Look inside this book.Where the Bush is Burning: A Daily Devotional by [Thomas Tice]

Tag: Luke 17

If He Repents

If He Repents

Take heed to yourselves. If your brother sins against you, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him. And if he sins against you seven times in a day, and seven times in a day returns to you, saying, I repent, you shall forgive him.  

Luke 17: 3-4 

What did Christ teach on the subject of forgiveness?  Our text is critical to our understanding of the subject. The parallel text to it, which lies in Matthew 18, is less detailed. That is a text upon which many have seized and use to pervert biblical forgiveness into an amnesty which places the responsibility for forgiveness upon the individual who was wronged without reference to the repentance of the one who has done the wrong. The real question is, does God forgive without repentance? The answer to that question is, no, He does not. He is always disposed to forgive. He is ready to forgive anyone who repents, as many times as they repent. Christ explains in our text how this translates into our own imitation of Him. If someone wrongs us 490 times in a day, and 490 times repents, we are to grant them forgiveness. This is that disposition to forgive that is most Christlike. What is not like Christ is to separate repentance from forgiveness and pervert it into an amnesty that denies the wronged individual the justice of the wrongdoer owning their wrong. If we are going to discuss forgiveness, we must discuss it in the terms of what Christ said and what the Scripture articulates upon the whole subject. 

Our Gracious God and our Father, 
we rejoice that You teach us Your ways. 
We praise You that in these last days, 
You have spoken to us by Your Son. 

Tomm Tice
Where the Bush is Burner

Increase Our Faith

Increase Our Faith

Immediately the father of the child cried out and said with tears, Lord, I believe; help my unbelief! 

Mark 9:24  

And the apostles said to the Lord, Increase our faith. 

Luke 17:5 

We have faith, but we are woefully aware we need more faith. We are not alone. Many before us have felt their need for their faith to increase. The man with the demon-possessed son said, ‘Help my unbelief.’ The disciples said, ‘Lord, increase our faith.’ These are two examples of many we could cite from Scripture and from personal experience. The purveyors of Christless, man-centered, guilt theology have an answer for this question of ‘how can I have an increase of faith?’ Their answer is, ‘Try harder, work harder, believe more, be more thankful, look to yourself.’ Christ’s answer is dramatically opposed to this. He told His disciples in the Upper Room, ‘without Me, you can do nothing.’ This applies to the increase of our faith. All the efforts we make will fail, if we look to ourselves. The man in our text looked to Christ. The disciples looked to Christ. They wanted their faith to increase. We want our faith to increase. If we do, we must look, not to ourselves, but to Christ. As we contemplate His Person, we believe. As we behold His work, we believe. As we draw near to Him, we believe. When He fills all our vision, we believe. Every sight of Christ increases our faith.  

Our Wise and Loving Savior, 
we rejoice that You show Yourself to us in many ways. 
We praise You that as we look to You, 
the more and more we believe. 

Tomm Tice
Where the Bush is Burning

If He Repents

If He Repents

Take heed to yourselves. If your brother sins against you, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him. And if he sins against you seven times in a day, and seven times in a day returns to you, saying, I repent, you shall forgive him.  

Luke 17: 3-4 

What did Christ teach on the subject of forgiveness?  Our text is critical to our understanding of the subject. The parallel text to it, which lies in Matthew 18, is less detailed. That is a text upon which many have seized and use to pervert biblical forgiveness into an amnesty which places the responsibility for forgiveness upon the individual who was wronged without reference to the repentance of the one who has done the wrong. The real question is, does God forgive without repentance? The answer to that question is, no, He does not. He is always disposed to forgive. He is ready to forgive anyone who repents, as many times as they repent. Christ explains in our text how this translates into our own imitation of Him. If someone wrongs us 490 times in a day, and 490 times repents, we are to grant them forgiveness. This is that disposition to forgive that is most Christlike. What is not like Christ is to separate repentance from forgiveness and pervert it into an amnesty that denies the wronged individual the justice of the wrongdoer owning their wrong. If we are going to discuss forgiveness, we must discuss it in the terms of what Christ said and what the Scripture articulates upon the whole subject. 

Our Gracious God and our Father, 
we rejoice that You teach us Your ways. 
We praise You that in these last days, 
You have spoken to us by Your Son. 

Tomm Tice
Where the Bush is Burner

If He Repents

If He Repents

Take heed to yourselves. If your brother sins against you, rebuke him; and if he repents, forgive him. And if he sins against you seven times in a day, and seven times in a day returns to you, saying, I repent, you shall forgive him.  

Luke 17: 3-4 

What did Christ teach on the subject of forgiveness?  Our text is critical to our understanding of the subject. The parallel text to it, which lies in Matthew 18, is less detailed. That is a text upon which many have seized and use to pervert biblical forgiveness into an amnesty which places the responsibility for forgiveness upon the individual who was wronged without reference to the repentance of the one who has done the wrong. The real question is, does God forgive without repentance? The answer to that question is, no, He does not. He is always disposed to forgive. He is ready to forgive anyone who repents, as many times as they repent. Christ explains in our text how this translates into our own imitation of Him. If someone wrongs us 490 times in a day, and 490 times repents, we are to grant them forgiveness. This is that disposition to forgive that is most Christlike. What is not like Christ is to separate repentance from forgiveness and pervert it into an amnesty that denies the wronged individual the justice of the wrongdoer owning their wrong. If we are going to discuss forgiveness, we must discuss it in the terms of what Christ said and what the Scripture articulates upon the whole subject. 

Our Gracious God and our Father, 
we rejoice that You teach us Your ways. 
We praise You that in these last days, 
You have spoken to us by Your Son. 

Tomm Tice
Where the Bush is Burner

Increase Our Faith

Increase Our Faith

Immediately the father of the child cried out and said with tears, Lord, I believe; help my unbelief! 

Mark 9:24  

And the apostles said to the Lord, Increase our faith. 

Luke 17:5 

We have faith, but we are woefully aware we need more faith. We are not alone. Many before us have felt their need for their faith to increase. The man with the demon-possessed son said, ‘Help my unbelief.’ The disciples said, ‘Lord, increase our faith.’ These are two examples of many we could cite from Scripture and from personal experience. The purveyors of Christless, man-centered, guilt theology have an answer for this question of ‘how can I have an increase of faith?’ Their answer is, ‘Try harder, work harder, believe more, be more thankful, look to yourself.’ Christ’s answer is dramatically opposed to this. He told His disciples in the Upper Room, ‘without Me, you can do nothing.’ This applies to the increase of our faith. All the efforts we make will fail, if we look to ourselves. The man in our text looked to Christ. The disciples looked to Christ. They wanted their faith to increase. We want our faith to increase. If we do, we must look, not to ourselves, but to Christ. As we contemplate His Person, we believe. As we behold His work, we believe. As we draw near to Him, we believe. When He fills all our vision, we believe. Every sight of Christ increases our faith.  

Our Wise and Loving Savior, 
we rejoice that You show Yourself to us in many ways. 
We praise You that as we look to You, 
the more and more we believe. 

Tomm Tice
Where the Bush is Burning