16 March 2016

Astonishing Doctrine of Jesus

All Christians have the sober responsibility to rightly divide the Word of truth.  It is important we observe what the text plainly says before we rush to explain what it means.  It is also critical we do not parrot what we have heard but do our best to stay true to the text with our emphasis.  It is a common mistake to transfer assumptions based upon hearsay or our opinions into passages and provide the wrong impression.  One passage where this is commonly done is when Jesus on two occasions cleansed the Temple in Jerusalem.

People have used this passage to justify being angry when the passage never explicitly says Jesus was.  The harmonising scriptural accounts of the Gospels portray Jesus observing the illicit trade in the Temple, fashioning a scourge of small chords, and then driving out the animals and overturning tables.  Those who say Jesus must have been angry (maybe they would have!) might be the same people who assume a parent must be fueled with anger when administering discipline with a paddle to the seat of his/her disobedient child.  This is unfounded.  To say Jesus was angry when He drove out the money changers is conjecture which goes beyond the text.  Looking at Jesus through the lens of our flesh is a huge mistake.

The emphasis and revelation of the text is Jesus taught the people who were in the Temple, quoting from Isaiah 56:7 and Jeremiah 7:11.  As I read the account of Mark, I noticed the emphasis in a fresh way today I never had before.  The richness of the Bible expands the understanding of those who are willing and patient to observe.  One would have thought the actions of Jesus made the biggest impact, but it was His teaching.  As Jesus held His ground in the Temple and forbade people to carry wares through the courtyard, Mark 11:17-18 says, "Then He taught, saying to them, "Is it not written, 'My house shall be called a house of prayer for all nations'? But you have made it a 'den of thieves.'" 18 And the scribes and chief priests heard it and sought how they might destroy Him; for they feared Him, because all the people were astonished at His teaching."

How clear is this?  Most Christians are blown away that Jesus would make a whip and drive sellers and their animals out of the Temple, but the scribes, chief priests, and people were amazed by His doctrine.  The text says the scribes and chief priests heard what He was saying.  They wanted to kill Him - not primarily because their hope of gain was gone - but because of His doctrine which implicated them.  Jesus first quoted from Isaiah 56, and after talking about His house as a house of prayer for all nations the passage said in Isaiah 56:10-11:  "His watchmen are blind, They are all ignorant; they are all dumb dogs, they cannot bark; sleeping, lying down, loving to slumber. 11 Yes, they are greedy dogs which never have enough. And they are shepherds who cannot understand; they all look to their own way, every one for his own gain, from his own territory."  Ouch.  No doubt the words of Jesus cut like a sword through the hearts of the scribes and priests, implicated as blind watchmen, dumb and greedy dogs who could not understand.  No wonder they were upset!

Jesus made a "den of thieves" reference spoken by the prophet Jeremiah.  Hear and feel the full force of His words in Jeremiah 7:1-11, a pronouncement from God against them:  "The word that came to Jeremiah from the LORD, saying, 2 "Stand in the gate of the LORD'S house, and proclaim there this word, and say, 'Hear the word of the LORD, all you of Judah who enter in at these gates to worship the LORD!' " 3 Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel: "Amend your ways and your doings, and I will cause you to dwell in this place. 4 Do not trust in these lying words, saying, 'The temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD, the temple of the LORD are these.' 5 For if you thoroughly amend your ways and your doings, if you thoroughly execute judgment between a man and his neighbor, 6 if you do not oppress the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow, and do not shed innocent blood in this place, or walk after other gods to your hurt, 7 then I will cause you to dwell in this place, in the land that I gave to your fathers forever and ever. 8 "Behold, you trust in lying words that cannot profit. 9 Will you steal, murder, commit adultery, swear falsely, burn incense to Baal, and walk after other gods whom you do not know, 10 and then come and stand before Me in this house which is called by My name, and say, 'We are delivered to do all these abominations'? 11 Has this house, which is called by My name, become a den of thieves in your eyes? Behold, I, even I, have seen it," says the LORD."  The scribes and priests oppressed the people for monetary gain, for money was their god.  These statements angered the rulers and amazed the people, for there stood a man who spoke as God.

Jesus, being God, had the authority to say such things.  To the scribes and priests these were fighting words.  They were infuriated and sought how they might destroy Him.  Jesus spoke the truth in love with a clear, strong voice and the rulers feared Him.  What Jesus did and said all has great significance, and let us be sure we put aside our own assumptions so we can observe and understand what the Bible says!

15 March 2016

Seeing Jesus As Your Way

For many people, happiness and joy is always out of reach.  We hope changed circumstances in the future will make things better, but quite often when we arrive at our destination we face another set of problems.  Like a man looking for an oasis we stumble from mirage to mirage, exhausted and increasingly disillusioned.  We swallow our fantasies and grow sick when they never deliver what they promised us.  Man looks for relief, rest, contentment, fulfillment, and satisfaction, and yet to reach for them is grasping for the wind.

When I worked at a church in the United States, people would often come off the street asking for something.  People would ask for food, money for petrol, bus tokens, to use the phone, for a lift, to leave their car in our carpark overnight, for counselling, anything.  I remember one man in particular who asked for money to fix the transmission on his van.  During my initial conversation with him, it seemed like his broken transmission was the only thing which concerned him.  If only he had his transmission fixed, his life would be fixed to.  I came to find out the reason why the transmission was so important was because this individual was living in his van.  There were a lot of broken things in the man's life; the transmission happened to be his biggest priority at the moment.  When it was fixed, something immediately sprang up to fill the void.

We are all the same.  When the poisonous "If only..." thinking takes hold on our thinking, be warned.  "If only I was out of this relationship..." "If only I had this better job..." "If only people respected me..." "If only I could have a decent holiday..."  "If only" thinking never ends and is never satisfied!  It is reasonable for us to take note of physical pain and treat it medically, even as it is wise to maintain our vehicles so they are able to safely transport us.  But unless we learn to be content in God in our current situation - despite our pain or difficulties - we will not be content even when our dreams come true.  There will be something else waiting to rob you of your joy and contentment.  It is only when we recognise Jesus Christ and a relationship with Him is our only means of being made whole that we can experience true joy and peace which cannot be taken from us.

This truth is illustrated when a blind man called out to Jesus as He came to Jericho.  Jesus stopped and bid the man be called to him.  The man rushed over to Jesus, and Jesus asked him what he desired.  The man said, "Lord, that I might receive my sight."  Mark 10:52 reads, "Then Jesus said to him, "Go your way; your faith has made you well." And immediately he received his sight and followed Jesus on the road."  It is telling that after Jesus opened the man's eyes, he used them to follow Jesus, the One who had made him whole.  I believe with eyes of faith this man understood.  His eyes would likely grow dim with age and one day close permanently in death.  So often we are without contentment and ask God to change our circumstances.  In the instances when He does, our tendency is to immediately ask for the next thing instead of following Him today in joyful thanksgiving.  Perhaps God is gracious and good to allow difficult trials so we will realise we need Him and not just something from Him.  The blind man who Jesus made whole teaches all who are willing to see.  Jesus said "Go your way," and the man did:  Jesus was his way, truth, and life.

14 March 2016

Hearing and Pleasing God

"Children, obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing to the Lord."
Colossians 3:20

After Jesus explained the Parable of the Sower to His disciples, He warned them:  "Take heed therefore how you hear." (Luke 8:18)  Though all in the parable heard the Word of God, only those who received the Word and put it into practice were fruitful.  The hearts represented by the footpath, rocky soil, and thorny ground all heard the same words but they were prevented from having the intended effect.  Only with humble and repentant hearts can we receive God's truth and walk in obedience.

Recently the worship team at our church has played Chris Tomlin's song "Good Good Father."  It is a sweet song which I know ministers to people who need a reminder that God is a good Father to those born again through faith in Jesus Christ.  Not all people have had a loving, close relationship with their biological dads.  It is comforting to know God loves us despite our sins and the offer of His unfailing love is not dependent upon our performance.  Yet we have a responsibility to abide in God's love, and we do this through keeping His commands (John 15:10).  If we only hear what is being said without comprehending the implications, we will never receive or experience all the joy, peace, and comfort on offer by God.

There is one line of the song which reminds me of the importance to take heed how I hear.  In the song it speaks of hearing a tender whisper of love in the night and then comes the phrase:  "you tell me that you're pleased and that I'm never alone."  Be careful how you hear!  These are true biblical statements when understood in their proper context.  Nothing can separate me from the love of God, but should I choose a path of disobedience I cannot walk in His love.  It does not please God when His children embrace sin.  Jesus says He will never leave or forsake me, but that does not mean I cannot willfully depart from the presence of God or grieve His Spirit.  I do not believe it was the intent of the songwriter to offer comfort to people who are far from God, but if not heard correctly it only offers false hope.

As Colossians 3:20 says, there are things we can do which are pleasing to God.  This suggests we can also do things which are not pleasing to God.  For those who are in doubt, the Bible plainly states this.  The writer of Hebrews quoted from Habakkuk 2:3-4 in Hebrews 10:38:  "Now the just shall live by faith; but if anyone draws back, My soul has no pleasure in him."   It is not just the apostate or unregenerate who do not please God, but those who live according the flesh.  Romans 8:8 says, "So then, those who are in the flesh cannot please God."  Though Christians have the Holy Spirit, we live in a body of flesh and can walk according to the flesh.  That is one reason why we sin.  Should we walk in the flesh or unbelief as Christians, it is not pleasing to God.  God still loves us and we are His children even when we make mistakes, but He is certainly not pleased with us when we choose sin.

When the prodigal son demanded his inheritance from his father in the parable, he took his money and spent it on himself.  All that time whilst he was living "high on the hog" he remained his father's son and was loved by him.  Yet he separated himself from his father and thus his love.  He ended up destitute and his only companions were pigs he fed.  Do you think it pleased his father when his son took his money and ran away to satisfy his lusts?  No!  But do you think the father was pleased when his son returned home?  Absolutely!  He rushed to embrace his son, lavished him with gifts, and gladly received him back into his home with celebration.  It was not the "tender whisper of love in the night" which caused the son to return home, but the realisation he had been a great fool in going his own way.  He was humbled, brought to repentance, and was able to receive his father's love, even as people must repent and come to God in faith to receive His love.  How sad it would be for a person living in sin to be comforted in his disobedience that God unconditionally takes pleasure in him and justify his departure from God!  Take heed how you hear!

Let us do the things which are well-pleasing in God's sight.  Love and pleasure are not the same thing.  Psalm 147:11 says, "The LORD takes pleasure in those who fear Him, in those who hope in His mercy."  This word "pleasure" in the Strong's Concordance means, "to be pleased with, satisfy, and accept."  God is a good, good Father to His children, and we ought to ensure we are good children in whom He is well-pleased.

12 March 2016

What Did God Say?

We are so blessed to have the written words of God.  The scriptures can introduce man into a growing relationship with God and illuminate the path of righteousness.  In our world of memes, cliches, and catch-phrases, God's Word can be tweaked to suit our views and distort His meaning.  Satan sought to undermine the words of God from the very beginning with Eve, questioning what He had said.  Had Eve held to exactly what God said without suspiciously and selfishly wondering why He gave the command, she would have been on firm ground.

People have a way of influencing others.  It is not just the people "in authority" who have this power:  even friends and acquaintances can possess profound influence.  Take David for instance, a man who had been anointed as king.  When on the run from murderous king Saul, David had an opportunity to avenge himself.  King Saul entered a cave alone where David and his men were hiding.  It was a vulnerable moment for Saul, but equally dangerous for David because of the temptation set before him by his loyal men.  1 Samuel 24:4 says, "Then the men of David said to him, "This is the day of which the LORD said to you, 'Behold, I will deliver your enemy into your hand, that you may do to him as it seems good to you.' " And David arose and secretly cut off a corner of Saul's robe."  I have searched the scriptures, but in no place has God ever said such a thing.  God had promised to deliver David from his enemies, yet never for the purpose of doing to others "as it seems good to you."  David wisely refused to obey the urging of his friends.

The followers of Jesus also did their best to influence Him - not that they were successful!  After Jesus told his disciples that He must suffer many things, be rejected, arrested, and crucified, Peter rebuked Him.  Mark 8:33 reads, "But when He had turned around and looked at His disciples, He rebuked Peter, saying, "Get behind Me, Satan! For you are not mindful of the things of God, but the things of men."  Jesus had decided to follow the will of the Father, not to live life according to the wisdom of men.  We too must exercise this same discernment afforded all Christians by the indwelling Holy Spirit.  God has provided His Word so we can test the spirits to see if they are of God.  Like our mouths taste food, so our ears weigh the words to see if they match what God has said.  False balances are an abomination to the LORD, and our words must be carefully weighed as well.  All claims of those who say they speak for God should agree with God's Word, for He will not contradict Himself.

11 March 2016

The Great Timekeeper

I hold to a belief which is becoming increasingly rare in the world and the church:  the literal interpretation of the Genesis account that God created the heavens and the earth.  Beliefs concerning the origin of the world and the age of the earth are considered by many "not essential for salvation," and therefore many people figure it an issue of small importance.  Whether we take God at His word or not is always a massive issue, regardless if salvation is at stake.  Great errors have entered the church when people have strayed from the literal interpretation of scripture and inserted man's ideas.  The idea of Darwinian evolution and billions of years never came from the scripture.  I tell you truly:  if you cannot take literally the Genesis account of creation, you will also diverge from literal interpretations down the line when it suits you.  It is a slippery slope many have fallen down and found themselves unable to stand again.

As we read through Genesis 1 with Tribe (year 11 through young adults) at Calvary Chapel Sydney, it struck me that time began before the heavenly bodies were created.  Genesis 1:3-5 says, "Then God said, "Let there be light"; and there was light. 4 And God saw the light, that it was good; and God divided the light from the darkness. 5 God called the light Day, and the darkness He called Night. So the evening and the morning were the first day."  It is fitting God would cause light to shine in the beginning, for in Him is no darkness.  God made a division between the Day and Night without the movement of heavenly bodies.  The last part of verse five is critical:  "So evening and morning were the first day."  I find it intriguing the Jews mark the beginning of a new day with the setting of the sun, in the evening.  This mention of evening and morning of the first day reveals time had begun.  Without the need of the Sun, Moon, or rotation of the earth, the 24-hour day was governed by God from the beginning.

This is an amazing truth.  For people who believe our ordered universe, galaxy, and planet just happened to come into being without design or the power of God, the common assumption would be time on earth is determined by the alignment of the heavenly bodies and the rotation of the earth.  I believe the scripture refutes this.  I submit to you that time is not dictated by heavenly bodies at all, but the God who created time gave them to us so we could mark time.  This is a monumental difference.  Into a void where there was no earth God caused the light to shine and immediately the clock began running, so to speak.  God separated the light from the darkness, divided the waters above and below in the earth's atmosphere, and divided the water from the dry land.  He caused the earth to bring forth seed bearing herbs and fruit trees, all after their own kind.  And yes, He did this in a matter of days because He is God.   It wasn't until the fourth day that God created the Sun, Moon, and stars.

Genesis 1:14-19 says, "Then God said, "Let there be lights in the firmament of the heavens to divide the day from the night; and let them be for signs and seasons, and for days and years; 15 and let them be for lights in the firmament of the heavens to give light on the earth"; and it was so. 16 Then God made two great lights: the greater light to rule the day, and the lesser light to rule the night. He made the stars also. 17 God set them in the firmament of the heavens to give light on the earth, 18 and to rule over the day and over the night, and to divide the light from the darkness. And God saw that it was good. 19 So the evening and the morning were the fourth day."  God is responsible for time, not the heavenly bodies.  God gave us the Sun and Moon to indicate signs, seasons, days, and years.  He also created the stars - more stars than can be numbered.  Leading astronomers in the Middle Ages reckoned there were over a thousand stars, but with the advent of the telescope that number was exponentially increased!  Psalm 147:4-5 says of my great God who made the stars, "He counts the number of the stars; He calls them all by name. 5 Great is our Lord, and mighty in power; His understanding is infinite."

This world will keep on spinning as long as the God who made it intends.  God made earth the central point of Creation, and made man created in His own image as the primary focus.  There were 21 generations from Adam to Abraham, 14 generations from Abraham to David, 14 generations from David to the Jewish captivity in Babylon, and 14 generations from the captivity in Babylon to Jesus Christ (Matthew 1:17, Luke 3:34-38).  These human markers are signposts of time indicating thousands, not millions of years have elapsed since God's voice boomed:  "Let there be light!"  Many generations have passed since Christ walked on this earth, yet there remains some to this day who have not bowed the knee to the tyranny of modern scientific interpretation which claims it knows better than God's Word.  What we see today is not so much a clash of science and religion, but contrasting views of worldly and biblical worldviews which impact how we interpret the same data.  Everyone agrees this world has a beginning and it must have an end.  The more Christians who stand on the firm foundation of God's Word without shame the better.  Let's decide to shine the light of God's Word on this world - even if they don't comprehend it.

09 March 2016

Freedom for Slaves

Psalm 119 is known for being by far the longest chapter in the Bible, but it also ought to be recognised for its praise of God's Law and righteous precepts.  In nearly every single verse the psalmist magnifies God's laws, statutes, precepts, commandments, and testimonies.  It is ironic a common complaint about Christianity is all the restrictive rules and requirements, yet the psalmist saw things completely differently.  In God's Law the psalmist saw freedom, not a prison.  A man who follows his own heart is enslaved to his own lust, yet the man who seeks God's counsel to walk in His judgment finds himself free from the power of sin.

Psalm 119:45 says, "And I will walk at liberty, for I seek Your precepts."  Even under the covenant of Law it was a time of freedom for God's people.  In the United States Declaration of Independence, the founding fathers wrote all men were endowed by their Creator with "unalienable rights."  Some of those listed were life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.  It is God who has created man and is the source of all life, He is a Deliverer and Saviour, and how happy are those who trust in Him!  This pursuit of happiness is only satisfied as we seek God and walk in His ways.  Happiness cannot be permanently obtained for any earthly price, yet happy are the people whose God is the LORD (Ps. 144:15).  The man who receives Christ and gives himself to God has assurance of happiness the world cannot know.

Jesus came to earth to set the captives free from all bondage and deliver souls from death.  He said in John 8:36, "Therefore if the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed."  The world has hijacked "freedom" to mean "the right to do whatever you want."  Freedom of speech means you can say whatever you see fit without fear of correction or retribution.  We have seen the results of this sort of freedom:  it creates people who are tyrannized by their own flesh.  People can only be free when they willingly place themselves under the sovereign rule of God.  For the first time when we are born again through faith in Jesus we breathe the free air of the Holy Spirit, knowing we are no longer a slave to self, sin, Satan, or the opinions of others.  God's righteous judgments provide clarity of thought and light for every step.  Those enslaved to sin claim to be free but aren't going anywhere:  for all their freedoms, their chains remain.  Jesus is the only King who breaks all chains and sets captives free.

08 March 2016

Jesus Can and Does

Things which are impossible with men are possible for God.  This is a theme repeated throughout the scriptures, and this message is served in a concentrated dose as the life of Christ is followed in the Gospels.  As I read Mark 5 this morning, I was struck with the three major interactions in the chapter:  the man possessed with demons, the woman with the flow of blood for 12 years, and the girl who died of illness.  All three of these people faced impossible situations.

Verse 3 said no man could bind the demon possessed man, even with chains.  The man was already bound with fierce demonic beings, and all hope of the man being cured was gone.  Even the attempts of the men of the city to subdue the man were futile.  Yet after a brief encounter with Jesus, the demons were cast out, the man was clothed, and sat down before Jesus in right mind.  Jesus bid him to go back to his family and tell others of the wonderful things He had done for him.  The free man boldly obeyed, and all who heard him were amazed.

Verses 25-26 speak of a woman who had a flow of blood for 12 years.  Despite spending all her money on treatments, her illness only grew worse.  When she heard Jesus was passing by she said to herself, "If I can just touch the hem of his garment, I will be made well."  She managed to reach Him in the crowd, and it was as she believed:  she felt the bleeding stop.  Jesus knew the healing had taken place and asked, "Who touched me?"  She fell down at His feet, confessed her illness, and she had been healed by touching the clothing of Christ before all the people.  He told her to go in peace, affirmed her faith had saved her, and she had been made whole.

Verse 35 tells us a man came to Jairus and reported the death of his daughter, the one he was leading Jesus to heal.  Why trouble the teacher any more? the man asked.  Her death made any hope for healing disappear.  But Jesus said, "Do not be afraid; only believe."  Even in the face of death, Jesus was filled with hope and the ability to save.  He put out the mourners who scorned Him, took the girl's hand in His own and said, "Little girl, I say to you arise."  Much to the astonishment of her parents, the girl sat up, spoke, and began to walk around.  Powerful demons, incurable illness, and even death are defeated by Jesus Christ.

A word from Jesus Christ is enough to create the world, drive out demons, and raise the dead.  The woman with the flow of blood touched Jesus and was healed, and Jesus held the hand of the dead girl and brought her back to life.  Jesus has the power to make what is impossible possible.  He brings hope to the hopeless.  He is not like a celebrity, who signs an autograph one day and shrugs off fans the next.  Jesus is the only King who had time for everyone, went with people who invited Him to their homes, cast out demons, healed the sick, and raised the dead.  He touched and was willing to be touched.  He gave of Himself wholly and His life of sacrifice was culminated on Calvary.  Will you bring your impossible situations to Jesus today?  Will you seek after Him with all your heart so you might touch only the hem of His garment in humble faith?  He invites us to come to Him with our unquenchable thirst, our hunger which cannot be satisfied, so that we might partake of Him and discover His abundant life.  Let us obey Jesus and testify of the great things He has done for us! 

06 March 2016

The Reasonable Appetite

It is interesting how different people's standards of right and wrong can be.  While there is great diversity among personal beliefs, there are sins which are exceedingly sinful on a universal scale:  murder, sexual molestation of children, forced slavery, and theft.  My point is not about these sins in particular, but how there are certain actions the conscience of men deems wrong.  The value of having God's Law held forth in the Bible is to instruct us concerning God's standard of righteousness according to which all men will be someday judged.  Believe it or not, but this is the Bible's claim.  It is for our benefit to know our errors before the Day of Judgment so we can submit a plea bargain and receive the Gospel, having repented and trusted in Christ.

It struck me this morning like never before how God chose a most simple thing - the denial of eating from a particular tree - as the only possible sin after Adam was created,  We cannot know sin apart from the Law, and Adam was given one command:  do not eat from the tree in the midst of the Garden of Eden.  It was that simple.  There was no limitation of how much fruit he could eat from the other trees in the garden, but he was strictly forbidden from eating from a tree which would kill him!  Undeterred, Adam sought to satisfy his fleshly appetites and ate from the tree with Eve his wife.  This teaches us man from the very beginning was unable to curb his carnal desires.  Without the indwelling Holy Spirit, man had to sin.  Adam was unable to stop himself from feeding his flesh and ignored something as simple as keeping to a divine diet given by God for his good.  Adam sinned by eating what would kill him, and every sin since has only brought sorrow and death with it.

I do not believe it is a coincidence Jesus instituted the new covenant in His blood by eating bread and drinking of wine during the Passover meal.  Jesus commanded all His disciples to eat and drink together - not to fill their bellies or quench their dry mouths - but to show they found their satisfaction in Christ alone.  They were commanded not only to eat the Lord's Supper that night only but to remember Jesus, His sacrifice, and to proclaim His death until He returned through receiving Communion.  The food and drink of Jesus was to do the will of the Father and to finish His work (John 4:34).  Those who are followers of Christ are no longer to be slaves to our fleshly appetites, but to heed and obey God's Word.  Jesus taught man shall not live by bread alone but by every word which proceeds from the mouth of God.  Adam made the mistake of following the dictates of self, and as Christians we can make the same mistake too.  There is no possible way we can deny ourselves and follow Jesus in relationship unless we are born again.  Adam's nature has led to separation from God and death every time, but being born again through faith in Christ makes us new creations called to be living sacrifices unto God.

People can maintain a high view of their own morality by simply not practicing what they consider to be "major" sins.  We are all like gamblers in that sense; we prefer to remember when we have won or the potential of winning and do not fix our minds on how much we have lost.  Our faults are easily forgotten.  But how about in the little things?  Have we ever eaten too much and strayed into gluttony?  Have we ever enjoyed too much drink and found ourselves under the influence of alcohol?  Have we feasted our eyes on what we know is wrong or uttered words which even we regretted later because they were sharp and vengeful?  The truth is, we cannot help ourselves in the matter of taming our flesh.  It must be crucified with Christ for us to experience the victory He has granted to all who trust in Him.  Let us not think of ourselves more highly than we ought, but to humble ourselves before God in repentance over what the world would term "little things" or "non-issues."  It is only in this place of repentance we can be forgiven and restored to fellowship with God.  Romans 12:1-2 says, "I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service. 2 And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God."

Gospel Inspiration

The Gospel of Jesus Christ should impact the way we live our lives.  When I face circumstances which are potentially frustrating and difficult, considering what Jesus has done for me helps me to meet issues with genuine joy.  Thinking about all Christ has freely given me transforms my perspective and aids me to show His love to others.

In our discipleship course we have been talking about seeing our lives through the lens of the Gospel, and keeping this in mind has been vital in me keeping a biblical perspective.  No matter how tired I am, inconvenienced I feel, or the depth of self-sacrifice is too great, Jesus has done infinitely greater for me.  What did Jesus do after a long day of ministry and people continued to seek Him?  He kept on ministering with grace and love.  Was it convenient for Him to leave the glory of heaven, put on human flesh, and take the form of a servant of all?  Is there any pain I have experienced like Christ endured when He was rejected, betrayed, scorned, and crucified?  Not a chance.  Jesus freely chose to be separated from the Father for my sin and it wasn't fair or fun.  It was loving, good, and merciful, but it was the most unfair thing in a human sense ever experienced on earth.  And Jesus still did it rejoicing, for He always did the will of the Father.

The next time you catch yourself feeling inconvenienced, annoyed, frustrated, or feeling resentment because people have been inconsiderate towards you, consider what Jesus has endured for your sake.  Instead of being preoccupied with what loving and serving other people is costing you, remember and praise God that Jesus freely paid a higher cost for your sake joyfully and without complaint.  When we weigh all we have freely received from God, we are able to freely give.  May our lives be a testimony of the Gospel lived out for all to see that God may be glorified for the power of His love and grace.

03 March 2016

Jesus Christ = Mind Blown

During a lively discussion last night at the discipleship course, I was amazed afresh by the power of Jesus Christ.  Sifting through even a chapter describing the character and teachings of Christ will blow the mind of an earnest seeker of truth.  No matter how well a person combs through a passage of the living Word of God, the same objective truth comes to people in different ways.  I love how God is able to reveal Himself to all people who seek Him.  Instead of our unique personalities or viewpoints hindering us from understanding, the Holy Spirit is able to lend our individual perceptions to shed light on a passage for all to appreciate.

After Jesus arrived in Nain after the long hike from Capernaum, he saw the sad scene of a dead man being carried out of the city, the only son of a grieving widow.  A large crowd had gathered, for much of the city was there to support the woman.  Luke 7:13 says, "When the Lord saw her, He had compassion on her and said to her, "Do not weep."  Jesus knew the woman and her great loss, and He had compassion on her.  On the surface it may seem inconsiderate to command a weeping widow to stop crying, but Jesus knew what He would do.  Luke 7:14 continues:  "Then He came and touched the open coffin, and those who carried him stood still. And He said, "Young man, I say to you, arise."  Jesus spoke to the dead man as if he was alive and could hear him.  Was this some sort of hideous prank?  And then the unthinkable happened in Luke 7:15:  "So he who was dead sat up and began to speak. And He presented him to his mother."  At the command of Jesus, the dead man miraculously rose to life before many witnesses.  Having compassion on widow and talking to a deceased man is one thing, but through this resurrection Jesus revealed power and authority no living man who witnessed it could deny.  Death separates, but Jesus unites and restores.

Later in the chapter, Jesus accepted an invitation from a Pharisee to share a meal with him.  While Jesus was eating, a woman well-known by the locals for her life of sin poured an expensive box of perfume on Jesus, washed His feet with her tears, and wiped them clean with her hair.  The Pharisee who invited Jesus was completely disgusted with this display and judged Jesus to be a religious fraud.  Luke 7:39  reads, "Now when the Pharisee who had invited Him saw this, he spoke to himself, saying, "This man, if He were a prophet, would know who and what manner of woman this is who is touching Him, for she is a sinner."  The Pharisee thought to himself if Jesus was indeed a holy man of God, He would not allow this woman to touch Him.  But the next verse says something amazing:  Luke 7:40 says, "And Jesus answered and said to him, "Simon, I have something to say to you." So he said, "Teacher, say it."  The verse says, "Jesus answered..."  Jesus answered the silent thoughts of the judgmental Pharisee.  Are you kidding me?  It is one thing to know if someone is a sinner, but another thing entirely to answer the thoughts of another person and to respond with wise insight.

These sort of events were commonplace in the life of Jesus during His pilgrimage on earth.  He showed compassion on others, spoke to dead people and raised them to life, and knowingly responded to the thoughts and hearts of men.  Jesus lives today and still raises the dead to life and speaks to the hearts of all who seek Him and listen.  I believe God has something to say to me and you today if we will heed Him.  In Christ there is everlasting hope and life.  Jesus created the mind to reason, and it is nothing for Him to change a mind, heart, or life.  He stands at the door and knocks, desiring to dine with anyone who will receive Him.  That will be a dinner conversation to remember!

01 March 2016

God and Democracy

It should be a sobering truth:  God gives people what they ask for.  Our gracious God loves and gives.  Despite this, the tendency of men is to look to other men for help, guidance, and provision in this life.  If man does not see God performing as he likes, he is glad to swap to new leadership.  At a time where many in the United States are voting for their preferred party or presidential candidates, concerns are mounting.  From what I see from afar in Australia, there seems to be no presidential candidate on offer who can span the chasm which currently separates parties and people, wealthy and poor, businesses and individuals.  A nation which in the past championed itself as "one nation under God" is as fractured, angry, disillusioned, apathetic, and without hope as I have ever seen.  When we look to men, women, a political party, or even the "power of the people" to save us, it is only a matter of time before we realise we have already lost.

After God brought His beloved people out of Egypt with a mighty hand and established them in the Promised Land, it was only a matter of time before He was deemed an unfit ruler by the masses.  The men of Israel demanded, "We want a king to rule over us like the other nations."  For a long time people had looked to Samuel the prophet and judge as God's mouthpiece, and it was clear to them his sons were not cut from the same righteous cloth.  They were wicked, accepted bribes, and perverted judgment.  Samuel was angry with the request of the people for a king, but brought their demand before God in prayer.  Some might assume God would also be angry and destroy all who opposed and criticised His rule, but He did no such thing.  1 Samuel 8:7-9 reads, "And the LORD said to Samuel, "Heed the voice of the people in all that they say to you; for they have not rejected you, but they have rejected Me, that I should not reign over them. 8 According to all the works which they have done since the day that I brought them up out of Egypt, even to this day--with which they have forsaken Me and served other gods--so they are doing to you also. 9 Now therefore, heed their voice. However, you shall solemnly forewarn them, and show them the behavior of the king who will reign over them."  God told Samuel not to take personally the rejection of God's rule, for it was not Samuel who had been rejected.  This followed a clear pattern of behaviour consistent with God's people from the beginning. Yet God would not give the people their desire before they had first been carefully warned about what to expect from their future king.

God provided specific details about what to expect from their new king and his governance, a stark contrast to God's divine rule.  God had given, but this king would take and take.  Ironically, Saul spoke more about what he would give - fields, vineyards, and position - than what he would take! (1 Samuel 22:7)  Consider the warning given the people in 1 Samuel 8:11-18:  "And he said, "This will be the behavior of the king who will reign over you: He will take your sons and appoint them for his own chariots and to be his horsemen, and some will run before his chariots. 12 He will appoint captains over his thousands and captains over his fifties, will set some to plow his ground and reap his harvest, and some to make his weapons of war and equipment for his chariots. 13 He will take your daughters to be perfumers, cooks, and bakers. 14 And he will take the best of your fields, your vineyards, and your olive groves, and give them to his servants. 15 He will take a tenth of your grain and your vintage, and give it to his officers and servants. 16 And he will take your male servants, your female servants, your finest young men, and your donkeys, and put them to his work. 17 He will take a tenth of your sheep. And you will be his servants. 18 And you will cry out in that day because of your king whom you have chosen for yourselves, and the LORD will not hear you in that day."  That last line should send a shiver through the most hearty soul.  It was their choice to have a king to rule, but they had no idea how much it would cost them.  Their foolish choice to reject God would silence their complaints to God and they would remain oppressed by the king they desired.  God is gracious and good to provide government which He has been established to punish evildoers and to reward those who do well (1 Peter 2:13-14).  Because men are to be governed by God and Christians have agreed to God as their King, we are called to submit to governors as an extension of His rule.

As much as people in a democratic process want to believe they hold the key to power, remember it is God who lifts up kings and deposes them (Daniel 2:21).  Though men and women run for public office, God maintains sovereignty over all nations.  God spoke in Jeremiah 18:7-10, "The instant I speak concerning a nation and concerning a kingdom, to pluck up, to pull down, and to destroy it,8 if that nation against whom I have spoken turns from its evil, I will relent of the disaster that I thought to bring upon it. 9 And the instant I speak concerning a nation and concerning a kingdom, to build and to plant it,10 if it does evil in My sight so that it does not obey My voice, then I will relent concerning the good with which I said I would benefit it."  The dearth of candidates in recent elections does not surprise me, for the people have spoken and God has listened.  If people are intent to cast off His rule, His righteous judgments, and deny His authority, we are free to appoint those we choose.  Many times God judged his people by their godless rulers, and God's ways have not changed.  Hearken unto God, the One who tells us what manner of rulers we choose for ourselves.  King Saul began in humility and the fear of the LORD, but finished his course as a madman who consulted witches for guidance.  He died in battle, but not by the hand of the enemy:  in a wounded panic he fell on his own sword.  So it will be for all who refuse to submit to God's rule and look unto men for hope and help.  Such will be pierced through with many sorrows.  Without God no nation is able to stand.  The warning of Samuel is relevant today for those who place their trust in men:  do not expect deliverance from God in heaven until there is first contrition and repentance.  God is our only hope, and in God the wise trust.

29 February 2016

Entrenched or Established?

Years ago our family had a little dachshund named Wendel.  He slept in a kennel inside the house, but the backyard was his domain.  When I mowed the lawn I was able to easily discern where his little paws had been, paths which become well-worn over time as he patrolled the perimeter.  He had a routine of running along the fence, stopping at a point and barking, then heading back on his circuit. Wendel and people alike can be creatures of habit and routine, and even our brains resort to common tracks of thought.  A single word or feeling can place our thinking like a slot car onto a track, destined to circle the same closed loop again and again.  We can become so taken with a particular observation or personal conviction we become entrenched in our thinking and are quite unable (and even unwilling!) to consider another view as equally valid.  Some people's thoughts resemble a simple oval and others are more elaborate with multiple lanes and loops, but the result is the same.  Round and round the slot car goes, but there is no winner in this solitary race.

I don't want to be entrenched in my thinking like a slot car in the track.  When Christians are entrenched in ways of thinking it is far from good.  It is actually tragic.  Taking an informed position in doctrine or having a personal conviction is right and good, but someone who is entrenched in their views resemble a vigilant soldier in a bunker on high alert.  The world is seen through the visage of a paranoid warrior ready to shoot in the direction of a unfamiliar noise in the darkness.  Everyone outside his way of thinking is seen as a significant threat.  He has fortified his position and is prepared for the eventual assault.  He has rations and ammunition enough to outlast his enemy in his cold, concrete dwelling.  His position is primarily defensive and nothing can convince him to lower his guard.  No one can coax him it is safe to venture out to enjoy a bite to eat in the sun.  A person with an entrenched mindset does not listen or consider the truth of what is being said by others but is preoccupied to share the observations of their closed loop.  The slot car on the track may move forward, but in reality it is a dead end.

Now consider the difference between an entrenched viewpoint and one that has been established by the truth of God's Word.  David wrote about a man who delights and meditates on God's law and compared him to a well-established tree in Psalm 1:3:  "He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that brings forth its fruit in its season, whose leaf also shall not wither; and whatever he does shall prosper."  A tree is a living, growing organism that has strong roots as a foundation - quite a different picture than a musty, cold bunker with guns pointed at all who approach!  With a strong root system which draws water and nutrition from the earth, so a Christian who feeds on God's Word and obeys it will be strengthened, grow, and be fruitful.  New branches of thought, new leaves of personal revelation and application sprout from old truths which are entirely new to a person.  It is not uncommon for Christians at times to place undo emphasis on one doctrine, ignore the implications of others, or have a distorted view of God's Word.  But God in His grace, through biblical truth rightly divided, chops off these branches and new, healthy growth is promoted,  Jesus compared a man who hears His words and does them to a man who built his house upon a rock.  Because the house had been established on a sure foundation who is Christ, he did not need to fear damage from the wind, rain, or flood.

Doctrine does not change, but my understanding of it should.  I should not remain perpetually on a closed loop concerning the implications of a passage, but to let down my guard, admit my knowledge and perspective is severely limited, and there is much for me to learn.  Jesus said He had much to say to His disciples, but they were not able to receive it because the Holy Spirit had not been sent.  I am afraid to say there is much Jesus cannot say to Christians today through His Word or the Holy Spirit because instead of listening we blurt out to finish God's sentences:  we have a closed loop of thinking which is familiar and therefore comfortable.  If someone holds a different slant or perspective on an interpretation people can feel instantly threatened and defensive instead of being willing to be challenged by what the Bible says and means.  There are few things worse than entrenched orthodoxy, for it prevents growth and maturity.  It substitutes increased knowledge for spiritual growth, sacrificing life and sweet fruit in exchange for what A.W. Tozer called a "circular grave."  How good it is for our faith to be growing and fruitful, knowing we are established in Jesus by the Gospel!  Instead of being entrenched in doctrinal debates, having been established by faith in Christ, let us venture out of the bunker and extend peace to all in Christ's name:  ready to listen, and choosing to love.

28 February 2016

Faith In Worship

I love the story of when Jesus was eating dinner in Bethany (Matt. 26:6-13) and Mary came to see Him.  She carried with her a valuable alabaster flask of perfume which some have estimated to be worth a man's wages for a year.  She broke the flask and poured it on the head of Jesus as an act of worship.  True worship must cost the worshipper something.  It will come with the cost of time, money, the sacrifice of other things, and obedience.  Worship is not the singing of songs - though we can worship through songs - but worship of God is acts of adoration by faith for God's glory. Mary's gift was accepted by Jesus, and He said her act would be spoken of wherever the Gospel is preached.

It is not necessary for Christians to burn money or pour out expensive fragrances for our prayers and praises to be accepted by God.  He is not like the idols formed by man's hands which demand much but give nothing.  God has freely provided for us all, and our worship is to be a response to His great goodness and love.  God is seeking people to worship Him in Spirit and in truth, and as we follow the promptings of the Spirit we will deny ourselves, take up our cross daily, and follow Jesus.  God looks for people who believe His Word and will trust Him enough to praise Him in the midst of pain and trials.  It is sweet to praise and thank God when all is well, but it requires faith to praise and thank God from the heart when all seems unwell.  This sacrifice of praise is well-pleasing in the sight of God.  Genuine praise from the depths of pain is a sweet savour before our Saviour.

Our prayers can be a sacrifice of praise we must persevere in.  Jesus told a parable to the end that men ought always to pray and not to faint.  He spoke of a widow who continually pleaded her case before an unjust judge.  Sick of the woman badgering him, the corrupt judge who did not fear God decided to act in the woman's favour to spare himself her entreaties.  Jesus said in Luke 18:6-8, "Then the Lord said, "Hear what the unjust judge said. 7 And shall God not avenge His own elect who cry out day and night to Him, though He bears long with them? 8 I tell you that He will avenge them speedily. Nevertheless, when the Son of Man comes, will He really find faith on the earth?"  God is longsuffering, and love enables us also to suffer long.  There is much singing in churches and many prayers uttered.  But does God find them prompted by faith in Him?  Even in the midst of our suffering we can demonstrate faith in worship and prayer, a commodity more rare and valuable in God's sight than the precious oil poured by Mary upon Jesus.  That is what Jesus commended in Mary:  it was not the monetary value of her sacrifice, but her heart willing to freely give all for Christ's sake.  That is the heart He is looking for.

25 February 2016

The Everlasting Man Lives

I have completed reading The Everlasting Man by G.K. Chesterton and was impressed by his unique insights.  One point he makes strongly in the last chapters is how Christianity is distinct from all other religions and worldviews.  As different as human beings are to plants, so is Jesus Christ and His claims unique from all others.  Jesus did not call people to religion but to life, and this life could only be found in Himself.  His resurrection from the dead is also unique, without parallel in the history of the world.  The fact Jesus did not remain dead and His followers still continue strong in this age of reason is troubling to many.  It has been attacked by atheists, strangled by legalism, debated by scholars, scorned by intellectuals, and discarded by the inoculated.  And yet Christ lives on.  Chesterton wrote, "These people are quite prepared to shed pious and reverential tears over the Sepulchre of the Son of Man; what they are not prepared for is the Son of God walking once more upon the hills of morning."  (Chesterton, G. K. The Everlasting Man. San Francisco: Ignatius, 1925 Reprint. Print. page 258)

Christians have died many deaths, but like our Saviour Jesus Christ Christianity will endure forever with truth, hope, and love.  Chesterton's observations still ring true, and every rational, thinking mind cannot lightly dismiss them.  Like many before him and since, Chesterton is a man who values and speaks truth in a world that does not particularly care for it.  If we value the truth, then we will seek and obtain it at any cost.  And once obtained, we ought to strive to live our lives in light of that singular, objective truth.  Our natural eyes are unable to see it clearly.  Pontius Pilate asked, "What is truth?" when the Way, the Truth, and the Life was standing before Him in the person of Jesus Christ, the man who "broke the backbone of history."  The whole world is flowing downstream, and Christianity alone swims upstream as a testimony of inexhaustible life.  As the song goes, "He lives, He lives.  Christ Jesus lives today!  He walks with me and talks with me along life's narrow way."
'Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.'  The civilisation of antiquity was the whole world:  and men no more dreamed of its ending than of the ending of daylight.  They could not imagine another order unless it were in another world.  The civilisation of the world has passed away and those words have not passed away.  In the long night of the Dark Ages feudalism was so familiar a thing that no man could imagine himself without a lord:  and religion was so woven into that network that no man would have believed they could be torn asunder.  Feudalism itself was torn to rags and rotted away in the popular life of the of the true Middle Ages; and the first and freshest power in that new freedom was the old religion.  Feudalism had passed away, and the words did not pas away.  The whole medieval order, in many ways so complete and almost cosmic a home for man, wore out gradually in its turn and here at least it was thought that the words would die.  They went forth across the radiant abyss of the Renaissance and in fifty years were using all its light and learning for new religious foundations, new apologetics, new saints.  It was supposed to have been withered up at last in the dry light of the Age of Reason; it was supposed to have disappeared ultimately in the earthquake of the Age of Revolution.  Science explained it away; and it was still there.  History disinterred it in the past; and it appeared suddenly in the future.  To-day it stands once more in our path; and even as we watch it, it grows.
If our social relations and records retain their continuity, if men really learn to apply reason to the accumulating facts of so crushing a story, it would seem that sooner or later even its enemies, will learn from their incessant and interminable disappointments not to look for anything so simple as its death.  They may continue to war with it, but it will be as they war with nature; as they war with the landscape, as they war with the skies. 'Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.'  They will watch for it to stumble, they will watch for it to err, they will no longer watch for it to end.  Insensibly, even unconsciously, they will in their own silent anticipations fulfill the relative terms of that astounding prophecy; they will forget to watch for the mere extinction of what has so often been vainly extinguished; and will learn instinctively to look first for the coming of the comet or the freezing of the star. (Chesterton, G. K. The Everlasting Man. San Francisco: Ignatius, 1925 Reprint. Print. page 260-260)

23 February 2016

Scriptures and Power of God

In my morning Bible reading, a statement by Jesus arrested my attention.  The passage listed occasions when those who doubted and hated Jesus sought to entrap Him in His words.  The Herodians, Pharisees, and Sadducees were groups who attempted to make Jesus look ignorant with their moral dilemmas and hypothetical debates, but they could not stump Jesus.  In response to the Sadducees, who only exposed their ignorance by taking their best shot at Jesus, the KJV rendering of Matthew 22:29 reads, "Jesus answered and said unto them, Ye do err, not knowing the scriptures, nor the power of God."  It is ironic how the Sadducees would have claimed extensive knowledge of the scriptures, but Jesus whom they desired to expose as ignorant expressed this of them.  Their lack of belief in things spiritual left them severely hamstrung.  Their doubts left them wanting in both knowledge of the scriptures and experience of God's power.

What struck me as I read the words of Jesus is how the knowledge of the scripture exposes a man to the power of God.  The Bible begins with the matter-of-fact explanation concerning God creating the heavens, earth, and all that is in them in mere days.  God's miraculous power was known by the Egyptians and the Israelites when He visited great plagues upon the land of Egypt.  God delivered His people through the Red Sea, destroyed their enemies, and sustained them in the wilderness.  He provided food daily, supplied water from a rock, and miraculously healed those who were bitten by venemous snakes.  He caused the ground to open up and swallow people whole, and made the walls of Jericho to fall down when the people obeyed God.  Through judges, prophets, kings, and ultimately Jesus Christ, God's power was revealed to all.  It knowing the scripture we can know God's power, and when we are born again through the Gospel the revelation of God's power becomes personally tangible as He transforms us from within and empowers us for God's service.

No matter how I turn the statement of Christ around it shines forth brilliantly like a precious gem.  It can be said of all men we do err; we do make mistakes.  The cause of much of our sin is because we have not brought scripture nor the power of God to bear on our current situation.  It is a matter of perspective.  We have all sinned, but when we are born again we do not need to sin any longer.  God has given us the scriptures to guide us and imbued us with power from on high through the Holy Spirit.  I can say without exception when I sin it is because I have disobeyed the truth of scripture and have refused the power of God.  Often we are deluded by our assumptions, imagining our situation is most peculiar and difficult.  But the righteous, God-fearing perspective obtained through knowledge of the scriptures and walking in the power of God sets us straight.  God's people perish by a lack of knowledge, but even knowledge has its limits.  It is a starting point, not the end.

Our lives are lived worthily when we keep both the scriptures and the power of God in full view.  We Christians tend to lean one way or the other.  When we lose sight of either we will err.  We make a grave mistake when we hold to scripture whilst denying the power of God, or seek after a miraculous display of God's power without the guide of scripture.  It is only through the power of the Holy Spirit we can discern the scripture, and only by the scripture can we test the spirits to see if they are of God.  I am so grateful for Jesus and for His priceless wisdom.  He always knows exactly what I need and how to perfectly communicate truth when I am willing to listen and obey.

22 February 2016

Playing God

"Do not say, "I will do to him just as he has done to me; I will render to the man according to his work."
Proverbs 24:29

"Do unto others as you would have them do unto you," the Golden Rule says.  This approach is contrary to the natural response of our flesh.  We prefer to take a stand upon our rights or a concept of fairness we agree with and hold others to that standard.  Doing unto others just as they have done to us requires us to judge not only their actions, but their motive.  When we are hurt by others we can be suspicious that was their intent all along, so we then seek how we can injure them.

Even as vengeance is the sovereign territory of God, so is the rendering to each man according to his works.  Should we do what Solomon forbids in this passage, we hastily clamber onto God's judgment seat.  It is one thing for a little child to innocently desire to sit in daddy's chair, but it is another thing altogether when we fueled by malice and revenge seek to bring down a gavel in judgment to punish others for their perceived wrongs.  David wrote in Psalm 62:11-12, "God has spoken once, twice I have heard this: that power belongs to God. 12 Also to You, O Lord, belongs mercy; for You render to each one according to his work."

Jesus said upon His return He will reward men according to their works (Matt. 16:27).  It is not by works of righteousness we have done, but according to His mercy He has saved us (Titus 3:5).  God has saved us unto good works, and we begin doing the good works of God by believing He whom the Father has sent:  Jesus Christ.  He will reward and judge as well.  Jesus said in Revelation 22:12, "And behold, I am coming quickly, and My reward is with Me, to give to every one according to his work."  Books will be opened, and those whose names are not found in the Book of Life will receive their wages of eternal damnation.  Can we add anything to that hell?

Let us not say we will do to others as they have done to us when they have sinned against us.  Let us do unto others as Christ has done for us with a heart of love, compassion, and mercy.  Jesus said in Matthew 5:7, "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy."  The Bible says with what judgment we judge we will be judged, and if we are severe with others the Living God will be severe with us.  There is a high cost for playing God, a price only fools judge wise to pay.

20 February 2016

Lucky or Loved?

I've heard Australia called the "Lucky Country."  People use this cliche in a in a positive sense, apparently much to the dismay of Donald Horne who penned The Lucky Country, a book about Australia in 1964 written as a "wake up call to an unimaginative nation, an indictment of a country mired in mediocrity and manacled to its past."  It sounds a bit harsh not having read the book myself, but there's nothing quite like a good dose of Australian irony.  In my opinion Australia is a blessed country in a multitude of ways.  Because I believe we live in a world governed by God who has provided our natural resources, this beautiful and fruitful land, freedoms, our necessities, and even luxuries, we ought to credit Him where it is due.

Every so often I hear the phrase, "unlucky in love."  I wonder:  if people could have their choice of luck or love, what would they choose?  My grandfather has often said in jest, "I'd rather be lucky than good."  What is the lure of luck, anyway?  Is it a revelation we secretly desire something for nothing?  Or is it because we value a faceless, powerless entity who cannot protest called "bad luck" when we fail?  In thinking this over, I have decided I would rather be loved than lucky.  It would be better to live as a person loved by God than to have what men call good luck perpetually.  Luck is an empty promise which never delivers.  I do not consider The Beatles to be experts on such matters, but had they sung "All you need is luck" it would have sounded a bit hollow.

Today in church we sang a song by Brenton Brown called "Our God is Mercy."  It contains biblical wisdom the world and even Christians might recoil from:  "You're blessed if you've been torn apart; you're blessed if you've a broken heart, for hope is waiting at the door: salvation's near."  How can pain be a blessing?  For a Christian, the pain of God's correction is proof of His love.  Christians are reminded in scripture not to despise the chastening of the LORD, for in so doing He is treating us as beloved sons - even as a father disciplines the son in whom he delights.  Some might ask, how can being torn apart in any way be construed as love?  Most men must be deathly ill before they will seek the care of a physician, and men must be in a severe state before they will humble themselves in desperation before a holy God.  It is in being torn apart a man can discover healing and wholeness he never experienced before.  All the "blessings" in the world are curses if they turn our affections from God.  How good for us are hard times when they prompt us to seek the LORD!  Only then will we know salvation and the love of God, and luck hasn't saved a person yet.

18 February 2016

Leaving All and Rising Up

"After these things He went out and saw a tax collector named Levi, sitting at the tax office. And He said to him, "Follow Me." 28 So he left all, rose up, and followed Him."
Luke 5:27-28

Careful observation of the scripture is critical for deeper understanding.  I do not profess to know secret knowledge or hidden mysteries, but even for the avid student of the Bible many plain truths lie undisturbed on the surface.  Before we figure we know the meaning of a passage, we must first examine what it says.  The order of the words unveils truth and personal application.  In reading Luke 5 this week I came upon something I had never noticed before, and it is profound.

The scene is simple enough:  Levi was sitting in his office on the clock.  He was a Jew employed by the Romans as a tax collector, and he had paid for the privilege.  The opportunity to be a "publicani" of a region was bid on for a set time and was paid in advance to the government.  Jesus walked up to the man and simply said, "Follow me."  It was a straightforward command but not one obeyed without consequences.  Verse 28 tells us, "So he left all, rose up, and followed Him."  The order of the words seems quite strange.  How could Levi leave all before he even stood up?  It would be easy to transpose  the phrases of the passage and give it little thought.  Is the order significant?  It certainly is!

When Jesus approached Levi and commanded him to follow Him, it was not an offer which could be negotiated.  An immediate decision was required, yes or no.  The order of verse 28 is significant because before Levi even stood to his feet, he had already left all behind:  his right to collect taxes, the significant financial investment and the interest on it, his position of authority, chance of future advancement, and remaining in good standing with the Roman authorities.  A problem common for those who attempt to answer the call to discipleship is they joyfully rise to follow Jesus without first deciding to leave all.  The decision to follow Christ can only be performed once we have decided to deny ourselves, our dreams, ambitions, the future of ease we long for.  Trying to put on the new man without first putting off the old man is an exercise filled with frustration and futility.  We must first purpose to leave all and then we can rise up and follow Christ as Saviour and enter into the joy of the LORD.

As long as we are in two minds about answering the call to Christ, we will never be free to do so.  So much of our Christian existence is a wrestling match between the flesh and the Spirit.  We are chained by worldly thinking and cares and therefore without the freedom to rise up to follow Christ.  The call to follow Jesus is one of self-denial, picking up our cross daily, and following Jesus.  Those who seek to save their lives will lose them, but those who lose their lives for Christ's sake will find them and be rewarded with life eternal.  You do not need to quit your job, end a relationship, move to a foreign mission field, give that money, or sell your house to follow Jesus.  But you must decide you are willing to do so joyfully at Christ's command.  Otherwise you will leave a bit of your heart behind and will never be able to truly say to your LORD and King, "I surrender all."  And if Christ cannot have all of us, we cannot have any part in Him.

16 February 2016

Mr. Dan Wilson, My Friend

I am blessed as a Christian to be part of the body of Christ.  When God enlarges your heart with His love the circle of ones deeply loved extend far beyond the reaches of immediate family.  The connection made by Christ binds us with pure desire and mutual affection not only on this planet but for all eternity.  Moving overseas causes this circle to grow as your life begins to intertwine with others.  Distance, however, does bring hindrances.  No longer can I just drop by my parent's home, watch my nephews and nieces grow, or maintain family traditions I always enjoyed.  Life moves on at a frantic pace, and during my time in Australia life on earth for many of my dear friends has ended unexpectedly.

Yesterday I received word that one of my childhood friends, Dan Wilson, has passed away into eternity.  When I say childhood friend, you might suppose Dan was my age.  Dan was actually older than my dad, one of the very few adults I could ever call a friend of mine as a young boy.  I cannot say I have ever known a more kind and thoughtful man than Dan.  We had a point of connection he never forgot:  we shared the same birthdate, and I was told many times 29 August was the greatest day on the calendar to have a birthday.  For many years we attended the same church, and Dan always made a point to wish me a happy birthday and made me feel special even when our birthday was months away.

My favourite memory of Dan was when he and my dad were challenged by three older teenage boys to a wrestling match on the lawn in front of the church after evening service.  We kids ran around and gathered all our friends to witness the bout.  The anticipation and excitement was electric, and everyone was picking their winners.  For all the build up, the match was almost anticlimactic as the old timers demolished the competition.  My dad when in for a double-leg take-down and knocked the wind out of the oldest boy and rendered him incapacitated, and Dan in seconds had the other boy pinned on his back.  The third boy, seeing what happened to his cousins - with a hint of terror in his eyes - practically ran away when Dan with a wide grin pursued him.  Dan and my dad gained a bit of respect that night...from me, anyway. :)

When I heard of Dan's passing, I admit I selfishly wished he had not left this world so soon.  I so enjoy our chats and seeing him smile, and he has a way with that carne asada!  Dan had a huge heart, a ready smile, and gave for the good of others.  As I grieved I said, "Lord, I really would have liked to see Dan again."  And instantly I remembered that I will see him again in a place without pain, sorrow, suffering, or death, in a place in God's presence where Dan is rejoicing right now.  Praise the LORD for the consolation we have been given in Christ, that the death of the body for Christians is the gateway to eternal joy and happiness.  Our Saviour Jesus Christ said in John 11:25-26, "I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. 26 And whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this?"  The resurrection of Lazarus and Jesus reveals the reality for all who repent and trust in Jesus.  He hasn't just pinned death to the ground, but He has killed it.  Thank you LORD Jesus for the hope we have in you.

14 February 2016

Forgiveness For All

As I read through Luke 5 today and jotted down notes for this week's Discipleship Course at Calvary Chapel Sydney, I was blessed with many gems.  Priceless truth can be gleaned when we spend a little time carefully reading God's Word.  A single word has great power to shed light to our understanding, dispelling incorrect assumptions.

Take Luke 5:17, for instance.  It reads, "Now it happened on a certain day, as He was teaching, that there were Pharisees and teachers of the law sitting by, who had come out of every town of Galilee, Judea, and Jerusalem. And the power of the Lord was present to heal them."  As Jesus taught, Luke focused on the Pharisees and teachers of the law sitting by.  These men were eminent scholars, famous teachers themselves.  The following sentence should be a surprise to all - especially to those learned men - the power of the LORD was present to heal them.  Now these were likely able-bodied men, some having traveled great distances to hear Jesus.  They would have been offended to think they of all people needed anything from Jesus.  They were the masters, and here was this young man without any formal training who spoke gracious words with authority.

Little did they know an object lesson would be presented before them.  The power of the LORD was present to heal them, and during Christ's discourse suddenly dust and debris fell from the ceiling.  Shafts of light passed through swirling dust as the roof was uncovered and a paralysed man was lowered down.  Luke 5:18-19 says, "Then behold, men brought on a bed a man who was paralyzed, whom they sought to bring in and lay before Him. 19 And when they could not find how they might bring him in, because of the crowd, they went up on the housetop and let him down with his bed through the tiling into the midst before Jesus."  It was obvious the paralysed man was in need of physical healing, and a careful reading shows Jesus had the power and will not only to heal bodies but forgive lost sinners.  I expect the masters were annoyed to be thus intruded upon and all eyes were fastened upon the young Teacher who exuded infinite wisdom beyond His years.  Those judgmental Pharisees and self-righteous rulers of the Jews unknowingly saw themselves spiritually sprawled upon that dirty cot, for they saw themselves as blameless as they penned scathing critiques concerning the supposed blasphemous statements of Jesus.

Jesus said, "Man, your sins are forgiven."  Jesus healed the man before them all to show He indeed had power over sin, for it is sin which brought disease, sin, and death into the world.  There was a healing beyond the physical which was needed in every person in that room.  Jesus healed him, but there was power to heal and save them.  Later in the chapter Jesus was criticised for eating with sinners to whom He replied in Luke 5:31-32, "Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. 32 I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance."  Only the power of the LORD can cleanse a man from sin, and the only means to receive this healing is through faith in Jesus Christ.  In sin we are all as that paralysed man, and Jesus looks upon us with compassion and grace.  Many think themselves in no need of a physician who are dying, and only those who see their need will seek healing.  Praise God Jesus has come, and through Him the power of God is present to save all!

12 February 2016

Your True Identity

Your perceived identity can shape your destiny.  Our identity is often founded on temporary, transitory things like the opinions of others, our history, personal appearance, friends, and activities.  It is important as Christians we not hold to an identity based on the opinions of others or even ourselves.  If we will become all God desires we be, it is critical we see ourselves through His perspective.  Instead of fostering pride, walking according to our new identity in Christ is humbling and satisfying.

An angel came unexpectedly to Mary and said, "You are highly favoured among women, and the LORD is with you:  blessed are you among women."  The next verse reveals that Mary did not see herself this way.  Luke 1:29 says, "But when she saw him, she was troubled at his saying, and considered what manner of greeting this was."  She didn't say, "I knew it!  Finally someone else realises what I have known all along!"  She found the statement of the angel troubling even though it was the truth.  We can do the same.

Gideon was threshing wheat in a winepress when the Angel of the LORD came to him and announced, "The LORD is with you, you mighty man of valour."  Gideon's perspective was quite the opposite and he questioned the veracity of the claim of the divine messenger.  Judges 6:13 says, "Gideon said to Him, "O my lord, if the LORD is with us, why then has all this happened to us? And where are all His miracles which our fathers told us about, saying, 'Did not the LORD bring us up from Egypt?' But now the LORD has forsaken us and delivered us into the hands of the Midianites."  Needless to say, Gideon struggled and even resisted to agree with God's assessment of him and His plans concerning him..

Perhaps one of the most classic instances of people holding onto their own identity despite being at odds with God's assessment is Moses.  The Living God said to Moses in Exodus 3:10, "Come now, therefore, and I will send you to Pharaoh that you may bring My people, the children of Israel, out of Egypt."  For decades God had been preparing Moses to deliver His people from bondage in Egypt, yet Moses initially refused to budge.  He was the very man God planned to use to save the children of Israel, but Moses could not see it.  Exodus 3:11 says, "But Moses said to God, "Who am I that I should go to Pharaoh, and that I should bring the children of Israel out of Egypt?"  God promised to be with Moses, but at that moment even that wasn't enough for Moses.

As Christians, our identity ought to be found in the person of Jesus Christ.  He demonstrated God's love for us through His death on the cross, and He rose from the dead in miraculous power.  The same Holy Spirit which came upon Him has filled all believers, and this should radically change the way we see ourselves.  It would be a grave error to distort this into a self-exalting or self-empowering theme.  In themselves Mary, Gideon, and Moses were unable to accomplish what God desired to do through them.  Each of these saints ultimately believed God's Word and walked in obedience to Him, and God brought deliverance and salvation through them.  When our eyes are fixed on Jesus and not on ourselves, then we can begin to live according to God's view of us.  God has great plans, and you can be part of them if you will trust and believe Him.

10 February 2016

Matching Wine and Wineskins

People say it is what a person is on the inside which counts, and this is true.  This inner focus is likely pushing back against our human tendency to measure ourselves by externals.  We can obsess superficial and transitory aspects like the appearance of our body - the size of our nose or be self-conscious about a mole - more than the character of our hearts.  Jesus taught the words and deeds of a person is an extension of the inner reality:  out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks (Matt. 12:34).  We can conclude therefore both the heart and conduct of a person is important.  Man looks at outer appearance, but God looks at the heart.  If the heart of a man is right before God, he should take intentional steps to see his conduct and words reflect that reality.

Jesus told a parable in Mark 2:21-22:  "No one sews a piece of unshrunk cloth on an old garment; or else the new piece pulls away from the old, and the tear is made worse. 22 And no one puts new wine into old wineskins; or else the new wine bursts the wineskins, the wine is spilled, and the wineskins are ruined. But new wine must be put into new wineskins."  New fabric shrinks, and new wine expands because of the fermentation process.  One point Jesus is making here is how there should be an agreement between the torn fabric and the fabric used to make the patch; there must be agreement between the new wine coupled with new wineskins.  If new wine is placed into an old wineskin the production of carbon dioxide will cause the brittle wineskin to rupture and all the wine will leak out.  New wine requires a new wineskin.

When a Christian is born again through repentance and faith in Jesus Christ, we are made new on the inside.  But we continue to live in a body of flesh saddled with a mind indoctrinated by the world and sinful habits.  A personal application for all to consider is a person who is born again must choose to live life in a new way according to God's Word.  A new spirit requires a new way of thinking, a new way of living.  Focusing on modifying behaviour without inner transformation is like buying a new wineskin for wine that has turned to vinegar.  Transformation within and holding onto the old life is untenable, like new wine in an old wineskin.  The old wineskin will burst and the wine will be wasted.  Like in the Parable where the seed fell on thin or thorny ground which sprang up yet remained without fruit, so it is for the professing Christian who is ensnared in worldly living.  Since God has changed us on the inside, we must be willing to continue changing on the outside too.

When a professing believer finds Christianity boring, reading the Word fruitless, and fellowship with believers tiresome, it may be that person has not been transformed within by the presence of the Holy Spirit.  He has laboured to appear as a new wineskin, but his original vinegar flavour has never changed inside.  Listen to what G.K. Chesterton says about the natural man and his appetites:
There comes an hour in the afternoon when the child is tired of 'pretending'; when he is weary of being a robber or a Red Indian.  It is then that he torments the cat.  There comes a time in the routine of an ordered civilization when the man is tired of playing at mythology and pretending that a tree is a maiden or that the moon made love to a man.  The effect of this staleness is the same everywhere; it is seen in all drug-taking and dram-drinking and every form of the tendency to increase the dose.  Men seek stranger sins or more startling obscenities as stimulants to their jaded sense.  They seek after made oriental religions for the same reason.  They try to stab their nerves to life, if it were with the knives of the priests of Baal.  They are walking in their sleep and try to wake themselves up with nightmares. (Chesterton, G. K. The Everlasting Man. San Francisco: Ignatius, 2008. Print. page 159)
People who become bored with Christianity and church resemble the pretender G.K. Chesterton speaks about.  It is not seen as strange a man should embrace the hobby of playing golf for years and sell his clubs to buy a bicycle, but people scratch their heads in disbelief when a man serves at church for years and walks away.  It is not for me to judge the hearts of others, but before God I am responsible to examine my own heart and conduct.  Is my inner man reconciled to my outer man?  Are my affections and desires in line with the will of my Father in heaven?  Too many professing Christians in word are not indeed Christians, for their conscience has been inoculated by their knowledge and service.  When we have increased the dose and we lose our buzz, the famished souls of men will search elsewhere.  Has following Jesus become stale?  Jesus Christ makes new creations, and a genuine new creation required newness of life.  Let us ensure our lives are reconciled to this truth.

08 February 2016

Addressing Source or Symptoms?

Head colds are common ailments usually caused by viruses.  Symptoms include a sore throat, blocked or runny nose, and sinus pressure.  There are many over-the-counter medications which can alleviate the symptoms in varying degrees.  It is important for the sufferer to realise the runny nose is a problem and an irritation, but it is not the source of the problem:  the runny nose is indicative of a virus the body will overcome in due time.

It would be silly to think the source of the head cold was eliminated by jamming Kleenex in the nose or irrigating the sinus with a saline solution.  Treating the symptoms of a chronic illness or disease never touches the root cause.  It would be foolish to load up on caffeine to fight fatigue when the body is suffering anemia or heart disease.  Morphine is very good at numbing pain, but it does nothing to mend a broken bone or remove bowel cancer.  Unless the source is dealt with directly, all efforts to treat the symptoms will not promote healing or restoration.  Efforts to remove white patches off tonsils with a wire brush will only add complications to pain.  The alleviation of symptoms without discovering and addressing the cause is problematic as well, for it masks the insidious nature of the sickness which will continue to rage unchecked.

It may be we only want our symptoms relieved, but wisdom demands we discover the source of our symptoms and seek a genuine cure.  The symptoms of spiritual illness are often played out in the physical realm.  A lack of peace, joy, or contentment should be an impetus to seeking God and His counsel through the Word.  Waywardness of eyes and thoughts are often indicative of a wandering heart from steadfast faithfulness to God.  We can toil against the lusts of our flesh and eyes and not realise the problem is not with all the temptation offered in the world but the sin which sits enthroned in our own hearts.  We are called to guard our hearts, for from the heart springs all the issues of life (Proverbs 4:23).

Sinful conduct and habits is like a spiritually runny nose and fever:  it is an indicator something inside us is sick and in need of a physician's care.  It may appear passive to allow a virus run its course, but in truth the body is working overtime to see the viral threat destroyed.  God designed our bodies with an intricate defense system which identifies and attacks all threats to the health of the body, and God allows feelings we classify as bad, sickness, waves of depression, and circumstances so we might recognise our need to repent and refocus our trust on God once more.  It is not more self-control in one area we need, but to abide in Christ's love by making God's will our practice in all our lives.  Resist the urge to force superficial change in yourself by modifying behaviour without considering the implications of how your actions reveal your heart.  Unless a heart is humbled before God in faith and surrender, lasting transformation is not a viable option.  Efforts of the flesh to clean our exterior resemble a man with a fever who scrubs his inflamed tonsils with a wire brush - and that is an ugly picture indeed.

07 February 2016

The Illegitimate Son

The strong negative stigma of having children or being born out of wedlock today has lost much of its former potency.  Not long ago even in western cultures children considered "illegitimate" or of dubious origin were mocked and shunned.  In the Bible we read that Jephthah was driven away from home by his brothers because he was the son of another mother.  Being deemed a bastard had legal consequences as well.  For instance, an illegitimate son could be denied an inheritance and could not be a rightful heir.  In Bible times there were strong consequences even in regards to worship.  Deuteronomy 23:2:  "One of illegitimate birth shall not enter the assembly of the LORD; even to the tenth generation none of his descendants shall enter the assembly of the LORD."  The exact meaning of the words translated "illegitimate birth" has been hotly debated by Jewish Rabbis, but the point is this:  the illegitimate nature of a person's conception had a far-reaching and often negative impact on life.

Even as a man and woman are necessary to conceive and bear children, so children have need of both their father and mother to raise them.  I cannot imagine how my life would have been impacted as a child without my dad or mum.  It used to be a boy who never knew his father was called a "child without a name," and I imagine the lack of a name would be the least of his worries.  I am grateful to have been raised by both my parents, but the day came when I left their immediate care.  Now I live on the other side of the world, and though the internet, technology, and modern transportation keeps us closer than has ever been possible, a divide remains.  A man need not leave a city, state, or country for a divide to exist.  The day comes when a son or daughter leaves home, embarks on a career, is married, and the nature of the parent/child relationship changes.  As much as a parent always wants to "be there" for their children, no one will live forever.  Praise God He has offered to be an eternal, heavenly Father who will always be there for His children.  He is not limited by distance or advancing age:  He provides, protects, and corrects us faithfully.

This morning I was listening to a message by Jon Courson and he reminded the congregation:  "Sin is not bad because it is forbidden; sin is forbidden because it is bad."  A good father who loves his son will discipline him.  If we have embraced a life of sin and are not under conviction or being chastised by God in a painful way for it, it may indicate we are not children of God at all.  Sobering words!  Listen to what Hebrews 12:5-8 says:  "...My son, do not despise the chastening of the LORD, nor be discouraged when you are rebuked by Him; for whom the LORD loves He chastens, and scourges every son whom He receives." 7 If you endure chastening, God deals with you as with sons; for what son is there whom a father does not chasten? 8 But if you are without chastening, of which all have become partakers, then you are illegitimate and not sons."  People can be downright gleeful in their sin.  It may even seem for a prolonged season they are unaffected by sin which works for their ruin.  God loves all people, but those who have received His love through being born again by the Gospel, in His love He will swat us.  He will even allow us to go into oppressive captivity for a season, taken captive by Satan to do his will.  God ultimately inflicts sharp pain to correct His children - all working towards our ultimate restoration, deliverance, and refinement.  If we are bastards and not sons of God by the blood of Christ, then we cannot legally receive any inheritance of eternal life from Him.

Don't despise the chastening of the LORD, believer.  And we need not concern ourselves that God isn't chastening others as we think He ought.  Jesus is the Good Shepherd, and He knows very well how to manage His own flock.  He does not need advice from the sheep of how to best do this.  He is a loving Father who knows the hearts of  His children perfectly.  God knows the best way to discipline each one, and we must answer the call as His child to act as an obedient, reverent, and faithful child towards Him.  The words of Jesus to Peter when he asked concerning John ring in my ears as an appropriate application.  John 21:21-22 says, "Peter, seeing him, said to Jesus, "But Lord, what about this man?" 22 Jesus said to him, "If I will that he remain till I come, what is that to you? You follow Me."  God is our good Father, and let us concern ourselves with being good sons and daughters.  Praise the LORD for His correction which prevents us from self-destruction!  It is better to be spared from future sin by pain now than for God to spare the rod and refuse to accept us as sons.  I would rather have a good Father who inflicts pain motivated by love than to live in my sin and suffer without help or hope.  What would you prefer?