God

SNS 89: Pain to Praise Through Prayer, Psalm 61

Can I say that I find something extraordinary in this psalm? We have all heard something about prayer, what it is, what it does, and how it works. Right? Yet, I find here an aspect of prayer rarely spoken of. Indeed, “rarely” is an understatement. Yet, it is most profound and makes total sense when viewed in a relationship with God. Prayer elevates us from pain into peace, joy, and praise as we talk with the one we trust. Now…. Well, let’s first hear the psalm. Then we’ll chat about it.  

Also, before beginning, I am proud to say that this podcast is now sponsored by our book, Psalms 1-72, A Simple Not Shallow Presentation. This book is a collection of the Psalms, as heard on the Psalm Tuesday episodes. It is available as a paperback and as an e-book. I will share two links for you in the description of this episode.       

But, for now, my name is Charles, Charles Yerkes, and this is Psalm Tuesday here on the Simple Not Shallow Podcast. This podcast is for those who want a deeper faith and not an aggressively mediocre one. Psalm Tuesday is a series in which we will listen to a psalm being read in a manner that honors their original use as part of a worship service. Here in episode #89, we are listening to Psalm 61. 

So, grab yourself some coffee, and let’s get started. 

If you don't mind, let me know what you think about this? You can do this in the comment box here:


Scripture Passages referenced:
Psalm 61

John 16:33 ~ Be cheerful because Jesus has overcome the world.

If you receive a blessing out of what I do and want to say, "Thank you."

Buy me a virtual coffee:

Our Book:
Psalms 1-72, A Simple Not Shallow Presentation:


Click here to learn more about our book.

It is available as a paperback and as an e-book. It can be found wherever fine books are sold.

For your convenience, two links are provided below.

Follow either to collect this book right away.

Amazon.com

Barnes and Nobel

Follow me on:

FaceBook - Twitter - Instagram

SNS 071: Remembering the Who (not the band or the doctor), Psalm 43, Psalm Tuesday

Can I just say that some things bear repeating? At least, the Psalmist seems to think so for he tells us once again how to have peace in midst of sorrow. It is by remembering who God is and what he has already done. Then trusting him to do so again. Trusting the one we know through remembering who he is. Well… let’s hear the psalm first, shall we? We’ll touch base afterwards. Oh, and there is an exciting announcement I’ll share at the end of this episode.

So, for now, my name is Charles, Charles Yerkes and this is Psalm Tuesday here on the Simple Not Shallow Podcast. This is a podcast for those who want a deeper faith and not an aggressively mediocre one. Psalm Tuesday is series in which, each Tuesday, we will listen to a Psalm being read in a manner that honors their original use as part of a worship service.     

So, grab yourself some coffee, and let’s get started. 

Please tell me what you think about this. You can do this in the comment box here:


Scripture Passages referenced:
Psalm 43

Other Scripture mentioned:
Psalm 8

Our Book:

Psalms 1-72, A Simple Not Shallow Presentation:

Available wherever fine books are sold. Below are links to just two of the possibilities.

Amazon.com

Barnes and Nobel

Follow me on:

FaceBook
Twitter
Instagram

SNS 027: Why Doesn't God Just Fix Things?

In our last episode, there were a couple of things we just weren’t able to get to. In particular, the question of why God doesn’t just fix things. If he is the caring friend who is always with us, then why doesn’t he simply remove what is causing us pain? What if it is a result of his caring so much about us? And what if our going through the pain, with him by our side, is actually better for us than his merely fixing things? My name is Charles, grab yourself some coffee, and let’s talk about them.

Please tell me what you think about this. You can do this in the comment box below:


Also, If you like this podcast, please subscribe so that you will never miss a future episode. Thank you.

Scripture Passages referenced:
Genesis 1:26 ~ God making man in his own image.
Genesis 3:8 ~ God walking in the garden to speak with Adam and Eve.
John 15: 7-12 ~ Remain in Jesus and his love and his joy will be in you and your joy will be complete.
Philippians 4:7 ~ The peace which passes our ability to understand it.
1 John 4:8 ~ The one who doesn't love doesn't know God.
2 Corinthians 4:8, 9 ~ To be hard-pressed but not crushed, perplexed but not despairing, struck down but not destroyed.


Follow me on:

FaceBook:
https://www.facebook.com/simplenotshallow/

Twitter: 
https://twitter.com/SimpleNShallow

SNS 017: How Big Is Your God?

Thank you for visiting.

Click on the white arrow in the green button above to hear this episode. Below are the show notes. Feel free to read along, check out the Bible references I make, and subscribe through the podcast service you prefer by clicking any of the buttons on the upper right side of this post.

Also, please hit the like button and leave a comment below. I’d love to hear what you have to say.

Thank you.

Show Notes

So, here is a question for you, is your God big enough? No, seriously, is your God big enough? Big enough for what? And why is that important? That is what we are going to explore here in episode 17.

My name is Charles, and this is The Simple Not Shallow Podcast. Home of The Simple Not Shallow Coffee House, a coffee house on the internet; but that’s ok, The Simple Not Shallow Coffee House. A podcast for those who want a deeper faith, not a confusing one. That is what our name is all about, keeping faith in Christ simple; simple enough that a child-like myself can understand it and yet, not so shallow, that when the storms of life hit, our faith is forced to run aground. It is for those who want their faith… to be like a good cup of coffee. That is, simple, strong, full of flavor, and richly satisfying. Just like this cup of French roast, I am enjoying now. Richly satisfying.

Take your time and sip on this.

So, is your God big enough? Another way to ask this is, who do you understand God to be? Does this seem like a strange question to you? I mean, God is God, right? 

Here is why I ask. I have found that people only ever practice their religion based on who they understand God to be. Which is to say, how they allow themselves to relate to God and then put that relationship into practice in their daily lives. Which, by the way, includes how they relate to other people.

Whether you look judgmentally down your nose at those doing wrong or are so emotionally sympathetic that you can see that no one is doing anything that wrong or you are somewhere in between. You are only living out what your perception of God will let you live out, religiously speaking. Whether you try to live out every single lesson in the Bible, to the letter, or you think that as it was written to a people so long ago that most of it really doesn’t apply; as we have come a long way since then. Or again, are you somewhere in the middle? All this is decided by who you understand God to be. Jesus even seems to indicate this when he says that when we are trained, we will be like our master (Luke 6:40). So, once again, let me ask you, how big do you understand God to be? Who is God to you?

“God is God,” you say. “He is the Ultimate God, the Only God, the God over the whole universe.” Ok, what else? Is that all you truly know? While this may sound counter-intuitive, that actually sounds like a pretty small God to me. For if that is all God is to you, then you have one that you can put in a little box and call it done. For then you need to give no more thought to such a remote and removed God. He is up there somewhere, far removed from your daily life. Oh, he is over your daily life, to be sure. But he is also removed and detached from it as well. So, while this is a good start, I find it, as a whole, as a whole definition of who God is, to be a bit of an understatement, really, and way too impersonal.

“Well,” you might say, “He is also holy, perfect, just, self-existing, eternal, sovereign, righteous, and wise.” Yea, I would agree with that. But as a holistic understanding of God, I don’t know; I mean, while this is better and richer than only understanding God to be God, the one and only God. I still find it to be a bit lacking. It is also one that I find too small and still too impersonal. If this is all you know God to be, then your practice of religion will tend to be judgmental and harsh. And to be honest, it cannot help but be so; as there is nothing in this understanding to soften the harshness. 

How can I say this? How can I say that God the one and only, God the righteous ruler, God the Just, the Sovereign is too small of a God? Well, I am not saying that. I am not saying that he is too small. Rather, what I am saying is that if that is all you know of him, if that is the sum total of your understanding of who he is, that is what is too small. And your religious life will reflect this, it will never be as abundant or as richly satisfying as he means for it to be.

“Oh,” you might be saying, “I suppose you are now going to say that he is only all love, mercy, graciousness, and forgiveness. Right? And that unless we see him that way, we’re being too small, right? That’s what you mean isn’t it?” No, that is not what I mean. For if that is your only understanding of God, that he is only about love, forgiveness, and mercy, then your understanding of God is also much too small; too small and this time instead of harsh, merely mushy. And your faith will also be small and mushy. So no, that is not what I am saying.

See, any of these understandings, isolated and by themselves, will allow you to put God in a nice neat little religious box. You bring him out when you need or want something from him and keep him out of sight and out of mind when you don’t. You always know exactly what other people have to do, you will know what you don’t have to do, and you will know what makes religious experience authentic. And you will know that any experience not matching your own quickly becomes suspect. Everything is all very prim and proper, is in its place, is all wrapped up with a nice little bow, and, because of this, religion tends to be seen as right and wrong, in black and white. 

Yea, well…. I have found very few things in this life that tend to be black and white. Especially when it comes to relationships. There is simply way too much, in relationships, that resides in the area of the grey for us to not learn how to navigate through it. Why am I talking about relationships? Since God is a relational God, how can we not? And since we human beings are involved in this relationship with God, this relationship will have more than its fair share of grey areas as well. For it is in the grey that we are forged into strong adults; into the men and women, God would have us be. And we need a God who is big enough to guide us through these areas as we learn to love. 

So, is your understanding of God big enough to allow him to be the God of the grey? Is your God big enough that he cannot be contained in a small box of the small box of black and white? What is my understanding of God? Fair enough.

He is God, the one and only. He is love and he is just. He is righteous and he is merciful. He is forgiving and he is sovereign. He is perfect and he is gracious. He is omni - everything and he is good. He is the complete and total package. He is all of this altogether and is never anything less. Because of this: righteousness is not righteousness without love; love is not love without righteousness. Justice is not justice without mercy; mercy is not mercy without justice. Sovereignty is not sovereignty without graciousness and graciousness is not graciousness without sovereignty. To deny or ignore any aspect of who God is is to make God smaller than he is. I mean, we don’t actually reduce the size of God in any way, that would be silly, nor we do not truly take anything away from him. But we do limit our relationship with him by choosing to not relate to him as he truly and fully is. Think about it, do you ever truly get to know somebody else, anybody here on this earth, by purposefully ignoring parts of who they are? That only creates a caricature. It does nothing about truly get to know that person. 

I guess there is a simpler way of saying who God is to me if I were to condense all this down to just a sentence or two. I think I would say that God, to me, is the relational God of growing up. The God of learning to live in love; in love with him, with our entire being, and with my neighbors as myself. Which does involve relationships and relationships, by their very nature, seldom if ever allow for the limitations of the black and white. There is simply way too much grey. He is the God of the grey. Is your God big enough to be the God of the grey? He wants to be.

So, love simply, love wisely, love well, and allow God to show you just how limited your current understanding of him has been. I almost said that you may know just how truly big he is, but I don’t think our little minds will ever fully know the infinite God. No more than a swimmer with a mouth full of seawater fully knows the vastness and the depths of the ocean.

Well, what do you think? I’d love to hear from you, so please, go to simplenotshallow.com, and under the Simple Not Shallow Podcast section, find this episode, #16. I now have a page that says, Choose the Episode, click on this episode and leave a comment for me there. Also, in the show notes, I’ll list all the verses I referenced, in the transcript that I’ve posted. And I will list them at the location in the transcript at which I referenced them. That way you can check me out to make sure I’m not making any of this up. For while I am a rather creative individual, I never want to be that creative. Also, please take a second to rate this episode and subscribe to this podcast through the podcast service of your choice. You know, iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify. iHeartRaido, or whichever service you prefer. That way, you can take the podcast with you, wherever you want to go. When you are driving your car, going to work, taking your morning jog, walking your dog. However, whenever, wherever.  Thank you. Thank you very much. I’ll catch you next time.

Also, if you do not see the like button or the comment box, you are on the page that lists 5 episodes at a time. It is a default page that I can not skip.

To click the like button and leave a comment click here. This takes you to the individual post. Then simply scroll down to the bottom of the post and click like and comment away. Thank you for understanding.

SNS 014: Is Life Meaningless?

Thank you for visiting.

Click on the white arrow in the green button above to hear this episode. Below are the show notes. Feel free to read along, check out the Bible references I make, and subscribe through the podcast service you prefer by clicking any of the buttons on the upper right side of this post.

Also, to click the like button or leave a comment, please click here. Then simply scroll down to the bottom of the post and click like and comment away.

Thank you.

Show Notes

 

Is life meaningless? Or is it that we just don’t see the meaning in it? And what does God have to do with any of that? That is what we are going to explore here in this episode, episode 14.

My name is Charles, and this is The Simple Not Shallow Podcast. A podcast for those who want a deeper faith, not a confusing one. That is what our name is all about, keeping faith in Christ simple; simple enough that a child like myself can understand it and yet, not so shallow, that when the storms of life hit, our faith is forced to run aground. It is for those who want their faith to be like a good cup of coffee. Simple, strong, full of flavor, and richly satisfying. Like this cup of very hot coffee I have before me right now. Yes, very satisfying. 

So, you might want to buckle up and sip on this.

Where does our sense of purpose and worth come from? What gives our lives meaning? Do these things not come from knowing that we are doing something worthwhile? And our sense of self-worth is that not tied, not only to our being loved, which it is, but also to our accomplishing things that are worthwhile? I think it probably is. 

Perhaps, just perhaps, that is why God, the one how loves and accepts us the most, made us not only on purpose but with purpose. And what if, what if that is the reason that we gain a sense of meaning and worth the way we do. What if he loved us so much that he was intentional in assigning us a purpose of such depth and complexity that if we are not pursuing it, our lives feel empty and meaningless. Jesus said he came to give life and that in abundance. What if that involves reconnecting us with the purpose for which we have been made. And from which we have become disconnected.

What is that purpose? Well, in thinking about this, and I was giving this a good deal of thought, I thought that a very good place to begin, as good as any, in looking for this purpose, was at the beginning, at beginning of it all. At the very moment human beings were created. Well, at least to see what I could find out. And then I figured, for that point I could turn to the New Testament to see if Jesus had anything to say about this. Know what I found? I found that at the very beginning, at the exact moment of being created, we were given a purpose by God. That purpose is found in our being made in the image of God. Our purpose was to be his representatives to the rest of creation. Yes, to all of creation. We were to act in his stead, to govern it for him, to tend and care for the garden, and to rule over the rest of creation. How’s that for purpose?

I find a lot of depth and complexity here. Especially when I take a look at some of Jesus’ teachings. The ones that say, that the first will be last (Mark 10:31), the leader with be the servant of all (Luke 22:26), the rulers will be the servants (Matthew 20:26). By looking at such teachings as these, it is not hard for me to see that our original purpose involved serving, being a good steward and servant of all the rest of God’s creation. 

As to our worth, it seems that since God entrusted us with being his representatives, that speaks volumes about the great worth that he has attached to us, his human creations. No other part of his creation is entrusted with acting in his stead, with maintaining and taking care of all that he has created. David, king David, even said it this way, he says, “you (God) have crowned him (us, human peoples) with glory and honor.” People, who even David saw as small when compared to all the marvels of the universe. Even he marveled at the worth God placed on us (Psalm 8:3 – 9). And David relates that it is this worth, this is the reason this purpose was given. Worth, purpose, and meaning. Then I did a little further digging and found our worth to be further explained in Hebrews 2, which quotes this Psalm, Psalm 8, but it then goes beyond that and shares our great worth to God. It does this by telling us how Jesus, who is God, is not ashamed to call us brothers and sisters. We are worth so much to God that he is proud to call us his family. And that, my friend, is a game changer.

Ok, so that was our purpose in Genesis, but how about today? Did that purpose remain the same once we human beings fell away and had to leave the garden? Before moving onto this, there is one more tender story in Genesis that I simply have to share. It is one that also shows our great worth and value to God. This happens after the fall and right before Adam and Eve are forced out of the garden. At this point, they know they are naked and because of this they are full of shame. Oh, they tried as best they could to make a covering for themselves, to cover up their shame, to alleviate it. But their efforts weren’t good enough; it was quite inadequate. As seen in the fact that they still hid from God for the expressed reason that they knew they were naked and they were full of shame about it (Genesis 3:7 – 23). Here is the touching part; they were worth so much to God, he valued them so much, even after they had fallen, that he did not abandon them to their shame. He could have, but he didn’t. He could have forced them out into the wild rugged world, full of shame and quite inadequately protected from it. But that is not what he did. He quite graciously and tenderly gave them cloths to wear (Genesis 3:21). To both help them out of their shame and to help protect their bodies against the wild world outside of the garden. For the world was never going to be such a nice place, ever again. That he did this, to me, is yet another sign of just how much value he places on people, even after they have fallen.

Well, back to what our purpose looks like today, is the same purpose we were given in Genesis? Are we still purposed with being his representatives today? I think we are; I even think that perhaps the purpose has expanded just a little, or changed just a little. I think we are still to be good stewards of all creation; we are still to tend and take care of all God has made. And yet, this may look a little bit different than it did in Adam’s day, before the fall. But in any event, I have not been able to find anything that tells me this purpose has ended, that it has changed to something else entirely. Though, like I said, I think it has shifted in focus just a little bit. 

Our purpose today, as far as I can tell, is summed up in this statement, “As you go, be my representatives to others. Teach them how to be reflections of me as well; help them be my disciples. Teach them everything I have taught you. I will be with you as you do so.” Yes, this is a paraphrase of the passages known as The Great Commission in Matthew (28:19, 20). But, but, in light of all we’ve seen so far, and in light of the passage I found that says that the way others will know we are God’s representatives, his disciples, is this, that we love one another (John 13:35); well, in light of all that, it does not seem to be wrong as a paraphrase. And that shift in focus that I mentioned, is directly on helping other human beings become true representatives of him. Helping them also be true reflections of his love.

To simplify this just a little bit more, our purpose in life then, the one where we find lasting meaning and profound worth, is this, to live a life based on the 1st and 2nd greatest commands as found in Matthew 22 (34 – 40). And I hear this purpose stated yet again in at least one other passage; the one that shares how remaining in Christ’s love is how we bear much fruit and is how we prove to be true representatives and reflections of Jesus. Because, if we remain in is love, that is to follow his commands and that is to love one other (John 15:7 – 12). 

That is our purpose today, to love God with our entire being and our neighbors as ourselves. When we do this, we find lasting meaning in life. When we do this, we allow God to show us our profound worth. All of this because we are focused on him. As we have talked about living from his love in most every other episode we have here at the Simple Not Shallow Podcast, I’m not going to delve too much more into it now. But, if you have not listened to these other episodes, please do so, for these will help prepare you for our next one. The next one is already being written. For there, in that episode, we are going to talk more specifically about what Jesus shares concerning how this living from love sets you free to live a meaningful life. To know the meaning in your life, to know the profound worth that God places on your life. 

Until then, love simply, love wisely, love well, and discover all the meaning, purpose, and worth that your life has been given by Jesus Christ, God himself; the one who loves you the most.

Well, what do you think? I’d love to hear from you, so please, go to simplenotshallow.com and under the Simple Not Shallow Podcast section, find this episode, #14, click on that and leave a comment for me there. Do click on the title as you will initially land on a summary page, one that lists several episodes at a time. To leave a message simply click on the title and that will take you to the actual post and you can comment away, all you’d like. Also, at that point, you’ll see the show notes, I’ll list all the verses I referenced, in the order and at the location in the transcript at which I referenced them. That way, and by the way, I really want you to do this, that way, you can check me out to make sure I’m not making any of this up, that I’m not putting things together that don’t belong, or that I’m totally in left field. I am a very creative individual, but I don’t want to be that creative. Making things up is never a good thing when it comes to biblical truth. Also, please take a second to rate this episode and subscribe to this podcast through the podcast service of your choice. You know, iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify… or whichever service you prefer. That way, you can take the podcast with you, wherever you want to go. When you are driving your car, going to work, taking your morning jog, walking your dog, or even going for morning coffee. However, whenever, wherever.  Thank you. Thank you very much. I’ll catch you next time.