"Therefore I urge you, brothers, on account of God's mercy, to offer your bodies
as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God, which is your spiritual service of
worship. Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing
of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what is the good,
pleasing, and perfect will of God."
(Romans 12:1-2)
Image courtesy/Wikipedia
It is a challenge to live our lives as sacrifices to God.
When we do, we aren't the masters of our bodies and minds-God is.
All that we do or think must conform to the Word of God. Such a high
calling is impossible without the Holy Spirit's guidance and help.
We cannot make spiritual progress without the Holy Spirit, and that is
why in Romans 12:1 the Lord tells us to offer our bodies to Him as
living sacrifices. If we try to grow and change spiritually without the
supernatural empowering of the Holy Spirit, we are conforming to
the pattern of the world. The Lord tells us to avoid this by becoming
transformed by the renewal of our minds.
As a sacrificial act of worship, God expects us to be holy and pleasing to Him.
When I was sharing Romans 12 with a group of young people, one fifteen year
old girl asked, "Does this mean that everything I do every day-at school, at home,
in sports, in art and with friends-all these should be an act of worship to God?"
Another student replied, "How can I stay on my knees that long?"
We chuckled, knowing that we worship not only on our knees, but also as
we live our lives. Our everyday lives are important to God, important enough
that He sent His Son to die on the cross so that Jesus could live in us through
each day-including the ordinary ones.
We can now say, "I'm going to school to worship God." "I'm going to paint
a picture to worship God." "I'm going to clean the kitchen to worship God",
as well as "I'm going to church to worship God."
When we conform to the world's patterns and methods, we do not please God,
no matter how good we feel about ourselves or how much other people approve
of us. But we do please God when our minds are renewed. Then we are able to
test and approve God's perfect will.
"Living Sacrifices"
Marie Chapian
(1938-
American writer and radio ministry host
Devotional taken from NIV Women's Devotional
New Testament With Psalms And Proverbs
(1983)
Zondervan Publishing
In the 1970's during a trip taken to the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia,
award-winning writer Marie Chapian conducted interviews with many
people there- peasants, gypsies, factory workers, physicians, laborers-
even officials of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia.
The purpose of these interviews was to discover how Christians sustained
their faith when the Axis powers invaded Yugoslavia during World War II.
The result of this research became the basis for her gripping, 1978 novel,
"Of Whom The World Was Not Worthy".
"We must believe with all our hearts and souls that He is with us. He is a God of love!"
declares Jacob, a devoted Christian evangelist, one of the main characters in the story.
"This is war. The only place you will be safe is in the grave",
a gray uniformed soldier responds to him.
And yet, despite living in the midst of hell on earth, Jakob, his wife, Jozeca, and
other believers, offered themselves as daily "living sacrifices" to God, clinging
to their unswerving faith in Him, while praying for both friends and foes alike.
Although this remarkable story, a true testimony of faith in a time of severe testing,
is now out of print, "Of Whom The World Was Not Worthy" is still available
online through Amazon.com and at Thrift Books.com