In January 1991 the Middle East was in crisis--so what is new? Is this Egypt thing "the end"? What do God's people do?
Here is a sermon God gave me then-- it seems to fit "now"...
January 27, 1991
Isaiah 40:28-31
A PROMISE OF GOD'S STRENGTH
Introduction
There is no question but that these are days of stress all over
the civilized world. The events in the Middle East are brought into
our living rooms and our minds, and they are sobering, to say the
least.
Yesterday the Patriot Ledger said that people of faith
everywhere are turning to prayer: some for guidance, some for solace,
some for God's intervention. I would hope that we would be people of
prayer.
The question is: Where do God's people have any advantage over
people who profess no faith at all? What difference does faith make?
Faith does indeed make a difference! I am sure that you are
already finding this out. Perhaps you don't even need to be told that.
But I find that it helps me to be reminded of God's great promises.
Times of stress, whatever the reason, are good times to return to
favorite treasures, to the passages of scripture that have 'come
through' with assurance over and over again.
One such passage that we can claim together is Isaiah 40, and
especially that last paragraph which says, in part:
" . . .they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their
strength . . ."
I. ISAIAH IS A PROPHET OF GREAT HOPE
[Isaiah is also a great Messianic prophet, and is
sometimes called "the Fifth Evangelist" (along with
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, because we Christians can
see so much of Jesus in his writings.]
A. Some "key words" that open Isaiah's message as we read are
words like "expectancy" and "hope" and "peace." Isaiah lived in
expectancy for a long time, through many difficult times. But Isaiah
was "forward looking." He believed that God was in charge, and that He
was in charge of the future. Isaiah is the one who told us that
Messiah would be called "Prince of Peace."
B. The heart of Isaiah's message is the fact that God works not only
on a cosmic scale, but personally. God was interested in kings and
nations, and Isaiah observed roles and rituals of religious ceremony
along with his fellow priests and prophets. But the message came in a
PERSONAL way to Isaiah himself. Isaiah felt his own personal
uncleanness before the holiness of God as well as that of his
people. Isaiah experienced personal cleansing and empowering. The
message that God gave him interfaced with his own family situation.
And-- Messiah would be a PERSON! Not just the nation of Israel,
but a Suffering Servant, a man among men and women!
Majestic and meek. Baptized - and a baptizer with
fire! Life-bringer who came to die! This personal
Savior would be called by the names of deity: WISDOM
POWER IMMANUEL! God with us!
C. Isaiah tells us in this passage that the reality of God's gifts
of HOPE and STRENGTH and PEACE are personally available, held out to
those who will 'WAIT UPON THE LORD!'
Wait upon the Lord!
II. WHAT IS THIS 'WAITING UPON THE LORD'??
A. "Waiting" would seem to imply something like 'killing time;' like
reading old magazines in a doctor's waiting room somewhere while the
appointments are an hour behind schedule.
Or, waiting might seem simply to let the years go by until God's
time gets right, and a certain day or hour appears and God says, "Now
you've waited long enough!"
But "wait" here has a personal aspect. It doesn't simply mean
letting time pass, but means waiting in expectancy, or looking to God
in trust as we watch to see how God will answer our prayer.
And no one, in any age, ever really waits on God in vain! No
one ever comes in trust and obedience that does not somehow find that
God is IN the prayer, that God is BEHIND the prayer-- and that,
ultimately, God is HEARING the prayer. [I certainly do not minimize
the mystery of prayer. I do not dispute the fact of genuine struggle
and even travail in prayer. But God does hear and answer prayer!]
B. But what, then, does this waiting mean?
1. Waiting on God indicates a sense of DEPENDENCY. Being
dependant somehow goes against our All-American western culture
Protestant work-ethic positive self-image self-confident way of life
and living.
[There ARE benefits to a healthy self-image which I do not deny.
There is enormous worth in looking at a task and thinking "I CAN!"]
But in matters of eternity and life and death "I CAN!" somehow
fades away into the realization that among the spinning galaxies of
ultimate reality there are many things which "I CAN NOT!"
[In "skits" of Bible stories which we used at a recent
pastors' retreat one mini-drama had to do with the
centurion who came and asked Jesus to heal his servant.
The man who represented the centurion was deeply moved,
even to tears. Later he said, "I realized that in
temporal things I had great authority: 'I say to
one, "Come!" and he comes, etc.' But in the things which
really mattered (i.e., the life and death of the beloved
servant) I was totally helpless, dependant on Jesus."]
Waiting on God is saying to God: We can't do it unless and until
YOU do it!
C. So waiting on God is not so much TIME as it is ATTITUDE. It is
listening for God. It is seeking to give God our attention. It is
being ready for communication from the Master. [It is perhaps like a
little dog trotting along, always looking back, always looking up to
make sure the master or mistress is coming along, and everything is
all right.]
And as we wait, we will hear God! As we wait the things will
happen that would NOT have happened if we had not waited! Isaiah
makes it clear that the benefits of waiting on God are in the HERE AND
NOW!
THEY THAT WAIT UPON THE LORD SHALL RENEW THEIR STRENGTH!
[But we are NOT little dogs trotting along, looking up to the
Master's face. We are PEOPLE, living in a tremendously complex world
situation. We have tremendously complex lives to lead. Is there any
practical guidance for waiting on God?
III. GIVING GOD OUR ATTENTION
A. We can pray DELIBERATELY to be filled with God's Spirit.
William Barclay says:
"The only way to receive the Spirit is to silently and
prayerfully WAIT upon the Spirit."
A helpful verse to me is Luke 11:13. Jesus says that if we ask
the Father He is more anxious to empower us with the Spirit than we
are to give things to our own children! But we need to ASK!
Barclay goes on: "In a church life in which the church
is increasingly organized, and in which strenuous
activity is the key-note, and in which ACTION is valued
above all things it is hard to find time for that
apparent doing nothing which means everything."
B. But can we be even more PRACTICAL? More SPECIFIC? How shall we
pray in such a way that we can renew our strength? [I have FOUR
suggestions:]
1. By praying HONESTLY. God will only receive as much of our
lives as we are willing to give freely to Him. This God who could
easily overwhelm us never pushes His way in past locked doors! If you
need His help in areas of your life make certain that you have made
Him welcome in EVERY area. [sin / confession / open-ness]
2. By praying REGULARLY. Prayer life is not so much a series of
major repairs and overhauls as it is keeping a schedule of daily
maintenance. Fifteen minutes a day is better than two or three hours
every other week!
3. By praying CORPORATELY. Worship together with the Body of
Christ is an essential part of waiting on the Lord. Worship is much
more than just a convenient time for religious people to get together
to hear a common word. The CHURCH has power as it joins in prayer
together. "Not forsaking the assembling of yourselves together" is the
word of God (Hebrews 10:24.)
Finally,
4. By praying TOGETHER. Not just in the assembly of the Body,
but in the daily traffic of life and living, Christians must learn to
pray with each other, and pray for each other.
We need to reach out and ask for help. We need to say, "Let's
pray!" If it seems like a weakness, it is only admitting before God
that He alone is our strength! There is strength and power in weaving
the potency of prayer into the daily conversation of our living.
Conclusion
William Barclay again:
"God will 'do it again;' that is, renew and revive,
both for us individually, and for the church, if we
remember that He asks nothing but our attention, and if
we learn to wait INTENSELY upon Him."
Prayer:
Lord, We confess freely our need of Your strength. We believe that
You are as good as Your word. Help us to wait in simple faith and
trust- to give You our full attention. Help us to hear Your Word of
power. Amen
Friday, January 28, 2011
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Who's Calling Us to Prayer???
Everybody seems to have answers . . .we analyze . . .we explain more than we know . . . but the fact is only One Person sees the whole picture, and He has given us a prayer which we know so well we sometimes pray it and don't hear what we are praying . . . or worse, we sing our ditties and pray our extemporaneous prayers and never come to grips with what Jesus told us:
PRAY THIS WAY!!!
OUR FATHER WHICH ART IN HEAVEN . . .
HALLOWED BE THY NAME!
THY KINGDOM COME !
THY WILL BE DONE ON EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN !
We need to pray this together ... in our churches . . . pray it in our homes . . . pray it from our hearts!
Then...it is all right to ask:
GIVE US TODAY WHAT WE NEED TO BE ALL YOU WANT US TO BE !
FORGIVE US OUR SINS AS WE FORGIVE THOSE WHO SIN AGAINST US !
LEAD US!
dELIVER US FROM EVIL!
What if we all did what Jesus said we shoudl do?
I hear the call to prayer from different, even surprising directions these days . . . before we rush off to save the world in our own puny strength . . . before our civilization slips into hell . . . can we join together and pray the prayer we know by heart until from our hearts we truly pray that prayer?
PRAY THIS WAY!!!
OUR FATHER WHICH ART IN HEAVEN . . .
HALLOWED BE THY NAME!
THY KINGDOM COME !
THY WILL BE DONE ON EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN !
We need to pray this together ... in our churches . . . pray it in our homes . . . pray it from our hearts!
Then...it is all right to ask:
GIVE US TODAY WHAT WE NEED TO BE ALL YOU WANT US TO BE !
FORGIVE US OUR SINS AS WE FORGIVE THOSE WHO SIN AGAINST US !
LEAD US!
dELIVER US FROM EVIL!
What if we all did what Jesus said we shoudl do?
I hear the call to prayer from different, even surprising directions these days . . . before we rush off to save the world in our own puny strength . . . before our civilization slips into hell . . . can we join together and pray the prayer we know by heart until from our hearts we truly pray that prayer?
Diana and Teresa . . . that week in September
September 7, 1997
Good News! There's Hope!
THE OUTSIDER
Mark 7:24-30 The Syro-Phoenician woman with a daughter
distressed with an unclean spirit.
This has been a week we will remember a long, long time. The
death of the Princess of Wales has caught the attention of many
millions of people around the world. At the outpouring of words that
immediately followed the news of Diana's death, I think I was most
impressed that Mother Teresa of Calcutta had loved Diana, and had
said, among other things, that Diana "was in love with the poor" of
the world. And then Friday afternoon we heard: Mother Teresa was
gone!
Two women, so very different-- one 37, and tall and stately and
beautiful-- one 87, and tiny and wrinkled and, yes, beautiful, too, in
her own wonderful way. One born to great riches, and living in the
glare of the spotlight. One with absolutely nothing of this world's
goods to call her own, under a vow of chastity, poverty, obedience,
and of service to the poor.
[[[Diana Frances Spencer was born on the first of July 1961, just
over 36 years ago and married Charles Philip Arthur George, the Prince
of Wales, in a spectacular wedding in St. Paul's Cathedral on July 29,
1981. Mother Teresa was born, Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu on the 27th of
August 1910 to Albanian parents in what was then Serbia. She was
called "Mother" but was a nun for 69 years. ]]]
Two women very different-- and yet both of them remembered with
love for one thing: they made the people they met feel valued and
respected. They somehow carried the message: "Whoever you are, you
matter!" And in so far as they carried that message, they were
messengers of truth. This world is starved for genuine love. We need
to hear the message "You are a person of worth! You matter!"
The first message that God wants this world to hear is that same
message: YOU MATTER TO GOD! Before they can really understand
anything else of spiritual worth, they need to know that God cares
about who we are and how we live.
It may not be the first message the church thinks the world
needs. We begin with Lesson Two or Lesson Three. We attack the evils
of our culture, and get wrapped up in boycotts and legislation, and no
doubt there is a place for all of that and much, much more. (After
all, Mother Teresa took every occasion she could to speak out against
abortion. But first she paid her dues; first she saw in every face
she met the image of God-- her base from which she worked was: YOU
MATTER TO GOD!) We tell the world "Change the way you're living, and
God will accept you, and you will be saved!" We say, "Confess your
sins-- and turn to Jesus and be saved!" and of course this is the very
heart of what we are here for-- but first, "Lesson ONE" is the message
the world needs to hear: God cares about you! You matter! You are of
worth to Him!
It seems so simple, perhaps. We've heard it so many times. But
the fact is, there are times when we need to hear this first word
again. But if we, who know our Bibles, and know something of God's
love need this, how much more people who have never met Jesus Christ
need to hear the good news of strong hope-- that God loves them, and
that THEY MATTER TO GOD!
In the gospel lesson today a woman, a foreigner, heard that Jesus
was nearby, in the coastal town of Tyre. This woman was an outsider
so far as the pious Jews were concerned. She had two big strikes
against her, maybe even three. She was a woman in a society where all
the religious leaders were male; she was a Syrophoenecian, a sort of
half-breed foreigner who was despised by the pure orthodox Hebrews.
This woman had a daughter in deep trouble, deep spiritual trouble.
This outsider thought she saw in Jesus that same quality we have
been speaking about-- the love and respect for all people that drew
people to Diana and Mother Teresa. Jesus had actually crossed a
political and religious boundary in entering Tyre, a city in Gentile
territory. It seems as though Jesus was trying to get a little down
time-- a tiny vacation, but it doesn't work and people flood in to
ask for his help.
The Syrophoenecian woman came to where Jesus was trying to rest,
and she watched for a while as people came and went, and saw his
kindness and power and healing compassion. Then she, too, asks for
help with those who are breaking into his time of rest.
Mark doesn't tell us, but Matthew does, that this woman was
noisily bothering the disciples and that they wanted Jesus to send her
away. He doesn't do that however, and I wonder if maybe the
interesting interchange between Jesus and the woman is more for the
disciples (read "us") than it was for the woman.
But this "outsider" saw what we all will see if we will look and
live-- she saw that no one who ever came to Jesus was turned away,
except those who came in hypocrisy to defeat Him. By his own words we
know "The one that comes to me I will in no way (ever) cast out!"
This "outsider" saw that compassion, and dared to ask for help. And
she found that she mattered to God. She got the help she needed.
YOU MATTER TO GOD! That is Good News!
Do you really believe that? You don't have to break down doors
and try to persuade God you are worthy to be loved by him. He loves
you just as you are! He cares about you! He wants to come into your
life and brings HIS HOPE to bear on all that you are and do.
YOUR NEIGHBOR MATTERS TO GOD!
How are you going to tell him/her? Probably imperfectly, if
you're like the rest of us. But it will begin with an attitude.
James has some suggestions in our epistle lesson. He tells us
that we had better stop deciding who is "in" and who is "out." He
says if a person with money starts attending, and we act as though she
matters more than another person who is poor, we are missing the
message: you matter to God.
Don't get me wrong-- rich people need to hear this message, too.
Don't despise your neighbor because he may have more than you do. The
message is the same: you matter to God!
Conclusion:
Not one of us here will ever catch the attention of the entire
world like Diana or Mother Teresa. We won't have the spotlight in
which to tell people that they count, they are important. We probably
can be thankful that we don't.
But we will all have the privilege, first of all, to know that
fact for ourselves. IN JESUS CHRIST WE HAVE A DOOR TO AN ETERNAL
RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD! We matter! We are as important to God as
anyone who ever lived!
And then we have the privilege and the duty to begin where we can
by spreading the word far and near: YOU matter to God! You are NOT an
"outsider" to him! That is the message of our church! Will you help
tell it this week?
Good News! There's Hope!
THE OUTSIDER
Mark 7:24-30 The Syro-Phoenician woman with a daughter
distressed with an unclean spirit.
This has been a week we will remember a long, long time. The
death of the Princess of Wales has caught the attention of many
millions of people around the world. At the outpouring of words that
immediately followed the news of Diana's death, I think I was most
impressed that Mother Teresa of Calcutta had loved Diana, and had
said, among other things, that Diana "was in love with the poor" of
the world. And then Friday afternoon we heard: Mother Teresa was
gone!
Two women, so very different-- one 37, and tall and stately and
beautiful-- one 87, and tiny and wrinkled and, yes, beautiful, too, in
her own wonderful way. One born to great riches, and living in the
glare of the spotlight. One with absolutely nothing of this world's
goods to call her own, under a vow of chastity, poverty, obedience,
and of service to the poor.
[[[Diana Frances Spencer was born on the first of July 1961, just
over 36 years ago and married Charles Philip Arthur George, the Prince
of Wales, in a spectacular wedding in St. Paul's Cathedral on July 29,
1981. Mother Teresa was born, Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu on the 27th of
August 1910 to Albanian parents in what was then Serbia. She was
called "Mother" but was a nun for 69 years. ]]]
Two women very different-- and yet both of them remembered with
love for one thing: they made the people they met feel valued and
respected. They somehow carried the message: "Whoever you are, you
matter!" And in so far as they carried that message, they were
messengers of truth. This world is starved for genuine love. We need
to hear the message "You are a person of worth! You matter!"
The first message that God wants this world to hear is that same
message: YOU MATTER TO GOD! Before they can really understand
anything else of spiritual worth, they need to know that God cares
about who we are and how we live.
It may not be the first message the church thinks the world
needs. We begin with Lesson Two or Lesson Three. We attack the evils
of our culture, and get wrapped up in boycotts and legislation, and no
doubt there is a place for all of that and much, much more. (After
all, Mother Teresa took every occasion she could to speak out against
abortion. But first she paid her dues; first she saw in every face
she met the image of God-- her base from which she worked was: YOU
MATTER TO GOD!) We tell the world "Change the way you're living, and
God will accept you, and you will be saved!" We say, "Confess your
sins-- and turn to Jesus and be saved!" and of course this is the very
heart of what we are here for-- but first, "Lesson ONE" is the message
the world needs to hear: God cares about you! You matter! You are of
worth to Him!
It seems so simple, perhaps. We've heard it so many times. But
the fact is, there are times when we need to hear this first word
again. But if we, who know our Bibles, and know something of God's
love need this, how much more people who have never met Jesus Christ
need to hear the good news of strong hope-- that God loves them, and
that THEY MATTER TO GOD!
In the gospel lesson today a woman, a foreigner, heard that Jesus
was nearby, in the coastal town of Tyre. This woman was an outsider
so far as the pious Jews were concerned. She had two big strikes
against her, maybe even three. She was a woman in a society where all
the religious leaders were male; she was a Syrophoenecian, a sort of
half-breed foreigner who was despised by the pure orthodox Hebrews.
This woman had a daughter in deep trouble, deep spiritual trouble.
This outsider thought she saw in Jesus that same quality we have
been speaking about-- the love and respect for all people that drew
people to Diana and Mother Teresa. Jesus had actually crossed a
political and religious boundary in entering Tyre, a city in Gentile
territory. It seems as though Jesus was trying to get a little down
time-- a tiny vacation, but it doesn't work and people flood in to
ask for his help.
The Syrophoenecian woman came to where Jesus was trying to rest,
and she watched for a while as people came and went, and saw his
kindness and power and healing compassion. Then she, too, asks for
help with those who are breaking into his time of rest.
Mark doesn't tell us, but Matthew does, that this woman was
noisily bothering the disciples and that they wanted Jesus to send her
away. He doesn't do that however, and I wonder if maybe the
interesting interchange between Jesus and the woman is more for the
disciples (read "us") than it was for the woman.
But this "outsider" saw what we all will see if we will look and
live-- she saw that no one who ever came to Jesus was turned away,
except those who came in hypocrisy to defeat Him. By his own words we
know "The one that comes to me I will in no way (ever) cast out!"
This "outsider" saw that compassion, and dared to ask for help. And
she found that she mattered to God. She got the help she needed.
YOU MATTER TO GOD! That is Good News!
Do you really believe that? You don't have to break down doors
and try to persuade God you are worthy to be loved by him. He loves
you just as you are! He cares about you! He wants to come into your
life and brings HIS HOPE to bear on all that you are and do.
YOUR NEIGHBOR MATTERS TO GOD!
How are you going to tell him/her? Probably imperfectly, if
you're like the rest of us. But it will begin with an attitude.
James has some suggestions in our epistle lesson. He tells us
that we had better stop deciding who is "in" and who is "out." He
says if a person with money starts attending, and we act as though she
matters more than another person who is poor, we are missing the
message: you matter to God.
Don't get me wrong-- rich people need to hear this message, too.
Don't despise your neighbor because he may have more than you do. The
message is the same: you matter to God!
Conclusion:
Not one of us here will ever catch the attention of the entire
world like Diana or Mother Teresa. We won't have the spotlight in
which to tell people that they count, they are important. We probably
can be thankful that we don't.
But we will all have the privilege, first of all, to know that
fact for ourselves. IN JESUS CHRIST WE HAVE A DOOR TO AN ETERNAL
RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD! We matter! We are as important to God as
anyone who ever lived!
And then we have the privilege and the duty to begin where we can
by spreading the word far and near: YOU matter to God! You are NOT an
"outsider" to him! That is the message of our church! Will you help
tell it this week?
Saturday, August 7, 2010
When Smart People answer Simple Questions
Process theology, as it appears to me, is the result of very smart people attempting to answer a question I have heard asked in innocence by much simpler, less well-trained minds:
Is God good?
Yes.
Is God strong?
Yes.
Is God stronger than the devil?
Yes.
Then if God is good and stronger than the devil why doesn’t God just kill the devil and be done with evil?
So we apply logic and human genius and presume to announce that God is . . .
Emerging church, as it appears to me, is the result of very sincere people beginning to see that behind and beyond and above all they have ever known is a God that loves them, and they come to believe they have discovered something so new that they must begin all over building the church from the ground up.
Emerging church…from where?
Who is building the church?
Where has the Builder been for 2,000 years?
Agreeable God! Never, ever says “No!” Grace for the asking, off-hand, even. God of excitement and good times. Who needs to study? Why split hairs over any doctrine? God of the beautiful, young and strong. Worship in cliché and celebration.
A caricature, perhaps, of homogenous worship.
But the challenge to sacrifice, to leave, and follow often is missing.
Old people like me-- who never have known anything but the church and hymns and scripture-- can and do get to thinking that while other Christian groups or understandings of the Way of salvation may stumble through because of grace, it is really WE who know the best. WE understand who God is and what God is REALLY “like.”
What all us sincere people have in common is the danger of “creating God in our image” . . . we know so much it is hard for God Himself to get through our (MY) dullness or ignorance or carnal pride or obscurantism to lead us onwaqrd and upward.
Elijah thought he was the last one left . . . and I sympathize--no, empathize with him in my weaker moments. I wonder what I can do to help my little corner of the church find its way.
Then I fall back into a promise
That if I can and do really believe that God IS
(not God is “like”, or God is “here”. Or God is (anything but God IS!)
..if I can believe God IS-- then I have a great gift! It is FAITH!
The rest of that promise is to take my gift of FAITH and diligently
Begin to SEEK God!
A very wise man and maybe one of the best preachers I ever knew said in a memorable sermon in a church I once pastored:
“I know God! Oh, I know God! He has saved me! He has forgiven my sins! God loves me!
“But sometimes it seems I hardly know Him at al!!”
He was saying that our lives are enriched as we seek God, seek to know Him and let Him know us to the depths of our beings.
I am concerned about many things. I want to do what I can to see God’s kingdom come and God’s will be done on earth. But I am convinced it begins and ends when people seek God diligently. It is so naïve to think thoughts like this, I know. But I’m beyond analyzing and seeking to provide answers. I need to know God. I want God to help me pray the Lord’s Prayer with you and with all who call Jesus “Lord”-- pray it all the way through!
Is God good?
Yes.
Is God strong?
Yes.
Is God stronger than the devil?
Yes.
Then if God is good and stronger than the devil why doesn’t God just kill the devil and be done with evil?
So we apply logic and human genius and presume to announce that God is . . .
Emerging church, as it appears to me, is the result of very sincere people beginning to see that behind and beyond and above all they have ever known is a God that loves them, and they come to believe they have discovered something so new that they must begin all over building the church from the ground up.
Emerging church…from where?
Who is building the church?
Where has the Builder been for 2,000 years?
Agreeable God! Never, ever says “No!” Grace for the asking, off-hand, even. God of excitement and good times. Who needs to study? Why split hairs over any doctrine? God of the beautiful, young and strong. Worship in cliché and celebration.
A caricature, perhaps, of homogenous worship.
But the challenge to sacrifice, to leave, and follow often is missing.
Old people like me-- who never have known anything but the church and hymns and scripture-- can and do get to thinking that while other Christian groups or understandings of the Way of salvation may stumble through because of grace, it is really WE who know the best. WE understand who God is and what God is REALLY “like.”
What all us sincere people have in common is the danger of “creating God in our image” . . . we know so much it is hard for God Himself to get through our (MY) dullness or ignorance or carnal pride or obscurantism to lead us onwaqrd and upward.
Elijah thought he was the last one left . . . and I sympathize--no, empathize with him in my weaker moments. I wonder what I can do to help my little corner of the church find its way.
Then I fall back into a promise
That if I can and do really believe that God IS
(not God is “like”, or God is “here”. Or God is (anything but God IS!)
..if I can believe God IS-- then I have a great gift! It is FAITH!
The rest of that promise is to take my gift of FAITH and diligently
Begin to SEEK God!
A very wise man and maybe one of the best preachers I ever knew said in a memorable sermon in a church I once pastored:
“I know God! Oh, I know God! He has saved me! He has forgiven my sins! God loves me!
“But sometimes it seems I hardly know Him at al!!”
He was saying that our lives are enriched as we seek God, seek to know Him and let Him know us to the depths of our beings.
I am concerned about many things. I want to do what I can to see God’s kingdom come and God’s will be done on earth. But I am convinced it begins and ends when people seek God diligently. It is so naïve to think thoughts like this, I know. But I’m beyond analyzing and seeking to provide answers. I need to know God. I want God to help me pray the Lord’s Prayer with you and with all who call Jesus “Lord”-- pray it all the way through!
Thursday, July 22, 2010
A SERIOUS QUESTION . . .
. . . the following question is one which should not be
avoided. [My problem sometimes is that people think I am exaggerating
when I'm serious, or think I'm serious when I am having fun and
exaggerating. I want absolutely no confusion here: I am as serious as
I know how to be!]
The question is: HOW REAL IS JESUS CHRIST TO YOU? If you, as
parent, role model, leader, have a "get-by" or "mediocre" friendship
with Jesus, and your prayer life is not an increasing push into the
adventure of the mystery of knowing God in Jesus Christ, then it is
likely that those watching you will not be excited about the faith
that you may well hold dear.
We need to talk with Jesus. We need to walk with Jesus, and tell
Him constantly how we are, what we are thinking. And then we need to
put at the top of our intercessory prayer list the people we do not
want to be separated from for all eternity!
avoided. [My problem sometimes is that people think I am exaggerating
when I'm serious, or think I'm serious when I am having fun and
exaggerating. I want absolutely no confusion here: I am as serious as
I know how to be!]
The question is: HOW REAL IS JESUS CHRIST TO YOU? If you, as
parent, role model, leader, have a "get-by" or "mediocre" friendship
with Jesus, and your prayer life is not an increasing push into the
adventure of the mystery of knowing God in Jesus Christ, then it is
likely that those watching you will not be excited about the faith
that you may well hold dear.
We need to talk with Jesus. We need to walk with Jesus, and tell
Him constantly how we are, what we are thinking. And then we need to
put at the top of our intercessory prayer list the people we do not
want to be separated from for all eternity!
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
The WORD of God ..the Word of God..where God's WORD lives
Colossians 3:16
The WORD of God . . . the Word of God . . . where God's Word Lives . . .
"It has become a family story..."
Ben went to the doctor who lifted his shirt and listened to his heart
with a stethoscope.
"What are you doing?" asked little Ben.
"I'm listening to your heart," was the reply.
"Jesus is in there, " said Ben, matter-of-factly.
"I think I hear Him," said the doctor with a smile.
My young grandson Ben's statement to the doctor: "God is in
there!" comes close to summing up what genuine Christian faith can be:
God in US! … incarnational faith!
Paul says in Colosians: Let the word dwell in you richly!
WHAT IS THE WORD OF GOD ??
The Bible? The Bible is God's WRITTEN Word. It is probably the first thing
that comes to mind, especially for those of us brought up in the
Christian church. We believe that the Bible is God's revealed Word on
salvation. It is a great and good thing to have the words of the
Bible hidden in our hearts. But the Bible is the written Word that tells us of the WORD.
JESUS CHRIST is God's WORD. He is the LIVING Word. John in the
Prologue to his Gospel says, "In the beginning was the WORD!" The
text says "Let the WORD dwell in you!" To have the WORD in us is more
than Bible memorization: the living WORD can come and live within us!
In Ephesians 3:17, a similar passage, instead of saying "Let the Word
dwell in you.." Paul says "That Christ may dwell in your hearts by
faith.."
But with Jesus Christ LIVING-- ALIVE in you and in me... WE the CHURCH-- become THE WORD INCARNATE!
Three great miracles of INCARNATION
-- the Bible, which exists to testify of
the WORD,
and the Church (made up of born-again believers)-- speak to a world that
is hungry for God.
It is our task to abide in Jesus, the WORD, and to let His WORDS
abide in us-- and then we can share in His mission to let the world
come to know God:
We are called to be HOLY; not simply so that we can bask in our
goodness, but so that Christ can indwell us, and speak of His love and
righteousness and grace to a world that wants to know God!
We are given what is necessary for us to live this CHOSEN life:
God's peace; His Word; and His great name-- the name of Jesus!
Into the Privilege of Christ’s Presence in the Sacrament of Communion
As we Invite the Living WORD to abide in us!
The WORD of God . . . the Word of God . . . where God's Word Lives . . .
"It has become a family story..."
Ben went to the doctor who lifted his shirt and listened to his heart
with a stethoscope.
"What are you doing?" asked little Ben.
"I'm listening to your heart," was the reply.
"Jesus is in there, " said Ben, matter-of-factly.
"I think I hear Him," said the doctor with a smile.
My young grandson Ben's statement to the doctor: "God is in
there!" comes close to summing up what genuine Christian faith can be:
God in US! … incarnational faith!
Paul says in Colosians: Let the word dwell in you richly!
WHAT IS THE WORD OF GOD ??
The Bible? The Bible is God's WRITTEN Word. It is probably the first thing
that comes to mind, especially for those of us brought up in the
Christian church. We believe that the Bible is God's revealed Word on
salvation. It is a great and good thing to have the words of the
Bible hidden in our hearts. But the Bible is the written Word that tells us of the WORD.
JESUS CHRIST is God's WORD. He is the LIVING Word. John in the
Prologue to his Gospel says, "In the beginning was the WORD!" The
text says "Let the WORD dwell in you!" To have the WORD in us is more
than Bible memorization: the living WORD can come and live within us!
In Ephesians 3:17, a similar passage, instead of saying "Let the Word
dwell in you.." Paul says "That Christ may dwell in your hearts by
faith.."
But with Jesus Christ LIVING-- ALIVE in you and in me... WE the CHURCH-- become THE WORD INCARNATE!
Three great miracles of INCARNATION
-- the Bible, which exists to testify of
the WORD,
and the Church (made up of born-again believers)-- speak to a world that
is hungry for God.
It is our task to abide in Jesus, the WORD, and to let His WORDS
abide in us-- and then we can share in His mission to let the world
come to know God:
We are called to be HOLY; not simply so that we can bask in our
goodness, but so that Christ can indwell us, and speak of His love and
righteousness and grace to a world that wants to know God!
We are given what is necessary for us to live this CHOSEN life:
God's peace; His Word; and His great name-- the name of Jesus!
Into the Privilege of Christ’s Presence in the Sacrament of Communion
As we Invite the Living WORD to abide in us!
Listening . . .
. . . Sometimes it seems the hardest thing to do to be quiet enough to hear God speak. And it is a mystery how He gets through to us when He answers our prayers. Hebrews 11:6 promises us that God is the Rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.
. . . The faith to believe God IS is itself a gift. The insight that God is GOOD is also a gift, because the way we look at things often tries to "see God" where WE expect and how WE "know" He should act. That is His business. But the diligence . . . the persistence . . . the listening, that is my part! I'm willing. And if I somehow am not in synch, or not really willing, by an act of will I say
"I am willing to be made willing!"
". . .No holds barred, no qualification-- Lord, I'm listening! I love YOU!
"Yes!"
. . . The faith to believe God IS is itself a gift. The insight that God is GOOD is also a gift, because the way we look at things often tries to "see God" where WE expect and how WE "know" He should act. That is His business. But the diligence . . . the persistence . . . the listening, that is my part! I'm willing. And if I somehow am not in synch, or not really willing, by an act of will I say
"I am willing to be made willing!"
". . .No holds barred, no qualification-- Lord, I'm listening! I love YOU!
"Yes!"
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