Thursday, January 15, 2015

Sermon Nuggets and Afterthoughts



I had the privilege to hear a Jewish missionary from Israel speak recently.  He spoke on the NINE fruits of the spirit in Galatians 6 in correlation to the NINE spices listed in Song of Solomon 4.  I had never heard of these two groupings of scriptures referencing one another before.  I have not done the study myself, but definitely found it intriguing and something to look further into.  I walked away with a stronger desire to be proactive in cultivating the fruit in my life and becoming a person of strong character.
 
There was far too much to it to mentally capture or physically jot down and give it justice.  So I am just going to type as I remember it and add in personal thoughts as they come. J
 
The young woman in Song of Solomon was at that time considered to be an unlearned, peasant girl and the man was a king.  In the very beginning of the book she was awakened to love; just like we become awakened to the love of God before we come to Him.  The king had to teach and show her what it is she needed in order to reign with him. 
 
When you move to the 4th chapter it speaks of the woman being a garden.  We are also the garden; a garden that is meant to live and thrive and grow good fruit that is pleasing to our King.   
 
The fruit that jumped out to me was meekness.  The origin of the word means “to suffer without retaliation.”  Wow.  That sure broadened a word for me that I thought simply meant “teachable.”
 
David was a meek man.  He did not retaliate against Saul when he had opportunities to do so.  Both Saul and David were anointed.  What set David apart is he was a man with character (fruits of the spirit).  He likened Saul to a church who is called and anointed but has not developed character.  We can settle with being like Saul.  We will still be used by God.  We may even slay our thousands.  However, if we develop our character like David did, we will slay ten thousands, so to speak.  (1 Samuel 18:7)  We will have greater power and presence of God working in our lives and in our ministries.
 
Someone asked how important the gifts of the Spirit were.  He said they are essential, but not foundational.  He said we need to desire them and want to be used in them, but without character, our influence and our relationship with the Lord will be limited.  Anointing builds the church but needs to be built on character. 
 
The fruit of the spirit attracts God's presence.  We become a sweet smelling aroma to Him and He is drawn to that.  (2 Corinthians 2:15, Ephesians 5:2)  When we react the right way, it brings God's presence.  When we react wrong, we nauseate Him. (Psalm 95:10)  The word grieved in that scripture literally means disgusted, nauseated, to make vomit. :(
 
Jesus Christ.  Christ is not His last name, as we know.  Christ means anointing.  Satan, anti-Christ = anti-anointing.  He hates the anointing that builds the church.  Made me think that this is why he fights our spirit walk so hard to get us to defer to walking in the flesh.  Flesh produces death.  Flesh never produces life and anointing. 
 
Another question asked was how to overcome anger.  He said we need to get to the root of it so God can heal us, but even apart from doing that, if we learn to walk in the fruit of peace, anger will be diminished.  It is like a buffer.  Imagine someone walking with a full cup of water to the brim.  Someone bumps them, it spills.  That's how it is when someone has pent up anger.  However, if we are walking in peace, even if the anger is underneath, there's a buffer there; a covering that allows for us a little extra time to not react in anger.  It reminded me of Philippians 4:7, "Then you will experience God’s peace [when you pray and give thanks, verse 6], which exceeds anything we can understand. His peace will GUARD your hearts and minds as you live in Christ Jesus." His peace guards and keeps us.
 
When our peace is disturbed, we need to stop and identify the fear attached to that moment.  In finding the root, we can be set free to walk in faith and not fear.  Fear is the default mode for our flesh.  Faith allows us to walk in the spirit and not default to our natural flesh reactions.  Faith shields us. (1 Peter 1:5) 
 
He shared he unknowingly had fear of abandonment his whole life due to being away from his mother for nearly a year after her suicide attempt when he was a young boy.  Once he got to the root of that fear, he learned to walk in the fruit of peace so he has that "buffer" to react properly.  He said without peace, he is sure his reactions would not be pleasant.  I found it interesting that he said lavender in Song of Solomon 4 was peace.  As we know, we use lavender for relaxation J
 
Final thoughts:  As I pondered on all of this today, I got to thinking about the gifts brought to Jesus after his birth. 
 
Gold = Associated with kings and kingdoms
Frankincense = Faith/faithfulness
Myrrh = Meekness
 
The King of kings (gold), who suffered for us without retaliation (myrrh), was faithful even unto death (frankincense)!  J
 
 

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