The Everyday Gospel Christmas DevotionalExemplo
Life on this side of eternity is one constant glory war.
I saw a change in my friend. He had once been a champion of the gospel. It was the fire in his belly, the passion that constantly motivated him. But now he was different. It hadn’t happened all at once, but his ministry had changed. It had been all about his Savior, but now it was all about him. He seemed to have fallen into the lure of his own notoriety. He clearly loved being the center of attention. He liked being surrounded by his fans. He loved hanging around with the “cool kids.” He was still in ministry and still doing ministry things, but the glory-focus had radically shifted. Whether he knew it or not, the glory that excited him was not the glory of his Savior. He was obsessed with his own glory, and it would be his undoing.
You and I were hardwired by God for glory. We are attracted to glorious things. That’s why we love a great meal, an overtime championship game, a beautiful dress, a dramatic movie, or a multihued sunset. God has packed his world full of glorious things and given us the ability to take in those glories. But every glorious thing God has created points to his glorious glory. We were never intended to live for our own glory or some created glory. Our glory orientation should drive us to the Lord, so that his glory would finally satisfy the glory hunger in our hearts.
Sin causes us to search for glory satisfaction outside of our Creator, but God will not share his glory with another. God is jealous for his glory to be the one glory that captures our hearts, and this should shape the way that we live. His holy jealousy for his glory is clearly communicated in a single statement repeated in Ezekiel 25–26: “Then you [or they] will know that I am the Lord” (Ezek. 25:7, 11, 17; 26:6). God is pronouncing judgment on the nations that surround Israel. He exercises his holy justice so that these nations will know that he is the Lord. God exercises his power for his own glory.
Does this bother you? It is wrong to live for your own glory because, as a creature, you belong to the one who made you. You exist by his will and for his purpose. But God is not like you. He reigns in glorious majesty over everything and everyone he has created. His zeal for his own glory is the hope of the universe. It is in living for his glory that we are rescued from our bondage to our own glory, a glory that will never satisfy our hearts.
Only by the power of God’s delivering grace are we liberated from our bondage to the glories of creation to find our hope, life, and satisfaction in living for the glory of our Maker. In 2 Corinthians 5:15, the apostle Paul reminds us that we find that grace in the person and work of Jesus. He came so that we would live no longer for ourselves “but for him who for [our] sake died and was raised.”
Prayer:
Lord, help me to live for your glory. Rescue me from the bondage of my own glory, which will not satisfy. I thank you for being my hope, my life, and my satisfaction. I praise the name of Jesus, the one who died and was raised for my sake. May I live for his eternal glory alone, even as I pray in his name, amen.
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Join Paul Tripp for 25 days leading up to Christmas in "The Everyday Gospel Christmas Devotional." Designed to be used during the Advent season, this devotional provides the perfect way to close out 2024 together and prepare your heart as we begin the new year immersed in God’s word.
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