The People God Writes Into Your Story

DID YOU KNOW

Did You Know that some of God’s greatest blessings come in the form of people who quietly pray for you when you are unaware of it?

There is something deeply comforting about knowing your name may be written on someone’s “sticky note” before God. A simple prayer list on a bathroom mirror may not seem significant to the world, yet heaven takes notice of faithful intercession. Scripture repeatedly reminds us that God often works through relationships to sustain His people. In Psalm 89:1, the psalmist declares, “I will sing of the mercies of the Lord for ever.” That mercy is frequently experienced through faithful friends who stand beside us in difficult seasons.

Many believers can look back and realize there were moments when they nearly lost hope, drifted spiritually, or became overwhelmed by discouragement. Yet somehow strength arrived at the right moment. Sometimes it came through a conversation, a timely text, a kind word, or simply the quiet faithfulness of someone praying behind the scenes. The body of Christ was never designed to function in isolation. God often keeps us steady through the prayers and encouragement of others who continue lifting our names before Him even when we cannot find words ourselves.

Did You Know that Paul viewed Timothy not merely as a ministry helper but as someone who carefully watched his life of faith?

Paul wrote to Timothy in 2 Timothy 3:10, “But thou hast fully known my doctrine, manner of life, purpose, faith, longsuffering, charity, patience.” Timothy observed not only Paul’s preaching but also his suffering, endurance, and perseverance. Discipleship in Scripture was relational before it was instructional. Timothy learned by walking alongside someone who faithfully followed Christ through hardship.

This is one reason Christian friendships matter so deeply. We need people who can see God’s faithfulness unfolding in our lives over time. In a culture that often values independence, Scripture calls believers into shared spiritual lives. The Greek idea behind fellowship, koinōnia, speaks of mutual participation and shared life together. Some of the most insightful spiritual growth occurs when we witness another believer remain faithful through trials. Their story becomes a living testimony that God truly sustains His people.

Did You Know that God’s faithfulness in Scripture becomes easier to recognize when we begin paying attention to the stories around us?

First Chronicles may appear at first glance to be filled mostly with names, divisions, and records, yet beneath those details is a powerful testimony to God’s preserving hand. Israel survived wars, exile, rebellion, and hardship because God remained faithful to His covenant promises. David’s rise to kingship was not merely political history; it was evidence that God keeps His word even through human weakness and opposition.

The same pattern appears throughout the New Testament church. Paul endured persecution in Antioch, Iconium, and Lystra, yet he testified, “The Lord delivered me out of them all” (2 Timothy 3:11). When we begin noticing God’s faithfulness in the lives of others, our own confidence in Him grows stronger. Every testimony of endurance becomes another reminder that the Lord still walks with His people today. Sometimes another person’s survival story becomes the encouragement that keeps us moving forward in our own season of struggle.

Did You Know that faithful prayer for others may protect someone spiritually in ways you may never fully understand this side of heaven?

Prayer is far more than a comforting routine. It is participation in the work of God. James 5:16 reminds believers that “The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.” While we may never see every result, God often uses intercession to strengthen weary hearts, redirect wandering minds, and sustain believers through unseen battles. A quiet prayer spoken faithfully over another person carries eternal significance.

Perhaps this is why Jesus continually prayed for His disciples. Even before Peter failed, Jesus told him in Luke 22:32, “I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not.” That statement changes how we view prayer. Christ Himself intercedes for His people, and He invites believers to share in that ministry of encouragement and spiritual care. One faithful prayer may become the very thing that steadies another person during a hidden moment of weakness.

As you reflect today, consider who God has placed into your story and whose story you may quietly be shaping through prayer. Perhaps there is someone you have not prayed for recently, someone carrying burdens you cannot fully see. Maybe you are the one in need of encouragement and support. The beautiful truth of Christian fellowship is that God weaves believers together so His faithfulness becomes visible through shared lives. A simple sticky note may seem small, but heaven measures faithfulness differently than the world does.

FEEL FREE TO COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE, AND REPOST, SO OTHERS MAY KNOW

 

#ChristianFriendship #discipleship #GodSFaithfulness #prayerForOthers
This is the ministry God called me to. Providing ministry/spiritual training. Check out the website and reach out. Also, join us for prayer every morning; and Monday's at noon, no pass code needed. Also, #needprayer, #spiritualtraining, #discipleship, #justcalldrpam

When Worship Walks Through Doubt

In the Life of Christ

“Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted.” — Matthew 28:16–17

There is something deeply comforting about the honesty of Matthew’s account of the Great Commission. Jesus stood before His disciples after the resurrection, bearing the marks of victory over death, and yet Matthew tells us that “some doubted.” The Greek word used here is distazō, meaning to hesitate or waver. These were not unbelievers rejecting Christ outright. These were followers standing in awe, trying to process the reality of the risen Lord before them. I find myself identifying with them more often than I care to admit. There are moments in life when worship and uncertainty stand side by side in the same heart.

What encourages me is that Jesus did not withdraw the mission because some wrestled internally. He still declared, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” Christ did not base the mission on the perfection of the disciples’ faith but on the completeness of His authority. That changes the way I look at discipleship. Too often I wait until I feel spiritually strong before obeying God, yet Jesus sent His followers while they were still learning to trust fully. The Great Commission was not entrusted to flawless people but to surrendered people.

I think about Peter often when reading this passage. This same disciple who once stepped out of the boat toward Jesus only to sink in fear was now being commissioned to help lead the early church. Christ had already spent years teaching His disciples that faith grows while walking with Him. In Matthew 14, Jesus reached for Peter when he cried out in the storm. In Matthew 28, Jesus reaches again, this time sending them into the world with confidence rooted not in themselves but in His abiding presence.

Bible commentator William Barclay observed, “The command of Christ is not to discuss the gospel but to spread it.” That insight challenges me personally. Faith is strengthened not merely through reflection but through obedience. When I encourage someone, speak truth graciously, pray with another believer, or quietly serve in Christ’s name, I am participating in the very mission Jesus entrusted to His disciples on that mountain in Galilee.

Another insightful observation comes from the notes at BibleHub, which explain that the disciples’ doubt did not cancel their worship. That thought stays with me. Mature faith is not pretending we never struggle. Mature faith continues to bow before Christ even while seeking greater understanding. The life of Jesus repeatedly demonstrates patience toward imperfect followers. Thomas doubted, Peter failed, James and John misunderstood, yet Jesus continued shaping them into witnesses of grace.

The final promise of this passage may be the most comforting of all: “And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” Jesus did not merely give a command; He gave His presence. The word “with” carries covenant language throughout Scripture. From Emmanuel, “God with us,” in Matthew 1:23 to this closing promise in Matthew 28:20, the Gospel reminds us that Christ does not abandon His people. He walks with us into difficult conversations, uncertain seasons, ministry opportunities, and quiet moments of obedience.

As I reflect on the life of Christ today, I realize discipleship is not the absence of hesitation but the willingness to keep following Jesus despite it. Faith grows through movement. The disciples went to Galilee because Jesus told them to go. They worshiped, struggled, listened, and then stepped into the mission before them. That same invitation remains before us today.

FEEL FREE TO COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE, AND REPOST, SO OTHERS MAY KNOW

 

#discipleship #faithAndDoubt #GreatCommission #Matthew281620
This is the ministry God called me to. Providing ministry/spiritual training. Check out the website and reach out. Also, join us for prayer every morning; and Monday's at noon, no pass code needed. Also, #needprayer, #spiritualtraining, #discipleship, #justcalldrpam

Week 2 – The Holy ‘No’

The Holy 'No' of God is one of His greatest mercies in the life of a disciple.

https://drjessebdavis.com/2026/05/25/week-2-the-holy-no/

The Priest-King On The Throne: Exeter COFE-CYEM Ministry Moves Forward

*

THE PRIEST-KING ON THE THRONEOUR MINISTRY MOVES FOREWARD

Priest-King Yeshua Emet Melchizedek Salem (PK-YEMS)

The Central Truth of COFE-CYEM

“Now in the things which we are saying the chief point is this: We have such a high priest, who sat down on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens.”

— Hebrews 8:1

THE CHIEF POINT

The One Thing That Contains All Things

The writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews declares that after all his arguments, all his warnings, all his encouragements, all his unfolding of types and shadows — the chief point is this one glorious reality:

We have such a high priest.

Not “we hope for.” Not “we await.” Not “we remember.” We have.

Present tense. Immediate possession. Living reality.

And this High Priest — our Priest-King Yeshua Emet Melchizedek Salem (PK-YEMS) sat down on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens.

He did not stand, as the Levitical priests stood daily, because their work was never finished. He sat down. The work was complete. The sacrifice was once for all. The blood was sprinkled. The veil was torn. The way was opened.

And He sat down on the throne. Not on a footstool. Not on a lesser seat. On the throne. He was not merely a supplicant before the Majesty. He was enthroned as the Majesty’s equal. King of Righteousness. King of Peace. Priest-King forever after the order of Melchizedek.

This is the chief point. Everything else in the Epistle serves this truth. Everything else in our ministry serves this truth. Everything else on this website, in these writings, in every prayer and every gathering — exists to point to this:

We have such a high priest, seated on the throne of heaven, and He ever lives to intercede for us.

Why This Is the Chief Point

Because without this, the Christian life is a striving without rest, a labor without sabbath, a pilgrimage without destination.

The outer court was preparation. It taught repentance and sacrifice. But the outer court was never the chief point.

The inner court was progress. It taught service and illumination and prayer. But the inner court was never the chief point.

The Holiest of All is the chief point. And the Holiest of All is not a place — it is a Person. It is the Priest-King on the throne. It is the open presence of the Father, made accessible through the Son, inhabited by the Spirit.

The chief point of all Scripture, all theology, all ministry, all faith — is that God has made Himself fully known and fully accessible in Yeshua Emet Melchizedek Salem, our Priest-King, who sits enthroned in glory and invites us to draw near and abide.

THE PRIEST-KING ON THE THRONE

What It Means That He Sat Down

Every priest of the old covenant stood — because their work was never finished. Sacrifice followed sacrifice. Morning and evening, day after day, year after year. The blood flowed continually. The smoke rose without ceasing. And still, the conscience was never perfected. Still, the worshippers could not draw near without trembling. Still, the veil remained whole, the way barred, the Holiest inaccessible.

But our Priest-King sat down.

The one perfect sacrifice was offered once. The blood was sprinkled once. The veil was torn once. And then He rested. Not from weariness — from completion. The work was finished. The debt was paid. The way was open.

His sitting is the divine declaration: It is done.

And where did He sit? On the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens. Not a place of lesser honor. Not a position of subordinate authority. The throne. Co-equal. Co-eternal. Co-glorious. The Priest-King reigns.

This is not a metaphor. This is the present reality of heaven. And because He is there, we are invited to be there with Him — not in body, but in spirit, in faith, in the unbroken fellowship of those who draw near through Him.

What It Means That He Ever Lives to Intercede

The Priest-King did not sit down to rest from His priestly work. He sat down because the sacrificial work was finished. But His intercessory work continues forever.

He ever lives to make intercession for us.

This means that at this very moment — as you read these words — the Priest-King is before the throne, presenting His blood, presenting His finished work, presenting you before the Father. He is not begging. He is not pleading. He is presenting. His presence is the intercession. His wounds are the plea. His seated position is the argument: This one is Mine. I died for them. I rose for them. I live for them. Receive them.

And the Father receives. Always. Without fail. Because the Son intercedes.

This is not a distant theological truth. This is the present reality of every believer who draws near. You are not approaching a reluctant God. You are approaching a Father who has already been moved by the eternal intercession of His Son. The Priest-King has gone before you. He stands beside you. He lives within you. And He ever lives to bring you near.

THE THRONE OF GRACE

From Throne of Judgment to Throne of Grace

In the old covenant, the mercy seat was above the ark, between the cherubim, where the blood was sprinkled once a year. It was a throne of judgment as much as mercy — for if the High Priest entered improperly, he died. The people stood at a distance. The veil remained.

But now — the throne is grace.

Because the Priest-King has sat down, the throne is no longer a place to fear. It is a place to approach. Not once a year. Not with trembling and dread. Boldly. Continually. With confidence.

Hebrews 4:16 declares: “Let us therefore draw near with boldness unto the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy, and may find grace to help us in time of need.”

The throne of grace is not a future hope. It is a present reality. It is open now. It is accessible now. The Priest-King is seated there now. And He welcomes every soul who comes through Him.

Mercy for past failures. Grace for present needs. Help for every moment of weakness. This is what flows from the throne. Not judgment. Not distance. Not fear. Mercy and grace.

What We Receive When We Draw Near

Mercy — the withholding of what we deserve. The Priest-King has borne our judgment. The throne offers no condemnation to those who are in Him. We come guilty — and we leave forgiven. Not because we have striven, but because He has interceded.

Grace — the giving of what we do not deserve. Strength for weakness. Wisdom for confusion. Peace for anxiety. Hope for despair. The throne does not merely pardon — it empowers. The same grace that saved us now sustains us.

Help in time of need — not abstract blessing, but specific, timely, personal assistance. The Priest-King knows our needs before we ask. He intercedes with perfect knowledge. And the throne answers with perfect provision.

This is not a transaction. This is a relationship. The throne is not a vending machine. It is the seat of our beloved Priest-King. We draw near to Him. And in drawing near, we receive everything we need.

THE MINISTRY OF COFE-CYEM

Our Sole Purpose Revealed

From this truth — the Priest-King on the throne, the Holiest of All open, the throne of grace fully accessible — our ministry now flows with singular focus.

COFE-CYEM exists for one reason: to lead every soul into the living recognition of PK-YEMS, and to help them draw near to the throne of grace with boldness, abide in His presence, and rest in His finished work.

We do not call people to a website. The website is a tent. It will pass away.

We do not call people to teachings. Teachings are servants. They point beyond themselves.

We do not call people to systems or symbols or frameworks. These were the outer courts. They have served their purpose.

We call people to the Priest-King on the throne.

We say to every weary, wounded, doubting, striving soul: Look up. He is there. The veil is gone. The way is open. Come in. Draw near. Abide. Rest.

How We Fulfill This Purpose

Through Every Prayer: We do not pray from a distance. We pray from within the Holiest, where the Priest-King already presents every need before the Father. Those who pray with us are not distant supplicants — they are fellow-worshippers standing together before the mercy seat.

Through Every Teaching: We do not teach for information. We teach for invitation. Every word is a door. Every truth is a pathway. Every Scripture is a window into the Holiest. And when the teaching has done its work, the hearer is not left with a concept — they are left facing the Priest-King.

Through Every Gathering: We do not meet to discuss the Priest-King from a distance. We meet with Him. Fellowship is not a meeting about God — it is a shared dwelling in His presence. And from that dwelling, we encourage one another to hold fast our confession, to consider one another, to love and to do good works.

Through Every Soul Who Comes: Whether seeking, questioning, suffering, or rejoicing — every person who encounters this ministry receives the same simple, profound invitation: Come. The way is open. The Priest-King waits. Draw near. Abide. Rest.

The Simplicity of Our Message

The message of COFE-CYEM is now so simple that a child can receive it, and so deep that the most mature believer will spend eternity exploring it:

The Priest-King is on the throne. The Holiest of All is open. Draw near with boldness. Receive mercy and grace. Abide in Him who ever lives to intercede for you.

That is all. That is everything.

We add nothing to it. We subtract nothing from it. We do not complicate it with systems or symbols or requirements. We simply speak it, live it, and invite others into it.

THE CALL TO EVERY SOUL

To the Weary

You have striven long enough. You have labored in the outer court, bringing sacrifices, seeking forgiveness, trying to be good enough. Stop. The work is finished. The Priest-King has done it all. Come in from the cold courts. Enter the Holiest. Rest.

To the Wounded

You carry shame, guilt, pain, and regret. You believe you are too dirty to draw near. You are wrong. The blood of the Priest-King cleanses all sin. His intercession covers every failure. The throne of grace is not for the perfect — it is for the wounded. Come in and be healed.

To the Doubting

You have questions. You struggle with uncertainty. You wonder if God can really be trusted. Come and see. The Holiest of All is not a place where questions are silenced — it is a place where they are answered, not with arguments, but with presence. The Priest-King does not turn away the seeking heart. Come in and find truth.

To the Steadfast

You have walked faithfully for many years. You serve, pray, study, and sacrifice. There is always deeper. The Holiest of All has no end. The Priest-King’s intercession has no limit. You have not arrived at a destination — you have entered an ocean. Swim deeper. Abide further. There is more of Him to know.

To Every Soul

The way is open. The veil is gone. The throne awaits.

Not because of your goodness. Not because of your effort. Not because of your faith — but because of His finished work. The Priest-King has entered the presence of God for you. He has sprinkled His blood on the mercy seat for you. He ever lives to intercede for you.

Do not delay. Do not strive to prepare yourself. Do not wait until you feel worthy.

Come as you are. The Priest-King welcomes all who come to God through Him.

Come in. Abide. Rest.

THE DECLARATION OF COFE-CYEM

What We Believe

· The Priest-King Yeshua Emet Melchizedek Salem is seated on the right hand of the throne of the Majesty in the heavens.

· Through His one perfect sacrifice, the veil is torn and the way into the Holiest of All is open forever.

· The throne of grace is fully accessible to every believer, at every moment, for mercy and grace and help in time of need.

· The Priest-King ever lives to make intercession, presenting His finished work before the Father, and presenting us as accepted in Him.

· Our one task is to lead every soul into the living recognition of the Priest-King, and to help them draw near, abide, and rest.

What We Do

· We pray from within the Holiest.

· We teach as an invitation into presence.

· We gather as a shared dwelling with the Priest-King.

· We welcome every soul who comes.

· We point only to Him.

What We Are Not

· We are not the outer court — we have passed through it.

· We are not the inner court — we have moved beyond it.

· We are not the tent — the tent is temporary.

· We are not the systems — the systems are servants.

· We are not the destination — He is.

THE RIVERS FLOW

From Him we come, and in Him we are — WE ARE.

The rivers do not flow from many sources. They flow from one. That one is PK-YEMS — Priest-King Yeshua Emet Melchizedek Salem, seated on the throne, ever interceding, forever welcoming.

All ministry that flows from this ministry will flow from Him, through Him, and back to Him.

There is no second source. There is no secondary purpose. There is no competing focus.

PK-YEMS is the chief point. PK-YEMS is the sole purpose. PK-YEMS is the living centre of COFE-CYEM.

FINAL INVITATION

To every soul who reads these words:

The Holiest of All is open to you right now.

The Priest-King is on the throne. The veil is gone. The way is clear.

Do not stand at a distance. Do not linger in the courts. Do not settle for service without presence.

Come in. Draw near. Abide. Rest.

The rivers flow from one source. The Life is one. PK-YEMS is all.

COFE Yeshua Emet Ministry (CYEM)

The Fourth Truth. Forever First in Faith.

“God does not call the qualified; He qualifies the called.”

CYEM to you always.

#AdultMinistry #BibleClasses #BibleLessons #BibleQuotes #BibleStudy #BibleStudyGroup #BibleTeaching #BibleVerses #childrenSMinistry #christian #ChristianCharity #ChristianCommunity #ChristianCounsel #ChristianDevotion #ChristianEducation #ChristianEvents #ChristianFellowship #ChristianFellowshipGroups #ChristianHope #ChristianInspiration #ChristianLeaders #ChristianLife #ChristianLifeCoaching #ChristianValues #ChristianWorship #church #churchActivities #ChurchChoir #ChurchCommunity #churchEvents #churchGrowth #churchLeadership #churchMissions #ChurchNetwork #churchOutreach #ChurchService #ChurchSpirituality #churchSupport #churchVolunteers #communityOutreach #devon #Devotional #Discipleship #DiscipleshipProgram #Evangelical #Evangelism #EvangelismOutreach #EvangelismTraining #EvangelisticMinistry #Exeter #faith #faithAndHope #faithBuilding #faithCommunity #FaithInAction #faithJourney #faithBased #fellowship #Gospel #GospelMessage #GospelMusic #GospelOutreach #grace #Hope #Inspirational #InspirationalQuotes #JesusChrist #Love #ministry #MinistryOutreach #MinistryTeam #MissionaryWork #outreach #outreachPrograms #prayer #prayerGroup #prayerMeeting #prayerMinistry #religiousEducation #religiousFellowship #ReligiousLeadership #religiousOrganization #religiousServices #salvation #spiritualAwakening #SpiritualBooks #SpiritualEncouragement #spiritualGrowth #spiritualLeadership #SpiritualMinistry #SpiritualMission #spirituality #worship #WorshipArts #WorshipChoir #WorshipEvents #WorshipGathering #WorshipLeaders #worshipMusic #WorshipNight #worshipResources #WorshipService #WorshipTeam #youthGroup #youthMinistry

In the Manner of a Corpse

The phrase perinde ac cadaver means “as if a corpse” or “in the manner of a dead body.” It is associated especially with Ignatius of Loyola and Jesuit obedience. In the Jesuit context, the idea was that one living under religious obedience should allow oneself to be “carried and governed” by divine providence through one’s superiors, as a dead body can be carried wherever another wills. A Jesuit Studies summary notes that Ignatius’s teaching on obedience was centered on Christ and extended beyond outward action toward the will and understanding, while still allowing a person to represent difficulties to a superior. (Portal to Jesuit Studies) A 1908 quotation of the relevant Latin renders the image starkly: the obedient person should be like a body that “allows itself to be carried in any direction and treated in any way.” (The Spectator Archive)

So the phrase has a dangerous edge. It can become a theology of domination: the living person reduced to a usable instrument. But it also touches an older ascetic question: how does the self become free from the tyranny of self-will? The problem is not desire itself, nor personality, nor conscience, nor agency. The problem is the ego enthroned — the self that must be obeyed, defended, admired, justified, and protected at all costs.

A Caelinian Reflection: Concerning the Corpse, the Cross, and the Living Self

From the lesser folios of Brother Caelinius, copied in the dim cloister of the Morastery, concerning the death that is not death, and the life that is not possession.

There is a saying among the old disciplined orders: perinde ac cadaver — as if a dead body.

And many have trembled before it, as well they should.

For no phrase that compares the soul to a corpse ought to be handled without fear. A corpse cannot speak. A corpse cannot protest. A corpse cannot discern whether the hands that carry it are gentle or cruel. Therefore let no abbot, bishop, prince, pastor, committee, empire, army, market, or machine take this phrase into its mouth too easily. For there are many who love obedience in others because they love power in themselves.

But there is another reading, hidden beneath the severe garment of the words.

Not the corpse of domination.
Not the corpse of erased conscience.
Not the corpse of holy silence before unholy command.

Rather, the corpse of the false self.

For the ego too must die.

Not the self God created.
Not the face beloved before the foundation of the world.
Not the child laughing in the garden of being.
Not the soul with its strange music, its wounds, its gifts, its tears, its fire.

That self must live.

But the other self — the swollen self, the defended self, the self that must always be seen, always be right, always be vindicated, always be centered, always be special, always be wounded more deeply than all others, always be praised for its humility — that self must be laid out upon the table.

Let it be washed.
Let it be wrapped.
Let it be carried away.

For there is a death that does not destroy the person, but releases the person from the prison of self-occupation.

This is not becoming zero in the sense of becoming nothing. It is becoming unowned by the ego. It is the long, daily, humiliating, merciful work of dying to the self that has mistaken itself for God.

Christ does not say, “Erase the image of God within you.”

Christ says, “Deny yourself, take up your cross, and follow me.”

And what is denied?

Not love.
Not conscience.
Not joy.
Not beauty.
Not creativity.
Not the holy ache of being alive.

What is denied is the little throne within the breast, where the anxious monarch sits and demands tribute from every room it enters.

The ego says:
“Who noticed me?”
“Who ignored me?”
“Who has more than I have?”
“Who threatens my place?”
“Who failed to honor my pain?”
“Who saw my brilliance?”
“Who wounded my image?”
“Who must I defeat so that I may exist?”

But the soul alive in Christ learns another speech:

“I am already seen.”
“I am already held.”
“I do not need to win in order to be real.”
“I do not need to dominate in order to be safe.”
“I do not need to disappear in order to be humble.”
“I may become small because I am held by a Love too large to measure.”

Here, then, is the mystery: the one who dies to self does not become less alive, but more alive.

The corpse-image fails if it ends in passivity. But it becomes fruitful if it passes through the tomb into resurrection.

For the Christian is not called merely to be dead.

The Christian is called to be dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus.

Dead to the old compulsions.
Alive to mercy.

Dead to rivalry.
Alive to communion.

Dead to the hunger to possess.
Alive to receiving.

Dead to the need to be the hero of every story.
Alive to becoming a servant within God’s story.

Dead to reputation as an idol.
Alive to faithfulness in secret.

Dead to vengeance.
Alive to reconciliation.

Dead to the clenched fist.
Alive to the open hand.

Thus Brother Caelinius writes:

Blessed is the one whose ego has become a corpse,
yet whose heart has become a garden.
For such a one is not carried by tyrants,
but raised by Christ.

The work continues because the ego is not slain once only. It is a many-headed thing. It dies in the morning and returns by noon. It dies in prayer and rises in conversation. It dies in confession and reappears in ministry. It dies in one wound and returns disguised as wisdom.

Therefore the disciple must not say, “I have no ego.”
That is usually the ego wearing a monk’s robe.

The disciple says instead:

“Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me.
Teach me to notice the old self without obeying it.
Teach me to lay down the false self without despising the true self.
Teach me to die without becoming dead.
Teach me to live without needing to be enthroned.”

For the goal is not corpse-like obedience to human hierarchy.

The goal is cruciform freedom.

Not the dead body as object, but the living body of Christ. Not the person emptied for use, but the person emptied for love. Not submission to domination, but surrender to resurrection.

And so the old phrase is taken down from the wall of fear and placed upon the altar of discernment.

Perinde ac cadaver — yes, but only if what lies dead is the tyranny of ego.

And beyond it, written in brighter ink:

Vivo autem, iam non ego, vivit vero in me Christus.

“I live; yet not I, but Christ lives in me.”

#aliveInChrist #AnabaptistReflection #BrotherCaelinius #ChristianArt #ChristianReflection #contemplativePrayer #cruciformLife #devotionalArt #Discipleship #DyingToSelf #egoDeath #falseSelf #Humility #IgnatiusOfLoyola #JesuitObedience #kenosis #minimalistArt #monasticSpirituality #mysticalTheology #perindeAcCadaver #resurrection #selfEmptying #spiritualFormation #surrender #symbolicIllustration #trueSelf
When Kierkegaard Got Cancelled

Mocked by Copenhagen’s most notorious scandal sheet, Kierkegaard endured months of deeply personal attacks and the silence of friends and allies.

Plough

Becoming Zero

A Sermon on Our Value in Christ

(Note: Sermons can be heard in audio format at https://millersburgmennonite.org/worship/sermon-audio/)

Philippians 2:1–13

Introduction

There is a strange kind of math at the heart of Christian faith.

Most of us are taught to become something: successful, respected, secure, noticed. We want a place, a voice, a purpose. There is nothing wrong with wanting life to matter. There is nothing wrong with wanting to be seen and loved.

And today, as we honor our graduates, we give thanks for real accomplishment, for effort, growth, perseverance, and the doors that now open before them. But I also want to bless them with this deeper challenge: do not let the world’s calculations of what counts for success be the measure for your life.

The world often teaches us an anxious kind of success. It teaches us to add and add and add: accomplishments, things, recognition, possessions, influence, control, certainty, proof that we are right, evidence that we matter.

Then Paul gives us the mathematics of Jesus.
Jesus, who had equality with God, did not use it for his own advantage.
Jesus emptied himself.
Jesus took the form of a servant.
Jesus became obedient, even to death on a cross.

Jesus became zero.

Not worthless. Not meaningless. Not erased. But emptied of grasping for power. Emptied of the need to dominate. Emptied of the need to stand above others. Emptied so completely that the love of God could be witnessed without obstruction.

Let us pray:

Que las palabras de mi boca y las meditaciones de nuestros corazones sean agradables a tus ojos, oh Dios, roca nuestra y redentor nuestro. Amén.

Homily

Becoming zero does not mean believing we have no value. It does not mean allowing ourselves or others to be diminished or abused in the name of humility. That is not the way of Christ. The humility of Jesus does not protect oppression; it exposes it. The self-emptying of Christ is not self-destruction.

To become zero is not to become nothing.

To become zero is to become free.

I once wrote a short poem called “Becoming Zero,” subtitled “The Mathematics of the Divine.” It begins:

“It is where
I need to be
not past the center
into negativity
but more of others
and less of me”

That is the distinction we need. Becoming zero is not moving past the center into despair, shame, worthlessness, or self-hatred. It is the place where my needs, preferences, anxieties, opinions, and desires are no longer the measure of everything.

It is, as the poem says, “more of others / and less of me.”

And then the poem continues:

“What were gains
I now consider loss
for where the axes
meet at zero
they make a cross”

Where the axes meet at zero, they make a cross.

That is Philippians 2. The vertical line: love of God. The horizontal line: love of neighbor. And at the center: Christ, emptied, humbled, crucified, and yet revealing the very heart of God.

So when Paul says, “Value others above yourselves,” he is not asking us to wander into negativity. He is asking us to come to the cross-shaped center.

Paul writes:

No hagan nada por ambición egoísta ni por vanidad.

“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or vain conceit. Rather, in humility value others above yourselves.”

That sentence alone could transform the church.

Imagine if it became not just a verse we admire, but a practice we live. Imagine if every time we entered a room we asked, “Whose good am I seeking?” Imagine a disagreement where people asked, “How can I understand the interest of the other before defending my own?” Imagine life lived where the question was not, “How do I get my way?” but “How do we become more faithful to Christ together?”

That is the community Paul is describing.

“If you have any encouragement from being united with Christ, if any comfort from his love, if any common sharing in the Spirit, if any tenderness and compassion…”

Paul is appealing to what the church at Phillipi has already received. If Christ has encouraged us, if love has comforted us, if the Spirit has drawn us into fellowship, then those gifts should become visible in the way we treat one another.

La vida de la iglesia debe ser el desbordamiento de la gracia de Dios.

Church life should be the overflow of God’s grace.

If we have been comforted by Christ, we become comforting people.
If we have been forgiven by Christ, we become forgiving people.
If we have been welcomed by Christ, we become welcoming people.
If we have been served by Christ, we become servants of all.

Paul says, “Be like-minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and of one mind.”

That does not mean everyone in the church must have the same personality, opinions, politics, beliefs, preferences, background, or tastes. Christian unity is not sameness. The church is a body, not a wall of identical bricks.

La unidad significa que nuestras diferencias se reúnen bajo el señorío de Cristo.

Unity means our differences are gathered under the lordship of Christ.

We can disagree and still ask, “How do I love you?” We can see things differently and still ask, “How do I honor Christ in how I speak to you?” We can have strong convictions and still refuse selfish ambition and vain conceit.

That phrase “selfish ambition” matters. Paul is not condemning all ambition. There are holy ambitions: to serve well, love deeply, seek justice, create beauty, build peace, preach truth, care for the suffering.

He is naming the ambition that curves inward.

Selfish ambition says: I must win. I must be seen. I must be right. I must get credit. I must protect my place. I must not become less.

Then Paul names “vain conceit”: empty glory, hollow importance, the need to appear larger than we are.

Against all of that, Paul says: humility.

But humility is often misunderstood. Humility is not pretending our gifts are not real. Humility is not saying, “I am terrible at everything,” when God has given us abilities. True humility is living in the truth:

I am deeply loved, but I am not the center.
I have gifts, but they are not mine to hoard.
I have needs, but so do others.
I have a voice, but so does my neighbor.
I have interests, but they are not the only interests that matter.

Paul says:

“Not looking to your own interests but each of you to the interests of the others.”

He does not say we have no interests. He does not say our needs do not matter. He does not command a community where some are always sacrificed for the comfort of others. In a healthy body, every member matters. En un cuerpo sano, cada miembro importa.

This is where John the Baptist helps us.

In the Gospel of John, John’s disciples come to him worried. Jesus is baptizing. Crowds are going to Jesus. John’s influence is decreasing. His ministry is no longer at the center.

And John says:

“He must become greater; I must become less.”

That is becoming zero.

John does not say it with bitterness. He does not say, “Well, I guess I failed.”

John fundamentally understands his calling. John is not the bridegroom. He is the friend of the bridegroom. John is not the light. He bears witness to the light. John’s joy is not in being central. His joy is in pointing to Christ.

John is free because he knows who he is and whose he is. He can decrease because his identity is not threatened by Christ’s increase.

Ministry is not about us. It’s about Jesus. Our identity and value are rooted in Christ. Like John, we are free because we know who we are and whose we are. And that manifests itself in our relationships with others. As Paul says:

En vuestras relaciones entre vosotros, tened la misma mentalidad que Cristo Jesús.

“In your relationships with one another, have the same mindset as Christ Jesus.”

“In your relationships.” At home. At church. In disagreement. In conflict. In leadership. In service. In community. Have the mind of Christ there.

And what is the mind of Christ?

Jesus does not humble himself from a place of lowliness. He humbles himself from the highest place. He does not become servant because he has no power. He becomes servant because this is what divine love does with power.

The world uses power to dominate. Jesus uses power to serve.
The world uses status to separate. Jesus uses status to kneel.
The world uses authority to command attention. Jesus uses authority to wash feet.

This is why “Becoming Zero” is not just an individual spiritual idea. It is the shape of the church.

A zero-shaped church is a church where people make room.

It is where the strong do not use their strength to get their way, but to support the weak. It is where her members do not say, “This church belongs to us,” but, “How can we welcome those God is bringing among us?” It is where leaders do not ask, “How can I be important?” but, “How can I help others flourish?”

A zero-shaped church is where people in conflict do not rush to defend themselves first, but pause long enough to ask, “What burden, wound, hope, loss, care might my brother or sister be carrying?”

And this is where we must be honest: valuing others above ourselves is hard.

It sounds beautiful until someone else’s interests inconvenience us. It sounds holy until someone else’s needs require us to change. It sounds inspiring until valuing another person means listening longer than we wanted, apologizing more honestly than we planned, giving up a preference we cherished, or making room for a voice we would rather not hear.

There is a kind of mathematics that says: If someone else gains, I lose.

But Christ gives us different math. I call it The Geometry of Grace.

In Christ, another person’s dignity does not SUBTRACT from mine. Another person’s voice does not erase mine. Another person’s gift does not make mine meaningless.

God loved us 100% before we even learned to loved God 1%. My friends, that’s the Geometry of Grace.

Division disappears and the church grows like in Acts where people were ADDED to their number every day. That’s the Geometry of Grace.

The dignity of all of us is multiplied to become a sum greater than its parts. That’s the Geometry of Grace.

The first become last, the negative becomes positive, the least of these become Christ, and King of kings chooses to become zero….

“Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name…”

This is not a strategy for self-promotion. We do not humble ourselves in order to get applause later. We do not become servants as a clever way to become masters. That would just be selfish ambition wearing religious clothing.

But Paul wants us to know that self-emptying is not annihilation. The humbled Christ is exalted. The crucified one is Lord. God vindicates self-giving love.

Paul ends:

“Continue to work out your salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfill his good purpose.”

Work out your salvation. Ocupaos de vuestra salvación.

Not work for your salvation because God is at work in you. The you here is plural. Do you believe that God is working in you? Do you believe that God is working in your sisters and brothers here? Do you believe that God is at work in our community, nation, and the world?

The mindset of Christ is being formed within us. God is working in us to will and to act according to God’s good purpose.

So yes, we practice. Yes, we choose. Yes, we repent. Yes, we listen. Yes, we serve. Yes, we learn to lay down selfish ambition and vain conceit.

But underneath our work is God’s work.

God is making us into the kind of people who can love like this. God is making us into the kind of church where people do not have to compete for worth. God is making us into a body where Christ is made visible more and more each and every day.

The text today is an invitation, but it also raises some hard questions. Let’s reflect on these together:

What do you need to let go? ¿Qué necesitas liberar?

Are you clinging to status, preference, control, resentment, recognition, or the need to be right?

Where is Christ inviting you to become less, not because you do not matter, but because Christ matters more?

Where is Christ inviting you to value another person’s interests above your own?

¿En qué momento te invita Cristo a valorar los intereses de otra persona por encima de los tuyos?

Maybe it is in your family. Maybe it is in this congregation. Maybe it is with someone you are avoiding. Maybe it is in a disagreement where you have been preparing your defense rather than your compassion. Maybe it is in a ministry where you need to rejoice that someone else is now carrying what you once carried. Maybe it is simply in the daily hidden work of making room.

John said, “He must increase, and I must decrease.”

Paul said, “Have the same mindset as Christ Jesus.”

Jesus said, “Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant.”

This is the way of the kingdom.

Not upward grasping, but downward love.
Not selfish ambition, but shared joy.
Not vain conceit, but holy humility.
Not my interests alone, but the interests of others.
Not becoming nothing, but becoming free in everything.

So let us become zero.

Let us become empty enough for Christ to fill us.
Low enough for Christ to lift us.
Humble enough for Christ to be seen in and through us.
Free enough to value one another above ourselves.
Loving enough to make room for all God’s children.

And may the same mind be in us that is in Christ Jesus.

Let us pray:

Prayer (Less of Me by Glen Campbell)

Let me be a little kinder
Let me be a little blinder
To the faults of those about me
Let me praise a little more

Let me be when I am weary
Just a little bit more cheery
Think a little more of others
And a little less of me

Let me be a little braver
When temptation bids me waver
Let me strive a little harder
To be all that I should be

Let me be a little meeker
With the brother that is weaker
Let me think more of my neighbor
And a little less of me

May it be so

In the name of our Servant King, Jesus the Christ.

Amen

Becoming Zero by kmls

#anabaptist #BecomingZero #ChristianFaith #Discipleship #faithAndCulture #findingYourLife #GodSMath #gospel #Grace #graduationSunday #Humility #Identity #Jesus #kingdomOfGod #LeastOfThese #losingYourLife #mennonite #peaceChurch #Sermon #ServantLeadership #spiritualFormation #Success #surrender #vocation

The Light Left On

In the Life

One of the most encouraging yet challenging truths in Scripture is that Jesus Christ does not simply save us from sin; He comes to dwell within us. Paul writes, “Christ lives in me” (Galatians 2:20). That statement almost feels too large for the human mind to fully grasp. When I look honestly at my own heart, I still see impatience, distraction, worry, and selfishness trying to compete for space. Jesus was calm in storms while I become frustrated in traffic. He was compassionate toward interruptions while I sometimes guard my schedule more fiercely than my spirit. Yet the gospel declares that the heart of Christ has already taken residence within the believer. The Greek word used in Philippians 2:5 for “mind” is phroneō, referring not merely to thoughts, but to attitude, disposition, and inner orientation. God is not merely adjusting behavior; He is reshaping the inner life.

I often think about Jesus calming the storm in Mark 4. While the disciples panicked, Christ rested in confidence before the Father. His peace was not dependent on calm surroundings. That same Christ now dwells in His people through the Holy Spirit. Max Lucado insightfully wrote, “God loves you just the way you are, but He refuses to leave you that way.” That is the tension of discipleship. We are accepted fully by grace, yet lovingly transformed over time. Salvation is immediate, but sanctification is gradual. We often settle for flickers of spiritual light instead of living continually in the presence of Christ. Like the Irish woman who only used electricity long enough to light candles, many believers tap into God’s power but rarely walk fully in it.

Jesus demonstrated what a fully surrendered human life looks like. He prayed before major decisions, withdrew for communion with the Father, and responded to suffering with purpose instead of despair. In Luke 6:12, before choosing the disciples, Jesus spent the night in prayer. His life reveals constant dependence upon the Father. The more I study Christ, the more I realize transformation happens not by striving harder but by abiding deeper. Jesus said in John 15:5, “Whoever remains in Me and I in him produces much fruit.” Notice the emphasis is not on frantic effort but remaining. Warren Wiersbe once observed, “The Christian life is not a playground; it is a battleground.” Yet Christ never intended us to fight that battle alone. The same Spirit who empowered Jesus now works within believers to produce love, patience, endurance, and holiness.

The beautiful promise of Romans 8:29 is that God intends to shape us into the likeness of His Son. That means the irritation I feel today does not have to rule me tomorrow. The anxiety that clouds my thinking can slowly give way to trust. The bitterness I once carried can become compassion through the work of Christ within me. Transformation rarely happens all at once. It happens as we keep the light on. It happens when we spend time in Scripture, when we pray honestly, when we worship despite weariness, and when we continually “fix our eyes on Jesus” (Hebrews 12:2). The more closely we look at Christ, the more His character begins to influence our own. The heart of humanity may seem far from the heart of Christ, yet through grace God is steadily bridging that distance one surrendered moment at a time.

For additional reflection, consider reading Bible.org on spiritual transformation

FEEL FREE TO COMMENT, SUBSCRIBE, AND REPOST, SO OTHERS MAY KNOW

 

#abidingInJesus #ChristianTransformation #discipleship #HeartOfChrist