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The Key to Your Life (Part 3)

Today we’re wrapping up our 3-part series on The Key to Your Life

If you missed part one and two, catch these two links:

The Key to Your Life (Part 1)

The Key to Your Life (Part 2)


Obedience is Difficult, Hellacious, Exacting, and Hard. We can’t deny it. We would be fools to even try.

But Obedience is also Liberating! Fulfilling. Life-giving. Refreshing. Rejuvenating. Restorative. Reviving. 

Why? Because when we’re determined to make obedience a deliberate daily decision, we discover our relationship with Jesus Christ deepens and we become more like Him.

But let’s not stop there! 

Obedience is also

Even so, obedience is difficult, hellacious, exacting, and hard because the consequences of disobedience are real, painful, and often life long. 

If we aren’t engaged in prayer and God’s Word every day and actively learning and applying all His principles and precepts, our moral character and integrity will decay. You can count on it!

Okay, ready for some GOOD NEWS?

Thanks to the shed blood of Jesus, for those who love Him and follow Him, the consequences are not eternal! 

*cue the happy dance

Want some more GOOD NEWS?

God didn’t leave us alone to figure this out on all by ourselves! Praise HIM! 

He gave us His Word 

AND He gave us His Spirit!

If we aren’t engaged in prayer and God’s Word every day and actively learning and applying all His principles and precepts, our moral character and integrity will decay. You can count on it! Like our muscles, our moral character and integrity are in constant flux. They’re either getting stronger or atrophying. Fortifying or eroding. So, the more we pray and read and study God’s Word, the more we learn; and the more we learn and apply, the stronger we get. And along the way we discover:

How did God ensure this? 

By making the Bible a very real book. 

The Bible is able to offer encouragement, instruction, and direction because the Holy Spirit didn’t sugar-coat any of the lives of those who fill its pages! How awesome is that?!

For example: In 1 & 2 Samuel we’re invited to experience everything from Hophni and Phinehas’s blatant blasphemy to Saul taking care of business in a cave. From Hanna’s tear filled surrender to Michal’s harpy-like bitterness. From David and his men ready to spill blood in a hangry rage, to David’s moral erosion and restoration. 

Through these accounts and many others, the Bible is able to offer encouragement, instruction, and direction because the Holy Spirit didn’t sugar-coat any of the lives of those who fill its pages! How awesome is that? Instead, He beckons us to see them in their glory and their depravity. He allows us to experience their seasons of faith as well as their moments of doubt. And in the process He helps us understand:

My sweet friend, the only difference between the sin of those in Scripture and ours, is theirs is recorded, preserved for all eternity for us to read, study, and learn from. 

This is the case with those chronicled in 1 & 2 Samuel. 

For instance: David’s sin with Bathsheba wasn’t an all-of-a-sudden, out-of-nowhere event. David’s moral character was cracked and had been steadily dissolving over 20 years due to his refusal to control his sexual impulses. (No, he wasn’t a sex-crazed pervert. He was living according to cultural customs at the time in collecting a harem rather than obeying God’s Laws for His kings.) Unaware his eroding integrity made him weak and vulnerable, David stayed home from leading his troops into battle, indulged in a season of self-imposed leisure, went out onto the terrace, became overwhelmed by his unbridled lust, and had a complete moral collapse. 

Those next few hours of intense pleasure lead to a series of horrific, flesh-inspired choices that culminated into 20 years of intense devastation. David was shattered. Broken. And later died a broken man with a broken heart. Yes, David confessed his sin and was forgiven, but he still had to endure the consequences of his sin. (Oh, there’s so much to learn through his experiences.)

See, as we study Scripture, we have an incredible opportunity to learn from the stories of those who fill it’s pages. To keep their sin in perspective and use the events surrounding them and their choices to examine our lives, to identify our weaknesses, to determine where we need to fortify our moral character, and to determine to make a deliberate daily decision to walk in obedience.

And we start by asking some very important questions:

And, Beloved, that all starts with obedience…The Key to Your Life.

Blessings, xoxo

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