Hey Everyone,
Disclaimer: I had to include an alternative to coffee for a particular tea-loving friend.
I was prepping my morning coffee a few days ago as I gathered up what I needed to do some work for a few hours. As I became distracted with other things, my coffee very quickly cooled down to barely lukewarm, causing the first sip to be less than enjoyable.
Because I don't like the taste of coffee that's been reheated in the microwave, I usually choose the opposite extreme once it's cooled down to "the point of no return," so instead, I add heaps of ice until it's cold enough to suit a polar bear.
I don't like coffee unless it's piping hot or ice ice (baby) cold. (That was a song reference for anyone who grew up around the same time I did!)
This whole morning coffee-turned-bad-turned-good-again scenario had me thinking about a particular passage in Revelation. I'm not the only one who doesn't enjoy something lukewarm.
Revelation 3:16 -- "So because you are lukewarm (spiritually useless,) and neither hot nor cold, I will vomit you out of My mouth (rejecting you with disgust.)"
This gave a whole new meaning towards my otherwise mundane coffee ritual.
Certainly none of us want to be seen as spiritually useless or disgusting to God.
But yet I found myself asking:
1. How do we know whether we are lukewarm, cold, or hot? How can we determine if God finds us spiritually useful? (And how much do we have to be doing, and what do we have to be doing to achieve this?)
Is going to church once a week enough? Praying 3 times a week? Helping out in one group... or 4? Or is it more or less?
How do we know?
I struggle with this myself. I have been reading a daily devotional for years, but a few weeks ago, I believed God was telling me to bump that up and get back into regular Bible reading. I've always tried to read the Bible regularly, but yeah, I was slacking. Every time I read through the Bible completely, I like to buy a new one with footnotes and additional articles and insights (about culture, geography, history of the time frames, etc.) I'm sad to say, I've had my latest Bible for over 3 years and I'm only up to Acts. The Holy Spirit was telling me, "C'mon now, pick that up and let's get going."
Right now I'm trying to read 2 pages a day, 6 days a week (with one day off for church,) and that seems to be the pace He wants me to have, at least for now. I know it's different for everyone -- for some, this would be a blink of an eye, but for others, even half a page would be a struggle. I can freely say that for me, it's a challenge keeping up regularly, which is probably why God determined that amount for me.
2. What benchmarks or signals do we use in our own lives to determine if we are "hot" enough for the will of God? Does He prompt/correct you about this? If so, how?
3. What do you use to keep yourself from becoming lukewarm? And how do you get back if you fall off the path?
I was thinking about these things as a single person just because that's my own situation, so I was thinking about the challenges of sometimes having the only guardrail as being God and yourself.
But I realize it can be just as or more difficult for married people due to several factors, especially if one spouse has strayed and the two are not in alignment.
Do you ever worry about your faith "cooling off" or becoming just room temperature?
I would love to hear your thoughts and experiences with how you stay on fire for God as He wants us to be.
Disclaimer: I had to include an alternative to coffee for a particular tea-loving friend.
I was prepping my morning coffee a few days ago as I gathered up what I needed to do some work for a few hours. As I became distracted with other things, my coffee very quickly cooled down to barely lukewarm, causing the first sip to be less than enjoyable.
Because I don't like the taste of coffee that's been reheated in the microwave, I usually choose the opposite extreme once it's cooled down to "the point of no return," so instead, I add heaps of ice until it's cold enough to suit a polar bear.
I don't like coffee unless it's piping hot or ice ice (baby) cold. (That was a song reference for anyone who grew up around the same time I did!)
This whole morning coffee-turned-bad-turned-good-again scenario had me thinking about a particular passage in Revelation. I'm not the only one who doesn't enjoy something lukewarm.
Revelation 3:16 -- "So because you are lukewarm (spiritually useless,) and neither hot nor cold, I will vomit you out of My mouth (rejecting you with disgust.)"
This gave a whole new meaning towards my otherwise mundane coffee ritual.
Certainly none of us want to be seen as spiritually useless or disgusting to God.
But yet I found myself asking:
1. How do we know whether we are lukewarm, cold, or hot? How can we determine if God finds us spiritually useful? (And how much do we have to be doing, and what do we have to be doing to achieve this?)
Is going to church once a week enough? Praying 3 times a week? Helping out in one group... or 4? Or is it more or less?
How do we know?
I struggle with this myself. I have been reading a daily devotional for years, but a few weeks ago, I believed God was telling me to bump that up and get back into regular Bible reading. I've always tried to read the Bible regularly, but yeah, I was slacking. Every time I read through the Bible completely, I like to buy a new one with footnotes and additional articles and insights (about culture, geography, history of the time frames, etc.) I'm sad to say, I've had my latest Bible for over 3 years and I'm only up to Acts. The Holy Spirit was telling me, "C'mon now, pick that up and let's get going."
Right now I'm trying to read 2 pages a day, 6 days a week (with one day off for church,) and that seems to be the pace He wants me to have, at least for now. I know it's different for everyone -- for some, this would be a blink of an eye, but for others, even half a page would be a struggle. I can freely say that for me, it's a challenge keeping up regularly, which is probably why God determined that amount for me.
2. What benchmarks or signals do we use in our own lives to determine if we are "hot" enough for the will of God? Does He prompt/correct you about this? If so, how?
3. What do you use to keep yourself from becoming lukewarm? And how do you get back if you fall off the path?
I was thinking about these things as a single person just because that's my own situation, so I was thinking about the challenges of sometimes having the only guardrail as being God and yourself.
But I realize it can be just as or more difficult for married people due to several factors, especially if one spouse has strayed and the two are not in alignment.
Do you ever worry about your faith "cooling off" or becoming just room temperature?
I would love to hear your thoughts and experiences with how you stay on fire for God as He wants us to be.
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