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Showing posts from January, 2017

A Revelation of God

Before the death of Isaac, he called Jacob before him, blessed him, and directed him to go his uncle Laban in Padanaram to seek a wife.  Though Jacob had the birthright and his father's blessing, he was commanded to leave home and all that was familiar.  Unlike his outdoorsman older twin Esau, Jacob was a "plain" man who preferred living the comforts of home.  His dad gravitated to manly Esau, and his mother favoured Jacob.  He was a homebody, and apparently preferred spending his day tending stew over working outside.  In his advancing age Isaac sent Jacob away, and it must have been hard for him to leave.  I imagine many would have felt rejected and ostricised at that moment. Jacob went from sleeping in the comforts of his tent to sleeping under the stars with rocks for a pillow.  After laying down to sleep in the darkness, in a dream God revealed Himself to Jacob.  Jacob had been sent away by his father, but God's eyes were upon him though h...

God Exists; Therefore I Think

Old news came across my Facebook feed the other day about how Pope Francis boldly declared support for evolution saying, “ When we read about Creation in Genesis, we run the risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything. But that is not so ,”  I believe the Bible provides evidence God is far greater than a magician using sleight of hand who seems able to do everything - without waving a "magic" wand.  That fact God can do everything is the precise conclusion Job came to when God revealed Himself in  Job 42:1-2:  " Then Job answered the LORD and said: 2 "I know that You can do everything, and that no purpose of Yours can be withheld from You ."  A god who cannot do everything is not God, and certainly not worthy of worship. The words of the Pope do not affect my beliefs in the slightest, but unfortunately much of the world sees him as speaking for the church with a degree of authority.  My entire life has been lived in a ...

Knocking In

Being an immigrant opens a new world to explore and enjoy.  There are countless adjustments to life after moving to a new country.  Australia is a culture permeated with sport, and it didn't take long after moving to Australia to notice the popular sports are quite different to those I was familiar.  Instead of growing up playing baseball, kids play cricket or compete in "Little Athletics" (track and field events).  I have never seen gridiron (American football) played in a park, but I have seen plenty of rugby.  Australian football (footy) bears no resemblance to any football I knew previously, and netball seems to be more popular than basketball. There is great personal enrichment available for all who will humbly lay aside what is familiar and be open to new things.  I remember hearing a message from Alan Redpath who hailed from Britain when he spoke of the "raw material" Abraham was made of, this flesh which " needed knocking in and knocking about ....

Pain in the Process

A great challenge in our Christian walk is working through painful trials.  A couple of useful books on the subject is The Problem of Pain by C.S. Lewis and Where is God When it Hurts ? by Philip Yancey.  We labour hard to reduce and eliminate it when we can, but pain isn't a bad thing when viewed through a biblical perspective.  Pain is a useful sensation (excruciating as it can be at times) to notify us of physical damage and prevents us from wounding ourselves further.  It is not fun to be robbed of sleep or rest due to pain, yet we can still find solace in Christ as our rest.  Our bodies heal much better and faster than wounded hearts and minds.  There is no prescription a doctor can supply to heal a broken heart, and what is impossible with men is possible with God.  The only time physical pain truly is a thing of the past is when a Christian enters into eternal glory. Last Saturday I sprained my ankle playing baseball, and I did a quality job...

When I Cannot God Can

The tendency to self-reliance is common to all people.  No matter how dependent we are on others or our environment, we retain the freedom of preference to suit ourselves.  It is a jarring realisation when we accept the fact we are powerlessness to change a situation.  We value the right to choose, and when that is "taken" from us we can resent it bitterly. This morning I read of Isaac and Rebekah who for about twenty years of marriage were without children.  They wanted to have children but Rebekah was barren.  There were no fertility clinics back in those days.  But the God who created man and woman was able to heal such an irreversible condition as infertility.   Genesis 25:21 says, " Now Isaac pleaded with the LORD for his wife, because she was barren; and the LORD granted his plea, and Rebekah his wife conceived ."  It occurred to me Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob all had wives who were for a time barren but the LORD remembered them and gave th...

What Jesus Believes

I love the genealogies in scripture.  They may be a bit tedious to read out loud or to teach from expositionally, but they are great evidence the Bible is a book of historical fact.  We understand in this world everyone is a descendant of other human beings, and the line of Jesus Christ is taken right back to the beginning, to the first man named Adam ( Luke 3:38 ) God created from the dust of the ground and breathed into a human soul.  I do not find it difficult to believe there is a God who created all things and is able to do everything.  What I find impossible to reconcile is how people who say they believe in this God and the Bible is God's Word yet explain away Adam and creation account in Genesis as figurative. Jesus claimed to be the Christ, the Son of God sent of the Father to save people from their sins.  He did many miraculous signs which confirmed His identity as God, the One who created all things.  I do not feel the need to scientifically e...

God Hears Your Cry

Today the LORD had encouragement for me from the book of Genesis.  The portion I read was when Hagar and Ishmael were sent away by Abraham with bread and a skin of water.  They wandered around in the wilderness of Beersheba until the water was gone.  It says in  Genesis 21:15-16 , " And the water in the skin was used up, and she placed the boy under one of the shrubs. 16 Then she went and sat down across from him at a distance of about a bowshot; for she said to herself, "Let me not see the death of the boy." So she sat opposite him, and lifted her voice and wept. "  I will admit this part is not very uplifting.  It is a sad picture of a dying child and a hopeless mother all alone in a wilderness.  Yet it is in the midst of this confronting and tragic scene God graciously revealed Himself. Hagar placed Ishmael in the shade, a boy of around 13 years old.  Not wanting to see him die of thirst, she separated herself to a distance where she could ...

A New World of Ideas

I kept a few of my university textbooks as reference materials.  One I find particularly interesting is a compilation of Lee A. Jacobus titled, " A World of Ideas:  Essential Readings for College Writers " (Fourth Edition).  It is a smattering of ancient and modern writings which include offerings of Aristotle, Charles Darwin, Thomas Jefferson, Mary Wollstonecraft, Lao-Tzu, Karl Marx, Mary Daly, Plato, and Siddhartha Gautama (the Buddha).  The great irony is this "world of ideas" considered essential for the modern writer pass over words spoken by Jesus Christ.  Perhaps the Sermon on the Mount provides too much food for thought. For a follower of Jesus Christ, this is no surprise.  It can hardly be debated Jesus Christ should be counted among the most influential people in the history of the world and certainly among the most polarising.  He was inclusive and exclusive at the same time.  He bid anyone who was thirsty to come to Him and drink of...

Reasonable Salvation

Today I had the privilege of "staying with the stuff" as a chaperone during a Camp Kedron outing at the beach.  It was cool and overcast, a welcome change from the heat of late.  After a pleasant bushwalk we arrived at Curl Curl to find the beach closed because of strong current.  I noticed a lifesaver (Australian for lifeguard) heading out to the waves for a swim, and it wasn't to cool down on a hot day.  He was checking the conditions of the surf.  It wasn't long before the rip pulled him further and further left, and as a result the beach remained closed after he easily swam back in.  The pros make it look so easy. I wondered how the lifesaver would have reacted if I waded after him into the rip and grabbed him by the arm to "save" him.  Needless to say it would have been an offensive and unwanted intrusion!  Now if he was a drowning swimmer flailing in the rip and I was a lifesaver, it would have been a totally different situation.  Th...

God is Able to Perform

"Persistence pays," people say.  "If at first you don't succeed, try and try again."  The English language is littered with such cliches.  I have found if at first we don't succeed, it is not long before we are looking for a new or different method.  A cricket player will hire a new coach to help his batting, and may even adopt a different stance.  It has also been mused that a definition of insanity is to continue doing the same thing hoping for a different result.  We come closer to the truth when these cliches are combined.  There are fundamental truths which cannot be denied, like a batsman in cricket should bring his bat to the crease.  A batsman cannot bat without it, and a return to basic fundamentals will help him find his way back to top form. Abram (later called Abraham) had been given a promise by God that through him all nations of the earth would be blessed.  God had promised Abraham his wife Sarai (whom later God named Sarah)...

Weary of Sin or the Way?

“ You are wearied in the length of your way; yet you did not say, 'There is no hope.' You have found the  life of your hand; therefore you were not grieved .” Isaiah 57:10 This verse grabbed my attention from our text at Calvary Chapel Sydney this week.  The context of the passage is God’s rebuke of His people for offering sacrifices to idols.  They went to great lengths to embrace the abominable practice of human sacrifice and sensual fertility rituals.  God’s lament was how the people wearied themselves in their sin, but they were not weary of their sin.  Their sin was what they lived for, and it was killing them at the same time. The people were wearied by the expense of their sin but did not notice the toll it took upon their families, nation, and their ability to worship God.  It reminds me of the response of smokers I worked with when California exponentially increased the cost of cigarettes.  The price increase may have influenced some t...

True Loyalty

I may live in Australia, but it didn't take long for the news to reach our shores that the San Diego Chargers intend to relocate to Los Angeles.  For someone born and raised in San Diego, it is a low blow first to lose our beloved NFL franchise, but to leave for a rival town who claims not to even want them adds insult to injury.  The purpose of this post is not to lament this loss, for as we all know the National Football League is a business, and in business the aim is to invest money today with the highest level of future return.  Detailed analysis of how or why this has finally happened cannot change the fact it is happening.  The Chargers are moving, and that is what loyal supporters are processing today. I am sad for the many loyal Chargers fans who feel betrayed by an organisation which did not extend enough loyalty to them to remain.  Many fans are loyal to their local team, supporting the team unconditionally, regardless of personnel changes or pe...

The Good Old Way

I've enjoyed reading through G.K. Chesterton's What's Wrong with the World , and because the nature of humanity has not changed he remains insightful and strangely prophetic.  Chesterton was able, with eloquence and humorous poise, to point out inconsistent folly in his day which has continued unabated until now.  I see no reason why these observations will not remain relevant for another hundred years - or until we start actually learning from our mistakes. One of the paragraphs I have turned back to a couple of times concerns a modern approach to education, one that was on display during the life of Chesterton and I have also observed myself.  There is a push in an effort to "save the children" to inject new and virtually unproved methods and programs to benefit students.  Recent examples of this are "Common Core" curriculum pushed through in the United States and the ridiculous "Safe Schools" program in Australia.  It seems many schools a...

Our Secret Spring

This morning I read of the interaction between Abram and Lot after their herdsmen had quarreled together.  So plentiful were their flocks and herds that the land was unable to support them both.  Though Abram was his elder, he graciously declared to Lot in an effort to make and keep peace in  Genesis 13:9 , " Is not the whole land before you? Please separate from me. If you take the left, then I will go to the right; or, if you go to the right, then I will go to the left ."  He gave Lot the opportunity to go wherever he wanted, and promised to go in the opposite direction. Abram was good as his word for  Genesis 13:10-11 tells us, " And Lot lifted his eyes and saw all the plain of Jordan, that it was well watered everywhere (before the LORD destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah) like the garden of the LORD, like the land of Egypt as you go toward Zoar. 11 Then Lot chose for himself all the plain of Jordan, and Lot journeyed east. And they separated from each ot...

No Coincidence

During the holidays it is easy to stay up a little later at night and rise a little later in the morning.  I set an alarm on my phone to ensure I do rise at an hour before the house is awake and bustling.  Eliminating these potential distractions is a big help to a sustained and focused time of prayer with God.  The scripture says a man's heart devises his way, but the LORD directs his steps ( Prov. 16:9 ).  One way this works out daily is I set the alarm, but God wakes me up when He wants. :) Today He woke me minutes before my alarm was to sound, and this is always lovely.  Whenever this happens I am convinced this is no coincidence, for my times are in God's hands.  After I knelt in my customary place it was a sweet time of thinking about God and affirming my appreciation for Him.  Time during prayer can rush by or feel like time stands still as a soul draws near to his Creator.  At one point I opened my eyes and noticed a flash of silver n...

Off the Rails

It is newsworthy when a train derails, and always bad news.  No train goes "off the rails" without incredible damage due to the sheer size and weight of the train.  With immense force linked carriages pile into one another, creating a twisted pile of metal carnage.  A train which leaves the track whilst transporting people is a greater catastrophe still.  The aftermath is a nightmare for all involved. Sometimes the lives of people have been compared to a train wreck, a personal disaster which causes people to stare and wonder in amazement.  A life which seemed to be going along smoothly to a profitable destination suddenly veered off course possibly due to bad choices.  Complications and severe consequences can quickly escalate out of control.  We say such a person has gone "off the rails."  A life which was once promising can be stopped in its tracks through drugs, alcohol, and debt.  There are undoubtedly many factors which lead to the...

The Aerated Heart

We have been experiencing summer in full swing in Sydney, and areas of our lawn without shade have begun to dry out.  Though the Sir Walter turf is very hardy, additional water is needed at times to keep it green and growing.  It took me mowing and edging to notice the dusty and dry condition of the lawn.  It's funny, isn't it?  I look across our green lawn every day, but it isn't until I tend to it that I notice areas of neglect which escaped notice.  Yesterday I spent a good half-hour watering the lawn and offering my skin to thirsty mosquitoes (I found this out later).  The soil was so dry it took a while before the water penetrated the surface.  A large portion of the turf slopes down to the street so it was necessary to water above the area I wanted to soak because of the water runoff.  Thirsty and dry as the soil was, it was like it was incapable to drink the water in. As I stood watering, it occurred to me dryness is one of the reasons s...