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God's Verb-age

A Year in the Spiritual Life... Discover Your Purpose: God's Verb-age

Saturday

God's Verb-age


Ok- read the word today and took notes about what I read, looked up the meanings of words in Strong’s Concordance and tried to be “studious’ and I did learn stuff, but it all seemed so cerebral, and stifled. 


Has reading the Bible ever felt like this to you? Sometimes we just don’t get it, so we have to stop and read the word in a new way. This is where learning, knowing, and understanding parts of speech help me.

O I hope I haven’t lost all of you now. Bear with me. Here is a quick chart to help….hopefully.

Parts of Speech
What it does/means in a sentence
NOUN
PERSON, PLACE, OR THING
PRONOUN
TAKES PLACE OF A NOUN IN A SENTENCE
Example: I, me, we, they, us…etc.
VERB
A WORD THAT DESCRIBES AN ACTION, (run)  or A STATE, (freeze)
ADVERB
WORDS THAT DESCRIBE OTHER WORDS
Some end with 'ly', and they can modify or change the emphasis of the action words in a sentence.
ADJECTIVE
WORDS THAT  DESCRIBE OTHER WORDS
These words modify or change the emphasis of nouns in a sentence.
Example: the good Shepard, the wise men



 Once you learn how every one of these types of words work, you can read the verse with renewed insight, seeing how it flows and what it says. What is God’s main point of this verse/ how does it apply to me?  I will show you what I mean with a few verses from my reading today.

Ephesians 1- KJV       

3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ: 4 According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love: 5 Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will, 6 To the praise of the glory of his grace, wherein he hath made us accepted in the beloved.

Now take those bold words and condense what you read. It looks like this:

God hath blessed us before the foundation of the world; we should be holy- without blame- in love.  Having predestinated us unto the adoption by Jesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will: praise – glory! His grace hath made us accepted beloved.

I am not advocating this all the time, but sometimes this brings a new perspective to the verse, honing the focus and zeroing in on the heart of the matter more quickly.



 Stay on Target!


Now we can look up these words in Strong’s Concordance and get a better understanding of the original Greek. Then we can begin to ask what does this mean to me? What is the Father saying to me here? Sometimes I also write down other scriptures or stories from the Bible that this passage reminds me of. This helps me decide if what I am seeing is bearing out (in agreement with) the rest of the word. We are supposed to ‘rightly divide the word of truth’ and one scripture by itself can never be the only basis for a doctrine.

So this is what I got out of these verses.

 First, God opened up heaven and poured out his love freely (John 3:16) to us through Jesus and what He gave on the cross. Secondly, God did this because he chose me to be in relationship with Him before the foundations of the earth (2 Thes 2:13). He has called us to live separate, (Romans 12:2) holy, without blame, constantly before his presence (Ps 95:6) and serving the body of Christ. (Galatians 5:13) He knew that he would claim us as HIS! (If you have no family, or are estranged from them you know how miraculous this is!) This adoption was legally binding and irreversible. And He did it because it made him happy to do so. (Romans 8:29-30)

Because we are now HIS, with the promise now in our hearts, we praise (promise with our lips) and glorify God. And God is faithful to bring us joy, sweetness, charm, loveliness, and goodwill by HIS GRACE. (Phil 4:8, Galatians 5:22-23) He makes us ACCEPTED (redesigns us to be graceful, loving, charming, and honors us with blessings) (Romans 12:1-3, Ps 16:9) so we can minister to other people God loves (John 3:16) (the ones we welcome, entertain, and have fond affection for) so HE can take pleasure in us as we are content in him. (Duet 10:15)

Wow! That is just a few verses from Ephesians, but it speaks whole volumes. In fact, it shows God’s love for us so perfectly that if that were the only gospel you were ever to hear; it would be enough to cling to forever!

Be blessed and be a blessing. Remember that focus is both a noun and a verb; it all depends on how you use it. 

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