Pastor Terry Lema's Daily Devotions
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Grace for a Purpose

by TerryLema January 17, 2022

There is one last thought from Titus that I want to focus on this morning.  It closes out the paragraph that began in chapter 2:11. That last thought is “He gave Himself for us to redeem us from all lawlessness and to cleanse for Himself a people for His own possession, eager to do good works.” [2:14 HCSB]

Over the last couple days, we have seen that grace appeared (epiphainó) and was clearly shown in Christ Jesus. Grace instructs us so that we might develop Christ-like character. Grace strengthens us to wait for the return of Christ Jesus.

Christ redeemed and cleansed us for His own possession. He made us children of God, no longer bound by the chains of sin and fear of death. And while that is wonderful, it is not the end, but the beginning. The grace that Christ Jesus brought to us also gives us a purpose and zeal. The purpose is good works. The zeal is the eagerness to do them.

Eager. I like that word. One definition I read resonated with me … “waiting with bated breath.”

I remember waiting with bated breath for a bike for Christmas when I was eight. I did not think I would get it because it was not my year to get the “big” gift, it was my brother’s. I was pretty sure I would get a doll instead, but still I was eager for Christmas. My brother got a bike but hidden behind the tree was a big surprise. Somehow my parents found the money to get a bike for me also.

I also remember waiting with bated breath to get married, to turn 21, and for the birth of each of my children. I remember many times in life I have waited with bated breath.

Paul reminds us that now, as God’s precious children, we are to be eager – waiting with bated breath – for the next thing He asks of us.

Oh, LORD, give us that child-like eagerness to do Your good works. Amen and Amen.

January 17, 2022 0 comment
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Grace While We Wait

by TerryLema January 16, 2022

“…while we wait for the blessed hope and appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ.” [Titus 2:13 HCSB]

Paul in Titus 2:11 reminded us of the appearance (the epiphainó) of God’s grace for salvation for all people. That epiphany, a moment in which we suddenly see or understand something in a new or very clear way, came through Christ Jesus our Savior. The grace of God that was often cloaked in the Old Testament became very clear in the New when God sent His Precious Son to our earth to redeem us.

Paul goes on now to remind us of another appearing. The word is “epiphaneia” and it means appearing, manifestation, glorious display. We are now waiting for this appearing. It is our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior, Christ Jesus.

We wait now. Amid the difficulties of life, grace enables us to wait for that promise given in Acts 1:11 when Jesus ascended into heaven: “This same Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will so come in like manner as you saw Him go into heaven.” [HCSB]

This same Jesus who brought grace at His first appearance will one day appear again bringing the blessed hope and glory that God has promised. The assurance of that promise that Jesus will not only return but will return in glory and set everything right under the authority of the King brings comfort now.

Even so, give us grace to wait for Your return, LORD.

 

January 16, 2022 0 comment
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Grace Instructs Us

by TerryLema January 15, 2022

John 1:17: For the law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. [HCSB]

As I read the book of Titus this week, I was reminded that when Jesus came, grace and truth were clearly shown and made universally available for salvation to all people.  [Titus 2:11]

Grace is God providing salvation for His enemies so that they might become His children. But grace has other purposes beyond salvation. Grace is vital for our sanctification—for maturing. Grace enables our character to be conformed to the character of Christ Jesus.

Paul reminds us that grace instructs us “to deny godlessness and worldly lusts and to live in a sensible, righteous, and godly way in the present age.” [Titus 2:12 HCSB]

As you read that verse you cannot help but focus on the descriptions of character, both negative and positive. Negative—godlessness and worldly lusts. Positive—sensible, righteous, godly. We are to deny the negative and encourage the positive.

The character trait that stood out to me was sensible. It is “sóphronós” and it means with sound mind, soberly, temperately, discreetly. I have been in the church for five decades and I must admit that I have not always found the character trait sensible flourishing among believers.

Five decades in the church have taught me that too often Christians get sidetracked from the path of the Gospel. Often, they get bogged down in things that draw their attention away from the Cross of Christ and the salvation provided through Christ Jesus. They major in the minors and ignore the centrality of grace and faith.

So, church. Grace has been provided so that we might be instructed to abandon the negative character traits, embrace the positive ones … and be sensible!  Glory!

January 15, 2022 0 comment
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Epiphany: Grace Appeared

by TerryLema January 14, 2022

I was reading in the book of Titus this morning. Paul had left Titus, his “true son in common faith,” in Crete to “set right what was left undone.” [1:4-5 HCSB]

This was a particularly difficult job because the Cretan Christians were being assaulted by false teachers, and as Paul described them in vs 12, “Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons.” Paul certainly wasn’t one to mince words.

Most of chapter 1 and 2 are focused on those things that were left undone, but then the end of chapter 2 ends on a wonderful note about grace and blessed hope and the appearing of Christ Jesus.

It begins “For the grace of God has appeared with salvation for all people …” —Oh, let’s stop there. [2:11 HCSB]

Grace appeared! The word for appeared is “epiphainó.” It means to become clearly known.  We get our word epiphany from it. (Epiphany: a moment in which you suddenly see or understand something in a new or very clear way.)

God’s grace has always been present. It was present in the Garden when Adam & Eve failed, and God slayed an animal and covered them. It was present in the Levitical sacrificial system when once a year God rolled forward the sins of the nation until they rested on Christ Jesus at the cross.

Grace, however, became clearly known to “all people” when God sent His Precious Son because He loved us so!  Grace for all is now clearly shown and universally available.

Grace appeared! Now that’s an epiphany!

January 14, 2022 0 comment
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The Hope of Glory

by TerryLema January 13, 2022

It is Christ.

“God wanted to make known among the Gentiles the glorious wealth of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.” [Colossians 1:27 HCSB]

“When [Christ], who is your life, is revealed, then you also will be revealed with Him in glory.” [Colossians 3:4 HCSB]

“For our momentary light affliction is producing for us an absolutely incomparable eternal weight of glory.” [2 Corinthians 4:17 HCSB]

Since Christ is our eternal hope of glory … since our destiny is to be revealed with Christ in glory … then we must seek to make Christ our only hope in every part of our life here.  That means He is our only hope in every trial, every difficulty, every circumstance of this life.

We can know His comfort in our trials because we know that nothing we will experience in this life compares to that “incomparable eternal weight of glory” that is ours in Him.

He enables us to look at the struggles of this life as “light affliction.”

The things of life that nearly crush us, the deep losses we all will experience at some time, when put side by side with Christ (the hope of glory in us) will hardly make us pause in comparison. Once we bask in that light of glory, everything else will dim.

It is Christ. Completely. Gloriously. Everlastingly. Ours.

January 13, 2022 0 comment
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Hidden Treasures

by TerryLema January 12, 2022

It is Christ.

“All the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden in Him.” [Colossians 2:3 HCSB]

Wow, wisdom! Wow, knowledge!  And that wonderful word, “All!”

(All!) Knowledge is knowledge of God as revealed in our Savior and in Scripture.  It also means knowledge of ourselves as revealed in Scripture. We must remember that the Bible is the one book that reads us! It is living and reveals who and what we are as we search and study it.

(All!) Wisdom refers to the ability to apply all God’s revealed truth to our daily lives. Remember the two commands of God that we looked at on January 4, found in 1 John 3:22-23:  We are to have faith in Christ Jesus, and we are to love one another.  The wisdom (and knowledge) of God teaches us how to live and love those commands.

(All!) wisdom and knowledge are the true treasures of life and they are found in Christ Jesus alone.  It is Christ!

But then there is that little word “hidden.” It is “apokruphos” and it means hidden away, secret, stored up. That word implies that we need to seek out those treasures. They are not always lying around on the surface like seashells on a beach.

While they are hidden, however, they are not unattainable. In fact, God’s Holy Spirit has been given to us so that we might attain them. Jesus promised, “The Counselor, the Holy Spirit—the Father will send Him in My name—will teach you all things and remind you of everything I have told you.” [John 14:26 HCSB]

On the Day of Pentecost, Jesus fulfilled that promise. Now those who have surrendered their lives to Him are indwelt by the very Spirit of God who enables them to search for and attain (All!) those hidden treasures of wisdom and knowledge in Him.

Remember though, that while God has provided all we need, we still have to do a little digging!

January 12, 2022 0 comment
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Complete

by TerryLema January 11, 2022

It is Christ.

“For the entire fullness of God’s nature dwells bodily in Christ, and you have been filled by Him, who is the head over every ruler and authority.” [Colossians 2:9-10 HCSB]

The NKJV says, “…you are complete in Him….”

It is a done deal … well, sort of …. Ah, Paul, why could you not have just left it there?

“Him we preach, warning every man and teaching every man in all wisdom, that we may present every man mature in Christ Jesus.” [Colossians 1:28 HCSB]

We have been filled by Him, we are complete in Him, but still the aim is to present every man mature.

That is the tension we live in between what God has made us positionally and what we must continue to endeavor to become practically. We have it all, but it takes all of life to learn to walk in the spiritual blessings that are already ours in Christ Jesus.

That is discipleship. Translating our position into our practice. And the world has no wisdom to add to that. It can only detract and undermine our walk.

It is Christ.

Above all. His fullness makes us complete. LORD, help us realize that truth in every moment of life. Amen.

 

January 11, 2022 0 comment
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It Is Christ

by TerryLema January 10, 2022

I came across this quote from Charles Spurgeon the other day. “It is not thy hold on Christ that saves thee; it is Christ. It is not thy joy in Christ that saves thee; it is Christ. It is not even thy faith in Christ that saves thee, though that be the instrument. It is Christ’s blood and merit.”

It is Christ. The LORD Christ Jesus is everything. He is the heart and soul, the core of our life and discipleship.

“You are being renewed in knowledge according to the image of your Creator. In Christ there is not Greek and Jew, circumcision and uncircumcision, barbarian, Scythian, slave and free; but Christ is all and in all.” [Colossians 3:11 HCSB]

Christ is all and in all. All the things that we use to identify or distinguish ourselves, our ethnic identity, religious identity, social standing, political standing, economic standing, educational standing, all of that comes to naught in light of our renewal in Him. Christ is all and in all.

How far short we come in knowing and experiencing the all-sufficiency of Christ in us. How far short we are in being Christ-centered in our personal life (our relationship with Him) or even in our “religious” life (our ministry).

The last couple of years have sought to draw our attention away from this truth. We have been bombarded on every side with fear. The enemy of our soul and the world have joined forces to wrestle our peace, our attention, and our faith away from our Lord and Savior.

But, the truth is found in those three little words that Charles Spurgeon spoke long ago … “It is Christ.”

Alone, He is our all in all.

January 10, 2022 0 comment
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Doing

by TerryLema January 9, 2022

I asked the LORD yesterday to open my spiritual ears so that I might hear what I am speaking out of “the abundance of [my] heart.”

It did not take long for the LORD to answer that prayer. One thought kept repeating, “what am I supposed to do now that I am retired from pastoring?”

Do. That is what my heart is focusing on. Doing. I have been doing for a long time. Lately with limited energy and having to accommodate days of pain and fatigue, my focus has been on what needs to be done. Even studying the Word has been focused more on what I have needed to do for a message, not on what nourishes my own soul. I had to ask myself when was the last time I just read my Bible for my soul’s sake?

God led me this morning to Luke 10:38-42, the story of Martha and Mary. When we look at this event, we need to realize that this is not a story about two women, it is a story about discipleship. In Jesus’ day, men rejected women as marginal, and their work equivalent to that of a servant. For Jesus to even be concerned with Martha’s frustration was unusual.

Also, it doesn’t mean that activity is inherently bad, but points to the truth that discipleship is more than merely action. It also involves relationship, reflection, quiet and rest. Jesus was not condemning Martha’s activity as much as He was commending Mary’s.

Our LORD wants our affection more than our service. We need to be occupied with Him, not with what we are “doing” to serve Him. That is what He nudged my spirit with this morning.

My LORD Christ Jesus is reminding me to reorder my priorities. He wants me at His feet. Now to quiet my spirit to rest in Him.

January 9, 2022 0 comment
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“Whatcha talkin’ bout?”

by TerryLema January 8, 2022

In 1978 a comedy called Different Strokes came on the air. It ran until 1986. Gary Coleman was one of the children on the show and always got the biggest laugh with his line, “Whatcha talkin’ bout, Willis?”

In Luke 6, Jesus was teaching his disciples and one of the lessons he taught them was “A Tree is Known by Its Fruit.”

“For a good tree does not bear bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit. For every tree is known by its own fruit. For men do not gather figs from thorns, nor do they gather grapes from a bramble bush.” [6:43-44 NKJV]

Jesus was not really talking about trees because He goes on. “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil. For out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.” [6:45 NKJV]

Jesus’ lesson is about people. Our heart’s priority is what we talk about the most. That made me ask myself, “Whatcha talkin’ bout, Terry?”

What do I talk about the most? Am I focused on what is pleasing to me, or even what is not pleasing? Or do I focus on what pleases the LORD? I think if I want to deepen my faith, I need to start by listening to myself and what the abundance of my heart is speaking.

Holy Spirit, open my spiritual ears and let me hear what my heart brings forth. Amen.

January 8, 2022 0 comment
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Pastor Terry Lema

Pastor Terry Lema has been married for 53 years, and has 3 children and 3 grandsons. Terry graduated from Trinity Bible College, and and recently retired as Lead Pastor at The Way Church in Middleton, Idaho.

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