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Realizing the presence, promise, and power of the Kingdom of God.
Crosfigell

Poor Man, Rich Man

How do we know that we love God?

Listen, my beloved brethren: Has God not chosen the poor of this world to berich in faith and heirs of the kingdom which He promised to those who love Him?

  - James 2.5

Who can satisfy God in the last times,
when the noble rules of truth have been changed,
save for those who scorn this present world?

  - Colum Cille, Altus Prosator, Irish, 6th century[1]

How do we know if we love God? And how do we know if our lives “satisfy” Him?

James and Colum give us a simple test: Are we poor with respect to the things and ways of the world? That is, do we treasure the things of God more than the things and ways of the world?

And, conversely, are we rich in faith? Have we entered the Kingdom of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Spirit? Is seeking the Kingdom of God indeed our highest aspiration and most constant endeavor?

We cannot love God and the world (Jms. 4.4; 1 Jn. 2.15, 16). If we find that our thoughts, affections, and strength are more devoted to accumulating things or indulging our whims, if our manner of speech mirrors that of our unsaved neighbors, and if our ways of relating to others are based on self-interest rather than self-denying service, then we have surely chosen to follow a god, but not the God of Scripture.

We scorn the ways of Christ and His Kingdom when we march in lock-step with the ways of the world. We can be certain that such conduct does not satisfy what God intends for us.

Loving God makes us poor toward the world and rich in the ways of faith. Moreover, if we love God, we will possess His Kingdom, and possessing the Kingdom, we will demonstrate evidence of being possessed by it.

Where Christ reigns supreme in the heart and life of a person, dramatic, rightside-up changes will be in evidence (Acts 17.1-9). Seeking the Kingdom will be our consuming passion. The power of the Kingdom will be at work within us, transforming us into the image of Jesus Christ, the Righteous One (2 Cor. 3.12-18; Eph. 4.17-24). We will conduct our affairs and manage our relationships in an envelope of peace and good will.

Loving God, we will be ruled by Him, for His glory, unto the progress of His Kingdom on earth, as it is in heaven. And we will not become bogged down in the priorities and practices of our materialistic and narcissistic age.

This is a matter for daily, even moment-by-moment vigilance over the time of our lives (Eph. 5.15-17).

Do you love God? Is it evident by your poverty toward the world, riches in faith, and fruit of the Kingdom?

Amid the shifting sands of what passes for truth in our postmodern world, our neighbors need to see living examples of steadfast love and faithfulness, of commitment to God and His Word, and of freedom from the distractions and diversions of our materialistic age.

Will they see such an example in us today?

Psalm 138.1-3 (Regent Square: “Angels from the Realms of Glory”)
I will give You thanks and praise You,
God of gods, with all my heart.
I will bow before Your temple,
Grateful praise to You impart.
For Your Name and for Your glory,
You have magnified Your Word!

Lord, my love of the world has fooled, drowned, deceived, and troubled me. Rescue me from this love, and teach me to seek my treasure only in You. Adapted from Litany of Confession

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T. M. Moore, Principal
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All Psalms for singing from The Ailbe Psalter. Scripture taken from the New King James Version. © Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.



[1]Carey, p. 49.

T.M. Moore

T. M. Moore is principal of The Fellowship of Ailbe, a spiritual fellowship in the Celtic Christian tradition. He and his wife, Susie, make their home in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.
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