The Joy of Glory

Discovering endless joy in the boundless glory of God…

Tag: Lent

Lent Devotional: Micah 7:18-20

Micah 7:18-20
Who is a God like you, pardoning iniquity and passing over transgression for the remnant of his inheritance? He does not retain his anger forever, because he delights in steadfast love. He will again have compassion on us; he will tread our iniquities underfoot. You will cast all our sins into the depths of the sea. You will show faithfulness to Jacob and steadfast love to Abraham, as you have sworn to our fathers from the days of old.

Reflection
Who pardons like our God? Who forgives like our God? Who relents from anger like our God? Who delights in steadfast love like our God? Who has compassion like our God? Who removes our sins forever like our God? Who shows faithfulness like our God? Who keeps their word like our God?

Who is a God like you?

The implied answer…the only true answer…is no one! No one is like our God! Do we ever stop to ponder just how incredible the Lord is? Do we ponder things like the fact he DELIGHTS in steadfast love? God doesn’t just forgive our sin, but he actually takes great joy in showing compassion toward us!

Do we ponder things like his treading our iniquities underfoot and casting them into the depths of the sea? In other words… he doesn’t just sweep our sin under the rug… he actually defeats it! He does a victory dance over it! He completely removes it and drowns it!

God kills the sin that would’ve killed us!

We take these things for granted. I take these things for granted! I fail to ponder the depth of their wonder. We act as though this is simple, and just what God is supposed to do… but the cross reveals that taking care of our sin was anything but simple… nor was it something God “had” to do.

Jesus was willingly killed in order to kill the sin that would have killed us!

What wondrous love is this? And he delights to do this??? Hebrews tells us that Jesus went to the cross for the JOY that was set before him. Ponder this today…Christ has not just killed your sin and lavished his love on you, but it has been his JOY, he has DELIGHTED to do so!

*The complete SVCC Lenten reading guide is available here.

Lent Devotional: Isaiah 65:17-25

Isaiah 65:17-25 (click here)
But be glad and rejoice forever in that which I create; for behold, I create Jerusalem to be a joy, and her people to be a gladness. I will rejoice in Jerusalem and be glad in my people; no more shall be heard in it the sound of weeping and the cry of distress. (Isaiah 65:18-19)

Reflection
Joy.

We thirst for it…long for it…seek it…yet it seemingly remains elusive.

All of life can seem like an unfulfilled hunt to satisfy our hunger for joy. Why? Why do we seek joy and why does it seemingly remain just out of our reach.

Scripture answers our questions with the claim that we were created for joy! We seek joy because that is what we were made to do. Yet, we do not find it because we fail to look for it in the one place it can be forever found…God.

We have an eternal thirst for joy, and there is only one eternally satisfying source.

We were created for joy in God.

However, our hunger has become twisted and seeks to be satisfied by anything other than the Lord. We need to be recreated with a hunger for God! We need this world, which tries to distract us with so many false joys, to be recreated in such a way that all things draw us toward the eternal fountain of joy…Jesus!

This is exactly what we have been promised. God will recreate all things to be a joy! All things will bring gladness to us, his people, for all things will perfectly point us to him!

No more weeping and crying in distress because we cannot find that which satisfies! No! He who satisfies will be ours forever and we will be his!

We fight toward that day! We fight right now to find our joy in Jesus, knowing the day will come when that fight will be won and we shall know perfect, eternal joy in him!

*The complete SVCC Lenten reading guide is available here.

Lent Devotional: Isaiah 25:6-9

Isaiah 25:6-9 (click here)
It will be said on that day, “Behold, this is our God; we have waited for him, that he might save us. This is the LORD; we have waited for him; let us be glad and rejoice in his salvation.” (Isaiah 25:9)

Reflection
So much of life seems to be spent waiting.

As a kid, you’re constantly waiting to be a certain age to be able to participate in certain things. You wait in lines, you wait on people, you wait for a special day to arrive. You wait and wait and wait and wait and wait…

Will the waiting ever end? And more importantly…will it have been worth it?

Much of relationship with the Lord is described as a call to wait. We are to wait for the Lord, which is another way of saying we trust him. Waiting does not mean we are idle in our relationship with God, but that we are actively trusting him.

The need to wait on the Lord arises from the fact that our experience does not currently align with his promises. We are a redeemed people waiting for the completion of redemption. This has been promised to us, and God will bring it about…but right now we wait…we trust…we hope.

That day will come…the day when we no longer have to talk about waiting, but will be able to speak in past tense and declare that we have waited. The day of final salvation will come when all our waiting will seem like it has been no more than a few moments.

Salvation will be complete and all the waiting will be over.

Yet, until then…we wait. Not idly, but expectantly. We wait in such a way that declares to the world our great confidence and trust in the Lord who is not idle, but actively working towards the day for which we are waiting.

*The complete SVCC Lenten reading guide is available here.