Am looking at 2 Thessalonians 1:11-12.
With this in mind, we constantly pray for you, that our God may count you worthy of his calling, and that by his power he may fulfill every good purpose of yours and every act prompted by your faith. We pray this so that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ.
This prayer follows Paul's thoughts earlier in 2 Thessalonians 1:1-10. I blogged about my reactions to verses 3-10.
In brief, Paul gave the Thessalonian believers some encouragement about how the sufferings they have experienced has not gone unnoticed by God and that those who persecuted them will be judged someday. It is in this context that Paul launches into a prayer for them.
Worthy of his calling strikes me. On one hand, there is no way I'm worthy of his calling in the sense I know I am, simply put, nothing more than a sinner saved by grace. On the other God has called me out of my old life which was controlled by sin and death into freedom (Romans 8:1-2). Thus, at one time a prayer to live worthy would have been pointless is now possible!
And so how does this work itself out in my life?
Paul's prayer continues ... by his power he may fulfill ...
every good purpose of yours ...
every act prompted by your faith ...
Imagine that!
Within the Thessalonian followers of Jesus, within us, within me, there are good purposes percolating within because our lives have been transformed by God. Within me, there are deeds prompted by the faith in my life. When those things show up within me, God's power is happily added onto it to strengthen it and to bring it to reality.
And then what happens?
the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you, and you in him ...
The good deeds we do bring glory to Jesus!
J.S. Bach was well known for putting the initials S.D.G. at the end of his composition. S.D.G. stood for Soli Deo Gloria which is Latin for to the Glory of God alone.
Lord Jesus, please continue to work in my life by strengthening and prompting the desire to be holy in thought and deed. Help me not to quench those thoughts that push me towards godliness and help me to resist those thoughts that are selfish and wicked. Amen.
2 comments:
Why do Christians use the expression "god" instead of talking about "a god" or "the god of . . ."
I know Christians think there is only one god but are they right? How would we know?
Hi Mairtin!
Thanks for dropping by and commenting.
Indeed, you are asking the correct question!
How do we know that the god described by religion X, Y or Z is right?
Some people will skirt that question by saying all roads lead to god.
Others will skirt the question by saying all roads lead to nowhere because there is no god!
My own view is that I respect those who do not share my views of god and religion and so forth. However, I would point out that not all religious claims are compatible and thus some are correct while others are not.
For instance, I hold that Jesus is the central figure of my religious faith. Jesus words and deeds shape my morality and view of the world. I believe his life, death and resurrection actually happened and have theological significance.
Is this belief reasonable?
Between the combination of historical evidence, eyewitness testimony and the transformed lives of his followers through the ages, we have basis for belief and faith.
For those who want to examine Christianity and have questions, please feel free to drop in here and read as I try to honestly write about the Bible and my struggles to understand it and put it into practice.
Also, I do welcome comments and will share my thoughts and would love to dialog with you.
I'd also highly recommend the web page for Stand to Reason which can be found at http://www.str.org. They have lots of good stuff there.
Thanks again for dropping by!
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