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Meister Eckhart: Adequate

For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do. Ephesians 2:10

“Note the wondrous work that God performs in the soul, as it says, “What wonders shall come of this child?” It is needful that every tool is adequate to the work the craftsman performs, if that work is to be perfect: for man is God’s instrument, and the tool works according to the nobility of the craftsman.”

Meister Eckhart (c. 1260-1328) in “Sermon Sixty-Two” in The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, translated and edited by Maurice O’C. Walshe (New York: Crossroad, 1987) 316.

It is remarkable that God works through people.

I am sure when He looks at each of us, He says, “What wonders shall come of this child?” Today we hear that it is needful that every tool is adequate for the work God has for us.

Think of the meaning of this. I am an adequate in the hand of God.

This tells me that I can do whatever He sets before me because I am but a tool in His hand. He is the Master Craftsman doing good through each of us. Doing things that He has prepared us to do.

I traveled to China today to do good work He has prepared for me. I did the next seven posts in advance because I will not have access to post until 4 February 2026.

The iconic Qingdao cityscape is pictured above in a stock photo.

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Meister Eckhart: Sensible, Rational, and Eternal will

Your kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Matthew 6:10

“Now let me instruct you about virtue. Virtuous living depends in three points on the will. One thing is to resign one’s will to God, for it is needful to do fully what one then knows, whether in taking or in leaving. There are three kinds of will.

The first is sensible will, the second is rational will, the third is eternal will. The sensible will seeks guidance, so that one needs a proper teacher. The rational will means following in the footsteps of Jesus Christ and the saints, that is, so that words, deeds and way of life are alike directed to the highest end. When all this is accomplished, God will give something more in the ground of the soul, that is, an eternal will consonant with the loving commands of the Holy Ghost.

Then the soul says, ‘Lord, tell me what thy eternal will is.’ And then, if the soul has satisfied the condition we have just mentioned, and if God so pleases, the Father will speak His eternal Word into the soul.”

Meister Eckhart (c. 1260-1328) in “Sermon Nine” in The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, translated and edited by Maurice O’C. Walshe (New York: Crossroad, 1987) 88.

Two days ago, surrender. Yesterday, orderly, understanding, and mindful service. Today, the path of virtue depends on resigning my sensible, rational, and eternal will to God.

I must seek guidance from God alone, walk in the footsteps of Jesus, and I figure it out as I live it out that I am here not to advance temporal but rather eternal purposes.

I think I am ready. I have had strategic meetings in Vietnam and head into China tomorrow. Are you ready for whatever next steps God has for you? Readiness links to resigning the will.

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Meister Eckhart: Orderly, Understanding, and Mindful

We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ. 2 Corinthians 10:5

“Three things especially are needful in our works: to be orderly, understanding, and mindful. ‘Orderly’ I call that which corresponds in all points to the highest. ‘Understanding’ I call knowing nothing temporal that is better. ‘Mindful’ I call feeling living truth joyously present in good works.”

Meister Eckhart (c. 1260-1328) in “Sermon Nine” in The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, translated and edited by Maurice O’C. Walshe (New York: Crossroad, 1987) 87.

Coming after the call to surrender yesterday, I feel I get the needful perspective for serving today: be orderly, understanding, and mindful.

By orderly, I must have my proverbial attachments in order and attach to God as highest. By understanding, I do well to detach from the temporal. And by mindful, if I am paying attention, I get to experience the living truth joyously present in my good works.

If I look closely into my heart, I see that sometimes my heart and mind can be disordered, I can lack understanding, and I can appear not at all mindful. God help me. God help other like me.

It seems to be orderly I must keep my focus on God. To grow in understanding, I must discern what God desires in every situation. And to be mindful, I must generously serve as the conduit of living truth.

This rings true for me in Asia and you too, wherever you are.

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Meister Eckhart: Needful Desert

This is he who was spoken of through the prophet Isaiah: “A voice of one calling in the wilderness, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him.’” Matthew 3:3

“This above all else is needful: you must lay claim to nothing! Let go of yourself and let God act with you and in you as He will. This work is His, this Word is His, this birth is His, in fact every single thing that you are. For you have abandoned self and have gone out of your (soul’s) powers and their activities, and your personal nature. Therefore God must enter into your being and powers, because you have bereft yourself of all possessions, and become as a desert, as it is written, “The voice of one crying in the wilderness” (Matt. 3:3). Let this eternal voice cry out in you as it listeth, and be as a desert in respect of yourself and all things.”

Meister Eckhart (c. 1260-1328) in “Sermon Three” in The Complete Mystical Works of Meister Eckhart, translated and edited by Maurice O’C. Walshe (New York: Crossroad, 1987) 51-52.

Today I return to my word for the year – needful – in the writings of Meister Eckhart.

I have arrived in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (pictured above) and asking God to prepare my heart for service. I feel him telling me that before I can tell others to make way for the Lord, it is needful for me to do it.

Absolute surrender is needful. It is needful to give God every portion of my being.

All of us can do this. Not just me sitting here in Asia. Before embarking on whatever is happening in your, it is needful to surrender yourself and everything to God.

Jesus, we surrender ourselves to you. Take care of everything. Amen.

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Selwyn Hughes: Turn Getters into Givers

In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ ” Acts 20:35

“I shall never forget a man giving to me many years ago when I was in financial difficulties. I needed help and a business man said to me, ‘The Lord has told me to give to you, but before I do I want to show you how to give to others.’ It revolutionized my life… One of the passions of my life is to turn getters into givers.”

Selwyn Hughes in Divine Mathematics: A Biblical Perspective on Investing in God’s Kingdom (Surrey, UK: CWR, 2004) 79-80.

What a fitting way to end this three-week exploration of this book! We have learned that the greatest form of helping people is to turn getters into givers.

How can you do this where God has placed you? It might mean teaching your children or grandchildren to give in tangible and basic ways. Can you think of others you can teach to give?

When this posts, I will still be in en route to Vietnam. Thanks for your prayers for my safe travel and spiritual growth spending time with the persecuted church and special people.

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Moses Maimonides: 8 Degrees of Giving

Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. 2 Corinthians 9:7

“Many years ago a Jewish Rabbi by the name of Moses Maimonides listed the 8 degrees of giving.

1. Giving grudgingly.
2. Giving willingly but less than one should.
3. Giving only when asked.
4. Giving what one should give without being asked.
5. Giving when the recipients know who gave but the giver doesn’t know who receives.
6. Giving when the giver knows who the recipients are but the recipients don’t know who the giver is.
7. Giving when neither the giver nor the recipient know each other.
8. When the giver helps the receiver give to others.

The last he called ‘service in the eighth degree’.”

Moses Maimonides (1135-1204) as cited by Selwyn Hughes in Divine Mathematics: A Biblical Perspective on Investing in God’s Kingdom (Surrey, UK: CWR, 2004) 79.

Where do you see yourself on the scale? I find that lists like this challenge us and stretch us. Sit with the Holy Spirit and think of ways you can practice service up to the eighth degree.

And take a minute to pray for me. I will travel and serve in Vietnam, China, and the Philippines from 22 January to 5 February 2026 as part of my sabbatical growth to deepen my faith.

I can think of no way to grow deeper in my faith than to spend time with the persecuted church. So, when I got invited, I prayed and discerned that I should go.

This is not a GTP trip. I have had affiliate faculty status at Kairos University for a decade. I go as Professor of New Testament. I wrote a paper in 2024 which has been translated into Chinese.

It is entitled “Advice from the Apostolic Fathers on Christian Social Engagement in a Hostile World”. Click here to download it English and here for Chinese.

Pray this paper, written at the request of Chinese brothers and sisters two years ago, and my physical presence encourages those I serve. I appreciate your prayers for my safety and spiritual growth.

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Selwyn Hughes: Had, lost, and have

For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me will save it. Luke 9:24

“That which I spent, I had. That which I kept, I lost. That which I gave, I have.”

Selwyn Hughes in Divine Mathematics: A Biblical Perspective on Investing in God’s Kingdom (Surrey, UK: CWR, 2004) 78.

Sometimes the shorter the meditation, the deeper the message. This one is a deep and profound as it gets. Would you put yourself in the had, lost, or have category?

The ‘had’ category tends toward spending. There is nothing wrong with spending on things for ordinary living. But marketers tell us that life is found in things. We must not be fooled.

The ‘lost’ category tends toward saving. These people prioritize saving money. We all need margin for uncertainty but it leads to saving for security. Such people do not grasp life because they can never save enough.

The ‘have’ category tends toward giving. These people work so they have resources to enjoy and share. They live simply so they can give generously. And they entrust their future to a faithful God.

Which one are you? Or which one do you want to be? The time to decide is today.

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Selwyn Hughes: Continuous Barrage

But godliness with contentment is great gain. 1 Timothy 6:6

“Contentment with basics equips us to resist the continuous barrage of advertising seeking to convince us that we are not able to enjoy life unless we buy some new gadget or service. Someone has said that contented people feel wealthy because they know that they already possess more than they need for daily living.”

Selwyn Hughes in Divine Mathematics: A Biblical Perspective on Investing in God’s Kingdom (Surrey, UK: CWR, 2004) 73.

While the theme of today’s post is contentment, the words “continuous barrage” struck me.

I noticed it because I invested an hour in prayer as part of a “continuous 24 hour prayer time” at our church. It had six stations: gratitude, intercession, contemplation, confession, lament, and worship.

It was a powerful time. See the photo of the six stations above.

The gratitude station from the start helped equip me to live my day and see my week from a place of peace and confidence knowing that in Christ I have everything I need to face whatever is in front of me.

The other stations touched me deeply as well. And then, upon leaving, I faced traffic.

The traffic reminded me of the continuous barrage of noise, distractions, and chaos that abounds in the world. But I have peace knowing that whatever I do and wherever I go. Christ is with me.

I pray that same contentment abounds in you – thanks to Jesus – despite the continuous barrage.

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Selwyn Hughes: Discontent

Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for He hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee. Hebrews 13:5

“A missionary tells of a young man who joined the missionary team in a foreign land and appeared concerned because there was a lack of the usual conveniences he was used to. The older missionary, sensing his discomfort, said, ‘Make a list of all the things you are used to and I will show you how to do without them’. Discontent destroys our ability to enjoy the things God has given us since our focus is on the things we think he should give us rather than on what we have.”

Selwyn Hughes in Divine Mathematics: A Biblical Perspective on Investing in God’s Kingdom (Surrey, UK: CWR, 2004) 72-73.

Today’s Scripture reads in the King James Version. Someone asked me recently what I think about the King James Version. I said, “While the language is antiquated,  and can be hard to understand at times, I miss one thing about it. I miss the use of you and ye. Ye being ‘you’ plural.”

That said, notice the message for all of ye today. Be content with what ye have. Related to generosity, ye will be discontent, if ye focus on what ye cannot do because of what ye do not have. And furthermore, ye will do nothing. Instead, God wants ye to put to work what ye have.

Enough of the ‘ye’ language but you get the point. I appreciate how the veteran missionary said, ‘Make a list of all the things you are used to and I will show you how to do without them’. Why? He wanted the young missionary to realize God had provided sufficiently for their needs.

The same is true for every person reading this. Sure, that’s a bold statement, but it’s true. Each of us has what we need today for what God has set before us. We may not think we do because we lack certain provisions or conveniences. Or God has not supplied as we had hoped or anticipated.

Take inventory. What do you have? What if after recounting God’s blessings, rather than focus on what you do not have, pause to give thanks for what God supplied to you. Now what if you put to work what you have today instead of focusing on what you do not have?

What might happen? The outcomes are different for all of us, and yet, the result is the same for everyone. We all discover contentment, find peace, and realize our focus has been on the wrong thing. It happens to everyone. The key is to live in the reality of today’s Scripture. Read it again to close.

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Selwyn Hughes: Sales Resistance

Then he said to them, “Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; life does not consist in an abundance of possessions.” Luke 12:15

“It is essential for parents to instill in their children a basic understand of finances as well as teaching them basic life skills. Another thing parents need to do in a family is develops sales resistance to the powerful influence of alluring advertising. Alluring advertising has been defined as ‘the carefully planned appeals to our human weaknesses designed to make us discontent with what we have so that we can rationalize buying things that we know we do not need and should not have’.”

Selwyn Hughes in Divine Mathematics: A Biblical Perspective on Investing in God’s Kingdom (Surrey, UK: CWR, 2004) 71.

Jesus warned us and we need to warn our children, and grandchildren if you have them. Life does not consist in the abundance of possessions.

Watch out for alluring advertising! How can we avoid falling into this trap? I suggest a counter intuitive approach. Rather than try to block the messages, because they are everywhere, try this.

Cultivate contentment. Every day with your children or whenever you see your grandchildren, have gratitude and thankfulness drip from your tongue.

When we cultivate contentment we see alluring advertising for what it is. Lies. Don’t believe them. Don’t buy what they sell. Warn your family, children, and grandchildren too.

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