~This blog is intended as an avenue to spread the Gospel and to encourage those who are already Christians. I hope you'll begin by reading my Faith Story located in the July 2011 archives.~











Tuesday, August 30, 2011

In the Trenches

     My, my, my.  It was so much easier to love God and love my neighbor as myself this summer when life was simple and stress-free.  Now, I'm back in the trenches and I feel defeated already.  My workload is such that I can't seem to get to the top of it, some of the kids are beginnning to drive me crazy and even the crazy, neighbor man has made me angry and spiteful.  I catch myself talking about the people driving me crazy instead of loving them.  I see friends in need but haven't had time to care for them.  How do I show the love of God in times of stress?  I'm not sure, but would love some of my readers to offer suggestions. 

     As for now, I know God hasn't left me alone. He's still there and He is in control of every detail of my day.  I will begin by asking forgiveness for wrong thoughts and deeds.  I pray this verse aloud, "Let the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be acceptable in your sight, Oh Lord, My Rock and my Redeemer"  Psalms 19:14 ESV.   I will also pray for patience and wisdom.  He will never leave me or forsake me.  And love will win because He is in control of my life. 



If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am only a resounding gong or a clanging cymbal. If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. If I give all I possess to the poor and surrender my body to the flames, but have not love, I gain nothing.
 Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. I Corinthians 13



Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Grace by the Skit Guys

Since Grace seems to be my theme, I thought I'd share this particularly awesome little video which is a skit showing a portrayal of Jesus and the unmerited grace He gives to Peter after He is resurrected.  It was recently shown in my church and I thought I'd pass it on.  I like these guys.  

Monday, August 22, 2011

This One is Important



We know the story.  Jesus was teaching the crowds of people and a teacher of the law asks Him a question.  "Of all the commandments, which is the most important?"  Jesus replied, "Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this:‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.” Mark 12: 30-31 NIV

What a perfect and brilliant answer!  If we love God with all we have and love our neighbor as ourselves, the other commandments will take care of themselves.  We will never worship idols, commit adultery, covet, lie or use God's name as a curse word.  Did you know the Bible tells us 8 times to love our neighbor?

But how do we do this?  Is it even possible?  It is not possible with our old, sinful nature.  Actually, it's a staggering commandment because in order to really love our neighbor, something earthshaking must happen in our souls.  Something supernatural.  But if Christ is central in our lives, we will desire to be more like Him each day and it will happen.  We begin to recognize that everyone is part of His creation.  We must love them enough to desire their salvation just as He does.  When we love our neighbors, we are a witness to Him because they can see Christ in us.  We love Him first and don't want to grieve Him or sin against Him.

God places great significance and seriousness on these commandments.  In fact, All of scripture and All His plans for history hang on these two commandments:  that we love Him with all our heart and that we love each other as we love ourselves.   I pray that my life begins to reflect His perfect love. 



Tuesday, August 16, 2011

The Bible for Dummies Part 3/ Hidden Truths Revealed

    # 3 Truth I've Learned About the Bible: (His Truths are Revealed to Believers)

 There was a time when I'd stare at the pages of the Bible and remain confused and angry.  Oftentimes, I'd just avoid reading it altogether because I didn't see it as relevant.  But then I became a true believer and chose to make Him the center of my life and a really cool thing happened.  The Holy Spirit allowed me to see those same words but I understood them. 

     I'm not talking about miraculous illuminations or direct revelations.  And I'm not talking about twisting scripture so it will align with one's man-made interpretation of truth.  He awakened me to His truth and alerts me to the Bible's promises.  It has become like a big, juicy novel I can't wait to pick up again.  It's no longer like reading someone else's mail but is speaking specifically to my heart. 

     You see, to unbelievers the truths of the Bible remain foolishness and make no sense.  Unbelievers can't see because they are choosing to remain in darkness. If you haven't already, I urge you to place all your faith in your creator and ask for wisdom to understand the Bible.  He will send His Holy Spirit to be your guide and you will wallk in the light.




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

Monday, August 15, 2011

Building A Biblical Worldview

It has been a busy week to put it mildly.  In keeping with my past two blogs about the Bible, I thought this link was well worth sharing until my next post.  It details how the Bible should be our authoritative standard by which we judge all our other sources of input.  Hope you will take a minute to read.  Happy Monday and God Bless.

Building a Biblical Worldview

read BibleActs 17:11 says that "Now the Bereans were of more noble character than the Thessalonians, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true." We should come to God's Word with "great eagerness." If we're more eager to watch a sitcom or the evening news than to read God's Word, inevitably our worldview will be more influenced by sitcoms and the evening news than by God.

We should "search" the Scriptures—we must probe deeply, not just skim the surface and quote verses out of context which back up our worldview. We must search the Scriptures, not simply always accept what others say about the Scriptures. The Bible should always be my primary source, and all other sources secondary. If I let secondary sources shape my worldview, I will not have a biblical worldview. I need a worldview informed by and corrected by God's Word. We need to see culture in light of God's Word, not see God's Word in light of culture. Our conclusion may or may not be politically correct (that changes with cultural winds), but we shouldn't care—what it should always be is biblically correct.

We should "search the Scriptures daily." Many other sources of input come at us daily—the media and the opinions of professors, family, and coworkers. If we study the Bible only partially and occasionally, it will shape our worldview only partially and occasionally. Our worldview will be determined by whatever we choose to expose our minds to. Unless I establish a strong biblical grid, a scriptural filter with which to screen and interpret the world, I'll end up being worldly in my thinking.

The Bereans searched the Scriptures daily "to see if what Paul said was true." Now, if ever in human history you were going to assume that another person's words were true, if you were ever going to take someone's word for it, not finding it necessary to double-check against the Scriptures, surely it would be with the apostle Paul. Yet the Bereans were commended for carefully scrutinizing Paul's words in light of Scripture. This reminds us that we should hold up under the scrutiny of the Scriptures not only the suspicious claims of an ungodly culture, but the well-intentioned words of godly parents and godly Christian leaders. If Paul's words needed to fall under the judgment of God's Word, so do all of ours.

Notice what happens here. Instead of God's Word being one more influence on us, God intends it to be authoritative over all other influences. It is not simply that I watch Seinfeld and read Time, the newspaper, Stephen King and Hemingway, and also get some input from the Bible. No—God intends that I read the Bible very differently than I read these others. I read it not simply as one more source of input, but as the Source and the authoritative standard by which I judge all other input.

Now, if I'm immersed in God's Word and biblically based literature, then and only then am I able to discern from the newspaper and Time and Hemingway and movies what values are being communicated and whether or not those values are true. Scripture becomes my grid, my moral filter by which I judge all other claims to truth. I can now pick and choose what is right based on my knowledge of God's Word.

But If I do not spend sufficient time in Scripture, or if I fail to realize the essential authoritative difference of Scripture and all else, or if I interpret Scripture in light of Seinfeld or Hemingway or Gladiator, then I will be led astray. If I am biblically grounded I can read the Book of Mormon and a book by the Dalai Lama and evaluate it appropriately. If I'm not, by reading such things I run the risk of believing untruths and being sucked into anti-Christian heresy.

This is why so many Christian young people "lose their faith" in both secular and Christian colleges. Being insufficiently trained in the Scriptures, they fail to screen out what their professors and textbooks and peers are saying (and how they are living). They absorb and end up adopting from the college a false worldview, usually a specifically anti-Christian worldview. Some reject their faith entirely and seldom come back to church, but many more become nominal Christians who have adopted a worldview that overshadows and undermines their faith—even if they remain church-goers.

lightbulbIt all comes down to this: is the Bible my authority, and how much time am I investing into knowing the Bible, so that I can interpret everything else in its light? Or am I giving my mind unfiltered access to all else, which will then dim the light of Scripture and cause me to be undiscerning and embrace that which is contrary to God's truth?

To be a biblical Christian, I must not simply affirm the inspiration of God's Word (that is necessary, but not sufficient). I must consciously critique everything else in light of Scripture (otherwise all else will unconsciously conform my mind to the world, the flesh and the devil). I must make a conscious effort to evaluate all my beliefs and my lifestyle preferences in the light of God's Word.

I must commit myself to making an examination, no matter how painful, of all my dearly-held beliefs (e.g. a loving God cannot send people to an eternal hell). And whenever they do not stand up to Scripture, I must abandon those beliefs. If I do not, then despite whatever I may profess to the contrary, my true authority is not the Bible, but my background, upbringing, peer group, the media, and schools that have influenced me. In short, I make myself and my culture (the flesh and the world) my authority.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

The Bible for Dummies Part 2

    #2 Truth I've Learned About the Bible (It's All About Him)




      I have found it easier to read the Bible since understanding that God's greatest goal for us is to pursue His glory in all parts of our lives.  From Genesis to Revelation, He is center stage...the Alpha and Omega, The Beginning and the End.  It is truly all about Him.

     In the Bible, He reveals Himself as creator and and the first commandment tells us to have no other gods before Him.  He blesses us first for His glory, not just for our benefit.  He alone calls and saves His people.  He calls us to advance His kingdom for His glory. 

     He tells us that His judgements and mercy is "that you may know that I am Lord".  Ezekial 6:10.  Paul tells us to give Him glory in everything we do.  Even as we eat and drink.  "So whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."  1 Corinthians 10:31.

     I've also learned that eternity will be centered around worshipping our savior.  "To Him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be blessing and honor and glory and might forever and ever." Revelation 5: 11-14

     We can read the Bible and understand our daily lives much better when we realize He allows events to happen for His glory, not ours.  Every word of the Bible teaches us more about Christ and teaches us to trust Him and fellowship with Him. May our ordinary, everyday lives reflect His majesty, power and glory.  And we will find that pursuing His glory and allowing Him to be the center of our lives gives us boldness, humility and hope.

Friday, August 5, 2011

The Bible for Dummies

  I'm one of the dummies.  And I'm certainly no expert or Bible scholar.  But certain truths I've learned have allowed Bible reading to become a delight and not a duty and I think they are worth sharing.  For the next few posts, I want to explain some of the things I've learned as little snippets of information in hopes that you can become an insider in God's conversation with His people.  In the Bible, God uses His words to form and bless us, teach and guide us, and to forgive and save us.  We don't want to miss this.

#1 Truth I've Learned about the Bible (The Old Testament and New Testament Distinctions):

Our ways of thinking are not God's ways of thinking.  It's easy to read the Old Testament and become angry at how unfair it seemed.  But God has an agenda for all of history and I believe that even the deaths of large groups of people was necessary in order to reveal God's overall plan of redemption to His people.  It's also good to remember that the death of His people was not the end of their lives but really the beginning of their afterlives with God.  I could go on and on, but what I'm really trying to get to is the distinction of the Old and New Testaments.  In the Old Testament, God used his judgements and mercy to show He was Lord and to reveal His plan for redemption.  It's meant for us to read but we must understand that we are not bound by the Old Testament Laws today.  We are to live by the New Covenant or the New Testament.  It's really very simple although I haven't always understood this.

Both testaments are ushered in with the shedding of blood.  The Old Testament foreshadows again and again the coming of the Messiah.  But in the Old Testament, God used elaborate plans and rituals with His people and it was necessary that they sacrifice animals in just the proper way to be perfect enough to cleanse their sins for a time.  In the New Testament, that PERFECT sacrifice comes and there is no more need for animal sacrifices and exact rituals and laws.  This particular verse explains it beautifully:
For it is not possible that the blood of bulls and goats could take away sins. ... And every priest stands ministering daily and offering repeatedly the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins.  But this Man, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins forever, sat down at the right hand of God, from that time waiting till His enemies are made His footstool.  For by one offering He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified." Hebrews 10:4, 11-14
We now have a far superior covenant in the New Testament.  It explains what we must do to be saved and to live as Christians.  But we can still read the Old Testament with wonder at God's elaborate plan for His people.