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Monday, March 29, 2010

"What Number Are You?"

On a scale of one to ten? Intellectually? Physically? Temperamentally? Academically? Financially?

What is your worth? In your opinion...in every way?

Self evaluation changes (and it should) as a person matures. How do we see ourselves as a mature adult? Someone may ask: why do we care? What difference does it make?

As a pastor - and therefore a religious/sociological/philosophical teacher - my answer directy comes from the Bible...God's Word to humankind, and our final authority.

OUR ANSWER TO ALL OF THE ABOVE SHOULD BE "ZERO", and this is predicated upon what God's Word says in 1 Corinthians 4:7: "What do you have that you did not receive?, and if you did receive it, why do you boast as thought you did not"?

This comes from one of the world's all-time, smartest, wisest, most gifted, most highly motivated men, the Apostle Paul. And ALL of humankind's really knowledgeable personalities - from Adam until now - humbly
join Paul's ilk.

We have NOTHING that we were not given - beginning, and including, that tiny, gynechological spark of human life. SO many people claim that "I've worked hard and long for what I have", rarely, if ever, pausing to consider that our bodies and minds and abilities are freely-given gifts.

I love to read the testimony of probably the greatest warrior of human history, King David, where he states in three places (2 Samuel 22:35; Psalm 18:34; and Psalm 144:1), "He (God) teaches my hand to war".
Thinbk of it! every task we accomplish with our hands can be done because God created them with such marvelous, incredible strength and dexterity!

Again King David credits directly to God our ability to earn, spend and give. In 1 Chronicles 29:14
David says, "Who are we to be able to earn and give? for ALL THINGS come of You, and of Your Own (wealth) we have given (back) to You".

This I often repeat: All we are, and all we have, or ever will be and have, is because Jesus came. All praise and glory be to Him, now and forever!

Monday, March 22, 2010

REAL Beauty

Christians who spend lots of time with God bear His unmistakable mark on their spirits and in their attitudes and on their countenances. Look at Romans 12: 10 and 16:

"Be kindly affectioned to one another, with brotherly love; in honor, preferring one another".


"Be of the same mind one toward another. Mind not high things, but condescend to persons of low estate. Be not wise in your own estimation".

I know that there is not an overabundance of such selfless expressions among Christians, but there is some, and it is always beautiful to observe. It is so uplifting to witness a person surrender a right, or yield to an opinion in favor of another person. I repeat this often: If no sin is involved, if no biblical truth is ignored, if no moral principle is being surrendered, what difference does it make whose opinion prevails, or who gets his way?

One of my life's biggest disappointments in my relationship with the body of Christ is at this very point. We allow the devil to upset us too much. We are way to short on forebearance and understanding. You have noticed - as I have - that there are times when teasing and joking is not only tolerated, but really enjoyed...and something upsets someone, and then every, little things becomes an insult. Generally speaking, people who get peeved are peevable, and this may not be grammatically or theologically correct, but we all understand it.

This in no way suggests that godly, Christlike Christians do not get their feelings hurt, for they are probably more sensitive to a "hurt feelings atmosphere". BUT WHEN IT HAPPENS - and it will happen to everyone - Christlike, biblical persons do not hold it against the perpetrator, they do not stop working with them, they do not get peeved, and they do not start talking against them to anyone who will listen, and they do not leave the church and stop paying their tithe, and they do not backslide and blame everyone else for it.

OOOO! I like this kind of preaching!

Monday, March 15, 2010

"The Glory of the Church"

There is a specific, proper, unique, awesome and wonderful glory of the church assigned to them and them alone that is rarely experienced these days. Those few saints of past days who have experienced it will instantly affirm that this is so, and many, if not most, today's church people either deeply hunger for a repeat of it, or - as in most instances - consider it mere emotionalism, or even fanaticism.

I know that the glory of the church is a fact, and, if I did not know this, or chose not to believe this, I would teach and preach it anyway because Jesus promised it in John 17:22 as He prayed for His church just before leaving them and returning to His Father.


"And the glory which You (the Father) gave Me (Jesus, His Son) I HAVE GIVEN THEM: that they may be one, even as We are one".

The fact is that this glory is so appropriate and desirable that Jesus prayed that His Father would endow His followers with it. There is a strong sense in which we are not the church without it!, and that the church is completely unique on earth because of it. This glory will be experienced by no one else on earth, because He has reserved it for His church. It will be found in and of the church, and nowhere else.

Satan hates the church's glory! and the church has historically been a persecuted body in this world of evil and iniquity. Holy people have been abused, maligned, mistreated, insulted, ill-favored, discriminated against, assaulted, and even killed from the dawn of human history, but they have all had this treasured, peculiar aura of God's glorious presence with them as a unique mark of idenity.

A righteous Abel was killed, but his blood cried up from the ground. An upright Job was woefully abused, but God brought him out better and stronger on the other side of his afflictions. A righteous Joseph was framed, but God was with him in prison and vindicated his honor. A praying Daniel was thrown into the lion's den, but God graced that cavern with His control and glory. Hananiah, Mishael and Azariah were mercilessly thrown into a blazing inferno, but Jesus walked with them there and delivered them. Jeremiah was dropped into a stinking, mouldy, miry, vermin infected pit, but God was there with him (think of it! God in that pit!) and brought him out.

Peter was placed in jail by the Romans, but God's angel was there to bring him out. Stephen was murdered in the cruelest fashion, but God's glory was on his soul, and the shine of His presence on his face. Paul and Silas sat on a cold, damp jail floor in stocks and chains, but God illuminated that dungeon with His presence and glory and gave them enough grace to sing hymns at midnight. And John was surrounded by the glory of God on a lonely Isle of Patmos.

The glory of the church is the presence of heaven's God. It when He draws near to us, and probably one of the most impressive properties of this peculiarly reserved glory is that we can experience it personally even if the various bodies of the church are too pre-occupied and too busy to wait on Him.

What I have experienced and noticed is that God's glory attends those who desire it, and hunger for it, and wait on Him for it.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

"Let Them Lead Me"

Before we discover the identity of the "them", we need to establish a couple of cogent facts, and then three meanings of this clause.

This comment by David, nine hundred years before Christ, directly infers two significant facts. One is that each of us is "moving"...even if we bodily and physically stop and stand, we continue on our life's unstopable journey. Even if we are asleep in bed in unconscious slumber, we are still unknowingly but continually moving on to a destination. DAvid recognized this. Also inferred is that David wanted a leader. It is as though he was walking in the dark... at least, as it concerned what was a head, and that he could not see ahead.

Three meanings: One, it was a prayer. It parallels an aspect of the so-called Lord's Prayer where Jesus said we should pray, "Lead us not into temptation". Okay, so the opposite is also prayed, "Lead us away from temptation and into wherever You want to go, and whatever You have planned for me." Two, it was a request. This is a continually paramount truth that God forces no person. He leads who will follow. He leads who wants to be led. Three, it was a choice. Knowing David from his writings, I would classify this as a yearning choice; an earnest choice; a hungering choice; yes, a passionate choice.

NOW, what are the "them"? (let them lead me). The Bible being its own best commentary, there are two
identities: (SEE Psalm 43:3 "Oh send out Thy light and Thy truth: let them lead me; let them bring me into Thy holy hill, and to Thy tabernacles".)

Both "light" and "truth" are elements of illumination, of revelation, of uncovering and opening, and David was passionate and direct in his insistance that his God would shine into his mind and heart and soul the ideas, the thinking, the logic and the meanings of HIS ways.

I have no question that God answered David's prayer...that day, and throughout his earthly journey with God...and He does the same today for those hearts who question and hunger and seek Him today!

Monday, March 1, 2010

"Thank You For the Pitch..."

...that is..."for the pitch that I never got on my fingers" as I brought in two pieces of firewood for the fireplace.
 
   This was as automatic as my breathing, and it occurs a number of times each day.  There are some of you who are reading who regularly have this happen to you as you go throughout your day, and walk and talk with Jesus.  And then, there are some who will consider it silly, or even sacreligious.
 
   I told Deloris that I was going out to the woodpile and get a couple of pieces of (preferably Red Fir)  firewood to put in the fireplace just before we went to Sunday school and church, and, as I started out the door, I thought to myself, "I will not pull on a pair of gloves, for I will be careful and look for pitch".  Then in an uncharacteristic manner (for I am always trying to save time...though "she who must be obeyed" calls it being in a hurry...and impatience), I paused to put on the gloves.  They were on the way out the door.
 
   After selecting the two large pieces, and bringing them into the house and placing them on the mantle of the fireplace, one finger of the glove wanted to stick.  R-i-g-h-t.  Pitch!  While taking the gloves back (see...it does save time not to use them!  Deloris!), and vainly trying to rub it off, it was then that I said, "Thank You, Lord". 
 
   It was such a small thing!!  Exactly!!  What ever others may think about this honest, grateful expression of thanks to my Lord, the reason I know it was OK is because I was grateful!  If there is a welling up of gratitude in my mind and heart for such small, seemingly, relatively unimportant things that occur to us many times on a daily basis, then I should thank Him.
 
   Probably what means more to me than what I have written in this blog, is that we can have such a close, warm and constant relationship with Him that it is natural and easy to commune with Him...and thank Him for the comparitively "little" things.
 
   And "Thank You, Lord, for being able to write these lines.  Maybe it will be a blessing to someone else".