09 March 2014

Green Leaves - But Any Pumpkins?

After we moved into our rental in Riverstone, I pulled out some of the overgrown seasonal plants which were dying.  In a cleared area of soil it was not long before a vine began to grow.  At first I thought it might be a zucchini plant, but after a month it became clear it was a pumpkin vine.  I knew this only because of the small green pumpkins the size of a cricket ball crowned with a golden flower.  The boys and I continued to water the plant along with our passion fruit vines.  Recently I went out to check on the growth of the pumpkins and to my surprise could not find a single one.  Upon further inspection, some animal (likely a possum or rat) had eaten every flower and pumpkin during the night, leaving only a small bit of rind.  That explained why the vine is growing massive.  With the fruit being eaten before it is mature, the vine keeps expanding.  The problem is, there's no fruit!  That's the only reason I didn't rip up the plant like a common weed!

The LORD reminded me of the passage in Song of Songs 2:15 that says, "Catch us the foxes, the little foxes that spoil the vines, for our vines have tender grapes."  Foxes, like possums, are opportunistic.  In the middle of the night they sneak into the garden or vineyard and do damage to the vines as they feed on the fruit.  The devil is an opportunistic spoiler himself.  If he cannot kill or destroy, he tries to ruin our fruitfulness.  He ever seeks to gain entry to our minds and hearts through temptations or suggestions.  When we least expect it, he covertly works to gain a foothold through sin.  Instead of bearing the fruit of the Spirit, our spreading green leaves hide the truth even from our eyes.  We are to take captive all thoughts to the obedience of Christ (2 Cor. 10:5).  That is why we must intentionally ask God to search our hearts and see if there be anything keeping us from fruitfulness.  Expansive growth may be pretty, but it's pretty useless if fruit never grows to maturity!

The world spoon-feeds us gossip disguised as news, distracts us with busyness, barges into our thoughts with technology and media, and keeps us preoccupied or occupied with things of this world.  We may be careful to avoid spreading gossip with our lips, but how well do we avoid it with our eyes?  Those tasty trifles deal out great damage to all who swallow them.  Let us set a godly guard over our eyes and ears, for they have a direct line to our heart from which spring all the issues of life.  Instead of being defined about what we avoid, let us be those who walk in love so we might be fruitful.  Growing green leaves without pumpkins is like gaining knowledge without loving one another as Christ loves us.  Jesus has called us to bear fruit as it is written in John 15:16-17:  "You did not choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you that you should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain, that whatever you ask the Father in My name He may give you. 17 These things I command you, that you love one another."  We love God because He first loved us.  It is walking in His love that makes us fruitful for His glory!

04 March 2014

Celebrate Small Victories

After sending the boys off to school, I walked past the kitchen to head to my office area.  When I walked by the empty kitchen sink, I celebrated a brief moment of happiness.  I made waffles for the family this morning and washed the dishes right away.  Seeing the sink empty of dirty dishes made me feel I had accomplished something worthwhile, something I ought to savour for a moment.  The clean dishes and empty sink was a victory worth celebrating.

Washing the dishes may seem a very insignificant thing.  It does not compare with landing a rocket on the moon, climbing a mountain peak, or surviving a fiercely fought gunfight as a soldier.  Clean dishes seem even less important because dishes become dirty again.  Since the next meal will generate more dishes, it can be one of those thankless jobs that never seem to be done.  Consider this:  how would your life be different if you saw the little household victories like mopped floors, clean windows, and washed dishes as great victories?  How thankful to God we would be!  Our appreciation of the strength and wisdom He provides would grow exponentially.  What if we saw small sacrifices for God's glory and the good of others as massive victories only accomplished by God's grace?  When we recognise we cannot do anything without God's help, no victory would seem small.  Indeed, even the smallest completed task is a miraculous victory to be celebrated if we maintain this biblical perspective.

Cleaning the kitchen cannot hardly be compared to warfare, but it is an accomplishment we ought not take lightly.  For some folks, simply getting out of bed when the alarm goes off at dark-thirty is a massive win!  Should we take this victory over the soft fetters of drowsiness lightly?  No!  Turning down that dessert, saying no to the second soda is a victory to be celebrated.  Our celebration should not be to boost our pride or build confidence in self, but in recognition and praise of God's grace toward us.  1 Corinthians 10:31 says:  "Therefore, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."  In seeking an arbitrary "victory" to celebrate (let's say losing 10 kilos), we neglect to celebrate when we only lost one!  In fact, the one kilo lost over two weeks feels more like a failure because we have forgotten that in everything we are to give thanks and rejoice before our Saviour.

If your sink is clear of dirty dishes, thank God and celebrate Him.  If your sink is full of dirty dishes, thank God you have dishes to clean!  In everything rejoice, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you.

02 March 2014

Grace to You and Peace

At Calvary Chapel Sydney yesterday, we began the study of Philippians.  Paul began by introducing himself and Timothy as bondservants of Christ and continued in verse 2:  "Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ."  The order of grace and peace is significant, for true peace is a product of God's grace.  There is no peace apart from the grace of God.  "Shalom" is the Hebrew word translated peace in the Old Testament and conveys peace, prosperity, and well-being.  Because the New Testament is translated from Greek, the transliteration is "eirene" which means "to join, by implication prosperity, to set at one again."  A man alone without God cannot be at peace, because he has been cut off from God because of his sin.  By the grace of God we can experience union with God through the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

On the heels of the sermon, I happened to read the back of a "Tea Tonic" chamomile packet.  It vividly described the effect of drinking the tea:  "A charming simplicity created from delicate flowers, that helps calm, soothe, and gives inner peace."  All I can say is, the "inner peace" chamomile tea potentially brings is far from what is available to all in Christ.  The union of tea with my stomach does not provide any lasting peace.  There is no shortage of activities or things the world claims is a substitute for peace from God, but every single one of them is a sham.  The world is big on promoting feelings gained from various activities, but nothing the world gives lasts.  Not one thing originating in this fallen world can bring peace to the soul of a human being.  The very things we can be duped into thinking bring peace do the opposite!  More money in the bank cannot give this peace.  No job, amount of fame, sex, or recognition provides peace.  Everything we see will someday pass away and be remembered no more.

But God, who is rich and mercy, has provided peace that passes understanding and is available to all who will receive Him.  Paul reminded the church in Ephesus to hearken back to their life prior to believing the Gospel in Ephesians 2:12-19 and to consider their changed circumstances after being born again by faith in Christ:  "...that at that time you were without Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world. 13 But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ. 14 For He Himself is our peace, who has made both one, and has broken down the middle wall of separation, 15 having abolished in His flesh the enmity, that is, the law of commandments contained in ordinances, so as to create in Himself one new man from the two, thus making peace, 16 and that He might reconcile them both to God in one body through the cross, thereby putting to death the enmity. 17 And He came and preached peace to you who were afar off and to those who were near. 18 For through Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father. 19 Now, therefore, you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God..."

No one can be truly be at peace alone, for how can we be joined to ourselves?  Our sin has separated us from God, and Christ through the Gospel is the one who makes us a new creation:  He "sets at one again."  It is foolish to imagine we can be at peace in this life surrounded by troubled people and circumstances all around us by any external means.  The only way to divine peace is through Jesus Christ and union with Him through faith.  God has given us grace, and peace is provided for all who abide in Christ.  No matter the trials and challenges God allows us to face in the future, the peace God gives is a reality we experience as we look to Him.  It is by God's grace Paul can write the exhortation found in Philippians 4:6-7:  "Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; 7 and the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus."

26 February 2014

Look to Christ!

Mr. Kennedy was my History teacher at Emerald Junior High in 1993.  He was a man in control, a seasoned veteran of the classroom.  He was one of those older men who had a gruff persona, but also had that twinkle in his eye.  I liked him from the first day.  My appreciation of his experience, knowledge, and teaching methods only grew as the year progressed.  When graduation from year 8 finally came, I mustered up the courage to ask him to sign my yearbook.  He obliged.  After writing a quick note, he said with a straight face, "I usually don't write half that much."  I received his statement as a compliment, and after reading his message knew it was.

Out of all the messages written in my yearbook by friends and teachers, his meant the most to me.  It still means a lot to me now.  Mr. Kennedy was a man who only knew me as a student in his class for a short time, yet there was a man who believed in me.  Outside of my parents and family relations, I don't know of any others who expressed what he did in a couple of sentences.  He concluded with a sentence at the time I hoped would prove prophetic:  "You will do well in anything you try."  It was an important encouragement at an awkward time in my life.  I had entered into public school after being home schooled for 3 years, and was preparing to transition into high school.  I thank God for Mr. Kennedy and the encouragement he provided.  Twenty-one years have passed, and my appreciation for his care burns undimmed.

Back in those days I could never have imagined where the LORD would lead me.  I had aspirations of being a forensic pathologist or a coroner.  Perhaps a baseball career or my budding golf interest would pay future dividends.  God opened a door after two years of university to go into a construction trade, mechanical insulation.  And after a decade God did the absolute unthinkable:  called me into pastoral ministry.  Then God even went further to lead me to settle in Australia and pastor a church!  When I consider how God has directed my life, it blows me away.  I am most thankful and appreciative of all He has done.

I had a strange series of thoughts the other day, and in retrospect I do not know they were mine.  There were suggestions, statements rooted in doubt that did not spring from a perspective of faith.  The devil can be most subtle.  "Look at all your High School friends," the thoughts began.  "Some are doctors, lawyers, professors, business owners, corporate executives, a commercial pilot, a professional baseball player, well-known people of wealth and distinction.  And what have you done?  You are virtually unknown.  Think what could have been should you have chosen a different path.  You could have done this, done that, been somebody."  I didn't think long before I realised the futility of it.  There was an undertone of discontent, envy, and greed that reeked of sulfur in those thoughts.  I confessed my sin as I prayed:  "Please forgive me LORD for even giving place to those thoughts for a second.  Your way is the right way.  I'm happy right where I am, and my satisfaction is in you."

The path of faith in Christ is the only one worth traveling.  If there is anything I desire to do well, it is to follow Jesus faithfully all my days.  I am not rich in worldly goods, but I have all I need.  I am not well known in this world, but I am known by God as His dear child.  And I am not alone!  Last night I read with great delight a passage of a man who has gone before me.  Moses was a man who was raised as a prince, trained by the very best, and at 40 years old had a bright future.  He had wealth, intelligence, fame, and security.  Yet Moses chose to forfeit it all to serve God, believing only God could supply true wealth.  Hebrews 11:24-26:  "By faith Moses, when he became of age, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, 25 choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin, 26 esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt; for he looked to the reward."  There it is!  Moses esteemed the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt.  I too have come to the conclusion that the reproach of Christ is greater than all this world could ever offer.  My convictions and beliefs have cost me superficial friendships, but the gain I have through friendship with God and fellowship in the church is of far greater and eternal value.

When you are tempted to look back on what could have been, instead look to the God who was, is, and is to come.  Regret promotes decay and death, whereas faith and hope in God bring light and life.  God is the one who does all things well, and He does not even need to try.  It is a beautiful day when our identity is found in Christ alone:  in the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His suffering.  God is a Redeemer who provides joy unspeakable and peace that passes understanding for eternity.  Jesus is the One who makes all things new!