John 3: 1 – 17
As we begin the second week of the Lenten season, I would like to ask us to entertain a very serious question: How might we, collectively and individually, be instruments of God’s pardon and faith? By this question, I mean to suggest that God is calling us to leave ourselves open to allow His grace and mercy to flow thru us in such a way that he can use us to be a blessing to those around us. One of God’s servants, a man named Francis of Assisi prayed these words, “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace… where there is injury, let me sow pardon… where there is doubt, let me sow faith.”
This morning I would like to have us look at the story of a Pharisee named Nicodemus, and his encounter with Jesus. In order to understand who Nicodemus was, we need to have a working knowledge of who he was and what he did. The Webster’s Dictionary defines a Pharisee as “a member of a Jewish sect of the intertestamental period noted for strict observation of rites and ceremonies of the written law and for insistence on the validity of their own oral traditions concerning the law.” In other words, a Pharisee was not just a legalist… a Pharisee was a legalist’s legalist. Not only did the Pharisee insist on strict observance of the written law, they were adamant that everyone around them also strictly observe the written law… and God help anyone who didn’t agree with them… God help anyone who either proposed, promoted, or recommended doing anything differently!
Nicodemus was a deeply conflicted man… He was a Pharisee, a religious leader and a teacher of the Law, but he was also a seeker of the truth. It was his desire to understand the things of the Kingdom of Heaven which brought him to Jesus. Nicodemus comes to Jesus at night, perhaps out of fear of being discovered as a seeker, or perhaps it to have sufficient time for his conversation and learning experience with Jesus.
Nicodemus begins the conversation with a statement of his belief in Jesus as a teacher who comes from God. He says to Jesus: “Rabbi, we know you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the miraculous signs you are doing if God were not with him."
To which Jesus responds by inviting Nicodemus to see God’s kingdom by being born from above… “Jesus declared, "I tell you the truth, no one can see the kingdom of God unless he is born again.”
This is very confusing for Nicodemus, and we can see that he struggles with this particular teaching, and gets stuck in the literal image of being born a second time from a mother’s womb.
"How can a man be born when he is old?" Nicodemus asked. "Surely he cannot enter a second time into his mother's womb to be born!"
As is typical in the Gospel of John, the words in this passage are used on several different levels. Jesus is not talking about the physical birth process, but rather about the spiritual transformation of a person who is reborn because of the Holy Spirit’s work in his or her life. But Nicodemus still does not grasp the profound significance of what Jesus is saying here. “How can these things be?” Nicodemus asks… and this is a great question of faith asked by seekers young and old who desire greater understanding.
Have you ever taken a step back to ask a question about something that you just don’t understand? What if we did not ask questions? Does that mean we have full understanding of God and all that God is doing in this world? Have you ever prefaced a question with the words “I have a dumb question…” A very wise teacher and friend backed me down recently after I had begun a conversation with those words… her reply was “The only dumb question is the one you do not ask…”
There are some who might say that it is better not to ask questions of God. But it is hard to live life and not ask questions. Bad things happen to very good people… Promises made by humans get broken… life can be rough… We experience hurts, and we hurt others. Sometimes we hurt the people we love. We wonder… we doubt… we don’t quite “get it”… questions come…
Any teacher worth his or her salt will tell you that asking questions is an integral part of education… of discipleship… and Jesus himself encourages his disciples (and each of us) to take his yoke upon us, and learn of him…
Some might say “Don’t ask God a question unless you are willing to hear and deal with the answer!” God might just want to change you… It’s true… The Holy Spirit is persistent in stirring, nudging and drawing people closer to Christ Jesus. It is the work of the Holy Spirit to call, gather, and enlighten, helping people move from doubt to faith.
God, in his infinite, unending wisdom, chooses to be made known to us through His Son, Jesus Christ, who walks and relates to people on this earth on their terms… Sandy Patti writes that “He became like us, so that we could become like Him…” At the same time, Jesus invites us to think on God’s terms, and imagine heavenly things… like being born again. Jesus invites us to stretch and be stirred by the Holy Spirit of the Living God. Jesus invites us to ponder and believe in heavenly things…
Just as he invited a legalist like Nicodemus to look past the strict and unyielding nature of this world, and grasp the concept of God’s unmerited favor… “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten son… that whosoever believes on him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”
In verse 17 we see one more step to Jesus’ teaching on our relationship with God… “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.”
Jesus’ dialogue with Nicodemus includes these two wonderful and beloved verses. Here Jesus sums up the faith. God loved the world to such a degree that God would willingly and passionately give over Jesus, his own son, to suffer and to be killed so that eternal life might extend to those who believe in Jesus.
Remember two Presidents named Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford? After Nixon was impeached and had resigned as President of the United States, Gerald Ford was sworn in as the next President. One of the first things that Ford did as the new President was something that many people believe severely injured his political future… he gave Nixon a full Presidential Pardon. Ford went out on a limb and extended forgiveness to someone who had been caught doing something wrong.
God calls us to be instruments of pardon and faith. His word reminds us that, just as he accepted us among his beloved children. When one of us confesses our sins to Jesus, and asks for the Blood of Jesus to cleanse us from our sins, God takes that sin and plunges it deep into the Sea of Forgetfulness… That’s grace… that’s unmerited favor… and that’s just like our God.
I Bid You Peace...
Pastor Ken+
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Saturday, February 9, 2008
An Instrument of Peace and Love
S.B.: Matthew 4: 1 – 11
“Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. He fasted forty days and forty nights, and afterwards he was famished.”
Please take notice of the chain of events coming up to this part of the text… God’s spirit leads Jesus from the Baptismal Waters of the Jordan River to a time of testing by the devil. In similar fashion, have you ever noticed that when you have had a victory, or even a new beginning, that suddenly things don’t go as well as they used to?
Now let’s take notice of what God does, and what God does NOT do… God does not protect or hide Jesus from a confrontation with the devil… but the truth is that God does not abandon him either… God tells us that WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH, HE WILL NEVER LEAVE US OR FORSAKE US… His word says “Fear Not, for I am with you!”
During his time in the wilderness, Jesus practices the spiritual discipline of FASTING… abstaining from eating foods for a period of time, in order to focus on prayer… in order to focus on what the Spirit of God is saying to you…
The scriptures point out many times over that there is power in fasting and praying. Some fasts last only from sunrise until sunset, but in Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus’ fast is described as lasting day and night… for forty days… and by the end of this time, Jesus is understandably FAMISHED. This is beyond hunger… this is reaching deep into a basic human need…
And so it is just like the devil to tempt Jesus with the basic human desires that we see in our text this morning… Food, Power and Prestige.
In this text we see that Jesus is being confronted by the limits of his own humanity. During the Christmas Season we celebrated the birth of Jesus, the God-Man, and here we see the very human side of his being… He was hungry… powerfully hungry…
When his hunger, loneliness and human weakness became overwhelming, Jesus returns to God’s word again and again… The scripture says that “The word of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous run into it, and they are saved.” WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH, THE RIGHTEOUS RUN TO GOD’S WORD FOR REFUGE AND STRENGTH.
Let’s also take a look at how Jesus answers the temptations of hunger and security… Jesus answers by pointing straight to the written word…
IT IS WRITTEN… Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God!
The second test is actually a test of God’s protection… Does God actually care? Jump off a cliff and see if God protects you… The devil actually has the unmitigated gall of attempting to use the Word of God to trip up the Son of God! This is actually very funny if you take a step back and think about it for a moment… “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down from here, for it is written, “He shall give his angels charge over you, and in their hands they shall bear you up, lest you dash your foot against a stone…” Jesus counters this with the Word of God again… “It is written, DO NOT PUT GOD TO THE TEST!”
The third test challenges Jesus’ relationship with God the Father… The devil brings Jesus to a high mountain and shows him all the Kingdoms, Nations, and all the wealth of the world, and says “You can have all these things, all the kingdoms of the world… here’s the catch… all you have to do is bow down and worship me…”
Jesus counters again with the Word of God… “IT IS WRITTEN… Worship the Lord your God and serve him only…”
The Spirit of God leads Jesus to the wilderness for 40 days, and during these 40 days of fasting and praying, God shapes Jesus into an instrument of God, focused on God’s word, and FILLED WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT.
A lot can happen in 40 days… and it is the Holy Spirit which leads us into Lent. From his 40 days in the wilderness, Jesus was launched into his ministry. These 40 days of Lent can be a wonderful gift for anyone seeking spiritual growth. Take your calendars and set aside time during Lent for prayer, worship, bible study, and serving others. Take the time to participate in one of the many Lenten Series programs that are being offered by different church groups (including our own) for your spiritual enrichment.
Some disciples of Jesus set aside Lent by fasting from certain kinds of foods or activities. Giving up something for Lent is something that most of us see as a sacrifice, but I would encourage us to see it more as an act of worship.
My invitation to us is to take time to identify those activities or vices which draw us away from a close relationship with Jesus Christ, and ask ourselves “How might we fast from these activities during Lent?”
Ask yourself one other question: What does it mean for you to be an instrument of God’s peace and Love.
P.S. Prayer:
Lord, make us instruments of your peace;
where there is hatred, let us sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
Lord Jesus,
grant that we may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood, as to understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to Eternal Life.
Amen.
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
“Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. He fasted forty days and forty nights, and afterwards he was famished.”
Please take notice of the chain of events coming up to this part of the text… God’s spirit leads Jesus from the Baptismal Waters of the Jordan River to a time of testing by the devil. In similar fashion, have you ever noticed that when you have had a victory, or even a new beginning, that suddenly things don’t go as well as they used to?
Now let’s take notice of what God does, and what God does NOT do… God does not protect or hide Jesus from a confrontation with the devil… but the truth is that God does not abandon him either… God tells us that WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH, HE WILL NEVER LEAVE US OR FORSAKE US… His word says “Fear Not, for I am with you!”
During his time in the wilderness, Jesus practices the spiritual discipline of FASTING… abstaining from eating foods for a period of time, in order to focus on prayer… in order to focus on what the Spirit of God is saying to you…
The scriptures point out many times over that there is power in fasting and praying. Some fasts last only from sunrise until sunset, but in Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus’ fast is described as lasting day and night… for forty days… and by the end of this time, Jesus is understandably FAMISHED. This is beyond hunger… this is reaching deep into a basic human need…
And so it is just like the devil to tempt Jesus with the basic human desires that we see in our text this morning… Food, Power and Prestige.
In this text we see that Jesus is being confronted by the limits of his own humanity. During the Christmas Season we celebrated the birth of Jesus, the God-Man, and here we see the very human side of his being… He was hungry… powerfully hungry…
When his hunger, loneliness and human weakness became overwhelming, Jesus returns to God’s word again and again… The scripture says that “The word of the Lord is a strong tower, the righteous run into it, and they are saved.” WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH, THE RIGHTEOUS RUN TO GOD’S WORD FOR REFUGE AND STRENGTH.
Let’s also take a look at how Jesus answers the temptations of hunger and security… Jesus answers by pointing straight to the written word…
IT IS WRITTEN… Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God!
The second test is actually a test of God’s protection… Does God actually care? Jump off a cliff and see if God protects you… The devil actually has the unmitigated gall of attempting to use the Word of God to trip up the Son of God! This is actually very funny if you take a step back and think about it for a moment… “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down from here, for it is written, “He shall give his angels charge over you, and in their hands they shall bear you up, lest you dash your foot against a stone…” Jesus counters this with the Word of God again… “It is written, DO NOT PUT GOD TO THE TEST!”
The third test challenges Jesus’ relationship with God the Father… The devil brings Jesus to a high mountain and shows him all the Kingdoms, Nations, and all the wealth of the world, and says “You can have all these things, all the kingdoms of the world… here’s the catch… all you have to do is bow down and worship me…”
Jesus counters again with the Word of God… “IT IS WRITTEN… Worship the Lord your God and serve him only…”
The Spirit of God leads Jesus to the wilderness for 40 days, and during these 40 days of fasting and praying, God shapes Jesus into an instrument of God, focused on God’s word, and FILLED WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT.
A lot can happen in 40 days… and it is the Holy Spirit which leads us into Lent. From his 40 days in the wilderness, Jesus was launched into his ministry. These 40 days of Lent can be a wonderful gift for anyone seeking spiritual growth. Take your calendars and set aside time during Lent for prayer, worship, bible study, and serving others. Take the time to participate in one of the many Lenten Series programs that are being offered by different church groups (including our own) for your spiritual enrichment.
Some disciples of Jesus set aside Lent by fasting from certain kinds of foods or activities. Giving up something for Lent is something that most of us see as a sacrifice, but I would encourage us to see it more as an act of worship.
My invitation to us is to take time to identify those activities or vices which draw us away from a close relationship with Jesus Christ, and ask ourselves “How might we fast from these activities during Lent?”
Ask yourself one other question: What does it mean for you to be an instrument of God’s peace and Love.
P.S. Prayer:
Lord, make us instruments of your peace;
where there is hatred, let us sow love;
where there is injury, pardon;
where there is doubt, faith;
where there is despair, hope;
where there is darkness, light;
and where there is sadness, joy.
Lord Jesus,
grant that we may not so much seek to be consoled as to console;
to be understood, as to understand;
to be loved, as to love;
for it is in giving that we receive,
it is in pardoning that we are pardoned,
and it is in dying that we are born to Eternal Life.
Amen.
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
Saturday, February 2, 2008
Following God's Beloved
S.B. Matthew 17: 1 – 9
Focal Point: (v.5) “While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said ‘This is my son, the Beloved… with him I am well pleased… listen to him…”
The drama unfolds: Jesus takes his closest associates with him… Peter, James and John go up the mountain with him…
In the Old Testament, Mountains are the places where people encounter the presence of God. Sinai, for instance, is one such mountain, and on that mountain God gave Moses the 10 commandments.
Peter, James and John are eyewitnesses to Jesus’ transformation:
· His face shines like the sun…
· His clothes become white…
· They see Moses and Elijah talking with Jesus.
The Transfiguration of Christ is the first step along the road to the Cross of Calvary… Ash Wednesday may be the first milepost in the Lenten Season, but the Transfiguration is very important to the Message of Lent…
The Transfiguration is important because:
God Glorifies His Son: Peter, James and John are seeing things that challenge their senses… They see their teacher and friend undergoing a change… His face shines like the son… His clothes turn white as snow… They can hardly believe their eyes… suddenly they see Moses and Elijah having a conversation with Jesus… Peter can barely contain himself, he blurts out “Master... this is a great moment… Would it be alright if I were to build three tabernacles here… one for you… one for Moses… one for Elijah???” [Peter reacts the way that we would react… we see God’s hand moving, and we want t commemorate it by setting it in stone…] HERE WE SEE AN EXAMPLE OF GOD DECLARING HIS LOVE FOR HIS SON… God is giving his Son the strength and courage to endure the things that are coming up (Capture – Imprisonment – Trial – Betrayal – Scourging – Crucifixion – Death…)
Our Lives are Transfigured by Christ Jesus: Paul the Apostle writes that “If anyone is in Christ, that person is a new creation.”
Paul’s point is that our lives are radically changed when Jesus takes over our lives… Old things are just that… a thing of the past… our former life is passed away… and look…. Something brand-new is in its place…)
Life in the Church is Transfigured by Christ Jesus: There can be no more “business-as-usual” in the church… “Behold, I make all things new…” the voice of God tells us today… This is reflected in our very relationship with Christ Jesus… Not static… but growing every day… from Glory unto Glory…
We are being called upon to look outwardly instead of inwardly… The Temple was not the focal point of the Christian Community… Acts 2 reports that “Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts.” The fellowship started in corporate worship in the church, but it didn’t end there… It was taken to the streets… to the marketplace… to the place of business… it was taken to the home… Perhaps that is just what God is calling us to do today… Yes, start the process of fellowship right here in the church… Corporate worship is vitally important to the Body of Christ… but it doesn’t end there… Continue the fellowship in each other’s homes… gather together in our homes to Study the Bible… Break bread together… Call a few of our brothers and sisters together… even this afternoon to watch the Patriots trounce the Giants… Call a friend you haven’t talked to in a while and invite that person for coffee… or breakfast…
Challenge for Today: Find a way to show your love for God’s beloved, and find a way to show that love to those gathered around us.
I Bid You Peace...
Pastor Ken+
Focal Point: (v.5) “While he was still speaking, suddenly a bright cloud overshadowed them, and from the cloud a voice said ‘This is my son, the Beloved… with him I am well pleased… listen to him…”
The drama unfolds: Jesus takes his closest associates with him… Peter, James and John go up the mountain with him…
In the Old Testament, Mountains are the places where people encounter the presence of God. Sinai, for instance, is one such mountain, and on that mountain God gave Moses the 10 commandments.
Peter, James and John are eyewitnesses to Jesus’ transformation:
· His face shines like the sun…
· His clothes become white…
· They see Moses and Elijah talking with Jesus.
The Transfiguration of Christ is the first step along the road to the Cross of Calvary… Ash Wednesday may be the first milepost in the Lenten Season, but the Transfiguration is very important to the Message of Lent…
The Transfiguration is important because:
God Glorifies His Son: Peter, James and John are seeing things that challenge their senses… They see their teacher and friend undergoing a change… His face shines like the son… His clothes turn white as snow… They can hardly believe their eyes… suddenly they see Moses and Elijah having a conversation with Jesus… Peter can barely contain himself, he blurts out “Master... this is a great moment… Would it be alright if I were to build three tabernacles here… one for you… one for Moses… one for Elijah???” [Peter reacts the way that we would react… we see God’s hand moving, and we want t commemorate it by setting it in stone…] HERE WE SEE AN EXAMPLE OF GOD DECLARING HIS LOVE FOR HIS SON… God is giving his Son the strength and courage to endure the things that are coming up (Capture – Imprisonment – Trial – Betrayal – Scourging – Crucifixion – Death…)
Our Lives are Transfigured by Christ Jesus: Paul the Apostle writes that “If anyone is in Christ, that person is a new creation.”
Paul’s point is that our lives are radically changed when Jesus takes over our lives… Old things are just that… a thing of the past… our former life is passed away… and look…. Something brand-new is in its place…)
Life in the Church is Transfigured by Christ Jesus: There can be no more “business-as-usual” in the church… “Behold, I make all things new…” the voice of God tells us today… This is reflected in our very relationship with Christ Jesus… Not static… but growing every day… from Glory unto Glory…
We are being called upon to look outwardly instead of inwardly… The Temple was not the focal point of the Christian Community… Acts 2 reports that “Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts.” The fellowship started in corporate worship in the church, but it didn’t end there… It was taken to the streets… to the marketplace… to the place of business… it was taken to the home… Perhaps that is just what God is calling us to do today… Yes, start the process of fellowship right here in the church… Corporate worship is vitally important to the Body of Christ… but it doesn’t end there… Continue the fellowship in each other’s homes… gather together in our homes to Study the Bible… Break bread together… Call a few of our brothers and sisters together… even this afternoon to watch the Patriots trounce the Giants… Call a friend you haven’t talked to in a while and invite that person for coffee… or breakfast…
Challenge for Today: Find a way to show your love for God’s beloved, and find a way to show that love to those gathered around us.
I Bid You Peace...
Pastor Ken+
Monday, January 28, 2008
Following The Light Of The World
S.B.: Matthew 4: 12 -23
A funny thing happened one day during the Beres family annual camping trip to Fisher’s Island when I was 10 years old. We were settling in for the evening, Mom was cooking dinner, and a certain nameless kid was trying to watch his favorite TV show when a thunderstorm knocked out all the electricity on the island. This was not an uncommon occurrence on the island, but each time it was unsettling. Slowly, my mom, dad and I moved through the Fisher’s Island retreat house and we found a flashlight. Click! Light shone in the room and overflowed down the hallway. We looked at each other with some relief. It was going to be alright… we were not in total darkness anymore… there was light!
Next we found the candles and matches… We placed our candles in strategic places, and the darkness was held at bay. Then, we relaxed and waited for the repair trucks from the electric company. Since there was no electricity, we could not watch television, or listen to the radio, or do much of anything that required electricity. So we talked with each other and shared stories. We stayed up late that night, just laughing and being silly… On that night, light cast out all darkness.
Jesus is the light of the world. He is the one that casts out darkness. In his ministry, he cast out darkness as he preached, taught and healed. His light was not kept for a select few… his light was not just for the Jews alone, but for the Gentile as well… and so, just as the light shines on all who are in its glow, so the light of Jesus is for everyone. The light of Jesus could not be restrained or contained, but it overflows, and it touches everyone.
After Jesus hears of John’s arrest, he withdraws to the area of Galilee… This means leaving his hometown of Nazareth and taking up lodging in Capernaum. Yet, he is not often home… Instead, Jesus devotes his time to preaching, teaching, and healing. He is on a mission.
If you take a careful look at the four gospels, you will find that only Matthew’s gospel introduces this change of a hometown from Nazareth to Capernaum, on the Sea of Galilee. This small detail is significant for those who understand the settlement of the twelve tribes of Israel, and the promises that God makes to each of those twelve tribes. The prophet Isaiah says that the people walking in darkness have seen a great light. Matthew’s gospel presents the idea of Jesus being the light of the world, but it is in John’s Gospel where we hear that “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it…” It is also in John’s gospel that we hear the voice of Jesus saying “I am the light of the world… Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life!”
Many of the Old Testament Prophets, and certainly John the Baptist focused on the theme of repenting of our sins… Many times in the Old Testament do we hear the words echoed by John the Baptist… “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!” Jesus not only echoes this prophetic message of repentance, he fulfills the message… The Son of God was declaring that the KINGDOM OF GOD IS AT HAND!!!
Jesus calls us to repent… When Jesus calls on us to repent, he is calling us to do three things… first he calls us to agree with God’s word that says “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God…”. Then he calls us to change our direction… to turn away from those things… from our actions… from our attitudes… from everything that puts a wedge between us and God’s presence in our lives… and take up a new heading… to take up our cross daily and follow HIM!”
Jesus calls us to follow him… When Jesus calls us to follow him, we need to realize that ministry is not intended to be a solo enterprise. The scene of Jesus calling the fisherman into ministry is a familiar one, but Matthew keeps the story to a bare minimum… There is no description in Matthew’s gospel of a bad night of fishing… there is no mention of Jesus’ advice about letting down their nets on the other side of the boat… nor of nets overflowing to the breaking point… Jesus simply calls the disciples and they IMMEDIATELY follow him.
I remember listening to a very captivating speaker during a Lenten program 11 years ago in Southbridge. The preacher was a representative of a ministry which focused on sharing God’s word with seafarers… this organization maintained Chaplains in many ports along the Eastern Seaboard, and as he was sharing about that particular ministry, I felt a tug on my heart as that pastor echoed Jesus’ words “take up your cross and follow me.” During the reception afterward, I gathered up the courage to talk to the gentleman, expressing a deep desire to learn more about that ministry and how I could participate. “I am leaving for the port in a half hour… can you be ready to come with me in half an hour?” I looked at my watch… it read 9 p.m., and I was about to ask for a few more minutes so I could make the trip home to pack a small travel bag…
He smiled, put a hand on my shoulder, and said “I appreciate your willingness to be a part of this ministry, but Jesus’ words are clear… when he called those fishermen, they dropped everything right there, and immediately ran after Jesus… Brothers James and John even left their father to mend the nets…”
At the time, I felt as if I had failed that test, but I was faced with the realization that being a Port Chaplain was not what God wanted me to do… At what point do we as people of faith leave our questions aside and follow the Light of the World, trusting in God to provide the answers? At what point do we take a departure from our comfort zones, from our own intellectual prowess, and follow HIM, trusting in him for our source of supply? At what point do we wake up to the words of Proverbs 3: 5 and 6, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding (the Good News Version tells us to “not rely on what we think we know…”) In all our ways acknowledge him, and he will direct your path.”
Jesus calls two teams of brothers… Peter and Andrew… and then James and John. All of them respond with radical obedience… their response is immediate… and striking…
Would Jesus get that same response from you if he told you to be ready to move out in half an hour? How would you respond to his call?
The theme that runs through the first chapters of Matthew’s gospel is OBEDIENCE. People genuinely desire to please God… people genuinely desire to live in a right relationship with Him, and respond to his call with radical obedience. And, of course, some people do not want light to be cast upon them, because they are comfortable in their own ways. Others are so lost that they are stumbling around in the dark and waiting for somebody to show them the way.
So, where do you stand? The words to “I have decided to follow Jesus” make a declaration of radical obedience. The world behind me, the cross before me… though none go with me, I still will follow… and… will you decide now to follow Jesus?” Making the decision to follow Jesus means following him even though nobody else follows him… embracing the cross when those around you throw rocks at you and give you a hard time. When my mother was a little girl, she and my Aunt Katy would walk home from school, and because they did not attend the local Greek Orthodox Church, or go to the Catechism classes that were being taught in the Alexandroupolis Public Schools, often the other kids in her class would taunt her mercilessly, and throw rocks at mom. Mom and Aunt Katy would often come home bloodied and crying, and my Yiayia and Papou would remind their daughters of the words “the world behind me, the cross before me… no turning back… no turning back.” And my Mom and my Aunt Katy have lived their whole lives in service to almighty God.
What legacy are we going to leave to those who come after us? How are we going to be remembered and talked about by the saints who come after us?
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
A funny thing happened one day during the Beres family annual camping trip to Fisher’s Island when I was 10 years old. We were settling in for the evening, Mom was cooking dinner, and a certain nameless kid was trying to watch his favorite TV show when a thunderstorm knocked out all the electricity on the island. This was not an uncommon occurrence on the island, but each time it was unsettling. Slowly, my mom, dad and I moved through the Fisher’s Island retreat house and we found a flashlight. Click! Light shone in the room and overflowed down the hallway. We looked at each other with some relief. It was going to be alright… we were not in total darkness anymore… there was light!
Next we found the candles and matches… We placed our candles in strategic places, and the darkness was held at bay. Then, we relaxed and waited for the repair trucks from the electric company. Since there was no electricity, we could not watch television, or listen to the radio, or do much of anything that required electricity. So we talked with each other and shared stories. We stayed up late that night, just laughing and being silly… On that night, light cast out all darkness.
Jesus is the light of the world. He is the one that casts out darkness. In his ministry, he cast out darkness as he preached, taught and healed. His light was not kept for a select few… his light was not just for the Jews alone, but for the Gentile as well… and so, just as the light shines on all who are in its glow, so the light of Jesus is for everyone. The light of Jesus could not be restrained or contained, but it overflows, and it touches everyone.
After Jesus hears of John’s arrest, he withdraws to the area of Galilee… This means leaving his hometown of Nazareth and taking up lodging in Capernaum. Yet, he is not often home… Instead, Jesus devotes his time to preaching, teaching, and healing. He is on a mission.
If you take a careful look at the four gospels, you will find that only Matthew’s gospel introduces this change of a hometown from Nazareth to Capernaum, on the Sea of Galilee. This small detail is significant for those who understand the settlement of the twelve tribes of Israel, and the promises that God makes to each of those twelve tribes. The prophet Isaiah says that the people walking in darkness have seen a great light. Matthew’s gospel presents the idea of Jesus being the light of the world, but it is in John’s Gospel where we hear that “The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not overcome it…” It is also in John’s gospel that we hear the voice of Jesus saying “I am the light of the world… Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life!”
Many of the Old Testament Prophets, and certainly John the Baptist focused on the theme of repenting of our sins… Many times in the Old Testament do we hear the words echoed by John the Baptist… “Repent, for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand!” Jesus not only echoes this prophetic message of repentance, he fulfills the message… The Son of God was declaring that the KINGDOM OF GOD IS AT HAND!!!
Jesus calls us to repent… When Jesus calls on us to repent, he is calling us to do three things… first he calls us to agree with God’s word that says “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God…”. Then he calls us to change our direction… to turn away from those things… from our actions… from our attitudes… from everything that puts a wedge between us and God’s presence in our lives… and take up a new heading… to take up our cross daily and follow HIM!”
Jesus calls us to follow him… When Jesus calls us to follow him, we need to realize that ministry is not intended to be a solo enterprise. The scene of Jesus calling the fisherman into ministry is a familiar one, but Matthew keeps the story to a bare minimum… There is no description in Matthew’s gospel of a bad night of fishing… there is no mention of Jesus’ advice about letting down their nets on the other side of the boat… nor of nets overflowing to the breaking point… Jesus simply calls the disciples and they IMMEDIATELY follow him.
I remember listening to a very captivating speaker during a Lenten program 11 years ago in Southbridge. The preacher was a representative of a ministry which focused on sharing God’s word with seafarers… this organization maintained Chaplains in many ports along the Eastern Seaboard, and as he was sharing about that particular ministry, I felt a tug on my heart as that pastor echoed Jesus’ words “take up your cross and follow me.” During the reception afterward, I gathered up the courage to talk to the gentleman, expressing a deep desire to learn more about that ministry and how I could participate. “I am leaving for the port in a half hour… can you be ready to come with me in half an hour?” I looked at my watch… it read 9 p.m., and I was about to ask for a few more minutes so I could make the trip home to pack a small travel bag…
He smiled, put a hand on my shoulder, and said “I appreciate your willingness to be a part of this ministry, but Jesus’ words are clear… when he called those fishermen, they dropped everything right there, and immediately ran after Jesus… Brothers James and John even left their father to mend the nets…”
At the time, I felt as if I had failed that test, but I was faced with the realization that being a Port Chaplain was not what God wanted me to do… At what point do we as people of faith leave our questions aside and follow the Light of the World, trusting in God to provide the answers? At what point do we take a departure from our comfort zones, from our own intellectual prowess, and follow HIM, trusting in him for our source of supply? At what point do we wake up to the words of Proverbs 3: 5 and 6, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding (the Good News Version tells us to “not rely on what we think we know…”) In all our ways acknowledge him, and he will direct your path.”
Jesus calls two teams of brothers… Peter and Andrew… and then James and John. All of them respond with radical obedience… their response is immediate… and striking…
Would Jesus get that same response from you if he told you to be ready to move out in half an hour? How would you respond to his call?
The theme that runs through the first chapters of Matthew’s gospel is OBEDIENCE. People genuinely desire to please God… people genuinely desire to live in a right relationship with Him, and respond to his call with radical obedience. And, of course, some people do not want light to be cast upon them, because they are comfortable in their own ways. Others are so lost that they are stumbling around in the dark and waiting for somebody to show them the way.
So, where do you stand? The words to “I have decided to follow Jesus” make a declaration of radical obedience. The world behind me, the cross before me… though none go with me, I still will follow… and… will you decide now to follow Jesus?” Making the decision to follow Jesus means following him even though nobody else follows him… embracing the cross when those around you throw rocks at you and give you a hard time. When my mother was a little girl, she and my Aunt Katy would walk home from school, and because they did not attend the local Greek Orthodox Church, or go to the Catechism classes that were being taught in the Alexandroupolis Public Schools, often the other kids in her class would taunt her mercilessly, and throw rocks at mom. Mom and Aunt Katy would often come home bloodied and crying, and my Yiayia and Papou would remind their daughters of the words “the world behind me, the cross before me… no turning back… no turning back.” And my Mom and my Aunt Katy have lived their whole lives in service to almighty God.
What legacy are we going to leave to those who come after us? How are we going to be remembered and talked about by the saints who come after us?
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
Saturday, January 19, 2008
Nothing Compares To The Promise...
Romans 8: 28 – 39
What are you passionate about? Webster’s dictionary defines the word “passion” as “intense driving, or overmastering feeling or conviction…” So, what is it that drives you intensely, convicts you, or gives you your deepest emotions?
I can answer that question for myself… I have a hierarchy of passions that drive me, inundate my emotions, and provide a baseline for my conscience… Paul writes that he would rather know nothing else other than Jesus Christ, and him crucified. Paul’s mission in life, from the moment he came face to face with Jesus on the Road to Damascus was to share the Good News of the Gospel of Christ Jesus with everyone, and if you do a study of the Acts of the Apostles, and compare the life of Paul with his writings, you will find that his travels blanketed the known world in his endeavor to Preach Christ to the Nations.
Paul was a changed man. Before his conversion… before he heard the voice of Christ asking him “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me? Why do you kick against the goads?” He was on a mission to eradicate this new movement, and once and for all put an end to this thing called Christianity. This new movement represented change, and as a Pharisee, he was opposed to any and all change, and felt that God was calling him on a search and destroy mission. He had made a name for himself, and when Christians in any given city got the message that Saul of Tarsus was coming to town, that meant that their lives were in danger. Saul of Tarsus left a wake of death and destruction as he went about his mission, persecuting and killing those who worshipped the one called Christ. That was his passion…
Until the day he came face to face with the one who died for him! Not only did Jesus capture his attention, but his life was changed forever. He was even given a new identity shortly after his conversion. But there were those who still doubted. While Saul was still blind, God spoke to a believer named Ananias… telling him to go to Straight Street, and find Saul of Tarsus “for behold, he is praying…” Ananias knew who Saul was… perhaps he even had some friends who had suffered and perished under the tender ministrations of Saul… and naturally, he was hesitant. We are familiar with the rest of this beautiful account, in which Ananias addresses Saul as “Brother Saul”, prays for him, and God restores Saul’s sight.
From that day forward, Saul’s mission… Saul’s passion was to know nothing except Christ, and HIM crucified.
Isn’t that just the way that Jesus works in our lives. There were times in Paul’s life when things weren’t going well. Paul often faced impossible situations, difficult co-workers, family members who didn’t understand why he was doing what he was doing, even church people would often give him a hard time… Paul was faced with challenges every day of his life with Christ Jesus… he was shipwrecked during a storm at sea… he even had a head-to-head argument with Peter… and through all of these trials and tribulations God gave him the grace to dig deep and say “No… In all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life… neither angels nor demons… neither the present nor the future… nor any powers… nor height nor depth… nor anything else in all creation… will be able to separate us from the Love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord!”
Did you catch the word “convinced” here? Paul was persuaded that nothing… absolutely nothing that the world could throw at him… nothing that any fight or squabble could produce… not even death itself… could separate him or unseat him from his relationship with God the Father through Christ Jesus… nothing could make him have a bad day… and nothing could possibly compare to the promise that he knew he had in Christ Jesus!
That’s conviction… that’s a deep level of knowing that something is so real and so true that nothing can possibly shake your belief. A very dear friend and mentor of mine, Dr. Hope Clark, talks about this level of conviction… every so often she will say that God put something into her “knower…” Paul had it in his “knower” that nothing could separate him from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus!”
That’s passion… once Paul was convinced and convicted of his relationship with Christ Jesus and his mission… Paul set out to set the world ablaze with the truth that God so loved the world that he sent his only son… that whosoever believes on him shall not perish, but have everlasting life… Paul’s mission was a global mission… to take this good news to both Jew and Gentile… and he knew that he was not going alone… during his journeys God provided encouragers and traveling companions… Silas, Barnabas, Timothy, and others… and more than that, Paul had the same promise that we have today when Jesus gives us our marching orders… “and surely I am with you always… to the very end of the age.”
Jesus Christ sent Paul out to declare his word… to minister to the body… Paul did not need to wonder or worry where his supply came from… he did not ask “how are we going to pay for this?” He never asked “Where is my next meal going to come from?” He knew that he knew that he knew that Jesus was his source of supply… He declares to us today “I know my God will supply all your needs according to HIS richest in glory by Christ Jesus!”
Earlier this week, as I was preparing for this message, I had to wrestle with the question I asked you at the beginning of this morning’s message. I had to ask myself “Ken, what are you passionate about?”
Certain names and ideas came to my mind, and I wrote them down… I am passionate about my wife and my daughter… my family (my mother and father, as well as my mother-in-law and father-in-law, brother-and-sister-in-law, cousins, aunts, uncles)… the call to ministry… my relationship with Jesus Christ…
Over and above any of these people I have named is one burning passion… one passion that drives me and convicts me more than any other… To know Christ Jesus, and to make him known… He is my King… All hail King Jesus… We have no King but Jesus…
Dr. S.M. Lockridge , onetime pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in San Diego describes the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords in these words:
The Bible says my King is a seven-way king....He's the King of the Jews; that's a racial king....He's the King of Israel; that's a national King....He's the King of Righteousness....He's the King of the Ages.....He's the King of Heaven....He's the King of Glory....He's the King of kings, and He's the Lord of lords. That's my King.
David said, "The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament shows His handiwork. My King is a sovereign King. No means of measure can define His limitless love. No far seeing telescope can bring into visibility the coastline of His shoreless supply. No barrier can hinder Him from pouring out His blessings. He's enduringly strong....He's entirely sincere....He's eternally steadfast....He's immortally graceful....He's imperially powerful....He's impartially merciful....... Do you know Him?
He's the greatest phenomenon that ever crossed the horizon of this world. He's God's Son....He's a sinner's Savior....He's the centerpiece of civilization....He stands in the solitude of Himself....He's august....He's unique....He's unparalleled....He's unprecedented....He's the loftiest idea in literature....He's the highest personality in philosophy....He's the supreme problem in higher criticism....He's the fundamental doctrine of true theology....He's the cardinal necessity for spiritual religion....He's the miracle of the age.... He's the superlative of everything good that you choose to call Him....He's the only one qualified to be an all sufficient Saviour...... I wonder if you know Him today?
He supplies strength for the weak....He's available for the tempted and the tried....He sympathizes and He saves....He strengthens and sustains....He guards and He guides....He heals the sick....He cleanses lepers....He forgives sinners....He discharges debtors....He delivers captives....He defends the feeble....He blesses the young....He serves the unfortunate....He regards the aged....He rewards the diligent....and He beautifies the meek....... I wonder if you know Him?
My King....is the King....He's the key to knowledge....He's the wellspring to wisdom....He's the doorway of deliverance....He's the pathway of peace....He's the roadway of righteousness ....He's the highway of holiness....He's the gateway of glory....... Do you know Him?
Well....His office is manifold....His promise is sure....His light is matchless....His goodness is limitless....His mercy is everlasting....His love never changes....His word is enough....His grace is sufficient....His reign is righteous....and His yoke is easy, and his burden is light. I wish I could describe Him to you, but He's indescribable....He's incomprehensible....He's invincible....He's irresistible.
Well, you can't get Him out of your mind....You can't get Him off of your hand....You can't out live Him, and you can't live without Him....The Pharisees couldn't stand Him, but they found out they couldn't stop Him....Pilate couldn't find any fault in Him....The witnesses couldn't get their testimonies to agree....Herod couldn't kill Him....Death couldn't handle Him, and the grave couldn't hold Him. That's my King.
Father..."Yours is the Kingdom....and the Power....and the Glory....Forever"....and ever, and ever, and ever, and ever. How long is that? And ever...and ever...and when you get through with all the forevers, then.... AMEN!....AMEN!
Nothing compares to the promise that we have in Jesus.
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
What are you passionate about? Webster’s dictionary defines the word “passion” as “intense driving, or overmastering feeling or conviction…” So, what is it that drives you intensely, convicts you, or gives you your deepest emotions?
I can answer that question for myself… I have a hierarchy of passions that drive me, inundate my emotions, and provide a baseline for my conscience… Paul writes that he would rather know nothing else other than Jesus Christ, and him crucified. Paul’s mission in life, from the moment he came face to face with Jesus on the Road to Damascus was to share the Good News of the Gospel of Christ Jesus with everyone, and if you do a study of the Acts of the Apostles, and compare the life of Paul with his writings, you will find that his travels blanketed the known world in his endeavor to Preach Christ to the Nations.
Paul was a changed man. Before his conversion… before he heard the voice of Christ asking him “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me? Why do you kick against the goads?” He was on a mission to eradicate this new movement, and once and for all put an end to this thing called Christianity. This new movement represented change, and as a Pharisee, he was opposed to any and all change, and felt that God was calling him on a search and destroy mission. He had made a name for himself, and when Christians in any given city got the message that Saul of Tarsus was coming to town, that meant that their lives were in danger. Saul of Tarsus left a wake of death and destruction as he went about his mission, persecuting and killing those who worshipped the one called Christ. That was his passion…
Until the day he came face to face with the one who died for him! Not only did Jesus capture his attention, but his life was changed forever. He was even given a new identity shortly after his conversion. But there were those who still doubted. While Saul was still blind, God spoke to a believer named Ananias… telling him to go to Straight Street, and find Saul of Tarsus “for behold, he is praying…” Ananias knew who Saul was… perhaps he even had some friends who had suffered and perished under the tender ministrations of Saul… and naturally, he was hesitant. We are familiar with the rest of this beautiful account, in which Ananias addresses Saul as “Brother Saul”, prays for him, and God restores Saul’s sight.
From that day forward, Saul’s mission… Saul’s passion was to know nothing except Christ, and HIM crucified.
Isn’t that just the way that Jesus works in our lives. There were times in Paul’s life when things weren’t going well. Paul often faced impossible situations, difficult co-workers, family members who didn’t understand why he was doing what he was doing, even church people would often give him a hard time… Paul was faced with challenges every day of his life with Christ Jesus… he was shipwrecked during a storm at sea… he even had a head-to-head argument with Peter… and through all of these trials and tribulations God gave him the grace to dig deep and say “No… In all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life… neither angels nor demons… neither the present nor the future… nor any powers… nor height nor depth… nor anything else in all creation… will be able to separate us from the Love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord!”
Did you catch the word “convinced” here? Paul was persuaded that nothing… absolutely nothing that the world could throw at him… nothing that any fight or squabble could produce… not even death itself… could separate him or unseat him from his relationship with God the Father through Christ Jesus… nothing could make him have a bad day… and nothing could possibly compare to the promise that he knew he had in Christ Jesus!
That’s conviction… that’s a deep level of knowing that something is so real and so true that nothing can possibly shake your belief. A very dear friend and mentor of mine, Dr. Hope Clark, talks about this level of conviction… every so often she will say that God put something into her “knower…” Paul had it in his “knower” that nothing could separate him from the Love of God which is in Christ Jesus!”
That’s passion… once Paul was convinced and convicted of his relationship with Christ Jesus and his mission… Paul set out to set the world ablaze with the truth that God so loved the world that he sent his only son… that whosoever believes on him shall not perish, but have everlasting life… Paul’s mission was a global mission… to take this good news to both Jew and Gentile… and he knew that he was not going alone… during his journeys God provided encouragers and traveling companions… Silas, Barnabas, Timothy, and others… and more than that, Paul had the same promise that we have today when Jesus gives us our marching orders… “and surely I am with you always… to the very end of the age.”
Jesus Christ sent Paul out to declare his word… to minister to the body… Paul did not need to wonder or worry where his supply came from… he did not ask “how are we going to pay for this?” He never asked “Where is my next meal going to come from?” He knew that he knew that he knew that Jesus was his source of supply… He declares to us today “I know my God will supply all your needs according to HIS richest in glory by Christ Jesus!”
Earlier this week, as I was preparing for this message, I had to wrestle with the question I asked you at the beginning of this morning’s message. I had to ask myself “Ken, what are you passionate about?”
Certain names and ideas came to my mind, and I wrote them down… I am passionate about my wife and my daughter… my family (my mother and father, as well as my mother-in-law and father-in-law, brother-and-sister-in-law, cousins, aunts, uncles)… the call to ministry… my relationship with Jesus Christ…
Over and above any of these people I have named is one burning passion… one passion that drives me and convicts me more than any other… To know Christ Jesus, and to make him known… He is my King… All hail King Jesus… We have no King but Jesus…
Dr. S.M. Lockridge , onetime pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in San Diego describes the King of Kings and the Lord of Lords in these words:
The Bible says my King is a seven-way king....He's the King of the Jews; that's a racial king....He's the King of Israel; that's a national King....He's the King of Righteousness....He's the King of the Ages.....He's the King of Heaven....He's the King of Glory....He's the King of kings, and He's the Lord of lords. That's my King.
David said, "The Heavens declare the glory of God and the firmament shows His handiwork. My King is a sovereign King. No means of measure can define His limitless love. No far seeing telescope can bring into visibility the coastline of His shoreless supply. No barrier can hinder Him from pouring out His blessings. He's enduringly strong....He's entirely sincere....He's eternally steadfast....He's immortally graceful....He's imperially powerful....He's impartially merciful....... Do you know Him?
He's the greatest phenomenon that ever crossed the horizon of this world. He's God's Son....He's a sinner's Savior....He's the centerpiece of civilization....He stands in the solitude of Himself....He's august....He's unique....He's unparalleled....He's unprecedented....He's the loftiest idea in literature....He's the highest personality in philosophy....He's the supreme problem in higher criticism....He's the fundamental doctrine of true theology....He's the cardinal necessity for spiritual religion....He's the miracle of the age.... He's the superlative of everything good that you choose to call Him....He's the only one qualified to be an all sufficient Saviour...... I wonder if you know Him today?
He supplies strength for the weak....He's available for the tempted and the tried....He sympathizes and He saves....He strengthens and sustains....He guards and He guides....He heals the sick....He cleanses lepers....He forgives sinners....He discharges debtors....He delivers captives....He defends the feeble....He blesses the young....He serves the unfortunate....He regards the aged....He rewards the diligent....and He beautifies the meek....... I wonder if you know Him?
My King....is the King....He's the key to knowledge....He's the wellspring to wisdom....He's the doorway of deliverance....He's the pathway of peace....He's the roadway of righteousness ....He's the highway of holiness....He's the gateway of glory....... Do you know Him?
Well....His office is manifold....His promise is sure....His light is matchless....His goodness is limitless....His mercy is everlasting....His love never changes....His word is enough....His grace is sufficient....His reign is righteous....and His yoke is easy, and his burden is light. I wish I could describe Him to you, but He's indescribable....He's incomprehensible....He's invincible....He's irresistible.
Well, you can't get Him out of your mind....You can't get Him off of your hand....You can't out live Him, and you can't live without Him....The Pharisees couldn't stand Him, but they found out they couldn't stop Him....Pilate couldn't find any fault in Him....The witnesses couldn't get their testimonies to agree....Herod couldn't kill Him....Death couldn't handle Him, and the grave couldn't hold Him. That's my King.
Father..."Yours is the Kingdom....and the Power....and the Glory....Forever"....and ever, and ever, and ever, and ever. How long is that? And ever...and ever...and when you get through with all the forevers, then.... AMEN!....AMEN!
Nothing compares to the promise that we have in Jesus.
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
Sunday, November 25, 2007
In The Stillness...
S.B.: Psalm 46: 1 – 11
It’s a bit hard to believe, but the busiest part of the year has just exploded on the scene. This past Thursday we gathered around the table with family and friends, gave thanks to God for the many blessings and lessons that he has given us this past year… the Bible does say to give thanks in all things… and then we enjoyed a sumptuous meal that was lovingly prepared and served… after the main course we enjoyed enough pumpkin pie to float the Mayflower… then we prepared the leftovers of this meal… turkey sandwiches… turkey salad… And just when the tryptophan was beginning to wear off… BAM! We are plunged headlong into the yearly commercial feeding frenzy that lasts until the first week of January.
If you want to get an idea of who is important in our lives, take a look at our Christmas lists. Here’s a “WHAT IF” for you… What if we were to put Jesus at the top of our Christmas list… not the end. After all, it is his birthday, and it is a month-long celebration. Could we spend even an hour a week with him?
It’s only 30 Days, 6 Hours, 10 minutes and 22 seconds worth of shopping until Christmas (but who’s counting…) Did you see the reports on Channel 10 News yesterday morning about the mob scenes during the early morning rush to get that latest electronic gadget, XYZBox, kitchen gizmo or football-watching accessory that your cousin Nell just has to have, or Christmas just won’t be the same? Some of the news footage showed people crammed against the front door of the mall, and a line stretching around the corner at quarter-of-six in the morning, waiting for the cattle call, and it’s a miracle that there were no people getting trampled in the stampede for stocking stuffers, yet people will drag their feet, and complain that 9:30 in the morning is too early to go to the house of God.
The Psalm of the Shopper
My soul follows hard after deep discounts…
Early in the morning will I rise up and go shopping…
And because thou hast been “buy-one-get-one”
Under the shadow of my credit card bill will I rejoice.
Yet, please hear the words of King David… I WAS GLAD WHEN THEY SAID TO ME “LET US GO TO THE HOUSE OF THE LORD…” This declaration from King David gives an interesting word picture… King David would often run to the temple to worship God with the same energy and religious fervor with which many people flocked to the malls this past Friday morning. “I WAS GLAD WHEN THEY SAID TO ME ‘LET US GO SHOPPING!!!”
My point for this morning is simply this: Christmas is a month away, and we are in the downhill run of our annual shopping mad-dash. Most of us have well-developed lists of gifts to buy, and will attack that list with military precision, you will leave the house extra early so you can swing by a store (or two or three) on your way to work, and will stop by the shopping mall on your way home to pick up an extra stocking stuffer or three… What would happen if we went to God’s house with the same religious zeal in which we check the malls for stocking stuffers? Could you imagine rising up extra early to worship God… Isaiah writes “my soul longs after thee, EARLY IN THE MORNING WILL I RISE UP AND SEEK THEE…”
Add God’s name to your Christmas list, and the gift that he wants from you is the same gift that the important people in our lives want from us… a little quality time with him.
I Bid You Peace...
Pastor Ken+
It’s a bit hard to believe, but the busiest part of the year has just exploded on the scene. This past Thursday we gathered around the table with family and friends, gave thanks to God for the many blessings and lessons that he has given us this past year… the Bible does say to give thanks in all things… and then we enjoyed a sumptuous meal that was lovingly prepared and served… after the main course we enjoyed enough pumpkin pie to float the Mayflower… then we prepared the leftovers of this meal… turkey sandwiches… turkey salad… And just when the tryptophan was beginning to wear off… BAM! We are plunged headlong into the yearly commercial feeding frenzy that lasts until the first week of January.
If you want to get an idea of who is important in our lives, take a look at our Christmas lists. Here’s a “WHAT IF” for you… What if we were to put Jesus at the top of our Christmas list… not the end. After all, it is his birthday, and it is a month-long celebration. Could we spend even an hour a week with him?
It’s only 30 Days, 6 Hours, 10 minutes and 22 seconds worth of shopping until Christmas (but who’s counting…) Did you see the reports on Channel 10 News yesterday morning about the mob scenes during the early morning rush to get that latest electronic gadget, XYZBox, kitchen gizmo or football-watching accessory that your cousin Nell just has to have, or Christmas just won’t be the same? Some of the news footage showed people crammed against the front door of the mall, and a line stretching around the corner at quarter-of-six in the morning, waiting for the cattle call, and it’s a miracle that there were no people getting trampled in the stampede for stocking stuffers, yet people will drag their feet, and complain that 9:30 in the morning is too early to go to the house of God.
The Psalm of the Shopper
My soul follows hard after deep discounts…
Early in the morning will I rise up and go shopping…
And because thou hast been “buy-one-get-one”
Under the shadow of my credit card bill will I rejoice.
Yet, please hear the words of King David… I WAS GLAD WHEN THEY SAID TO ME “LET US GO TO THE HOUSE OF THE LORD…” This declaration from King David gives an interesting word picture… King David would often run to the temple to worship God with the same energy and religious fervor with which many people flocked to the malls this past Friday morning. “I WAS GLAD WHEN THEY SAID TO ME ‘LET US GO SHOPPING!!!”
My point for this morning is simply this: Christmas is a month away, and we are in the downhill run of our annual shopping mad-dash. Most of us have well-developed lists of gifts to buy, and will attack that list with military precision, you will leave the house extra early so you can swing by a store (or two or three) on your way to work, and will stop by the shopping mall on your way home to pick up an extra stocking stuffer or three… What would happen if we went to God’s house with the same religious zeal in which we check the malls for stocking stuffers? Could you imagine rising up extra early to worship God… Isaiah writes “my soul longs after thee, EARLY IN THE MORNING WILL I RISE UP AND SEEK THEE…”
Add God’s name to your Christmas list, and the gift that he wants from you is the same gift that the important people in our lives want from us… a little quality time with him.
I Bid You Peace...
Pastor Ken+
Attitude Adjustment
S.B. Psalm 33: 1 – 11
What a wonderful promise we have from our text this morning… Verse 4 proclaims that “the word of the Lord is right and true, He is faithful in all he does!” We sing wonderful hymns of faith which declare how great is God’s faithfulness, and remind one another of the fact that the way that God provides for us is over and above anything that we can possibly imagine.
One fine day last year, Amanda came home from school and asked us if we wanted to hear a new song that she had just learned… (Of course we would…) And she started singing “The B-I-B-L-E… Yes, that’s the book for me… I stand alone on the word of God… the B-I-B-L-E… Bible!” That day she also learned a new Bible Memory Verse which she has used several times since then… Psalm 56:3 which says “What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee…” I had to remind both of us this last week when I was standing on the side of Swanzey Lake in New Hampshire, talking to Amanda who was being taken to Children’s Hospital… and we said it together on the phone several times that afternoon “what time I am afraid, I will trust in thee…”
Change is inevitable… It is scary… change means facing the unknown and stepping out of familiar routines and comfort… it means risk… and it means potential failure… When all else fails you, you can trust in God’s word… and HE never breaks his promises. (He doesn’t… WE do, frequently.) And his promises are new every morning… and every morning He reminds us of his promises.
The Pilgrims faced an uneasy future as they embarked on their journey to the new world…
Verse six declares “by the word of the Lord, were the heavens made… their starry host by the breath of his mouth.”
The Hebrew word that the psalmist is using in this text is the word “ruach” which translates roughly as “breath” or “wind.” The word “ruach” can also be translated as “spirit.” The implication of this verse is that the Breath of God is the activity of the Holy Spirit. When we sing “Breathe on Me, Breath of God” we are asking “Breathe on me… move on me… or move through me… Holy Spirit.
Agreement is powerful… The union of two people is a powerful force… The union of a man with a woman in marriage has the potential of creating a new family unit… it is powerful enough to create a legacy… it has the potential to create children to fulfill that legacy. The union of one man plus one woman united in marriage releases God’s creative power.
In like fashion, the union of God’s word plus the Holy Spirit always releases God’s creative power. What can the power of God’s word, united with the power of the Holy Spirit do when we stand on faith?
Let’s take a look at John 1… The word was in the beginning… the word was with God… the word IS God… He made everything… life and light were in him… In Genesis 1 we also see that the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the water… If I were to put this into a mathematical equation, it might be expressed in the following manner:
The word of God + the Spirit of God = Creation
Verse 11 reminds us “But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations.”
Every day we make plans… every day we consult our dayrunners and palm pilots to see where we need to be, and what we are going to do when we get there.
God’s plan was for the glory of the Lord to be restored to the church, the Body of Christ. God’s plan was for the intimate relationship that God had with us in the Garden of Eden to be restored… That is why:
He raised up Moses and Joshua (Yeshua) to lead his people out of captivity…
He sent Noah to rescue his people from the flood…
He sent Gideon to demonstrate the need for us to depend on him and follow his direction…
He sent his son, Jesus (Yeshua ha’Meshiach) to lead his people out of darkness and into his marvelous light… to restore HIS glory to the church.
The glory that is in the church is not in the church suppers of the past, but in eager anticipation of the marriage supper of the Lamb!
The attitudes that are prevalent in the church today need to fade away as we focus on what is important… as we focus on the cross instead of the things of the world… I would offer you four thoughts…
A.) There are things which are really important…
B.) There are things which we think are really important, but which in reality are not.
C.) There are things which we think are really not important, but which in reality are very important.
D.) There are things which are NOT important.
The Pilgrim fathers had to make a decision. Was it
more important for them to live in an oppressive society which was imposing very strict laws upon the way the people worshipped God, or was it more important for them to worship God the Father in Spirit and in truth? They made their choice… they stepped out on faith into an unknown future, but a future which was redolent with the powerful combination of the Word of God combined with the Holy Spirit and gave birth to a promise… and a nation.
This morning, after church, we are going to be gathering together to partake of a sumptuous thanksgiving dinner. The Women’s Fellowship and many other volunteers have worked diligently to put this feast together, and it will take its place among the memorable feasts that we have enjoyed here, and will continue to enjoy here for many years until Christ’s return… We will be enjoying turkey, ham, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce (my favorite…) a plethora of pies, and I am getting hungry just thinking about what is in store for us… perhaps you can smell some of the aromas wafting up here into the sanctuary… And yet there is one thing which is being served up even as we speak, which is more savory than the turkey and ham, more delicious than the mashed potatoes and cranberry… and sweeter by far than the sweetest desert… the fellowship which we have with each other under the banner of the Love of God in Christ Jesus. Dinner’s on the table… Taste and see how sweet in the Lord.
P.S. Prayer:
Our Father in Heaven, we honor all nations and their peoples. This is the season of togetherness, to live side by side in peace and harmony with our brothers and sisters… your children. Show us the wisdom of your ways so we can lead others in faith. We are forever your children and look to you for guidance. We pray to you in the name of your holy son, Jesus Christ…
Amen
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
What a wonderful promise we have from our text this morning… Verse 4 proclaims that “the word of the Lord is right and true, He is faithful in all he does!” We sing wonderful hymns of faith which declare how great is God’s faithfulness, and remind one another of the fact that the way that God provides for us is over and above anything that we can possibly imagine.
One fine day last year, Amanda came home from school and asked us if we wanted to hear a new song that she had just learned… (Of course we would…) And she started singing “The B-I-B-L-E… Yes, that’s the book for me… I stand alone on the word of God… the B-I-B-L-E… Bible!” That day she also learned a new Bible Memory Verse which she has used several times since then… Psalm 56:3 which says “What time I am afraid, I will trust in thee…” I had to remind both of us this last week when I was standing on the side of Swanzey Lake in New Hampshire, talking to Amanda who was being taken to Children’s Hospital… and we said it together on the phone several times that afternoon “what time I am afraid, I will trust in thee…”
Change is inevitable… It is scary… change means facing the unknown and stepping out of familiar routines and comfort… it means risk… and it means potential failure… When all else fails you, you can trust in God’s word… and HE never breaks his promises. (He doesn’t… WE do, frequently.) And his promises are new every morning… and every morning He reminds us of his promises.
The Pilgrims faced an uneasy future as they embarked on their journey to the new world…
Verse six declares “by the word of the Lord, were the heavens made… their starry host by the breath of his mouth.”
The Hebrew word that the psalmist is using in this text is the word “ruach” which translates roughly as “breath” or “wind.” The word “ruach” can also be translated as “spirit.” The implication of this verse is that the Breath of God is the activity of the Holy Spirit. When we sing “Breathe on Me, Breath of God” we are asking “Breathe on me… move on me… or move through me… Holy Spirit.
Agreement is powerful… The union of two people is a powerful force… The union of a man with a woman in marriage has the potential of creating a new family unit… it is powerful enough to create a legacy… it has the potential to create children to fulfill that legacy. The union of one man plus one woman united in marriage releases God’s creative power.
In like fashion, the union of God’s word plus the Holy Spirit always releases God’s creative power. What can the power of God’s word, united with the power of the Holy Spirit do when we stand on faith?
Let’s take a look at John 1… The word was in the beginning… the word was with God… the word IS God… He made everything… life and light were in him… In Genesis 1 we also see that the Spirit of God was hovering over the face of the water… If I were to put this into a mathematical equation, it might be expressed in the following manner:
The word of God + the Spirit of God = Creation
Verse 11 reminds us “But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations.”
Every day we make plans… every day we consult our dayrunners and palm pilots to see where we need to be, and what we are going to do when we get there.
God’s plan was for the glory of the Lord to be restored to the church, the Body of Christ. God’s plan was for the intimate relationship that God had with us in the Garden of Eden to be restored… That is why:
He raised up Moses and Joshua (Yeshua) to lead his people out of captivity…
He sent Noah to rescue his people from the flood…
He sent Gideon to demonstrate the need for us to depend on him and follow his direction…
He sent his son, Jesus (Yeshua ha’Meshiach) to lead his people out of darkness and into his marvelous light… to restore HIS glory to the church.
The glory that is in the church is not in the church suppers of the past, but in eager anticipation of the marriage supper of the Lamb!
The attitudes that are prevalent in the church today need to fade away as we focus on what is important… as we focus on the cross instead of the things of the world… I would offer you four thoughts…
A.) There are things which are really important…
B.) There are things which we think are really important, but which in reality are not.
C.) There are things which we think are really not important, but which in reality are very important.
D.) There are things which are NOT important.
The Pilgrim fathers had to make a decision. Was it
more important for them to live in an oppressive society which was imposing very strict laws upon the way the people worshipped God, or was it more important for them to worship God the Father in Spirit and in truth? They made their choice… they stepped out on faith into an unknown future, but a future which was redolent with the powerful combination of the Word of God combined with the Holy Spirit and gave birth to a promise… and a nation.
This morning, after church, we are going to be gathering together to partake of a sumptuous thanksgiving dinner. The Women’s Fellowship and many other volunteers have worked diligently to put this feast together, and it will take its place among the memorable feasts that we have enjoyed here, and will continue to enjoy here for many years until Christ’s return… We will be enjoying turkey, ham, mashed potatoes, cranberry sauce (my favorite…) a plethora of pies, and I am getting hungry just thinking about what is in store for us… perhaps you can smell some of the aromas wafting up here into the sanctuary… And yet there is one thing which is being served up even as we speak, which is more savory than the turkey and ham, more delicious than the mashed potatoes and cranberry… and sweeter by far than the sweetest desert… the fellowship which we have with each other under the banner of the Love of God in Christ Jesus. Dinner’s on the table… Taste and see how sweet in the Lord.
P.S. Prayer:
Our Father in Heaven, we honor all nations and their peoples. This is the season of togetherness, to live side by side in peace and harmony with our brothers and sisters… your children. Show us the wisdom of your ways so we can lead others in faith. We are forever your children and look to you for guidance. We pray to you in the name of your holy son, Jesus Christ…
Amen
I Bid You Peace,
Pastor Ken+
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