Journal,
My apology for the last blog. It was sent accidently with nothing in it. On well - You live and you learn.
How’s about this for compassionate fishing. I went white perch fishing yesterday afternoon with my son, Andre, and my grandson, Justin. There were a number of boats in the area but no one was catching anything. Guess everyone decided to do some compassionate fishing.
Anyway, at one point I simply threw my line in the water, set my rod and reel down, reached over for a diet coke and honey bun, and settled back for a relaxing moment. Suddenly Andre’ shouted, ‘Dad, grab your pole. You have a fish!’ Believe it or not, my pole was about to take a deep sea dive.
So’s I grabs it and sure enough this montrous bass was on the other end. Well, I fought, and I fought, and in after a bitter contest I finally landed that monster. It was so large that I don’t even wish to guess its weight.
Now would you believe that my monster fish was the only fish we three compassionate fishermen caught yesterday? And we fished until it got dark.
Ok, so here’s
a picture of Mick, Mike, and Mustard, and the monster fish. (Boy, you should have seen the one that got away.) :)
Ok, what’s that got to do with being mule headed….
All joking aside. As if that is possible with we Martin men.
Wednesday evening I ministered on the subject of ‘Don’t be a Mule Headed Believer.’ Took Psalm 32 as my text. My main projection came from verses 8 and 9, which says,
“I will instruct you and teach you in the way which you should go; I will counsel you with My eye upon you. Do not be
as the horse or as the mule which have no understanding, Whose trappings include bit and bridle to hold them in check, Otherwise they will not come near to you.”
You see, a mule-headed believer has no real sense of direction so he tends to be double-minded. On top of this, the mule-headed believer resents anyone trying to help him with good advice. Why, shucks, he is that kind of believer that don’t no nobody to tell him what its all about. Got his own way of doing things.
The sad note in all this is that the mule-headed believer is really missing out of the life that Jesus came to give him. He tends to live a life of confusion, with one problem following another problem. And all the while many of his problems could have been solved had he simply learned how to walk in the ways of the Lord. But not him - He’s too smart for all that.
What about the believer who has learned to walk in the ways of the Lord, and who always looks to the Lord for guidance? Now this is a horse of a different color.
This believer has learned that the race of life is all about moving step-by-step with Jesus. This believer is a true winner.
David describes this winning believer as saying,
“You are my hiding place; You preserve me from trouble; You surround me with songs of deliverance.” (Verse 7)
The winning believer goes where Jesus goes, stops where Jesus stops, and refuses to take any measure of life to himself, unless it is something that the Lord would show him to do. It is sort of like what Jesus said of His heavenly Father, “My Father is working until now, and I Myself am working.”
Which brings me to an interesting issue that many folk are not aware of. Has to do with…
The Issue of two rests…
Some years ago I discovered an interesting thing about the Lord’s call to rest. Jesus actually spoke of two rests, one rest is given and the other rest has to be taught. This certainly fits into the ‘don’t be a mule-headed’ believer scenario. You know, the guy that you can’t teach anything.
Listen and you will pick up on the two rests:
“Come to Me, all who are weary and heavy-laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.” (Matt11:28,29 nasb)
Notice how the first rest is given but the second rest is a learned rest. The first rest has to do with our entrance into God’s kingdom, otherwise known as our birth from above, or, our initial salvation experience. Jesus explained this to Nicodemus as a new birth of the human spirit. It is instantaneous.
The second rest is for our soul. The soul of man and the spirit of man are not one and the same. The soul is our personal self-life, or that part of our internal makeup that gives us individuality, character, and personality. The spirit is that part that must be born anew. The soul is where our personal life learns God’s ways through the transformations of truth. 
Paul explained it this way:
“Now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. but we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as from the Lord, the Spirit.” (2Co3:17,18)
There is so much to be said about these soul transformations, but I’ll have to leave that alone for time’s sake.
However, one point does need to be made. What the believer is beholding as in a mirror, and what it is that is transforming his life, is the glory of the Lord Jesus that is found encapsulated in the sacred text, the Bible. We are beholding His majesty.
I also like to call these transformation moments, ‘Life gates.’ (A subject in itself.)
This is why our walk with Jesus can be called ’the yoke of life’ …
Where Jesus tells us to take His yoke upon us, this was a Hebraic way of telling us to come fully under His government. Jesus is telling us to enter into the majesty of His life. It is He alone who can teach us how to live. He does this by living His life with us and in us. Such a mystery, this.
To the Jews, the covenant of Moses was called the ‘yoke of the Law.’ In the new covenant we have the yoke of Christ. This is why Paul says, “For the kingdom of God is not eating and drinking (rabbinical laws that governed all factors of life), but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.” (Rom14:17)
Being under the yoke of Christ, has to do with learning to live for Him under the auspices , the guidance, the love, and the protection of the Holy Spirit. Again this is something that has to be learned. But as we learn this, we have a change over from being an immature believer, to a believer who is able to discern life in its fullness.
And it can only be taught to a fully surrendered life.
Beware of strange yokes…
Many of God’s people are unable to come fully under the yoke of Christ, because they have placed upon themselves strange yokes. These yokes can be a person, even a false prophet or teacher. It can also be the yoke of religion. This means that if our particular religion is replacing the yoke of Christ, then we will never know the true rest that belongs to followers of Christ. A religious yoke is where we place our faith in our religion rather than where it should be placed, that is, in Jesus Christ.
Yes, we do need balance in this area. It is possible to go to an extreme in more than one direction. For instance, we are commanded to assemble ourselves together in church bodies, that is, as flocks of the Lord. However, never should we allow any religion or any person to ursurp Christ’s place in our life.
How do we learn to distinguish the true yoke of Christ from a religious yoke? It all comes back to personal surrender. The place to begin is with ’the’ book. The Bible is designed to be a book of living for believers. We should study the Scriptures to receive understanding.
But this brings me to the second distinguishing marker for the true yoke of Christ. It has to do with the voice that speaks in our hearts. Jesus continually reaches out for His people to come and walk with Him. The prophet Isaiah addressed this:
“Your ears will hear a word behind you, ‘This is the way, walk in it,’ whenever you turn to the right or to the left.” (Isa30:21)
What voice was the prophet referring to? Isaiah was drawing attention to the voice of Jesus Christ Himself. Jesus said,
“My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me; and I give eternal life to them,
and they will never perish; and no one will snatch them out of My hand.” (John 10:27,28)
So, now only one questions remains. Have you heard the voice of Christ for yourself? Jesus speaks from the empty cross. His voice is from heaven but He speaks in our hearts.
Not much else to be said for now.
Ok, let’s all learn not to be mule-headed believers.
Much love coming your way,
Buddy
Posted: April 24th, 2008 under Devotions & Studies, General.
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