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2 Corinthians 3
Reading through the Biblical account of God’s people in the Old Testament presents an invariable notion that obedience to Yahweh is never a forgone conclusion. God’s language recorded by Isaiah illustrated His frustrations and anger: He called them a rebellious people, deceitful children, unwilling to listen to His instruction, they polluted the earth for they transgressed laws, violated statutes, broke the everlasting covenant, they who execute a plan, but not Mine, and make an alliance, but not of My Spirit, in order to add sin to sin (Is 24:5; 30:1, 39), and on and on. If not for the prophets, Israel never admitted that obedience is one of their indelible weaknesses? The Scriptures informs us that God’s laws are perfect (Ps 19:7-11; Rom 7:12), but the real problem is man’s heart (Jer 17:9). The glaring fact of Israel’s struggle with obedience throughout her history raises the question of what would motivate us to obey? Although the Old Testament in Ezekiel alludes to a time when God would remove the heart of stone and give man a new heart, and put His Spirit within him and caused him to walk in His statues and be careful to obey His rules, read in its context, this prophecy referred specifically to the conversion of Israel (Ezek 36:22-38) and is still future-related. However, it gives us some insight into God’s modus operandi for the disobedient. Despite man’s redeemed state, the Apostle Paul concludes that man still possessed a conflicted nature (Rom 7:4-25), but the arrival of the promised Spirit of God by Jesus Christ at Pentecost had meant that the indwelling of the Spirit will transform man’s heart, sensitizing him towards God’s truths, and refocusing his life’s trajectory. As we all know, the familiarity of these thoughts and claims alone will not produce obedience towards God’s Laws and will. A close observation of the lives of the prophets and kings of Israel and Judah enlightens us to an important association: the ones who had an ongoing vibrant relationship with Yahweh were obedient to Him and followed His counsel in the long run. These relationships were based on accountability to Yahweh, willingly committed by the individual in submission to Him, with humility and sincerity. Nothing much can be said of others who eschewed this vital lifeline as they govern and apparently spoke at times on God’s behalf; their life turned out to be messy, their rule corrupt, and the nation led astray politically and spiritually. It is also significant that these accountable relationships were personal in nature, in the sense that God looks at each heart and chose to hold them liable to Him. How did the Apostle Paul describe such a dynamic relationship in the New Testament? He provided a glimpse of this in his Letter to the Corinthian Church, in an interesting exchange when they impertinently sought to question his apostolic credential (although it was the norm in those days for unknown preachers). In a rebuke to the Corinthians, what mattered to him when a genuine heart change had occurred, is a Christ-like transformed life: so that “you are our letter, written in our hearts, known and read by all men; being manifested that you are a letter of Christ, cared for by us, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts” (2 Cor 3:2-3). And he rounded his case out by reemphasizing what must have been a shocking indictment on the church, that we all not only have free access to our Lord with our faces now ‘unveiled’ before God, due to the work of Christ, so that our gaze into the mirror, is not a reflection of our narcissistic self, but an image of the Lord, as He gloriously transforms us by His Spirit (2 Cor 3:17-18). Implying that each believer’s Christ-like testimony is not only obvious to others but to themselves. Not many can claim such a compelling relationship with our God, which remains an ongoing devotional challenge for us in our own authentication to be Christ-like!
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AuthorGerald Cai Archives
April 2026
Preamble
Our eyes are holden that we cannot see things that stare us in the face, until the hour arrives when the mind is ripened; then we behold them, and the time when we saw them not is like a dream. Ralph Waldo Emerson My introduction to the spiritual realm took place in my late teens in London, U.K. The realisation that God existed was never in doubt, as I searched for answers on the mode of communicating with Him. One day, after challenging God on His silence and relevance in this tumultuous age, I was immediately immersed in a peace that was out of this world; it was nothing that I could have produced from within myself. That extraordinary peace led me to earnestly seek its Giver. Journeying with Him continues to this day as the reality of God's presence and fellowship remains, at times, palpable. After all, we are spiritual beings too! Hence, this Blog is entitled Living Coram Deo - living in the presence of God. |