Luke 6

Take a moment to read the entire chapter of Luke 6 before reading the devotional below.

I’m the worst when it comes to rules. Not because I break them — quite the opposite actually. From a very young age I learned that when I followed the rules those around me were happy. When I saw others break the rules, the adults were not pleased and the consequences (both natural and imposed) were not something I wanted to experience. I began to trust in rules. And the more I tried to follow the rules, the more I realized that people also had preferences. Not rules exactly, just ways they liked things. And so I added that to my list of “rules” — things I did to please other people and get the positive reactions I liked. Pretty soon I became a lot of people’s favorite (you know I’m still your favorite, Mom…). I knew exactly who liked what things in which ways and my behavior always adjusted to make sure I met everyone’s standards. Then I added to that all the Bible rules that seemed to be there and I felt like I was doing pretty well keeping everyone including God happy.

And as much as I wish my children would bend to my preferences (which my sister assures me would turn them into creepy robot children), I have come to realize a few things about rules. For example, you will eventually reach places in life in which the people around you have conflicting preferences and you cannot make everyone happy at the same time. Another problem with rule-obsession is that you lose your sense of self. My heart’s desire was so strongly tied to rules and making others happy, I never asked myself what I needed or wanted. I had no understanding of grace, nor did I know how to receive it from God. Salvation is one thing. Grace in the midst of breaking rules is another.

Luke 6 brings us back to some of our earlier themes about rules versus life in the Spirit. Jesus breaks some rules and makes some people mad. Then he gives a sermon about all the ways that you can follow all the rules and be so far from the heart of God you have missed the whole point.

I still miss the point a lot. I still feel better when I can follow an exactly prescribed path and not have to do much thinking for myself. I still want to make everyone happy and it is very hard for me when that does not work. But God has begun to help teach me about his grace. I never wanted to need grace, honestly. If you follow all the rules you never need it. And Jesus came with that exact message: “If you think you don’t need grace, then you don’t need me. But if you know you need some grace, I’m handing it out freely.” Here’s your freedom for today: let your heart be moved by the grace of God. If you know you need it, take it today. And if you don’t want it, check in with your heart. Chances are you are protecting something that you are better off without.

Luke 7

Take a moment to read the entire chapter of Luke 7 before reading the devotional below.

Jesus was socially inappropriate. Politically incorrect. Rule breaker in sometimes horrifying ways. This chapter is full of cultural faux pas as Jesus offers healing and kindness to a solider of the regime oppressing the Jewish people, disrupts a funeral procession, publicly calls out the religious elites, praises a well-known prostitute after she won’t stop kissing his feet, and asserts the power to forgive sins (which only God could claim to do). It’s like he’s looking for ways to offend people. And I think he was.

Contrast that with today’s churches. Many churches are making their services flashier, their flyers cooler, and their sermons snazzier to appeal to the masses and give them more of what they want. Now, let’s not swing in the other direction (which many Christians have been known to do) and take Jesus’ ministry as a license to be obnoxious people. Don’t needlessly offend people, and when you do offend people make sure it’s the right people.

Those who were most offended by Jesus were those who thought they were closest to God. He was calling out the ones who would consider themselves to be the most devout. He was offering hope to people who thought they were counted out of society. There was no way they could ever claim to be religious, that’s for sure. Here’s your freedom for today: offend people with your kindness to those who least expect it. Show mercy to those who don’t deserve it. Offend people’s religious propriety by moving with the Spirit and displaying the heart of God for all to see. You just might get to see some people’s lives changed.

Luke 8

Take a moment to read the entire chapter of Luke 8 before reading the devotional below.

We’ve been talking about how Jesus was a rule-breaker who was willing to offend those who thought they knew God well (see yesterday’s post). As we journey on into chapter 8, we continue to see the confrontational nature of Jesus. His authoritative claims force us all to confront ourselves and our beliefs. What do we do with Jesus? Everyone must answer this question at some point in life.

In verses 4-15, Jesus tells and then explains a parable in which seeds are scattered on four types of soil. If you’ve been around church for any length of time, you’ve heard this one in a variety of forms. What strikes me most is that it emphasizes this confrontation with Jesus: you will either never believe, believe enthusiastically but never grow, believe but love all your other stuff more, or believe and grow. That’s it. Everyone will be in one of those categories. Jesus’ life, unquestionably historic even by those who do not follow him, confronts us still today.

The rest of the chapter is more mind-bending supernatural stuff. Story after story of healings and exorcisms and weather control. We like to talk about Jesus calming the “storms of life,” but that is a lame, watered-down retelling. He literally changed the weather. He threw a legion of demons into a bunch of pigs who then jumped off a cliff. These are not cute children’s Bible stories. These are confrontations with the supernatural. And this is the space in our minds where faith can exist.

Here’s your freedom for today: faith is not about you feeling better. Sometimes we feel like we don’t have enough faith if we struggle with depression or anxiety or other emotional issues. But faith is the position you take with the supernatural confrontation of Jesus. Are you willing to wrap your mind around who he is and what he did while on earth? Are you willing to wrestle with tough questions about the supernatural realm? Don’t weaken the definition of faith by making it about your feelings. Wrestle with the genuine spiritual questions Jesus forces us to answer.

Luke 9

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Take a moment to read the entire chapter of Luke 9 before reading the devotional below.

The theme that jumped off the page as I read this chapter was, “Take nothing with you.” Jesus shows off in a bunch of ways by using nothing to make something. Cast out demons and heal every disease? Sure, I have nothing but the clothes on my back! 5,000 people suddenly over for dinner? No problem, I have nothing to give them! Want to live a life full of everything? Great, just lose everything important to you! Are you up for a huge promotion in the kingdom of God? Super, be sure to be the last one in line!

If you cling to nothing then Satan’s power is extremely limited in your life. When we live like we have nothing to lose, we stop protecting our own interests and instead think of others first. No one can steal from you if you freely give whatever you have away.

Here’s your freedom for today: live a life holding on to nothing but faith, hope and love. We know these eternal things will be with us forever. Everything else Satan can try to rob, but he cannot steal your faith. He cannot take your hope. And he cannot snatch you away from God’s love. Against these things he is utterly powerless.