“First Steps” by Rev. Dr. Shane Green – September 16
September 16 Spiritual maturity and emotional health are related. Part of the work of Godâs Spirit (sanctification) is to lead us to maturityâemotionally and spiritually. Part of Godâs work is to rework some of our past that needs to be healed. What is not processed (from the past) will be passed on (into the future).  God forgives past actions, but He also wants to transform the effects of the past so that those same patterns are broken. This needed work can be painful because we must face areas of our lives that are filled with scabs. Self-Honesty is crucial but difficult. For some, there will need to be a realization that we have used Godly activity to run from God. We spend hours and hours doing things âfor Godâ instead of âbeing with God.â We fill our days with things of God that preoccupy our time and energy only to be too weary to be with God.  Take prayer for instanceâwe spend time in prayerâpraying for any and everything but wonât carve out 20 minutes to sit and reflect to allow Godâs Spirit to bring to the surface the areas of our lives that need to change. The same can be said with serving in different ministries. We go and do, go and do, but donât have time for crucial relationships. How about the one who studies the Bible daily, but then uses those same scriptures to justify oneâs defensive behaviors, critical attitudes, or the avoidance of anything that would lead to a life change.  Do you use God to run from God? Do you create a great deal of âGod-activityâ to avoid difficult areas in your life God wants to change? If so, consider an alternative path. Focus on your own self-awareness. St. Augustine wrote, âO Lord, grant that I may know myself that I may know thee.â Practice confession. Engage a friend in accountability. Listen to what they say without justification or blame shifting. Sit with God in prayerâreflective prayerâasking God to reveal those areas that need to change.    |
This Week’s Readings: Monday – Leviticus 1 Tuesday – Leviticus 2 Wednesday – Leviticus 3 Thursday – Leviticus 4 Friday – Leviticus 5 We are reading the Bible in just a little over a year! We have completed Exodus and are now reading Leviticus. You may join anytime. Just mark your Bible on the chapter you started and keep up with the weekly readings. |
Things to Pray About: Pray for our country and the 2024 Presidential Election. Pray for spiritual maturity. Our unwillingly absent members and shut-ins. Pray for comfort for those who are grieving. Wisdom for our church leaders, local leaders, and world leaders. Family restoration through forgiveness. Continued growth of the faith of the people. Pray for understanding. âDonât worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need and thank him for all he has done.â –Â Philippians 4:6 |
âFirst Stepsâ by Rev. Dr. Shane Green â September 9
Rev. Dr. Shane Green wanted to share a First Steps newsletter from the past in conjunction with last week’s letter.
September 9
E. Stanley Jones, an American missionary to India, once said, âThere are two groups of people in this world. There is a very big group of people in this world who are miserable. They live for themselves. Thereâs another group who have given their lives away to others. Their lives are filled with a wild joy.â
This week, find a way to live for another. Notice the people around you. Invite them into your life. Speak words of love and grace to them. In doing so, we can find joy in serving the One who makes us whole.
September 2 (to read again)
What is the connection between emotional health and spiritual maturity? Can someone be spiritual mature and emotionally immature? It has been my experience that the two are related, maybe more than realized. Unfortunately, Christians tend to bifurcate their life. This is spiritual while that is emotional (or relational, physical, or mental for that matter) and think they arenât related. But they areâvery related.
We jump into more Bible study, small groups, worship, prayer, and service thinking it will fix everything. They are helpful but disciplines are tools, not the solution. Emotional health and spiritual maturity are inseparable. As one grows so will the other. Peter Scazzero, a pastor and author, referenced his own lifeâs struggles to illustrate this point: âI was a Christian for twenty-two years. But instead of being a twenty-two-year old Christian, I was a one-year-old Christian twenty-two times! I just kept doing the same things over and over again.â (Emotional Healthy Spirituality, P.21).
This process was not lost on the Apostle Paul. He wrote this to the Corinthians:Â
âBrothers and sisters, I could not address you as people who live by the Spirit but as people who are still worldlyâmere infants in Christ.  I gave you milk, not solid food, for you were not yet ready for it. Indeed, you are still not ready.  You are still worldly. For since there is jealousy and quarreling among you, are you not worldly? Are you not acting like mere humans?â (Cor 3:1-3).
The sanctification process has as much to do with how your past experiences influence your present as it does your future. When God makes all things newâsome of that work is instantaneousâlike our status before God; however, some of that work takes times. A long time! The work of the Holy Spirit involves years of continued transformation. Perhaps past healings lead to future wholeness.
In the coming weeks, I want to use this First Step devotional to identify some of the ways one might bifurcate their life which can lead to spiritual immaturity. I hope you will join me in prayer as we all are going on to perfection. Remember, Godâs desire is for all to be wholeâspiritually, mentality, emotionally, and physically. Â
This Week’s Readings:
- Monday – Exodus 36
- Tuesday – Exodus 37
- Wednesday – Exodus 38
- Thursday – Exodus 39
- Friday – Exodus 40
We are reading the Bible in just a little over a year! We have completed Genesis and are now reading Exodus. You may join anytime. Just mark your Bible on the chapter you started and keep up with the weekly readings.
Things to Pray About:
- Pray for our country and the 2024 Presidential Election.
- Pray for spiritual maturity.
- Our unwillingly absent members and shut-ins.
- Pray for comfort for those who are grieving.
- Wisdom for our church leaders, local leaders, and world leaders.
- Family restoration through forgiveness.
- Continued growth of the faith of the people.
- Pray for understanding.
âDonât worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need and thank him for all he has done.â – Philippians 4:6
“First Steps” by Rev. Dr. Shane Green – September 2
September 2 What is the connection between emotional health and spiritual maturity? Can someone be spiritual mature and emotionally immature? It has been my experience that the two are related, maybe more than realized. Unfortunately, Christians tend to bifurcate their life. This is spiritual while that is emotional (or relational, physical, or mental for that matter) and think they arenât related. But they areâvery related. We jump into more Bible study, small groups, worship, prayer, and service thinking it will fix everything. They are helpful but disciplines are tools, not the solution. Emotional health and spiritual maturity are inseparable. As one grows so will the other. Peter Scazzero, a pastor and author, referenced his own lifeâs struggles to illustrate this point: âI was a Christian for twenty-two years. But instead of being a twenty-two-year old Christian, I was a one-year-old Christian twenty-two times! I just kept doing the same things over and over again.â (Emotional Healthy Spirituality, P.21). This process was not lost on the Apostle Paul. He wrote this to the Corinthians: âBrothers and sisters, I could not address you as people who live by the Spirit but as people who are still worldlyâmere infants in Christ.  I gave you milk, not solid food, for you were not yet ready for it. Indeed, you are still not ready.  You are still worldly. For since there is jealousy and quarreling among you, are you not worldly? Are you not acting like mere humans?â (Cor 3:1-3). The sanctification process has as much to do with how your past experiences influence your present as it does your future. When God makes all things newâsome of that work is instantaneousâlike our status before God; however, some of that work takes times. A long time! The work of the Holy Spirit involves years of continued transformation. Perhaps past healings lead to future wholeness. In the coming weeks, I want to use this First Step devotional to identify some of the ways one might bifurcate their life which can lead to spiritual immaturity. I hope you will join me in prayer as we all are going on to perfection. Remember, Godâs desire is for all to be wholeâspiritually, mentality, emotionally, and physically.  |
This Week’s Readings: Monday – Exodus 31 Tuesday – Exodus 32 Wednesday – Exodus 33 Thursday – Exodus 34 Friday – Exodus 35 We are reading the Bible in just a little over a year! We have completed Genesis and are now reading Exodus. You may join anytime. Just mark your Bible on the chapter you started and keep up with the weekly readings. |
Things to Pray About: Pray for our country and the 2024 Presidential Election. Pray for guidance in times of wilderness. Our unwillingly absent members and shut-ins. Pray for comfort for those who are grieving. Wisdom for our church leaders, local leaders, and world leaders. Continued growth of the faith of the people. Pray for understanding. âDonât worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need and thank him for all he has done.â –Â Philippians 4:6 |
âFirst Stepsâ by Rev. Dr. Shane Green â August 25, 2024
This summer, Dr. Green wanted to share some of his favorite First Steps from previous years. Â
August 26 Often I feel like my prayers are foul balls, or I really donât know what to pray.  During these times, I borrow from other people. I pray their prayer, using their words until I can find my own. Their words prime the pump of my mind so that I can eventually unlock my own voice. If you are like me and find yourself in a season of busyness, a hectic schedule, or pulled from one place to the next; then consider this prayer: Ever-present God, thank you for being here with me right now. In the chaos of my life, I often forget that you are always with me, always seeking to bring me peace. I feel overwhelmed, as if the world around me is a heaving, crashing sea; and I am adrift in a small boat, unable to keep the waves from closing over me. Only you can bring order out of this chaos. Say the word, all-powerful God, and I know that the seas will be calmed, and I will be safe. Even as I say these words, I can hear how foolish they are. You, the God of my life, are also the God of order. Bring order to my life, and in doing so, take care of all those concerns that rise up around me like stormwaves. Calm the seas of my busyness; still the waters of my âdoingness.â Let me drift on the gentle swells of your love and care. (Pat WilsonâContemporary Christian Writer). |
This Week’s Readings: Monday – Exodus 26 Tuesday – Exodus 27 Wednesday – Exodus 28 Thursday – Exodus 29 Friday – Exodus 30 We are reading the Bible in just a little over a year! We have completed Genesis and are now reading Exodus. You may join anytime. Just mark your Bible on the chapter you started and keep up with the weekly readings. |
Things to Pray About: Pray for our country and the 2024 Presidential Election. Pray for guidance. Our unwillingly absent members and shut-ins. Pray for comfort for those who are grieving. Wisdom for our church leaders, local leaders, and world leaders. Family restoration through forgiveness. Continued growth of the faith of the people.Pray for inner peace. âDonât worry about anything; instead, pray about everything. Tell God what you need and thank him for all he has done.â –Â Philippians 4:6 |