Break
Out of Your Cocoon
Today's
Scripture:
Do
not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of
your mind…
Isaiah 54:2, NIV.
Isaiah 54:2, NIV.
Today's
Word:
On
the inside of each one of us is a blessed, prosperous, victorious person. This
person is free from addictions and bad habits, confident and secure in God. But
just because that’s in you doesn’t mean it’s going to automatically come out.
In
today’s scripture, that word “transformed” in the original language is
“metamorpho.” It’s where we get our word “metamorphose.” We know how a
caterpillar metamorphoses into a butterfly. This is saying that if you meditate
on God’s Word, then a transformation will take place.
Think
about the little caterpillar. It’s very plain, nothing really special about it.
At a certain point, it forms a cocoon. The metamorphose starts to take place.
It’s a process. Little by little it changes. One day, it begins to push out of
the cocoon. Before long, it goes from being one of the plainest insects to
being one of the most beautiful. Instead of having to crawl on the ground and
squirm around, it can now fly wherever it wants to go. Today, why don’t you
break out of your cocoon? Believe that God is at work in you. Believe that He
has good plans for you. Believe that He will complete every good work that He’s
started in your life!
Prayer
for Today:
Father,
thank You for the good plan You have for me. Thank You for Your Word which
transforms me into Your image. I choose to trust, I choose to believe, and I
choose to follow Your Word which is life to my soul in Jesus’ Name. Amen.
***Jesus Paid the Price You Couldn’t Pay
13 hours ago
by Rick Warren
“He gave his life to purchase freedom for everyone.” (1 Timothy 2:6a NLT)
All of us are slaves of something. Maybe it’s our peers. Maybe it’s our lusts. Maybe it’s money. The Bible says in 2 Peter 2:19, “You are a slave to whatever controls you” (NLT). Based on this definition alone, all of us are slaves to something.
We don’t have to let anything enslave us, though. The Bible says Jesus bought our freedom: “He gave his life to purchase freedom for everyone” (1 Timothy 2:6a NLT). The Greek word for redemption actually refers to slaves who were purchased in a marketplace. In a spiritual sense, all of us were slaves to sin until Jesus purchased us out of the slave market and set us free from sin’s bondage.
Let me give you a picture of what Jesus’ death on the cross did to purchase our freedom. Imagine you’re in a busy marketplace with a lot of commerce going on. In the center of the marketplace, you’re in the middle of an auction, where you are being bid on. As each successive bid is shouted out, you look in the eyes of those who are bidding on you and try to size them up. Are they kind or cruel? Just as the auction is winding down, a stranger from the crowd stands up and offers a bid a thousand times higher than anyone else’s bid. There is no way anyone could ever match or beat that bid. As the auctioneer hastily accepts it, you look into that stranger’s eyes and realize he isn’t bidding on you to use you, like a slave. He’s buying you in order to set you free.
That’s just what Jesus did for you. He paid the price to set you free. The price for your freedom was so high you could never pay it. But he paid it for you.
Even if you’re a follower of Jesus, you may not be living in that freedom. You may be subtly allowing yourself to be controlled by your desires, your relationships, your schedule, or your fears. Galatians 5:1 says, “Freedom is what we have — Christ has set us free! Stand, then, as free people, and do not allow yourselves to become slaves again” (GNT).
So many people spend their lives seeking significance and freedom on manmade dead-end passes. Yet, here’s the amazing truth: “We can never redeem ourselves; we cannot pay God the price for our lives, because the payment for a human life is too great” (Psalm 49:7-8a).
The price for your freedom has already been paid. You’ve been bought. Are you living in that freedom?
Talk It Over
- In what ways do you let things other than God have mastery over your life?
- What kinds of activities have you seen people embrace in their search for spiritual freedom and wholeness?
- How does knowing and reflecting upon what Jesus went through to pay for your freedom change how you embrace that freedom?
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