Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Bible People I want to Meet in Heaven

Consider some Bible personalities that would like to meet when you get to heaven.  Since in our culture we often like lists of a top 5, make out said list, but don’t feel constrained to put them in some kind of order.  Who did you choose and why do you find them fascinating?

There are a few things which I noted were important to me on my list of personages.

I noted that when I made my list, I included some names because they have answers to questions I ask, and I know they can take care of them.  I am not one of those who believe that God will make us “omniscient” as He is when we get to heaven.  I do believe that our minds and eyes will be opened to make it easier for us to discover truth, and our capacity to remember and learn will be greatly increased.  But I do believe that part of life with God will also include an endless journey of discovery of his greatness and goodness that will last forever.

Joshua

Joshua is one of the few Biblical Heroes that we don’t see had massive glaring weaknesses.  Samson, Saul, David all had big weaknesses of character.  Samuel was a poor father, as were Isaac and Jacob.  Abraham, not the best father himself, could be rather deceptive, as was his grandson.  The list goes on, with the scriptures being very honest about the failure of its characters.  That’s good.  If they were all Joshuas and did not fail, we would feel that that there would be no hope for us, right?  I don’t admire Joshua because he’s like me.  I have more of David, Abraham, Hezekiah and Jacob in myself than I do of Joshua.  

But that’s one reason why I really like reading about this man.  He’s so humble, with a heart for serving the people of Israel.  He’s a lot like our own George Washington who turned down an opportunity to be King after the revolution.  Joshua was only concerned fulfilling his commission to bring Israel into the promised land.  He was not after being a king.  He was not after self aggrandizement.  When it was all over, the only thing he wanted to do was retire to the country and lead his family in serving God.  Like Cincinnatus of the Romans, he was simply one of the citizens of the (heavenly) kingdom, and took up his call without desire to hold it after it was completed.  

Such figures are compelling to us today most of us feel like we entitled to certain benefits and honors if we have success.  “To the victor goes the spoils” is the rally cry of businessmen, generals and politicians.  We have deeply imbibed these sentiments in our culture.  

Washington, Cincinnatus and Joshua all understood that there is such a thing as duty, humbly performed and closed when completed.  Washington would not be king, and only kept accepted presidency for two terms in a day when he could have had three terms. He returned home to retirement.  Cincinnatus was the “Anti-Caesar,” holding the office of Dictator through a war crisis, and resigning it when it was over.   Joshua held a status as a respected elder of the community, but he did not crown himself king of God’s people.   What a model!

I also would like to hear from Joshua about his experiences in Egypt and about the historical circumstances of his life.  I am a diehard and lifelong fan of ancient history.  I would like to question him as a Western style thinker about the details of what he had seen.  Simple questions about things like “who was the pharaoh of your day,” to details about how he wrote and what he wrote, and how he learned to write.  What was his childhood like? What about his faith experience?  How did he develop such a conviction about what God was going to do, when so many people who saw the same things he had did not?  What was the road of the Exodus? Jebel Musa or Jebel El Lawz? And it goes on..

Being that his writings are not intended to be a historical work, but rather a diary of how God revealed himself in bringing his people into the land, it does not have these details which so fascinate and concern the western mind.

There is also the whole “manly” warrior archetype thing that I would like to hear from him. 

You know what I mean…  Warrior’s tales.

I would like to hear from him his views on Pharaoh’s army and fighting him.  How he trained his warriors and how they fought (Skirmishers, shock troopers, order of battle, communications, etc.).  What were the great individual combats he saw, and who were his heroes, and why.  Did he have a fitness routine, and what did it look like (yes, seriously).  What about the whole giant thing, and how big they really were?  Were they skinny skeezicks or were they tall and broad like an old oak tree?  Did he like a sword best over spear?  What battle was he most honored to have participated in?  Did he ever deal with PTSD?  If in heaven there is wargaming would he like to play one with me, and his views on how the game reflects reality or does not?

You may be scratching your head over such questions.  Yet they are important, as the scriptures deal with real human beings in circumstances that may differ in detail but remain analogous to things we face today.  They are prominent by their absence in many ways, and in others provide important color that bring the sacred texts to life. 

There is also the manner of his “clean living.”  The only real error we see him complicit in was the matter of the city of Gibeon.  He just did not take time to consult God about these people who had come to make peace with Israel.  I think that if he had taken time, he would have found out, but God’s intent was to spare them any way.  God was just teaching them a lesson that they needed to ask Him about every step, and nothing was too trivial that they could not take time to “bother God” about it.  Otherwise we see character traits that speak of a bright faith, consuming passion for God and for Holiness, deep humility, and powerful confident bravery that stood firmly on that cornerstone of conviction- a conviction that knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Israeli’s were going to take that land and that he was God’s man to do it.  I wonder if many Pastors even have the strong of a conviction about their calling.  I know many, including myself, that have struggled at times with that.


In the end, yes, I do like to read about the man.  But I also really want to find out about the man himself and what made him tick.   I look forward in hope that I will be able to have that opportunity.  Its not like we will be rushed for time or anything.

Friday, May 2, 2014

The Man in the Mirror…UGLY Sometimes!



Sometimes I take a look at my life and don’t like what I see.  Wednesday was one of those days.  

Its not that I have anything to really complain about for how I am being treated by “life itself.”  I can only say that God is good to me.  In fact far better than I could ever deserve.  I have a good job.  I have contented family and everyone is healthy.  I have a nice house, and no current challenges in how it works. I have a budding fleet of decent cars to get my family around in.  I have a good job, with lots of people who like what I do.  I can have a positive influence on people through the things I teach, and through them have an impact on the town I live for the sake of the kingdom of God. 

Yet I still take a look inside and am disgusted.  

I think you get where I am going with this.  I look at my own self and see how far I have got to go.

We have a conference coming up that our church is hosting.  There have been some stressful moments in the preparation for this event.  I have not handled them well.  I have see a powerful resurgence of a critical spirit through out preparing for this.  I am also learning, thanks to our study of “Peacemaking” at our church, that I have a powerful “Control” idol in my life.  I have found myself saying mean things.  I have found myself angry frustrated, and lost in the details of getting things ready for Saturday (conference day) Sunday morning, and Sunday night study, all so I can restart the cycle of preparation on Monday.  

I know I have so much to be thankful for, yet I still find myself lashing out and being angry over silly things, or worried about how key individuals will feel if things don’t go well over the course of the next few days.  What a grouch!  And much of it over a conference that is going to be over in few days.  Its not that there are not other pressures too, but I also have an amazing capacity for imagining the worst possible outcomes to everything. There are the regular challenges and pressures that come with my job,  but by and large much of the stress I am feeling comes from a couple of key personality defects coming together with a challenging and time sensitive event.  In other words, I myself am a significant part of my own problem.

Of course I don’t begin to realize this until after I have been sitting on my couch, locked down and stare at the wall shaking my head.  Then, I hear Jackie telling me, “What should you be doing now?”  The answer of course is: “I KNOW! I know! I should be praying about this.”  Why do I wait to hear this from someone else before I do what really needs to be done? To pray.  

Its in the moments that I replace the anxious thoughts about what I am facing with worship that I begin to be open to any hope of seeing light at the end of the tunnel.  Its in those moments when I return  my precious idol of control back over to my God.  Its in those moments that God reminds me that He saved me not because I am a great person, but He saved me to make me like Jesus, the most amazing person, ever.  

Becoming that person means I have to come to the death of self, and sometimes that means I have to go through hard things that show me that I still cling to life and control.  I have to die to control and self to have Him become more and more alive in me.

You are no different, though you may come to these things by a different path.  Mine leads through ministry in a church, and a family home on Shiawassee St. in Bancroft.  Your path may go through a factory or out on the farm;  maybe in the school room or lab or a big office building before it winds its way back to home.  You deal with people who rub you the wrong way, all the while you are rubbing THEM the wrong way.  But all the time, the people and tasks and roles you deal with are not just rubbing but are God’s hand sanding and forming you into the image of Jesus.  Someday I will get to the place where I think about that reflexively too.


Friday, April 25, 2014

Vanity, Vanity…all is Vanity. Unless…

    Discouragement certainly abounds today.  Where is the hope?  I read the news accounts of the young men and women committing suicide all around us.  There is a loss of hope, and and its having a profound impact on life as lived in the Western world.  Drug use to numb the pain is up.  Suicide to end the pain is skyrocketing.  This despite the fact that Ivory tower secularist academics who don’t live a regular life tell us to throw off our cares.  There is no God, so don’t worry about sin! Do what you want!
   Our culture has been living this reality, functional atheism, even if it has not confessed it to be so, for over half a century.  And we are now where such thinking takes us.  We have stopped seeing God as being relevant for life and for the moment by moment.  And now the despair that is the only natural result sweeps over us and our young people.  Hopelessness and purposelessness is killing us.  
   No cosmetics can cover over the ugly reality.  No money can buy enough pleasure to deaden the pain.  No power position can fill the void.  No sex, no vote, no accomplishment, no honor or award can make life matter if there is no God.  
   One might argue that there IS the advancement of the species to consider.  But what does that “great” cause matter to Joe average?  In the back of Joe’s mind remains the haunting thought that he is only one amidst a sea of peoples, and he does not really matter that much anyway.  Who cares if he’s missing from the “great cause” to propel the human race.  And propel the race to what?  The stars?  Even they must die.  And those who claim to know believe that the universe itself must be extinguished someday, even if its billions of years from now, in a great cosmic night.  So what does the individual matter?

   These are questions without an answer if there is no God.

   If you feel despair and emptiness, its time to reconsider the meaning of life.  If there is a God, then everything has meaning and value about you and for you.  The tack you stepped on when you were five has meaning.  The illness you had when you were ten has meaning.  Your Father making you get a job at 14, and your first accident in a car at 16.  That inexplicable firing when you had your first decent job...all of it has a meaning.  You job has meaning and purpose.  Your drive home has meaning and purpose.  Its part of God making you and shaping you.  Into what?  That’s really the important question isn’t it… But now you are searching for meaning and you don’t know how it all fits.  Things are not working out the way you expected, harder in fact, than you thought it would be.  Why? 

    If you feel that life is meaningless, your feeling is flat out wrong!  Its time to start centering on God!  Its time to consider Him.  Its time to see His hand in your life, and in all your circumstances.  Its time to realize that He knows you by name, and has numbered the hairs on your head.  You may have attended church in the past.  You may have read your bible once in a while, but haven’t picked it up in months.  You’ve tried what the world has told you would work: Be a better wife/husband; be a better business man; get more money; have more pleasure; buy a nicer car; get a better hobby; buy a bigger house; have a more important career; pave over the bad things, and seek the honor of people.  It goes on and on. Yet you still feel empty.  Its time to come back to God.  “Seek his Kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well (Matthew 6:33).”

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Were You There?

Its one of those statements that comes up periodically in Bible studies and sermons.  Its even a question that’s immortalized in the famous Negro Spiritual, “Were You There?”  Over the years it has sometimes struck me as opportunistic emotional manipulation, or a way to generate cheap oos and ahs from your audience:  “I was there when they drove in the nails, and all the people said Amen.”  You know that type of thing.  You’ve heard it before.

But this week I entered some serious introspection, and began to review my life in light of that question, “Were you there?”  Instead of thinking about it piously and shallowly, and I realized that I was very much there in a variety of ways.

I have done my work mercilessly and callously like a Roman Soldier,
I have heckled people of faith like the crowd.
I have hated and plotted murder like a pharisee,
I have abandoned and denied my Lord like a disciple.
Like a crucified bandit, I have judged people better than I 
Even as I hang guilty and condemned between heaven and earth.
I have been jealous like a Sadducee,
I have rejected truth like a Pilate.
I sought to use violence to enforce my will, like a Peter,
I have betrayed like a Judas

Easter has always been the Highest Holiday on the calendar until about the last couple of centuries.  Its a day for celebration and victory.  I thank God for Easter, because it says that there is hope and forgiveness for every human being on earth.   But Thursday is about Betrayal, and Friday is about Repentance. 


 “You ARE the man.”  “All we like sheep, have gone astray.”  Were you there on Good Friday?  The scriptures say it is so.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

YOUTUBE!

There is a new sermon on my Youtube site!  Enjoy!

Disrespecting the Church? I'm a little confused about this…

I am confused.  

I recently bumped into an individual who was an occasional attender of our church, had participated in ministry we sponsored, and was also saved through our ministry, as a result of money spent here at this church, through efforts of volunteers at our church.  This person, when I asked why they don’t come to church began to inform me that everything we were doing here was irrelevant and phony.

This person did not say it exactly like that.  But he certainly pointed the finger at the general church crowd.  This person is not attending anywhere a regular “church” service.  And its not just our church crowd...but all the Sunday Church crowd.  Phony.  Shallow.  Pretender.  Hypocrites.  Again, not necessarily using those words, but the description fit.  And so he doesn’t attend any service.

I scratched my head over that.  Around that same time I bumped into him again, but in the context of a bible study.  It was a collection of individuals who have ties to a few local churches, and I stopped by to check it out.  There I learned, according to them, that the Sunday crowd is phony and unnecessary.  This event, this study, was the real church in their mind.  They said so.  

The two conversations were separated by a little bit of time and other concerns, but sometime later, I put two and two together.  Here was the problem.

I did not get a chance to point out to this friend that if our church, or any church is fake, phony, hypocritical or shallow, they certainly do pony up resources, funds, people and effort to make sure that we can do ministry to people like him.  If it hadn’t been for people who were serious about making a difference in the lives of people like him, there would have been no outreach.  There would have been no resources spent to ensure that we could have events where he could become a Christian.  There would have been no volunteers to lead people like him to Christ by telling him the story of salvation.  That certainly does not seem phony to me!

Now I need to note that I am not angry at this person.  Just confused.  And a little bit sad and disappointed.  Part of it is because BCC, and other churches around this area really are doing relevant and life changing ministry. The Church is quite alive and well here in Bancroft and Shiawassee County.  

But there is more to it than that.  Its a question of wrong thinking which certainly has not been taught here.  

The Church is the BODY of Christ.  Its the Bride of Christ.  Its built on the rock of the confession of faith, and the gates of Hell will not prevail against it.  The scripture tells us, in no uncertain terms, that its a dangerous thing to sit in judgment against other parts of it, and forbids us from saying that we do not need the other parts.  The Bible enjoins communal worship despite differences that can potentially separate us.  It tells us to be in subjection to one another in love and to a divinely appointed leaders/Elders/Pastors/Deacons who watch over us for our benefit.

I am confused because Jesus says, "The gates of hell shall not prevail against my church," but some think that modern complacency has done what the devil could not do!  

A Bible study is not church.  Its a function of church.  Its something a church does and should be present in every local manifestation of the body of Christ.  But if that’s all you are in… you are not in church.  Church is a collective.  Church isdiverse.  Church seeks out fellowship, not a place to hide from its other parts.  Church is mutual submission.  Church seeks to minister to the needs of the people around, both believers and non-believers.  


We ought to be seeking out fellowship with other believers.  If we think we are more zealous than others, than we ought to go and help stoke the fires of others, rather than retreat from them.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

"Hold the Rope"

 William Carey once asked others to “hold the rope” while he goes to bear witness of Christ to the lost of India.  He believed that he himself, and others, are called to go and make a difference in the lives of lost people around the world.  He knew that someone needed to tell them about Jesus, and that they were going to hell without him.

He knew also that not everyone can go.  He knew not everyone is called.  But he needed help.  He needed people back home to “hold the rope,” that is to be a safety line, so that he would be able to go.  

There were all kinds of ways to support Mr. Carey...to hold the rope.  Certainly there was prayer.  We might be tempted to wave that off in todays culture of computers and motor cars.  It does not seem like much, but in God’s economy, that’s everything!  Its not the least she can do, its the most important thing.  If we are going to entrust a dear friend or relative to a long trip and possible privation overseas, we certainly better be praying for him or her!  

There were also donations of finances.  Financial “rope holding” gave Mr. Carey the freedom to purchase facilities and grounds, to pay staff, and provide for practical every day needs.  There is food for family.  There are services to be procured.  Many missionaries, even today, are woefully underfunded.  

Don’t forget that people could also send goods that might not easily be obtainable in a place like India.  There might be medical supplies and clothing.  Perhaps machinery or text books, and study resources.

These are all ways that Mr. Carey, and so many others have been blessed by the church through out the years for purpose of reaching the lost for Christ.


Today has not lessened the need.  In fact, they are as great as ever.  With the world population exploding, there are still many people that need to be reached for Jesus Christ.  And missionaries still need someone to “hold the rope.”  How can you hold the rope?  Do you have a missionary you support?  Are you upholding them in prayer?  Are you helping them with material needs?