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Jeremiah 6:13        “From the latest to the greatest, all are greedy for gain.”
 
A close relative of covetousness, greed is quite possibly the parent of more evil than any other sin. Greed cheats, robs, murders, and slanders in order to achieve its desires–and each of us is born with greed in our nature.
 
The Bible teaches that greed is idolatry, because it places things at the center of our lives instead of God. We in America, for instance, are so bent on making money that we do not have time for God and the spiritual disciplines. It is not a sin to be rich, but if our riches have choked out our spiritual life, then being rich has become sin–and we are poverty-stricken in God’s sight. Furthermore, the love of money corrodes the human heart, spoiling our happiness and setting us in conflict with one another. The Bible says that “the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil” (1 Timothy 6:10).
 
As long as the prodigal son sang the song of “Give me,” his lot was misery, want, loneliness, and famine. But when he changed his song to “Forgive me,” he found himself in a state of fellowship, comfort, and plenty. What song are you singing?
 
 
Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
 
 
Giving produces all abundance from what is given. 
 
Taking consumes everything good from what was desired.
 
Giving lifts and expands the giver. 
 
Taking lowers and shrinks the taker.
 
 
Seeking giveness,
 
Z gardener
 
 
 
Author’s note: this gardener will be on sabbatical through the end of April. The daily devotional will be on leave as well. If possible, will try to send some photos for you edification from time to time. Peace. Z.
 
Matthew 26:36-37         “Then Jesus went with his disciples to a place called Gethsemane…and he began to be sorrowful and troubled.”
 
Gethsemane means “an oil press.” When the olives are harvested, they are squeezed under an enormous revolving stone that mashes the fruit to pulp and recovers the valuable oil.
 
In the Garden of Gethsemane, the wheel of humiliation and death would squeeze Jesus to the point of His greatest agony, so He pleaded with His Father for release–but only if it were the Almighty’s will.
 
God did not grant release, for there was no other way for our just and loving God to deal with our sins. Sin must have a price. If God were simply to forgive our sins without judging them, then there would be no justice, no accountability for wrongdoing. God would not be truly holy and just.
 
But if God were simply to judge us for our sins as we deserve, there would be no hope of salvation for any of us. His love would have failed to provide what we need.
 
The cross was the only way to resolve the problem of sin. At the cross God’s love and justice came together. Jesus took the judgement we deserved, and now we are clothed in His perfect righteousness.
 
 
Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
I will sing to my Lord as long as I live, I will sing
praise to my God while I have my being.
 
 
 
“For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son so that whosoever believeth in him would not perish but have everlasting life”. John 3:16
 
On this Good Friday let us remember that our savior sacrificed himself for our salvation. He was God’s son, the Word who created us. He became the human Jesus to bear our sins, was tortured and crucified by us. Yet God resurrected him to save us and to leave God’s Holy Spirit in us to counsel us, guide us and advocate for us in heaven.
 
Father, give us eyes to see this Advocate’s guidance, ears to hear its wise counsel, courage to seek its counsel and strength to live according to its will. Then we can “celebrate” his sacrifice and rise with him on Easter to live with him in the Eden he created here and forever in heaven.
 
This is the day the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it.
 
Taking up his cross,
 
Z gardener

THE POISON OF SLOTH

Proverbs 21:25 The sluggard’s craving will be the death of him, because his hands refuse to work.

Webster’s defines sloth as “a disinclination to action or labor, sluggishness, laziness, idleness.” In theological contexts, sloth carries with it not only the idea of laziness and spiritual things, but also apathy and inactivity in the practice of our everyday lives.

The slothful person is like a piece of driftwood floating effortlessly and heedlessly downstream with the current. It takes no effort, no strength to be lost. A drifting boat always goes downstream, never up. Likewise, a drifting, slothful soul is inevitably moving toward an eternity of destruction.

The sin of doing nothing–the sin of omission–is just as dangerous as any sin of action–of commission. You don’t have to do anything to be lost: just do nothing. Just be slothful about your soul. Tragically thousands of us Christians are slothful also–when it comes to prayer, worship, reading the Bible, witnessing for Christ, helping neighbors in need, giving to charity, or giving to God’s work.

A stubborn, slothful spirit is a great hindrance to receiving Jesus’ forgiveness and transforming power. Don’t let this happen to you.

Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
I will sing to my Lord as long as I live, I will sing
praise to my God while I have my being.

Broad, low and flat is the way to destruction. It is the narrow, high and rocky path that leads to salvation. We can pretty much assume that if we are taking the easy road filled with many fellow travelers that we are likely on the wrong path. We can also assume that the right path is the far less traveled one filled with challenges and obstacles.

It is easy to go along just to get along in this world. It is exceedingly hard to stay on the path of light and righteousness; God’s path. Many times, we may not be sure which path to take. So, when faced with a choice of paths, we would do well to choose the harder, less traveled one.

On that path God awaits, saying “I am with you and will never forsake you. I will give you what you need to make the journey. And your reward will be the peace which surpasses all understanding.” So, the choice is ours. Will we choose ease or peace, pleasure or joy, sloth or salvation?

Rocky road?

Z gardener

In God’s eyes, impurity is one of the most revolting sins, because it twists and distorts one of God’s most precious gifts: human love. Impurity drags this gift down to the level of the beast.
 
Yet impurity–surrounding us as it does in the form of filthy stories, suggestive remarks, open vulgarity; in magazines, on television, in the movies, through the internet–has a better press agent than purity. Purity is considered smug, but impurity is considered smart–and the consequences of this vicious sin are played out. Satan fails to speak of the remorse, the futility, the loneliness, and the spiritual devastation that go hand in hand with immorality.
 
Christ can do only one thing with the sin of impurity–and every other sin, Jesus neither condones sin nor condemns it; he forgives it. He will also cleanse you and give you victory over your sin. Jesus said to the immoral woman, “Go now and leave your life of sin” (John 8:11). He says that to you as well–and He never told anyone to do something without offering them the power to do it.
 
Ephesians 5:3         Among you there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality, or of any kind of impurity…because these are improper for God’s holy people.
 
From the “Good Morning, Lord” series
The material world (culture), that humans have shaped and created to live in, exposes us to every form of human weakness in attitude, behavior and spirit. When we allow these weaknesses into our personal world they subject us to every negative human experience (doubt, fear, worry, etc.). When we engage in these negative human activities it causes the words, thoughts and deeds that hurt us and hurt others.
 
Let us this day confess those weaknesses, take personal responsibility for our part in them, repent of them and commit this day to act according to God’s will. Let us begin that commitment by forgiving other and by asking God for forgiveness. Then, we will be forgiven, made pure again and live in the Eden God created for us.
 
Confessing and committing,
 
 
Stan

SPIRITUAL FOOD

 
 
Nothing will help us grow spiritually more than spending time alone with God every day, reading His Word and praying. I know our lives are busy today, but time alone with God is essential to our spiritual welfare. Most of us wouldn’t think of missing a meal, yet we miss our spiritual “meals” when we neglect God’s Word–and we end up spiritually weak.
 
Even five minutes alone with God each day can renew and strengthen your soul.
 
Psalm 119:105    Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path.
 
  
 
Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing Net Surfers
Psalm 104:33      I will sing to the
Lord as long as I live; I will sing 
praises to my God while I have
my being.

 

 
 
 
 
Even more than our physical bodies require nourishment, our spiritual selves must have time in communion with God to grow and remain strong. Each prayer, each time we think of God or our relationship with God, we receive the spiritual sustenance we require to grow into fully mature spiritual beings.
 
When we act according to God’s will, we become a portal for God’s love into the world. This is spiritual exercise. And, just as we require spiritual food, we also require spiritual exercise to become the spiritual beings, the children of God we were created to be.
 
So today, let us feed our souls with God’s presence and then exercise our souls by acting according to God’s will. Then we will have a healthy, growing and strong spirit. Then, we will be living in the Eden created for us.
 
Working out with God,
 
Z gardener

THE POISON OF ENVY

Envy dethrones God. Envy destroys our spiritual health, and it takes the joy, happiness, and contentment out of living. Envy becomes a spiritual leprosy, isolating us from both God and other human beings. No wonder God ranks envy on the same level as sexual immorality, idolatry, witchcraft, and drunkenness (see Galatians 5:19-21).
 
To get rid of this devastating poison, first recognize that you have it. Then confess your sin to God and renounce it. Finally, since envy cannot be overcome in your own strength, open your heart to the transforming power of Christ.
 
Proverbs 14:30      A heart at peace gives life to the body, but envy rots the bones.
 
 
Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
I will sing to my Lord as long as I live, I will sing
praise to my God while I have my being.
Envy devalues one’s own life, station or outlook as being inferior to another’s. It robs us of self-respect, identity and status as children of God. Most of the time it springs from a sense of inferiority or covetousness (desiring that which belongs to another). It is never good, it always hurts the one experiencing it and seldom affects the one to whom it is directed.
 
If we face this weakness honestly and turn it over to God, he can help us overcome it. That may begin with a frank assessment of our own situation and recognition of changes we need to make. If we make those changes we will clearly see the true nature of God, our value to him and therefore our own value and worth. Then we will have no source or foundation for envy because we truly know who and whose we are.
 
Seeing clearly,
 
Z gardener
 

FREE OF PRIDE

 
He had dropped out of church when he didn’t agree with a building project that was being planned. After his wife died, however, he found himself wishing he had never left; his loneliness was almost more than he could bear. But would he have the courage to swallow his pride and go back to church? Finally he did, and his only regret was that he hadn’t done it sooner.
 
Maybe this reminds you of a situation in your life. Do you need to swallow your pride? Do you need to apologize or admit you were wrong about something? Do you need to work to restore your relationship with a brother or sister in Christ–especially if you were the one at fault? Or, like this person, do you need to get back into a fellowship of believers?
 
If so, confess your pride and seek God’s wisdom and strength for the future. Let go of your pride–and then patiently wait to see how God will work to restore and change your heart and your life.
 
Ecclesiastes 7:8    Patience is better than pride.
 
 
 
MIchael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing Net Surfers
 
 
 
When we face our pride and confess it, our pride loses its power over us. So today, let us face our pride honestly, confess it and repent. Then, that which we need so much will be available to us, and will be good for us.
 
Facing down pride,
 
Z gardener

THE POISON OF PRIDE

The pride that God loathes is not a healthy self-respect or a legitimate sense of personal dignity. It is the haughty, undue self-esteem out of all proportion to our actual worth. It is the repugnant egotism that is repulsive to both man and God. It is that revolting conceit which swaggers before men and struts in the presence of the Almighty. And God detests it.
 
Pride may take various forms. Spiritual pride trusts in one’s own virtue rather than in the grace of God. Intellectual pride gives its possessor self-confidence rather than God-confidence. Pride in material things enthrones self and displaces God; secondary things are exalted to the place of first importance. Social pride manifests itself in arrogance and status. All forms of pride emanate from the haughty human heart, and pride is the sin that God detests most.
 
What can you do about it? Confess your pride. Humble yourself in the sight of God. Look then at Christ, who “humbled himself and became obedient to death–even death on a cross!” (Philippians 2:8).
 
Proverbs 16:5 – The Lord detests all the proud of heart. Be sure of this: They will not go unpunished.
 
  Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
I will sing to my Lord as long as I live, I will sing
praise to my God while I have my being.
 
 
Sin springs from the false sense of separation; separation from God and from others. The particular sin of pride takes this false sense of separation to its worst manifestation. In pride, we not only falsely separate ourselves from God and others, but we perceive ourselves as superior to God or others. It is the gateway sin to all other sins. It is the original sin that caused us to be cast out of Eden. 
 
However, the gate to Eden was reopened by Christ’s sacrifice and we can live in the garden again. To live there, we must overcome our pride and turn our lives and our priorities over to God. We must see through the false illusion of our sense of separateness, and accept that we are God’s children, indivisible and eternally connected.
 
Then we can live in harmony with true reality as one of God’s children, no better or worse than any other. Then we can see the true picture of our selves in our world. Then the garden appears and we can claim all the hope, joy, love and peace that God put in this garden for our best good.
 
Coming together right now,
 
Z gardener
The name Pontius Pilate will be forever linked to the death of Jesus Christ, for it was he, as Roman governor, who gave the final order condemning Jesus to death by crucifixion.
 
But the name of Pontius Pilate will also stand forever as a prime example of someone who knew what was right–but failed to do it. Repeatedly he told the mob clamoring for Jesus’ death that he found no basis for condemning him–but in the end, he caved in to the pressures of the crowd and ordered His death. Publicly he washed his hands and told the crowd that they alone were responsible for Jesus’ death (Matthew 27:24), but in reality Pilate’s cowardice sent Jesus to the cross.
 
How often do you cave in to the pressures of the crowd, seeking the approval of others instead of the approval of God? We all like to be liked–but that can be a very dangerous thing. Make it your goal to live for Christ and be faithful to Him, regardless of what the crowd demands.  
 
Luke 23:4, 23         Then Pilate announced…”I find no basis for a charge against this man”….but with loud shouts they insistently demanded that he be crucified, and their shouts prevailed.
 
 
 
Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
I will sing to my Lord as long as I live, I will sing
praise to my God while I have my being.
It is important to note that it was the crowds of people that demanded Jesus’ crucifixion. They, and their religious leaders insisted on his death. Not the Roman Governor or the Emperor, but in essence, us. He died for us and because of us.
 
How often today do we face the same choice in our lives? Do we not crucify Christ each time we deny him, each time we turn away from his will and each time we fail to stand up to wrong regardless of popular opinion and modern culture?
 
So today let us lead the crowd and not cave in to the pressures of modern leaders or culture. Ignore the pressures that say “Everyone does it, don’t be a stick in the mud or nobody does that any more”. Today, let us say “As for me and my family, we will serve the Lord” and, let us with our actions say, “We will follow God’s will, not the crowd’s, and we will keep God’s commandments now and forever.” 
 
That is the lesson we must learn from the crowd-demanded crucifixion, from Peter’s denial and from Judas’ betrayal. His death was for us, by us and of us. Now, it is our turn to resurrect Christ in our own lives, to lift him up and to claim the salvation that his death secured. We are the crowd. Let our righteous shouts prevail.
 
Honoring, claiming and raising up Christ,
 
Stan

READ THE LABEL

After a minister had spoken strongly against sin one morning, one of his members said, “We don’t want you to talk so plainly about sin, Because if our children hear you mention it, they will more easily become sinners. call it a mistake, if you will, but do not speak so bluntly about sin.”

The minister went to his medicine shelf and brought back a bottle of strychnine marked “Poison.” He said, “I understand what you want me to do. You want me to change the label. Suppose I take this ‘Poison’ off the bottle and put on a label like ‘Peppermint Candy.’ Can’t you see the problem? The milder you make the label, the more dangerous the poison’s presence.”

Romans 6:32 For the wages of sin is death, But the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Michael & Alison Smitherman
The Singing NetSurfers
I will sing to my Lord as long as I live, I will sing
praise to my God while I have my being.

We must not shy away from using truthful words about evil and sin. Like poison, they are to be identified and warned against in the clearest of terms. However, we must not make sin and evil the focus of our lives or our self-perception. We are to be children of God overcoming and avoiding our weaknesses. We are not to see ourselves as evil beings who only do good to avoid punishment or damnation.

Sin, in its truest sense is the illusion of separation from God, and it is very poisonous. Yet the antidote to sin is communion with God. That means love, peace, joy and hope are to fill our existence. Focusing on negative emotions and thoughts such as fear (accept in the sense of reverence and awe), self -recrimination, judgement, scorn, condemnation of self or others is not healthy, not should it be our point of focus.

Label sin, yes. Live love, yes.

Focused on love,

Z gardener