Tuesday, July 23, 2019

A Prayer for Freedom



Holy Father,

Grant please, in thy mercy, that I seek no freedom other than that found in thy Blessed Son, my Lord Jesus Christ and in his Cross.

In thy grace and benevolent kindness, let me know no freedom except as the bond-servant of your Son.

As the nails held the body of my dear Lord to the Cross, hold my heart, mind, and soul to him on the Cross.

And even though I might have twelve legions of angels at my beckon call, let me, by your grace, cling to my Lord Jesus Christ in his sufferings.

In the name of thy dear Son,

Your son,

Bob
 July 23, 2019

Monday, July 22, 2019

Having a Life That's Never Lived


This is an excerpt from my July 21, 2019 message:

Who is God and what is my relationship to Him?

Who am I and what is my relationship to God and the world around me?

What is my identity?

If we cannot Biblically answer and live out these questions we will be in one of two conditions; we will either be dead in our sins…even though we may call ourselves Christians; or we will actually have eternal life…but we will not functionally live it – we will basically live as functional atheists, we will live as if we do not know Jesus Christ.

There are those who have a life they never live, those are women and men who someway, somehow, have actually come into God’s Kingdom in Christ – but who live as if they don’t have the life of Christ in them. They may even mouth Christian words, use Christian terms, go to church, go to Sunday school, maybe preach, maybe teach, maybe sing in the choir, maybe hold a church office – but they don’t actually live in a vibrant relationship with Jesus Christ. They may even live good moral lives, but there are plenty of people who don’t know Jesus who live good moral lives.

Then there are those who think they are living a life that they don’t really have, those are people who are going through the motions of some kind of cultural Christianity or of church tradition is the same as actually knowing Jesus Christ and living in a relationship with Him. They may even mouth Christian words, use Christian terms, go to church, go to Sunday school, maybe preach, maybe teach, maybe sing in the choir, maybe hold a church office – but they don’t actually live in a vibrant relationship with Jesus Christ. They may even live good moral lives, but there are plenty of people who don’t know Jesus who live good moral lives.

Did you notice that having a life you never live, and trying to live a life that you’ve never had – can look exactly the same on the outside?

This is why Jesus, the prophets, and the apostles are always striking at the heart, always looking at the heart. As God told Samuel, man looks on the outward appearance, but God looks on the heart – and the heart that God is looking for is the heart that is formed into the image of His Son, Jesus Christ. It is a heart which is beating for love – for God and for others. It is a heart that is laying down its life for others – proclaiming the Gospel to others, praying for others – for as Jesus said to us, that’s you and me, “Even as the Father sent me, even so I send you.”

My heart breaks when I see God’s people not knowing their identity in Christ. It breaks when I see people who don’t know Jesus Christ. It breaks when I see uncertainty in the Body of Christ, confusion, disorientation, and a lack of knowledge of God’s Word.

In the Prophets God says, “My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.” That was true then, that is true today.

So please forgive me if my passion for Christ and the Bible is a bit much, for to me it is a matter of life and death. To me witnessing to others, proclaiming the Gospel, is both a matter of obedience to Jesus Christ and a matter of life and death. And to me, seeing people growing in Jesus Christ is a matter of life and death – for Jesus calls us to make disciples, not add people to our church membership rolls.

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

One Giant Leap



Here is a little something to ponder, well, not really a little something; it may appear little to you at first blush, but I promise it is not.

Surrounding the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong’s first step on the moon is discussion about just what exactly he said – the debate continues. He intended to say, “That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.” However, the audio seems to indicate that he actually said, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” There are audiologists who think they here the words “a man” instead of “man” – the article “a” is important. Armstrong intended to use the article “a” to refer to himself, and then the collective noun “mankind” to refer to us all. Otherwise, “man” without the article is collective as well and his statement has redundancy.

So I ask you, has “man” been to the moon, or have “men” been to the moon? When Armstrong first stepped on the moon was that “a” man stepping on the moon, or was it “man” “mankind” stepping on the moon?

Or was it both?

If you will work with this, you might find some treasures in Romans 5:12 – 8:39 and 1 Corinthians 15:20 – 28, 42 – 49…by the grace of God of course.

What is my relationship to Adam? (Romans 5)

What is my relationship to sin? (Romans 6)

What is my relationship to the Law? (Romans 7)

What is my relationship to the flesh? (Romans 8)

Am I living as a son (or daughter) of the Living God in Jesus Christ? Or am I still earthbound?


Friday, July 12, 2019

An Unusual Family



This Sunday our church is hosting a family from another country; a dad, a mom, and three children. They have been in the States for two or three years polishing their English. In a few more weeks they are heading to a third country, a land that is closed to the Gospel. The Lord willing, they plan to be there for at least five years before they have to renew their visas.

I met this family earlier this year through a missionary friend. I felt as if I had stepped back in time in the United States; I was struck by their passion for Christ, their commitment to Him, and their desire to share Christ with others – even those in “closed nations”. While it may not be uncommon in this family’s home country to encounter Christians committed to Christ and mission, it is uncommon today in the United States. Yet, I can recall there still being a passion for mission, at least in some groups, when I was a teenager in America. I can recall there still being calls for missionaries, still being calls for men and women to commit themselves to Gospel proclamation – there was still encouragement for families to devote themselves to Gospel ministry.

A friend recently requested special prayer for his daughter, a rising-junior in college; she has a summer missionary itinerary that will take her through some insecure areas in Africa. I thought, “Well, that’s rare today. Many parents would not let their daughter or son go on such a trip.”

I recall, as a pastor, once having a college student in my parish who wanted to spend her summer overseas helping people who had been affected by a tsunami; her parents said, “No”, it was too dangerous. That student is now a wife and mother, I wonder what she would say if one of her daughters should make the same request one day?

It seems as if we only want our families to be committed to Christ once we have acquired the things we think important in life, once we have established security, once we have assured our futures. Our prisons of pleasure and security are killing us spiritually and as the pressures of our society squeeze us into conformity to the world we surrender our lives…not to Christ, but to the world. We surrender our families. We abdicate our responsibility to be light and life in Jesus Christ. We have plenty of rationalizations for our surrender, but none of them are faithful to Jesus Christ.

Hosting this family on Sunday will be both a pleasure and a challenge, for I must ask myself, “How do I measure up? What is my commitment to Jesus Christ? Am I taking up my cross daily and following Jesus?”

What about you?

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

John Keble's Dedication

Below is the dedication that John Keble wrote for his book, The Christian Year. If the form of the language slows us down, so much the better; we live too fast, we hear too fast, we read too fast; consequently we ponder little or nothing, we retain little or nothing, and we become little or nothing. Better to walk slowly with a psalmist or a poet, meditating on the Trinity, than to eat the fast food of a Christianity a mile wide and an inch deep. 

When in my silent solitary walk,
   I sought a strain not all unworthy Thee,
My heart, still ringing with wild worldly talk,
   Gave forth no note of holier minstrelsy.

Prayer is the secret, to myself I said,
   Strong supplication must call down the charm,
And thus with untuned heart I feebly prayed,
   Knocking at Heaven’s gate with earth-palsied arm.

Fountain of Harmony!  Thou Spirit blest,
   By whom the troubled waves of earthly sound
Are gathered into order, such as best
   Some high-souled bard in his enchanted round

May compass, Power divine!  Oh, spread Thy wing,
   Thy dovelike wing that makes confusion fly,
Over my dark, void spirit, summoning
   New worlds of music, strains that may not die.

Oh, happiest who before thine altar wait,
   With pure hands ever holding up on high
The guiding Star of all who seek Thy gate,
   The undying lamp of heavenly Poesy.

Too weak, too wavering, for such holy task
   Is my frail arm, O Lord; but I would fain
Track to its source the brightness, I would bask
   In the clear ray that makes Thy pathway plain.

I dare not hope with David’s harp to chase
   The evil spirit from the troubled breast;
Enough for me if I can find such grace
   To listen to the strain, and be at rest.

Friday, July 5, 2019

Esther


Here's a note I sent to my small group...we're taking a look at Esther:

Good morning brothers,

Just some follow-up thoughts on Esther:

Haman was an Agagite (Esther 3:3). Numbers 24:7 and 1 Samuel 15:8 – 33 indicate that the Agagites (synonymous with the Amalekites) were Israel’s adversaries. Israel’s failure to eliminate the Agagites meant that in a future generation Haman would appear and seek to eliminate Israel.

When we fail to seek the elimination of sin in our lives, and especially when we think we can accommodate our lives to sin – I think we can be sure of encountering our own Haman sooner or later. Also, as we see in the next section of Esther, not only does Haman have to go, his offspring also have to go – we simply cannot entertain sin in our lives (Romans Chapter Six).

Esther Chapter 4 contains two great statements, two Himalayan peaks; I sadly confess that I have not meditated on their grandeur for quite some time…shame on me.

“For you if remain silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place and you and your father’s house will perish. And who knows whether you have not attained royalty for such a time as this.”

We are called to live in an awareness of our calling (we are a royal priesthood – 1 Peter 2:9), and therefore wherever we are, whatever we’re doing, we are called to be aware of God’s possibilities in using us to bless others. We are called to serve others as a way of life.

“If I perish I perish.” This reminds me of Daniel 3:17 – 18 when Daniel’s three friends tell the king that they are going to worship God whether God saves them or not.

This attitude, this “spirit”, this passion, this total “all-in” for Christ, has left the Western church. We see it elsewhere in the world, but we do not see it in the West. It is as if the soul of the church has been compromised and we have A.I.D.S. – we cannot fight off false doctrine, demonic thinking, the deification of self, our pleasure-seeking propensities, our insistence on entertainment.

We ought to live everyday with Esther’s words on our lips, emblazoned on our hearts and in our souls.

I love you,

Bob