Category Archives: Morning Thoughts

Philip Conley's Morning Thoughts

Morning Thoughts (Exodus 36:6-7 – “Willing Service: More Than Enough”)

“Willing Service: More Than Enough”

Exodus 36:6-7, “And Moses gave commandment, and they caused it to be proclaimed throughout the camp, saying, Let neither man nor woman make any more work for the offering of the sanctuary. So the people were restrained from bringing. For the stuff they had was sufficient for all the work to make it, and too much.”

This morning, self-centeredness abounds. One of the universal failings of mankind is that we put self before all else, even though we can mightily convince ourselves that we have not. One of the things that a self-first mindset genders is an unwillingness to do anything that is not an absolute requirement. Even then, the performance is out of obligation rather than devotion. One of the hardest things for any devoted disciple of the cross to live up to is a willing heart of service that does the right thing guided by the right motivation. Since there are so many promised and realized blessings to be had in obedience, it is easy to slip into looking at the rewards of service rather than the true motivation of service, which is sole affection and devotion to the Almighty. As a minister, there can be times when our preaching meets with encouragement that can be used wrongfully. Whenever we are commended for our service, that can become an idol in our minds and hearts that clouds our service to God. Whenever we are looking at the results and rewards of the service as our end, we have lost our way in willing and faithful service to God. As I have heard it said throughout my days in the church, “Our purpose here should be to see how much we can put into it rather than how much we will get out of it.” God is faithful to bless us, but we devote our sight to how much we can do in it.

Much of the time during the journeys of the children of Israel in the Old Testament under Moses and later Joshua we point out all the ways in which Israel failed God. Time and time again, they murmured and complained even though God had been so good to them, and His presence dwelled with them perpetually. Much like the Apostle Peter these folks can become the handy “punching bag” for an illustration of what not to do. However, like Peter, there were times when they “got it right,” and this is one such time when they are to be commended for their service. Our study verses show a worthy example that is applicable to followers of Christ in our day, thousands of years removed from these people.

During this period, the children of Israel have come out of Egypt with a mighty hand. They have not yet received the Promised Land of blessing that God said Abraham’s seed would inherit. Moses has just received the law and the pattern of worship that the Lord has ordained should be followed. After returning with God’s law and pattern of worship, the congregation sets out to fashion everything as God had commanded. They had to construct the tabernacle, the furniture for the building, and all the alters and other constructs that would be needed. To do this, they had to give materials for the service, their time for the construction, and ultimately set their hearts to follow the order as God had established.

In our study verses, we see where this often stiff-necked and hard-hearted people actually performed admirably in their giving. They gave so much so willingly that Moses had to proclaim an end of giving for that season. The things given were sufficient and over and above. What a blessing for a people to give time, service, and supplies so that there was not room for everything! In a world where we constantly hear about deficits and other losses, they had a windfall of surplus for the Lord’s service here. People were that engaged and willing to go about doing the Lord’s work. One of the reasons that this success occurred is that they knew God Himself had ordained it. They saw His manifestation on the mount in fire, and they knew this God who had showed them so much said, “You will worship me this way.” Another reason they had this success is that though commanded to do so, they wanted to do it.

Willing service gets to one of the hallmark differences between God’s service and discipleship and every other form of group service. Oftentimes, religious activity is marked by either willing service or commanded service, but not both. When someone is commanded to do something, they may do it out of fear, duty, bribery, or some other form, but they perform it because it is required. When someone does something that is not commanded just because they want to, they really have liberty to do what they want, since there is no commandment for it. God’s service is the only one that joins the two together. He commands obedience, but He attaches willingness to it. (Isaiah 1:19-20) To simply do as commanded is not sufficient, but to want to do what is commanded yields sufficient for the work and more than enough.

Have you ever observed people do things in life that they enjoyed and things they had to do? Do they look the same while performing them? I remember Dad taking us to Disneyland when we were younger, and looking back, he might have preferred a root canal than to be at an amusement park for 2 whole days. It just was not his thing, but he knew that we enjoyed it and did it. However, he learned quickly that with wait times for rides, he could get a lot of Bible reading in. So, he started carrying a pocket Bible and reading it while we waited on roller coasters. The look on his face when we walked into the park or stepped on a ride was not nearly like the look on his face while standing there reading. He supremely enjoyed the reading, while he did the other to please his children.

God is not pleased when we help one another grudgingly. He is not pleased when we come to church with some sense of duty without the willing heart of love. He is pleased when we want to do what He has commanded. He is pleased when we help one another not to get something out of Him or others but just because we want to help our brethren in need. Oftentimes, I will hear people say, “I just don’t get anything out of that anymore.” Maybe the “that” is reading their Bible. Maybe it is going to church. Maybe it is their preacher. Whatever the object, a little investigation oftentimes yields the conclusion that long before their mouth declared their dissatisfaction with a thing, they lost the willing desire to engage. Maybe they kept at the activity for a season, but their heart was not in it.

Recently, I talked with a brother who had quit attending church, and when I asked him if there was something I could help him with, he said, “I had to quit cause I wasn’t being fed.” When I asked a few simple questions like “How were your prayers for the service?” “How about singing in service?” and things of that nature, he said, “Well I don’t really sing in church, and the preacher just seemed to be dry and saying the same things.” I encouraged him to go back and prepare his heart for the Lord’s service and fully engage while there. (I Chronicles 22:19) If we come to God’s service with the attitude to do as much as we can, there will be more than enough. Even if the task seems impossible, consider that God commands us to do the possible, and while performing it, He accomplishes the impossible. When He gave His disciples commands while feeding the multitude, He told them to do things they could. They made the men sit down in the grass, and then they distributed what He gave to the people. But, the impossible happened, because Christ was involved! Does the task seem insurmountable? Does everything seem to be going wrong in life? Do what He has commanded, and the impossible will be performed!

In recent years, I have heard far too much depressing talk from God’s people and sadly, too much doom and gloom from some of His ministers. Friends, take courage! God is still here, and when we willingly follow Him, we will have more than enough to do what we have been commanded by Him. The success of our performance in His service does not hinge on Him giving us all that we need or the ability to do it. Everything God commands us, He has already blessed us with the ability to perform, and all the supplies necessary have already been given by Him to use. The success of our engagement depends on how willing we are in our obedience and service. When these people gave gold and other things for the work, where did that come from? When they gave themselves and their time, where did that come from? Whether material supplies or our very lives, all that we are and all that we have belongs to Him. He has blessed us with it; therefore, He has supplied all that is necessary to serve Him acceptably in in Godly fear.

During this time of the calendar year, we normally focus on the coming year and make “resolutions” that oftentimes dissolve within the first month of a fresh year. Whether the resolution is losing weight, reading through the Bible, etc. we fall down on our commitment. The things dissolve when we lose the resolve to perform them. Spiritual drifting and waning comes when we lose our willingness in the performance of it. Then, we seem to be lacking and wonder, “What happened?” If there is any lack of supply or time, friends the fault lies with us. He has given us so much, we have sufficient for His service and more than enough. May we band together as these people did and be so willing and faithful that there is not time or room for it all. What grand days of service can be ours to enjoy when we say, “He said do it this way, so let’s get busy and do it.”

In Hope,
Bro Philip

Philip Conley's Morning Thoughts

Morning Thoughts (John 13:14 – “Our Debt of Service”)

“Our Debt of Service”

(This subject is by request.)

John 13:14, “If I then, your Lord and Master, have washed your feet; ye also ought to wash one another’s feet.”

This morning, what is real service? What does it look like? Our present day, self-centered culture has lost touch with what true service entails. With governments throwing money at poverty and the rat race becoming more and more fast paced, we rarely give time or thought to what could be done for those in need. Whether on a personal or community level, the sense of aid and altruism looks more like the exception than the rule. To combat this – or any other problem in life – we only need consult the source material for standards: The Holy Bible. There we find a plethora of commands that instruct us to put self on the back burner so that others would be blessed. Years ago, a former football player – Gale Sayers – penned a book whose title gets to the heart of this subject called “I Am Third.” In the book the title is expounded to reflect God first, others second, and I am third.

Our study verse is one of the more well quoted verses during a communion and feet washing service. We hear about our Lord’s majestic stoop to servitude by washing His creation’s feet, and then the simple command He gives for us to do likewise. Yet, though the command is simple, consider how profound it truly is. Simple words with simple meanings can really bring to bear the great import of statements like this. While growing up, my natural father used the word “ought” a lot. One of the most common examples was when he would have to run errands in town. He would line out my work to do around the house and say, “When I get back from town, you ought to be done with all of this.” Heaven help you if he came home from town to find the tasks unfinished with no certifiable reason. Yet, even in that common usage growing up, we still do not really find the teeth of the word’s meaning.

The word “ought” is literally rendered to mean that we owe a debt. Instead of a suggestion, this command shows our responsibility. We owe debts to creditors who have power over us due to what is owed. Currently, I live in a house that is partly owned by a bank until I get the note paid off. My house payment is not a voluntary monthly item. If I want my family to continue to enjoy living there, I must pay it, else the bank has the power to forcefully remove my family and me from the house. That is the nature and power of a debt. Though this instance happens during a literal feet washing service (which is simply commanded to the church to keep literally as His example and service), the verse is a microcosm of a much broader application. What is to be performed literally in that service should be mirrored and reflected in all portions of service.

Let us begin by considering the Speaker, and then we shall turn our attention to His audience. In doing so, I believe the profound nature of this word (ought) will shine forth in exceeding splendor. The Speaker is the Lord from heaven. He is the Incarnate and Eternal Son of God. He is God. No less in power than the Father or Holy Ghost, He has all power, honour, knowledge, and glory. Would it be proper to say that this Great One was in debt? Years ago, I would have answered the question incorrectly as I have heard it said all my life, “God does not owe us anything. He is not obligated to us at all.” While the statement was made honestly, the sense of it is wrong. It would be more proper to say, “God did not owe us anything, and He was not obligated to us at all.” What is the difference between the two? The difference of sense comes from a difference of tense.

In God’s character and nature, He owed us nothing. As the eternal, self sufficient, and great I AM, He was beholden to nobody and nothing. Should He have chosen never to create a universe, nothing in His essence or being would have changed. Yet, He chose to create this great physical realm. He chose to create man in His image. Further, He covenanted with Himself (before creation itself) to redeem His people from the ruin of sin-cursed creation that He knew we would enter into. To affect this covenant, His Son willingly and joyfully entered into the contract to redeem us from ruin by becoming one of us (a man) and standing where we should have stood. He died the traitor’s death so that traitors would live in glory with all majesty.

In addition to that, He agreed to fulfill all that was foretold and laid upon Him. Not only did He die for us on Calvary and rise again from the dead, He also lived for us to show us the good way where rest is found for the soul. In that short 33.5 year span, He fulfilled every prophecy made of Him, fulfilled all righteousness through His conduct, and gave us the perfect, supreme example of what a true servant does in his service. The high water mark of this living servitude came that night when He knelt down before them. Not only had they never seen a master do this, no master compared to this Master! Doubtless, Peter was honest in his initial prevention of Christ just as John the Baptist was with his until Christ instructed both of them more perfectly. John was told that his participation with Christ fulfilled all righteousness. Peter was told that unless washed he had no part with Christ. Both of them then willingly submitted to the service.

Why would THE LORD and THE MASTER kneel down to creation? Isaiah 42 prophesizes this when the LORD declares that the GodMan Jesus (His Elect) would be His servant. No doubt this prophecy pertains to Christ as the New Testament tells us so, but the LORD calls His Son “My servant.” To fulfill all that this pertained to, Christ had to come in the form of a servant though He be Lord of all. Consider Him. Consider His humility and meekness. Consider the power of this one to submit to such a contradiction of sinners against Himself. (Hebrews 12:3) He not only fulfilled the legal requirements of the law for our justification, He fulfilled all the prophecy for our chief example for life. Why? Because He owed a debt. What debt? To do all that the Godhead promised to do. He owed us, not because we were His creditors, but because we were the blessed recipients of His contract. God obligated Himself to us! To fail to do pay any portion of His debt of service would have invalidated His covenant and His nature, which is why the Lord included in Isaiah’s prophecy (Isaiah 42:5) that He will not fail nor be discouraged. Blessed thought!

Looking from the Speaker to His audience, let us point the glass at ourselves no matter how bitter the image. How well are we paying our debt? We have a debt, as this verse tells us. We owe Him our service, our best affection, and our first priority in life. To fulfill that, it is imperative that we view one another (His people) as we view Him. The King will one day tell His sheep “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me.” (Matthew 25:40b) Whether in literal stooping at our brother’s feet or in various aspects of servitude, we are “paying” on the debt we owe Him. He receives our service to one another just as if it were a payment made directly to Him. How often do we think of that when dealing with our brethren? Sobering indeed.

Whether speaking of officers in the church (elders and deacons), fellow disciples of Christ, etc. we owe Him service and ought to be willing and obedient to pay. Elders serve the church ministering to her in the feeding of knowledge and instruction, being apt to teach. (Jeremiah 3:15, I Timothy 3:2) Deacons serve the church by holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience so that they can purchase to themselves a good degree with boldness in the faith of Christ Jesus. (I Timothy 3:9, 13) As “leaders,” the leading comes through the example of service. Pastors serve through example, and deacons do as well. The example of knowing and/or instructing in the principles of the faith and showing forth with all fidelity the good life to lead. In like manner, devoted disciples show forth the same fidelity and care one for another, with each esteeming others better than themselves.

Consider us. We do not have the eternal nature and self sufficiency of Him. We have not created. We have not redeemed. We are not perfect. Yet the One who is all these things and more did these things for us. How reasonable is it that we do these things for Him through and to one another? Years ago, I observed perhaps two of the most touching things during a communion service that have stayed with me ever since. I observed an old and respected deacon as he washed his brother’s feet. While washing, his tears fell into the bowl, and as he rose from his knees, he cast his eyes to heaven saying, “Lord, there is some of what I owe you.” This man held the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience, knowing what the word “ought” means.

Years later, my wife and budding family were visiting with a church during their communion. The children we had were very small and getting loud. Sitting up front assisting the service, my wife was forced to wrestle them alone until she had to go out due to their noise. She stayed out of the sanctuary until we starting singing the hymn before going out. As she re-entered, the pastor leaned in and said, “We need to keep singing for a while.” Nodding to the deacons who distributed the table, they took the bread and wine back to my wife as the sisters began a procession line to her. After partaking of the table elements, some of the sisters took the children from my wife, while another who was already girded knelt down before her to allow her to partake of the service. Friends, they may have been singing, but I was too touched to do anything but weep. After service, I thanked everyone that had assisted in allowing my wife to partake, and they all said the same thing, “It was the least we could do. He has done so much for us.”

Whatever your calling and station in life, remember how much we owe Him. Remember how devoted He is to us. So should we be devoted to one another. Many times you will hear it said at communion, “You can’t be at your brother’s throat, when you kneel at his feet.” When our hearts stay prostrate before our Lord and our brother’s feet, we exemplify the attitude and position of Christ. When our affection is tuned to things above, we really are third. Remember my house analogy from above. I live in a house the bank owns. One day I will live in a house that God dwells in that His Son bought for me. While here, I live in His earth, and dwell in His church. They belong to Him, but I get to use and enjoy them. Just as I must pay the bank for the living in my house, I owe the Lord to live here and the privilege of being part of His kingdom and church. May we daily and constantly serve, knowing that our Master is owed these things, and use His willing and cheerful example to guide us as He paid all that was required of Him.

In Hope,
Bro Philip