Posts Tagged ‘God’

Earth Day 2015

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April 22, 1970 is an important day in our history.  On that day Congress established April 22 as "Earth Day."  In a time when pollution seemed to be running rampant and people were misusing Planet Earth, some decided to set aside a day to remember where we live.  I realize that for many people then, and now, this day reflects more on "Mother Earth" than God as Creator.  But, that shouldn't stop us from presenting Him as such.

Throughout the Bible God's role as Creator is clearly seen.  Psalm 24:1-2 says, "The earth is the Lord's, and all it contains, the world, and those who dwell in it.  For He has founded it upon the seas and established it upon the rivers. "  King David was reminding us of God's creative work.  

Psalm 24 is part of a trilogy of Psalms.  Psalms 22, 23, and 24 form a movement of truth.  Psalm 22 presents the truth of the cross, Psalm 23 presents the truth of the crook, and Psalm 24 presents the truth of the crown.  Each Psalm reminds us of the importance of Jesus Christ.  When David reflects on the crown he wants us to realize that one day Jesus will sit as King over Planet Earth because it is His from creation.

Other Bible writers present the truth of God's creation and ownership of earth.   From Moses in Exodus 9:29 and 19:5, to Asaph in Psalm 50:12, to Ethan in Psalm 89:11 to Job in Job 41:11, to even the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 10:26, the writers of Scripture are clear that God owns and operates His creation.  This world is not man's and it did not come about by accident.

In the Garden of Eden God gave to mankind a responsibility to till the ground and to keep the earth.  In this command rests mankind's duty to God's creation.  Mankind is to cultivate the earth and to guard it.  We are merely stewards taking care of Someone else's property. We are only borrowing it.

When I was growing up my mother used to tell me that when I borrowed something I was  to return it in better condition, or at least as good of a condition, as when I borrowed it.  Since we are just borrowers of this universe it is incumbent upon us to treat it in that manner.  Though the songwriter said, "This world is not my home," we actually do live here for awhile.  In the time we sojourn here on Planet Earth we should take care to treat it well.

As believers in Jesus Christ, and children of God, may Earth Day 2015 be a day we remember Whose world we live in.  We could say it like this, "God Created Earth Day."  Now, if I punctuate it like this, "'God Created Earth' Day" it gets it right!  God didn't create "Earth Day."  Rather, He created Earth and on this day we can celebrate that truth.

 

Racing through Life

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Who remembers Simon and Garfunkel? I do!  Does that make me really OLD?  I think so.  One of their more popular songs was known as “59th Street Bridge Song.”  It began with these words, “Slow down you move too fast, you’ve got to make the morning last….”  It was a call in the 60’s to slow down from the fast pace of life.  Maybe they were on to something.

If the 60’s represented a fast paced life, what can be said of our day?  We live in a time of just about instant everything.  From virtually instant communication through FB, Twitter, email and cell phones to the plethora of fast food restaurants and drive-up windows to ATM’s and instant cash to….  Well, you get the point.  Most people are running so much from one activity to another they never stop to “smell the roses.”  Even the prophet Nahum spoke of the invading enemy as having raging chariots. (Nah. 2:4)  I guess speed isn’t only a modern day  problem.

What do we miss in the fast lane?  We can find out if we simply pull over to the slow lane!  Or, better yet, get out to walk.  It’s amazing the things we miss when we are fixated on speed.  Teenagers want to speed through life to adulthood.  Children want to speed through childhood to being a teenager.  And, many want to just get moving faster through life.  Rarely do we hear to slow down.

I want to issue a call to slow down.  Remember when we were children our parents and teachers said this to us, “Stop, look and listen.” They didn’t want us to rush across the road and endanger our lives because we weren’t looking.  A few years ago I was on my way to a Giants game and I must have been too interested in getting there quickly.  Crossing the Embarcadero I failed to stop, look and listen and almost paid for it with my life.  I ran out in front of oncoming traffic, narrowly missing being struck.  Believe me, if I had been run over, the driver would not have been at fault!  But, the Lord was gracious and got me across the street without a scratch.  But, if I had only slowed down, none of that would have happened.

What are we missing by just rushing headlong into the fray?  We need to take time to meditate and reflect.  Find a quiet spot where you can be alone without interruptions.  That means, turn off your phone, get away from your computer, and listen to the birds.  Think about life and the Lord.  Don’t become distracted as Martha was.  She was way too stressed out and pent up!  She needed to slow down to see what was more important.  Jesus told her that her sister, Mary, had chosen the better part.

This week, why not practice a little slowing down?  Get alone with the Lord.  Watch your children or grandchildren more than the TV.  Listen to the Lord more than music.  Pay attention to others more than your favorite sports team.  Slow down.  Stop, look, and listen.

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Family First

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The Bible has much to say about believers in the Church.  Different pictures were used to describe the Church.  Some of these are a building, a bride, a body, and a bastion.  But, the one picture that might be most endearing is the picture of the brethren.  The New Testament draws lessons from the relationship in a family for our relationship with each other.  Just like in a family sibling rivalry exists, at times a little misunderstanding can happen in a local church.  And, just like in a family, we will defend our family to the end, so also in a local church we should be prepared to stand up for one another.  Families are a great metaphor for the Church.

Many years ago Bill Gaither wrote a song we sing quite often.  Some of the words are, “I’m so glad I’m a part of the family of God.  I’ve been washed in the fountain, cleansed by His blood.  Joint heirs with Jesus as we travel this sod, For I’m part of the family, the family of God.”  This family is precious to us.  We have members of our family around the world that we haven’t met.  Yet, this is not the family I want to talk about.

I doubt anyone would disagree with me that the family is under attack.  More than ever the family unit is being maligned and redefined.  Society is pushing the make up and purpose of the family unit far from a biblical model.  G. K. Chesterton once said, “The family is the test of freedom.”  Where did the family come from?  Why does it exist?  How is it formed?  These and other questions will be considered as we continue our way through Ephesians 5.

Two main functions will be seen in these verses.  The first one is the roles of the husband and wife.  Paul will spell out how this relationship should function.  Remember, he was addressing a culture quite immoral and pagan.  Ephesus was the headquarters for the worship of Diana.  The people who made up the church were coming from lives of debauchery and depravity.  They did not grow up in a “christian home” or a “christian society.”  They had to learn first hand how the home should be a reflection of Christ and the Church.  What a change this represents for them.  What a testimony it would have been to see the dramatic difference their families would make.

The second relationship referred to is the parent and child.  Some married couples will not have children.  God is the One who opens and closes the womb.  But, those who are blessed with children carry a huge weight of responsibility.  The home should the breeding ground of faith as the children see genuine faith being lived out. One author said this, “The family circle is the supreme conductor of Christianity.”  We as parents are to be raising our children to love the Lord.  Will they all follow the Lord?  No.  But, it is our responsibility to be the first one to share the Gospel.

Family; we all have one.  It may not be the best, and it may not even be Christian.  But, we can change that cycle.  Love your family and give thanks for them.

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Sing the Love of God

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Today is Valentine’s Day. I would imagine each of us have loved ones we need to express our love to.  This expression of love could be to our moms and dads, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters, or other family and friends.  This day has been set aside on the calendar as a remembrance of more than one saint named Valentine.  In these cases it reflects one who lived with the love of God in their hearts.  It wasn’t until the days of Chaucer that the thought of love turned to a romanic love.

Valentine’s Day is also remembered for a brutal attack that is anything but an expression of love.  On Valentine’s Day 1929 members of the Al Capone gang murdered seven members of the Bugsy Moran gang in cold blood.  This event has been known as the “St. Valentine’s Day Massacre.” What a sad reminder of the hate some people express.

Of all the love we will ever experience from family and friends, none is more important than the love we experience from the Lord Himself.  The Apostle John, who would come to be remembered as the :apostle of love,” wrote in 1 John 3:1, “Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed upon us…”  Even into eternity we will never be able to understand all there is to know of God’s love for us.  At the death of Lazarus, when Jesus wept, just before raising him from the dead, the onlookers said, “Behold how He loved him.”  God’s love for us was demonstrated most emphatically upon the cross of Jesus.

Could we ever out love God?  Certainly not.  But, none the less, we are to respond in love to our Saviour and others.  Jesus summed up the whole Mosaic Law into two statements; love God, love others.  On this Valentine’s Day, consider how much you love God and others.  Be ready to be one who will reach out in love as deeply as God reached out in love to you.

Listen to this beautiful rendition of an old song about the love of God sung by Mercy Me.

Order of Chaos?

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Oh, boy, mom won’t be happy about this mess!  Looks like someone hasn’t been very careful in putting things away.

Have you heard about hoarders?  They have become popular enough for a television show.  Hoarders are people that have no self-control  when it come to getting things.  Some order unnecessary things and never open them.  Others just won’t throw away an old magazine or newspapers.  Things simply pile up higher and higher until the person can barely get around in their own home.  Simply put, it is chaos!

Yet, each one of us has that same choice every day.  We might not stress over throwing away an old newspaper.  And, maybe our offices don’t look like this. ImageBut, our lives are made up of one out of control decision after another.

The Apostle Paul says, “Stop being dunk with wine which leads to dissipation.” (Eph. 5:18)  Now, I don’t know about you, but I don’t use the word “dissipation” much! :-)  Other translations use the English word “debauchery.”  The Greek word Paul uses points out a wasteful life style.  It has the idea of scattering things randomly.  Much like a tornado, a life out of control simply turns life into chaos.

What about us?  Are we living orderly or chaotically?  Sunday we will look into steps that lead to orderly lives.

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YOUR CHOICE

Happy New Year

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Can we really be at the end of another year?  Wasn’t it just a few days ago we were turning our calendars to 2013?  It seems like we just got into the habit of writing 2013.  Now we must retrain ourselves to write 2014!  Wow, how time flies.

So, what did you accomplish in 2013?  Was it a “happy” new year?  What makes you happy?  Happiness and joy are essential to life.  Wise King Solomon wrote in Proverbs 17:22, “A merry heart does good like a medicine…”  Some people try to “medicate” themselves to happiness.  What they find is that no medicine can bring lasting happiness.  Rather, a joyful heart will keep us looking at life from a healthy perspective.  And, as we know, genuine joy and happiness come from a right relationship to the Lord.  So, did your happiness in 2013 come from that source?  May 2014 by a “happy” new year as you draw closer to the Lord.

Was 2013 “new” for you?  Did you get some new things?  Maybe this was year to replace your old car with a new one?  Or, maybe you swapped out your old refrigerator for new one?  Or, maybe you moved into a new home?  But, sooner or later, all of these new things simply become old.  They will fade and deteriorate.  What about you, are you new?  Did you just keep doing all the “old” things?  Or, did you grow spiritually so that you added new things to your walk with your Saviour?  Revelation 21:5 says, “Behold, I make all things new.” Our God is in the business of replacing old, worn out things with new ones.  How well did you do in 2013 replacing your old ways with new ways?  Reread Ephesians 4:22-24 to be reminded of this process.

How long was your “year”?  You might be saying, “what a ridiculous question.”  Of course, we were all given 365 days in 2013.  That breaks down to 12 months or 52 weeks or 8,760 hours or 525,600 minutes or 31,536,000 seconds!  And, as of January 1, 2014 another set of those numbers will be available.  But, just as in 2013, so also in 2014, some of us will not make it to December 31.  Our life will have ended some where in those days.  Moses says in Psalm 90:12, “Lord teach us to number our days…”  This year, will you go through life oblivious to eternity?  2014 is to be another opportunity to prepare ourselves for life after death.  Which of us reading these words will not be on the earth at the end of 2014?  I don’t know, but I do know some will not be.

As you reflect upon the new year, may the Lord give us a “happy new year” because we receive our joy from a right relationship to Himself, because we are being made new by His grace, and we are willing to reflect upon eternity.  Let’s decide now to make 2014 a truly HAPPY NEW YEAR!

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What’s in your heart?

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What’s in your wallet?  Have you heard this commercial lately?  If not, you are obviously not watching any TV! Which isn’t a bad thing.  But, this phrase was made popular by Alec Baldwin as the spokesman for Capitol One credit card.  Now, Samuel L. Jackson is the pitchman.  But, in each commercial the final question is, “What’s in your wallet?”

Well, at Christmas time, after all the buying is over, maybe we would conclude that not much is left in our wallets!  But, if we pull the Capitol One credit card, there just might be a big balance on our bill come January 1.

Today I want to pose a different question.  I’m not as concerned about what’s in your wallet as I am about what’s in your heart.  As you navigate through this Christmas season have you even thought much about God’s love for you or your love for God?  Do you stop to recognize the motivation behind the coming of Jesus to Earth was His love for the Father and sinners?  He was obedient to His Father’s will to be humbled to such a low estate.  Please read Philippians 2:5-11 to see how the Apostle Paul presents this humbling.

But, we also must ask ourselves how much do I love God; what is in my heart?  Nearly every person associated with the Christmas story demonstrates an unflinching love for God.  Zacharias, Elizabeth, Joseph, Mary, the Magi, and the shepherds, all showed their love for God by their obedience.  They gave themselves first to God and then to others.

On Sunday we will hear a beautiful rendition of the Christmas story via music.  Come to worship the Lord with us.

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The Wonder of Christmas

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Do you see the words above?  Read through the list to see what they are?  No, I mean read them NOW! :-) Did you see it?  Each of these words are used so often in our modern speech that they have lost their impact.  When nearly everything is “amazing” or “wonderful” what sets anything apart as truly amazing?

When you read the Christmas story for the first time you are amazed at it.  You cannot grasp how God became man and came as a little Baby in “the little town of Bethlehem.”  You are astonished by the love of God that He would send His Son to be the Redeemer of a lost, sinful human race.  You wonder about it.

Christmas 1933 saw the introduction of a “new” Christmas carol.  I put new in quotation marks because the song wasn’t new.  It was a folk song well known in the hills of the Appalachia Mountains.  A songwriter b y the name of John Jacob Niles was traveling in the Appalachia mountains when he heard a little girl sing a few lines of this song.  He went home and put the words to a haunting melody and the song became an instant classic.  Here are the words to the first verse.

I wonder as I wander out under the sky
How Jesus the Saviour did come for to die
For poor on’ry people like you and like I;
I wonder as I wander out under the sky

Do you still wonder about Christmas?  Or, has it become just “old hat”?  This Sunday we will look at how some of the characters in the account of Christmas reacted to the news of the birth of the Baby Jesus.

Let’s add wonder back to Christmas and again be amazed at the story.

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Walking in Wisdom

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Don’t you just love the commercials that ask, “Got milk?”  They show a person eating a delicious looking cookie and then looking for a cold glass of milk.  Not finding one the person almost chokes on the delicious cookie.  The message?  Milk is the most import part of eating a cookie!

So it is with life.  In our world, a premium has been placed on the acquisition of knowledge.  Over the past 100 years or so we have been told that the more education you receive, the smarter you will be.  More and more emphasis has been placed upon getting a degree.  At one time an 8th grade education was thought sufficient, and a high school diploma was better.  Then, it was the high school diploma that was sufficient, but a college degree was better.  Now we have come to a place where even a Ph.D degree doesn’t seem to be enough.

Yet, with all the education being “eaten” in our culture, it seems we have less and less of what is really important; wisdom.  After spending multiple years to acquire knowledge, we will be very disappointed when we come to realize education isn’t enough.  Knowing how or what just isn’t as important as knowing when.  Applying our knowledge at the right time is more important than randomly applying our knowledge.  Wisdom teaches us that principle.

Yet, even more important than wisdom alone is Godly wisdom.  We’ll call that “Wisdom 2.0″ Wisdom 1.0 is the wisdom man dispenses.  Yet, it needs updating and replacing.  On Sunday we will see in Ephesians 5:15-17 that aspect of walking in our everyday lives that requires God’s wisdom.  Read Ephesians 5:1-17 in preparation for our study.

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Is your light on?

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How many of you have ever tried to fool a person on their birthday with “never blow out” candles?  You know the kind, the ones that can be blown out, but, soon reignite!  No matter how many times they blow them out, the candle comes right back on.  It is a fun trick to play on the unsuspecting.

Sunday we will look at the fact that we are light.  The text says we not only walk in light, but that we ARE light.  Now, we are not light in ourselves.  We are simply a reflector of light.  But, we are light and no longer darkness.

Remember the children’s song maybe you sang or taught to your children, “This little light of mine”?  One verse says, “Don’t let Satan blow it out..”  We are built like the “never blow out candle” in that Satan can look like he blew out our light.  But, soon, it will reignite.  As we stay close to the real Light our light can never permanently go out.

Sunday come to study with us the concept of us as light-bearers.