I
pray this finds you all resting in the joy and peace of the Lord.
That really is what Christmas should be about, isn't it? Instead we
find ourselves exhausted and worn as we hustle from party to party
and scurry from store to store. We do this in preparation to
celebrate the birth of one who was born in a stable, spent his
childhood on the lam, apprenticed as a carpenter, was homeless in
his prime and was buried in a borrowed tomb. Seems crazy, doesn't it?
Well, we also do it because he was born of a virgin, lived a sinless
life, died a substitutionary death as an atonement for sins, was
raised from the grave, sits at the right hand of God, and will return
to judge the living and the dead and to take the church as His bride.
Still seems crazy, right? Yet we do it, and fight for the right to
call it Christmas, because we are in, but not of the world. We do it
both because of our cultural Christianity and we are Christians in a
pagan culture. It still seems strange that we run past a holiday
called Thanksgiving to get to the business of Christmas consumerism
as a means of celebrating the birth of an impoverished, crucified
man, who reigns as the eternal King of a spiritual kingdom. Oh well,
peace on earth, good will to men. I pray we will all find a place
beyond the noise to be still and know that He is God.
Reid is the President of Legacy Ministries, and author of Legacy Leadership: Principles for Leaving a Spiritual Legacy. He serves as Pastor of Family and Student Ministries at Morningview Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama. Reid has a passion for discipleship and family ministry. Reid and his wife, Rayanne, have four children: Trinity, Elijah, Zachariah and Aaron.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Family: A Theological Crisis
I wanted to pass along an article published yesterday How Did This Happen? The Family Crisis as a Theological Crisis by Albert Mohler. It is a great look at how our the theology of family can contribute to the current family crisis in our culture, or how it can defend the family form this crisis. He does so by looking at four main theological facts about the family, and how they relate to the current crisis. I pray it is clarifying, encouraging and challenging.
Friday, November 9, 2012
Division of Worldviews
We were confronted with
the undeniable reality this week. What we learned on Wednesday
morning is more important than who the next president will be. It was
something many of us had already suspected, that the culture we live
in has changed. One article pointed out, “The changing U.S.
electorate split in two Tuesday, not only along lines of political
party and ideology but also by race and ethnicity, gender and marital
status, region and religion, education and age.” The divisions are
even sharper than they were four years ago. Republican pollster Whit
Ayres says, "We have never had a more polarized electorate."1
Dr. Mohler noted that “millions of Americans went to the polls and
voted according to a contrary worldview." What does that mean
for us as believing families? He goes on to say, "I think this
was an evangelical disaster." He is right, and says “there's a
danger that evangelicals won't see this larger lesson.” Mohler
points out, “The popular vote reveals a deeply divided nation. The
nation is divided politically, but that divide points to a division
at the level of worldview.”2
He illustrates the
point in an article published November 7, “The 2012 election makes
clear that Americans are divided over fundamental questions.
Americans are divided into camps that define and see the world in
fundamentally different terms. The election did not cause this
division, it merely revealed it. This deep division at the level of
worldview is an even greater challenge for the church. The electorate
is becoming more secular. Recent studies have indicated that the
single greatest predictor of voting patterns is the frequency of
church attendance.” 79% of those voting for Romney attend
religious service as much as once a week, while 60% of those voting
for Obama never attend any religious service. “Far fewer Americans
now attend church, and a recent study indicated that fully 20% of all
Americans identify with no religious preference at all. The
secularizing of the electorate will have monumental consequences.”3
Clearly, we face a new
moral landscape in America, and a worldview challenge that is far
greater than any political challenge. Christians must never see
political action as an end, but only as a means. Our main concern is
the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This is, however, an urgent call to
action. Maybe Jimmy Scroggins, Senior Pastor of The First Baptist
Church of West Palm Beach, tweeted it best, “This election ought to
force evangelicals to change identities. Abandon 'moral majority'
mindset & embrace living as 'missional minority.'”
The culture we live in
is different, and now we know it. We ought to be raising our children
according to this mindset, and training them to live in a throughly
secular humanist culture. As I have already said this week, even
though we are not the stumbling block, the culture will stumble over
the gospel. When the culture stumbles over the gospel and is lost in
the confusion of their own sinfulness, and we are faithful to
confront the confusion and lostness with the truth of the gospel, in
love, then we will receive persecution. It will come, and we
must be prepared to receive it as a blessing from God. We must see it
as a confirmation of our righteousness in Christ; that we are being
held up by God, like Job before Satan, and sifted out like Peter. We
must see that God has used it throughout history to strengthen His
people and expand His kingdom; from Noah to Abraham, to the nation of
Israel, to Christ himself, to the Church. When we have no other hope
for rescue, and nothing else in which to trust, it causes us to look
more to Christ and to rely on Him, for He is all we have. And, it is
the remnant who trust in Christ that God always uses as a means to
deliver his people and to draw a lost and dying world to himself. I
have found that I, almost strangely, am already looking more to
Christ. This has been the effect throughout history, and today I
understand anew.
1http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2012/11/07/analysis-nation-moves-further-apart/1688031/
2http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2012/11/08/164711265/for-religious-conservatives-election-was-a-disaster
3http://www.albertmohler.com/2012/11/07/aftermath-lessons-from-the-2012-election/
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Let There Be Thanksgiving
We have entered into my
favorite month, probably because the cool weather always reminds me
of the beginning of basketball season and Thanksgiving is my favorite
holiday. One of the first things that come to mind when I think of
thanksgiving is Ephesians 5:4, Let there be no filthiness nor
foolish talk nor crude joking, which are out of place, but instead
let there be thanksgiving. Thanksgiving should be the leaning of
our soul, attitude of our heart, and fruit of our mouth. There is a
definite and consistent relationship throughout scripture between the
heart and the mouth. That relationship is best summarized, I think,
in Luke 6:45, The good person out of the good treasure of his
heart produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure
produces evil, for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth
speaks.Therefore, the opposite
is true, an evil or undisciplined tongue is an indicator of a wicked
attitude of heart, and a sinful leaning of the soul.
Mark
Ross says, “Scriptural warnings about the control of our tongues
are many and urgent. Yet for all their importance, they are too often
disregarded by otherwise sincere and devoted Christians.”1
One example of how this ought to apply to our lives is how we speak
in a judgmental way toward one another. Matthew 7:1-2 tells us that
Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you
pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be
measured to you.This is not a
command to not judge, it is a command to judge according to the
measure, or standard, by which you wish to be judged. It is judgment
according to the golden rule. Matthew 7:12 sums up the whole law and
prophets by this “ethic of reciprocity,” So whatever
you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is
the Law and the Prophets. Jesus
does this because there are only two measures by which we can be
judged; the measure of grace according to Christ's righteousness, or
the measure of works according to Christ righteousness. As
Ross explains, “One would think that such a warning would encourage
us toward the most generous view of others that could be taken.”
However, this is often not the case. We want grace for ourselves, and
judgement for others. “Even within the church, we adopt the
patterns of the world and allow our speech toward one another to be
corrupted.”2
This
is why it is such a serious matter when students speak in a
judgmental or hateful way toward one another, or when they are
disrespectful to their parents. Or when parents provoke your
children to anger, or model
judgmental behavior toward one another. Matthew 5:21-22 has made
clear, You have heard that it was said to those of old,
‘You shall not murder; and whoever murders will be liable to
judgment.’ But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his
brother will be liable to judgment; whoever insults his brother will
be liable to the council; and whoever says, ‘You fool!’ will be
liable to the hell of fire. With
this kind of warning, I find it hard to believe that we take such
chances with our speech. James 1:26 gets to the point, If
anyone thinks he is religious and does not bridle his tongue but
deceives his heart, this person's religion is worthless.
He goes on to develop the point in James 3:3-10, comparing the tongue
to a bit in a horses mouth and the rudder of a ship, So
also the tongue is a small member, yet it boasts of great things. How
great a forest is set ablaze by such a small fire! And the tongue is
a fire, a world of unrighteousness. The tongue is set among our
members, staining the whole body, setting on fire the entire course
of life, and set on fire by hell. For every kind of beast and bird,
of reptile and sea creature, can be tamed and has been tamed by
mankind, but no human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless
evil, full of deadly poison. With it we bless our Lord and Father,
and with it we curse people who are made in the likeness of God. From
the same mouth come blessing and cursing. My brothers, these things
ought not to be so.
Ross
concludes, “Bridling our tongue will require a change in our hearts
as well s an effort to sift what comes out of our mouths.” That is
why law and command can not control our tongue. “It is love that
proves most effective: love for our neighbor, love for our enemies,
love for the household of God especially.” I would add that a love
for God is foundational because it supposes that by grace He has
first loved us. “Then our words will be pleasing in the sight of
our great God and Savior.”3
1Ross,
Mark E., Guarding Our Speech, Tabletalk; October 2012,
Page 62.
2Ibid,
62.
3Ibid,
63.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
Monday, October 29, 2012
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Friday, October 26, 2012
Cultural Fascination with Evil
This
time of year, I am always surprised at the lack of seriousness with
which we generally take the occult. It is concerning to me how many
of our students are entertained by the dark side of our culture. Dr.
Mohler, in an article called Christianity and the Dark Side: What
About Halloween?1
that he has publish at least three times in the past ten years,
places Halloween at the center of a “cultural fascination with evil
and the demonic.” He says, “Over a hundred years ago, the great
Dutch theologian Hermann Bavinck predicted that the 20th century
would 'witness a gigantic conflict of spirits.' His prediction turned
out to be an understatement, and this great conflict continues into
the 21st century. The issue of Halloween presses itself annually upon
the Christian conscience. Acutely aware of dangers new and old, many
Christian parents choose to withdraw their children from the holiday
altogether. Others choose to follow a strategic battle plan for
engagement with the holiday. Still others have gone further, seeking
to convert Halloween into an evangelistic opportunity.”
Is
Halloween really that significant? Mohler answers, “Well, Halloween
is a big deal in the marketplace. Halloween is surpassed only by
Christmas in terms of economic activity.” He sites cultural experts
who view “a celebration of Halloween as a transgressive holiday
that allows the bizarre and elements from the dark side to enter the
mainstream,” and study it by “looking at the cultural impact of
Halloween on the rise of horror movies and the nation’s fascination
with violence.” After a review of the origins of Halloween and the
Christian response throughout history, he notes, “This fascination
with the occult comes as America has been sliding into post-Christian
secularism. While the courts remove all theistic references from
America’s public square, the void is being filled with a pervasive
fascination with evil, paganism, and new forms of occultism.”
Dr. Mohler
presents the various ways that the church has dealt with this
phenomenon in recent years, acknowledging that some Christians,
“argue that the pagan roots of Halloween are no more significant
than the pagan origins of Christmas and other church festivals.” He
concludes, “the issue is a bit more complicated than that. While
affirming that make-believe and imagination are part and parcel of
God’s gift of imagination, Christians should still be very
concerned about the focus of that imagination and creativity. Arguing
against Halloween is not equivalent to arguing against Christmas. The
old church festival of 'All Hallow’s Eve' is by no means as
universally understood among Christians as the celebration of the
incarnation at Christmas.”
Dr.
Mohler says, “Christian parents should make careful decisions based
on a biblically-informed Christian conscience. Some Halloween
practices are clearly out of bounds, others may be strategically
transformed, but this takes hard work and may meet with mixed
success. The coming of Halloween is a good time for Christians to
remember that evil spirits are real and that the Devil will seize
every opportunity to trumpet his own celebrity. Perhaps the best
response to the Devil at Halloween is that offered by Martin Luther,
the great Reformer: 'The best way to drive out the devil, if he will
not yield to texts of Scripture, is to jeer and flout him for he
cannot bear scorn.' On October 31, 1517, Martin Luther began the
Reformation with a declaration that the church must be recalled to
the authority of God’s Word and the purity of biblical doctrine.
With this in mind, the best Christian response to Halloween might be
to scorn the Devil and then pray for the Reformation of Christ’s
church on earth. Let’s put the dark side on the defensive.”
By
God's providence, we talked about some of this in FUEL Wednesday
night, in the context of Acts 19:11-20. I have included some notes
below. I pray it will provide a good context for a family discussion
on the topic.
When
Paul came to Ephesus on his second missionary journey he left Aquila
and Priscilla in Ephesus to establish the infant church there until
his promised return. While Paul is away, God raised up a new
generation of church leader, in the person of Apollos, to take Paul's
place in Corinth. We saw that while Apollos was competent
and eloquent, he was deficient in at least one way. Apollos knew only
the baptism of John, and was not teaching people about the person and
work of the Spirit of God.
When
Paul arrived back in Ephesus, on the heels of Apollos' ministry, he
had to correct the people, and teach them about the Spirit of God. We
will see that meant correcting misunderstandings about the
spiritual realm, misuse of spiritual authority, and rooting out evil.
Paul worked many miracles at Ephesus, as previously in Acts, opening
the door for hearing the gospel and giving confirmation that God
himself was working through Paul and his message. However, he
encountered others who pursued a false way of working “miracles,”
including some Jewish exorcists and those who practiced cultic faith
in magical spells. Now this is a sensitive subject, as we have to
find a balance and respect regarding the Holy Spirit and the
spiritual realm.
The
Power of God (11-12)
God
was doing this. We are not told that Paul did these unusual miracles,
but that God worked them by the hands of Paul. Luke states that these
were unusual miracles, and gives an example; Paul’s handkerchiefs
or aprons could be laid on a person even without Paul present and
that person would be healed or delivered from demonic possession.
Literally, the phrase “unusual miracles” could be translated,
miracles “not of the ordinary kind.” This implies and assumes
miracles of an ordinary kind. However, even if we should “expect”
miracles, these are the unexpected sort! We should not expect that
God would continue to use this method to bring healing, or
deliverance. It was unusual for God to use handkerchiefs or aprons
used by Paul in such a way. The handkerchiefs or aprons worked in the
same way that the shadow of Peter (Acts 5:15) or the hem of Jesus’
garment (Matthew 14:36) might heal: the item became a point of
contact by which a person released faith in Jesus as healer. So, we
receive whatever is proven to be from the hand of God, but pursue
only that for which we have a Biblical pattern.
Why
was God acting in such a manner among these people? God
delights in doing things in new and different ways. God will stoop
down to meet us even in the context of, and in order to confront our
crude superstitions; as had happened at Samaria (8:9–13), Cyprus
(13:6–11), and Philippi (16:16–18). As we will see, the
superstitious practice of magic and sorcery was prevalent in Ephesus.
This never means that God is pleased with our superstition, but that
in His mercy He may supersede it in order to reveal Himself and
affirm the work of the gospel. The powerful forces of pagan magic and
religion connected to demonic activity were confronted by the far
more powerful work of the Holy Spirit ministering through Paul. But,
it should not surprise us that some took a quite superstitious view
of the miracles done through Paul.
Occult
Religion (13-16)
Here,
a group of itinerant Jewish exorcists try to imitate Paul’s
“formula” for success. At that time, there were Jewish exorcists
who practiced their “trade” with a lot of superstition and
ceremony. There are records of extensive ceremonies and spoken
formulas that Jewish people in the first century used to try to free
themselves from the influence of evil spirits, but it is unlikely
that these were very effective, since the people were astounded when
Jesus was able to cast out demons with “authority and power” in
Luke 4:36. These seven sons of Sceva, seeing the power Paul had,
tried to invoke the name of Jesus. They failed because they had no
personal relationship with Jesus, they only knew Jesus as the God of
Paul.
Similarly,
there are many people, even churchgoers, who name the name of Jesus
and will perish in Hell because they have no personal relationship
with Jesus Christ. Some of you are in this danger. You only know “the
Jesus the pastor preaches” or “the Jesus my parents believe in”
instead of the Jesus of your own salvation. Do you have the “right”
to use the name of Jesus? These sons of Sceva did not, because they
had no personal relationship with Jesus, they were not in Christ.
The
spiritual danger of claiming the name of Jesus, who you don't know,
is made physically obvious. The evil spirit knew exactly who Jesus
was, and knew exactly who Paul was. But they didn’t know who the
seven sons of Sceva were; they had no spiritual authority. A “reverse
exorcism” occurred, with the demon driving out the exorcists. The
man in whom the evil spirit was jumped on all seven of them, and beat
them naked. Because the seven sons of Sceva had no real relationship
with Jesus, they had no spiritual power, and posed no threat, and had
little defense from the evil spirit. They left the encounter naked
and wounded, insult to injury, their nudity enhanced their
humiliation. It was dangerous for them to take the reality of
spiritual warfare lightly. It is equally dangerous for us to take it
lightly.
Repentance
from Evil (17-19)
The
incident with the sons of Sceva impressed the people with the reality
of the demonic realm. Ephesus was a stronghold of Satan, where many
evil things both superstitious and satanic were practiced.
Apparently, before the sons of Sceva incident, many believers did not
know they were involved in the occultic. They saw their actions in a
far more innocent light, until they knew the reality of the demonic.
It made them fear the Lord and the demonic: both in healthy ways.
Spurgeon said, “You will
have enough temptation in your own mind without going after these
things. Is there any habit, any practice, that you have got that
defiles your soul? If Christ loves you, and you come and trust in
him, you will make short work of it. Have done with it, and have done
with it forever.”
Many
who had believed came confessing and telling their deeds. It is
significant that these practitioners of magic came confessing and
telling their deeds; it was thought that the power of these magic
spells resided in their secrecy, which was renounced in the telling.
They renounced the demonic by confessing and by burning their magic
books. The Greco-Roman world put great stock in magical incantations
and spells, often collecting them into books that sold for large
sums. Converts in Ephesus bought these relics of their pagan past,
disregarding whatever value they might have. The estimated total was
50,000 drachma (drachma = about a day’s wage; @ $10 an hour =
$4,000,000 today). That is a lot of Harry Potter movies! Judas only
got a week's wage.
What
about us? Are we mindlessly engaged in the occult? Should we be
removing books, movies, statues, charms, games, or whatever else
might have connection with demonic spirits? It is a matter of
conscience on one level; I cannot tell you for sure what you should
and shouldn't have. It is a matter of wisdom on another level; what
fellowship has the temple with idols? Why risk the danger of playing
with the devil?
The Gospel Prevails (20)
We
have seen over and over again, Luke uses this phrase as a summary
statement of how the power of the gospel prevails over every obstacle
and persecution. He again emphasizes the inherent power of the word
of the Lord, showing that the gospel triumphs over all demonic
powers. In these summary statements, Luke continues to give glory to
God and his word rather than to any human skill, knowledge, or
effort. At the end of the day, the Gospel is the power of God unto
salvation. What are you trusting in? Do you take seriously the
reality of the Spiritual realm? Are
you being entertained by the darkness of the occult? What risk are
you taking? What value does it have?
1http://www.albertmohler.com/2007/10/31/christianity-and-the-dark-side-what-about-halloween/
Thursday, October 25, 2012
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Kingdom Identity
1 Peter 2:4-12 Online Audio
Before I was converted, as a Sophomore in college, the closet thing I had to a mentor was an agnostic history/philosophy professor Dr. David Bowen. He was the first person to clearly articulate and intentionally seek to answer for me the three basic questions of life; Who am I? How did I come to be? Why am I here? These are basic philosophical questions that have been asked since the beginning of recorded time. As human beings, we find the most basic answers to these question in Genesis. As believers, we find specific answers in Acts. However, perhaps nowhere do we find, as Piper says, "such resoundingly clear answers to all three questions in such a small space," as we do in this passage.
http://www.morningview.org/2012/10/22/sermon-kingdom-identity/
Before I was converted, as a Sophomore in college, the closet thing I had to a mentor was an agnostic history/philosophy professor Dr. David Bowen. He was the first person to clearly articulate and intentionally seek to answer for me the three basic questions of life; Who am I? How did I come to be? Why am I here? These are basic philosophical questions that have been asked since the beginning of recorded time. As human beings, we find the most basic answers to these question in Genesis. As believers, we find specific answers in Acts. However, perhaps nowhere do we find, as Piper says, "such resoundingly clear answers to all three questions in such a small space," as we do in this passage.
I. Jesus is the object:
"As you come to him,"
indicates a personal relationship with Christ, a drawing near,
beginning at but not limited to the time of conversion. Spiritual exiles have been called to
faith in Christ, and therefore, ought to live as People of God. Our identity is that of a kingdom
people, it is a Kingdom Identity.
In creation, we were made in the image
of God, and ours was a garden identity; the consequence was to be fruitful and
multiply. In the fall, we fell under the likeness
of Adam, and ours was a slave identity;
the consequence was the bondage of the
will and slavery to sin. In redemption, we were raised up
into the likeness of Christ, and ours is a kingdom identity.
Jesus is the object of the passage. This is important, as we will talk
about our Kingdom Identity, we must start with the foundation and
absolute truth that our kingdom identity is in Jesus Christ. While we come
into the kingdom individually, our Kingdom Identity really has very
little to do with us individually.
We are all created in the image of God, and fallen in the likeness of Adam. That is our human identity. Our kingdom identity comes from dying to self and being given the life of Christ. That spiritually dead self, and all of its allegiance to the ruler and power of this world, was put to death on the cross, and by grace, through faith in Christ, we have been raised with Christ to newness of life. All we have is Christ.
We are all created in the image of God, and fallen in the likeness of Adam. That is our human identity. Our kingdom identity comes from dying to self and being given the life of Christ. That spiritually dead self, and all of its allegiance to the ruler and power of this world, was put to death on the cross, and by grace, through faith in Christ, we have been raised with Christ to newness of life. All we have is Christ.
1. So, just as Jesus was rejected by
men; His followers suffer persecution.
2. But, just as Jesus is God’s elect
(chosen) one, the firstborn of all the elect; His followers are God's elect,
chosen and given as a gift to Christ before the foundation of the
world.
3. Therefore, just as Christ, risen
from the dead and hence, is the living stone, the foundation of God’s
new temple, the exalted Lord,
honored above all as King of kings and Lord of lords; His followers are living stones in
God’s new temple, and as believers continue
in fellowship with Christ they “are being built up as a spiritual
house.”
II.
Worship is the analogy:
This is the analogy of 1 Peter 2, Jesus
is the Chief Cornerstone, and those who have faith in Christ are
being made into His temple. We get our identity from God, and it
is, in fact, our relation to God in Christ. Since the components that make up the
house are “living,” the house itself is also growing. You yourselves … are being built
up.
Peter’s picture here is that God is
building a spiritual temple using living stones, those who have come
to the ultimate Living Stone (Jesus). God does the work of building. A stone can not make itself alive, and
even a living stone cannot build itself up into a temple. It requires a builder, and it requires
the unity of many stones being fit together into a structure. What God does in us together is
important; He is constructing and instrument of His glory out of us.
Peter sees clearly that the Old Testament temple anticipated the new temple (His people) where God dwells and is worshiped, and both the old and new are but pictures of the real temple of God; the throne-room of heaven. As much as the nation of Israel was chosen by God, so the Church is called from among every tribe and tongue and nation. As much as Israel had a physical temple, Christians are themselves a spiritual temple. As much as Israel had a priesthood, so Christians are a holy priesthood. And as much as they had sacrifices, so Christians offer up spiritual sacrifices. As we get closer to the reality of the kingdom of God, the clearer the pictures become.
Peter sees clearly that the Old Testament temple anticipated the new temple (His people) where God dwells and is worshiped, and both the old and new are but pictures of the real temple of God; the throne-room of heaven. As much as the nation of Israel was chosen by God, so the Church is called from among every tribe and tongue and nation. As much as Israel had a physical temple, Christians are themselves a spiritual temple. As much as Israel had a priesthood, so Christians are a holy priesthood. And as much as they had sacrifices, so Christians offer up spiritual sacrifices. As we get closer to the reality of the kingdom of God, the clearer the pictures become.
To support this idea that Jesus is the
cornerstone of God’s temple, Peter cites Isaiah 28:16. Starting in verse 6, For it stands in Scripture: “Behold,
I am laying in Zion a stone,
a cornerstone chosen and
precious,
and whoever believes in him will not be put to shame.” So the honor is for you who believe,
but for those who do not believe, “The stone that the builders
rejected
has become the cornerstone,” and “A stone of
stumbling, and a rock of offense.” They stumble because they disobey
the word, as they were destined to do.
Those who trust in Christ will be
rejected by men, as He was, but ultimately, they will not be put to
shame, but will be eternally vindicated in the resurrection of
Christ. However, those who reject the living
stone (a cornerstone chosen and precious), for those who do not
believe, that cornerstone has become;
A stone of stumbling - Those who reject Him, refusing to build on Him, instead stumble over Him.
A stone of stumbling - Those who reject Him, refusing to build on Him, instead stumble over Him.
It is no wonder that it is the truth of
Jesus Christ that reveals the unbelief of the fleshly heart.
And a rock of offense - Instead
of being their salvation, Jesus becomes to them a rock of offense.
We must be careful that, when
proclaiming Christ to the world, we do not become the cause of their
stumbling, or the source of their offense. We must get out of the way, so that
they might either believe or find offense in the rock of stumbling. We are to become as nothing, all
things to all men, not only because Jesus is the cornerstone of Psalm
118 and the foundation stone of Isaiah 28, but He is also the
stumbling stone of Isaiah 8.
Jesus quoted this passage from Psalm
118 in regard to Himself in Matthew 21:42-44. Talking to the Jews regarding the
kingdom of God, Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the
Scriptures:‘The stone that the builders rejected has become the
cornerstone; this was the Lord’s doing, and it is marvelous in our
eyes’? Therefore I tell you, the kingdom of God will be taken away
from you and given to a people producing its fruits." When Jesus spoke of Himself as the
stone of Psalm 118, He spoke of what those who rejected Him are
appointed to: And whoever falls on this stone will be broken; but
on whomever it falls, it will grind him to powder. (44)
Peter does not deny human
responsibility; their stumbling is their own fault. They stumble because they trip over the
righteousness of Christ, and disobey God. Those who have rejected, stumble
because all sin and fall short of the glory of God, and even though
God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever
believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did
not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order
that the world might be saved through him. Whoever believes in him is
not condemned. They
stumble because, whoever does not believe is condemned
already, because he has not believed in the name of the
only Son of God. And this is the judgment: the light has come into
the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light
because their works were evil.
Apart from Christ,
we are dead and dying, and destined eternally to death. However, we see already that in Christ,
we are a chosen temple for Christ; chosen by God in Christ, for Christ; elect to be a house of worship; made both alive and precious by the
grace of God, for the glory of God, in the face of Christ. But believers are not only God’s
temple, but are also a holy priesthood; which offers spiritual sacrifices; not
the animal sacrifices of the OT, but living sacrifices of whole lives
lived in praise to God;
that are made acceptable through
Christ; not having any priestly authority in ourselves, but only through Christ is our
offering made acceptable.
As you come to him, you yourselves
like living stones are being built up as a spiritual house, to be a
holy priesthood, to make making spiritual sacrifices.
III. The Identity of God's People:
Peter expounds and explains the realities that are brought forward by this picture of a chosen temple and holy priesthood in the first part of verse 9, But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession. Collectively, the individual living stones are built together (the chosen race) into a house and a priesthood, a holy nation and a particular people.
III. The Identity of God's People:
Peter expounds and explains the realities that are brought forward by this picture of a chosen temple and holy priesthood in the first part of verse 9, But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for his own possession. Collectively, the individual living stones are built together (the chosen race) into a house and a priesthood, a holy nation and a particular people.
The Church is a chosen race.
God’s grace, rather than human
choice, is the ultimate explanation for why some people come to faith
and others do not. We are a chosen race; therefore there
is no distinction of race in the kingdom of God.
There is both a corporate and
individual implication because the chosen race is not racial, but is
a new people from among all peoples. God has chosen some to be adopted as
His people; as a result, our identity is relational, not ethnic; "chosenness," not color or culture. Piper concludes, "you are part
of the chosen race because the race is made up of individuals who
were chosen - from all the races." Therefore no one can boast of
being included!
Peter views the
church as a new Israel, (or being made part of the people of God) for
he picks up what is said of Israel in Exodus 19:5&6 and applies
it to the Church. The things that
once exclusively belonged to Israel; their election, priesthood, and
calling, are now no longer the property of Israel alone. Those who are in
Christ have been grafted in, and possess them in a greater, more full
spiritual sense. So
that Paul can say in Ephesians 1:3-6, Blessed be the God
and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ
with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, even as he
chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be
holy and blameless before him. In love he predestined us for adoption
as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will,
to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed us in
the Beloved.
The Church is a royal priesthood.
The offices of royalty and priesthood
were jealously separated in Israel, but Jesus, who is our King and
Priest, has brought them together for His people. Our priesthood is one not only of
worship, but dominion.
Priesthood relates access to God. Those who trust in Christ are as priest before God; not needing any mediator except Christ, our great High Priest. As we have seen in Hebrews 7, this is one way that the new covenant is better than Judaism, a better hope is introduced, through which we draw near to God.
Priesthood relates access to God. Those who trust in Christ are as priest before God; not needing any mediator except Christ, our great High Priest. As we have seen in Hebrews 7, this is one way that the new covenant is better than Judaism, a better hope is introduced, through which we draw near to God.
Priesthood relates an active role
before God. We are ministers before God,
offering up our lives as a spiritual service of worship. The is no christian or secular
activity for the believer, all of life is priestly service. As Romans 12:1 makes clear, I
appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present
your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which
is your spiritual worship.
The Church is a
holy nation.
You are set apart
by God, for God. Since he is holy,
we have been made holy. We share in His
character both as the one who set us apart, and who is our King. It is hypocrisy (a
lie) to act out of this holy character, saying with your actions that
you are something you are not; treasonous to be a citizen, and act
like you are not. The implication is
that we are not made part of a holy nation, we are not holy because
the nation is holy; we are a holy nation, the nation is holy because
we are made holy. Both as the one who set us apart and
rules over us, He makes us holy and commands us to be holy; even as
He himself is holy.
The Church is a
people for His own possession.
A museum may be filled with quite
ordinary things: hats, canes, shoes, and so forth; but they are
significant because they once belonged to someone famous. God takes ordinary people, and because
He has taken them, they are special. Our identity is so tied to this idea of
possession, that it is repeated in verse 10, Once
you were not a people, but now you are God's people. Peter alludes to texts in Hosea 1 and 2 that refer to
Israel and again sees them fulfilled in the Church. This is at the heart of the Gospel; this is reconciliation and
adoption.
We once were without these privileges, and were not even a people before God. We had not seen the mercy of God, but now have obtained mercy. In our culture, with its Christian foundations, we don’t understand the tremendous sense of privilege and relief that came to Gentiles as they were able to share in the New Covenant with the God of Israel. Peter’s message is nonetheless wonderful: “You didn’t used to belong, but now you belong to God and among God’s people.” You are a chosen race, You are a royal priesthood, You are a holy nation, You are a people for His own possession; that you may proclaim the excellencies of Christ.
We once were without these privileges, and were not even a people before God. We had not seen the mercy of God, but now have obtained mercy. In our culture, with its Christian foundations, we don’t understand the tremendous sense of privilege and relief that came to Gentiles as they were able to share in the New Covenant with the God of Israel. Peter’s message is nonetheless wonderful: “You didn’t used to belong, but now you belong to God and among God’s people.” You are a chosen race, You are a royal priesthood, You are a holy nation, You are a people for His own possession; that you may proclaim the excellencies of Christ.
IV. Consequence of this Kingdom Identity:
The First consequence of this identity in Christ is that we to
be proclaimers of Christ; (vs. 9b) But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy
nation, a people for his own possession; that you may proclaim the
excellencies of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous
light. As God’s chosen ones, Christians are
to proclaim the excellencies of the one who summoned them from
darkness and ushered them into his marvelous light.
The Second consequence of this identity in Christ is that we
are to live as citizens of a spiritual kingdom; (vs.
10) now you are God's people; now you have received mercy. Having received mercy, and being reconciled to God, we are citizens
of His Kingdom. The purpose for these high privileges
is not so we can grow proud, but so that we can bear witness to the
excellencies of Christ; the chief cornerstone, our great High Priest,
our King who called us out of darkness into his marvelous light.
Once you were not a people, but now
you are God's people. Once you had not received mercy, but now you have received
mercy. Therefore, in verse 11, we are identified, in this world, as
sojourners and exiles:
Sojourner;
a stranger, one who lives in a place without the right
of citizenship,
in this world.
Exile;
a pilgrim, one who comes from a foreign country into a city or
land to reside there by the side of the natives; in but not of this
world.
As sojourners and exiles, we should live as though this is not our
home. As a result, we are to live as kingdom citizens, according to our
Kingdom Identity.
1) As citizens of
the kingdom of God we should abstain from the passions of the
flesh, which wage war against our soul. The primary
spiritual battle we fight is against the sin of our flesh. This battle is
waged in our minds, and sin uses the members of our body against us
to destroy our soul. We are a holy
people, citizens of a holy nation, who serve a holy King, who
intercedes to make us holy.
As
sojourners in an unholy land, we must fight to not marry ourselves to
the pagan tribes, For what partnership has righteousness
with lawlessness? Or what fellowship has light with darkness? What
accord has Christ with Belial? Or what portion does a believer share
with an unbeliever? What agreement has the temple of God with idols?
For we are the temple of the living God; as God said,
“I will make my dwelling among
them and walk among them,
and I will be their God,
and they
shall be my people.
Therefore go out from their midst,
and be
separate from them, says the Lord,
and touch no unclean thing;
then
I will welcome you,
and I will be a father to you,
and you shall
be sons and daughters to me,
says the Lord Almighty.”
(2 Corinthians 6:14-18)
2) As citizens of
the kingdom of God we should Keep our conduct among the Gentiles
honorable, so that when they speak against us as evildoers, they may
see our good deeds and glorify God on the day of visitation. Peter refers to
unbelievers as Gentiles, which is in keeping with his understanding
of believers being a people of God and unbelievers being not a
people. We are to live godly lives, so that
when we are reviled by unbelievers, persecuted for Christ, called
evil because of our faith (which is quickly becoming more of a
reality in our culture), the outworking of Christ righteousness in
us, our sanctification, will be an instrument for God's glory.
As pilgrims living among a lost
people, Peter clearly points us to Matthew 5:13-16 here, You are
the salt of the earth, but if salt has lost its taste, how shall its
saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything except to be
thrown out and trampled under people's feet. You are the light of the
world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do people light a
lamp and put it under a basket, but on a stand, and it gives light to
all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before
others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your
Father who is in heaven.
Some unbelievers will repent and
believe and thus glorify God, as a result (as God uses means) of our
testimony. However, on the day of judgment,
every knee will bow and every tongue confess, as God brings all
things together in unity and submission under the feet of Christ, for
the praise of the glory of His grace.
Therefore, I urge you (unbeliever)
to fall on the mercies of God; crying out to the Great High Priest
for salvation; that his intercession on the cross might be for you
(taking on your sin, and putting in you His righteousness); that in
Christ, you might be adopted into the family of God and made a child
of His own possession.
God has given us our identity in order that the excellency of His identity as the one who choses and reigns, intercedes and makes holy, and possesses us might be proclaimed thorough us.
Therefore, I urge you (Morningview) as sojourners, as exiles; to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul; to keep your conduct among the Gentiles honorable, so that when they speak against you as evildoers, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day of visitation.
God has given us our identity in order that the excellency of His identity as the one who choses and reigns, intercedes and makes holy, and possesses us might be proclaimed thorough us.
Therefore, I urge you (Morningview) as sojourners, as exiles; to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soul; to keep your conduct among the Gentiles honorable, so that when they speak against you as evildoers, they may see your good deeds and glorify God on the day of visitation.
http://www.morningview.org/2012/10/22/sermon-kingdom-identity/
Thursday, September 27, 2012
When We Have to Do Hard Things
I
had to come in and do some hard things today. When I am faced with
difficult task, I am reminded of something my good friend Randy
Stinson always says, “real men do the hard thing first.” I am
encouraged by this and want to share with you an exerpt of an article
where he talks about this in the context of cultivating manhood.
After establishing that, “biblical
manhood is modeled after the Lord Jesus,” he says the following.
One should not overlook
the fact that the characteristics of biblical masculinity can and
should be cultivated. It is easy to recall at this point David’s
own life experiences. When standing before Saul in 1 Samuel 17:34-36
trying to convince him that he should be allowed to go out and fight
Goliath, David brings up past experiences that have impacted his
ability to take on this current fight. He has already killed a lion
and a bear, and Goliath will be like them. Note also, this is not a
self-reliant vision of masculinity, since he clearly understands (vs.
37) that ultimately God delivered him from the mouth of the lion and
the bear.
God gives all of us
opportunities each day to resist passivity and develop biblically
masculine characteristics. Each of the challenges men face should be
viewed as instruments in God’s hands that will help shape us as
biblical men. These opportunities should be viewed with the same
understanding exhibited by David. We must acknowledge that it is God
who delivers and protects and cultivates. With that in mind, here are
some ways men can, on a daily basis, cultivate masculine
characteristics under the lordship of Christ:
Do the hardest task
first: Attacking your hardest task of the day without delay will
build your resistance to passivity. Waiting until the end of the day
only reinforces your sinful tendencies toward passivity.
Make the hard phone
call first: While this is similar to the first suggestion, it
deals more with passivity within interpersonal relationships. Some
men are willing to do the hard task first, but avoid difficult
situations involving other people.
Run to the battle: One
only needs to consider the life of the Apostle Paul to see that
conflict is a regular feature of the Christian life. Men who think
all conflict should be avoided, or who refuse to engage with those
who would harm the body of Christ or their family, not only model
passivity but fail in the area of protection.
Do your work now as
opposed to later: From term papers to tax filing, the man who is
cultivating biblical masculinity will not allow these things to rule
him. He will exercise dominion over them by doing them in a timely
manner.
Keep your domain in
order: While most of us on occasion have a messy desk or car
trunk, a life that is characterized by disorder is evidence of
passivity. Your home, dorm room, garage, office and car should bear
the mark of your masculinity as you subdue it and keep it in order.
Kill a bear or a lion:
In other words, do something that is a challenge for you. It may
actually be to kill a bear or a lion, but it may be a health
challenge like running a triathlon or a marathon. It may be something
as basic as riding a roller coaster or as edgy as snorkeling with
sharks. It may involve debating the atheist at work or starting a
Bible study at home. It may mean you need to finally share the gospel
with your lost friend or deal with a family conflict that you have
allowed to go on for too long.
Mind you, these
activities do not constitute manhood. But, as you consider your own
challenges and interests, they can help to cultivate a sense of
willingness to reject passivity and embrace the characteristics of
biblical manhood to lead, provide and protect. Don’t wait for some
endorsement from the world and don’t embrace the feminized version
of manhood espoused by our culture. Hear the words of a father to a
son and “show yourself a man.”
I
pray this is encouraging to you all in some way, much as it has been many times for me.
He is also assistant professor of leadership, and vice president for academic innovation.
Dr. Stinson also serves as Senior Fellow with The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood. Southern Seminary Magazine | Winter 2005. Vol. 73, No. 3. Copyright © 2005 The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, KY. publicrelations@sbts.edu.
Monday, September 17, 2012
Great Post by Timothy Paul Jones on Family Ministry.
Timothy Paul Jones » Family Ministry: Learning to Do Less So That Parents Can Do Moret.coParents in your ministry don’t have time to disciple their children—or, at least, that’s the way many of them feel when they look at their weekly to-do lists. In the survey that formed the foundations for my Family Ministry Field Guide, half of the parents in the survey had resigned themselves to th...
http://www.timothypauljones.com/2012/09/17/making-time-for-what-matters/
Timothy Paul Jones » Family Ministry: Learning to Do Less So That Parents Can Do Moret.coParents in your ministry don’t have time to disciple their children—or, at least, that’s the way many of them feel when they look at their weekly to-do lists. In the survey that formed the foundations for my Family Ministry Field Guide, half of the parents in the survey had resigned themselves to th...
http://www.timothypauljones.com/2012/09/17/making-time-for-what-matters/
Where Were You
by Reid Ward
“Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)” is a song written by country music artist Alan Jackson in the wake of the September 11 attacks. All of us who were alive in September 2001 remember where we were and what we were doing when we heard the news. I remember standing in the conference room of the church where I was serving, watching the images of commercial airplanes flying through a clear, cool New York sky and into the towers of the World Trade Center.
As I sit here writing this article on September 11, 2012, I am reminded of how important it is to remember. Remembering is important to society because as Edmund Burke, the 18th century Irish statesman said, “Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it.” History is important for the sake of remembering, of maintaining a firm grip on the past.
Remembering is an equally important concept in Scripture, because it contains the story of God condescending to reveal Himself to man through actual historical events. God remembered Noah in the ark, in Genesis 8:1, and remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob, in Exodus 2:24. Then God commanded Israel to “Remember this day in which you came out from Egypt,” when instituting the passover in Exodus 13, and to “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy,” when giving the moral commands of Exodus 20. At least 15 times God calls His people to remember in the book of Deuteronomy. Throughout the Old Testament, the waywardness of Israel is tied to their failure to remember.
Jesus constantly called His disciples to remember, and instituted the ordinance of the Supper by commanding us to “Do this in remembrance of me,” as we eat and drink. If we do not remember, we run the risk of becoming myopic, proud, self-sufficient, and eventually incurring our own destruction. The danger is not necessarily physical destruction, but rather a complete loss of identity, purpose, and meaning, or what Amos refers to as a “famine of hearing the Word of the Lord.”
A key scripture passage for understanding the importance of remembrance is Isaiah 46:8-11, “Remember this and stand firm, recall it to mind, you transgressors, remember the former things of old; for I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose,’ calling a bird of prey from the east, the man of my counsel from a far country. I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have purposed, and I will do it.” Two major thoughts arise from these verses.
First, God is sovereign, or absolutely in control. History is in the most literal sense His story. Nothing happens at random or by chance. The hairs of our heads are numbered, and the details of our lives are threads in the great tapestry of His overarching providential plan.
Second, we as human beings cannot understand our place in the world without cultivating a vision of ourselves as part of this larger story. This is why the Bible contains so many exhortations to “remember” what God has done in the past, whether through the device of “memorial stones,” annual festivals, tassels, phylacteries, or the discipline of hiding His Word in our hearts.
Here we come face to face with the implications of man’s fallen nature. Man resists the idea of a sovereign God. He wants to control his own destiny, live inside his own little story, and free himself from all connections to an all-inclusive divine plan. He devises ways to propagate the deception of self-determination by taking the larger story of history into his own hands and turning it into a powerful tool for the manipulation of other people and the accomplishment of his own selfish purposes.
Historical revisionism operates on the basis of the premise, “If I can change your historical context, I can determine the way you view the present.” This strategy is consistent with George Orwell’s observation that “He who controls the past controls the future” and Karl Marx’s dictum, “A people without a heritage are easily persuaded.” Postmodernism, the contemporary philosophical perspective that rejects both revelation and reason, takes this process to an extreme conclusion by denying the validity of all comprehensive truth systems, including Christianity.
Remembering gives us a proper appreciation of historical context, our place in God’s “larger story.” It is fundamental to an accurate understanding of almost every aspect of our lives. History provides us with indispensable insights into the meaning of existence, God’s plan and purpose for the ages, man’s responsibility toward the Creator, and his duty toward his fellow creatures.
Stated simply, the postmodern perspective maintains that there is no larger story. Instead, everyone must tell his own story and invent his own concept of meaning and significance. In other words, history does not exist at all except as it exists in our own minds, where it can be edited and tailored to further our own goals in the present. But this idea does not resonate in our souls, because we have a faith that is based on objective truth, and the historical events surrounding the life and work of Jesus of Nazareth. This perspective is not compatible with reality, because you do remember where you were when the world stopped turning on that September day.
http://www.morningview.org/2012/09/14/where-were-you/
As I sit here writing this article on September 11, 2012, I am reminded of how important it is to remember. Remembering is important to society because as Edmund Burke, the 18th century Irish statesman said, “Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it.” History is important for the sake of remembering, of maintaining a firm grip on the past.
Remembering is an equally important concept in Scripture, because it contains the story of God condescending to reveal Himself to man through actual historical events. God remembered Noah in the ark, in Genesis 8:1, and remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob, in Exodus 2:24. Then God commanded Israel to “Remember this day in which you came out from Egypt,” when instituting the passover in Exodus 13, and to “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy,” when giving the moral commands of Exodus 20. At least 15 times God calls His people to remember in the book of Deuteronomy. Throughout the Old Testament, the waywardness of Israel is tied to their failure to remember.
Jesus constantly called His disciples to remember, and instituted the ordinance of the Supper by commanding us to “Do this in remembrance of me,” as we eat and drink. If we do not remember, we run the risk of becoming myopic, proud, self-sufficient, and eventually incurring our own destruction. The danger is not necessarily physical destruction, but rather a complete loss of identity, purpose, and meaning, or what Amos refers to as a “famine of hearing the Word of the Lord.”
A key scripture passage for understanding the importance of remembrance is Isaiah 46:8-11, “Remember this and stand firm, recall it to mind, you transgressors, remember the former things of old; for I am God, and there is no other; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning and from ancient times things not yet done, saying, ‘My counsel shall stand, and I will accomplish all my purpose,’ calling a bird of prey from the east, the man of my counsel from a far country. I have spoken, and I will bring it to pass; I have purposed, and I will do it.” Two major thoughts arise from these verses.
First, God is sovereign, or absolutely in control. History is in the most literal sense His story. Nothing happens at random or by chance. The hairs of our heads are numbered, and the details of our lives are threads in the great tapestry of His overarching providential plan.
Second, we as human beings cannot understand our place in the world without cultivating a vision of ourselves as part of this larger story. This is why the Bible contains so many exhortations to “remember” what God has done in the past, whether through the device of “memorial stones,” annual festivals, tassels, phylacteries, or the discipline of hiding His Word in our hearts.
Here we come face to face with the implications of man’s fallen nature. Man resists the idea of a sovereign God. He wants to control his own destiny, live inside his own little story, and free himself from all connections to an all-inclusive divine plan. He devises ways to propagate the deception of self-determination by taking the larger story of history into his own hands and turning it into a powerful tool for the manipulation of other people and the accomplishment of his own selfish purposes.
Historical revisionism operates on the basis of the premise, “If I can change your historical context, I can determine the way you view the present.” This strategy is consistent with George Orwell’s observation that “He who controls the past controls the future” and Karl Marx’s dictum, “A people without a heritage are easily persuaded.” Postmodernism, the contemporary philosophical perspective that rejects both revelation and reason, takes this process to an extreme conclusion by denying the validity of all comprehensive truth systems, including Christianity.
Remembering gives us a proper appreciation of historical context, our place in God’s “larger story.” It is fundamental to an accurate understanding of almost every aspect of our lives. History provides us with indispensable insights into the meaning of existence, God’s plan and purpose for the ages, man’s responsibility toward the Creator, and his duty toward his fellow creatures.
Stated simply, the postmodern perspective maintains that there is no larger story. Instead, everyone must tell his own story and invent his own concept of meaning and significance. In other words, history does not exist at all except as it exists in our own minds, where it can be edited and tailored to further our own goals in the present. But this idea does not resonate in our souls, because we have a faith that is based on objective truth, and the historical events surrounding the life and work of Jesus of Nazareth. This perspective is not compatible with reality, because you do remember where you were when the world stopped turning on that September day.
http://www.morningview.org/2012/09/14/where-were-you/
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Winds of Change
by Reid Ward
August 14, 2012
These are exciting and difficult times. Coming out of Promotion Sunday, I am mindful of how many of our families are going through significant change. Even this morning parents are posting about their children going off to school; some starting school for the first time, some going into high school. Some are experiencing the real change of a child going away to college; maybe it is the first one, maybe it is the last one, maybe it is the only one.
Many of us are entering a new phase of life. In these seasons of transition, there are always the things we leave behind, and the new opportunities that lay ahead. It is important for us to be reminded that both are essential and necessary; all are valuable. Regardless of what our transition may look like, God wants to use this time of changeto grow and mature our faith. Many of us are leaving something behind, something good that has given us a strong spiritual foundation. But now a new door has been opened, and God wants to grow you and use you in a new way to multiply His kingdom. He wants us to come to trust Him, and not our comfort zone of life. That is primarily what God wants to accomplish in our lives through this time of transition.
It is also important for us to remember that none are incidental, or accidental; all are providential. God is in control, and He is doing something in our life. He wants to change us through changing our circumstances. He is growing us, challenging us, drawing us to himself and pressing us into the image of His son. There are many things that we need to leave behind; old things, hinderances, that need to be put off so that we might press forward in Christ.
He also wants to use that change to multiply our influence, as He opens new doors and expands the reach of our ministry. I have told our students, “We are loosing good people, who are going off to college, but God is going to use them in their new fields of service and multiply His kingdom.” God uses it in our lives for His purposes, for the expansion of His kingdom, and for praise of His glory.
Many of us are entering a new phase of life. In these seasons of transition, there are always the things we leave behind, and the new opportunities that lay ahead. In all of this, we must ask ourselves, “are we being faithful?” It is important for us to be reminded of the essential nature of the things we leave behind, while at the same time, trusting that nothing is incidental, or accidental; God is in control, and He is doing something in our life. Will we be self-disciplined, or will we require discipline from God? God will do His good work in us, in spite of us. However, if we are submissive to the will of God, we will be moldable, teachable, humble, and sacrificial. We must repent of our sin, pride, and rebellion, lest we resist God growing us, challenging us, drawing us to himself and pressing us into the image of His son. God is in control, and uses these seasons of change in our lives, to transform and conform his people, to multiply the ministry of His kingdom, and to bring praise to His glory.
Here are three questions that we can ask ourselves to help us to think rightly about these times of transition. How can God use this season in my life to grow me spiritually? How can God use it to multiply my ministry for His glory? How can I honor God in what is left behind; what must I repent of and leave behind? How do I need to trust God as He changes my circumstances; what must I bring forward as a foundation; what door of opportunity is He opening before me?
These are exciting and difficult times. Coming out of Promotion Sunday, I am mindful of how many of our families are going through significant change. Even this morning parents are posting about their children going off to school; some starting school for the first time, some going into high school. Some are experiencing the real change of a child going away to college; maybe it is the first one, maybe it is the last one, maybe it is the only one.
Many of us are entering a new phase of life. In these seasons of transition, there are always the things we leave behind, and the new opportunities that lay ahead. It is important for us to be reminded that both are essential and necessary; all are valuable. Regardless of what our transition may look like, God wants to use this time of changeto grow and mature our faith. Many of us are leaving something behind, something good that has given us a strong spiritual foundation. But now a new door has been opened, and God wants to grow you and use you in a new way to multiply His kingdom. He wants us to come to trust Him, and not our comfort zone of life. That is primarily what God wants to accomplish in our lives through this time of transition.
It is also important for us to remember that none are incidental, or accidental; all are providential. God is in control, and He is doing something in our life. He wants to change us through changing our circumstances. He is growing us, challenging us, drawing us to himself and pressing us into the image of His son. There are many things that we need to leave behind; old things, hinderances, that need to be put off so that we might press forward in Christ.
He also wants to use that change to multiply our influence, as He opens new doors and expands the reach of our ministry. I have told our students, “We are loosing good people, who are going off to college, but God is going to use them in their new fields of service and multiply His kingdom.” God uses it in our lives for His purposes, for the expansion of His kingdom, and for praise of His glory.
Many of us are entering a new phase of life. In these seasons of transition, there are always the things we leave behind, and the new opportunities that lay ahead. In all of this, we must ask ourselves, “are we being faithful?” It is important for us to be reminded of the essential nature of the things we leave behind, while at the same time, trusting that nothing is incidental, or accidental; God is in control, and He is doing something in our life. Will we be self-disciplined, or will we require discipline from God? God will do His good work in us, in spite of us. However, if we are submissive to the will of God, we will be moldable, teachable, humble, and sacrificial. We must repent of our sin, pride, and rebellion, lest we resist God growing us, challenging us, drawing us to himself and pressing us into the image of His son. God is in control, and uses these seasons of change in our lives, to transform and conform his people, to multiply the ministry of His kingdom, and to bring praise to His glory.
Here are three questions that we can ask ourselves to help us to think rightly about these times of transition. How can God use this season in my life to grow me spiritually? How can God use it to multiply my ministry for His glory? How can I honor God in what is left behind; what must I repent of and leave behind? How do I need to trust God as He changes my circumstances; what must I bring forward as a foundation; what door of opportunity is He opening before me?
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