Monthly Archives: October 2023

THE SEASON OF GRACE

THE SEASON OF GRACE

With the conflict in the Middle East growing in intensity, many are the would-be prophets and prophecy interpreters who are cashing in on the current situation. Without even reading the prophecies or the interpretations of the Israel/Gaza mayhem, I can almost guess what many of them are saying. In a nutshell, “This is the beginning of the end.” Throw into the mix the recent natural disasters that have decimated countries and killed thousands, and we have a situation ripe for all kinds of speculation.

Does the Bible have anything to say that will give us a timeline so that we can pinpoint where we are or at least find some clues to help us understand what is happening right now?

I am not a “fundi” on Bible prophecy. I make no claim accurately to interpret the present events. However, there are principles we can glean from Scripture that help us navigate these difficult times.

Firstly, I don’t think God likes timeliness. When we read through the history of God’s people in the Old Testament, prophecies pop up randomly in the story. We sometimes see prophecies fulfilled soon after the predictions were made, and we sometimes discover that prophecies can have a double fulfilment, soon after as well as decades or centuries after they were uttered.

God oversees history. He works according to a divine plan, weaving together human situations and His unfolding will according to His sovereign wisdom and power. All we can do is put our hope in Him because He is faithful to His Word.

He assures us, through His prophetic word, that He is working in our world and that He will fulfil everything He has promised. He does not intend for us to tick boxes when we read His Word. He wants to grow our faith and our anticipation for what lies ahead for faithful believers.

For several thousand years, God kept His people accountable to Him through His covenant with them at Mount Sinai. Apart from a few, they failed completely to be faithful to Him. However, even their unfaithfulness served His purposes.

Jesus fulfilled every prediction made about His first coming and will fulfill every promise about His return. He came to set the record straight for Israel and the Gentiles that no amount of rule-keeping will satisfy God’s demand for perfect holiness. Israel’s history confirms this truth.

Jesus also provided the solution for universal human failure by dying in our place and rising again to secure forgiveness and eternal life for those who surrender all rights to Him.

So, God’s grace is for everyone, Jew, and Gentile, to start again, to live for and in Christ. They experience the real life God wanted for everyone in the beginning.

However, there is a season of grace that God provides, a window of opportunity that God will open and close for Jews and Gentiles.

Romans 11:7 NLT
[7] “So this is the situation: Most of the people of Israel have not found the favor of God they are looking for so earnestly. A few have—the ones God has chosen—but the hearts of the rest were hardened. …
[11] Did God’s people stumble and fall beyond recovery? Of course not! They were disobedient, so God made salvation available to the Gentiles. But he wanted his own people to become jealous and claim it for themselves.”

Why did God allow this to happen? Israel’s season of unbelief has opened the door for the Gentiles to receive the gospel. Since the Apostle Paul took the message of Jesus to the Gentile world, for more than 2000 years the harvest among Gentiles is being gathered in.

Few Jews by comparison have believed in their Messiah? Will they ever stop rejecting Jesus and come to Him?

Zechariah prophesied thousands of years ago,

Zechariah 12:6-10 NLT
[6] “On that day I will make the clans of Judah like a flame that sets a woodpile ablaze or like a burning torch among sheaves of grain. They will burn up all the neighbouring nations right and left, while the people living in Jerusalem remain secure. [7] “The Lord will give victory to the rest of Judah first, before Jerusalem, so that the people of Jerusalem and the royal line of David will not have greater honor than the rest of Judah. [8] On that day the Lord will defend the people of Jerusalem; the weakest among them will be as mighty as King David! And the royal descendants will be like God, like the angel of the Lord who goes before them! [9] For on that day I will begin to destroy all the nations that come against Jerusalem. [10] “Then I will pour out a spirit of grace and prayer on the family of David and on the people of Jerusalem. They will look on me whom they have pierced and mourn for him as for an only son. They will grieve bitterly for him as for a firstborn son who has died…. “

Since scenarios like this happened many times in Israel’s history, we cannot say for certain that this time the Jews will turn to the Lord. We can only say for certain that there will be a last time that God defends Israel against the world before He opens the eyes of their hearts to the truth about their Messiah. Will they see His wounds when He returns?  We don’t know.

I do not want you to be ignorant of this mystery, brothers and sisters, so that you may not be conceited: Israel has experienced a hardening in part until the full number of the Gentiles has come in, 26 and in this way all Israel will be saved. As it is written:
“The deliverer will come from Zion;
he will turn godlessness away from Jacob.
27 And this is my covenant with them
when I take away their sins.”
28 As far as the gospel is concerned, they are enemies for your sake; but as far as election is concerned, they are loved on account of the patriarchs, 29 for God’s gifts and his call are irrevocable. 30 Just as you who were at one time disobedient to God have now received mercy as a result of their disobedience, 31 so they too have now become disobedient in order that they too may now receive mercy as a result of God’s mercy to you. 32 For God has bound everyone over to disobedience so that he may have mercy on them all” Romans 11:25-32


Since God’s predictions are scattered throughout the Bible in a seemingly disorderly fashion, on no orderly timeline, we can only really have that “Aha!” moment when they have been fulfilled. Only then will we able to say with certainty, “Now I understand what God meant when He said…”

God gives Habakkuk the correct understanding in situations like the present. He revealed His plan to the prophet to raise up the Babylonians who would inflict suffering and exile on his people. However, the bottom line, even in this national catastrophe, was the individual. Amid the terrible destruction of invasion and war, God is still concerned about the individual.

Habakkuk 2:4 NLT
[4] “Look at the proud! They trust in themselves, and their lives are crooked. But the righteous will live by their faithfulness to God.”

Jesus endorsed God’s heart in all this suffering,

Luke 13:1-5 NLT
[1] About this time Jesus was informed that Pilate had murdered some people from Galilee as they were offering sacrifices at the Temple. [2] “Do you think those Galileans were worse sinners than all the other people from Galilee?” Jesus asked. “Is that why they suffered? [3] Not at all! And you will perish, too, unless you repent of your sins and turn to God. [4] And what about the eighteen people who died when the tower in Siloam fell on them? Were they the worst sinners in Jerusalem? [5] No, and I tell you again that unless you repent, you will perish, too.”

We want answers to what is happening in the world. God’s response is simple, “What about you?” In the end, once again, the Bible assures us that God is at work in us, even through world events, to hone our faith in Him and our faithfulness to Him as we await the return of the Lord Jesus to finish what He started.

So, don’t ask the wrong questions. Ask the only question that really matters,

Matthew 16:15 NLT
[15] “Then he asked them, “But who do you say I am?”

and joyfully proclaim the only answer that counts…

Matthew 16:16 NLT
[16] Simon Peter answered, “You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.”




DO YOU HATE YOUR BROTHER?

DO YOU HATE YOUR BROTHER?

In his first letter, the Apostle John often refers to neglect of our brother’s physical and material needs as evidence that we do not have God’s love in us. We cannot, therefore, be God’s children if we have no love for a needy brother, since only the Holy Spirit in us can pour God’s love into our hearts.

1 John 2:9 NLT
[9] “If anyone claims, “I am living in the light,” but hates a fellow believer, that person is still living in darkness.”

However, what do we mean by “hatred”? Hatred seems a strong word to describe neglect of a fellow-believer’s needs. In the Hebrew language, there is no word for “more” than or “less”. Jesus used the same word “hate” to explain to His disciples that our love for Him must be more than our love for our parents and family members.

Luke 14:26 NLT
[26] “If you want to be my disciple, you must, by comparison, hate everyone else—your father and mother, wife and children, brothers and sisters—yes, even your own life. Otherwise, you cannot be my disciple.”

So, to hate a Christian brother in essence means to think less and care less about him than we do about ourselves. This attitude touches on the core struggle every believer in Jesus endures throughout our lives, the struggle against the selfishness of our old nature.

Paul sounds a warning against the ravages of the flesh in almost all of his letters. It’s a moment-by-moment war that we must take seriously if we are to receive the crown of righteousness we anticipate at the end of our journey.

This battle is much more than a skirmish here and there.

Galatians 5:17 NLT
[17] “The sinful nature wants to do evil, which is just the opposite of what the Spirit wants. And the Spirit gives us desires that are the opposite of what the sinful nature desires. These two forces are constantly fighting each other, so you are not free to carry out your good intentions.”

How does this battle play out? The deeds of the flesh are all directed towards self, satisfying selfish desires, or promoting self in one way or another.

Elevating ourselves above others leads us to” hate” those who need our help, whatever that need might be.

We can only gain victory over the flesh by recognising its ruthless demands, humbly submitting to the Holy Spirit’s leading, putting to death the deeds of the flesh through the Spirit’s power in us,

Romans 8:5-6 NLT
[5] “Those who are dominated by the sinful nature think about sinful things, but those who are controlled by the Holy Spirit think about things that please the Spirit. [6] So letting your sinful nature control your mind leads to death. But letting the Spirit control your mind leads to life and peace….
[12] Therefore, dear brothers and sisters, you have no obligation to do what your sinful nature urges you to do. [13] For if you live by its dictates, you will die. But if through the power of the Spirit you put to death the deeds of your sinful nature, you will live.”

…and by heeding Paul’s instructions to follow Christ’s example.

Philippians 2:1-4 NLT
[1] “Is there any encouragement from belonging to Christ? Any comfort from his love? Any fellowship together in the Spirit? Are your hearts tender and compassionate? [2] Then make me truly happy by agreeing wholeheartedly with each other, loving one another, and working together with one mind and purpose. [3] Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. [4] Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too.”

Dealing with the persistent demands of the flesh boils down to one thing. Say an emphatic “NO!” to the flesh and mean it. The Holy Spirit will empower us to carry out our resolve and, with it, the decision to “love” by doing something practical for another.

Only those who have the Spirit in them through their faith in Jesus can overcome their old sinful nature. They can grow in grace and love. They can increase in their love and concern for others. It’s a lifetime of warring against the flesh and losing and winning until winning gains the upper hand…

… And, in the mix, is our Advocate, the Lord Jesus, who won the war for us so that we can win the battles we face daily.

Hebrews 2:18 NLT
[18] “Since he himself has gone through suffering and testing, he is able to help us when we are being tested.”

Hebrews 4:14-16 NLT
[14] “So then, since we have a great High Priest who has entered heaven, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold firmly to what we believe. [15] This High Priest of ours understands our weaknesses, for he faced all of the same testing we do, yet he did not sin. [16] So let us come boldly to the throne of our gracious God. There we will receive his mercy, and we will find grace to help us when we need it most.”

So, dear reader, never lose heart in your battle against the flesh. Press on in your resolve to pay it forward as much and as often as you can. You have an Advocate for you and an Advocate in you that guarantee your final victory.

Thankfully, God has not abandoned us or thrown us to the wolves in our battle against the flesh. He has not said, “This is how it is. Get on with it!”
Instead, He has provided every resource we need to be real overcomers.

2 Peter 1:3-4 NLT
[3] “By his divine power, God has given us everything we need for living a godly life. We have received all of this by coming to know him, the one who called us to himself by means of his marvellous glory and excellence. [4] And because of his glory and excellence, he has given us great and precious promises. These are the promises that enable you to share his divine nature and escape the world’s corruption caused by human desires.”

It’s up to us to join hands with Him through His Spirit and to truly love one another as He has loved us.



PMS – THE MONSTER THAT DESTROYS

PMS – THE MONSTER THAT DESTROYS

In my 83 years, I have had my share of tough times. I suffered a toxic marriage that ended in divorce, which left deep emotional scars, and I endured many years of sub-clinical depression as a consequence.

By subclinical, I mean that this “condition” was not medically diagnosed because I was never physically debilitated by my feelings. For years, I continued my busy life with four young sons under a cloud of misery.

Through these experiences, I have reached a life-changing conclusion which I shall explain in what follows.

A little booklet written by an insightful Christian changed my life forever. This booklet was entitled “How to win over depression” by Tim La Haye, an expansion of a chapter in his book entitled “Spirit Controlled Temperaments”.

The writer used an interesting mathematical equation to explain the mechanism of depression.
A difficult situation or event (essentially sin) X self-pity = depression. How simple is that!

If one removes the self-pity from the equation, the mathematical problem doesn’t exist anymore. Depression disappears.

Is this the way to deal with depression today? The first problem is that medically trained people have made depression a “mental illness” which many try to manage or cure with drugs instead of uncovering and dealing with its root, compounded by self-pity or PMS (Poor Me Syndrome).

When depression becomes a diagnosis, depressed people become victims. Remove the self-pity, and the victim becomes a victor!

Unfortunately, Christian counsellors often follow the treatment misguided secular practitioners use to treat a spiritual problem. I call it “spiritual” because self-pity is part of the vast range of self-sins which form the core of the old sinful nature.

Often, the counsellor’s sympathetic agreement with the patient’s suffering enforces the sufferer’s victim mentality.

In his book, “My Utmost for His Highest”, Oswald Chambers makes this observation (I paraphrase), “Many Christians sit down and die of self-pity, and we help them die.”

Once I grasped the significance of La Haye’s equation, and applied it when depression threatened to overtake me, I have NEVER experienced depression again. As soon as I recognised (past tense) the symptoms, I dealt with the self-pity, and the rest is history!

The steps I took to cure depression have become, for me, like the ABC of reading.

1. I recognised the symptoms of impending depression; no peace in my heart, feelings of hopeless and heaviness, just feeling “bad”.

2. I took steps to identify the issue that triggered those feelings. What had happened to start the process? It could be something I had done wrong that made me feel bad. Sometimes, some sin, done to or by me that I had denied or ignored was the beginning of the equation. Sometimes depression followed a set of painful or unfortunate circumstances that set the ball rolling.

3. I took responsibility for the self-pity that triggered those emotions.

4. I turned to the Lord, confessed, and renounced my self-pity, received His forgiveness for my unbelief in His goodness, and affirmed my confidence in His love for me.

5. I renewed my commitment to trusting in the Lord, resting in His promise that He works in all things for my good. Whatever the issue that provoked my self-pity, I included it in the “all things” working for my good.

The outcome was amazing. God’s peace replaced my depression, His joy was restored, and I began a new chapter of understanding God’s ways.

How often our sin, no matter how insignificant it may seem, sets a process going that affects not only us but also those around us, bringing a cloud of darkness over us, our families and those closest to us. No matter what form that sin takes, it is the fruit of unbelief in God’s love and goodness. It will cause us to feel bad. We will, inevitably, adopt a victim mentality, blame others where we can, and feel sorry for ourselves.

If we don’t recognise and deal with the situation honestly, and stop the emotional downward slide, we will land up in depression. I am convinced that real, deep depression is fertile feeding ground for demonic activity. Not even the diagnosis of “chemical imbalance” with its appropriate medication can offset the invasion of demons into a soul rotten with self-pity.

Psalm 42 is a resume of David’s brush with depression and his journey to victory.

Psalms 42:3 NLT
[3] Day and night I have only tears for food, while my enemies continually taunt me, saying, “Where is this God of yours?” …
[5] Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad? I will put my hope in God! I will praise him again— my Savior and [6] my God! Now I am deeply discouraged, but I will remember you— even from distant Mount Hermon, the source of the Jordan, from the land of Mount Mizar….
[8] But each day the Lord pours his unfailing love upon me, and through each night I sing his songs, praying to God who gives me life….
[11] Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad? I will put my hope in God! I will praise him again— my Savior and my God!

Without the Lord in the centre, depression will win. However, if we allow Him to be in the middle of the process to healing, we will be “more than conquerors” of which Paul speaks in Romans 8.

Romans 8:37 NLT
[37] “No, despite all these things, (every adversity we can think of) overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us.”

Truly, the permanent cure for depression is not a diagnosis and its treatment. Our hope lies in an honest examination of the situation and a return to the truth of God’s Word. Recognise and deal with the sin that opened the door to depression. Repent and return to the Lord. Receive His forgiveness, and His peace will return.

Hallelujah! God’s Word is the real medicine that works.

ATHEISTS CREDIT THE GOSPEL

ATHEISTS CREDIT THE GOSPEL

Two high-profile atheists concede that to get practical help to the poor and liberate them from poverty you need Christianity’s teaching about man’s place in the Universe

by David Catchpoole

Although an atheist, veteran British politician Roy Hattersley1 is considered something of an authority on the origins of the Salvation Army, since he wrote a best-selling biography of William and Catherine Booth.2

Hence it wasn’t too surprising that a BBC program3 about the Salvation Army’s effectiveness sought his opinion on the subject. The narrator, Peter Day, put it to Hattersley that, “This sort of thing, a sort of social entrepreneurial drive which starts off out of a particular place and circumstances—those sorts of things often run out of steam after a generation or two. Is the Salvation Army in danger of running out of steam?”

Hattersley’s response was immediate and effusive:

Since the publication of his biography of William and Catherine Booth, Roy Hattersley has written further (http://textualities.net/author/roy-hattersley/) of the positive influence of Christian evangelists: “My view of society is very different from that which was held by Booth and [John] Wesley. I am an atheist. But that does not prevent me from admiring the strength of their different convictions. Nor did it stop me from realising the crucial part that Wesley’s ‘respectable’ Christianity played in the development of modern Britain.” For more on the positive effects of the Wesley/Whitfield revivals, see Anti-slavery activist William Wilberforce and A Tale of Four Countries.

“I don’t think the Salvation Army is remotely in danger of running out of steam. And I think it remains a vibrant organization because of its convictions. I’m an atheist. But I can only look with amazement at the devotion of the Salvation Army workers. I’ve been out with them on the streets and seen the way they work amongst the people, the most deprived and disadvantaged and sometimes pretty repugnant characters. I don’t believe they would do that were it not for the religious impulse. And I often say I never hear of atheist organizations taking food to the poor. You don’t hear of ‘Atheist Aid’ rather like Christian aid, and, I think, despite my inability to believe myself, I’m deeply impressed by what belief does for people like the Salvation Army.”

Roy Hattersley is not the only high-profile atheist to publicly note, grudgingly or otherwise, the fruit of the Gospel.

Matthew Parris, another well known UK politician, author and journalist,4 wrote in The Times a most remarkable piece entitled …

“As an atheist, I truly believe Africa needs God”

… and subtitled: “Missionaries, not aid money, are the solution to Africa’s biggest problem—the crushing passivity of the people’s mindset.”5

Parris’s article was written from a very personal perspective, dwelling particularly on his experience in various countries in Africa during his childhood and during an extensive tour across the continent when in his twenties. Of a more recent visit to see a village well development project, he wrote:

“It inspired me, renewing my flagging faith in development charities. But travelling in Malawi refreshed another belief, too: one I’ve been trying to banish all my life, but an observation I’ve been unable to avoid since my African childhood. It confounds my ideological beliefs, stubbornly refuses to fit my world view, and has embarrassed my growing belief that there is no God.

I never hear of atheist organizations taking food to the poor. You don’t hear of ‘Atheist Aid’—atheist and UK Labour politician Roy Hattersley, January 2010

“Now a confirmed atheist, I’ve become convinced of the enormous contribution that Christian evangelism makes in Africa: sharply distinct from the work of secular NGOs, government projects and international aid efforts. These alone will not do. Education and training alone will not do. In Africa Christianity changes people’s hearts. It brings a spiritual transformation. The rebirth is real. The change is good.”

Rebirth? Spiritual transformation? Hardly the language of an atheist. But nevertheless, Parris’s atheism is real. He tells of trying to “avoid this truth” of what he was observing, wanting to applaud the practical work of the mission churches while ignoring other aspects of missionary work. “It’s a pity, I would say, that salvation is part of the package,” writes Parris, “but Christians black and white, working in Africa, do heal the sick, do teach people to read and write; and only the severest kind of secularist could see a mission hospital or school and say the world would be better without it. I would allow that if faith was needed to motivate missionaries to help, then, fine: but what counted was the help, not the faith.”

However, as Parris admitted, “this doesn’t fit the facts”. He explained how Christian faith benefits the poor not merely because of its supportive effect on the missionary, but because “it is also transferred to his flock. This is the effect that matters so immensely, and which I cannot help observing.”

Matthew Parris has written many books, including Chance Witness, an autobiographical account focusing primarily on his UK parliamentary observations and experiences. But the time he has spent in Africa is arguably of much greater significance. As a child more than 45 years ago, Matthew Parris grew up in southern Africa, and often stayed with Christian missionaries (friends of the family). When he revisited Africa in his twenties, the inescapable observation that Christians, whether black or white, were ‘different’ from other people continued to taunt him wherever he went, driving from Algiers to Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, through the Congo to Rwanda, Tanzania and to Nairobi, Kenya. And his recent trip to Malawi reminded him of it once more—a truth he’d been trying to ‘banish’ all his life.

Parris notes indeed what many other people, past and present, have observed in those who believe the Gospel. “The Christians were always different. Far from having cowed or confined its converts, their faith appeared to have liberated and relaxed them Matthew Parris also notes that Christians had a certain “liveliness, a curiosity, an engagement with the world—a directness in their dealings with others” that was lacking in non-believers. “They stood tall”, he writes.

Recalling his driving tour in a Land Rover with four student friends when he was aged 24, Parris observed that the difference between Christians and non-Christians was particularly striking in “lawless” parts of the sub-Sahara. “Whenever we entered a territory worked by missionaries, we had to acknowledge that something changed in the faces of the people we passed and spoke to: something in their eyes, the way they approached you direct, man-to-man, without looking down or away. They had not become more deferential towards strangers—in some ways less so—but more open.”

His recent trip to see the village development project in Malawi brought him in close contact with charity workers. Although Parris admits that it would suit him to believe that their “honesty, diligence and optimism in their work” had no connection with their evident personal faith,6 he had to concede that they were undeniably “influenced by a conception of man’s place in the Universe that Christianity had taught.”

The Christians were always different. Far from having cowed or confined its converts, their faith appeared to have liberated and relaxed them—atheist Matthew Parris

Parris also makes this astute observation: “There’s long been a fashion among Western academic sociologists for placing tribal value systems within a ring fence, beyond critiques founded in our own culture: ‘theirs’ and therefore best for ‘them’; authentic and of intrinsically equal worth to ours.7

“I don’t follow this. I observe that tribal belief is no more peaceable than ours; and that it suppresses individuality.” He goes on to say that such a mindset “feeds into the ‘big man’ and gangster politics of the African city: the exaggerated respect for a swaggering leader” and does nothing to allay fear of evil spirits, ancestors and nature that so burden many in Africa. Parris writes that “a great weight grinds down the individual spirit, stunting curiosity. People won’t take the initiative, won’t take things into their own hands or on their own shoulders.”

But in stark contrast, Christianity, “with its teaching of a direct, personal, two-way link between the individual and God, unmediated by the collective, and unsubordinate to any other human being, smashes straight through the philosophical/spiritual framework I’ve just described. It offers something to hold on to for those anxious to cast off a crushing tribal groupthink. That is why and how it liberates.”

Removing Christian evangelism from the African equation may leave the continent at the mercy of a malign fusion of Nike, the witch doctor, the mobile phone and the machete—atheist Matthew Parris

Parris concludes by warning that aid programs that focus only on provision of material supplies and technical knowledge are unlikely to succeed. “Removing Christian evangelism from the African equation may leave the continent at the mercy of a malign fusion of Nike, the witch doctor, the mobile phone and the machete.”

Parris’s observations remind one of other atheists who like ‘Christian values’. Richard Dawkins has often said that on social and moral questions, he is no Darwinist. He even called himself a ‘cultural Christian’ in that regard. However, it’s all very well for atheists to want Christian values, but if people are told they can’t believe Christianity’s Bible, those values, as we see all around us, are simply not sustainable in society. It’s as if the post-Christian West is still living off of the last gasps of Christianity’s cultural capital, which is being rapidly exhausted.

Observant and open-minded, yet deceived?

Given Roy Hattersley’s and Matthew Parris’s keen observations about the undeniably positive impact of Christianity’s teaching about “man’s place in the universe”, why don’t they themselves believe that teaching?

Perhaps, in their case, it’s because they only want to believe what is true and conforms to reality. They don’t want to waste time and energy in duping themselves into believing what they think is a falsehood. Remember, they’ve been taught that evolution is fact, thus in their mind relegating the Bible, beginning in Genesis, to ‘fairytale’ status.

How many thousands of other people are victims of the same deception? It doesn’t have to stay that way, as many readers of Creation magazine would personally testify.

ARE YOU BROKEN DOWN OR BROKEN IN?

ARE YOU BROKEN DOWN OR BROKEN IN?

The world is full of broken people. No one escapes the brokenness that sin causes us. Lives, families, communities, towns, cities, and nations are all involved in breaking and destroying, no matter how hard some try to stop the rot.

Why is our world so broken, in the first place? The Bible offers the only explanation for the world’s pain and suffering. It’s called “sin”, but what is sin?

God created a perfect pair and gave them a perfect home. He gave them everything they needed and asked only one thing of them, to love Him by obeying His instructions. “Just don’t try to go it alone. You’ll never make it!”
So, what they do? They decided to leave God out of their lives and make their own rules. The result is very real everywhere today. Brokenness!

Does God care about our brokenness? Has He done anything to fix the mess we have made for ourselves? Yes, He does care,

Psalms 34:18 NLT
[18] The Lord is close to the broken-hearted; he rescues those whose spirits are crushed.

and yes, He paid the terrible debt of sin Himself. He came as a human to take the death penalty Himself.

Isaiah 53:4-5 NLT
[4] Yet it was our weaknesses he carried; it was our sorrows that weighed him down. And we thought his troubles were a punishment from God, a punishment for his wn sins! [5] But he was pierced for our rebellion, crushed for our sins. He was beaten so we could be whole. He was whipped so we could be healed.

All He asks of us is to come back to Him and start again. He has forgiven our sin, cancelled our debt and restored us to His family. “Now,” He says, “you must show your love for me by obeying my instructions.”

That’s the brokenness that heals our brokenness. Like a wild young stallion that is “broken in” so that it learns to submit to the rider, so we are broken in to submit to Jesus as Lord, our Supreme Authority.

Psalms 51:16-17 NLT
[16] “You do not desire a sacrifice, or I would offer one. You do not want a burnt offering. [17] The sacrifice you desire is a broken spirit. You will not reject a broken and repentant heart, O God.”

So, the question we must all answer is, “Are you still broken down or are you broken in?”