Sunday, May 11, 2008

From Us to Them

Shift: Jesus-followers must make room for expanded hearts to be more like Jesus and embody a genuine love for those who are far from God.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives.By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #13: The Shift from Flattery to Truth-Telling.

SHIFT #14: From Us to Them

We celebrate today Mother’s Day. As we think about the shift from Us to Them, Mother’s are the embodiment of “Them.” Mothers most often think of others, not themselves.

Mother, on a winter’s day, milked the cows and fed them hay, hitched the mule, drove kids to school…did a washing, mopped the floors, washed the windows and did some chores…Cooked a dish of home-dried fruit, pressed her husband’s Sunday suit…swept the parlor, made the bed, baked a dozen loaves of bread…split some firewood and lugged it in, enough to fill the kitchen bin…Cleaned the lamps and put in oil, stewed some apples before they spoiled…churned the butter, baked a cake, then exclaimed, “For goodness sake!” when the calves ran from the pen, and chased them all back in again…Gathered eggs and locked the stable, back to the house and set the table…cooked a supper that was delicious, then washed and dried all dirty dishes…fed the cat and sprinkled clothes, mended a basketful of hose…then opened the organ and began to play: “When You Come to the End of a Perfect Day.”

A teacher asked a boy this question: “Suppose your mother baked a pie and there were seven of you–your parents and five children. What part of the pie would you get?” “A sixth,” replied the boy. “I’m afraid you don’t know your fractions,” said the teacher. “Remember, there are seven of you.” “Yes, teacher,” said the boy, “but you don’t know my mother. Mother would say she didn’t want any pie.”

Motherhood and compassion are intertwined. In the Hebrew language of the Old Testament the word for “compassion” comes from the root word, “womb.”The picture is of a birthing. Something new is being born. If we apply this in a human experience, it means that our compassionate acts always give the other person another chance. We offer a fresh start. Such compassion will dramatically change the way we relate to each other.

This shift from Us to Them must not only take place in the family, but also in the church community. Often a community of Jesus-followers assumes that making serious efforts to reach out to those who have not yet come to know the love of Jesus suppose their own church community will be forgotten and their needs won’t be met. This imagining reveals fundamental misunderstandings about God, the church, and the call to share God’s love with the world.

There are those in the church today that have legitimate concerns regarding the meeting of their needs in the local body of believers. However, when believers who are already receiving quality worship, study, fellowship, and service opportunities in the church say, “What about us? In your reaching out to new people please don’t forget us!” We must ask in return, “What do you need that you don’t already have?” We are not talking about physical needs like clothes, a car, or a place to live. We are talking about the spiritual blessings and eternal inheritance we have in Jesus.

The apostle Paul writes in Ephesians 1:3…

Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ.

God has been so good to us when we remember the marvelous grace God has lavished on us and the sacrifice he made to show us his love. Once we have reflected on all we have as God’s children, we can look at one another as Jesus-followers and ask ourselves, “What do we need that we don’t already have in Christ?” The answer must be, “Nothing!”

In Jesus’ day, there were many cultural barriers between various groups of people. Jews had no dealings with the Gentiles. Most men would not speak with women in public. No one wanted to be seen with the tax collectors. No one in their right mind would dare touch a person with leprosy. So we might say that there was a huge “us versus them” mentality.

Since Jesus was an aspiring Jewish rabbi, most people knew that for him, some people were off limits if he wanted to maintain a good reputation in the religious community. But in full view of the public, Jesus systematically knocked down the cultural barriers. He questioned the norms and customs of the day.

Love That Risks

Jesus took a huge risk when he had a theological conversation with a Samaritan woman who had a questionable moral history. However, we don’t want to focus upon the encounter with this woman as much as we need to center upon Jesus’ discussion with his disciples after they rejoin him from buying food in town. This dialogue with the disciples helps us as Jesus-followers understand the “us versus them” way of thinking. It helps us to have expanded hearts for lost people. It enables us to take an honest look at how we function and discover if there are patterns that are counterproductive to reaching out to those who are not yet part of God’s family.

Let’s pick up the narrative with Jesus and his disciples in John 4:31-38…

When the disciples are concerned with their own physical needs, Jesus confronts them with the shift from Us to Them in two compelling and challenging ways:

1. Satisfying needs by doing the will of God

31 Meanwhile his disciples urged him, “Rabbi, eat something.” 32 But he said to them, “I have food to eat that you know nothing about.” 33 Then his disciples said to each other, “Could someone have brought him food?” 34 “My food,” said Jesus, “is to do the will of him who sent me and to finish his work.

Jesus’ ultimate source of nourishment is that divine, eternal relationship he shares with his Father who has sent him. It is in obeying God and doing his will that he finds fulfillment, his most satisfying food. And Jesus will see that work through to the end. It is Jesus’ great desire that we should be as he was: to do the will of God is the only way to peace; to do the will of God is the only way to fulfillment; and to do the will of God is the only way to power.

Thus, to have ministered to this Samaritan woman’s need was as food to his soul; it was doing God’s will and accomplishing his work. For most of us our hunger for two or three nourishing meals a day takes precedence over everything else. Jesus spoke of satisfying another hunger: ministering to God’s needy and lost people. To Jesus it was exciting and immediate. It is also true that any one of Jesus-followers who have been caught up in God’s mighty work, however small it may have seemed, discovers food in an entirely different dimension than any physical lunch.

2. Securing the harvest by developing the kingdom of God

35 Don’t you have a saying, ‘It’s still four months until harvest’? I tell you, open your eyes and look at the fields! They are ripe for harvest. 36 Even now those who reap draw their wages, even now they harvest the crop for eternal life, so that the sower and the reaper may be glad together. 37 Thus the saying ‘One sows and another reaps’ is true. 38 I sent you to reap what you have not worked for. Others have done the hard work, and you have reaped the benefits of their labor.”

It is Jesus’ unrestricted obedience to his Father’s will which has brought Jesus to a great harvest. The response of this one Samaritan woman which has made her an uninhibited witness among her own people, despised and rejected as they are, now brings them running to hear and believe.

In God’s period of grace, which Jesus is ushering in, all the neat calculations about harvesting four months after sowing, as the ancient proverb put it, are upset and transcended. We are now dealing with God’s timetable. This is the Greek word kairos for “the proper time”—that the time of great opportunity is at hand; it is ripe for the harvesting. In this time, no one can carefully project who will receive the greatest wages, sower or reaper. Their work is intertwined, interdependent, and the wages are the same for both, the joy of eternal life. This is the time of grace.

We often want to wait in our churches—“four month until harvest”—when God says—“open your eyes and look at the fields”—the harvest is ripe now! We can only reap a harvest now because others have faithfully sown the seed of God’s Word. Is not the costly ministry of those who have ministered before us a part of this? So like the disciples, we are entering today into the faithful labors of others. Only then can sowing take place. But we must not wait; the harvest is ready right now, for “the proper time.”

In these verses, Jesus is challenging us in the church as Jesus-followers to shift from Us to Them by reminding us of an occupation—to do the work of the Father, and reminding us of an opportunity—to reap a harvest for God. These are the times in history when people are strangely sensitive to God. What a tragedy it is if Christ’s church as such a time fails to reap Christ’s harvest!

It would have been safest for Jesus to minister only to those who were on the cultural and spiritual inside track. In the same way, it is easier and safer for us to extend our love and compassion to those who are already part of God’s family. We can lock the doors of our churches, and forget the broken world Jesus died to save. But where is the excitement in that mindset? Where is the adventure? How does this put us in a place where we have to cry out for the wisdom and power of the Holy Spirit? Jesus took huge risks when he moved his attention from the “us” of his day to “them.” He also calls each of his followers to enter into this same risky journey!

Shift Suggestion: A Welcoming Church.Take a walk through your church building and across the grounds. Try to look at things as if you were a first-time guest. Imagine you knew nothing about faith, the location of the nursery, or religious language. Could you find your way around the campus? Could you find your way through a church service without feeling out of place? If you think of any ideas that will make your church more inviting to guests, pass it on to a staff member or contact Brian Scrivens, the leader of the “Developing Relationships through Encounters” Task Team. If you are willing to help make this change, let them know they can call and count on you.

Moving from Us to Them is one of the great disciplines that allow God to speak to our heart through his Word. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves…God gave…We believe…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a worldchanger.

From Clean to Messy.Since this is Mother’s Day, let’s return to honoring our ladies. Mothers learn to live with a balance of order and chaos in their lives. They move from clean to messy in so many ways. What mothers do in this life puts them in the tension between chaos and order, between clean and messy. This same tension exists in the church when we desire to make the shift from Us to Them.

So let’s encourage our ladies with God’s Word and an affirming word:

In the words of the King Lemuel in Proverbs 31:30…

Charm is deceptive, and beauty is fleeting;

but a woman who reveres the LORD is to be praised.

In the words of Nehemiah 8:10…

…the joy of the Lord is your strength.

An affirming word (bookmark)…

A mother strengthens us with her prayers,

Encourages us with her hope,

And blesses us with her unending love.

  • Prayers

Lorne Sanny of The Navigators once wrote of his mother: “My mother gave birth to me in a frontier house on a Midwestern prairie. On the kitchen counter she placed a list of the ingredients necessary for my formula. At the top of the list was ‘prayer,’ and that remained at the top of her list for me throughout her life…I have her to thank for firmly establishing my spiritual roots.”

A mother strengthens us with her prayers.

§ Hope

Ann Lamott is a mother who wears everything on her sleeve, including her toils with young children, her poor motherhood skills, and her struggles with faith and her church. She writes, “Hope begins in the dark, the stubborn hope that if you just show up and try to do the right thing, the dawn will come. You wait and watch and work: you don’t give up.”

A mother encourages us with her hope.

§ Love

Washington Irving writes, “The love of a mother is never exhausted. It never changes–it never tires–it endures through all; in good repute, in bad repute, in the face of the world’s condemnation, a mother’s love still lives on.”

A mother blesses us with her unending love.

May we end this message as we began. Mothers most often think of others, not themselves. There is no more influential or powerful role on earth than a mother’s. Stay at it, dear ladies. Never doubt the value of the shift from “us to them.” Without your prayers, hope, and love, the family and church simply could not survive! Amen.

Posted by Bob at 20:02:52 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, April 27, 2008

From Served to Serving

Shift: Jesus-followers must grow servant hearts by serving the people God has placed in their lives, following the example of Jesus with compassion and helpfulness.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives. By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shiftscan take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #11: The Shift from Burning to Building.

Jesus said in Mark 10:45…

“For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”

These words of Jesus set the standard of servanthood. Jesus’ mission statement upsets all the accepted standards of the world. Categorically rejecting rank and power, Jesus establishes servanthood as his standard of greatness. By rank, a servant is last of all. In power, a servant has none.

SHIFT #12: FROM SERVED TO SERVING

I remember when I was a little spud in elementary school. Across the street from our school was a Texaco Star Service Station. In fact, the first day of school my mother dropped me off and expected me to find my way home about a mile away. Now, not knowing now to get home, I went across the street to the Texaco Star Service Station. A man in a dark brown shirt and pants, wearing a cap with a big star on it, asked me if he could help me. Yes, I told him I was lost and didn’t know how to get home. So he asked me a few questions concerning the whereabouts of my home, and invited me to ride in the side car of his motorcycle. It was only a matter of minutes that he drove me to my home on Emerson Avenue. What an impression of caring and service that man set upon the life of one small boy.

You see, the place where you got your gas in those days was called service stations, not merely gas stations. Attendants rushed out to your car and literally serviced your vehicle with gas, water, oil, and a clean windshield. You never had to leave your car. Now days, the attendant never leaves the booth so you pump the gas, service your car, and pay your own bill by a credit card directly attached to the pump. From full-service stations to self-serve gas stations. My, has service changed!

Jesus made the shift from served to serving. Jesus as the Son of God could have arranged life entirely to suit himself, but as the Son of Man he spent himself and all his rank and power in the service of others. He has come “to give his life as a ransom for many.” This saying of Jesus is a simple and pictorial way of communicating that it cost the life of Jesus to bring lost people back from their sin into the love of God. It means that the cost of our salvation was the cross of Christ. It defines what Jesus-followers need to focused upon in these last days, making the shift from being served to serving.

“Servant” in our English New Testament usually represents the Greek doulos (bondslave). Sometimes it means diakonos (deacon or minister); this is strictly accurate, for doulos and diakonos are synonyms. Both words denote those who are not at their own disposal, but are their master’s purchased property. Bought to serve their master’s needs, to be at his beck and call every moment, the servant’s sole profession is to do as he or she is told. Christian service therefore means, first and foremost, living out a servant relationship to one’s Savior.

What work does Christ set his servants to do? The way that they serve him, he tells them, is by becoming the servants of their fellow-servants and being willing to do literally anything, however costly, irksome, or undignified, in order to help them. This is what love means, as he himself showed at the Last supper when he played the servant’s part and washed the disciples’ feet.

A little background information on foot-washing in first century Palestine will help us to understand the significance of this act of service. Foot-washing was not primarily a ceremonial custom. It was practically important because people walked in sandals through dusty and manure-filled streets. Feet simply got dirty and stinky.

Not surprisingly, washing someone else’s feet was regarded as one of the most demeaning tasks anyone could perform. It was reserved for the lowest of the household servants. It would be similar today to the entry job of a United States forest ranger. All rangers begin their work by cleaning toilets in the national parks. They don’t begin by sharing their knowledge of the awesome wonder of creation by leading nature walks.

We must place in contrast the fact that even though the task of serving was demeaning; the servants were well cared for by their masters. In the Parable of the Prodigal Son, the youngest of the sons requested his share of the inheritance and left for greener pastures. He scoots with the loot, and found himself penniless among the pigs, the detested swine of Jewish custom. When he came to his senses, he considered the fact that many of his father’s hired servants had food to spare, and he was starving to death (Luke 15:17).

So on this night before Passover, since there was evidently no household servant present at this private meal, who would perform this task? Jesus’ disciples were not about to do it. Luke says they were in the midst of their favorite argument–”which one of them was regarded to be the greatest” (Luke 22:24). Those who washed feet in this setting would be admitting they were the good-for-nothings of the bunch!

Compassion and Helpfulness

When the New Testament speaks of ministering to the saints, it means not primarily preaching to them but devoting time, difficulty, and substance to giving them all the imaginative compassion and practical helpfulness possible. The essence of Christian service is loyalty to the king expressing itself in care for his servants.

So John sets the stage of this act of service by telling us it was just before the Passover Festival. Jesus was fully aware that his hour had come for him to leave his disciples and go to the Father. Jesus loved those who followed him supremely. He would love them to the end. So the evening meal was in progress in the Upper Room.

Jesus models for us the shift from served to serving as he washes the disciple’s feet in John 13:3-5, 12-15.

In the likeness of Jesus…

1. Servants are dependably aware of their origin and destiny

3 Jesus knew that the Father had put all things under his power, and that he had come from God and was returning to God;

Jesus knew the source of his authority came from his Father. He knew that his incarnation of becoming flesh was ordained by his Father, and he would ascend back to heaven when he completed the work his Father gave him to do. So he was fully aware of his mission and ministry. He was able throughout his life and ministry to constantly recognize his work with humility, obedience, compassion and gentleness.

Servants must know the origin and the destiny of their authority. It is important that we as Jesus-followers know our roots. Our heritage is important because it helps us know who we are, but most importantly, whose we are. When we know we are God’s children, and one day we are going to spend eternity with him, then our service takes on a new dimension than the social services of our day. When we serve with loyalty to our Master, expressing care for his servants, then our service embodies eternity. We have a foundation and a future upon which to base our service. Our service has the stamp of eternity upon it.

2. Servants are dutifully observant of the task before them

4 …so he [Jesus] got up from the meal, took off his outer clothing, and wrapped a towel around his waist. 5 After that, he poured water into a basin and began to wash his disciples’ feet, drying them with the towel that was wrapped around him… 12 When he had finished washing their feet, he put on his clothes and returned to his place. “Do you understand what I have done for you?” he asked them. 13 “You call me ‘Teacher’ and ‘Lord,’ and rightly so, for that is what I am.”

Jesus was both observant and sensitive to the fact that the household servant either was lax in the assigned duties or was no where to be found. The disciples entered the place of dining, and the servant did not do the customary act of washing their feet. No doubt, Jesus was the guest of honor.

How strange it must have been for the disciples to witness this act of compassion and helpfulness coming from their Teacher and Lord. But Jesus takes off his outer coat, wraps a towel around him, pours water into a basin and washes their feet. Jesus then returns to his place of honor. He asks them if they truly understood what he had done for them. They were right in calling him Teacher and Lord. Would they be responsive to move from served to serving?

Servants must be observant of the task before them. Jesus calls us as Jesus-followers to minister to one another in his name. There is no excuse for us to sit back and wait for God to show us the need for service in our lives and ministry. Jesus sets the example and calls us to observe the commitment it takes to serve him, especially our brothers and sisters in Christ. So we make the shift from served to serving.

3. Servants are devotedly obedient to the commission assigned them

14 “Now that I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet. 15 I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you.”

Jesus called his disciples servants, not consumers. He commissioned his disciples to serve one another in the likeness of his service to them. Jesus set the example. Jesus provided a model. One who models has the willingness to go first. Jesus will never ask his disciples to do anything that he first isn’t willing to do.

Servants must be devotedly obedience to the call of servanthood. In a culture where people are most often concerned about their own well-being, we are charged to follow the lead of our Master. We begin our service to those who we are called to love, care about, and be concerned for. Only the Holy Spirit can create in us the kind of love toward our Savior that will overflow in imaginative compassion and practical helpfulness towards his people. Unless the spirit is training us in love, we are not fit persons to serve with that creative compassion and sensible helpfulness in the church.

All in the Family–

Let’s envision the following scenarios…

First, let’s picture a church where everyone wants to be served. (video clip, second service).Each person believes the church exists to serve their needs, to make them happy, and to cater to their whims and tastes. Imagine a church where everyone has a “take care of me” attitude and is quick to grumble whenever things are not as they should be. It becomes a church of self-absorption. Sadly some people don’t have to use their imagination to picture such a church. This kind of church will NEVER have a positive impact on their world.

I’ll go where you want me to go, dear Lord,

Real service is what I desire.

I’ll sing you a solo any time, dear Lord,

Just don’t ask me to sing in the choir.

I’ll do what you want me to do, dear Lord,

I like to see things come to pass.

But don’t ask me to teach boys and girls, dear Lord,

I’d rather just stay in my class.

I’ll do what you want me to do, dear Lord,

I yearn for your kingdom to thrive.

I’ll give you my nickels and dimes, dear Lord,

But please don’t ask me to tithe.

I’ll go where you want me to go, dear Lord,

I’ll say what you want me to say.

I’m busy just now with myself, dear Lord,

I’ll help you some other day.

Now, let’s imagine a church where every person has a passion to serve others. What could God do through such a church? The church was never meant to be a bunch of people watching on as a few exhausted people strain to carry the burden of a whole congregation. Football has been likened to service in the church. Thousands of fans are watching, desperately in need of exercise. Twenty-two players are exercising, desperately in need of rest! The wise saying from Ecclesiastes 4:9, “two are better than one, because they have a good return for their labor” is true. It becomes a church of self-sacrificing. This kind of church is filled with people who will CHANGE their world.

Brother Lawrence lived in the 17th century. He remained 40 years in the uninterrupted awareness of God’s presence. He walked in the humility of depending on God and the purity of doing everything for the love of God. It was observed, that in the greatest hurry of business in the kitchen, he still preserved his recollection and heavenly-mindedness. He was never hasty or loitering, but did each thing, even the washing of dishes, in its season with an even uninterrupted composure and tranquility of spirit. “The time of business,” said he, “does not with me differ from the time of prayer. In the noise and clutter of my kitchen, while several persons are at the same time calling for different things, I possess God in as great tranquility as if I were upon my knees at the Blessed Supper.”

Moving from served to serving is one of the great disciplines that allow God to speak to our heart through his Word. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves…God gave…We believe…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a worldchanger.

Posted by Bob at 20:01:45 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, April 20, 2008

From Burning to Building

Shift: When words become a fire, the Spirit convicts Jesus-followers to have the courage to open their mouths and build others up with their words.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives.By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #10: The Shift from Anxiety to Peace.

“May these words of my mouth and this meditation of my heart be pleasing in your sight, LORD, my Rock and my Redeemer.” –Psalm 19:14.

SHIFT #11: From Burning to Building

We who have lived in Southern California in the fall, we know we don’t get much change in our weather. No, instead we’re stuck with the same boring eighty-degrees day in, day out. But fall in Southern California does have one major drawback. Fall is fire season. It happens every September, October, and November. The gentle winds shift from the standard off-shore afternoon breezes to the warm, whipped up Santa Ana desert winds. And every time they do, a high alert goes out for wildfires. We have watched these infamous, fall fires on the evening news. For some, we know of family or friends who have literally been evacuated from their homes. In recent fires near Malibu, the flames literally jumped eight full-size lanes of a massive freeway in an instant. The fire left a charred and flattened path twenty miles through Malibu Canyon and down to the beach. It is a frightening experience. Each year, hundreds of thousands of acres are burned, homes are lost, and lives are threatened by fires that often get started with a simple “spark.” [video clip on start a fire].

There is another force to be reckoned with when it comes to our speech. One of the most startling passages in the Bible was written by Jesus’ younger brother, James. Describing the power of our words, he writes in James 3:5-6…

5 … the tongue is a small part of the body, but it makes great boasts. Consider what a great forest is set on fire by a small spark. 6 The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body. It corrupts the whole person, sets the whole course of one’s life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell.

James seems to be going to extremes. He thinks the tongue is like a fire, that a whole world of evil lives in this tiny pink organ, that it can corrupt us through and through, that it ignites the very fabric of our lives with flames that must be quenched, and that all of this fiery mess has been ignited by hell itself.

Is the tongue really as dangerous as James thinks? Do our words have the potential for the kind of destruction he seems to be worried about? Well, we as Jesus-followers need to respond to these questions with consciences open and hearts softened by the prompting of the Holy Spirit. When considering our words, we need to make the shift from burning to building.

Words that burn cause emotional battle scars. We don’t have to walk long on this earth before we discover that some of our deepest wounds are the result of careless or hurtful words. It is also true; words that build produce lasting relationships. When people speak words of love, affirmation, and blessing, we experience some of the most precious memories in this life.

So it is no surprise that God gives us all kinds of warnings about how we use our words. God inspired Solomon to speak on this topic from the book of Proverbs.

Proverbs 18:20-21 20 From the fruit of their mouths people’s stomachs are filled; with the harvest of their lips they are satisfied. 21 The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit.

Solomon understood that words have the potential to burn or to build. They have the power of life or death. We all know how refreshing it is to hear words of life, hope, and encouragement. They can help our performance and brighten our attitudes. The right word at the right time can bring us renewed vigor for a task and can challenge us to improve. Young or old, people blossom under the influence of encouraging words. Too often we do not hear encouraging words. Too often, yet we do not speak words that build, only burn.

The truth of the matter is that if we are not careful, our words tend toward the negative. If we push the default button, we tend to use words in ways that destroy relationships and fracture community. God has something very different in mind. God longs to see us build healthy and lasting relationships. But to accomplish this, we must learn to control our speech.

Can we imagine what it would be like to have a full-time grumbler following us around for a day? Perhaps some of us can say, “For a day? I’ve got one that follows me around everyday!” Well, we would soon discover that our house is too small, our job is no fun, we have bad taste in restaurants, and our clothes don’t match…that is, if we survived the day without going crazy. Grumblers can scorch the life out of just about any circumstance. At work, a grumbler can change a dream job into one of drudgery. At home, a grumbler can turn a place of rest into a place of stress. At church, a grumbler can twist a ministry that thrives into a ministry that only survives.

The apostle Paul wrote in Jude 16…

16 These people are grumblers and faultfinders; they follow their own evil desires; they boast about themselves and flatter others for their own advantage.

There is a danger in grumbling. The forty-years Israel spent wandering in the desert was a time they would have preferred to forget. When Paul brought up this topic, it would have been as comfortable as asking someone to talk about their root canal surgery during the second course of a dinner party. Some things are better left unsaid. However, Paul brings up this awkward topic and lists four sins the people of Israel committed while they wandered in the wilderness during those agonizing years.

Let’s note these sins in 1 Corinthians 10:6-10…

6 Now these things occurred as examples to keep us from setting our hearts on evil things as they did. 7 Do not be idolaters, as some of them were; as it is written: “The people sat down to eat and drink and got up to indulge in revelry.” 8 We should not commit sexual immorality, as some of them did—and in one day twenty-three thousand of them died. 9 We should not test Christ, as some of them did—and were killed by snakes. 10 And do not grumble, as some of them did—and were killed by the destroying angel.

Here are the four sins:

Idolatry… Sexual immorality…Testing the Lord…Grumbling

Now, Jesus-followers take a strong stand on idolatry, sexual immorality, and testing the Lord. The question then becomes, why do we practically ignore the fourth sin Paul addresses in this passage? We simply ignore this one as seriously as the other three. Paul is basically communicating God’s heart on this topic. This sin of grumbling not only plagued the people of Israel all through their history, it was damaging the church in Paul’s day, and it still runs rampant in the lives of too many Jesus-followers and churches today.

Therefore, we need to constantly draw near to God and ask him for the right words to speak, words that will satisfy the soul of every listener. Words that encourage and not discourage those who hear us speak. That God might help our tongues to nourish life and not to torch others. And perhaps most important of all, help us to encourage others to be encouragers.

So how do we make the shift from burning to building?

Words That Matter

Grumbling burns, consumes, and destroys relationships; speaking words of blessing can heal, strengthen, and rebuild them. If we desire to experience dynamic and lasting relationships, we can begin by committing to use our words as a source of blessing and encouragement. We need to declare our lives Zero Tolerance Zones. We must not tolerate the poison that grumbling brings into our relationships. God wants us to celebrate the good we see in others. We can speak uplifting words face to face, and we can even become ambassadors of “good gossip.”

Paul writes to the believers in Ephesians 4:29-32…

29 Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen. 30 And do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, with whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. 31 Get rid of all bitterness, rage and anger, brawling and slander, along with every form of malice. 32 Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.

When we develop the habit of affirming others, a shift from burning to building occurs. In a modern culture where the tongue is often used to burn, we create a culture of blessing. Paul prohibits burning and permits building in his wise counsel:

1. Paul disallows all “trash talk”

29 Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths…

Burning permits are not granted. It’s too dangerous to take the chance. Also, he urges us not to grieve the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is the guide of life. When we act contrary to the counsel of our parents when we are young, we hurt them. In a similar way, to act contrary to the guidance of the Holy Spirit is to grieve the Spirit and hurt the heart of God who, through the Spirit, sent his word to us.

So burning permits are not granted by God. The conditions are too dangerous to take the chance. Why? Here are ten modern-day examples from culture…

· There are a lot of ugly people out there, too bad your one of them

· I hear you are connected to the Police Department — by a pair of handcuffs

· Save your breath, you are going to need it to blow up your date tonight

· Try not to let your mind wander - it’s too small to be left out alone on its own

· I hear the only place you’re ever invited is outside

· Don’t you need a permit to carry that much stupid around?

· Your family tree is nothing but a rest stop for dogs

· You’re so stupid that if brains were taxed you would get a rebate

· Your teeth are so yellow when you walk into church the choir sings “let it shine, let it shine, let it shine”

· Your breath is so hot when you sneeze you start forest fires

2. Paul allows “building permits”

29 … but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs, that it may benefit those who listen.

Paul goes on to put the same thing positively. He wants us as Jesus-followers to take out “building permits.” The Jesus-follower should be characterized by words which help, not hinder. Building permits are granted.

Here are ten affirmations that bless…

· You are God’s special gift in my life

· Your smile brightens my day

· Your friendship means the world to me

· Is there something I can do for you today?

· Be strong because God is on your side

· Your words keep me on my feet

· I thank God for you

· I need some guidance; can you help me?

· God is doing a good work in you

· I love you

So Paul comes to the summing up of his advice. He tells us to be kind. The Greeks defined this quality as the disposition of mind which thinks as much of its neighbor’s affairs as it does of its own.Kindness has learned the secret of looking outwards all the time, and not inwards. Paul tells us to forgive others as God forgives us. So, in one sentence, Paul lays down a rule for personal relationships—that we should treat others as Jesus Christ has treated us. Forgiveness is the standard Jesus modeled for how we treat one another. And this treatment of others surely includes the words we speak!

Moving from burning to building is one of the great disciplines that allow God to speak to our heart through his Word. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves…God gave…We believe…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a worldchanger.

Triple-Filter Test

Let’s bring a summation to our message. When we think about what we say and how we say it, there is a very simple test for guiding our speech. There are three things we can ask ourselves before we speak:

  • Is it kind?
  • Is it true?
  • Is it helpful?

We have affirmed in this message the fact that speaking mindfully is not a simple task. We are used to blurting out and presenting our opinions, grumblings and thoughts, sometimes to the detriment of others and ourselves.

Is it kind, is it true, and is it helpful? I didn’t make those questions up. We might be familiar with them already—they were first used in a poem in 1835, and the Rotarian 4-Way test is similar. Some people use the word “useful” or “necessary” instead of “helpful.” I think these three simple tests of our speech bring together the meaning and purpose of many of the laws in the Bible about right speech.

Maybe the questions of “kind, true, helpful” were in the mind of Paul when he gave his advice concerning our speech to the believers at Ephesus.

Ephesians 4:25

Therefore each of you must put off falsehood and speak truthfully to your neighbor, for we are all members of one body.”

Gossip can be very malicious—telling lies, or secrets about someone to anyone who will listen. But it is also interesting to note the fact that the word gossip was not always a negative word.

The word gossip came from the early English word “God-sibb.” A god-sibling, like a god-parent, was a member of a religious community, someone who shared faith. We were truly kindred in God. Therefore, the original meaning of gossip literally was speech within the church.

So if it seems like a lot of gossiping happens in church…we are right! Gossip can be good. Gossip is the way a community tells its story. Gossip can be the way that people get the help they can’t ask for, the forgiveness they didn’t know they needed, and the affection that comes with being loved with all our faults. Thus, not all “gossip” is bad. Some of it is just sharing stories and connections so that we humans can better care for each other, and better understand the world we live in. The difference between good gossip and bad gossip comes when we ask ourselves…

Is it kind?

Is it true?

Is it helpful?

If we really take this “triple-filter test” into our lives; really think before we speak (or type) and ask ourselves if what we are about to say—is kind, is true, is helpful—there would be a lot less talking in the world. It would be a calmer, quieter, kinder place.

I have attempted personally to take this “triple-filter test” into my life in the past two weeks, but it’s hard. I’m not used to thinking before I speak. I have to wonder if incorporating kindness, truth and helpfulness into my communications is really such a great idea. However, small talk, discussion of the weather, asking people how they are doing even though you may not care or listen or know who they are, is a very important part of human interaction. And let’s face it; refraining from speaking the truth is sometimes the only way to be kind. Kind, true and helpful, for me is like anything I enjoy: ice cream or chocolate, fine in moderation, but we have to know when to stop. We can have too much of a good thing.

Shift Suggestion: Fire Hazards.Dump the “trash talk” and take out a “building permit” because we all have fire hazards in our lives: people who can ignite our tongues just by walking into the room; situations that just seem to invite us to lash out with words. Make a list of the fire hazards in your life. When and where are you most prone to let your words become negative? Once you have your list, do three things. First, try to avoid the fire hazards. Second, if you can’t avoid the fire hazards, be ready before fire season comes. Third, take the “triple-filter test” by asking yourself before you speak: Is it kind? Is it true? Is it helpful? Be prepared to replace burning with building. Foresight can make a big difference.

So let’s make the shift from burning to building. We are members of one another, kindred with all we meet. May we forgive ourselves and each other; we begin again in love.

May the words of all our mouths be a benediction and a blessing to those we encounter daily. May what we say be kind, true, and helpful! Amen.

Posted by Bob at 19:59:43 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, March 30, 2008

From Monologue to Dialogue

Shift: We cannot hear God until we reduce competing noise in our modern culture. We spend solitary time listening to our Shepherd’s words when he calls.

[Bob]

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives. By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #7: The Shift from Sacrifice to Celebration.

SHIFT #8: From Monologue to Dialogue

This message will be presented in the form of a dialogue to highlight the importance of communication that embodies a verbal exchange of thought and feeling between two or more persons. We might take a moment and define the contrast between a monologue and a dialogue.

Monologue =

“a stirring sketch presented by one performer”

Dialogue =

“a captivating conversation between two or more persons”

In essence, dialogue is a channel of communication. Two or more persons are able to be open with one another, whether that exchange is pleasant or the cause of conflict. It is a two-way process in which people discuss issues that concern them. Dialogue calls a person to be vulnerable, to engage in the process of self-disclosure and feedback.

People in dialogue:

– try to receive feelings and thoughts of others without attempting to change them;

– can let others be themselves even when they are different;

– listen without trying to refute or argue down the other person;

– listen to understand;

– ask questions to check out or ensure understanding;

– don’t sit in judgment;

– are open to being changed should the evidence point in this direction.

Now when it comes to our relationship with God, a dialogue with God involves a natural two-way conversation similar to our conversation with others. We seek to share our dreams, desires, needs, fears, and praises. God in return encourages, redirects, challenges, teaches, and blesses us. Dialogue moves our relationship with God from dependence to interdependence, to a sense of belonging and bonding to the life-giving relationships for which we are created by God.

Our culture today finds it difficult to accept the fact that we as Jesus-followers can actually experience a conversation with God who still speaks. Years ago comedian Lily Tomlin asked, “Why is it that when we talk to God it is called prayer, but when God talks to us it is called schizophrenia.” The bottom line truth is, talking to God and listening to God are both acts of faith. Talking and listening are two sides of the same coin. It is imperative for those of us who call Jesus our Good Shepherd to learn how to recognize his voice and to follow where he leads.

The gospel writer Mark records an example of Jesus’ relationship with his Heavenly Father in Mark 1:35…

Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed.

So Jesus models for us how he consistently observed a communal relationship with his Heavenly Father. Jesus kept in check a discipline of quiet in his own life and ministry. Like Jesus, we can prepare for our Shepherd’s call by first learning the discipline of quiet.

[David]

Hearing God’s Voice

The gospel writer John records an example of how crucial it is for us to hear God’s voice through the illustration of the Good Shepherd in John 10

John 10:1-6

“Very truly I tell you Pharisees, anyone who does not enter the sheep pen by the gate, but climbs in by some other way, is a thief and a robber. The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep….”

Most people during the time of Jesus would understand this illustration, though we in the west may not. When shepherds gathered their sheep, they would put them into a sheepfold. A sheepfold was a designated area, usually made with mud walls and only had one entrance, the gate, used for protection against thieves and wolves. And since the area would hold the sheep of many shepherds, a doorkeeper was hired to guard the sheep and open the door for those who were allowed.

v.3 “The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep listen to his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out.”

Ok, that part sounds weird…right, sheep with names? What doe she do? “hey Jim!” C’mere, Steve.” But this corresponds exactly with what we know of Eastern shepherds. They gave names to sheep as we do horses, cows, and dogs. Even today, witnesses have claimed to watch shepherds walk up to a flock of sheep which would be several hundred, call a particular one, and that sheep will actually break from the flock and come to the gate.

v.4 “When he has brought out all his own, he goes on ahead of them, and his sheep follow him because they know his voice. But they will never follow a stranger; in fact, they will run away from him because they do not recognize a stranger’s voice.”

This is also true; when a stranger has changed clothes with the shepherd for an experiment, the sheep still follow the disguised shepherd’s voice and refused to listen to the voice of a stranger whose wearing the clothes of their shepherd.

This passage also says that the sheep “follow” the shepherd. Again, in the West shepherds drive their sheep from the back with dogs, but in the East, shepherds lead their sheep – and all of the sheep simply follow them.

So how will we know we are listening to the voice of the True Shepherd or a thief who has come to destroy us? Following the wrong voice can be extremely painful, and possibly deadly!

Jesus says in, Matthew 7:15

“Watch out… for false prophets. They come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ferocious wolves.”

The biblical warning for our day is clear. We are all a part of the sheepfold; and if we listen, a time will come when a voice calls us to follow.

v.6 “…Jesus used this figure of speech, but the Pharisees did not understand what he was telling them.”

The Pharisees, as the religious leaders, should have known and been known by their followers. But they had ceased to be shepherds who cared for their sheep and they had become thieves who only wanted to “acquire” more sheep to increase their own status.

The prophet writes, Ezekiel 34:3

“You eat the curds [the food], clothe yourselves with the wool and slaughter the choice animals, but you do not take care of the flock”

See the relationship between sheep and shepherd was quite different in Palestine. In America sheep are largely kept for killing, for food; but in the East they are kept mainly for wool. Jesus doesn’t use us …or deplete us. Our True Shepherd wants a shared relationship with us.

So how do we get to that point? How can we be like sheep? For a sheep to recognize its master’s voice, or to learn to come when it’s master calls, sounds like it would take months or years for a relationship like that to develop.

Possibly, but then what else is there to do out in the fields all day? How complex is the life of a sheep? For that matter, how difficult is the life of a shepherd? As we saw last week, in our need to do more, be more…we pack our lives with so much business, that we inevitably drown out the master’s voice.

Jesus says in, Matthew 6:5-6

“When you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen.

Jesus says, we cannot hear until we become still and block out all competing noise. And you might remember that in older translations, this used to say, “Go into your closet” and it’s actually a more accurate translation. This is a Hebrew prayer shawl, the same that would have been worn by a Middle Eastern Rabbi, and Jesus. And one tradition of wearing it is like this…. And this was called your “prayer closet.”

But, it seems this discipline becomes more and more difficult in our “modern” age. We must spend the necessary time getting to know the voice of our Shepherd when he calls. Fortunately, his words are recorded and preserved so we need never be deceived. Make the shift in your life to observe moments of solitude. Know His words; recognize his voice. There is no greater pursuit in life.

Do we speak to God in monologue or dialogue? Do we expect him to reply? Do we wait on God and listen for him to speak? And do we then respond to his promptings?

Some people may hear God speak with their ears; others with their heart. Still others simply feel divine nudges. God chooses to speak in various ways to different people. The key is for us to encourage the conversation and to follow his leading.

God speaks to Jesus-followers today through…

The Bible

Other People

Circumstances

A Still, Small Voice

Dreams and Visions

[Bob]

Learning to Listen to God

Let’s practically discover now how we as Jesus-followers can determine if something is really a word from God. It is a four-step process:

Step 1: We Identify the Source

First, we determine the origin of what we are hearing when we sense God is speaking. There are usually three possible sources. The voice speaking can be of God, Satan, or self. We need ask ourselves, “Is what I am hearing the kind of thing that I would say, that God would say, or that the Enemy would say?

Step 2: We Use the Scripture Test

Next, we need to take the source of what we are hearing and test it against the teaching of the Bible. God’s Holy Spirit will never lead us to do anything contrary to his will revealed in the Scriptures. Never! So we constantly evaluate what we hear and filter it through the standard of God’s Word.

Step 3: We Take Action

Then, once we have determined that God is the most likely source of what we are hearing and we have tested it against Scripture, we are now ready to move into action. Taking action could be seen through performing an act of service, changing a behavior, giving a generous gift, seeking reconciliation in a broken relationship, or many other things.

Step 4: We Evaluate, Reinforce, and Remember

Finally, we make sure we evaluate what happened. The key is that we learn to look back and remember how God communicated to us. Just like a sheep, we record this in our memory banks so the next time God speaks, we recognize his voice with greater clarity. We give God praise when we look back and are confident God was leading.

Shift Suggestion: Growing in our ability to hear from and follow God is a skill we must acquire. We will never sharpen this ability unless we use it. So the next time you feel God is prompting you, use the four-step process outlined above. You might want to invite a wise Jesus-follower friend to pray for God’s leading in this area of your life. And seek his or her input as you press forward.

Moving from monologue to dialogue is one of the great disciplines that allow God through prayer and solitude to speak to our heart. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves…God gave…We believe…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a worldchanger.

[David]

Listening to God through times of prayer and solitude is a learning and growing experience. We will never rightly understand the love of our True Shepherd until we learn to understand the bitterness and the enmity of the human heart. We will never rightly understand the beauty of the tranquility of our True Shepherd, until we have learned a little bit of the unbelief and of the frustration of the human heart. We will never rightly learn to understand our True Shepherd’s blessed love and the love of the Father in giving his Son until we see it in contrast.

[Bob]

In the Arms of Jesus. We want to close this message with a picture that captures praying in our heart of hearts. It comes from a confession that many Jesus-followers make over the years: “I feel guilty because there are many evenings I try to pray but end up falling asleep right in the middle of my prayer time.” These people feel they let God down each time they doze off before uttering their official amen for the day.

This is what we can tell them. Hopefully, this response will speak to our hearts.

Imagine a mother cradling her five-year-old girl in her arms. It is the end of the day, and the two are talking. The mom is telling her about the plans for tomorrow. The little girl is talking about the fun she had that day. As the daughter talks, she yawns and rubs her eyes. They keep chatting, but the little girl is fading quickly. The mother looks down at the one she loves so tenderly. As they are talking, in midsentence, her little girl falls asleep, right in her arms. How does the mother feel? Is she angry? Disappointed? As the mother looks on her precious child, she smiles and rejoices. There is no other place she would rather have her little girl fall asleep.

When we end our day talking with God and we happen to doze off, God is not angry or disappointed. God holds us in his arms, embraces us, and gives us a kiss on the forehead. God loves to be with us, to speak to us and hear what is on our hearts. And if we happen to fall asleep in God’s arms, it brings joy to his heart. It’s the shift from monologue to dialogue—there is no other place for us to end a busy day! Amen.

Posted by Bob at 17:08:56 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, March 23, 2008

From Sacrifice to Celebration

Shift: Easter’s celebration is at hand. Those standing by Jesus when everything seems to be falling apart will see Jesus in all his power and glory.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives. By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, which focused on Good Friday, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #6: The Shift from Top to Bottom.

SHIFT #7: From Sacrifice to Celebration

I guess it was inevitable. Growing up in northern California, I guess it was predestined that I would become a San Francisco Forty-Niner football fan—a faithful Forty-Niner fan. Even in the season when they won only three games, and even when they had a string of bad seasons. Even when the airplane flew over the stadium with the banner that said, “Thirty years of lousy football.” What used to really annoy me was when friends who claimed to be Forty-Niner fans kept “crossing lines of allegiance” when they kept losing. Oh, then came the playoff Forty-Niners, and then the Forty-Niners that won the Super Bowl. The Forty-Niners then called the “dynasty of the eighties” with a string of five Super Bowls. Suddenly, there were gazillions of Forty-Niner fans everywhere, jumping up and down, celebrating the champions. But they could never know the joy of fans like me—fans who never lost hope, and who never stopped rooting for their team. Yes, the losing seasons are back once more, but I’ve never stopped rooting for my team!

It’s true in sports; it’s true in life. Celebration is sweetest for those who were loyal through all the sacrifice. Let’s note the shift from sacrifice to celebration on this Easter Sunday.

Let’s look at the perspective of sacrifice. On Good Friday night it appeared as if evil was the master of life. The holiest and most lovable One who had ever lived was dead and in his tomb, crucified by the order of a tyrant without either doubts or regrets. He who had raised the highest hopes among people had died by the most shameful means. A cross, two nails, a jeering mob of corrupted souls, and a quick thrust of a spear had ended it all. Those hours when his voice was stilled and his hands were quiet were the blackest through which the human race has ever lived. If Caesar could put an end to Jesus, then no one could ever dare aspire or hope again. Hope, in such a world, could be nothing better than a mockery. Christ was crucified and buried. Yes, it is called sacrifice.

Now, let’s see at the viewpoint of celebration. Then came Easter morning and the glorious word: ‘He is Risen!’ And evil’s triumph was at an end. Since that hour when Mary in the garden first discovered the staggering fact of victory, those whose hearts were pure and whose labors were honest have never had reason to fear or despair if they believed in the Resurrection. Christ was crucified and buried, but he wouldn’t stay dead. The tomb could not hold him—and because of him—the tomb cannot hold us either. Yes, it is called celebration.

Where the gospel according to Matthew ends, the Christian faith begins—in the resurrection of our Lord. The resurrection exhausts our capacity to imagine and it pushes our reasoning ability to the breaking point. But we don’t have to explain the resurrection. Rather it explains us; it establishes who we are and why we are here today. Because Easter happened, because the resurrection happened, the church happened. The simplest meaning of Easter is that we are living in a world in which God still has the last word.

From Anguish to Alleluia

Like Mary Magdalene, taken directly from the glorious Easter story. Mary made the shift from sacrifice to celebration. Mary had been there at the cross, when all but one of Jesus’ disciples had disappeared like scared rabbits. She had gone to the tomb for Jesus’ burial. And now, after having been, along with some friends, the first one at Jesus’ tomb that early Sunday morning, she just can’t leave. She has found the tomb empty and now sunk to even greater despair, believing that someone has now stolen her Master’s body.

The story of Easter is so familiar that we sometimes fail to perceive some of the details of the account. These details provide for us a shift from sacrifice to celebration. It’s a detailed portrait from anguish to alleluia.

Let’s look at three of those details of the first Easter morning as found in the gospel account from Matthew 28:1-10…

1. Easter is Power

The Stone was rolled away—not to let Jesus out—but to let us in

1After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to look at the tomb. 2 There was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from heaven and, going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it. 3 His appearance was like lightning, and his clothes were white as snow. 4 The guards were so afraid of him that they shook and became like dead men.

We can say this because the idea that God rolled the stone away from the door to let Jesus escape is inconsistent with the resurrection appearances of Jesus recorded elsewhere in the scriptures. Appearances in which he suddenly appeared in the midst of the disciples, even when they were behind closed doors. Closed doors never kept Jesus in or out.

Matthew makes this clear in his account of the resurrection it was after Mary Magdalene and the other Mary had come to the tomb that “there was a great earthquake and an angel

of the Lord rolled away the stone and sat upon it.” For centuries the curious have always wanted to look into the dark depths of death, but the tomb has been sealed with secrecy. The tomb has always mocked us. It has always stood as the “dead end” of all our efforts to peer beyond this life into the life to come.

A three-old girl was as anxious for Easter to come as she had been for Christmas to come. She announced to her Daddy, ‘I can’t wait for Easter!’ ‘Her Daddy asked her, ‘Do you know what Easter means, honey?’ She replied, ‘Yes.’ ‘Well, what does Easter mean?’ In her own sweet three-year-old way, with arms raised, a smile on her face, and at the top of her voice she said, ‘Surprise!’ What better word could sum up the meaning of Easter! Surprise, death! Surprise, sin! Surprise, grieving disciples! Surprise, modern culture! He’s alive!’

It’s a surprise—for God in his power at Easter rolls the stone door of the tomb away for us so that we might penetrate the mystery of death. It makes of the tomb a tunnel—a tunnel into the heart of the eternal and shows us that the holy heart of God is love and life. God rolls the door of the tomb away not to let Jesus out—but to let us in—to allow us to see that Christ’s promises are true.

2. Easter is Promise

The tomb is not completely empty—for the place is filled with the words of the angel

5 The angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. 6 He is not here; he has risen, just as he said. Come and see the place where he lay. 7 Then go quickly and tell his disciples: ‘He has risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see him.’ Now I have told you.”

Matthew records that Christ’s body is not there, but the place is filled with the words of the angel. The angel tells the two women on the first Easter morning to look inside the tomb saying to them “He is not here; he has risen, just as he said.” If the women on that first Easter morning had looked into an empty and silent tomb, then our resurrection faith would be a belief based on human speculation, an assumption of the moment, an argument based on negative evidence. But no! Our faith is based on a word spoken to us by God. It is based on God’s holy promise, spoken by Christ before he died, and upon God’s holy assurance—spoken by the angel on the first Easter Sunday.

If Easter means anything to us in our modern culture, it means that timeless truth is eternal. We may nail it to the tree, wrap it up in grave clothes, and seal it in a tomb. But truth crushed to earth will rise again. Truth does not perish. It cannot be destroyed. It may be distorted. It has been silenced temporarily. It has been compelled to carry its cross to Calvary’s brow, but with an inevitable certainty after every Black Friday of sacrifice dawns truth’s Easter morn of celebration.

So it is always the third day! Wasn’t that the essence of the angel’s message at the empty tomb? The angel wanted the women to know that the anguish of Friday and the gloom of Saturday had passed. If God has defeated death, the third day is forever! This same promised word that echoed and re-echoed in that Easter tomb still fills the emptiness of our world today. “He is risen”. The tomb has become a trumpet of truth promising the victory of life over death, and the continuation of Christ’s presence and mission in this world—first in Galilee, and ultimately to the ends of the earth.

3. Easter is Purpose

Because of Easter we can turn our backs on the grave

8 So the women hurried away from the tomb, afraid yet filled with joy, and ran to tell his disciples. 9 Suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he said. They came to him, clasped his feet and worshiped him. 10 Then Jesus said to them, “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.”

Matthew tells us that Mary Magdalene and the other Mary, having heard the angelic assurance, “He is risen”, turned their backs on the grave and ran “with great joy” to tell the disciples. Joy is the key word here. Mary Magdalene went to the disciples with the good news. We can bet she had seen the living Christ—as no one had ever seen him before. Who did Jesus choose as the first one to ever see him alive again? The one who had been loyal to him in many losing “seasons” when every reason to be loyal seemed gone—those are the people who see Jesus in ways his fair-weather fans will never see him. Those are the people who make the shift from sacrifice to celebration.

Christ was buried, but he wouldn’t stay dead. The tomb could not hold him, and because of him, the tomb cannot hold us either. This indeed is what Jesus promised to us before he died, a promise that seemed at the time totally incredible, a matter, at best, of metaphor, and hyperbole, but which because of the first Easter morning, we now know to be a matter of fact and substance.

The stone was rolled away from the tomb, not to let Jesus out, but to let us in, to show us that death is not the end, but rather a new beginning. This new beginning gives us a purpose for living. It’s a beginning that proclaims the victory of life over death, and which allows us to turn our backs on the grave. We face our future with faith and hope, confident that all of God’s promises will indeed bear fruit.

One trouble we face in our culture today is that too many people want to have Easter without Calvary—Celebration without Sacrifice. Philip Yancey, in his book The Jesus I Never Knew, writes about Easter being incomplete without the scars.

One detail in the Easter stories has always intrigued me: Why did Jesus keep the scars from his crucifixion? Presumably he could have had any resurrected body he wanted, and yet he chose one identifiable mainly by scars that could be seen and touched. Why? I believe the story of Easter would be incomplete without those scars on the hands, the feet, and the side of Jesus.

When human beings fantasize, we dream of pearly straight teeth and wrinkle-free skin and sexy ideal shapes. We dream of an unnatural state: the perfect body. But for Jesus, being confined in a skeleton and human skin was the unnatural state. The scars are, to him, an emblem of life on our planet, a permanent reminder of those days of confinement and suffering. I take hope in Jesus’ scars. From the perspective of heaven, they represent the most horrible event that has ever happened in the history of the universe. Even that event, though, Easter turned into a memory. Because of Easter, I can hope that the tears we shed, the blows we receive, the emotional pain, the heartache over lost friends and loved ones, all these will become memories, like Jesus’ scars. Scars never completely go away, but neither do they hurt any longer. We will have re-created bodies, a re-created heaven and earth. We will have a new start, an Easter start.

Maybe we’re going through some losing seasons—times that could be a major test of our loyalty to Jesus. It’s dark, plans have been shattered, it’s tempting to desert because of a tragedy, a loss, or an awful hurt. Perhaps we don’t understand why we have experienced a number of losing seasons. Many others maybe have deserted Jesus. God seems silent and things seem to being getting worse instead of better. Our hopes have just been sealed in a tomb.

This Easter is the moment of truth in our relationship with the Christ who gave his life for each of us. Jesus did not abandon us when it meant a cross. Now, will we abandon him? It’s Mary Magdalene time—time to stand by Jesus, to stand firm in our commitment to the risen Christ—even when it feels like there’s no reason to sacrifice. The wisdom of many a veteran of many a spiritual battle still rings true today—“Never doubt in the darkness what God has told you in the light.”

Shift Suggestion: Take some time this week to reflect upon the celebration of Easter. In the view of some, the bodily resurrection of Christ is not an essential Christian belief. Do you agree or disagree? If the orthodox teaching about the Resurrection is denied, what implications does this have for how Jesus-followers are to think about the body in this life and beyond? What propositions does this belief have for how you live out the shift from sacrifice to celebration? Refer to 1 Corinthians 15:35-58 in responding.

Moving from sacrifice to celebration is one of the great disciplines that allow God to give us the power, promise, and purpose of a new beginning in our lives. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves…God gave…We believe…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a Worldchange.

Yes, perhaps it’s a Good Friday sacrifice for us right now. But Easter has come and the celebration is at hand. Those who stand by Jesus in the losing seasons when everything seems to be falling apart are the ones who are going to see Jesus in all his power and all his glory. Celebration is sweetest for those who have tasted sacrifice—those who never leave him!

Listen to the words of Annie Johnson Flint…

Some of us stay at the cross,
some of us wait at the tomb,
Quickened and raised with Christ
yet lingering still in the gloom.
Some of us ‘bide at the Passover feast
with Pentecost all unknown,
The triumphs of grace in the heavenly place
that our Lord has made His own.
If the Christ who died had stopped at the cross,
His work had been incomplete.
If the Christ who was buried had stayed in the tomb,
He had only known defeat,
But the way of the cross never stops at the cross
and the way of the tomb leads on
To victorious grace in the heavenly place
where the risen Lord has gone.

So we make the shift from sacrifice to celebration, and we proclaim with certainty…

Thine is the kingdom and the power, O Lord, and the glory forever. O, Thine is the kingdom and the power, O Lord, and we’ll give You all the praise! Hallelujah, Christ is Risen! Amen.

[listen to the podcast]

Posted by Bob at 18:00:48 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, March 16, 2008

From Rushing to Slowing

Shift: It is time to slow down as Jesus-followers, take a deep breath, rediscover God’s presence, reconnect with people and learn the secret of Sabbath.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives. By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #4: The Shift from Snacking to Feasting.

SHIFT #5: From Rushing to Slowing

Lots of activities, long hours, and never-ending to-do lists. In today’s world, that life has become the norm—for everyone from beggars to kings and all those in between. And many of us aren’t complaining too loudly; we thrive on the pressure that life at warp speed brings. We learn early in life to set our lives upon multitasking.

Multitasking = the ability to execute more than one task at the same time; a task being an agenda, program or plan in everyday life.

Multitasking may be one of the hot bywords of the New Millennium, but several studies show it can be hazardous to our health.

Let’s consider the case of the Illinois man who left the snow-filled streets of Chicago for a vacation in Florida. His wife was on a business trip and was planning to meet him there the next day. When he reached his hotel, he decided to check his email, make a quick call on his cell phone, and quickly respond to all correspondence while also checking out the latest news on CNN. We can say that this man was multitasking.

It’s wise to remember how easily email can be misused, sometimes unintentionally, with serious consequences when handling more that one task at a time. Unfortunately, when typing his wife’s email address, he missed one letter, and his note was directed instead to an elderly preacher’s wife whose husband had passed away only the day before. When the grieving widow checked her email, she took one look at the monitor, let out a piercing scream, and fell to the floor in a dead faint. At the sound, her family rushed into the room and saw this note on the screen: “Dearest Wife, Just got checked in. Everything prepared for your arrival tomorrow. P.S. Sure is hot down here!”

When considering multitasking in plain terms, studies show people can only do so many things at one time before everything starts to slide downhill. People who love to talk on their cell phones while driving should be aware, for instance, that the Federal Aviation Administration and University of Michigan researchers discovered that the time involved in switching back and forth between tasks while driving or flying may be critical to avoiding an accident. Virginia Tech researchers using “black box” data confirmed these findings, proving that distractions, including the use of hand-held portables, contributed to 80 percent of all crashes in their study.

UCLA research shows we don’t learn as well when dividing attention between learning new information and watching TV or listening to the radio, or talking on our cell phone, for that matter. Such diversions, they found, don’t allow us to be as flexible in the use of the new information as we would have been with full attention giving to the learning, whether that information is for passing a Bar exam or Real Estate exam, or learning to safely operate a new power saw or electric carving knife.

There is in addition hidden health harm caused by multitasking, even if we escape car and plane crashes, manage to operate our new saw or knife without losing fingers, and don’t burn the house down: the stress involved in multitasking takes a toll on our body by producing the stress hormone cortisol. Over a period of time — and if the level of stress is great enough — cortisol can set us up for obesity and inflammation, which in turn lead to numerous physical problems including neurological changes and heart conditions. Perhaps the new hot byword should be “minimize multitasking.”

So it is not uncommon for us to be multitasking on a daily basis. If we walk into the rooms of our average teenagers, it is possible that we will see multi-tasking taking place as they talk on the cell phone, email responses on the computer, have their homework nearby and the TV set or CD player turned on. It is more than likely for me as a pastor to be answering my correspondence and email, taking that important phone call, setting up that appointment, working on a Bible study or message for Sunday’s worship, and rushing to the next meeting all within a matter of 30 minutes.

A God of Rest

But in the midst of all this multitasking, we still desire a deeper spiritual life. How can we find it? Into this frantic time famine, God speaks with startling hope. We must confess that we need a summons to rest; a shift from rushing to slowing. God gives us that call to rest in the understanding of the Sabbath.

In 1981 the motion picture, Chariots of Fire, won the Academy Awards’ best picture. It is based on a story about two very different runners — one a devout Christian, the other a proud Jew — who are teammates and competitors on the Great Britain squad in the 1924 Olympics. Due to his convictions of Sabbath, this devout Jesus-follower, Eric Liddell, refuses to run on the Sabbath [Chariots of Fire clip].

Sabbath =

a weekly day of rest and/or worship that is observed in the Judeo-Christian faiths.

The term derives from the Hebrew shabbat, “(to) cease”. The term was first used in the biblical account of the last day of creation. It was repeated, as a commandment, as the fourth of the Ten Commandments. A number of other religions have a similar practice, and the term has also been imported into secular usage. Sabbath is a rest-filled activity that is different from what we do on the other days of the week. The Sabbath embodies three basic elements: (1) it is a time to connect with God; (2) it is a time to experience the blessings of community, connecting with those we love; and (3) it is a day that is dramatically different from the rest of the week.

So do we feel weary? Is our burden too heavy? Are we tired of carrying our load alone? Do we need rest for our soul? It may be surprising to us, but Jesus doesn’t ask us to leave the world. He simply asks us to live in it with a new sense of priorities. He doesn’t always ask for a change of lifestyle; what Jesus wants is a change of heart. We’re in the middle of a time famine. And we need an invitation to rest in order to get us through. Our bodies, minds, and souls long for rest.

Well, Jesus extends to us an invitation to rest as recorded in Matthew 11:28-30…

“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

Jesus gave us three commands in this invitation to rest. We are told to…

Come to Jesus

–we must be willing to move from rushing to slowing and center down before Jesus. It takes a change in mindset. It warrants a change in our schedule and activity. Being willing to come into close touch is prerequisite to growing and learning with Jesus.

Do plow work with Jesus

–we must be willing to take on Jesus’ yoke in service. A yoke harnessed two oxen together to plow as a team. In the day when Jesus shared this truth, the yoke was a tailor-made for the neck and shoulders of the particular oxen that would use it.

Learn from Jesus

–we must be willing to make ourselves available to Jesus for this learning process. We come to Jesus with hearts that are willing to change. We take on the characteristics of Jesus: gentleness and humility.

We must not have hearts that are hardened toward God. God said to Moses concerning the children of Israel in Exodus 32:9…

“I have seen these people…and they are a stiff-necked people.”

To the contrary, we commit to a renewing relationship with God. Therefore, a promise complements hearts willing to shift from rushing to slowing:

We will find rest for our souls. We will experience a Sabbath in our lives—a weekly day of rest or worship to replenish our bodies, minds, and souls.

Those of us who refuse this shift from rushing to slowing become “minimalists.” We take on so many tasks at once (multitasking) that we seek only to accomplish the minimum expected in order to complete as many demands upon our time and energy as possible. During Passion Week Jesus took on only one task. He devoted his time, energy, schedule and relationships in preparing to become the Savior of the world. Jesus moved from rushing to slowing as he obediently went to a cross to take on the sins of the world, including each of our sins.

Jesus said to his Heavenly Father in John 17:4…

“I have brought you glory on earth by finishing the work [task] you gave me to do.”

Let’s note from John’s perspective how Jesus intentionally moved from rushing to slowing before Good Friday in order to be willing to complete this one task assigned to him by his Heavenly Father. During Jesus’ final days called Passion Week, he experienced a Sabbath rest. He took time to connect with God. He took the time to experience the blessings of community, connecting with the disciples he loved. He experienced a week that was dramatically different from any other week in his life.

Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem (John 12)

Jesus explains his death and summarizes his message (John 12)

Jesus washes his disciples’ feet (John 13)

Jesus and the disciples share the Last Supper (John 13)

Jesus instructs his disciples about dwelling and the Holy Spirit (John 14-16)

Jesus offer his priestly prayer to his Heavenly Father (John 17)

As we review Jesus’ Passion Week from rushing to slowing we see the spiritual priorities that were in our Savior’s heart: the glory of God; the sanctity of God’s people; the unity of the church; and the ministry of sharing the Gospel with a lost world. We today would be wise to focus on these same priorities.

Three Secrets of Sabbath…

God has given us a wonderful gift of Sabbath to show us a way to freedom and rest. We have turned this freedom into bondage with a culture that runs counter to God’s intentions. God wants us to rediscover the secrets of Sabbath. If we let God’s truth about Sabbath rest change our hearts, we will begin as Jesus-followers to make the shift needed from rushing to slowing—the enduring refreshment our hearts really long to experience.

Observing Sabbath is an affirmation that we trust God is capable of running the universe without us. Each time we experience a Sabbath rest, we confirm the fact that our confidence is in God not in ourselves. We don’t take on the Messiah complex. We remember, “it’s not about me; it’s about God.”

Observing Sabbath shows that we are convinced that God can provide all we need in six days. When we order our lives around a Sabbath day of rest, God promises to take care of us. Each time we stop our usual activity, turn eyes to heaven, and experience God’s rest, we declare to a watching world that we know God can provide all that is required in just six days of labor.

Observing Sabbath shows our understanding that slowing down and meeting with God and his people is a priority in our lives. A weekly Sabbath day allows us to make time in our schedules to connect with God and with God’s people.

When we take a Sabbath rest, we are able to make private and corporate worship a priority and connecting with people in unrushed moments a possibility. Again, Sabbath rest is a gift from God. It enhances the two most important priorities in life, loving God and loving people (Matthew 22:37-39).

Shift Suggestion: If we work out, we occasionally stop and check our pulse. If our heart is beating too fast, we know we need to slow down. So we also stop and check our life-pulse. When have we allowed time to stop and meet with God this Lenten season before we celebrate Jesus’ death and resurrection? If our schedule is too fast paced – slow down.

God took a day off as an act of love. God rested so that he could model a rhythm of life essential for the health and well being of his children. The very first Sabbath was not for God; it was for us. So we model a rhythm of life by taking a day off as an act of love.

Moving from rushing to slowing is one of the great disciplines that allow God to speak to our heart through his Word. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves…God gave…We believe…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a worldchanger.

Sharpen Your Axe. A young man approached the foreman of a logging crew and asked for a job. “That depends,” replied the foreman. “Let’s see you cut down this tree.” The young man stepped forward, and skillfully cut down a great tree. Impressed, the foreman exclaimed, “You can start Monday.” Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday rolled by — and Thursday afternoon the foreman approached the young man and said, “You can pick up your pay check on the way out today.”

Startled, the young man replied, “I thought you paid on Friday.” “Normally we do,” said the foreman. “But we’re letting you go today because you’ve fallen behind. Our daily charts show that you’ve dropped from first place on Monday to last place today in chopping down trees.” “But I’m a hard worker,” the young man objected. “I arrive first, leave last, and even have worked through my coffee breaks!” The foreman, sensing the young man’s integrity, thought for a minute and then asked, “Have you been sharpening your axe?” The young man replied, “No sir, I’ve been working too hard to take time for that!”

Our lives are like this young man without a Sabbath. We sometimes get so busy that we don’t take time to “sharpen the axe.” In today’s world, it seems that everyone is busier than ever, but less happy than ever. Why is that? Could it be that we have forgotten how to stay sharp? We fail to shift from rushing to slowing.

Jesus entered Passion Week with a parade and faced Good Friday with a prayer. Jesus chose to slow down to connect with God and his people. The following poem helps us to reflect on the importance of a Sabbath rest—from rushing to slowing.

Slow me down, Lord

Ease the pounding of my heart by the quieting of my mind. Steady my hurried pace with a vision of the eternal reach of time. Give me, amid the confusion of the day, the calmness of the everlasting hills.

Break the tensions of my nerves and muscles with the soothing music of the singing streams that live in my memory. Teach me the art of taking minute vacations — of slowing down to look at a flower, to chat with a friend, to pat a dog, to smile at a child, to read a few lines from a good book.

Slow me down, Lord, and inspire me to send my roots deep into the soil of life’s enduring values that I may grow toward my greater destiny. Remind me each day that the race is not always to the swift; that there is more to life than increasing its speed. Let me look upward to the towering oak and know that it grew great and strong because it grew slowly and well.

–Orin L. Crain

One day, each of us will have to give an account of our life and ministry. It is a sober thought that we will stand before the judgment seat of Christ and give our “final report.” May we be able to confirm the shift from rushing to slowing. May we be able to say, “Father, I have brought you glory on earth by finishing the task you gave me to do!” Amen.

[listen to this week's message on iTunes]

Posted by Bob at 17:31:30 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, March 9, 2008

From Snacking to Feasting

Shift: God’s Word has the power to change us for it is the ultimate source of shifts. When we are willing to respond, transformation is inevitable.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives. By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #3: The Shift from Me to God.

SHIFT #4: From Snacking to Feasting

In the movie Hook, a modern telling of the Peter Pan story, there is a scene in which the lost boys and Peter sit down at a banquet table. The boys are licking their chops and drooling, ready to dig in. Peter, who has grown up and forgotten what it is like to be a boy, is looking at the table that appears to be set with empty bowls, dry goblets, and huge platters with nothing on them. Peter can’t see the feast. Peter has a feast before him, but he can’t enjoy it because he does not partake of the bounty of Neverland—he does not believe the feast is there.

This picture is frightfully familiar. There has never been a time in our culture when the Bible has been more accessible than it is today. But there have also been few times in history when people were more biblically illiterate. Here we sit, with a feast of God’s Word spread in front of us, and we are starving spiritually on a smorgasbord of junk food. Christian publishers have given the church a gift. We can read Bibles that have daily reflections for men, women, youth, seniors, and even for those who are in time of recovery. There are giant Bibles that can adorn a living-room table, and little Bibles that we can carry in our pocket or purse.

So why is our generation facing a famine of God’s Word? This malady is not because the Bible is inaccessible, but because we fail to see the feast God has placed right in front of us. It is easier to feed ourselves upon the junk food of life rather than on the bread of life. We seek to satisfy our hunger with junk food instead of feasting on God’s truth revealed in the Scriptures.

(Picture of Hostess Twinkies). Kind of makes those Twinkies stick in the throat after reading the following…. Ever wonder why junk food is so cheap, despite having so many ingredients? It would seem that they require costly refining processes and complex preparation procedures. So why are Twinkie snacks a mere dollar a box sometimes, and why are value meals called “value” meals? And yet all the health food that contains one tenth the number of ingredients tends to cost two or three times as much.

Some say it’s because the added preservatives in junk food improve shelf life, so it’s cheaper to keep the products on sale for longer periods of time. The low price attracts thrifty consumers, particularly lower class families. Twinkies are also marketed to catch the attention of our younger generation. “Eating Twinkies is cool,” said a 16-year-old boy who has been a Twinkie user since age 11. “I didn’t like them at first, but all my friends were eating them, so I started doing it too because I wanted to fit in. Now, I love them–I’m practically addicted.” “Twinkies are the best,” said a 14-year-old. “My mom won’t let me have them, but I sneak out and eat them behind the 7-11 whenever I get the chance.”

The elite have never been fond of these, whom they call “useless eaters”; feeding them dangerous chemicals apparently makes them useful as waste receptacles, though. So the next time we pay for junk food, we need to remember that it will be paid in two installments: first in cash, then in health. A little might not hurt, but a consistent diet will take its toll. The simplest solution is to eat simple: spend more time in the fruits, vegetable, and cut-meat section of the grocery store than the refined foods areas. Overall it is cheaper and healthier. Complaining that one doesn’t have time to cook fresh foods is a poor excuse, especially if the time saved by eating junk food is spent watching TV.

(Picture of Bible Bar) In contrast, The Bible Bar from Logia Foods is a complete, all natural, wholesome food which is jam packed with nutritional and spiritual goodness. The Bible Bar is unbaked and contains no additives or artificial ingredients. It has a delicious and wholesome fruit and grain flavor with just the right amount of sweetness from raw honey and natural grain syrup. The Bible Bar is so nutritious and healthy that it actually represents a complete, well-balanced meal. God obviously had some very important reasons for linking these foods to the Promised Land. Therefore, when you eat a Bible Bar, you are consuming seven foods that God called good and in a form that is easy and convenient to use. The Bible Bar contains the seven foods of Deuteronomy 8:8…Wheat • Barley • Raisins • Honey • Figs • Pomegranates • Olive Oil

Back to our illustration of Hook. Peter finally sees the feast covering the table. His eyes are opened. It is time as well for Jesus-followers to see God’s Word as the sustenance our hearts long for. We must let the famine come to an end and the banquet begin. It’s a shift from snacking to feasting.

There is no reason, then, for surprise that Paul told the Colossian Christians to feast on the Word of God in Colossians 3:16-17… Let the message [word] of Christ dwell among you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns and songs from the Spirit, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts. 17 And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.

The message or word of Christ could refer to Christ as the living Word. For as the prologue to John’s gospel points out, Christ is the eternally living Word. But Paul could also have been referring to the written Word of God. The words of Christ were being collected and circulated by that time. Paul’s own words were gathered into the Bible, where they became standardized as the Word of God. The word for dwell means “at home.” The message of Christ is to be “at home” in our hearts.

What happens when the Word of God dwells in us?

1. God’s Word enriches us

16Let the message of Christ dwell among you richly…

The Bible becomes a part of life. It gives richness to life; abundantly, without limits. The centrality of the word is crucial. As much as pastor/teachers who are rooted in the word, the entire body needs to be immersed in the word, to the point that it dwells in us richly. The Bible is not junk food that will sustain us for a short time. It is a feast that will satisfy us for the long haul.

2. God’s Word educates us

…16as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns and songs from the Spirit, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts.

The Bible brings all wisdom. It is to be taught. The fundamentals of the word are to be taught as a means of instruction in living. This instruction is modeled formally and informally in teaching. God’s Word can also be taught through music. Some of our favorite theology is taught through the music we sing. The book of Psalms is a treasure of music and poetry that tells of God’s dealings with persons and their experience with God. The Bible is not junk food that will neglect proper belief and action. It is a feast that will bring grace and truth into life.

3. God’s Word encourages us

17 And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.

The Bible affirms the authority of Christ. All work is to be done in Christ’s name. This includes the things we say and the things we do—our conversation and conduct. Everything about our work in Christ is to be Spirit-filled and Spirit-controlled. Our worship is to reflect thanksgiving to God. The Bible is not junk food that puffs up people. It is a feast that provides continual confidence and courage for the work at hand.

The Action-Packed, Life-Changing, Soul-Moving Word of God…

So every time we open the Bible, God is at work.

There are all types of word pictures the Bible uses to identify the work of God. Let’s look at five dramatic pictures to give us a foretaste of how God works when we feast at the table of his Word.

1. A Lamp: the Bible illuminates

Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light for my path. –Psalm 119:105.

We live in a dark world so it is easy for us to trip, stumble, and fall into all kinds of difficulty. We need a light to shine on our path. The Bible is God’s tool to shed that light.

I’ve used the following illustration often of a lamp from the context in which the Psalmist wrote. In those days, a lamp was usually a small wick in a little bowl of oil, and similar to a lantern. It provided no more light than a candle. It was not likened to our flashlights today. So if we get the idea that God wants to give us a high beam of light so we can see far down the path, we are missing the point. The light of a single lantern provides the light we need for one or two steps down the road. Therefore, when we read the Bible, it becomes a tool the Holy Spirit uses to give us direction for the next step in our journey. It can provide daily exactly the wisdom, insight, and illumination we need.

2. A Taste of Honey: the Bible is sweet

How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth! –Psalm 119:103.

At times we need to enjoy the sweetness of God’s mercy, grace, and peace. God wants to encourage us through the word. There are times we won’t exactly remember what we read. All we know is it was good to be in God’s presence and the truth he spoke to our heart was sweet and satisfying.

We offer so many excuses of why we settle for the snack and walk away from the feast. Simply, we miss the invitation to the feast. The most common excuse can be expressed in the following way: “I can make some sense of the New Testament, but I don’t get the Old Testament.” It’s true that I can’t remember or understand certain areas of the Bible. However, this reality must not inhibit me from feasting on it daily and experiencing its sweetness. I can’t remember every meal I ate last week, but I know I didn’t miss a meal!

So we affirm the fact that God is in the midst of every detail of life and wants to satisfy us through his Word. Even when we can’t understand what God is doing, we can trust him in every situation no matter how small. Paul quotes from the prophet Isaiah [40:13] in his doxology from Romans 11:33…Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out!

3. A Training Manual: the Bible equips

All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that all God’s people may be thoroughly equipped for every good work. –2 Timothy 3:16-17.

God discloses his Word to us as a living, lasting, and life-giving book. The Bible is God’s training manual to prepare us for the life he wants us to experience. To teach, rebuke, correct, and train—these words are all active words. The result is that we as Jesus-followers become equipped, ready to do the work of God.

Most organizations use a training manual to develop their people. Whether it’s in the sports, business, or education fields, following the training manual is a necessity, not a choice. If we want to be fully equipped and ready to do what God assigns us to accomplish in his kingdom, then we must feast on the training manual—God’s Word—to advance the work. Following our own plans and desires is futile.

4. A Surgeon’s Scalpel: the Bible cuts to heal

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. Nothing in all creation is hidden from God’s sight. Everything is uncovered and laid bare before the eyes of him to whom we must give account. –Hebrews 4:12-13.

There are times when the truth of God’s revelation comes to us like a surgeon’s scalpel. The Word cuts down deep into our hearts. We must remember that God cuts, not to wound but to heal. God sees everything that keeps us from becoming more and more like Jesus. So God uses his word like a scalpel.

Like a skillful surgeon, God penetrates deep and removes attitudes, uncovers actions, and cuts out the cancer that reveals evil motives. God will take the razor-sharp edge of the scalpel and operate for our own good. I remember when I was diagnosed with cancer. I chose to go under the knife to remove that cancer from my body. I know when the doctors said they feel they “got it all,” how thankful I was after the surgery. The Holy Spirit uses the Word of God to cut, but after we are healed, we thank God for removing those areas of our lives that were killing us from the inside out.

5. A Sword: A weapon for spiritual warfare

Take…the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God. –Ephesians 6:17.

When we read the Bible regularly and feast on the truth of God’s Word, we are going through training for the battles that lie ahead. Owning a sword does not make us warriors. Owning a number of swords does not make us more powerful. Only practicing will prepare us to stand strong against spiritual attack. Many people today have a stack of Bibles on the shelf but no idea of how to use them in spiritual warfare.

When Jesus was tempted by the Devil in the wilderness after his baptism and the launching of his ministry, he pulled out his sword and fought back. In defense to each of the Devil’s three temptations, Jesus quoted specific passages from the Book of Deuteronomy to counter the attack. We must learn from Jesus’ example because each of us will face close combat with the evil one—the Devil. Our primary weapon is the Word of God.

God will use his Word in each of these action-packed, life-changing ways at different times throughout our week. We don’t ever know what God has planned, but when the Bible is open, shifts from snacking to feasting are in our future.

How much time does it take to read from Genesis to Revelation? If we would read the Bible at standard pulpit speed (slow enough to be heard and understood) the reading time would be seventy-one hours. If we would break that down into minutes and divide it into 365 days we could read the entire Bible, cover to cover, in only twelve minutes a day. Is this really too much time to spend feasting on the Word of God?

Shift Suggestion: In the next seven days, we can make a plan for a daily feast on God’s Word. When will we dine? Where will we eat? What will be on the menu? Once we have decided the when, where, and what of our Bible study, we need to tell someone else about our goal and ask them to pray for us. At the end of the week, we can share with this person what we learned. If we are feeling spiritually nourished from our daily feast, we make a dining plan for the next week. There are many Bible reading plans available.

Lock it in our heart and brain

One of the great disciplines is memorizing verses, passages, or sections of the Bible that really speak to our heart. Our series on 16:Shifts highlights the verse from John 3:16…

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

…God loves

…God gave

…We believe

…We live.

Prayer: Father, I believe you love this world. You gave your one and only Son so I can live forever with you. Apart from you, I die. With you, I live. I choose life. I admit I need a Savior. I believe Jesus is my Savior. I choose to walk with Jesus and become a worldchanger.

John Stott, one of Time Magazine’s one-hundred people who shape our lives, writes…

We have an almost superstitious attitude to Bible reading as if it had some magical worth. But there is no magic in the Bible or in the mechanical reading of the Bible. No, the written Word points to the Living Word and says to us, ‘Go to Jesus.’ If we do not go to the Jesus to whom it points, we miss the whole purpose of Bible reading.

Therefore, we as Jesus-followers do not worship the Bible; we worship the Christ of the Bible. For example, a young man who is in love has a girlfriend who has captured his heart. As a result he carries a photograph of his beloved in his wallet because it reminds him of her when she is far away. Sometimes, when nobody is looking, he might even take the photograph out and give it a sneaky kiss. But kissing the photograph is a poor substitute for the real thing. He isn’t in love with the picture, but with the person the picture represents. And so it is with the Bible. We dwell on it only because we make Christ “at home” in our hearts. We feast on it only because we love the Christ who is the author and the finisher of our faith.

Let’s not miss out on the amazing banquet God has set before us. If we settle for a weekly snack at church and never dig into God’s Word between Sundays, it costs us more than we realize. We need to get past all of our excuses and fears, sit up straight at the table, and partake of the good things God has set before us. It’s a shift from snacking to feasting! Amen.

Posted by Bob at 17:17:08 | Permalink | No Comments »

Sunday, February 24, 2008

From Gathering to Scattering

Shift: Jesus-followers grow in spiritual maturity by accepting a Kingdom Assignment: experiencing its power, and entering fully into its life by participating in its blessings.

The little things do matter…

Shifts not only have a big impact in the crust of the earth, but also in every area of our lives. By making these small adjustments in the right places, we can set off a chain reaction – much like the earth’s seismic forces that result in an earthquake – but in this case small changes can make a BIG difference in the most important areas of our lives. 16:Shifts can take place almost anywhere: in the workplace, the school, the family, the church, the community, and in our spiritual and personal lives. In our last message, God disclosed to us the importance of Shift #1: The Shift from Infancy to Adulthood.

SHIFT #2: The Shift from Gathering to Scattering

I grew up in the church and was raised upon the truth of God’s Word. But church was boring and irrelevant so I had the tendency to “act up” during the service. I remember one Sunday morning when I was “acting up” during the service. My parents did their best to maintain some sense of order in the pew but were losing the battle. Finally, in tow, my father walked me sternly up the aisle on his way out. Just before reaching the safety of the narthex, I called loudly to the congregation, “Pray for me! Pray for me!”

I grew up believing the Christian faith was only about getting to heaven. As an active child, I had no interest in death and dying, let alone heaven. In fact, our pastor asked the congregation a question on another Sunday morning, “how many people want to go to heaven?” I didn’t raise my hand. He said, “Bobby, don’t you want to go to heaven when you die?” I replied, “Sure I do, but I’m not ready to go right now!”

As a child I pictured heaven as a big, expansive place where God lives. It was a place with fluffy white clouds, harps, angels (not Los Angeles Angels), that kind of thing, and I believed it held little relevance whatsoever to my life as a young boy. No surprise that church attendance was not a priority for me back then. But thanks to my parents, they kept me close to the church, waiting for the time when the Holy Spirit would capture my heart for Jesus. As a young adult, church became a significant part of my life as a Jesus-follower. No longer was it boring and irrelevant.

The kingdom of God is a world that emulates heaven; God’s reign as king over all the earth. The “kingdom of God” also refers to the “kingdom of Jesus.” Jesus talked often concerning the kingdom. How people related and worked and played and loved one another in the kingdom. Jesus emphasized that being his close follower wasn’t merely getting to heaven, although that was a benefit. He affirmed the truth that the kingdom is a reality that begins deep within us as we give our lives over to him. The benefit of kingdom living can be realized now, without another moment’s hesitation.

George Eldon Ladd describes the essence of the kingdom of God as he writes…

An initial manifestation of God’s Kingdom is found in the mission of our Lord on earth…We may therefore now experience its power; we may know its life; we may enter into a participation of its blessings. If we have entered into the enjoyment of the blessings of God’s Kingdom, our final question is: What are we to do as a result of these blessings?

At the conclusion of this message I want to come back to this question concerning kingdom living: “What are we to do as a result of these blessings?” I want to offer to you a kingdom assignment—an opportunity to experience its’ power, know its life, and enter into a participation of its blessings.

For now, let’s look at one of the small changes that can make a big difference in the most important areas of our lives—the switch from gathering to scattering.

The early church was born in the first-century. The account takes place in Acts 2 when the Holy Spirit descended upon the believers at Pentecost—fifty days after the resurrection of Jesus Christ. We might say that the first seven chapters of the book of Acts describe a gathering church.

This gathering church was based upon the gathering of the believers in Acts 2:42…

They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.

Acts 2 affirms the fact that all the believers were together and had everything in common as they gathered together in worship, study, fellowship and service. Even though the Lord added to their number those who were being saved, they were by-in-large a gathering church.

However, an amazing shift took place at the beginning of chapter eight. The church moves from a gathering church to a scattering church due to persecution. Persecution isn’t a user-friendly word. It means to chase, harass, hunt, pursue, and single out.

This gathering church changed suddenly, dramatically, and tragically in Acts 8:1, 4…

On that day a great persecution broke out against the church in Jerusalem, and all except the apostles were scattered throughout Judea and Samaria…Those who had been scattered preached the word wherever they went.

As a result of this calamity Jesus-followers began to scatter. Scatter means to disperse, and it’s an old word found in the New Testament only in Acts 8:1, 4 and 11:19. These were moving out! Their bags were packed and they were catching the next Metrolink leaving town! What once was the first church to exist was no more. Down from thousands to a few. God knew what he was doing. Since the time of Acts 8, the church has scattered worldwide.

Today we need to scatter rather than merely become a gathering of Jesus-followers always living together and spending all our time together. While it’s enriching to spend the bulk of our time in worship, study, fellowship and service together, it doesn’t accomplish all of God’s will. That’s what was happening to Jerusalem so God scattered them!

As a congregation, even though we meet together a few times a week, we’re scattered. We represent a portion of our community. We’re strategically located, probably where God wants us to be, for the purpose of sharing Jesus. We don’t need to scatter to accomplish God’s purpose. In a real sense, we’re already scattered in our community.

However, we also need to know God’s will and respond to it in a meaningful way. We need to see in this incredible passage during this daring and difficult time, that the church prospered! The church in Acts 8 was scattered, and in a real way, we too are scattered about our community from Covina throughout the San Gabriel Valley and Los Angeles.

Accepting a Kingdom Assignment

It is easier to live in a gathering community. But now we must consider our responsibilities as we’re scattered. We must be a sharing people. Wherever these early Jesus-followers were scattered to, they preached the Word. Our founding brothers and sisters went out and preached Jesus. What’s happened to us? What’s become of our enthusiasm to share Jesus?

Jesus talked about the importance of living with a Kingdom Assignment in Luke 19:11-26. This parable of kingdom living described a case of off-site ownership and on-site management. Actually, it reflected the government in Palestine, in which Rome “owned” the region but left it in the hands of local governors, such as the infamous Herods (see Acts 12:1-2).

The reason that Jesus told this story is that the kingdom of God would be delayed, and he wanted his followers to know some of the implications of that delay. This parable illustrates certain facts of living with a Kingdom Assignment perspective.

1. A Kingdom Assignment tells of the king’s trust

11 While they were listening to this, he went on to tell them a parable, because he was near Jerusalem and the people thought that the kingdom of God was going to appear at once. 12 He said: “A man of noble birth went to a distant country to have himself appointed king and then to return. 13 So he called ten of his servants and gave them ten minas. ‘Put this money to work,’ he said, ‘until I come back.’

Footnote: [a] a mina was about three months’ wages.

The king gave his servants the money and then went away and left them to use it as they could and as they thought best. He did not in any way interfere with them, or, stand over them. He left them entirely to their own devices. That is the way in which God trusts us. The nicest thing about God is that he trusts us to do so much by ourselves.

Chief among the implications is that we have a job to do. We’ve been given resources to manage until the Lord returns. These include our skills, jobs, time, wealth, mental capacities, physical bodies, and so on. Eventually we all will give a full accounting for how we have used these resources for kingdom purposes.

2. A Kingdom Assignment tells of the king’s test

14 “But his subjects hated him and sent a delegation after him to say, ‘We don’t want this man to be our king.’ 15 “He was made king, however, and returned home. Then he sent for the servants to whom he had given the money, in order to find out what they had gained with it.

This trust was a test, of whether or not a servant was faithful and reliable in the little things. There is no example of this test than like Jesus himself. Of his thirty-three years of life, Jesus spent thirty in Nazareth. Had Jesus not discharged with absolute trustworthiness the tasks of the carpenter’s shop in Nazareth and the obligation of being the breadwinner of the family, God could never have given him the supreme task of being the Savior of the world.

We’ve also been given a test of faithfulness and reliability in the little things so we may be trusted with greater things. We have no excuses to justify inefficiency in carrying out the tasks assigned to us by God.

3. A Kingdom Assignment tells of the king’s reward

16 “The first one came and said, ‘Sir, your mina has earned ten more.’ 17 ” ‘Well done, my good servant!’ his master replied. ‘Because you have been trustworthy in a very small matter, take charge of ten cities.’ 18 “The second came and said, ‘Sir, your mina has earned five more.’ 19 “His master answered, ‘You take charge of five cities.’ 20 “Then another servant came and said, ‘Sir, here is your mina; I have kept it laid away in a piece of cloth. 21 I was afraid of you, because you are a hard man. You take out what you did not put in and reap what you did not sow.’ 22 “His master replied, ‘I will judge you by your own words, you wicked servant! You knew, did you, that I am a hard man, taking out what I did not put in, and reaping what I did not sow? 23 Why then didn’t you put my money on deposit, so that when I came back, I could have collected it with interest?’ 24 “Then he said to those standing by, ‘Take his mina away from him and give it to the one who has ten minas.’ 25 ” ‘Sir,’ they said, ‘he already has ten!’

The reward that the faithful servants received was not one which they could enjoy by sitting down and folding their hands and doing nothing. One servant was placed in charge over ten cities and the other servant five. The reward of work well done was more work to do. The greatest compliment we can pay a person is to give even greater and harder tasks to do. The great reward of God to the one who has satisfied the test is more trust.

God will reward us today when we desire to move out and share Jesus with those around us in our “oikos”—extended households. We have 3-16 people with whom God has given us the test, and trust to share Jesus. We have been given the responsibilities, not merely to serve one another, but to share Jesus within our web of relationships with family, friends, neighbors, work mates and school mates. Each one of us today will receive a “My 3—16” prayer card. Write down the names of people in your “oikos”—extended households—and pray for them in the days ahead. Place it in your pocket or purse, and pray that they may come to know Jesus Christ as their own personal Lord and Savior.

Jesus concluded this parable by saying that we have been given a kingdom assignment to share God’s resources with others until he returns. The inescapable law of life is described by Jesus in the final verse of this passage… 26 “He replied, ‘I tell you that to everyone who has, more will be given, but as for those who have nothing, even what they have will be taken away.”

There is no such thing as standing still in the Christian life when it comes to kingdom living. We either get more or lose what we have. We either advance to greater heights by intentionally scattering—sharing Christ, or slip back by merely gathering—serving ourselves.

Our culture today is already being primed for sharing our available resources with others in need. “Oprah’s Big Give”™ is a new primetime series that airs on March 2. Ten contestants make dreams come true for total strangers and prove that one person can make a huge difference. It’s a brand new primetime series. Viewers can watch the drama and emotion unfold in this unprecedented competition as determined contestants from all walks of life transform the lives of others. Millions of dollars are given away in this intense cross-country adventure that twists and turns in ways that test the nerve, passion and stamina of each contestant. Each week, a mystery challenge is unveiled, and in order to win, contestants must out-give one another. Big-name stars join “Oprah’s Big Give”™ as the stakes get higher and the emotions intensify in every episode. The judges continue to make the tough call of who will go home before the final episode, when the Biggest Giver is named and the surprise ending is revealed. If our culture is sensitive to sharing with others in need, then how are we as Jesus-followers going to respond to kingdom living?[video clip]

Now, let’s seek to understand the dynamics of kingdom living by returning to the question: “What are we to do as a result of these blessings?” Let’s consider together a Kingdom Assignment—an invitation to experience its’ power, know its life, and enter into a participation of its blessings.

Kingdom Assignment… All we have this morning is a gift from God. It’s up to us to invest those resources in the kingdom and watch the King bless us in the process. This can be a parable that we will never forget. Let’s pause now for a moment and consider the words of Jesus again—a king’s trust, test, and reward. (pause). I need volunteers for a Kingdom Assignment. I’m serious. I need twenty-five volunteers (Twenty-five adults from each service. We are also inviting children and youth to join us). A total of fifty adults, ten youth and ten children who will be willing to accept a Kingdom Assignment. Who will join me at the front of the worship center right now and accept a Kingdom Assignment? (initially wait for volunteers to come, then go out into the congregation and personally invite others to accept the Kingdom Assignment.)

The guidelines of this Kingdom Assignment number three:

Recognize that your resources do not belong to you; rather, they belong to the King. They are God’s resources.

Realize that you are being trusted to invest God’s resources in a way that will extend God’s kingdom. Whatever you do is between you and God.

Resolve to return in ninety- days and share the results of your investment with our congregation.

Each of you as a volunteer will be given a packet. This packet will include a book, a wristband, and a personal letter. Use these resources as an aid in carrying out your Kingdom Assignment.

Maybe there are those of us in the congregation who have not come forward that may want to add to this investment in the days ahead because we are anxious to have a part in this Kingdom Assignment. But after ninety-days we are all going to gather as a congregation on Wednesday evening, May 28 to share and to celebrate what God has done through us with the investment of kingdom resources.

Shift Suggestion: In the coming weeks—whether or not we have accepted a Kingdom Assignment—we need to take note of any way we share our resources with others. We can specifically think of our money or material goods. Are we sharing freely? Are we looking for ways to help and support others? If we are, then we celebrate this and pray for strength to continue. If we sense we need to grow in our ability to share, then we pray for courage and generous hearts.

Prayer: Gracious God, you have blessed me with the opportunity to be a vital part of your blessing to other people. I commit this day to you, the resources you have given me to be sensitive to the needs of others around me. Free me of preoccupation with myself and my own needs. Help me to remember that people will care about what I know when they know I care about them. I accept this Kingdom Assignment. Fill me with your presence in these days ahead as I live for Jesus through the sharing of the blessings of kingdom living, and become a worldchanger.

From an old collection of tales comes this story:

In a town in Holmes County, Ohio, the world’s largest concentration of Amish settlements, there is an Amish pastor who disappears each Friday morning for several hours. His devoted disciples boast that during those hours their pastor goes up to heaven and talks to God. A stranger moves into town, and he’s skeptical about all this, so he decides to check things out. He hides and watches. The pastor gets up in the morning, says his prayers, and then dresses in peasant clothes. He grabs an axe, goes off into the woods, and cuts some firewood, which he then hauls to a small cabin on the outskirts of the town. There an old woman and her sick son live. He leaves them the wood, enough for a week, and then sneaks back home. Having observed the pastor’s actions, the newcomer stays on in the town and becomes his disciple. And whenever he hears one of the townspeople say, “On Friday morning our pastor ascends all the way to heaven,” the newcomer quietly adds, “If not higher.” This story is an interesting Kingdom Assignment story about an Amish pastor who represents God’s kingdom through loving others. It’s a weekly sharing of God’s resources with those in need.

Perhaps the greatest wonder of representing God’s kingdom is that God trusts so much to us, and then gives us the freedom to use what he has given as we choose in sharing Jesus with others. God just doesn’t stand over us, but makes his presence known alongside us. God lets us have the pleasure to share in the blessings of kingdom living. God lets us have the delight of taking the initiative, the joy of achieving. God gives us the freedom and support, and while he does hold us responsible, he wants us to be faithful in the carrying out of our Kingdom Assignment. It’s a shift from gathering to scattering! Amen.

[listen to the podcast]

Posted by Bob at 21:30:44 | Permalink | No Comments »