New Tomorrows

What are you expecting for the new year?

As a new year unfolds, the Lord wants us to know what to believe Him for and how to be open to that, because He is set to do it. How can we step forward into His year of new tomorrows with expectation?

Called to New Discernment

Do you not know that a little leaven leavens the whole lump? Therefore purge out the old leaven, that you may be a new lump, since you truly are unleavened. For indeed Christ, our Passover, was sacrificed for us. –1 Corinthians 5:6-7

Purging out the old leaven to become a new lump refers to a practice the Lord instituted at the beginning of Passover, which God called “a beginning of days.” In releasing the children of Israel from slavery to their destiny in His order, the first thing the Lord instructed was seven days of eating unleavened bread.

The skill of ancient Egypt’s bakers with yeast had cultivated a particular taste among the people. The Lord’s directive was not to call them to a life of blandness but to move them away from what they were accustomed to in their former environment, so they could become sensitized to where He was leading them.

Paul is addressing a congregation who had lost their “taste” or discernment for the Lord’s ways. Within the community of the faithful, there had come tolerance for the Corinthian culture, considered even by Roman standards to be the lowest with regard to moral matters. These who had come to Christ were losing their perspective on grace—they knew the grace of God had forgiven them of their past failures, but they had somehow lost their taste for holiness. The old leaven is an exaggeration of the idea of grace.

The Lord’s desire is for His people to discern between what was tasty by the old way, and what is a new fulfillment beyond all you have ever known. He calls us to new tomorrows, but first He wants to “re-tool” our taste buds so we don’t accommodate what is less than worthy of His purpose in our life. That’s the principle of the “new lump”—God wants to create a new “rise” of His life, so that it’s a “leaven that comes from heaven,” not from the world’s order of things.

Convinced of New Promises

Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things have become new. –2 Corinthians 5:17

Our new tomorrows begin when we first come to the Lord: the old record of our sin is removed, and we are promised eternal life. If we know Jesus, we know those two things are true, and our biggest concerns are resolved: He’s erased my past that would have destroyed the possibilities of my future; and, He’s given me the promise of a future I never could have gained in myself. Still, it’s amazing the number of people who believe God can do those things but have no idea how God can handle a situation they are facing right now.

In Christ, we have available to us a resource that continues to beget the newness of His power in the everyday things of our life. He sets before us new tomorrows in which He offers to develop our character, help us shape new habits, bring freshness and vitality into our vocation, bring a resurgence of love in a marriage, and reconstruct ruined relationships and broken homes.

Believing for New Tomorrows

“Do not remember the former things, nor consider the things of old. Behold, I will do a new thing, now it shall spring forth; shall you not know it? I will even make a road in the wilderness and rivers in the desert.” –Isaiah 43:18-19

The promise of new tomorrows has a requirement built into it: Don’t talk about things the way they were. Don’t let “the way it was” dominate your mind. This is not just “positive thinking”—it is God’s power. He says He will make a way in the wilderness. There are thorny issues and an overgrowth of circumstances that we don’t know how to get through, but the Lord promises a road through the wilderness—a way—and a river in the desert—a resource to sustain us while we’re pursuing that new way.

Cleansed for New Possibilities

“Nor do they put new wine into old wineskins, or else the wineskins break, the wine is spilled, and the wineskins are ruined. But they put new wine into new wineskins, and both are preserved.” –Matthew 9:17

When Jesus encountered religious traditionalism, He said that although it may have served them well in the past, it wouldn’t take people to the next place. When Jesus talked about new wineskins, He was talking about something that had been rinsed and stretched “just like new.” Just as surely as new wine is an illustration of the ministry of the Holy Spirit, the operation of the Word of God flows like water into our lives.

To open up to the newness of God’s possibilities in our lives, most of us need a rinsing of the fabric of our lives. Oftentimes those of us who have walked with Him the longest can become the stiffest when the Lord says, “I want to do a new thing.” Even the dearest of committed believers has the mistaken capacity to say, I’ve tasted it all. The Lord wants to rinse us fresh and do something new in us unlike anything we’ve ever known before.

Won’t you welcome the new year with me by opening up to and expecting the promise of God’s new tomorrows in your life? Invite the Lord to let the rivers of heaven flow over you and to renew your capacity to receive the new thing He wants to do in you.

Article provided by Jack Hayford Ministries.

Dr. Jack Hayford
Dr. Jack Hayfordhttps://collective.tku.edu
Dr. Jack Hayford is the founder and chancellor emeritus of The King's University. He is the founding pastor of The Church On The Way in Van Nuys, California, and he is the bestselling author of more than 50 books.