Thursday, December 3, 2015

The First Christmas was Fitting



“It was fitting that God, for whom and by whom all things exist, in bringing many sons to glory, should make the Founder of their salvation perfect through suffering” (Hebrews 2:10).

The very first Christmas came as a surprise to the world, but Christ’s birth was a highly anticipated good news of great joy in heaven (Luke 2:10). Jesus existed before He created all things for Himself. To bring many of His children to glory, Jesus chose to be in Mary’s womb in Bethlehem on that very first Christmas. He chose that perfect time, perfect place, and perfect way in order to willingly suffer, willingly lay down His life as a ransom for many (John 10:18).

Hebrews says that it was fitting that Jesus who created all things for Himself and founded our salvation was made perfect through His suffering. That’s right, Jesus is made perfect. Not because Jesus lacked something, but the wording is that it was fitting that Jesus perfectly fit into the office of High Priest (Hebrews 5:9-10) by Himself being the perfect sacrifice (Hebrews 10:14).

Jesus was born to suffer and die. Let us not forget this as we celebrate God the Son who became a baby. He chose to be a baby, to grow up to be a man, the perfect man, to suffer and die the death we deserve. The Founder of our salvation chose to die our death when we deserved judgment and wrath.
Let us celebrate Jesus by believing the whole Bible story. The Eternal Word chose to become one of us. He chose to grow hair and fingernails, to know our pains and temptations, becoming a Man of Sorrows to carry the heavy burden of our sins to the cross of Calvary though He Himself was without sin, having been raised to glory to give us hope of eternal life. The Christmas story is only part of the whole redemptive story written down by the hand of Christ Jesus before creation.

Heavenly Father, we rejoice in this good news of great joy that Christ took our sin to the cross to be our perfect sacrifice and High Priest. Bless our hearts and our homes with this joy. Increase our joy by seeing and savoring Christ Jesus more. May You be glorified in our lives, our homes, and our church. Amen.

Friday, November 20, 2015

Come, Follow Me



“Come follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men,” (Matthew 4:19).
I have fond memories of my dad taking me to a farm in rural Kentucky which had several farm ponds that were rarely fished. In one hand I had a small tackle box of my own with cheap lures and hooks, and in the other hand I had a styrofoam container of nightcrawlers we purchased at a small roadside store with a handmade sign which read, “Live Bait.”  In my boyhood mind, I imagined myself to be some professional fisherman as the crappie, bass, and catfish from these ponds would take my hook, even without bait!

We’d like to think that evangelism would be easy like this. “If I just tell people to come to church with me and a short sentence about Jesus, thousands will just come to church services!” Man fishing is far more challenging. Our passions are right, but to fish for men we need more. Man fishing reveals our need for Jesus.

We need Jesus because Jesus alone makes us into fishers of men. “I will make you fishers of men.” Jesus teaches us and His work in us makes us into evangelists. His Spirit gifts us, His Word equips us, His saints encourage us and build us up, and His gospel upon our lips is God’s power to save.
We need Jesus because Jesus alone catches fish. Sinful people are like fish in the water in that their home is sin just like water to a fish. They have to be caught out of their sinful waters. No amount of moral reasoning, church invitation, church statistics, or charisma from preachers will save them. Jesus alone saves, as the Word declares, “Salvation belongs to the Lord” (Psalm 3:8).

We speak about what we love. When we are so overwhelmed with the display of Jesus’ love in His dying our death, we are compelled by His love to follow Him and evangelize (II Corinthians 5:14). To evangelize is to speak about Who we love, His gospel work, persuading people to believe in Jesus and follow Him.

Jesus says, “follow Me.” We must be followers of Jesus, and He will make us people fishers with His gospel and witness Christ’s work of making new people fishers who follow Him.
O Father, overwhelm us by Your steadfast love to compel us to speak of Who we love to a dying world drowning in sin. Make us people fishers, Lord. Teach us, equip us, and send us. May we witness the powerful gospel work in the fish we catch. Amen.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

A Letter to the Teens

As I sit here thinking about each of you and praying to the Father for you, I cannot help but talk to you directly. I know you guys are going through a lot. And I know you're tired of hearing that your "high school drama" isn't real; but I know the pain is real. Broken relationships, loneliness, sadness, anger, jealousy...it's all real and it really hurts. I also know that I am only aware of like 10% of what you are going through. So, if you're still reading this, stick with me. What I have to say to you is important.

I love you guys. It pains me to see you in pain. When there is "drama" in your life, I am hurt. When you are angry and unforgiving and rebellious, I'm not angry. I am sad and burdened deep in my heart. Why? Because I love you. I care about you. I listen to you more than you think. I'm worried about you more than you realize. So let me explain (please stick with me!).

When I hear about your drama, when I see your tears, when I read your posts, I'm crushed because you look like a man dying from dehydration next to a water fountain. What I mean is this: you have "drama" burdens that are heavy, you come to church, hear the Bible, and sit right next to Jesus and tell Him that you don't need Him or want Him around. (Keep reading, it gets better)

I don't come and teach you the Bible because of some religious ritual. I come to you who are thirsty with a big drink of water. You are hurt, so I bring Jesus to you. If you actually trust Him enough to ruin your broken life and your broken heart, He will change things for your joy and for your good.

Why do you like the way you're living? Do you enjoy holding grudges? Do you smile when people who hurt you are hurt? Do you like having BFFs that come and go every few months? Do you like looking back and seeing relationships that burned up and placing scars on your heart? Is that the way to live life?

Please understand that I am writing to you now with tears on my cheeks. I don't even know if what I'm telling you is making any sense. But please, keep coming to our meetings. I will keep handing you a drink of this water. I can't bear seeing you thirsty. I can't bear seeing you in pain when the Healer is standing next to you.

What is far more important than my love and care for you is where I get this love: Jesus. He loves you and cares for you. He sees you lost without direction and hope. The Bible is not mini lessons of rules, but the best direction and hope. I hope to see you Sunday morning at 9:30. I hope to hear your laughter again. I hope to answer your questions some more. I hope to see you walk with Jesus in love and truth, leaving your prison of "drama" behind.

The Father's Loving Discipline



“My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline or be weary of His reproof, for the Lord reproves him whom He loves, as a father the son in whom he delights.” –Proverbs3:11-12

I had a conversation recently with a kind, older woman. “I don’t go to the doctor,” she explained to me with her finger pointed downward, “I just know he’ll find something wrong with me!”
Our sinful flesh has the natural tendency to cover our shame and hide from God (Genesis3:8). We’re afraid of God, we’re ashamed before His holiness, and we don’t want to be exposed as sinful and experience His painful discipline.

In certain seasons of our life, we want to avoid God and His reproof. We despise it! So, we avoid in-depth Bible study, we avoid church services, we avoid prayer and reading God’s Word. Just like avoiding the doctor, we avoid God. 

God does not cause our sin; He does not move us away from sin to settle for holiness. His discipline is for our joy and our good. The Father delights in His children, you and me! Sin is settling for lesser pleasures. There is no greater pleasure than delighting in God. So, we must have humility to be exposed before God, ready for His discipline. He will shepherd us from the dangers of sin and to enjoy Him.

The Christian life is not a one-time discipline from God, but a lifetime discipline from God. So the proverb says, “do not…be weary of His reproof.” We are commanded to love our God with all our heart, mind, and strength (Matthew 22:37). Out of His delight for you, God is actively disciplining you to hold each thought, desire, and action captive to love Him.

This proverb tells us, “The Lord reproved whom He loves…” This is encouraging. Let those words soak into your heart! God doesn’t discipline us from wrathful disgust of us. We deserve that, but that’s been taken from us! Jesus has taken the punishment we deserve, and we are healed by His wounds (Isaiah 53:5, I Peter2:24).

As the Son in whom God delights, Christ took God’s full punishment for our sin (Matthew3:17). Disciples of Jesus are not disciplined by God to appease Him. In Christ we are already pleasing to God! He disciplines us in His love for us to enjoy Him more! God delights in disciplining us to increase our joy! My beloved flock, desire His discipline that you may move from lesser joys to enjoy God more fully.
Heavenly Father, You are good and kind to us, Your children, to discipline us to enjoy You more. Increase our joy in You through Christ Jesus who bore our punishment of Your terrible wrath and has given us life eternal and pleasures everlasting. Amen.

Thursday, September 10, 2015

Let us Not Be Frightened into Stopping the Work



When the Babylonian exiles returned to Jerusalem to rebuild the city and temple, surrounding kings and generals sent threatening letters to Nehemiah, and Nehemiah writes, “For they wanted to frighten us, thinking, ‘Their hands will drop from the work, and it will not be done.’ But now, O God, strengthen my hands” (Nehemiah6:9).

The world is a chaotic place of darkness. If we stare too long and listen too hard at it, we will see the brokenness and hear the painful cries of pleasure without joy; water from a well that never satisfies (John 4:13). From this world comes taunting and distraction. “The church has become irrelevant,” they shout. “Christians are hateful bigots,” they claim. “The church is dying,” they mock while pointing to closed church buildings. The noise from the world can and is causing Christians to stumble and become silent, stopping our commanded work.

Let’s be confident. Not simply in our faith, but Who the object of our faith is. He is mighty; He is mighty to provide and He is mighty to save. Our confidence is not to be founded upon ourselves or upon the work of the church gathered. The source of the confidence of the Christian and the work of the church is to be the might of the Lord.

When the world seeks to frighten the Christian’s work of disciple-making and discipleship, trying desperately to get us to stop the work, let us pray like Nehemiah: “But now, O God, strengthen my hands.” Not by our own will or driven by inner strength, but seeking God to strengthen our hands.
Let us be like Paul, learning to have joyful obedience not dependent upon comfort, but “I can do all things through Him who strengthens me” (Philippians 4:13). 

When the exiles finished building the wall of Jerusalem, Nehemiah tells us, “all the nations around us were afraid” (Nehemiah 6:16). Let us do Kingdom work, being confident disciple-makers using the power of God in the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. 

O sovereign God, strengthen the hands of your servants to take the light of Jesus Christ into darkness, and grant us peace in Your presence shielded from the noise of this world. May Your Name be glorified in the work of our hands. Amen.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Humble, Patient Listening



Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger” (James 1:19).

While I was stopped at a red light this week, another car beside me kept easing past the designated white line. He ducked down to read the light of the crossing traffic to time the light change. As soon as the crossing traffic light turned red, he tapped his accelerator. Unfortunately, the oncoming turn lane became green as our light stubbornly remained red. He had to brake well into the intersection. And he looked foolish doing it.

We are not natural listeners. We are quick to speak and quick to judge. When someone has a problem, we talk to fix it. When things aren’t going the way we want, we speak quickly to let others know it. Our hearts explode through our mouths to make certain our preferences and ideas are met. We jump out in front, and often look foolish doing it. But the new creature in Christ is commanded to use the new heart Jesus gave us. 

It takes a great deal of humility to be quick to listen. Before speaking, we are to value the person and listen to their words. We listen to gain understanding, yielding because we desire a genuine relationship with someone else speaking. We listen so we provide a biblical, thoughtful, and loving response. This means our first desire in conversations is to possess a patient humility. Why? Because love is patient (I Corinthians 13:4). Our natural reaction is not humble patience. 

We are not commanded to NOT respond, just to be patient in our response. Proverbs 12:18 says, “There is one whose rash words are like sword thrusts, but the tongue of the wise brings healing.” Our temper is to be crushed by a humble, patient love. We have a thoughtful, biblical response to be delivered out of true loving care for others. We possess a tongue to proclaim Jesus in His Word, and His Word pierces (Hebrews 4:12), and His Word heals (Psalm 107:20). In other words, the Bible does the work. Not our sinful hearts which complain when our preferences aren’t met, or rebukes sharply when we don’t get what we want, or refuses to listen because of selfish indifference. We are called to have loving hearts patiently humble to listen, giving a clear, biblical response of God’s grace.

Lord, be gracious to us and give us humble, patient hearts to listen and use our mouths to proclaim the truth of Your glory. Amen.