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No Distraction

No Distraction

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Distractions can be fun. They can be the cow out the vehicle window that you point at and watch as you pass. It can be the shiny thing that caught your eye and sparkles just right. They can be the fancy car, the pretty clothes, the cool show, and they can also be the argument you've having over what's for dinner. They all keep you away from what should be in front of your eyes.

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This is a series of devotions and meditations on scripture that reject fear in any form. It discusses the power of fear and how it can be overcome through faith in God. The transcript also shares a story about Paul raising a boy from the dead and emphasizes the importance of staying focused on the word of God. It concludes by reminding the listener of God's unconditional love. Welcome to Fear No Fear. Grace to you from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. May the Holy Spirit embrace you today. This is a series of devotions and meditations on scripture. We reject fear in any and all forms. Fear is a spiritual force, the currency of darkness and ignorance. It's what we inherited when Adam gave up his faith and Satan uses it to keep people down. His only weapon is words. If he can get you believing or looking at words of fear, he's got you. Instead, we champion faith as an allegiance to God, as a belief and trust and loyalty to the Lord God Almighty. We accept the evidence of his word as unvarnished truth, as is, just as it's written. We get close to his perfect love through the word, and perfect love casts out fear. 1 John 4.18 All scripture is taken from the World English Bible, which is in the public domain. Visit eBible.org Acts 20.10 Paul went down and fell upon him, and embracing him said, Don't be troubled, for his life is in him. Three people were raised from the dead in the Old Testament, one unintentionally. Jesus raised three in the New Testament, and both Peter and Paul raised one. This doesn't count Jesus himself, who was resurrected and not raised, an important distinction, or the many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised, Matthew 28.52, that happened when Jesus died. While this may not seem like a lot, really think about it. How many people do you know who have been raised from the dead? It is still extremely rare and hotly contested. While it is clearly not tagged to the age of the apostles, which some hold ended when the New Testament was completed and sealed, it is also clearly connected to people who were highly anointed of the Lord. So maybe not everyone can do it, but you don't have to be an apostle to participate in this miracle. Just highly anointed of the Lord. How does that happen? Well, that happens when we're close to the Lord, when we're studied and grounded in the Word, when we live it and breathe it and move in it. When the Lord is number one and no one and nothing comes before him, we can be simple janitors or globe-hopping evangelists. The Lord anoints those who have a heart for him. Just look at King David. So Paul was well within his rights to expect the boy in question to come to life. They had been having a meeting. Paul had arrived. They gathered to break bread together. And he was due to leave the next day. As you do, they got to talking. Or Paul got to talking anyway. And talk he did. He gave a speech before the meal and kept going and going long into the night. He spoke until midnight in a well-lit upper room. And then he spoke some more. Poor Eutychus fell asleep. But he had been reclining in a window. Once he was fully gonzoed, he fell out. It says in verse 9 that he was taken up dead. Now the man writing the book of Acts and present at the time was a medical doctor. He'd no death from life. Everyone was naturally upset. Paul ran down and fell upon him and said the boy was still alive. Then Paul went back upstairs. Then they ate. And then he kept talking right until the morning. At dawn he left. What about the boy? Verse 12. They brought the boy in alive and were greatly comforted. This incident did not derail Paul. He was there to impart things to the believers at Troas. He'd been with them seven days. And this was the first day of the new week. It was the last day to speak to them as Paul was going to travel by land to Azoz. He had already done his teaching and preaching. This was the last meal together. But this was also his last chance. So Paul was John 15ing them. What's that? It's one of my favorite moments in Scripture. At the last supper, after Judas had left, Jesus was speaking to his disciples. And at the end of the meal, the end of the night, it was all over. John 14.29-31 says, and this is right at the end of the 14th chapter. Now I have told you before it happens, so that when it happens, you may believe. I will no more speak much with you, for the prince of the world comes, and he has nothing in me. But that the world may know that I love the Father, and as the Father commanded me, even so I do. Arise! Let's go from here. Jesus immediately keeps speaking for three chapters and 86 verses. So like Jesus, Paul was taking the last opportunity he had to get some things into these people. We aren't told what it was that he said, but he was dedicated to saying it, and they were dedicated to hearing it. Who hasn't been at an event, and the speaker was going on a little bit long? You know, if it's before the real part of the event, the film, the concert, the food, they get hurried along. But Paul wasn't hurried along. They gathered for the evening meal, which happens probably around seven or so, just after the sun goes down. And Paul gets up to talk before the meal and keeps going for hours and hours. They didn't stop him. They didn't cough semi-politely into the napkins repeatedly while pointing at the food. They didn't start playing music and cut off his microphone. They were interested in what he had to say. Even young Eutychus, until he fell out the window anyway. But the important thing is, this was a blip to Paul. Paul had been sharing Jesus. Jesus! Death wasn't going to stop Jesus, Doc. But that doesn't stop the enemy from trying. So faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God. Romans 10.17 Hearing the Word is a vital part of the believer equation. We hear the Word and things happen. It strengthens our faith to hear it, but that's just one thing. It renews our mind, Romans 12.2. It is life to us, John 6.63. It births us into new life, James 1.18. It is a seed for our endurance, 1 Peter 1.23. It births reverence and knowledge, Proverbs 2.1-5. It is our food, Matthew 4.4. It guides us, Psalm 119.105. It heals us, Proverbs 4.22 and Psalm 107.20. It keeps us from sin, Psalm 119.11. It's a helmet for us in spiritual warfare, Ephesians 6.17. It is a living thing within us, 1 John 2.14. It sanctifies us, John 17.17. It sets us free, John 8.31-32. It keeps us from stumbling, Psalm 119.165. It is our refuge and our shield, Psalm 119.114. It preserves our life, Psalm 119.25. It never fails because it can do the impossible, Luke 1.37. The Word is more than that. The Word is imbued with the power of God. It reveals to us the unknown things that happen in the kingdom of God, Genesis 1-2. It equips us and gives us the grounds to refute ungodly teaching, 2 Timothy 3.16-17. It is the seed that grows us in amazing ways, giving us roots that keep us strong, healthy, and focused on the Lord, Luke 8.11-15. It gives us a lodestone that our souls naturally gravitate to, keeping us always turning back to the Lord, 2 Peter 2.25. It recharges and renews us in time of trouble, restoring us to where we belong in Jesus, Psalm 138.7. It is a reward for us and a vehicle by which we are richly rewarded by the Lord, Hebrews 11.6. It helps to ready us for the things that are coming, Luke 12.40. Because Jesus, who is the Word, uses it to tell us what we need to know so that we don't fall away from the truth in times of upheaval, regardless of how our feelings may be doing feels, holding fast to what He said and believing that it is truth, John 14.29. With all of that at stake, don't you dare forget that the enemy is invested in robbing us of that, preventing us from receiving that, distracting us from it, trying to keep you down on their level. If you want to have distractions upon distractions upon distractions, you take a serious deep breath and go to study the Word. It is amazing the stuff that will come to mind. Things about the area you're sitting in. Things that you meant to do but haven't done yet. People calling, emailing, or texting you. Fights that you had 17 years ago come to mind with the perfect comebacks and pithy points to win it. Past sins will kick up. Shameful and embarrassing memories, personality faults, and even demonic distractions by manifestations. Anything to keep you from hearing and receiving the Word. Especially anything to keep you from applying and acting on it. In Paul's case, they killed a kid. Having a member of your audience die is usually a good way to throw a speaker off their stride. Death can affect all of us at the best of times. When you're trying to be focused and really get across what God has laid in your heart, death is a kind of buzz killer. But Paul didn't miss a beat. Stopped talking, went and dealt with it, and came back to eat and keep talking. That is smooth. That is not being distracted. Paul was able to keep the Word flowing because he had the Word inside him. Perhaps Psalm 121 came to mind. I will lift up my eyes to the hills. Where does my help come from? My help comes from the Lord, who made heaven and earth. He will not allow your foot to be moved. He who keeps you will not slumber. Behold, he who keeps Israel will neither slumber nor sleep. The Lord is your keeper. The Lord is your shade on your right hand. The sun will not harm you by day, nor the moon by night. The Lord will keep you from all evil. He will keep your soul. The Lord will keep your going out and your coming in, from this time forward and forevermore. The Lord knew what was going to happen. The angels of the Lord were there. Now why did they even let the kid die at all? I don't know. My best guess and rationale is that the Lord seized a teaching moment. For the believer, you see, death has no sting. 1 Corinthians 15, 55-58 It is nothing. It's like closing your eyes to sleep. It has no power over us at all. If you die, you can come back, if that's what you and the Lord want. And I'm not saying this as someone untouched by death. I've lost a child. I've lost relatives. I've lost friends. I know about wanting someone back. But unlike Paul, my faith didn't have coming back on the dance card. It never crossed my mind. But recently, an acquaintance died in a state that I could not get to. I'd been praying for them for a while. I had heart for them, but they didn't stay. First thought I had when I heard of it was whether, if I could make it to the funeral, we could pray and bring them back. If anyone would join me in faith or try and stop me. I wondered if the family would gather around. And I seriously considered it. But I didn't go because I wasn't called to. These were all me thoughts. But I realized there had been a shift in my thinking. Death was no longer a player on the field. It was just something that existed. Like changing buses on a long journey or changing clothes before a wedding. My faith in this area was strengthening. The Word was changing me to see that death really has no power or meaning for the believer. Paul had already been changed. He went and dealt with it like he would a heckler at a show. He went to the boy. He checked the boy. He assured the onlookers that everything was okay. He continued on with the evening and with his talk to his friends. Paul stayed focused and continued the assignment he had from the Lord. He'd been called to do this. He was empowered to accomplishment. And he did not let anything stop him. He used the empowerment. Now, we know Paul had an assignment, because Acts 16.6 shows us there were places the Spirit didn't want him to go, and he obeyed. Therefore, anywhere he was, he was called, or at least allowed to go. Paul was called to travel and preach, Acts 13.2. When God calls us, he equips us to succeed. We have to obey and not let things move us aside, no matter what the things are. This doesn't mean that people are going to drop dead when we go to talk about Jesus. And it doesn't mean that if someone does, God will raise them from the dead. But the possibility is on the table, because God is not a respecter of persons, Acts 10.34-35. God is the God of the impossible, Matthew 19.26. When we work with him, Mark 10.27, when we give him permission to do what he wants, when he wants, and how he wants, then the impossible will become commonplace in our lives. We want to see the dead raised, but not have it happen. We might want to get as much as we can out before the brunch service ends, and have God lengthen time for us. Impossible happens on his scale, not ours. Small impossibles are as great as large ones. Now the other day I was swapping out water jugs in our cooler. We had just purchased a new jug. My son noticed water on the floor where it had been sitting. There was a trail through the house, and there was also a pool under the now one-quarter empty jug that was sitting on the counter waiting for me. So I put it in the shower stall, cleaned up the water, soaking portions of a towel and picking up a now wet small throw rug, and I grabbed the old jug, which was the same size. I poured the water from one to the other, spilling some, but when I was done, the second jug was full. I had to recheck the jugs, but they were the same volume and shape. I ended up with no loss of water, even though I had picked up a fair bit. Now you can argue with me if you like, but I know what I experienced. There was water loss without water loss. Impossible? Yes. It was a small impossible. But I was as grateful for it as I would be for a big one. It was yet another example of the Lord providing just because He wanted to. If God can do small miracles of impossible, then God can do big miracles of impossible. I can ask for anything I want, but He is only going to move in the ones and in the ways that He wants. I don't monitor His wants on a scale of success. It isn't a failure if I pray for a body and it doesn't rise. It isn't a success if I ask for the gas in my vehicle to last until payday, and it does. God does what He wants, when He wants, and how He wants. Anything He does is a success, whether my mind sees it that way or not. My job is to give Him permission to move in my life in any and every way all of the time. My job is to get into the Word and make sure I am hearing it, steadily hearing, by reading or listening, both the Word itself and the Word as interpreted by reliable preachers and teachers, every day in some way, the more the merrier, but even 10 minutes a day is enough to change your life. Don't let distraction rule, but use the Word as a weapon to drive the enemy from your mind. 2 Timothy 1.7 Use it as the rock you stand on to firmly choose to listen and receive the Word. The enemy will try and choke it out of you, keep it from you, and turn your mind to other things. It is your duty to stay focused on the Word and hear it. The Word helps and equips us for that battle, Ephesians 6, 10-18. We can win it. In Jesus we have dominion. Through Jesus we are equipped, and by Jesus we will overcome. Hear the Word, believe the Word, receive the Word. Amen. Our daily affirmation of God's love is James 1.22-25. Inspirational books, uplifting commentaries, cute memes that really make you think. All of them designed for feel-good moments. Nice, engaging, inspiring, but ultimately unhelpful. Nothing you hear is useful if you don't apply it. Years ago I saw a clip from an animated cartoon where a normally fit character had been drawn enormously obese. They were eating the contents of a box of chocolate piece by piece, while smiling, laughing, and commenting to a friend on the phone that I love chocolate, but I can't have any because it makes me fat. This is inspirational literature to us. We love it. We enjoy it. We tell others the quotes. But if we aren't doing anything with it, it does us no good. The endless list of 10 things every mother should know, 14 ways to change how your child learns, the 7 effective steps for peopling, or the 3 simple habits to lose 1,437 pounds in a month. They're all just so many words if they aren't applied. The word is the same way. Our faith is the same way. Who cares how strong yours is if you never apply it? Read every printed word about people in the Bible who have been raised from the dead. Meditate on the verses. Read commentary about them. Picture yourself doing it until it seems normal. Get it into you so much you're dreaming about it. Every dead body in every television program is an opportunity for you to visualize yourself there beside it praying in order to get your mind around the concept. Study, read, meditate, and then pray. Pray about it. Praise the Lord that all things are possible to those who believe. Claim the promises of Jesus. Get yourself so worked up and charged with it that you're absolutely positive with no doubts whatsoever that if a dead body so much as comes near you, it's coming alive. And then do nothing. Go nowhere. Pray for no one. It won't do you any good, will it? We aren't called to keep our light hidden, Matthew 5, 15-16. We need to do. Faith without works is dead because faith that does nothing is faith that isn't empowered for anything. A vehicle fully gassed up with a charged battery that never leaves your driveway is a 4,000-pound paperweight. Faith not discharged is gas in a pillowcase, not helium in a balloon. Faith discharged is faith used. Faith used builds you up, reminds you of who you are in Jesus. It reminds the world who Jesus is. It is a beacon to the blind, a siren to the deaf, a tsunami of unshakable truth to the doubter. It is that which lets people know there is not only a God, not only a God who moves, not only a God for whom time, space, and reality are not barriers, not only a God who was real, but a God who wants interaction with them, and He wants it today. Faith unused is forgettable, pitiable, and pointless. Faith in action, guided by the Holy Spirit, is a dynamo, a light show, a certifiable shout of praise to our living, breathing, moving, almighty God. As we close, remember that you have birth. You are precious and valuable. Declare this. Today, God loves that I, now you, fill in the blank. Was it a meal you made? A smile you gave? Did you get out of bed? Read? Put on socks? There's no wrong answers here. There is no end to God's love, and no end to the things about you that He loves each and every day. Pick one. And remember, the Lord loves you, just because you're you. 1 John 4, 9-10 tells us, By this, God's love was revealed in us, that God has sent His only-born Son into the world, that we might live through Him. And this is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son as the atoning sacrifice for our sins. His perfect love turned away God's wrath because of sin, and it casts out our fear, too. See verses 18 and 19. We love because He first loved us. He just loved us. Can't get enough of us. And that is wonderful. See you next time.

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