BeholdExemplo
Behold His lordship
Lift your praises now
All our lives to Him we bring
Lift your praises now
Let every heart make room for Him
Let fear and striving cease
His blood has made us clean
Now all can enter in
Through Christ the Lord
Raise your voices now
For there is One upon the throne
Raise your voices now
And make His praises glorious
Every knee will bow
Every tongue cry out
The praises of our God
Christ the Lord
Give Him glory now
For Christ our God has overcome
Give Him glory now
For all that He has done for us
Let His Kingdom come
Let His will be done
Let His praise be sung
Christ the Lord
There will come a day
When our eyes will see Him
Oh we will see Him
And on our faces we’ll fall
Joining with heaven
Singing His praises
Devotional
Often, upon first coming to salvation, we are first overwhelmed by what Christ has done for us while we were still sinners (Romans 5:8). We read of His suffering and of the love for us that motivated Him. We are moved. And within that we come to know Christ as our Saviour. But Scripture tells us something striking. We find Scripture doesn’t just call us to repentance in light of Christ as our Saviour, but also Christ as our Lord (Romans 10:9).
What this means is that we cannot come to abide in Christ without accepting both His sacrifice for us and His lordship over us.
This is so because, in resurrecting Christ, God didn’t just return to Him His breath, but He made Him Lord over all at the same time (Ephesians 1:19-23, Romans 6:23, 8:39, 1 Corinthians 6:11). There does not exist for us a Saviour in Christ who is not also Lord over us.
Jesus Christ as Lord is also what the disciples consistently preached. In his second letter to the Corinthians, Paul makes it clear that the concept of Christ as Lord is in fact inextricably at the heart of the Gospel (2 Corinthians 4:5).
We must come to the reality of the nature of the Christ Who saved us. He is Christ received in whole, not in part, though we hope to ever grow in the extent to which we know the whole. John Piper explains it thus: “…from the time of our first saving acceptance of Christ, He is our King and Lord and Savior and Priest and Prophet and Counselor. All that He is, He is for those who are His. And then begins a life of faltering and growing yieldedness to Christ in all that He is.”
This yieldedness begins when we know His salvation, and it continues for the rest of our lives, actively manifest in daily acts of submission, faith, trust, obedience and worship. The Word calls us continually to yield all we are to God (see also Hebrews 12:1), and to do so to such an extent that we even become “slaves” to God – devoted entirely to the will of our Master and Lord.
We were once slaves to lawlessness and impurity and stood to receive the “wages of sin” which is death. But through Christ we have been offered a gift – one of eternal life (Romans 6:17-19, 23).
Brothers and sisters in Christ, choose to surrender today and every day. “Present your members as slaves to righteousness”. Be convinced that He who has saved you, is also your Lord.
Reflections
- Knowing Christ purely as your Saviour and not as your Lord also, can lead to overly emotional responses and hyper-grace doctrines. Knowing Him only as your Lord might lead to dead works or a relationship characterised by fear. How then does knowing Christ as both allow us the freedom to live for Him and draw near to Him without fear?
- What will yieldedness look like in your own life? List a few things or ways you can begin to yield to God.
- How can being in community help us to grow in yieldedness?
Sobre este plano
ShofarBand’s latest album, Behold, is about the community of God beholding Him, bringing worship that’s in Spirit and truth: inspired by His Spirit and established in His Word. This devotional is based on the twelve songs on the album and structured around twelve facets of God’s character, encouraging us, as the writer to the Hebrews did, to “fix our eyes on Jesus,” the author and finisher of our faith.
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