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Monday, March 2, 2009

No Baby's Cry (Part 3 of 3 parts)

When Jesus left the church and stated that He would be taking "a far journey", He never told us how far, or for how long. We are still looking and waiting for His return nearly two thousand years later.

In view of this long waiting period, anyone can imagine the strain this would place upon the duty of watchfulness. It would become natural to become disbelieving and disenchanted and disillusioned. The longer the time lapse, the easier it would be to discount the possibility of any return at all, and the harder it would be to maintain a state of alertness. It seems accurate to state that, from this conclusion alone, that is, the long time span of Jesus' absence, the church would have disbanded and disintegrated long ago if there were not something living and vital in the Christian faith!

Something unearthly beats in the breasts of the saints. Something active fills their minds. Something as new and fresh as the morning sun brings hope and assurance. An inner voice softly repeats, "He is coming back...and it may be today." Watching for His imminent return in no way turns on a nearly 2,000 year promise alone. It rests upon a hope as fresh as a new breath of air. It results from a confidence as new as each sunrise. It stands upon a living conviction that throbs and pulsates with every exposure to its truth.

Active watchfulness without this repletion, this recurring infusion of advent vitality, would be an utter impossibility. The point is that any time the church hears the voice of the Holy Spirit, He speaks of Jesus' soon return. So the saints of 2009 are not predicating their state of alertness on 2,000 year old information alone. Every time we tune in to heaven's throne room, the message and atmosphere is that "He is coming back...and soon!"

Somebody suggested that when Jesus does come from heaven with a shout (SEE 1 Thessalonians 4:16) that His shout would be just one word..."ENOUGH!" This is just one person's speculation, but it is worth our consideration. "Enough" heartache, pain and sorrow. "Enough" broken things: broken hearts and broken homes and broken marriages. "Enough" rejection and lonliness. "Enough" deception and lying and false accusations. "Enough" temptation. "Enough" crying and misery. "Enough" misunderstandings. "Enough" disappointments and broken dreams. "Enough" discouragement. "Enough" sickness and suffering and death.

"Even so, Come, Lord Jesus!"

Monday, February 23, 2009

No Baby's Cry (Part 2 of 3 parts)

Every believer wants to go out of this world with the church when Jesus returns for His Own. We do not want to be left behind. We cannot bear to think that we could come home from work or shopping some day to a forever eerily, empty house. It scares us half to death to think that we could awaken some morning and never again see the face(s) of a loved one(s). It nearly stops our hearts to think that we would never again hear the words, "Daddy" or "Mommy", or "Grandpa" or "Grandma".

Do not think for a single second that I am just playing on your emotions, dear reader. I cannot possibly or adequately describe the horror of a world without a baby's cry; or that loss of a familiar, sudden smile; or the stark absence of eyes seeing us in loving recognition. There simply are no adjective embellishments to describe a world without a telephone call transmitting that familiar voice; that one more pleading prayer; just one more gospel message...and "Please God!...one more call of the Holy Spirit!" But it is all coming... and each one will be there who is not ready now!

It seems that I can hear it all now. "Preacher, if I miss it, I'll drop to my knees right where I am - regardless of where or when - and beg God to save me then and there. I do not care where I am or who is around, I will pray through no matter what!" No, you wouldn't, and no, you won't.

I have heard a few preachers make the statement that the greatest revival the world has ever known will occur right after the church is raptured out and people realize that they have missed it. There are at least three BIG reasons why I do not agree, even though, in the saying, I would be forever grateful if I am mistaken.

First, there is absolutely no biblical proof of that happening. The reason that such a view arises is that all of us desperately want to believe it. We want to hold out some hope for unsaved loved ones and friends.

The second reason is that every credible Bible scholar I know about believes that the Holy Spirit will leave this world with the church. If we cannot find it within ourselves to do what it takes to say "yes" to God and obey God, and walk with God, when faithful preachers repeatedly warn us, and faithful believers weep and intercede for us, and the Holy Spirit consistently convicts us and talks to us, what gives us any hope of getting to God with all of that gone?

The third reason why there will be no great turning to God immediately following the rapture is that if that would do it, the sooner God would allow it to occur, the more would be saved. Every day, persons in a lukewarm, backslidden condition are dying and slipping into Hell. If, because of the rapture occurring, millions would get right with God immediately following, the sooner, the better.

(Concluded next week)

Monday, February 16, 2009

No Baby's Cry (Part 1 of 3 parts)

It is hard to imagine a world without a baby's cry, but when Jesus Christ returns for His church, all babies and children within the age of innocency will be caught out with the believers.

Christians of the year 2009 live in the twilight of the church age, and in the barely perceptible dawning of the raptured church. We are threshold saints, and the very mention of the term should send a shiver through our nervous systems. We have one foot in the church era, and the other nearly with the Savior.

At any time our heart rhythms could change from earthly to heavenly, and our breathing from temporal to ethereal. At any time our eyes could be viewing angels instead of coworkers and family members, and streets of gold in place of concrete and asphalt, and the joyous countenances of the relaxed and redeemed rather than the strained and stressed-out crush of super market shoppers.

In these very days our ears could begin hearing the opening crecendo of the Lamb's song as the redeemed pick up the unrehearsed notes and lyrics of the refrain written before the foundation of the earth. Momentarily we could be standing before Him, looking upon Him in wonder, warmth, and peace.

Are you ready for it? Are you ready, men and women, children and young men and young women? Not only should we be ready now to stand before Him...but are we ready to hand in our homework? That is, ready to stand inspection and judgment?

The entire context and environment of Jesus' words "Therefore be ye also ready" in Matthew 24:44 bristles and expands as He quietly, but fearfully, warns His disciples. No person who ever lived...no preacher who ever poured out his soul...was more poignantly specific about the possibility of being left behind at the moment of Jesus' second coming than He was by this statement.

Christians who would not dream of being unprepared for a house fire, or a hospitalization, or a collision, or a windstorm, or a layoff, or a disability or retirement, will daily, and weekly and monthly fail to maintain their readiness for Jesus' soon return.

(Continued next week)

Monday, January 5, 2009

When It Storms

Any time a Christian's peace is gone, it is of the devil. Oh, how well I know that most of us have been taught not to blame the devil...but the fact is that it is he who is behind the disruption & absence of peace.

We live in a world of conflict, confusion, upset, anger, disagreements and offenses. We cannot avoid these unpleasant, and at times, destructive and painful experiences - as hard as we try, and as much as we hate them!

Things can be going along "normally" (that means they are favorable and pleasant), and almost without warning or cause, we are in the midst of upheaval - at home, at work, at school or at church.

As mentioned, we have to conclude that such "clashes" are most frequently unavoidable, for most of the time - even with the benefit of hindsight - we wonder how in the world it happened? Oh, there are reasons, but not anywhere near the level of the resultant hurt, distress and separation.

This stuff is from the devil! It is not of God, and most often not even "our fault" - again to the level of such great harm and pain. Behind great conflicts and offenses is a dirty devil who gets his jollies from upseting the saints, and he delights in "helping" us maintain huge quanities of guilt and blame for days at a time.

Ephesians 6:12 maintains that: "we wrestle not against flesh and blood" (but against Satan's powers).

In John 14:27 our Lord specifically promised to His followers that: "My peace I give unto you, and not the peace of the world".

He continues in John 16:33, "These things have I spoken unto you that in Me you might have peace. In the world you shall have tribulation, but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world".

Here are two certainties. One, we cannot escape tribulation because we are earthlings. We cannot avoid; we cannot anticipate; we cannot walk close enough to the Lord; we cannot stay in the Word or pray enough; we cannot try hard enough; to eliminate conflicts, misunderstandings, disagreements and the pain that accompanies them.

What we can do is, two, be mature enough to know that the devil is actively fostering all of them. We can pray for grace and patience. We can apologize and ask forgiveness. We can stay tender and humble. And we can refuse to affix blame...to ourselves or to others. We grow up in grace when we place the lion's share of the blame right where it belongs!

Monday, December 29, 2008

What Kind of a Rose Would You Like?

Without specific knowledge of percentages, I would guess that 75 to 80% of buyers prefer red roses. However, I just read after an author who took two dozen yellow roses to a departed friend's memorial service because she favored yellow.

When my mother, Ida, went to be with the Lord, our neighbors brought us a lovely white rose bush to plant, and their young daughter, Rebecca, asked us if she "could help us bury it," in her sweet, caring words.

There are so many varieties of roses that no person should have or buy a rose he did not like. Basically, however, roses are roses, and are appreciated and loved for their beauty and frangrance.

Uniqueness would be another quality. "A rose by any other name would still be a rose".

Debatably - with a few exceptions - a rose is usually characterized by thorns. For most varieites, their lovliness is accompanied by offensive and injurious thorns.

Relationships are a lot like roses in this regard. You have to watch the thorns! As long as you just look from a distance, the thorns pose no threat, nor do they become personal. But if you want to get close enough to touch, to embrace, to scrutinize, thorns are a part.

Rose thorns are not rational or logical. They do not intentionally choose to cause pain or injury - but they do just because their space is invaded.

To have a rose is to require carefulness, sensitivity, tenderness, and a soft touch. He who tries to brusquely grasp a rose will loose every time. They must be held carefully. Relationships are a lot like this.There are "barbs" in all of us that offend those with whom we realate, and we are unaware of most of them.

Obviously we are different from roses, though, in that we can learn what offends and hurts, and either eliminate, or at least, minimize them. Here is a crusade for us. Blunt the barbs.

Monday, December 22, 2008

God is Jealous?

"We work (labor) for Jesus, that we may be 'accepted' of Him". The entirety of the verse we have been looking at for three weeks now in 2 Corinthians 5:9 is:

"Wherefore we labor (the "fact"), that, (the "nature" of the labor) whether present or absent (the "arena" of the labor), we may be accepted of Him (the "motive" or "reason" for the labor)".

This is the entire goal of a follower of Jesus - to please Him. To be accepted of Him. It is probably the dominant characteristic of all serious Christians I have known - this constant, over-riding, primary, consuming desire to please one's Savior and Lord.

It is the dominant goal of any servant to be approved of his master. A servant's highest achievement is making happy and pleased his master. His constant effort is to gain his master's approval - to see his nod, his smile, any recognition of acceptance.

The Bible gives a name to such a servile motive: "single". In the Greek it means, "steadily directed". Jesus used the term in Matthew 6:22 wheh He taught that "our eye be 'single'", or "steadily directed". Paul used the same term with the instruction to servants in Ephesians 6:5 when he directed "servants to be obedient" to their employers "with singleness of heart".

It is the idea of "exclusivity", and carries the same idea of "jealousy" God required from Old Testament followers (SEE Exodus 20:5 and 34:14). And why not? Even us earthly spouses require such "exclusivity" of our husbands and wives...and rightly so.

The biblical fact is plainly established by Jesus in Matthew 6:24 and in Luke 16:13 when He stated that: "no person can serve two masters". A divided love or loyalty is no love at all, for some things by nature are not divisible. A Christian cannot love Jesus "a little bit", or even mostly!, and he cannot be loyal to Christ "partly".

What means a lot to me personally is that Jesus is worthy of such supreme love and loyalty. Any way we may view Him, He is lovely, and indescribable, and unequaled, and worthy!

Monday, December 15, 2008

Church Work is Heavenly

For two weeks we have been looking at 2 Corinthians 5:9, and particularly the four outstanding points it makes:

"Wherefore we labor (the fact), that, (the "nature" of the labor), whether present or absent, (the "arena" of our labor), we may be accepted (the "motive" of our labor), of Him".

It is repeated that in this brief verse, the Apostle Paul defines his entire ministry and life work. It equally sets down the proper goals of us Christians who work in Christ's church today.

So, the third aspect of a Christian's life work is "the arena" of the labor, as described by the writer as being either "present or absent". Here is a poignant thought. The Holy Spirit impressed Paul to tell us that a Christian's work is only begun when his physical life ends - that there will be work for us to accomplish when we graduate, transfer, transition into the realm of Christ's presence.

Jesus taught - as to responsibilities for His followes in His heavenly kingdom - in Matthew 25, Luke 19, Matthew 20:23, and The Revelation 1:6, that there would certainly be "labors" in the heavenly realm. Paul was certainly persuaded that he would have responsibilities in the world to come as well as in this life, and that he would be accountable to God in the presence of the Lord as much as during his earthly duties.

This truth adds dimension to how we work for the Lord now. It makes a definite connection to our Christian service in the heavenly kingdom to come as much as in Christ's church on earth today. It strongly reminds us that the visible world and the unseen one are both the same in nature, in purpose, and in accountablility.

And this leads us right into the thoughts of next week's topic, which is "the "motive" or "reason" for Christian service.