope, for our hope of the
Rapture, glorified bodies, and eternal life with Jesus Christ and our loved ones
in Him will have been realized.
But love? Praise God, we will experience His infinite,
unconditional love throughout eternity!
Laurie Collett
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| Art by The Catholic Guy 2012 |
© 2015 Laurie Collett
Reposted from the archives
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| Photo of Ark replica by Ben Schumin 2007 |
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| Photo by Kristof Zerbe 2014 |
To cap off the holiday season, my family and I recently
visited Christmas Town at Busch Gardens Tampa. While exploring all the animal
exhibits, walking through the festively decorated park, and watching the
entertaining shows, we were eagerly anticipating sunset, when the park’s main
holiday attraction would come to life.
Lights! As we had learned from the trivia quiz preceding
the ice show, workers began stringing lights from trees, archways, and
buildings starting in June! Good thing, because there were more than 3 million
lights, covering 60 miles if lined up end to end!
Our viewing of lights began auspiciously with the Serengeti
Light Show, a spectacular display on a huge tree-shaped screen and on the
neighboring buildings of what seemed like hundreds of thousands of lights, all
changing colors and patterns in synchrony to Christmas music. Impressed and
delighted, we were ready for more!
With all the exercise from exploring throughout the day, we
had also worked up quite an appetite! So we began the long trek to Christmas
Town, not only to view the lights but to sample the delectable treats from
various food vendors that opened only after dark.
But as we approached the entrance, the path grew dim, and
we wondered what had happened to all the lights we had been promised. The main
gate to Christmas Town had been barred shut, and a park officer informed us
that it would be closed all evening because of a power outage!
Disappointed, we made our way back to the tram taking us to
the parking lot. As we walked to our car, however, we were unexpectedly blessed
to see the true star of the show – the moon!
On that night was a supermoon, also known as a Wolf Moon,
which was particularly large due to the moon illusion, in which low-hanging
moons appear oversized. It was veiled in wispy clouds that gave it a silvery
aura, with the moon’s familiar landmarks alternately highlighted or shrouded,
depending on how the clouds danced in the changing winds.
The experience reminded me that all of man’s efforts pale
in comparison to God’s majesty, creativity, power and handiwork (Psalm 19:1).
Because we are made in His image (Genesis 1:26), we too are
creative and productive, with feats of ingenuity producing artificial beauty
like that in the light show.
But none of this is possible unless God allows it, for
without Him, we can do nothing (John 15:5). Because we live in a
sin-cursed world (Genesis 3:14-19), all it takes is a switch
malfunction or tripped circuit breaker or some other mechanical failure for all
of man’s brilliant ideas and hard work to malfunction. Often the failure stems
from our own mind, body, or will (Psalm 73:26).
But God never fails (Deuteronomy 31:6; Joshua
23:14). He consistently and faithfully regulates the rising and setting
of the sun and moon, the circling of the planets in their orbits, and the
movements of the stars and galaxies across the universe (Psalm 19:1-6;
104). That night, sadly invisible to us because of the clouds, the
supermoon was accompanied by a particularly luminous planet Jupiter and the
constellation Orion, which would have been a spectacular celestial display
under better viewing conditions.
Even though we couldn’t see Jupiter and Orion, we knew that
God had placed them there. Because we walk by faith and not by sight (2
Corinthians 5:7), we know He is working all things together for our
good and His glory (Romans 8:28), even when we can’t see the road
map or the destination of the journey He has planned for us since before time
began (2 Timothy 1:9). It is enough to hear His still, small voice (1 Kings 19:12) guiding our next step, just as He did for
Abram when he took the first step of faith to the Promised Land (Genesis
12:1-3).
The moon’s brilliant illumination that night also reminded
me that we have no life or light of our own, but only that which God has given
us (John 1:1-9). The moon itself is a mass of stone cold, dark
rock. But when the sun sets and shines on it, sunlight reflected from the moon
lights up the dark night.
Only Jesus Christ is the true Light (John 1:9),
the Light of the World (John 8:12; 9:5). Once we are saved
by trusting in His death, burial and resurrection (1 Corinthians 15:1-4)
as the only Way to Heaven (John 14:6), He gives us the privilege
of being His lights in this dark, sin-cursed world (Matthew 5:14).
May His light in and on us shine so brightly before men
that they can see the true Light and find the Way to His saving grace and to eternal life!
Copyright 2026 Laurie Collett
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| Photo by Tulumnes 2013 |
New Year’s Eve and its celebrations are a great reminder
that any ending always leads to a new beginning. During the countdown of the
last moments of 2025, we thanked God for His blessings, provision and
protection throughout the year, and also for His giving us a fresh start in
2026. As His mercies are new every morning (Lamentations 3:22-23),
we can begin every morning and every year with renewed hope that He will
continue the good work He began in us (Philippians 1:6).
The cycle of beginning and ending permeates our lives. The
sun sets on one day and rises again the next (Matthew 5:45). We may
end our term in high school and begin college. We may leave one job or ministry
and begin another, ideally in response to God’s direction rather than in
rebellion against it. As Clive Staples Lewis, British author of “The Chronicles
of Narnia,” wrote, “There are better things ahead than any we leave behind.”
God created many wonderful examples of how an apparent
ending leads to a new beginning. A plant dies and goes to seed, but the
apparently lifeless seed germinates and gives rise to a new plant (1
Corinthians 15:36-38). A lowly, earthbound caterpillar encases itself
in a chrysalis and secretes enzymes that completely liquefy itself. Yet from
that biochemical soup a butterfly forms, eventually struggling to break free
from its shroud and emerge in a brilliant burst of color and flight. A baby
ends its nine months of silence in the darkness and security of the womb with a
triumphant (or outraged?) cry heralding its physical birth (John 16:21).
Even the musical scale ends on the same note with which the
next octave begins. Christ Himself is the Beginning and the Ending, the Alpha
and Omega, the First and Last (Revelation 1:8,11; 21:6; 22:13).
He is the self-existent great I AM Who existed in eternity past since before
time began (John 8:58), and Who will live and reign throughout
eternity future as King of Kings and Lord of Lords (1 Timothy 6:15; Revelation
17:14; 19:16).
His death on the cross to pay for our sins (Romans 3:25)
was the essential ending to His earthly life so that He could rise again,
becoming the firstborn with a glorified body (Romans 8:29; 1
Corinthians 15:20-23), so that all who trust Him will also live forever
(John 3:16). The destruction of most life on earth with the great flood in Noah’s day led to a cleansed, renewed planet populated by the remnant
of faithful Noah and his family, and by the creatures God commanded him to
bring into the ark (Genesis 7-10).
One day, after the Great Tribulation and Battle of
Armageddon in which Jesus Christ will defeat the enemies of Israel, Satan, sin
and death (1 Corinthians 15:24-28), the heavens and earth will
burn up with a fervent heat (2 Peter 3:10), giving way to the new
heavens and new earth (Isaiah 65:17; 66:22; 2 Peter 3:13)
where Jesus Christ will reign forever in the Heavenly City (Revelation 21:1-5;
Hebrews 11:16; 12:22).
What are the endings we must face on our way to the New
Jerusalem? The first is that we must come to the end of ourselves. Only when we
realize that we are sinners, doomed to hell, with no merit or power of our own
to save us (Romans 3:23), can we realize that we need a Savior,
turn to Him for forgiveness, repent of our sins, and ask Him to save us and
enter our heart as Lord of our new life (1 John 1:9; Revelation 3:20;
Ezekiel 36:26; 2 Corinthians 1:22; Galatians 4:6).
Then we are born again, beginning a new life in the family
of God (John 3:5-8). No longer are we His enemies and children of
the devil, for now we are God’s children (1 John 3:10),
joint-heirs with Christ (Romans 8:17), part of His body the
church (Colossians 1:18,24), betrothed to our Bridegroom (Isaiah
61:10), and ambassadors (2 Corinthians 5:20) and
co-laborers with Him in the kingdom of God (1 Corinthians 3:9).
Our first step of obedience should be believer’s baptism, or water immersion,
symbolizing our identification with His death, burial and resurrection (Matthew
28:19).
Like the unsaved, born-again believers experience physical death, unless they are still alive when Christ returns for his children.
Nothing on this earth seems like a more final ending than death, but for the
child of God, it is the beginning of new life with Jesus Christ and fellow
believers. To be absent from the body is to be present with the Lord (2
Corinthians 5:6-8). We will experience that joy forever, for we
received the gift of eternal life the moment we were saved by faith (John 3:16).
Even those who are living when Christ returns will
experience the end of life in their physical body. But what a glorious new
beginning! At the Rapture, our aging, frail, limited earthly bodies will be
instantly transformed into glorified bodies like that of Jesus Christ (1
Corinthians 15:35-38). Sin, death, pain, sorrow, illness and aging
shall be no more! In their place is eternal, abundant life (John 10:10)
in a body without physical limitation, and with the mind of Christ (1
Corinthians 2:16), for we shall know Him as He now knows us (1
Corinthians 13:12).
Then we shall live forever in a mansion He has uniquely
designed for each of us (John 14:1-3), in the Heavenly City so
resplendent that it defies physical description (Revelation 21:10-27).
We shall have infinite time to enjoy Him and our loved ones in Him, the beauty
of our surroundings, the fulfillment of worshiping Him in complete surrender
using the talents and gifts He gave us, and the purpose and productivity of
meaningful work uniquely suited to our abilities and personality.
So let us not fear or regret any earthly ending, but instead let us joyously anticipate the next beginning He has planned for us, and ultimately the blessed, living hope of the Rapture and eternal life with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ!
Copyright 2026 Laurie Collett