Friday, August 30, 2019

Wise Choices

Monday, September 2, 2019

The end of the world is coming soon.  Therefore, be earnest and disciplined in your prayers.  Most important of all, continue to show deep love for each other, for love covers a multitude of sins.  Cheerfully share your home with those who need a meal or a place to stay.  God has given each of you a gift from his great variety of spiritual gifts.  Use them well to serve one another.  Do you have the gift of speaking?  Then speak as though God himself were speaking through you.  Do you have the gift of helping others?  Do it with all the strength and energy that God supplies.  Then everything you do will bring glory to God through Jesus Christ.  All glory and power to him forever and ever! Amen.  1 Peter 4:7-11[2]

Grandchildren are an incredible joy in many ways…sometimes you get surprised!  Here’s an example from my daughter’s Face Book page; she wrote:
With the boys starting at new schools this year we’ve been anxiously asking how their days have gone.  If you know Jonah (age 11), you know he has never ventured from bringing his lunch to school so when he offered to try school lunch this year I was ecstatic.  Thoughts for today, from him...
J:  “Lunch was good today.” 
Me:  “awesome!  What’d you have?”
J:  “the outside of a corn dog.”[3]
Sometimes it’s fear that makes us cautious; sometimes it’s wise prudence.  All of us choose very carefully how deeply we’ll venture into change.  Sometimes the outside of a corn dog will do for now. 
That old question about what three things you’d take with you if you’re going to spend the rest of your life on a deserted island is something the apostle Peter must’ve thought about deeply before he wrote this epistle.  His three choices, and what he wanted his flock to excel in, were prayer for others, loving deeply, and offering hospitality.  Did you notice none of those can be bought on Amazon.com? 
For Peter, end-of-the-world priorities have little to do with the balance sheet of stuff.  When all is said and done nobody is going to care what you’ve managed to accumulate, money, lands, or a warehouse full of antiques and toys.  He cautions his readers to use everything God has placed in their hands to serve one another.  That’s a whole universe opposite of gaining stuff for yourself.  It took Peter awhile to learn this, but he reminds us that, in the end, the only standard by which we will be judged is how well we did with Jesus’ command:

“A new command I give you:  Love one another.  As I have loved you, so you must love one another.  By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”  John 13:34-35

For You Today
Like Jonah’s corn dogs or Forest Gump’s box of chocolates, you never really know what life will bring when you bite down, but the wise choice is to be ready to serve one another; on God’s island that’s what matters!
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road; have a blessed day. 

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[1] Title Image:  Courtesy of  Pixabay.com     Unless otherwise noted, Scripture used from The New Living Translation©
[2]For another post on this text:  Glory by Russell Brownworth
[3] Carrie Brownworth Wynne (used with permission)

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Intercessor

Thursday, August 29, 2019

I urge you, first of all, to pray for all people. Ask God to help them; intercede on their behalf, and give thanks for them.  1 Timothy 2:1

The word intercede  is one of those nouns that really screams to be a verb!  To intercede in Bible times meant to plead with the king on behalf of a friend.  In our application, the real sense is to be; it is to be involved, in between, standing in the gap.
The cosmetic world’s Estee Lauder said that most women don’t wear enough perfume.  They always think they should just dab a little on the wrists, and the pulse points.  NOT SO, says the lady.  She says the best way to apply fragrance is to spray the air in front of you and walk into it.  Wearing perfume is a little like loving – you can’t be stingy.  You must use it abundantly.  It just may be that Estee Lauder has given the best illustration of interceding in prayer.  We must fill our entire existence with the presence of God, and the problems which plague the one for whom we pray, and walk in it, abundantly!  
Giving thanks for the ones you pray for is an act of gratitude.  Prayer is active; it’s part of a lifestyle, rather than a ritual.  Part of every believer’s daily (hourly) living ought to be an active, vibrant attitude of gratitude for God and fellow men and women.  
Let’s face it, if we are of the belief that everything happens under the control of God, and He is engineering it for our good (Romans 8.28), then we must be thankful for all of it; we must be thankful even when we cannot understand what God is doing in our lives.
There are things I didn’t understand when I was younger.
·      I couldn’t understand how some childhood bullies I knew were not incinerated by lightning for their ways.  How could I be thankful for them?
·      I didn’t understand why my Dad had to work the graveyard shift.  He was working at night when I wanted him home.  But my lack of understanding at that point doesn’t change the fact that it was his love for his family that made him work just to keep food on the table.  I admire him now, understanding his sacrifice.  I admire his being there at ball games to cheer for me when he was probably exhausted from working those late hours.
·      I confess -- it is difficult for me to be thankful for mosquitoes and chiggers, but I will praise Him now (and ask Him why when I get home).
Believers in, and followers of Jesus Christ live a lifestyle of intercession, praying and giving thanks for one another!
For You Today
·      If you are a person who has a relationship with God the Father, because, in faith you asked His Son, Jesus to forgive your sins, and the Holy Spirit has placed you in the body….
·      and you recognize that it is time to get in the battle, and the front of the battle is where you are called, and you’re ready to follow your Captain Jesus wherever He leads…we say,
·      Come…come and die with us; die with us in the prayer room.
·      Come stand in the gap for your brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus.
·      Come stand in the gap as we pray for marriages and children.
·      Come stand in the gap as we storm the gates of Hell against drugs, alcohol and all the habits that enslave and impoverish and kill in our communities.
·      Come stand in the gap for your neighbors, our President and all leaders, and for missionaries around the world.
·      Come stand in the gap against sin, powers of the air, wickedness in high places.
·      Come…intercessor…come stand in the Gap!
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road; have a blessed day.

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[1] Title Image:  Courtesy of  Pixabay.com     Unless otherwise noted, Scripture used from The New Living Translation©

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Why?


Why is one of the first words a three year old begins to understand he can use to drive his parent crazy from the backseat of the family van!  It is asked no less than 82 gazillion times an hour!
That “why” word must’ve loomed large in the youthful mind of Jeremiah when God called him to speak as Heaven’s messenger. 
Like Timothy, Paul’s protégé’ in the New Testament, Jeremiah figured he was just a youngster, why would all the people in power listen to a word he spoke.  God told Jeremiah to lose that thinking and just trust him. 
The Lord gave the fledgling prophet assurance because of three facts:

1.        God’s Sovereignty

The Lord gave me this message:  “I knew you before I formed you in your mother’s womb.  Before you were born I set you apart and appointed you as my prophet to the nations.”  Jeremiah 1:4-5

God did what only a sovereign can do; he chose Jeremiah.  Sovereigns don’t answer, especially to those they rule. Had Jeremiah not been the one for God’s plan, he wouldn’t have heard from God in the first place.
In this particular case, even before Jeremiah’s mother gave birth to him, God had appointed him to God’s service.  That may seem arbitrary, but we are talking about the same One who spoke the universe into existence; it is the Creator’s right to have His way with the creatures.  Even if we don’t understand or agree with that, there is a part of each of our insides that says we must respect Him.
Remember Lot’s wife?  She had gotten so used to being a resident of Sodom she didn’t want anything else.  When God decreed the destruction of that wicked city it was time to leave; God brought the Lot family out as a matter of kindness.  Mrs. Lot didn’t agree, and even though God had warned not even to look back, she just had to have one last look.  She didn’t respect God’s command or His Sovereignty, and she was frozen in time as a pillar of salt, forever to stare at the destroyed city.
It is not wrong to ask why, but when God says I’ll tell you later – just do what I said, it isn’t time to quibble or struggle.  He is still sovereign over all, and that is a comfort Jeremiah needed if he was going to serve the God with no name.
A second fact that comforted the newly-ordained prophet that day was:

2.        God’s Intimacy

Notice all the personal pronouns that describe God’s relationship with Jeremiah:

“O Sovereign Lord,” I said, “I can’t speak for you! I’m too young!”  The Lord replied, “Don’t say, ‘I’m too young,’ for you must go wherever I send you and say whatever I tell you.  And don’t be afraid of the people, for I will be with you and will protect you.  I, the Lord, have spoken!”  Then the Lord reached out and touched my mouth and said, “Look, I have put my words in your mouth!  Jeremiah 1: 6-9

Five times in these 4 verses God refers to His personhood “I” and “my”.  And he marries that with “you” and “your” when referring to Jeremiah.  We serve a God who is sovereign, but not aloof.  The whole reason God created us is for relationship.  We are hard-wired for fellowship with God and each other. 
The next time you begin to ask why remember the God of the universe understands every heartbeat of your pulse, intent and purpose of your thoughts and soul, and loves you more intensely than any parent could even imagine.  And on top of that, He is engineering everything to bless you.

28And we know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for them. 29 For God knew his people in advance, and he chose them to become like his Son, so that his Son would be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters.  Romans 8:28-29

The ultimate answer to the question “why” is “love” – that word agape’ means doing the best for someone else…that someone is you!  Sometimes the best may not look like it at first…but with God it is always the best in the universe!
Marianne was a friend of Elizabeth and mine years ago.  She and Richard had a mongrel dog they loved named Sadie.  The mutt gave birth to a litter of pups.  She came back in the house one afternoon covered with fleas.  Marianne, a clean-freak of the Marine drill sergeant variety went into overdrive.  She prayed, Lord, how could this happen?  I’m so careful, and I can’t afford another big vet bill, but I can’t put this mama in with the pups with all those fleas.  They took the mutt to the vet and, in the examination the vet discovered the dog had a problem that would’ve killed her, but could be cured with a simple, inexpensive shot.  Marianne came to Bible Study that night praising her sovereign, loving Lord for fleas; FLEAS!  Those little ugly bugs that are 90% teeth may not look like a blessing, but without them Sadie the mama dog would’ve been only a memory.
And then, the sovereign, intimate Lord, who chose and loved Jeremiah, gave his life purpose and direction with a mission to accomplish because of:

3.        Eternity

Today I appoint you to stand up against nations and kingdoms.  Some you must uproot and tear down, destroy and overthrow.  Others you must build up and plant.”  Jeremiah 1: 10

Talk about things we don’t understand; God’s plans are certainly something you and I have a great deal of problem comprehending.  God uses a different lens to look at eternity than we do.  Our only choice is to trust Him.
Let’s do a little survey of Bible people who God has used to teach us the reality of trusting a Sovereign, intimate, and eternal God.  These are all people who tried to do right, obey God, but had stuff happen that gave them reason to ask why:
·      Job was a model citizen who served God with a passion; his life fell apart and the pain of not knowing why was killing him.
·      Joseph loved God and behaved himself; his brothers threw him in a hole, then sold him to slave traffickers…why, indeed?
·      Paul gave up everything he’d ever earned, including the respect and trust of the movers and shakers of the world, just to serve God; he got shipwreck, beatings, humiliation, prison, and eventually beheaded.  Why?
·      Peter knew Jesus, and served Jesus, and loved Jesus ferociously; as thanks he got crucified upside-down.  Why?
·      John, the apostle Jesus favored more than just about anyone else spent his retirement years imprisoned in a God-forsaken island prison camp working on the chain gang, digging coal.
But the biggest why of all belongs to the carpenter’s son, Jesus.  He gave his life helping others, teaching love, healing lepers, cripples, blind beggars, feeding the multitudes, and standing up for the oppressed.  They beat Him, mocked Him, and put Him on a cross.  In the end he cried out why have You forsaken me?  I tend to think Jesus understood the cost of sin being forgiven was to have the Father turn his back on Him.  He said that because the pain was great to bear, and we needed to know that He knows our pain. 
He said it to bear our pain…That’s Why!   
In the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit…Amen!

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[i] Title Images:  Courtesy of Pixabay.com.    All Scripture quoted is from The New Living Translation (unless otherwise stated) 

James the Just - Part 12 - Praying for People

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Elijah was as human as we are, and yet when he prayed earnestly that no rain would fall, none fell for three and a half years! Then, when he prayed again, the sky sent down rain and the earth began to yield its crops.  My dear brothers and sisters, if someone among you wanders away from the truth and is brought back, you can be sure that whoever brings the sinner back from wandering will save that person from death and bring about the forgiveness of many sins.  James 5:17-20

Intercession and reconciliation – that’s the ministry of the body of Christ.  Abraham was the beginning of the nation of Israel, God’s chosen people.  They were to intercede, bring God’s message to the world.  The church is the “new Israel,” and our calling is the same; we are to present the gospel of Jesus Christ to a lost world.  That’s not easy!  Intercession is standing in the gap – for the lost, the sick, the needy.  When you stand in a gap between God and the people God has told you to help, you’re doing what William Carey[2] the father of modern missions said:
Attempt great things for God; 
expect great things from God
It is like a small child turning over his security blankey to Dad, trusting that Dad won’t hurt him. 
That Charlotte, NC farmer in 1934 had spent a good deal of time battling a stubborn farm during the Great Depression.  Raising a family was tough work then…as it is now – only in a different way.  Still tough!  The Depression had spread spiritual apathy in the city.  But, when asked, the farmer lent out one of his pasture fields to some business leaders for a day of prayer.  A man named Vernon Patterson lead the prayer this way:  O Lord, raise up from Charlotte someone to preach the gospel to the ends of the earth.   Those businessmen erected a tabernacle of pine beams in the city.  For the next eleven weeks an evangelist by the name of Mordecai Ham shattered the complacency of church-going Charlotte.  
The farmer who lent his pasture for the original prayer meeting was named Franklin Graham.  During the revival, Franklin’s young son, Billy, responded to Christ, and committed his life.  These days we call him Dr. Graham.  Only eternity will reveal how many souls were touched for Christ beginning with one farmer willing to let go of a field for a while, and one businessman willing to trust God for the sake of the gospel.
How can I trust God like that?
Do you remember what happened when Mrs. Job looked her man in the eyes and said, You’ve lost it all, children, possessions, reputation and even your health – why don’t you just curse God and die?  He said, Though he slay me I’ll worship him.  That was Job, choosing to trust God.
Do you remember Naaman the Leper?  God’s prophet said, Go dip in the Jordan river seven times to be healed.  Naaman grumbled, but he went.  Each time he bobbed up in the water, it was Naaman choosing to trust God:  Here, God of Elisha, take my choices; I trust You!
The big fisherman, Peter, knew something about faith that had fizzled.  Outside Pilate’s house the night Jesus was arrested Peter was confronted by a little girl who thought he was one of Jesus’ disciples.  Peter cursed:  I don’t know Jesus!  It was Peter’s unbelief, no trust at all.  After the crucifixion, he back went home to do some fishing.  What happened?  He had a meeting with Jesus, the resurrected Lord of the universe.  And Peter found out he was forgiven.  All that cowardice and backpedaling…forgiven.  Peter chose to trust, and God taught him for the rest of his life HOW to trust.
For You Today
Preacher, I want to trust God that way; how do I do that? 
Answer:  You just do it; you choose to do it. 
You chew on that as you hit the Rocky Road; have a blessed day.

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[1] Title Image:  Courtesy of  Wikimedia Commons     Unless otherwise noted, Scripture used from The New Living Translation©
[2] 1761-1834