Holy Habitation
Do you think of yourself as holy? Does it make you squirm a little to think of calling yourself righteous? Perfect? When was the last time you looked at yourself in the mirror and thought that there was nothing you would change? Ok, that last one made even me giggle. Why do we struggle with accepting the labels that God himself has placed on us? We have no problem identifying ourselves as sinners, less than perfect, works in progress. What does He see that we don’t?
A few Sundays ago Pastor Kevin preached a great message on being tuned into the Holy Spirit and how we can and should walk in the Spirit. Then Pastor Michelle closed out with an idea that struck me. We are holy. Already Christ has taken our place and exchanged our sin for His righteousness. But are we creating a habitat for that holiness? What does that look like in our own lives? What kinds of habits are helping to shape that habitat?
I don’t know about you, but I’ve gotten really good at making excuses for my bad habits. Like, really good. Oh, and finding lots of reasons to not create good new ones. I shouldn’t question where my son gets his debate skills because the apple obviously doesn’t fall too far from the tree if you know what I mean. The problem is, as a believer, I can recognize where that conflict comes from. It may sound like me in my head, it may even have some very valid points. But the truth is if God has commanded me to do or not to do something, and the Holy Spirit is giving me that check in my spirit, then the response should be obedience.
Ugh, that word. OBEDIENCE. Why do we have such a hard time with it? It instantly makes me crinkle my nose up like it’s got some awful stench wafting out of it. I truly feel that Americans have more trouble with this word or idea than most. Unlike in other countries, our children are not taught to value authority as they should. In fact, it’s almost the opposite these days. We struggle with being told what to do. Everything in our society is now programmed with the idea of ‘my body, my choice’. ‘I am the master of myself and my destiny’. ‘I can be anything that I want to be.’ ‘Just be you.’ ‘Self-love’ and ‘self-care.’ You get the picture. I, I, I, me, me, me. We have made ourselves and the way we feel the ultimate authority in our lives and those feelings begin to dictate the directions we go and the choices we make.
Why is that so wrong, Casey? What’s wrong with taking care of yourself? Why wouldn’t you want to strive to be the best you can be and follow your dreams? Do you see it? Those debate skills come into play. These things don’t sound bad on the surface. But if the Holy Spirit has told me one thing and my flesh has told me another, then I have to decide which one I’m going to obey. If I want to have a relationship with this person but the Holy Spirit is warning me to run, not walk, in the opposite direction, then who am I going to listen to? If I want to take this job because it’s going to mean my bank account is going to double in size but God is warning me that it’s going to steal all my time and rob my peace, then who am I going to listen to? The examples could go on and on.
However, obedience is not hard or scary if you have trust in the person you are submitting to. The first sin was disobedience and it came because Adam and Eve believed the lie from the enemy that God was not as good as He said He was. That somehow He set those rules in place to deprive them instead of for their benefit. When all was said and done, we can
see that if they had just followed God and obeyed his commands, then they would have saved themselves and all of mankind a ton of pain and heartache. But the devil has been practicing this lie for a long time and he’s gotten pretty good at it. When I said I’ve gotten good at making excuses for bad habits, what I’m really saying is I’ve listened to the lie of the enemy telling me that what God has asked me to do is going to deprive me of something that I want. That God is holding out on me and keeping me from something good.
But is that who God is? No. It’s not. When the Holy Spirit asks me to start setting aside time to pray and seek Him, it’s not because he wants to test how well I’ll function on an hour less of sleep. It’s because He genuinely wants a relationship with me and He knows I need one with Him. When He prompts me to give some change to the same person I’ve seen on that corner holding a sign asking for money week after week, it’s not to deprive me of my Starbucks fund. It’s to remind me that I trust in Him for my provision. Do I know that He is good? Do I believe that He has great things planned for me? Am I certain that He gave up heaven and came to earth to suffer and die for me so that I could have life and life more abundantly? I am. I believe that. Yes, God is good.
Then the response to that is a heart of obedience. Listen to Him. Follow Him. Create in yourself habits that create a habitat for holiness. As we walk in step with the Father, we destroy any foothold the enemy had in our lives. Hebrews 12:11 reminds us “No discipline is enjoyable while it’s happening - it’s painful! But afterward, there will be a peaceful harvest of right living for those who are trained in this way.” It’s worth it! He’s worth it! God loves you and wants His best for you. He wants to have a relationship with you, His child, and that means trusting that He is God and you are not… and that’s ok. In fact, it’s great because He sees and knows what we do not. “For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them”, Ephesians 2:10. This Easter season and always, let’s walk in that holiness, trusting that God is for you. You are so LOVED.
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