On the news before dinner, a video was shown of a flaming, mangled car which was involved in a tragic accident. The wreck ended up killing the teenage driver and sending a passenger to hospital in critical condition. After dinner our family reads a chapter from the Bible and discusses it together. The words of Jesus which we read were most appropriate and thought provoking. Luke 13:1-5 reads, "There were present at that season some who told Him about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices.
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And Jesus answered and said to them, "Do you suppose that these Galileans were worse sinners than all other Galileans, because they suffered such things?
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I tell you, no; but unless you repent you will all likewise perish.
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Or those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell and killed them, do you think that they were worse sinners than all other men who dwelt in Jerusalem?
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I tell you, no; but unless you repent you will all likewise perish."
That girl who perished in that accident was no worse than any other teenager. She was not killed because of bad karma, having sown the seeds of bad deeds throughout her life. I never met her, but I know she was no worse than I am. God causes the rain to fall on the just and unjust alike. Those Galileans who were killed by Pilate, nor those on whom the tower of Siloam collapsed, were worse than other people. The fact is, we have all done wrong. The point of Christ's emphasis is, "Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish." Not too many of our lives will end in a fiery automobile crash. Not all of us will be crushed under the weight of crumbling masonry or face capital punishment. But unless we repent, we will likewise perish. Jesus spoke these words to compel people to face their own mortality. Every man will die, and if we die in our sins we face eternal death as a result. Though it may seem a bit harsh, Jesus was loving to speak this way. As I think of the flames licking that gutted car, I understand Him clearly. People are not unlucky to die, and others are not lucky to live. No matter how long we live on earth, each day is a step towards the inevitable end.
In the evangelism efforts of Christians it is a grave error to divorce the stark truth of the Gospel from the love which made it a reality. Most of us have witnessed a callous, arrogant, unloving presentation of Gospel truth. This is an outrage. But the other extreme is to hold forth the Gospel packaged with such fluff and ribbons that when the gift is opened there is nothing of substance within. We hold back from sharing the Gospel the way Jesus did because we are afraid of offense. The result is we pander to those who would refuse to trust in Christ no matter how it is presented, and we do not adequately warn others who would actually respond to the message of salvation through faith in Jesus. Because we are worried about scaring away the fish we stay away from the water. If we want to catch fish, we must not only be content to lower the nets: we need to retrieve them as well.
If we will save souls, there are things which we also must bring up: our sinful condition, mortality, the judgment that awaits all people after our life is over, and the salvation offered us through Jesus Christ. If John 3:16 is worthy to commit to memory, so is Luke 13:5. Unless we repent, we will all likewise perish. John 3:16 says, "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life." He who has ears to hear, let him hear!
07 August 2012
06 August 2012
Visa Update!
I consider it a great privilege to serve God in Australia. There is no place in the world I would rather be. Australia was never in my plans growing up or even well into adulthood, but God had other plans! He has knit my heart so closely to the people here that I cannot imagine living anywhere else. Watching God unfold His plan for me and my family has been instrumental in strengthening my faith in His provision, timing, and grace. The love and support of friends and family from "up above" and "down under" has been such a blessing.
Visas are part of the deal when serving in a foreign field. We are about a year and a half gone of a two-year visa. When we obtained the 428 Religious Workers visa through the nomination of Calvary Chapel Sydney, it was a once-renewable path to permanent residency. When Laura called a couple weeks ago to see when we could begin to submit paperwork for the renewal, I knew something was up. I could hear from the other room: "I would like to know when we can renew the 428 visa. We were told it was a path to residency...it isn't? Oh. Ok. Good to know." What came out of the call is the 428 is renewable, but no longer a path to residency. I suppose that was the bad news. It would have been disappointing had the other news not been so good. It turns out that 1 July a new immigration began which would allow the church to nominate me as a Minister of Religion right now and with it permanent residency! "Get it done now," the immigration officer said. "Why wait?" I could not agree more with that sentiment!
Immediately I began to investigate the process and initiated our Australian Federal Police checks. At the moment we are gathering together the necessary documentation for the nomination and application, an involved process to be sure. We are content in the knowledge that God is in control and want to be faithful to do our part. Patience is something God has given me many lessons in, and there are more lessons to come. Please pray for the nomination and application to be sorted in God's time. Thank you for all the prayers, financial support, and love many have expressed to us. With this visa process and all things may God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven!
Visas are part of the deal when serving in a foreign field. We are about a year and a half gone of a two-year visa. When we obtained the 428 Religious Workers visa through the nomination of Calvary Chapel Sydney, it was a once-renewable path to permanent residency. When Laura called a couple weeks ago to see when we could begin to submit paperwork for the renewal, I knew something was up. I could hear from the other room: "I would like to know when we can renew the 428 visa. We were told it was a path to residency...it isn't? Oh. Ok. Good to know." What came out of the call is the 428 is renewable, but no longer a path to residency. I suppose that was the bad news. It would have been disappointing had the other news not been so good. It turns out that 1 July a new immigration began which would allow the church to nominate me as a Minister of Religion right now and with it permanent residency! "Get it done now," the immigration officer said. "Why wait?" I could not agree more with that sentiment!
Immediately I began to investigate the process and initiated our Australian Federal Police checks. At the moment we are gathering together the necessary documentation for the nomination and application, an involved process to be sure. We are content in the knowledge that God is in control and want to be faithful to do our part. Patience is something God has given me many lessons in, and there are more lessons to come. Please pray for the nomination and application to be sorted in God's time. Thank you for all the prayers, financial support, and love many have expressed to us. With this visa process and all things may God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven!
Consecrate Your Temple
Consecration is a theme I have been meditating upon lately. Webster's 1828 dictionary defines it this way: "The act or ceremony of separating from a common to a sacred use, or of devoting and dedicating a person or thing to the service and worship of God, by certain rites or solemnities. Consecration does not make a person or thing really holy, but declares it to be sacred, that is, devoted to God or to divine service; as the consecration of the priests among the Israelites; the consecration of the vessels used in the temple." The priests, articles of the temple, and even the temple itself were all consecrated for the worship and service of God. But just because something has been consecrated to God does not mean it was always used for its intended purpose.
When we think of the temple, it's likely we do so with a sense of awe and reverence. Think of that magnificent temple Solomon built with the doors covered in gold, awesome brass pillars, the solid gold lampstand and the altar of incense. Imagine you are a priest, walking through the doors into the holy place, lifting your eyes to see the massive cherubim, smelling the fragrance of the incense, and before you stands the curtain separating the Holy of Holies where the Spirit of God dwells above the mercy seat of the Ark of the Covenant. And now imagine that it's been a really slow day because of rainy weather and quite some time has passed since any have visited the temple. A bit bored, you and other priests decide close the doors of the temple and set up a indoor soccer game using the table of showbread and altar of incense as one goal, and the curtain of the Holy of Holies for the other goal! Pretty ridiculous, right? It seems an utterly ludicrous suggestion. It would be plain wrong to degrade a holy, consecrated place to the level of a field of sport.
The temple was consecrated to God, yet throughout scripture we read of many occasions when it was profaned, neglected, and polluted. While the tabernacle was set up in Shiloh, Eli's wicked sons Hophni and Phinehas had sex with women who assembled there (1 Samuel 2:22). Eli allowed the lamp to burn out instead of keeping it lit perpetually. The sons of Athaliah broke up the temple and dedicated God's things to Baal (2 Chron. 24:7), a false god. Josiah was a good king who desired to fix the leaks and breaches of God's house. When they began to repair the temple, the priest Hilkiah found the book of the law which had been lost (2 Kings 22:8). Imagine losing God's Word in the temple! The wicked king Ahaz polluted the temple, barred the doors, and set up altars to idols throughout the city (2 Chron. 28:24). It took eight days for the Levites to carry all the rubbish that was left in the holy place to the brook Kidron (2 Chron. 29:17). And what of Eliashib the priest in the days of Nehemiah, who allowed Tobiah, the avowed enemy of God and Israel, to live in a room inside the temple (Neh. 13:4-7)? Nehemiah was furious and threw out all Tobiah's stuff. When Jesus came to Jerusalem, He made a whip of cords and overturned the tables of the money changers, driving them and their wares outside of the temple courts (John 2:13-16). Instead of regarding God's house as a house of prayer, they made it a den of thieves.
For those who reverence and love God, it is difficult to grasp how the temple of God consecrated for worship would be misused, polluted, and profaned. As human beings, it is easier for us to reverence a physical place as holy ground rather than temples not made with hands. There is the very real potential that the temple of the Holy Spirit can be profaned even in our day. Do you know that born again Christians are now the temple of the Holy Spirit, having become His consecrated dwelling place? Being holy does not mean that we need to walk in slow motion, call people "my son," or adopt mechanical hand motions: it means that we have been consecrated for use by God, having been employed in his service. We are to separate ourselves from sin and walk in righteousness. The worship and service of God is our sole purpose in all we think, say, and do. It is not our primary purpose: it is our only purpose. Through the Gospel and faith in Jesus Christ we have chosen to be purchased as voluntary slaves with Christ's blood. We ought to be about God's business, for a servant is not above his Master.
Does this mean we can't play soccer? No. Whatever we do, we should do it heartily as unto the LORD. But we ought to recognise we have been bought with a price and our life is not to be lived for ourselves any more. No game, activity, or earthly thing may be allowed to compete with our allegiance and affections towards God. What we love the most is evident by how we spend our time - or how we wish we could spend our time. God has freely given us everything to enjoy, and we ought to glorify God in all we do. Instead of living to please the dictates of ourselves, we are to walk in obedience to God. We are to put off the old man, be renewed in the spirit of our mind, and put on the new man. We ought to faithfully read the word instead of neglecting it. We ought to keep the doors of our heart open to Christ instead of barring them. We need to keep our light burning bright like a city on a hill that cannot be hid. We must ruthlessly destroy any idols that exist in our lives and pursue the worship of God alone. All sin is to be put off and no good deed for God left undone. Paul sums it up well in 1 Corinthians 6:19-20: "Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? 20 For you were bought at a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God's."
When God looks at you, He is not focused on the image you see in the mirror: He looks upon your heart. In modern vernacular, the concept of "my body is a temple" is limited to the physical. Your muscles or lack thereof is of little concern to Him. God is not in awe of ornate buildings constructed for the purpose of worship, nor is He impressed with our physical bodies. Isaiah 66:1-2 reads, "Thus says the LORD: "Heaven is My throne, and earth is My footstool. Where is the house that you will build Me? And where is the place of My rest? 2 For all those things My hand has made, and all those things exist," says the LORD. "But on this one will I look: on him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at My word." May we humble ourselves before the LORD, being consecrated for His use not in word only, but in deed and truth. Let us wash our hands and cleanse our hearts from sin so we will experience the communion and fellowship God freely offers by His grace. The curtain has been torn. Put away the soccer ball and bow before your Maker, man! There's nothing boring about that!
When we think of the temple, it's likely we do so with a sense of awe and reverence. Think of that magnificent temple Solomon built with the doors covered in gold, awesome brass pillars, the solid gold lampstand and the altar of incense. Imagine you are a priest, walking through the doors into the holy place, lifting your eyes to see the massive cherubim, smelling the fragrance of the incense, and before you stands the curtain separating the Holy of Holies where the Spirit of God dwells above the mercy seat of the Ark of the Covenant. And now imagine that it's been a really slow day because of rainy weather and quite some time has passed since any have visited the temple. A bit bored, you and other priests decide close the doors of the temple and set up a indoor soccer game using the table of showbread and altar of incense as one goal, and the curtain of the Holy of Holies for the other goal! Pretty ridiculous, right? It seems an utterly ludicrous suggestion. It would be plain wrong to degrade a holy, consecrated place to the level of a field of sport.
The temple was consecrated to God, yet throughout scripture we read of many occasions when it was profaned, neglected, and polluted. While the tabernacle was set up in Shiloh, Eli's wicked sons Hophni and Phinehas had sex with women who assembled there (1 Samuel 2:22). Eli allowed the lamp to burn out instead of keeping it lit perpetually. The sons of Athaliah broke up the temple and dedicated God's things to Baal (2 Chron. 24:7), a false god. Josiah was a good king who desired to fix the leaks and breaches of God's house. When they began to repair the temple, the priest Hilkiah found the book of the law which had been lost (2 Kings 22:8). Imagine losing God's Word in the temple! The wicked king Ahaz polluted the temple, barred the doors, and set up altars to idols throughout the city (2 Chron. 28:24). It took eight days for the Levites to carry all the rubbish that was left in the holy place to the brook Kidron (2 Chron. 29:17). And what of Eliashib the priest in the days of Nehemiah, who allowed Tobiah, the avowed enemy of God and Israel, to live in a room inside the temple (Neh. 13:4-7)? Nehemiah was furious and threw out all Tobiah's stuff. When Jesus came to Jerusalem, He made a whip of cords and overturned the tables of the money changers, driving them and their wares outside of the temple courts (John 2:13-16). Instead of regarding God's house as a house of prayer, they made it a den of thieves.
For those who reverence and love God, it is difficult to grasp how the temple of God consecrated for worship would be misused, polluted, and profaned. As human beings, it is easier for us to reverence a physical place as holy ground rather than temples not made with hands. There is the very real potential that the temple of the Holy Spirit can be profaned even in our day. Do you know that born again Christians are now the temple of the Holy Spirit, having become His consecrated dwelling place? Being holy does not mean that we need to walk in slow motion, call people "my son," or adopt mechanical hand motions: it means that we have been consecrated for use by God, having been employed in his service. We are to separate ourselves from sin and walk in righteousness. The worship and service of God is our sole purpose in all we think, say, and do. It is not our primary purpose: it is our only purpose. Through the Gospel and faith in Jesus Christ we have chosen to be purchased as voluntary slaves with Christ's blood. We ought to be about God's business, for a servant is not above his Master.
Does this mean we can't play soccer? No. Whatever we do, we should do it heartily as unto the LORD. But we ought to recognise we have been bought with a price and our life is not to be lived for ourselves any more. No game, activity, or earthly thing may be allowed to compete with our allegiance and affections towards God. What we love the most is evident by how we spend our time - or how we wish we could spend our time. God has freely given us everything to enjoy, and we ought to glorify God in all we do. Instead of living to please the dictates of ourselves, we are to walk in obedience to God. We are to put off the old man, be renewed in the spirit of our mind, and put on the new man. We ought to faithfully read the word instead of neglecting it. We ought to keep the doors of our heart open to Christ instead of barring them. We need to keep our light burning bright like a city on a hill that cannot be hid. We must ruthlessly destroy any idols that exist in our lives and pursue the worship of God alone. All sin is to be put off and no good deed for God left undone. Paul sums it up well in 1 Corinthians 6:19-20: "Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? 20 For you were bought at a price; therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God's."
When God looks at you, He is not focused on the image you see in the mirror: He looks upon your heart. In modern vernacular, the concept of "my body is a temple" is limited to the physical. Your muscles or lack thereof is of little concern to Him. God is not in awe of ornate buildings constructed for the purpose of worship, nor is He impressed with our physical bodies. Isaiah 66:1-2 reads, "Thus says the LORD: "Heaven is My throne, and earth is My footstool. Where is the house that you will build Me? And where is the place of My rest? 2 For all those things My hand has made, and all those things exist," says the LORD. "But on this one will I look: on him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at My word." May we humble ourselves before the LORD, being consecrated for His use not in word only, but in deed and truth. Let us wash our hands and cleanse our hearts from sin so we will experience the communion and fellowship God freely offers by His grace. The curtain has been torn. Put away the soccer ball and bow before your Maker, man! There's nothing boring about that!
02 August 2012
Hitting the Mark?
No matter how harshly we judges ourselves, I am confident we human beings are worse than our lowest estimation. The best men may see themselves in the worst light, but we are not always at our best. I am actually grateful for the amazing way the challenges of life draw out negative qualities and bring to the surface my obvious dearth of character. When all is going according to plan, we might convince ourselves of our own goodness. But what about when we are running late? It is when I am running late all the slowest, most clueless drivers seems to abound. Hmmm. How about when you lose something? Or when you pick the wrong queue again at the shops? I can't even count the many times I had several queues to choose from and I chose the one with the sluggish trainee who has to call for price checks or assistance. Because all the other lines seems to evaporate before they form, I would decide to change to another line, only to have the manager to be called to approve the purchase in front of me! The people who were behind me in the previous line are now long gone while I stew there, believing that death itself could not be so miserable.
Even as the world is perfectly suited to support human, animal, and plant life, God has so arranged our lives to provide ample proof that we are sinners who desperately need a Saviour. Time pressure, delays, sickness, pain, relationships, driving, waiting, and even shopping all combine together as a proving ground of our character. I have come to the conclusion to which Paul arrived, that in my flesh no good things dwells. Any praiseworthy or honorable traits which exist in me I only have received by the grace of God. All the time God reveals areas of weakness in my life only His strength can bring victory. Proverbs 20:6 says that most men will proclaim their own goodness, but Christians are not to be like most men. Instead of taking the credit or the glory for any good work, we must extol and praise the name of Jesus as the source of any goodness found within us.
So the next time you are frustrated, lose your temper, or react harshly to your spouse or children, take heart. God is gracious to allow us to fail so we might recognise our sin, apologise to those we have wronged, repent, and commit ourselves to God wholeheartedly again. A small adjustment of the bow is the difference between hitting the target and missing it altogether, and small improvements in our attitudes and actions brings God more glory. May we live a life that hits the mark!
Even as the world is perfectly suited to support human, animal, and plant life, God has so arranged our lives to provide ample proof that we are sinners who desperately need a Saviour. Time pressure, delays, sickness, pain, relationships, driving, waiting, and even shopping all combine together as a proving ground of our character. I have come to the conclusion to which Paul arrived, that in my flesh no good things dwells. Any praiseworthy or honorable traits which exist in me I only have received by the grace of God. All the time God reveals areas of weakness in my life only His strength can bring victory. Proverbs 20:6 says that most men will proclaim their own goodness, but Christians are not to be like most men. Instead of taking the credit or the glory for any good work, we must extol and praise the name of Jesus as the source of any goodness found within us.
So the next time you are frustrated, lose your temper, or react harshly to your spouse or children, take heart. God is gracious to allow us to fail so we might recognise our sin, apologise to those we have wronged, repent, and commit ourselves to God wholeheartedly again. A small adjustment of the bow is the difference between hitting the target and missing it altogether, and small improvements in our attitudes and actions brings God more glory. May we live a life that hits the mark!
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