one step: water break

He makes me lie down in green pastures.
He leads me beside still waters.
He restores my soul.

Every well-planned journey requires a pause along the way. A journey with no rest will cause burnout which leads to a higher likelihood of injury. Injuries, untreated, will derail a mission and leave a journey uncompleted, making the long road more difficult. Today is a water break.

Being made to do something isn’t fun. There are times, however, that our Good Shepherd makes us lie down. Why is this?

It’s because we need something: a restored soul.

In our face-paced, merciless society, we can unwittingly end up with tired, tattered, wounded, and broken souls. Our minds, wills, and emotions begin to limp through life in a way that we call normal because it has become our norm. Even when we do not realize this, our Good Shepherd does. He sees you. He wants to restore you.

Today, take a step.

Maybe today the one step God wants you to take is to set an alarm for 1-3 minutes. During this time, remain quiet. Be still. Allow Him to do some restoration on your soul. Much of the restoration we need takes a lot more time than this, but today, take a step.

Whatever the step, ask God to direct it. Take a moment to take that step. Invite Him to speak. He will.

Life is a long road. Walk it with Jesus. Take a step today… just one is fine.


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one step: Matthew 5.15

You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.’  But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart.

Jesus continues to take the expectation of Godly living from a rule book to be followed to a condition of the heart to be lived.

We live in a culture that encourages the pursuit of happiness and prescribes hyper-sexuality as a legitimate path to happiness. Visual and audio media portray others as objects of pleasure; the objectification of humans into mechanisms of happiness exposes an unquenchable thirst in the soul.*

This is the story of lust. Lust objectifies another into a prostitute of pleasure. It looks at others as a means to an end called self-gratification. This rages against love. Love seeks the best for the other, placing the other’s needs beyond one’s own. Love self-denies and self-sacrifices to the point of death.

Adultery breaks up families, injuring spouses and children. The ripple effect of adultery wounds friends and extended family. It rips apart societies and cultures. According to Jesus, lust has this power too.

The activity of the heart that deeply desires to use another for pleasure breaks up families, injuries spouses, children, and friends. Lust rips apart societies and cultures. Heart matters.

The answer to the illness of our culture today does not come from bandaids over wounds. More rules and regulations on actions do not address the matters of the heart. Only a pursuit after God through Jesus Christ will do this. Only those who hunger and thirst for righteousness will be satisfied (Matthew 5:6).

Has lust found a way into your heart? Does lust lurk in the shadows of your home? Does the darkness of the night, the silence of solitude, or the passing of time fill with lust in your life?

Today, take a step.

Maybe today the one step God wants you to take is to ask for a pure heart? Perhaps God wants you to view others as mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers before you view them as sexual beings? Perhaps God wants you to value others as His children above all else. Maybe today God wants you to see yourself as something more than a sexual being looking for satisfaction? Only in righteousness will we be satisfied.

Whatever the step, ask God to direct it. Take a moment to take that step. Invite Him to speak. He will.

Life is a long road. Walk it with Jesus. Take a step today… just one is fine.


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*Leon, Morris, The Gospel According to Matthew. Pillar New Testament Commentary (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1992), 117-119, and Keener, C. S., Matthew (Vol. 1, Mt 5:27-30) (InterVarsity Press, 1997).

one step: Matthew 5.14

So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift…

Sacrifice may seem like the most holy and important act of the believer. Jesus Christ himself sacrificed His life of perfection to take on the sins of this world. All through Israel’s history we see sacrifices made to bring reconciliation between man and God. Sacrifice and love go hand in hand.

In this passage, however, Jesus presents something that must come before sacrifice: reconciliation. Jesus displays the holy act of reconciliation between God and man via the cross, but in this passage, Jesus invites the believer to engage in reconciliation with one’s peer as a part of the process of reconciliation with God. Before sacrifices are made before God, reconciliation must be attempted.*

How does this apply to believers today who have been reconciled fully with God through Jesus Christ? The life of the believer should be marked by acts of obedience to the voice and commands of the Father. Many times these calls to obedience are calls to sacrifice. This passage invites us to reconcile with our brother or sister before embarking on a sacrificial journey of obedience, but under what circumstance?

As I’m confident you have experienced, in different seasons of my life, I have been injured by a brother or sister in Christ while transitioning to a journey of obedience. Transition can prove difficult to manage, and some manage it better than others. In this passage, Jesus addresses anger as the root of the grievous sin of murder, thus expanding the judgement of the law to extend beyond actions and into our very hearts. The reconciliation He invites the believer into comes in those moments when we realize that someone has something against us. Meaning, if we have made someone else angry, we must make this right before our sacrifice of obedience.

God calls us to forgive others who have harmed us. Not doing so before a new season in life threatens to flavor that season in bitterness and resentment, and according to this passage, anger that could lead to murder violates the law in the same way that murder does.* Forgiveness is not the same as reconciliation though. The offended must forgive before reconciliation can occur, but in the case of the offender, reconciliation must come before sacrifice.

Today, take a step.

Maybe today the one step God wants you to take is to recognize that you have taken your turn both as the offender and the offended. Which are you today? Perhaps God is asking you to take the step of reconciliation with someone you have made angry before you make your sacrifice. Maybe God is asking you to reflect on your own heart to see if there is anger that needs to be addressed.

Whatever the step, ask God to direct it. Take a moment to take that step. Invite Him to speak. He will.

Life is a long road. Walk it with Jesus. Take a step today… just one is fine.


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*Leon, Morris, The Gospel According to Matthew. Pillar New Testament Commentary (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1992), 113-117, and Keener, C. S., Matthew (Vol. 1, Mt 5:21-26) (InterVarsity Press, 1997).

one step: Matthew 5.13

Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them… For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.

I spent much of my life somehow convinced that I needed to earn the approval of God. I’m unclear how I landed in this space. I was raised in a Christian environment that I would think emphasized the grace and Word of God. However I landed in my performance mentality, I was worn and tired, attempting to do everything right.

Such was the condition of the Jewish people in the time of Jesus. the Scribes and Pharisees demonstrated and demanded a life of obedience to the 613 commands found in the law. I imagine that a short observation of the life and activities of a Scribe or Pharisee served as a discouragement to the average Jewish person.

The Scribes and Pharisees looked like radical obedience. Jesus had another perspective.

To Jesus, radical obedience did not just look like an adherence to the law, but it looked like an embodiment of the spirit behind it: love. The way of Jesus required the believer to give their hearts without reservation.*

The radical obedience of Jesus says, “this is not just about what you do; it’s about who you are!”

The call of Jesus has not changed. Our focus must shift beyond what we do and into who we are. With what heart do we do what we do? Who are we? Are we performers looking for approval? Or are we sons and daughters living out of the reality of who we are as those who have received love and can then pass it along?

The kind of extreme obedience Christ called the people of Israel to and calls us to today requires that we go beyond sacrificial actions and offer ourselves as sacrifices to Him. When others observe a life like this, they see a life worth living.

Today, take a step.

Maybe today the one step God wants you to take is to abandon the pressure you have to perform. You are good enough because He made you so. Receive that. Perhaps God wants you to live life from a place of understanding that it is not you who live, but Christ who lives in you. Maybe God wants you to say yes to radical, extreme obedience today.

Whatever the step, ask God to direct it. Take a moment to take that step. Invite Him to speak. He will.

Life is a long road. Walk it with Jesus. Take a step today… just one is fine.


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*Leon, Morris, The Gospel According to Matthew. Pillar New Testament Commentary (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1992), 111, and Keener, C. S., Matthew (Vol. 1, Mt 5:17-20) (InterVarsity Press, 1997).

one step: Matthew 5.12

You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do people light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a stand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven.

“You are…” These two words open our heart to receive identity. Unfortunately, in life, these two words are often followed by lies intended to cripple, quiet, and destroy us. How many of us have heard explicitly or implicitly, “you are not enough,” “you are stupid,” “you are a failure,” “you are ugly,” or worse?

When Jesus speaks into our identity, we must receive His words in our most inner being in a way that displaces lies that we have believed about ourselves. If we do not, we suffer, our family suffers, and our community suffers. This suffering is called darkness.

In the case of this passage, Jesus calls us a light. Interestingly, Jesus is referred to as light in the Gospel of John. This comes as a reminder that we have light because He is light and gave it to us. We cannot generate this light, but we can only share it as a light that comes to us from Him.*

When we understand that the light that we share through our good works comes from who He made us to be and who He is through us, then our works must find motivation in making Him known rather than ourselves. Our works ought not point to our quality of belief or following, but to the greatness of God as our Father.

The light that we share and the works that we do comes from a place of true identity. How many lies have we believed about ourselves that have robbed us from exercising gifts, talents, and opportunities in this life that would bring Him glory? How many times have we not shined our light and thus left those we love in darkness?

I cannot count how many times in life that my belief in who I thought I was crippled my ability to bring glory to God. The crippling manifested in both a lack of doing and a lack of being. I did not do the things that God was calling me to do, and those things that I was doing, I wasn’t being a light in, so people were left in darkness. Truthfully, the lack of being manifested in my lack of doing. The problem was identity and it left myself, my family, and my community in darkness.

Today, take a step.

Maybe today the one step God wants you to take is to recognize that you are the light. Perhaps you need to pause long enough to hear Him tell you who you really are in Him. Maybe you need to reject the lies about your identity. Perhaps today God wants you to take a step of obedience in being the light. Maybe today is the day to do the things you have been doing for His glory rather than your own.

Whatever the step, ask God to direct it. Take a moment to take that step. Invite Him to speak. He will.

Life is a long road. Walk it with Jesus. Take a step today… just one is fine.


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*Leon, Morris, The Gospel According to Matthew. Pillar New Testament Commentary (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1992), 104-106, and Keener, C. S., Matthew (Vol. 1, Mt 5:13–16) (InterVarsity Press, 1997).