Monday, July 23, 2012

"Because we're so careful to keep control over our lives, we water down the ' Christian life' to the point that there is actually very little Christ in it. We're so concerned with it being user-friendly, seeker-senitive, open-minded, and non-offensive that too often it can cease to be Christ-centered. in fact, if we're honest, we have to ask whether our life really reflects a commitment to a living Biblical or to a 'cultural Christianity.' We learn to go through the religious motions, use Christian lingo, attened Christian meetings and events, but we lack the evidence of a life transformed by Jesus Christ. As Pat Morely well described it in his book Man in the Mirror, we create a god of our own preference rather than the biblical God who calls for our allegiance."
-Randy Singer

Sound familiar?  If you’re shaking your head in denial, you’re probably not being honest with yourself. We’ve all been there. We’ve all forgotten at times to keep Christ the center of our lives. At some point, we have all, in the name of reaching out, compromised Biblical truth in one way or another.  And, when we get down to the heart of it, we’ve all tried to fit God into a box, thus creating our own god. Thus, we’re all guilty of idolatry, according to God’s perfect standards.  I never really thought of myself as an idol worshipper, but that quote made me realize just how easy it is to worship the god we want, instead of the God who really is, the God who created the universe,  and is the same yesterday, today, and forever.

Monday, July 16, 2012

How is Your Service?

“I’m A Slave For You”- Brittney Spears

Got your attention with a lyric from that awful song. Really, it’s just terrible, musically, lyrically, and morally. All around that song was a disgusting example of what has become of popular music over the past twenty years. But hey, even something as worldly as that song can be used for good. It directed your attention to this, didn’t it?

Servant hood was in Jesus’ very nature. Philippians 2:6-7 tells us “being in very nature God, [Jesus] did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in humans likeness.” We should humbly view ourselves as servants. That's a very Biblical attitude. I somehow doubt Brittney Spears had washing feet in mind when she sang that song, so lets move on and examine what God's Word tells us about serving others.

I want to focus on the contrast between Luke 22:24-27 and John 13:13-17. In the first passages we see the disciples arguing which of them will be the greatest, trying to exalt themselves and hoping to gain prestige and authority (they, like many ancient Jews, had an expectation that the Messiah would save them from oppression and have political power.) In the passages from John, we see Jesus serving his disciples by washing their feet. Culturally, this was something that a servant would have done as guests entered their master’s home. People walked on dirt roads in sandals, so I imagine that by the end of the day they had dirty, nasty feet. Jesus was setting an example for each of us to follow.

I want to dig a little deeper into the context of foot washing. Nearly every home would have had a pot of water and towel available at the entrance so that guests could have their feet washed. If the home had a servant, it was their responsibility to see to it that guests would have their tired, dirty feet cleaned before they entered the home. If the home did not have a servant, generally the host would wash the feet as a gesture of hospitality. If the host was busy, many times one of the guest s would volunteer to be the foot washer. We see that none of the disciples volunteered for this duty, but Jesus was more than willing to humble himself.

Jesus was God and Jesus was willing to sacrifice and serve. Jesus is our perfect example of love. He spent his life healing, delivering , and caring for the needs of people. Jesus’ most significant act of sacrifice came when he offered himself as a once-and-for-all payment for our sins. There is no greater love, no bigger sacrifice than laying down your life for another. From beginning to end, the life of Christ exemplifies how we ought to live.

In America, the harder we work and the more we work our way up the social ladder, the less we expect to do. Jesus tells us in Matthew 20:25:27 that if we want to be great in the Kingdom of God, we must serve others. Serving strengthens relationship, and Jesus knew this. If you question that, I challenge you to test it. Do the laundry and dishes for your wife and see how she reacts. Yeah, you’ll thank me for that one later. Even if our acts of service go unnoticed, and often times they do, they are still blessings for those we do them for.

It’s easy to look at the disciples and think they were silly for their actions (which, at times they sure were) but I think more often than not we behave like them without even realizing it. Sometimes Jesus is right in front of us and we miss him.We see in Matthew 25:31-46 that sometimes God appears to us in the form of the needy, and we are expected to have the love of God flow out from us and help them. Often times we miss chances to serve our Savior because we’re caught up in what we have on our own agenda. Sometimes we’re busy thinking about all that God can do for us, when God is calling us to get our hands dirty, humble ourselves, and love like he loved. God puts people and circumstances in our lives for a reason. God provides us with resources in order that we can show his love. I want to challenge you to pay closer attention for chances to be an example of God’s love by being a servant. Start in your own home and expand outwards. Find some needs in your community and start a ministry at your church that meets them. Do service projects with your small group once or twice a month. Let Christ become greater in your life so that you can become less- I bet you’ll find opportunities daily to drop your plans and meet somebody’s needs. Maybe you’ll spend that $5.00 in your purse to help somebody instead of doing with it what you had planned. Perhaps you’ll find somebody in need of a ride and forget about your schedule to get them where they need to be. Maybe you’ll buy less snack food and spend the difference on groceries for a hungry family. Maybe instead of judging the guy holding the "I'm stranded and hungry" sign you'll buy him some food and show through your actions that you truly believe that God loves and cares for him just as much as he loves and cares for you. Open your eyes. I promise you’ll find dirty feet in need of washing all around you. If you don't find yourself intentionally serving God and his kingdom each day, take a deep look into your heart, evaluate your life and priorities, and start the habit of asking God every morning for opportunities to shine his light into a dark and hurting world.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Be transformed

I read a story in the book The Unexpected Adventureby Lee Strobel that got me thinking. The story is about a radical transformation. Lee himself was radically transformed, so he loves a good, redeeming story about a change of heart . Once an outspoken atheist, Lee sought truth and found it in the Gospel of Christ. He is now one of the most respected Christian apologists of this generation.

The story Lee tells is of a “ hard –drinking, glue-sniffing, drug-abusing, hate filled urban terrorist who had been in and out off the court system ever since he threw a hammer at someone’s head when he was eight years old. He rose to second in command in the Belaire’s, a vicious street gang that ruled parts of Chicago. And ironically, he became a significant influence in my journey toward Christ.”

It’s kind of obvious at this point that the man Lee described must have turned his life around, so let’s move on to his story.

“Ron Bronski did something that anyone can emulate and that God can powerfully use as we reach out to others…

Ron got into big time trouble when he was twenty-one. A member of a rival street gang brutally assaulted one of Ron’s friends and Ron vowed revenge. Soon he tracked down the assailants brother, whose name was Gary…Ron pointed the gun in the air and pulled the trigger…one of the bullets found its mark, tearing into Gary’s back and lodging next to his liver. He fell face down on the pavement…without an once of compassion or a moment of hesitation, Ron shoved the gun in Gary’s face and pulled the trigger once more…this time the gun was empty.

Ron managed to escape the police, but they issued a warrant for his arrest on a charge of attempted murder. With his previous police record, this would mean twenty years in the penitentiary. To avoid prosecution, Ron and his girlfriend fled Chicago and ended up in Portland, Oregon, where Ron got his first legitimate job, working in a metal shop.

By divine [planning] his coworkers were Christian and through their influence and the work of the Holy Spirit, Ron became a radically committed follower of Jesus Christ.

Over time, Ron’s character and values changed. His girlfriend also became a Christian and they got married. Ron became a model employee, and active church participant, and a well respected member of the community. The Chicago police had stopped looking for him long ago. He was safe to live out the rest of his days in Portland.

Except that his conscience bothered him. Even though he had reconciled with God, he hadn’t reconciled with society. He was living a lie, which as a Christian, he couldn’t tolerate. So after much deliberation and prayer, he decided to take the train to Chicago and face the charges against him.

When Ron appeared in court, I was there working as a reporter for the Chicago Tribune. In contrast to the other defendants, who were always ioffering excuses for their behavior, Ron looked into the judge’s eyes and said, ‘ I’m guilty. I did it. I’m responsible. If I need to go to prison, that’s okay. But I’ve become a Christian and the right thing to do is to admit what I’ve done and to ask for forgiveness. What I did was wrong, plain and simple, and I’m sorry. I really am.’

I was blown away. Even as an atheist, I was so impressed by what Ron did that he didn’t need to approach me to talk about his faith. I asked him about it.

Over a cup of coffee, Ron recounted his entire story as I scribbled notes. Frankly, his tale was so amazing that I needed to corroborate it. I interviewed his coworkers, friends, and pastor in Oregon as well as street-toughened detectives who knew him in Chicago. They were unanimous in saying that something had dramatically transformed him. Ron claimed God was responsible. Though a skeptic, I was thoroughly intrigued.

The judge, deeply impressed by Ron’s changed life, concluded that he wasn’t a threat to society anymore and gave him probation instead.

I had never seen anything like this. I rushed into the hallway to interview Ron. ‘ What’s your reaction to what the judge did,’ I asked.

Ron faced me squarely and looked deep into my eyes. ‘What that judge did was show me grace- sort of like Jesus did. And Lee, can I tell you something? If you let him, God will show you grace too. Don’t forget that.’

I never have. Hearing Ron tell me the story of God’s transforming work in his life helped pry open my heart to God. Without a doubt, Ron Bronski was one of the key influences in my journey toward faith…”

Are you living a transformed life? Is there something about the way you live that attracts people’s attention? Is there an obvious change in the way you used to live your life before you placed your faith in Christ and now?

Here’s what Paul tells us in > Romans 12:2 “Do not be conformed any longer to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good, and acceptable, and perfect.”

How can we do this? It seems so impossible to live so drastically different, to overcome the temptations of the world and our past ways. Some of you may be thinking, “It seems unlikely that I can ever change."That’s correct. On our own, it is impossible. But we serve a God who says that we “can do all things through Christ.” When we accept Christ, God’s Holy Spirit gently speaks to us and works on molding us into his image. He’s the potter and we’re the clay. Have patience. God will be faithful to finish what he starts ( Philippians 1:6, 1 Corinthians 1:8, 1 Thessalonians 5:24 ), but He works in His time. And remember, to God a thousand years is like one day ( 2 Peter 3:8 .) This transformation process , no matter how large or how small, it’s part of your testimony. We can’t all be former gang-bangers and drug addicts (and, I don’t know about you, but I’m glad that’s not part of my old self!) but we all have a testimony, and that testimony is meant to be shared and to change the hearts and lives of others. God knows what He is doing. In my life, I have found out perfectly that though I may not have a clue what is going on, God always does, and as Romans 8:28 assures us, He works all things together for His good. Part of transformation is being realistic. It’s not helpful to beat ourselves up over our past mistakes, but it doesn’t help to simply run from it either. Like Ron, we can change our lives, but there comes a point where we must own up to our past in order to truly hand it over to God. If we continue to blame others or overlook our sins entirely, there is no way to honestly place them in God’s loving hands. But k now this, once you’ve accepted responsibility for your life of sin and subsequently turned your life over to Christ , your sins are forgiven. You are justified before a holy God and your transgressions no longer exist . He takes those sins from you and washes you clean ( Pslam 103:12, Hebrews 9:26, Galatians 2:16 )

Here’s the deal. Satan wants nothing more than for you to hold onto any portion of your past so he can control you with it. The Bible tells us that anyone who is in Christ is a new creation ( 2 Corinthains 5:17 ) . Give it all to God. Let Him make you brand new, not just parts of you, but all of you, from the inside out. It’s a wild and crazy process, but one you surely won’t regret. It won’t always be easy. Sometimes it will be painful, but that goes with the territory of growing. Sometimes you’ll have to make really difficult decisions. Leaving the past behind is rarely easy. You’ll be tempted to give up. You’ll struggle with desires for your old life. But in the end, you’ll experience growth. You’ll see that God’s way was so much better than your way. You’ll realize that, though difficult at times, the process of perfecting you and refining you had permanent results. Bear in mind what Romans 5:1-5 tells us, “ that suffering produces endurance, endurance produces character, character produces hope, and hope does not put us to shame because God’s love has been poured into us through the Holy Spirit.”

Be mindful that when it comes to God's hand in transforming us, there is always more than meets they eye. Yes, I did just make a Transformers reference.Live with it!

Nobody is beyond redemption. Not Ron the thug, or Lee the atheist. Not your boss who drives you nuts, not that son or daughter who has gone astray, not that ex husband who seemed to only be faithful in being unfaithful, not the bank robber you laughed at on last nights episode of America's Dumbest Criminals, or the drunk driver whose lapse in judgment took you child's life, not the unwed pregnant teen, not the meth dealer in the trailer up the street. No gap we can create in this life is too large to be reconciled to God through faith in Christ. Remember that as you act out your own day-to-day life, and remember that each and every day as you show grace to the world around you- for we once we lost, but now are found, we once were dead but have been made alive again(Luke15:11-32.)

Be blessed and by God’s mercy and grace, be transformed.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Love endures all things

"Paul was never more the wordsmith than when he crafted this sentence: Panta stegei, panta pisteuei, panta elpigei, panta upomenei... Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things…Panta means 'all things.' When we love something, we take the entire package. No picking and choosing. No large helpings of the good and passing on the bad. Love is a package deal. But how can we love those we find difficult to love?” – Max Lucado, A Love Worth Giving

When Paul spoke of love here, he used the Greek word for Godly love, which is agape. What is agape? One thing I’m sure that agape is not is an emotion. Emotions are fickle, and emotions certainly don’t endure all things. If that were the case, I'd still be mad that for Christmas of 1991 my brothers got the Ninja Turtles that I wanted (in retrospect, I got Raphael,the coolest of the group. But let's get back on track here) Agape is the all encompassing love of God the Father. It isn’t naïve. It doesn’t pretend that wrong is right, but it remains constant regardless of circumstances. Agape is the steady overflow of God’s undying, everlasting love for us. Before creation God loved us, and it has never ceased, plain and simple. God sees to our very core, yet His affection for us never ends.

You know how God showed His love for us? Romans 5:8 tells us, “ But God demonstrates His own love for us in this: while we were still sinners, Christ died for us."

That’s agape love. A perfect and just God providing a way for us to be reconciled to Him.

God wants us to be one with Him. “It is not God’s will that any should perish ( 2 Peter 3:9) For you see, “Without the shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins ( Hebrews 9:22 )

Colossians 1:19-22 describes for us that it was God’s pleasure to offer His son as a blameless sacrifice for us: “For God was pleased to have all His fullness dwell in him, and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross. Once you were alienated from God and were enemies in your minds because of your evil behavior. But now he has reconciled you by Christ’s physical body through death, to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation.”

God loves you with an unfailing, undying, everlasting love. But God also must judge. A perfect and holy God can not be in the presence of sin. Love endures all things. Christ endured the cross. He went all the way. He bore it all for us, so that we can be reconciled to God, holy and blameless through His redemptive blood. I’ve never been under the Old Testament law, so it’s difficult sometimes for me to comprehend exactly what Christ did for me when he took my sins upon himself and died on the cross. In the hymn How Deep the Father’s Love For Us, the author ponders a similar question when he sings:

Why should I gain from His reward?

I cannot give an answer

But this I know with all my heart

His wounds have paid my ransom

Monday, July 2, 2012

“…And whoever does not carry their cross and follow me cannot be my disciple. Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Won’t you first sit down and estimate the cost to see if you have enough money to complete it? For if you lay the foundation and are not able to finish it, everyone who sees it will ridicule you, saying, ‘This person began to build and wasn’t able to finish..’” Luke 14:27-30 “Then he said to them all: ‘Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.’” This is a passage of verses that is commonly misunderstood. How often have you heard somebody say “I guess that’s just a cross I’ll have to bear?” Most of the time they are not referring to the type of deep spiritual devotion Jesus was talking about. Often times people reference it about non spiritual things entirely. Jesus commands us to take up our cross each day if we want to call ourselves His followers. Then He makes sure to point out that there is a price to pay. We need to be conscious about both those facts. So what exactly does it mean to take up our cross and follow Christ? To understand the context of Jesus’ words, we must understand what the cross was. I’m not going to go into a big long history lesson filled with details of crucifixion. Most of us understand that the cross was used for punishment leading to death. When you saw somebody walking down the road carrying a cross, you knew their death was imminent. So, the cross is a symbol of death. Taking up our cross means we put to death our old nature to follow God at all cost. By doing so, He gives us new life. Taking up our cross means we spiritually die to ourselves. It means turning over our desires, our dreams, our ambitions, habits, thoughts, our self interest, to the One we choose to follow. Some of us never count the cost. Some of us chose to walk away before the job is complete, and turn back to our old ways. Is it any wonder the world often mocks Christians? They see people who never counted the cost and who never took up their cross, claiming to have lives transformed through a relationship with Christ. In reality, many of us are not living any differently than the world. Unbelievers see Christians who give to God the pieces of their lives that are convenient and withhold the areas they are comfortable surrendering. That is not surrender. That is in no way the image of self denial that God has in mind for us. This is not the life God intends for us to live. The story of Abraham illustrates the type of devotion we ought to have to God. Abraham waited many years for the son God promised him, then God asks him to do something that was a true test of his faith and devotion- off him as a sacrifice. Abraham must have been a little confused. That doesn’t sound like something God would do, does it? But being sure that he had heard God’s voice, Abraham knew that he had to be obedient. Abraham took the son that he waited years to blessed with and loved so dearly and prepared to sacrifice him. In the end we see that God was never interested in Abraham killing his so, He was simply seeing how great Abrahams love and devotion was for Him. Abraham passed God’s test. He was willing to give up what was nearest and dearest to his heart. How willing am I to give up something that might interfere with my devotion to God? These things don’t have to be inherently bad things, but they aren’t acceptable once they begin to fill up my heart and take God’s place in my life. "I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20.)

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Anger


God created emotions; a life without them would be rather dull. Often times we abuse these emotions though. One of the most  misunderstood and abused  emotions is anger. I have heard some Christians claim that anger is a sin. I used to believe that to a degree, but I’ve come to understand that just can’t be the case, for Jesus himself was angered, yet we know that He was perfect and without sin. Plus, I have witnessed firsthand, both in my own life and through observing others, the consequences of holding emotions inside. Most often the result is much more severe than if the problem and the emotions (especially anger) attached to it were realistically assessed and dealt with.
It almost seems like I’ve found one of those contradictions in the Bible that my atheist friends love to tell me about, but can never quite pinpoint. Upon reading many verses on anger (lately I’ve been convicted about certain areas in my life that I have intentionally been ignoring/avoiding. I’ve been pushing them to the back of my mind due to the hurt associated with them causing  my flesh to be roused and generally ending with an anger filled spirit)  I discovered two verses that on the surface seem to be inconsistent with one another.

Ephesians 4:26 tells us, In your anger do not sin: Do not let the sun go down while you are still angry.”
In reading this, is seems like a valid conclusion that one is able to be angry and not sin.  This passage doesn’t forbid anger, it just instructs to not allow that anger to lead to sin, and to deal with the root of the issue in order to reach closure.
A few verses later in Ephesians 4:31 we are given what appears to be completely opposite instructions to heed: “Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice.”

Okay, so which is it? It must be one or the other, or does it? Knowing that the Bible is the infallible Word of God, I started rampant research, just like I did back in my freshman year of college when I waited until the last minute to write a 24 page paper. I had to act quickly. I needed the answer to this quandary, and I needed it soon.. I wasn’t having a crisis of faith in the slightest bit, but I did need some major clarification.

Here is what I discovered after plowing through a dozen or so concordances. I already knew that some things are simply lost in translation. I learned this fact years ago when I was given a lesson on the various types of love that the Bible describes. Bible manuscripts contain three main Greek words for love-  eros (romantic love), philia (brotherly love, the type expressed amongst Christian believers), and agape (easiest understood as Godly love). In English we don’t distinguish types of love. In this sense, the word has become watered down quite a bit. We don’t differentiate. We use love to describe how we feel about our spouse,  our job, television programs, favorite sports team, and the new pair of trousers we got on sale at Kohl’s. Greeks have a much more beautiful and poetic way of describing love, and the same applies for how they describe anger.

John MacArthur’s study  Bible points out that in Scripture we find three main Greeks words  used to describe anger:
Thumos: Unrestrained, uncontrolled, furious anger. Used in the New Testament most frequently to describe unsaved persons.
Parorgismos: Resentment. Typically associated with and rooted in jealously.
Orge: Anger resulting from conviction.

Obviously,after learning of the different forms of the Greeks words for anger, we discover that there's no contradiction at all. The verses are simply describing two types of anger, with differing connotations. In English, we tend to use the word angry just as we use the word love. We're angry the dog went pee on the carpet, we're angry we hit every single stop light on Peach Street, we're angry with decision the government is making, we're angry at the spouse who cheated on us. You get the point- one word used to describe the same emotion, but in drastically varying forms.


MacArthur warns “Don't get angry when people offend you. Don't let your anger degenerate into personal resentment, bitterness, sullenness, or moodiness. That is forbidden. The only justifiable anger defends the great, glorious, and holy nature of our God" 

Anger without action is senseless, but anger resulting in wrong behavior can be cataclysmic. We should be angry about the issues that go against God’s perfect Word and we should most definitely do something about it. The rising divorce rate, domestic violence, sex trafficking,  racism, drugs (did you see the zombie guy in Miami who, thanks in part to doing that crazy bath salts stuff, ate some  guys face off? Drugs are bad news, man!), pornography, and so on and so forth. When it comes to social issues, I think we have every right to become angry, but we must ask ourselves one very important questions- are we angry because we demand to be right on the issue or are we angry because the issue grieves a perfect and  Holy God?  When pride sneaks into the equation, the formula becomes extremely  toxic. Case in point are the Christians who, in order to defend the sanctity of unborn lives, shoot abortion doctors. Such actions don’t make rational sense, but that is why anger and pride mixed together are so potent- combined, they can blind us just as much as the sinner is blinded by the sin we are choosing to confront.

So the next time you get angry, take the time to pray about and ask the Holy Spirit to guide you in your next step. Make sure you understand where your anger is coming from. Is it rooted in selfishness or pride?  If so, you don’t pass the righteous anger test.  You may find that you anger was unjustified and sinful, On the other hand, you may find that, like Jesus turning over the tables (John 2:13-17) you are called to take a bold, Biblical stand for holiness, 

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

True Religion


True Religion is more than a pair of jeans.

James 1:27 describes what religion really is: “Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted from the world.”

Does that verse challenge your thoughts on religion?  Are you still thinking about dry and boring rituals or are your thoughts taking a new path?

Taking this one select verse to construct an entire theology would not be appropriate. There are many who do that though.  I don’t think that’s what James had in mind when He heard from the Holy Spirit and penned those words. It can be dangerous to place too much emphasis on works. Often it’s a slippery slope- we end up doing more and more to try and please God our Father. Doing God’s work won’t cause Him to love us any more or any less, but it’s a sure sign that God’s love is living in us. I believe it does make Him proud, and I believe He does reward us for it, but it does not alter His love towards us one bit.  

As destructive spiritually as attempting to earn  God’s grace can be, ignoring or misunderstanding His words in James 1:27 can be equally damaging.  Many of us get so caught up in our own journey that we forget to pay attention to those we are passing by. God doesn’t place people in our path for no reason. So it’s a good idea to stay in tune with the Holy Spirit and pay close attention. Many people that we come across may have never had an encounter with the Living God, and their first glimpse of Him comes through us.

Perhaps you’re thinking to yourself, “ I don’t  really know any orphans or widows to take care of.”   I don't think the context of this verse limits us strictly to orphans and widows. That just doesn't match up with the rest of Scripture.Open your eyes and consciously look around. You’ll start seeing needs you never knew were there, and probably not far from your own front lawn.  Maybe a single mother  of four could use a gift card for  some groceries and diapers. Perhaps  an elderly neighbor is suffering exhaustion because they can’t sleep through the hot summer nights and you have an extra air conditioner. Possibly the coworker going through a divorce needs a listening ear. Give them your cell phone number with an open invitation to call any time, or take them out for coffee. Maybe you can cut the grass for the disabled  veteran up the street. Maybe you can visit a shut-in, volunteer at a shelter, or play your banjo at the nursing home.  If you can perform a song using only the G chord, I'll sign right up for that banjo playing stuff. Maybe I can even get Steve Martin to join me.  

Mother Theresa challenged us with these powerful words:
 “You  can find Calcutta anywhere in the world. You only need two eyes to see. Everywhere in the world there are people that are not loved, people that no one will help, people that are pushed away or forgotten. And this is the greatest poverty.”  
If you’re already chipping in around your community, good for you. Maybe it’s time to extend your reach. Maybe it’s time to think bigger. One huge issuing facing the world is AIDS.
Every hour, approximately 230 people die from AIDS. That means that just about  every four seconds, four parents are left without a precious child, or a child is left without a parent. You might be thinking, “Big deal. Four people per second isn’t that many. Why all the fuss? It’s just part of life.” I bet you wouldn’t be thinking that if every four seconds people were dropping dead in your town. Sooner or later you’d be affected. Sooner or later that statistic would include you, and then you’d start caring.
I read a quote from Bono. Perhaps you’ll have some theology issues with it. Perhaps you’ll  agree 100% Read it, and take it as you will:
“God is in the slums, in the cardboard boxes where the poor play house. God is in the silence of a mother who has infected her child with a virus that will end both of their lives. God is in the cries heard under the rubble of war. God is in the debris of wasted opportunity and lives, and God is with us, if we are with them.”


So my question is this- How is your religion doing? IF your religion is that of a follower of Jesus Christ, you should be keeping pretty busy  establishing relationship, meeting people’s needs and showing them love. After all, that’s the kind of religion that God the Father finds to be pure and faultless. 

Monday, June 25, 2012

Hunger


“Hunger is, in essence, the most basic form of poverty, where individuals or families can not afford to meet their most basic need for food.”  - Bread for the World ( www.Bread.org )

*1/3 of the world (more than 2 billion people)suffer from malnutrition
                                         *Approximately every 3 seconds somebody dies from hunger. That’s 25,000 people per day.


While the developing world is struggling to provide for the most basic of meals, the United States is literally killing itself with its eating habits. One epidemic in the US is heart disease, the leading  cause being a diet high in saturated fat and cholesterol. The Unites States spends $150 billion each year to treat the effects of heart disease (The China Study.Campbell. BenBella Books, 2006.)  The budget for the entire World Food Program was reported at  $2.7 billion as of 2008. Try to wrap your mind around those numbers and think about that for a few seconds.   
We over indulge, and we under appreciate. In the last three days, I was blessed enough to dine out three times. Three nights in a row I spent almost enough to feed a hungry person in a third world country for an entire month.  I thought about that today and I wept. I  prayed and thanked God for each meal, but I'd be dishonest if I said that I had visions of starving children as I expressed my gratitude to God.   I can open up my fridge and bemoan that “there’s nothing to eat.” Then I hop in my car and drive to the next town up and can choose between two grocery stores and seven fast food restaurants.  Meanwhile, there is a mother in Africa holding her starving child and watching helplessly as it happens. Those commercials you see on TV of kids rooting through garbage for something to eat, that really happens. 
I read Matthew 14:18-21 in a whole new light today. In this passage of Scripture we see Jesus meeting the needs of the people by feeding them. This got me thinking: If Jesus cared about people being hungry so much that he performed a miracle to do it, shouldn't I take attention to the needs of the hungry as well?  
Ronald J. Sider has this to say," To those who do not feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and visit the prisoners, Jesus will speak a terrifying word at the final judgement: 'Depart from me...' (Matthew 25:41)The meaning is clear and unambiguous. Jesus intends that  his disciples imitate his own special concern for the poor and needy. Lest we forget, God repeats it in 1 John 3:17-18. ' But if any one has the the world's goods and sees his brother in  need, yet closes his heart against him, How does God's love  abide in him...' The words are plain.  What do they mean for Western Christians who demand increasing affluence each year while Third World nations suffer malnutrition, deformed bodies and starvation? The text clearly says that if we fail to aid the needy we do not have God's love- no matter what w e may say. No matter what we say or do at 11:00 A.M. Sunday morning, affluent people who do not help the needy and neglect the poor are not the people of God." 
Wow! That's harsh. But, it's backed up by Scripture. We can't just ignore the needy. Jesus, God's perfect Son did not, and we are to model our lives after Him.
Ferdinand Mahfood,  the founder of Food  for the Poor, points out that it's our job to become aware, and once we are aware, to take action. "We must become aware of the need and the call to share our resources with the poor. We must examine our conscience often. Then, prodded out of our comfortable cocoons, we can truly be doers and not just hearers..."
So, what are you doing to meet the needs of the hungry in your community? In the world? Have you ever stopped to consider that you have the privilege to be able to help? Not one of us is helpless, we just need to open our eyes to the situation and seek ways that we can be part of the solution.
Ezekiel 16:49 speaks of Sodom, “Now this was the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were arrogant, over fed, and under concerned; they did not help the poor and needy.” Sounds a lot like America. Sounds a lot like me, to be honest. 
THOUGHT TO PONDER: How would you feel if your child had no food, no clean water, and was wasting away right before your very eyes?
Today I realized that I have never really stopped to be thankful for what I have. Yeah, I pray before I eat but I never contrast what I am blessed with to what others are needing around the world. How different my spirit feels when I empathize. I find myself wanting to seek out little ways to change the lives of those who are suffering.
According to Food for the Poor, a $175  donation can feed an entire family for a year. That's not a typo. $175 feeds a family for one full year. Having heard stories from my mother who returned from a missions trip to Honduras, it's heart breaking to think of all that I have spent $175 on this past year. I'm convinced that, for the most part, what was true to Sodom is true to most of the developed world- we are "arrogant, over fed, and under concerned..." 
I'm not wanting to leave you feeling helpless and guilty, quite the contrary, actually. I want to leave you thinking beyond yourself and looking at the world for needs that you can help meet.  Maybe you have funds that you can readily contribute. Perhaps you can spend some time volunteering at your local food bank or shelter. No matter what you are able to do, we are are all able become educated on the topic of hunger. Spend some time on Google, talk to somebody who has gone on a missions trip and look through their pictures. You'll not soon forget what you discover. Remember, if you're reading this from the United States, you live in one of the most affluent countries in the history of the world. You are not helpless to make a difference.
Here's just a few places where you can donate. All of these charities score highly on 
the charitynavigator.org


www.worldvision.org/
www.bread.org
www.compassion.com/

God wants all of me. Every single bit of me. I'm a stubborn and strong willed person, so I find this difficult at times. I'm discovering I'm not so good with total submission, but that's what Jesus calls me to.He wants me to arrive at a place of complete surrender. Nothing less. It's not easy to let go of things—relationships, dreams, careers, lifestyles, past hurts,  but in the end the benefits are worth the cost. God wants the best for my life, and He knows exactly what that is. 

Scripture confidently declares that  God knows what He is doing, after all, He is God. In Jeremiah 29:11, we read: For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. And Psalm 139:16 gives us the confidence that, "[God] saw me before I was born. Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed."
I think I've learned, probably the hard way, that it cost far more to hold my life back from God than it does to completely hand it over as a beautiful act of worship. When I attempt to handle life on my terms, I set myself up for the consequences that  follow. When I try to run my own life, I am not allowing God to be  Master. I may be calling him Lord, but my actions do not line up with somebody who has relinquished control of their life. Paul gives us an example of this dualism in Romans 6:16:  "Don't you know that when you offer yourselves to someone to obey him as slaves, you are slaves to the one whom you obey--whether you are slaves to sin, which leads to death, or to obedience, which leads to righteousness?"

I'm not sure why I struggle so much with giving control of my life over to the One who spoke everything into existence. Maybe it's driven in part by pride and fear. One thing I have figured out though- no life and no past mistakes, are beyond redemption. It might be a long hard road, but when we surrender our lives over to Him, God will always restore us with  His abounding grace and mercy.
The world offers many solutions to despair. Substances, prescriptions, possessions, relationships, formulas to follow and best selling books to read. On and on the list goes. In the end they all just serve as substitutes and distractions,trying to fill a great void in our souls. We search and search for anything to give us peace, but there is an emptiness built into us that can only be satisfied through an eternal relationship with Jesus Christ. I'm sure you've heard soembody say "There's a God sized hole in each of us that only God can fill." Well, that might be an overused saying, but it is 100%  true. God designed us to be in deep, loving, and intimate relationship with Him.


“Most people, if they had really learned to look into their own hearts, would know that they do want, and want acutely, something that cannot be had in this world. There are all sorts of things in this world that offer to give it to you, but they never quite keep their promises." CS Lewis
Take time to absorb what God is teaching you. Respond joyfully, in faith. Many times we have weak spots that are hard for us to see but God's Spirit is revealing them to us. He's ever patient with us as we are refined. The process of dealing with issues may seem painful, but will prove well worth it. As we lose more of ourselves to become more Christlike, our character, and ultimately, entire life will be transformed.

" Or do you show contempt for the riches of his kindness, forbearance and patience, not realizing that God’s kindness is intended to lead you to repentance?"  Romans 2:4

Thursday, January 5, 2012

What's on the horizon?

I am on the verge of doing something big, something incredible, perhaps unfathomable. I don't know what it is, but for the first time in a long while, I have given my all to God. I know something monumental is on the horizon! Complete surrender. I always have held back,. I know now this was because of my insecurity. I don't like not knowing, that is until now. Now I know, I just don't have all the details. I like not having the details; it grows my faith and allows God his proper authority. If I claim Him as my Master, He deserves to be treated as such. I know my life is about to explode and spread God all over. I know that I no longer feel weighed down by my sense of inferiority, for if I am lacking, it is for God's glory. In my weakness, He makes me strong! Thank you Lord for taking my defeated life and raising it up to victory! Thank you for the process, though it wasn't pretty, it was beneficial. To You be all glory. You have revived my spirit, and I will never stop praising You!

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Changing for a reason

We replace God in our hearts. It is human nature. It is also in our nature to deny doing this. There is a peace that only God can provide. Humans were built to be balanced, but we can't reach that place without Him. We can't get to Him without removing our spiritual distractions. We must allow God to identify areas in our life that require surrender. Be ready, this is a painful process. First instinct is to resist, but allow God to convict you and be ready to follow through. Are you pushing God away and attempting to fill in the gaps with replacements? Social status? Food? Exercise? Career? Relationships? Sex? Drugs? Gossip? We all do it, and we all do it in different ways. Some substitutes are more obvious than others. Obviously  on the surface it is easier to identify the spiritual troubles of a drug addict than the person who tries to replace God's love with, say, a relationship. The root of both is the same- a desire to feel satisfied. Get real before God. Go to His throne and ask the Holy Spirit to reveal to you what area of your life you need to turn over to Him, what area is unbalanced, what places do you run to in order to hide from Him, to avoid facing His convictions? To feel a phony, counterfeit, sense of fulfillment?
We are designed to be balanced spiritually, mentally, and physically. May we seek Christ first and allow Him to be our focus and our source of satisfaction. May we define ourselves as His own, and identify our value from the priceless gift of salvation He gives freely to us. May we hunger and thirst after Him.