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Matthew Ruttan

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Tag: a new heavens and a new earth

Armageddon, Part 2: Why will the world end, and how?

November 25, 2019 MatthewRuttan

If the world as we know it will end, why will it end? What’s the reason? And if it’s going to happen, how is it

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Pessimism & Optimism vs Reality The "Up!" Devo for December 12 There was a family with two boys. One was an extreme pessimist. The other was an extreme optimist. The parents didn’t like their extreme attitudes, so they tried a gift-giving experiment at Christmas to try and correct them. They thought that if they gave the pessimist a gift that was so over-the-moon awesome, he would simply have to be happy. They gave him the latest iPhone. But he just frowned: ‘Dumb thing is probably gonna break.’ Next was the gift for the optimistic boy. He was always so happy about everything that they wanted to get him something so bad that he would simply have to feel sour about. That way, he would learn a valuable lesson about disappointment. He opened his gift, only to find a pile of manure. It stunk up the whole room! But instead of a frown, a huge smile came across his face. ‘Why are you happy?’ his parents asked, ‘You got manure!’ ‘I know, I know,’ he said excitedly, ‘that means there has to be a pony around here somewhere!’* Talk about optimism! Both boys had unhelpful perspectives: one so negative that it was out-of-touch with reality, and the other so positive that it was out-of-touch with reality. How often do we do the same? We think the sky is falling when it isn’t. Or we put our hope in the wrong things which lead to disappointment. The antidote to naïve optimism and sky-is-falling pessimism is reality. In 2 Corinthians 4:16 Paul reminds us about our reality: “we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day.” Though we live in frail bodies in a sin-soaked world, we are being renewed on a daily basis by the power of God. In the very next verse he writes, “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.” Life is tough. God is good. He is with you. Forever. Do you let naïve optimism or sky-is-falling pessimism take over your brain? The antidote to naïve optimism and sky-is-falling pessimism is reality. Life is tough. God is good. He is with you. Forever. By Matthew Ruttan #faith #God #perspective #optimism #dailydevo
Marana Tha The “Up!” Devo for December 11 Today I’d love to share a short, special prayer with you so that you can include it in your daily arsenal. -When you’re on your knees, or not. -When you’re driving, or walking. -When you’re calm, or fed up. -When you’re composed, or frazzled. It’s biblical, easy to memorize, and powerful. “Marana Tha.” It’s Aramaic (the language Jesus spoke) and means “Our Lord, come.” Paul tells it to us in 1 Corinthians 16:22 and offers no explanation. To me that probably means it was so widely known—at least in Corinth—that he didn’t have to. Everyone knew what he was talking about and what it meant. When we pray “Marana Tha,” I think we pray for at least two things: First, we pray for Jesus to return and bring an end to pain, tears, sin, estrangement and brokenness, and replace it with “a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells” (2 Peter 3:13). Sounds amazing! Second, we pray that Jesus come powerfully into the specific situations, thoughts and contours of our day. All that in two words? Yes! No matter who we are or what we’re going through, all of us need the powerful presence of God, don’t we? Marana Tha. By Matthew Ruttan #secondcoming #Jesus #parousia #maranatha #powerofGod #presenceofGod #discipleship #faith #inspiration
Wild goose or game geese The "Up!" Devo for December 10 Speaking to his fellow disciples, Peter wrote: “you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light” (1 Peter 2:9). They are chosen, royal, holy and special. Why? So that they can “declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.” We do that. Sometimes. But not always. It can just be so easy to blend in—to cozy up to comfort. To forget. To dismiss. To take-for-granted. Soren Kierkegaard tells a telling story: “There was once a wild goose who went to live with some tame geese. He was committed to liberate them from their mediocre lives. The wild goose lived with the tame geese for a year, and he enjoyed the rich food, comfortable shelter and easy life. Each year, when the wild geese flew overhead, he would flutter his wings, prepare to join them, but settle down again in the farmyard. Ten years passed and the wild goose became tame, and it forgot how to fly.”* That story is a warning. If we get too comfortable and familiar with the misplaced rhythms of our world we too will forget how to fly. The way to flap our wings is to “declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.” Don’t be afraid to stand out—to shine the light you were made to reflect: Declare. Praise. Thank. Sing. Love. Pray. Help. Celebrate. Some days you might feel stuck in the muck. But the sky is closer than you think. By Matthew Ruttan #different #faith #dailydevotional #unique #inspiration #fly ##Jesus #kierkegaard
Don’t shortchange your life The “Up!” Devo for December 9 Talking about the return of Jesus, the apostle Peter wrote, “You ought to live holy and godly lives as you look forward to the day of God and speed its coming” (2 Peter 3:11-12). But what does it mean to be holy? Something that is holy is set apart; it is made for a special, godly purpose. For example, if I was playing a game of tennis, and instead of using a tennis racket I used my Bible, someone might take issue with that. Why? Because, they would probably tell me, the Bible is holy. In other words, it is made for a special purpose. It’s God’s word and wisdom to us and should be respected as such. (By the way, I have no plans to use my Bible as a tennis racket.) In a similar way, followers of Jesus are holy. That doesn’t mean you’re ‘holier than thou,’ have all the answers, or never make a mistake. It means you are set apart. You are made for a special, godly purpose: to know, love, serve and glorify God as the hands and feet of Christ, as you get in on the ways he is renovating the world with his love and truth. Sure, that will take different forms in different chapters of your life, and based on your experiences, personality, and spiritual gifts. But whenever and however, you are to be holy. Don’t just fit in. Don’t blend. Don’t adopt the apathetic and cynical view that nothing really matters anyway so who cares. Good things are coming. Hope is dawning. And your life—as one of God’s holy ones—can be a foreshadowing of that great day when heaven and earth really do meet. “You ought to live holy and godly lives as you look forward to the day of God and speed its coming.” Life is short. So don’t shortchange your life. By Matthew Ruttan #holy #holiness #godly #faith #inspiration #christianity #purpose #special #meaning #handsandfeet #unique #secondcoming #parousia #waiting #advent
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