Admit it now - sometime, somewhere you have done something stupid. Maybe you made a rash promise or done something dumb to someone else's stuff? I know I have. So what is your first reaction: damage control!
We don't like looking stupid, we don't like admitting mistakes, and we certainly don't like eating crow in front of other people. So instead we cover it up, we make excuses or we just bear up under the consequences. There is a better way.
Proverbs 6:1-3 "My son, if you have put up security for your neighbor, have given your pledge for a stranger, 2 if you are snared in the words of your mouth, caught in the words of your mouth, 3 then do this, my son, and save yourself, for you have come into the hand of your neighbor: go, hasten, and plead urgently with your neighbor."
In essence what this Proverb teaches us is to take responsibility for the dumb things we do and actually go and talk with the people we hurt. You might look dumb but I tell you, your honesty will speak a lot louder for the Lord than your pride.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Monday, September 10, 2007
Before Sinning - Hesitate
Have you ever noticed that when temptation comes it demands to be acted on quickly? I know sometimes the temptation grows slowly over time, especially when you start to give ear to it, but often temptation wants us to jump on an opportunity - essentially to act before we can think.
There is an interesting saying in Proverbs 1:15-16 "My son, do not walk in the way with them; hold back your foot from their paths, for their feet run to evil, and they make haste to shed blood."
We have a policy in our house never to agree to send money to someone calling over the phone. No matter how wonderful the opportunity or cause, we ask them to send something to us in the mail or by email. Why is that? Because in the moment it is often hard to make a reasoned decision. We want time to pray, and time to consider how are action will affect our budget.
That's good advice when it comes to temptation. Make a pact with yourself that when temptation calls for you to run, you'll walk, and think, and pray first. What might seem good in the emotion of the moment can have long term negative consequences.
Pastor Tom
There is an interesting saying in Proverbs 1:15-16 "My son, do not walk in the way with them; hold back your foot from their paths, for their feet run to evil, and they make haste to shed blood."
We have a policy in our house never to agree to send money to someone calling over the phone. No matter how wonderful the opportunity or cause, we ask them to send something to us in the mail or by email. Why is that? Because in the moment it is often hard to make a reasoned decision. We want time to pray, and time to consider how are action will affect our budget.
That's good advice when it comes to temptation. Make a pact with yourself that when temptation calls for you to run, you'll walk, and think, and pray first. What might seem good in the emotion of the moment can have long term negative consequences.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, September 06, 2007
Want to Feel Good?
I'm not suggesting running for ten miles, having a second (or third) latte, renting a comedy, or something like that. I have another suggestion as a "feel good" formula: praise.
Psalms 147:1 Praise the Lord! For it is good to sing praises to our God; for it is pleasant, and a song of praise is fitting. ESV
I love the three words used to describe the act of singing to the Lord: good, pleasant, and fitting.
It's good - it focuses us on the Lord, not our problems, and since God is good and has His good focused on us, it is also our good. It is pleasant. This is the Hebrew word for "delightful" or "sweet." It makes me think of sitting on a shaded porch with an ice cold glass of lemonade on a summer day with a good friend. Thirdly it is "fitting." The root word means "to be at home." When we are praising God we are at home, in the place that feels right; fits right.
So for today's feel good tip: lift up a song of praise to the Lord!
Pastor Tom
Psalms 147:1 Praise the Lord! For it is good to sing praises to our God; for it is pleasant, and a song of praise is fitting. ESV
I love the three words used to describe the act of singing to the Lord: good, pleasant, and fitting.
It's good - it focuses us on the Lord, not our problems, and since God is good and has His good focused on us, it is also our good. It is pleasant. This is the Hebrew word for "delightful" or "sweet." It makes me think of sitting on a shaded porch with an ice cold glass of lemonade on a summer day with a good friend. Thirdly it is "fitting." The root word means "to be at home." When we are praising God we are at home, in the place that feels right; fits right.
So for today's feel good tip: lift up a song of praise to the Lord!
Pastor Tom
Friday, August 24, 2007
The Door of My Lips
Psalms 141:3 "Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips!"
What a great prayer. How many times have we said something hurtful only to almost reach out with our tongue to grab the words on their way through our teeth so as to pull them back?
How many relationships have we harmed or destroyed because there is no guard over our mouth?
Later, Paul the Apostle will say "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs. (Ephesians 4:29)
Notice Paul says "according to their needs," not what we think their needs are. Sometimes we think someone needs a good talking to, but in reality it is coming from our own hurt, not for their benefit at all.
So, let's all pray that prayer of David and may God make that guard armed!
Pastor Tom
What a great prayer. How many times have we said something hurtful only to almost reach out with our tongue to grab the words on their way through our teeth so as to pull them back?
How many relationships have we harmed or destroyed because there is no guard over our mouth?
Later, Paul the Apostle will say "Do not let any unwholesome talk come out of your mouths, but only what is helpful for building others up according to their needs. (Ephesians 4:29)
Notice Paul says "according to their needs," not what we think their needs are. Sometimes we think someone needs a good talking to, but in reality it is coming from our own hurt, not for their benefit at all.
So, let's all pray that prayer of David and may God make that guard armed!
Pastor Tom
Thursday, August 23, 2007
How Important is God's Word?
Sometimes I think we sort of downgrade the Bible. Maybe its because we don't understand it, or that parts of it seem out of date or downright harsh.
What we need to understand is that the Bible is God's way of communicating to us His character and our character and His plan of salvation through Jesus Christ. It was written by the Holy Spirit through men and women who lived in cultures and epochs very different from our own.
I won't get into a lesson on systematic theology here but the basic truths behind the Bible are applicable no matter who you are or where you live, though sometimes you have to do a little cultural translation for those truths to come out clearly.
My point for today is that God Himself puts a great deal of emphasis on His Word.
Psalms 138:2 "...for you have exalted your word above your name."
Pretty strong words. Until we stand before the Father face to face and can hear Him speak audibly to us we need to trust that everything we need to know is in His Word.
Pastor Tom
What we need to understand is that the Bible is God's way of communicating to us His character and our character and His plan of salvation through Jesus Christ. It was written by the Holy Spirit through men and women who lived in cultures and epochs very different from our own.
I won't get into a lesson on systematic theology here but the basic truths behind the Bible are applicable no matter who you are or where you live, though sometimes you have to do a little cultural translation for those truths to come out clearly.
My point for today is that God Himself puts a great deal of emphasis on His Word.
Psalms 138:2 "...for you have exalted your word above your name."
Pretty strong words. Until we stand before the Father face to face and can hear Him speak audibly to us we need to trust that everything we need to know is in His Word.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Sow in Tears, Reap with Joy
Psalms 126:5-6 "Those who sow in tears shall reap with shouts of joy! He who goes out weeping, bearing the seed for sowing, shall come home with shouts of joy, bringing his sheaves with him."
Do you ever feel like what you do for the Lord is wasted? Do you pray, seeking the Lord for answers, do you study his Word and share the good things God has shown you? Do you seek His Spirit to fill your life and guide you in your every step? Then does it seem at times like all that effort, all that prayer, all that dedication and obedience is just wasted because you don't see any fruit?
Take heart. Sow away. Though you may not see it today, or even in your lifetime, the promise of God is that those things done for His glory will bear fruit and one day, either here or in heaven, you will rejoice with shouts of joy for the wonderful harvest God brings in for what you have sown.
Pastor Tom
Do you ever feel like what you do for the Lord is wasted? Do you pray, seeking the Lord for answers, do you study his Word and share the good things God has shown you? Do you seek His Spirit to fill your life and guide you in your every step? Then does it seem at times like all that effort, all that prayer, all that dedication and obedience is just wasted because you don't see any fruit?
Take heart. Sow away. Though you may not see it today, or even in your lifetime, the promise of God is that those things done for His glory will bear fruit and one day, either here or in heaven, you will rejoice with shouts of joy for the wonderful harvest God brings in for what you have sown.
Pastor Tom
Monday, August 20, 2007
Giving Back To God
Do you ever wonder what you can give back to God for all He has done for you?
Here is a simple suggestion from Psalm 116:
"What shall I render to the Lord for all His benefits to me? I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord ... I will offer to you the sacrifice of thanksgiving and call on the name of the Lord."
Simply put, our gift to God for what He has done is taking a hold of his free gift, lifting it up for all the world to see what he has done in us, then lifting up thanksgiving in the form of worship to him.
God doesn't want or need anything from you. You cannot repay him, but you can glorify and praise him. If you haven't given your life to him, then do it now by taking the free gift of salvation through Jesus Christ, then worship and thank Him for it!
Pastor Tom
Here is a simple suggestion from Psalm 116:
"What shall I render to the Lord for all His benefits to me? I will lift up the cup of salvation and call on the name of the Lord ... I will offer to you the sacrifice of thanksgiving and call on the name of the Lord."
Simply put, our gift to God for what He has done is taking a hold of his free gift, lifting it up for all the world to see what he has done in us, then lifting up thanksgiving in the form of worship to him.
God doesn't want or need anything from you. You cannot repay him, but you can glorify and praise him. If you haven't given your life to him, then do it now by taking the free gift of salvation through Jesus Christ, then worship and thank Him for it!
Pastor Tom
Friday, August 17, 2007
Be Careful Little Eyes What You See
Remember that old Sunday School song referenced in the title of this blog entry? I do. It's a cute song but has a great point that David comes back to in Psalm 101.
(2-3) "I will walk with integrity of heart within my house; I will not set before my eyes anything that is worthless."
Two great points here: often times we as Christians are careful to reflect the character of Christ in church, perhaps even at work or in the grocery line. But something happens to us when the doors close on our home and we feel like no one but our family sees us.
Sometimes we lose that drive to be like Jesus. Sometimes we let go of acting with integrity. Don't. Some of the greatest witness you have is when you are behind closed doors. I know this is a cliche but God really does watch us when no one else does. Wouldn't it feel that much better if we lived out our walk with Jesus as well inside as out?
Secondly, I really like this idea of not setting things in front of us that are "worthless." If you are watching something that is not going to help you grow in Christ, or perhaps is going to cause you to stumble, why do it?
I'm not into censorship or anything like that. I'm not saying don't watch TV or movies or go on the Internet. I'm just saying: be a little more careful. What you take in can affect you.
Pastor Tom
(2-3) "I will walk with integrity of heart within my house; I will not set before my eyes anything that is worthless."
Two great points here: often times we as Christians are careful to reflect the character of Christ in church, perhaps even at work or in the grocery line. But something happens to us when the doors close on our home and we feel like no one but our family sees us.
Sometimes we lose that drive to be like Jesus. Sometimes we let go of acting with integrity. Don't. Some of the greatest witness you have is when you are behind closed doors. I know this is a cliche but God really does watch us when no one else does. Wouldn't it feel that much better if we lived out our walk with Jesus as well inside as out?
Secondly, I really like this idea of not setting things in front of us that are "worthless." If you are watching something that is not going to help you grow in Christ, or perhaps is going to cause you to stumble, why do it?
I'm not into censorship or anything like that. I'm not saying don't watch TV or movies or go on the Internet. I'm just saying: be a little more careful. What you take in can affect you.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Escaping Real Danger
Psalm 91 is one of the most awesome Psalms in the entire book. It's also one of the most comforting for those going through hard times.
I'd strongly encourage you to just read the whole thing; its only 16 verses. But what power, what promise, what protection God promises to us.
I wanted to make an observation about it, though. Read this part:
Psalms 91:7-8
A thousand may fall at your side,
ten thousand at your right hand,
but it will not come near you.
8 You will only look with your eyes
and see the recompense of the wicked. ESV
Let me ask you something. Does this mean that nothing bad will ever happen to you? In verse two it says that "you shall not fear ... the pestilence that stalks in darkness." Does that mean you will never get sick? Obviously not. We do get sick, we do suffer harm, the enemy seems to get away with a lot in our lives. Does that mean these promises are meaningless or not applicable to us? No.
Look at the end, verse 16: "With long life I will satisfy him and show him my salvation."
You see, we need to take God's view of our lives. We are protected (by angels, verse 11) and no harm can come to us outside of God's will and nothing can ultimately harm us because we are saved by God. Now that might mean being taken home before we see relief, but what is a temporary suffering compared to eternal bliss?
Paul was a really beat up Apostle. Do you think he read this Psalm and was discouraged? I don't think so. He knew God had him in His hand. He knew he would be delivered. So will you. Take heart.
Pastor Tom
I'd strongly encourage you to just read the whole thing; its only 16 verses. But what power, what promise, what protection God promises to us.
I wanted to make an observation about it, though. Read this part:
Psalms 91:7-8
A thousand may fall at your side,
ten thousand at your right hand,
but it will not come near you.
8 You will only look with your eyes
and see the recompense of the wicked. ESV
Let me ask you something. Does this mean that nothing bad will ever happen to you? In verse two it says that "you shall not fear ... the pestilence that stalks in darkness." Does that mean you will never get sick? Obviously not. We do get sick, we do suffer harm, the enemy seems to get away with a lot in our lives. Does that mean these promises are meaningless or not applicable to us? No.
Look at the end, verse 16: "With long life I will satisfy him and show him my salvation."
You see, we need to take God's view of our lives. We are protected (by angels, verse 11) and no harm can come to us outside of God's will and nothing can ultimately harm us because we are saved by God. Now that might mean being taken home before we see relief, but what is a temporary suffering compared to eternal bliss?
Paul was a really beat up Apostle. Do you think he read this Psalm and was discouraged? I don't think so. He knew God had him in His hand. He knew he would be delivered. So will you. Take heart.
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Now Is The Time To Worship
How excited are you to enter into God's presence in worship? Is worship to you opening a hymnal and just reciting words? Is it something you do as an intro to the sermon on Sunday? Do you ever find yourself worshiping anywhere outside of a church?
Psalms 84:1-4
4 How lovely is your dwelling place,
O Lord of hosts!
2 My soul longs, yes, faints
for the courts of the Lord;
my heart and flesh sing for joy
to the living God.
3 Even the sparrow finds a home,
and the swallow a nest for herself,
where she may lay her young,
at your altars, O Lord of hosts,
my King and my God.
4 Blessed are those who dwell in your house,
ever singing your praise! ESV
My encouragement to us all today is to think about worshiping God like taking a drink of cool water on a hot summers day. The Bible tells us that God Himself is "enthroned" on the praises of His people.
If you are down or discouraged or angry or lonely - lift up your voice to God in worship. At our church we call worship "musical prayers to God." Speak to Him, sing to Him, long for Him - use worship as a way to come into His very presence.
You will be amazed and pleased at how blessed you will be.
Pastor Tom
Psalms 84:1-4
4 How lovely is your dwelling place,
O Lord of hosts!
2 My soul longs, yes, faints
for the courts of the Lord;
my heart and flesh sing for joy
to the living God.
3 Even the sparrow finds a home,
and the swallow a nest for herself,
where she may lay her young,
at your altars, O Lord of hosts,
my King and my God.
4 Blessed are those who dwell in your house,
ever singing your praise! ESV
My encouragement to us all today is to think about worshiping God like taking a drink of cool water on a hot summers day. The Bible tells us that God Himself is "enthroned" on the praises of His people.
If you are down or discouraged or angry or lonely - lift up your voice to God in worship. At our church we call worship "musical prayers to God." Speak to Him, sing to Him, long for Him - use worship as a way to come into His very presence.
You will be amazed and pleased at how blessed you will be.
Pastor Tom
Monday, August 13, 2007
This Too Shall Pass
I know it may seem that I've been on a doom and gloom theme lately. Perhaps it's because of things going on in my life, but perhaps also because of things that were going on in David's life when he wrote some of the Psalms we've looked at lately.
I was struck by a couple of verses in Psalm 71:20
20 You who have made me see many troubles and calamities will revive me again;
from the depths of the earth you will bring me up again.
21 You will increase my greatness and comfort me again.
Notice first that it was God that made David see trouble. That might strike you as odd, but it's true. But just as God brings trouble, He saves us out of it too. It doesn't mean that God is mean and likes to see us suffer. We shouldn't put God in a box like that. In reality He is much more complicated than that.
We could end up in difficulty because of our own choices, the fallen world we live in, or attack of the enemy. That part doesn't concern me here as much as the promise that no matter what you face, and no matter whether God was allowing or even behind it happening, you will come out again if you trust in Him.
And not only that, but David says that for all the suffering He will actually increase greatness and comfort. You will end up on the other side more like Him and more in love with Him than ever before.
Look for that. Count on that. Rejoice in that.
Pastor Tom
I was struck by a couple of verses in Psalm 71:20
20 You who have made me see many troubles and calamities will revive me again;
from the depths of the earth you will bring me up again.
21 You will increase my greatness and comfort me again.
Notice first that it was God that made David see trouble. That might strike you as odd, but it's true. But just as God brings trouble, He saves us out of it too. It doesn't mean that God is mean and likes to see us suffer. We shouldn't put God in a box like that. In reality He is much more complicated than that.
We could end up in difficulty because of our own choices, the fallen world we live in, or attack of the enemy. That part doesn't concern me here as much as the promise that no matter what you face, and no matter whether God was allowing or even behind it happening, you will come out again if you trust in Him.
And not only that, but David says that for all the suffering He will actually increase greatness and comfort. You will end up on the other side more like Him and more in love with Him than ever before.
Look for that. Count on that. Rejoice in that.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, August 09, 2007
Not Greatly Shaken
I think sometimes we think that once we belong to God in Jesus Christ we are bullet proof - that nothing bad can or should happen to us.
That wasn't the experience of the Apostles and I don't think it is ours either if we admit it. The Christian life often includes perils of some kind or another. Maybe for you it is the taunts of friends or family. Perhaps it is actual physical attack. Maybe it is tremendous trial and tribulation that simply wrack your body and mind until you can't stand it any more.
In reading Psalm 62 I noticed this little verse:
"He only is my rock and my salvation, my fortress; I shall not be greatly shaken."
Notice that David doesn't say here "I will not be shaken at all." For us there will be times of turmoil and despair.
Jesus said "in the world you will have tribulation but be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world."
Paul said: "We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair; 9 persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed;" (2 Cor 4:8-10)
You see, we are shaken, but not greatly. And we have the rock of the Lord Jesus to lean against, to take the blows, to provide a backstop and a fortress.
Look at verse 8: "Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us."
In the end God will triumph for you (11) "Once God has spoken; twice I have heard this: that power belongs to God."
Pastor Tom
That wasn't the experience of the Apostles and I don't think it is ours either if we admit it. The Christian life often includes perils of some kind or another. Maybe for you it is the taunts of friends or family. Perhaps it is actual physical attack. Maybe it is tremendous trial and tribulation that simply wrack your body and mind until you can't stand it any more.
In reading Psalm 62 I noticed this little verse:
"He only is my rock and my salvation, my fortress; I shall not be greatly shaken."
Notice that David doesn't say here "I will not be shaken at all." For us there will be times of turmoil and despair.
Jesus said "in the world you will have tribulation but be of good cheer, for I have overcome the world."
Paul said: "We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair; 9 persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed;" (2 Cor 4:8-10)
You see, we are shaken, but not greatly. And we have the rock of the Lord Jesus to lean against, to take the blows, to provide a backstop and a fortress.
Look at verse 8: "Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us."
In the end God will triumph for you (11) "Once God has spoken; twice I have heard this: that power belongs to God."
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, August 08, 2007
What Does God Want?
Have you ever asked that question - what does God want, anyway? Does He want me to give up stuff or do hard things to prove my love for Him? If I give enough time or money or talents will that please God?
It's a valid question. Deep down I think everyone wants to please God - by good works or by keeping away from sin. We don't know exactly how to do that so we cast about and write books and hold seminars.
I think David had the answer in Psalm 51. You ought to read the whole thing. David really nails what we are like, and how that affects our standing with God.
But he says something at the end which should set us free from the endless quest to please God.
Psalm 51:16 "For you will not delight in sacrifice, or I would give it; you will not be pleased with a burnt offering. 17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise."
Isn't that cool? All God really wants is for us to realize we don't and can't measure up to His glory and to admit that state to Him. Stop trying to please God and just love Him. You'll be surprised what peace comes over your heart.
Pastor Tom
It's a valid question. Deep down I think everyone wants to please God - by good works or by keeping away from sin. We don't know exactly how to do that so we cast about and write books and hold seminars.
I think David had the answer in Psalm 51. You ought to read the whole thing. David really nails what we are like, and how that affects our standing with God.
But he says something at the end which should set us free from the endless quest to please God.
Psalm 51:16 "For you will not delight in sacrifice, or I would give it; you will not be pleased with a burnt offering. 17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise."
Isn't that cool? All God really wants is for us to realize we don't and can't measure up to His glory and to admit that state to Him. Stop trying to please God and just love Him. You'll be surprised what peace comes over your heart.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
Remembering to Worship
I know what it's like to face a tough situation - one where you aren't really sure it's going to work out okay in the end. But I'm greatly comforted by Psalm 42.
This one starts out in a familiar refrain - that's because it was turned into a famous worship song:
"As a deer pants for flowing streams, so pants my soul for you, O God. My soul thirsts or God, for the living God."
But what you notice as you read through the Psalm is that it is written out of real pain. "Why are you cast down, O my soul," "my tears have been my food day and night."
What's cool though is that as the Psalmist remembers two things he is comforted: worship and being in God's presence.
"... at night his song is with me, a prayer to the God of my life," "When shall I come and appear before God?"
So when you going through it, I mean REALLY going through it, remember to worship and remember that coming into God's presence is as simple as drawing near to Him. Cling to the thought that not only can He be with you in the present but that soon you can be with Him physically.
"Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation and my God."
Pastor Tom
This one starts out in a familiar refrain - that's because it was turned into a famous worship song:
"As a deer pants for flowing streams, so pants my soul for you, O God. My soul thirsts or God, for the living God."
But what you notice as you read through the Psalm is that it is written out of real pain. "Why are you cast down, O my soul," "my tears have been my food day and night."
What's cool though is that as the Psalmist remembers two things he is comforted: worship and being in God's presence.
"... at night his song is with me, a prayer to the God of my life," "When shall I come and appear before God?"
So when you going through it, I mean REALLY going through it, remember to worship and remember that coming into God's presence is as simple as drawing near to Him. Cling to the thought that not only can He be with you in the present but that soon you can be with Him physically.
"Hope in God; for I shall again praise him, my salvation and my God."
Pastor Tom
Monday, August 06, 2007
Some Encouraging Words
I've been going through a hard time lately, and someone close to me an even more difficult time. It was the result of service to the Lord. I've known in theory that suffering for the Lord should be a good thing.
Acts 5:41 "... rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the name."
It's fine in theory, but in practice it is much more difficult. At times it'd actually be preferable to die for Christ than suffer.
Thanks to the prayers of many around the world the enemy was beaten back and his attack thwarted.
I ran across these verse in the Psalms today as I continued my journey through the Scriptures.
Psalms 34:17-19 "When the righteous cry for help, the Lord hears and delivers them out of all their troubles. 18 The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit. 19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivers him out of them all." ESV
I take great comfort that God is near to me when my heart is broken, and that when my spirit is crushed, and I feel like I can't even take one more breath or one more step forward that He is there to save me.
I am also greatly comforted by the fact that God recognizes that as a person made righteous in Him that I will suffer many afflictions and I look to Him to deliver me out of them all.
Pastor Tom
Acts 5:41 "... rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer dishonor for the name."
It's fine in theory, but in practice it is much more difficult. At times it'd actually be preferable to die for Christ than suffer.
Thanks to the prayers of many around the world the enemy was beaten back and his attack thwarted.
I ran across these verse in the Psalms today as I continued my journey through the Scriptures.
Psalms 34:17-19 "When the righteous cry for help, the Lord hears and delivers them out of all their troubles. 18 The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves the crushed in spirit. 19 Many are the afflictions of the righteous, but the Lord delivers him out of them all." ESV
I take great comfort that God is near to me when my heart is broken, and that when my spirit is crushed, and I feel like I can't even take one more breath or one more step forward that He is there to save me.
I am also greatly comforted by the fact that God recognizes that as a person made righteous in Him that I will suffer many afflictions and I look to Him to deliver me out of them all.
Pastor Tom
Friday, July 27, 2007
Experiencing God's Anger
Psalms 30:5 "For his anger is but for a moment, and his favor is for a lifetime."
Some people picture God as eternally angry. He's so mad at sinners that he has fire in his eyes and lightning bolts coming out of his hands. He's so upset that he just can't wait to bring calamity on us and takes some sadistic pleasure in our pain.
Nothing could be further from the truth. God hates evil, that's true. There's a good reason for that: God is good and evil is bad. And who is the best judge of what is evil, us or God? For us to judge ultimately what is good or bad is like trying to describe a football game while viewing it from the bottom of a swimming pool. Water distorts our perspective, and so does living in a world already tainted by evil. Only God, who lives outside of that sin can accurately judge good from evil.
So anyway - back to my main point. Though God is actually a loving God he really does hate evil. And when we choose to do evil we can experience God's anger. It comes in the form of discipline. We experience difficulties and think God is punishing us. Actually he is trying to burn the evil out of us.
And like a parent who disciplines his or her child, God longs for the loving embrace after the tears have subsided. His anger lasts but a moment, but thanks to His mercy and grace found in Jesus Christ, his favor lasts for a lifetime. Rejoice in that today!
Pastor Tom
Some people picture God as eternally angry. He's so mad at sinners that he has fire in his eyes and lightning bolts coming out of his hands. He's so upset that he just can't wait to bring calamity on us and takes some sadistic pleasure in our pain.
Nothing could be further from the truth. God hates evil, that's true. There's a good reason for that: God is good and evil is bad. And who is the best judge of what is evil, us or God? For us to judge ultimately what is good or bad is like trying to describe a football game while viewing it from the bottom of a swimming pool. Water distorts our perspective, and so does living in a world already tainted by evil. Only God, who lives outside of that sin can accurately judge good from evil.
So anyway - back to my main point. Though God is actually a loving God he really does hate evil. And when we choose to do evil we can experience God's anger. It comes in the form of discipline. We experience difficulties and think God is punishing us. Actually he is trying to burn the evil out of us.
And like a parent who disciplines his or her child, God longs for the loving embrace after the tears have subsided. His anger lasts but a moment, but thanks to His mercy and grace found in Jesus Christ, his favor lasts for a lifetime. Rejoice in that today!
Pastor Tom
Friday, July 06, 2007
The Crucifixion Psalm
Most of us have read Psalm 23: The Shepherd's Psalm... you know: "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want ..."
But have you ever considered Psalm 22? It's known as the crucifixion Psalm because of how closely it describes the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. It's so close, in fact, that it becomes one of the proof texts for the crucifixion.
Let's just look at the phrases that closely match what happened many hundreds of years later:
(vs 1) My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? (Jesus spoke these words on the cross)
(vs 7) All who see me mock me;they make mouths at me; they wag their heads; 8 "He trusts in the Lord; let him deliver him;
let him rescue him, for he delights in him!" (they shouted this to Jesus on the cross)
(vs 14) All my bones are out of joint (what happens to someone who is crucified)
(18) They divide my garments among them; and for my clothing they cast lots (the Roman soldiers who crucified Jesus did this exact thing, casting lots for Jesus' inner garment)
It's pretty amazing, really. Read the crucifixion account then Psalm 22. More than a coincidence? You bet!
Pastor Tom
But have you ever considered Psalm 22? It's known as the crucifixion Psalm because of how closely it describes the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. It's so close, in fact, that it becomes one of the proof texts for the crucifixion.
Let's just look at the phrases that closely match what happened many hundreds of years later:
(vs 1) My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? (Jesus spoke these words on the cross)
(vs 7) All who see me mock me;they make mouths at me; they wag their heads; 8 "He trusts in the Lord; let him deliver him;
let him rescue him, for he delights in him!" (they shouted this to Jesus on the cross)
(vs 14) All my bones are out of joint (what happens to someone who is crucified)
(18) They divide my garments among them; and for my clothing they cast lots (the Roman soldiers who crucified Jesus did this exact thing, casting lots for Jesus' inner garment)
It's pretty amazing, really. Read the crucifixion account then Psalm 22. More than a coincidence? You bet!
Pastor Tom
Thursday, July 05, 2007
The Fullness of Joy
I love the Psalms - they are such an honest outpouring of grief, sorrow, anger, and love and worship. Psalm 16 is especially wonderful, especially because of who wrote it: David.
David was a king. He could have had anything he wanted - money, women, power - whatever he wanted. David was also a warrior. He could kill you before you knew what hit you. If there was ever anyone who could proudly say they were a self made man no one could touch - it would be David.
Yet here he is in Psalm 16 saying things like:
"...in you I take refuge."
"I have no good apart from you."
"The Lord is my chosen portion and my cup; you hold my lot."
Why? Why would the most powerful man in his nation be so lowly? He knew the secret - he was really nothing and God was everything.
"You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore."
Without Yahweh all the power and prestigious meant nothing. David knew that all he could amass in this life would mean nothing unless he had a relationship with his God. And he knew that real satisfaction can be found nowhere else.
Read Psalm 16 - and realize that your joy is not full unless experienced with God.
Pastor Tom
David was a king. He could have had anything he wanted - money, women, power - whatever he wanted. David was also a warrior. He could kill you before you knew what hit you. If there was ever anyone who could proudly say they were a self made man no one could touch - it would be David.
Yet here he is in Psalm 16 saying things like:
"...in you I take refuge."
"I have no good apart from you."
"The Lord is my chosen portion and my cup; you hold my lot."
Why? Why would the most powerful man in his nation be so lowly? He knew the secret - he was really nothing and God was everything.
"You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore."
Without Yahweh all the power and prestigious meant nothing. David knew that all he could amass in this life would mean nothing unless he had a relationship with his God. And he knew that real satisfaction can be found nowhere else.
Read Psalm 16 - and realize that your joy is not full unless experienced with God.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, July 03, 2007
Declaring Your Independence
I would call the United States of America today a post-Christian country. Though our founding fathers had faith in God and took all of the principals used to frame our Declaration of Independence and the Constitution from the Scriptures - we have now moved passed needing God because we don't need that "crutch" anymore.
Or, as Psalm 2 puts it: "The kings of the earth set themselves and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against his anointed saying, 'Let us burst their bonds apart and cast away their cords from us.'" (vs 2-3)
Belonging to God is seen as a "cord" or a "bond." That's because God and his character seem so restrictive. In our society we want what feels good (sensuality) and what does good (practicality) FOR US.
That's all well and good if we see ourselves as first belonging to God and desiring to bring glory to Him. But when we become god ourselves we want to throw off all "restrictions". In reality we are only becoming slaves to the flesh and enemies of God.
The end for those with this opinion is pretty bleak: "You shall break them with a rod of iron and dash them to pieces like a potter's vessel." (vs 9)
The flesh fools us into thinking that whatever feels good is good. We should desire God because He is the only thing that is truly good. I didn't make this stuff up. If God, who is the only One who is good, said this, I believe it:
"Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and you perish in the way, for his wrath is quickly kindled. Blessed are all who take refuge in him." (vs 12)
Take refuge from the post-Christian world in Jesus Christ. Let His character become your character. You will find more freedom than any declaration of independence from God will ever get you.
Pastor Tom
Or, as Psalm 2 puts it: "The kings of the earth set themselves and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against his anointed saying, 'Let us burst their bonds apart and cast away their cords from us.'" (vs 2-3)
Belonging to God is seen as a "cord" or a "bond." That's because God and his character seem so restrictive. In our society we want what feels good (sensuality) and what does good (practicality) FOR US.
That's all well and good if we see ourselves as first belonging to God and desiring to bring glory to Him. But when we become god ourselves we want to throw off all "restrictions". In reality we are only becoming slaves to the flesh and enemies of God.
The end for those with this opinion is pretty bleak: "You shall break them with a rod of iron and dash them to pieces like a potter's vessel." (vs 9)
The flesh fools us into thinking that whatever feels good is good. We should desire God because He is the only thing that is truly good. I didn't make this stuff up. If God, who is the only One who is good, said this, I believe it:
"Kiss the Son, lest he be angry, and you perish in the way, for his wrath is quickly kindled. Blessed are all who take refuge in him." (vs 12)
Take refuge from the post-Christian world in Jesus Christ. Let His character become your character. You will find more freedom than any declaration of independence from God will ever get you.
Pastor Tom
Monday, July 02, 2007
As you read through the book of Job one of the things that really strikes out at you are the sheer number of words.
I mean really - these guys go on and on and on. Sure, the style of the writing is filled with allusions and metaphors and ideas all prettied up with word pictures, but it does seem a bit excess.
Turns out it is. If you take a look at chapter 38 - the first words spoken by the Lord in answer to all the words from Job's friends read like this:
"Who is this that darkens counsel by words without knowledge?" (38:2)
I love it! Its kind of like He is saying "If you don't know what you are talking about - shut up!"
It reminded me of a lot of words spoken today by people who really think they know what they are talking about. Just turn on one of the cable news networks. They have expert after expert that go on and on about this and that - and we believe them.
I've also heard religious and philosophical people go on and on about what God must be like and what life is like and the human soul and all of that.
To tell you the truth, it gets a little wearying. So then along comes God and in just a few words He cuts through all the garbage and right to the chase: man is sinful, God is holy.
The good news of course is that God is also merciful and loving and went the extra mile to buy you back, but its also a good lesson for us.
Ecclesiastes 5:2 Be not rash with your mouth, nor let your heart be hasty to utter a word before God, for God is in heaven and you are on earth. Therefore let your words be few.
James 1:19-20 Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger; 20 for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness that God requires.
Pastor Tom
I mean really - these guys go on and on and on. Sure, the style of the writing is filled with allusions and metaphors and ideas all prettied up with word pictures, but it does seem a bit excess.
Turns out it is. If you take a look at chapter 38 - the first words spoken by the Lord in answer to all the words from Job's friends read like this:
"Who is this that darkens counsel by words without knowledge?" (38:2)
I love it! Its kind of like He is saying "If you don't know what you are talking about - shut up!"
It reminded me of a lot of words spoken today by people who really think they know what they are talking about. Just turn on one of the cable news networks. They have expert after expert that go on and on about this and that - and we believe them.
I've also heard religious and philosophical people go on and on about what God must be like and what life is like and the human soul and all of that.
To tell you the truth, it gets a little wearying. So then along comes God and in just a few words He cuts through all the garbage and right to the chase: man is sinful, God is holy.
The good news of course is that God is also merciful and loving and went the extra mile to buy you back, but its also a good lesson for us.
Ecclesiastes 5:2 Be not rash with your mouth, nor let your heart be hasty to utter a word before God, for God is in heaven and you are on earth. Therefore let your words be few.
James 1:19-20 Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger; 20 for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness that God requires.
Pastor Tom
Friday, June 29, 2007
Looking Bad When you Suffer
In Chapter 29, Job talks about how good he had it. He says that the young and old, powerful and weak, all respected him as he took his place of leadership in his community.
29:12 "Men listened to me and waited and kept silence for my counsel."
But by Chapter 30:10 "They abhor me; they keep aloof from me." All the respect he had was gone. All the good feelings others had towards him had vanished - all because he was suffering from the probably one of the worst trials ever to hit a man.
I'm not faulting Job here, but it made me wonder: how much of our self esteem is bound up in how other people feel about us? I admit this effects me too. If someone shows respect for me it certainly feels better than when they diss me.
But my point for today is this: when stuff goes bad and you are down and having a bad hair life and are not your best - don't worry so much about what other people think about you.
As a Christian, people are watching you. They learn from your life what Jesus is like and life in Him. But they learn best, not from when you are on top of the world but when you underneath it and its weight pushes down on you.
They learn that life is not a bed of roses but a bed of thorny blackberry bushes - and yet Jesus is there - healing, touching, forgiving, transforming the terrible into the holy.
So live life - the good and the bad. When the good comes rejoice. When the bad comes mourn, yet in it all do it in the face of God. Let people see the real you that God is working in and with. It'll draw more people to Christ than any sermon.
Pastor Tom
29:12 "Men listened to me and waited and kept silence for my counsel."
But by Chapter 30:10 "They abhor me; they keep aloof from me." All the respect he had was gone. All the good feelings others had towards him had vanished - all because he was suffering from the probably one of the worst trials ever to hit a man.
I'm not faulting Job here, but it made me wonder: how much of our self esteem is bound up in how other people feel about us? I admit this effects me too. If someone shows respect for me it certainly feels better than when they diss me.
But my point for today is this: when stuff goes bad and you are down and having a bad hair life and are not your best - don't worry so much about what other people think about you.
As a Christian, people are watching you. They learn from your life what Jesus is like and life in Him. But they learn best, not from when you are on top of the world but when you underneath it and its weight pushes down on you.
They learn that life is not a bed of roses but a bed of thorny blackberry bushes - and yet Jesus is there - healing, touching, forgiving, transforming the terrible into the holy.
So live life - the good and the bad. When the good comes rejoice. When the bad comes mourn, yet in it all do it in the face of God. Let people see the real you that God is working in and with. It'll draw more people to Christ than any sermon.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Trust in a Living God
One of the repeated themes in the book of Job is death. It's no wonder because so much has been taken away from Job that death seems all that is left.
We as humans have some real problems with death. We deny that it will happen, and when it does we hide it from public view and dress up the body as if it wasn't really dead. Or we see death as something on a computer game that can be reset and replayed or on a movie screen where it teaches us that death doesn't really happen in real life.
But Job has faced death. And not only did he lose those around him that were dear, he is so sick and seemingly abandoned that death seems the only thing left.
Then Job makes this startling and wonderful statement: "I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last he will stand upon the earth." (19:25)
See, Job had a hope. It wasn't just that his god lived. His God was his Redeemer too. Sure, he didn't know about all the prophecies about the Messiah or even know who Jesus was, but he knew that despite all the death and destruction around him that God was there and God would save him.
Later he says: "in my flesh I shall see God" (26). I'm so glad for that hope. Job hinted that even our bodies will be made new - that death would not take us away from seeing our Redeemer in person.
Take hope in that today. Death is real but God, our Redeemer, is more real still.
We as humans have some real problems with death. We deny that it will happen, and when it does we hide it from public view and dress up the body as if it wasn't really dead. Or we see death as something on a computer game that can be reset and replayed or on a movie screen where it teaches us that death doesn't really happen in real life.
But Job has faced death. And not only did he lose those around him that were dear, he is so sick and seemingly abandoned that death seems the only thing left.
Then Job makes this startling and wonderful statement: "I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last he will stand upon the earth." (19:25)
See, Job had a hope. It wasn't just that his god lived. His God was his Redeemer too. Sure, he didn't know about all the prophecies about the Messiah or even know who Jesus was, but he knew that despite all the death and destruction around him that God was there and God would save him.
Later he says: "in my flesh I shall see God" (26). I'm so glad for that hope. Job hinted that even our bodies will be made new - that death would not take us away from seeing our Redeemer in person.
Take hope in that today. Death is real but God, our Redeemer, is more real still.
Monday, June 25, 2007
The Escape Key
Have you ever faced a situation in your life where the only thing you can think of is escape? Perhaps the loss of a loved one or a relationship, perhaps health concerns or financial woes. Maybe it was emotional, where the blackness just envelopes you and you can't see out.
Welcome to Job's world. Job had it all - lost his kids, his livelihood, and his health. Understandably, Job's emotions were pretty raw and dark. In Job 6:8 he says: "Oh that I might have my request, and that God would fulfill my hope, that it would please God to crush me, that he would let loose his hand and cut me off!"
But God didn't. In fact, the torment got worse thanks to the company of Job's friends and his wife who said "curse God and die!" And that's the thing. Throughout all of what Job went through, the one thing he never lost was his relationship with God, and it was that more than anything that brought him through.
In fact, God had no intention of granting Job's request, not out of meanness but out of love. God allowed Job to go through pain in order to help Job know him more. God wanted to Job to see that he was really nothing compared to the Lord. Once he knew that then God could bless him even more.
As difficult as it is to hear in the midst of great difficulty, escaping is not an answer, its a Band aid. Instead of escaping, hold on to the one thing you do have - a relationship with God through His Son Jesus. God knows suffering because He suffered for you. And He wants you to know Him more. In the process you will see that feeling sorry for ourselves doesn't cut it with God. Be open and naked before him. When all else is stripped away, let Him see the real you. It may not be pretty, but that's when He can really begin to cleanse, wash, purify, and bless you.
Pastor Tom
Welcome to Job's world. Job had it all - lost his kids, his livelihood, and his health. Understandably, Job's emotions were pretty raw and dark. In Job 6:8 he says: "Oh that I might have my request, and that God would fulfill my hope, that it would please God to crush me, that he would let loose his hand and cut me off!"
But God didn't. In fact, the torment got worse thanks to the company of Job's friends and his wife who said "curse God and die!" And that's the thing. Throughout all of what Job went through, the one thing he never lost was his relationship with God, and it was that more than anything that brought him through.
In fact, God had no intention of granting Job's request, not out of meanness but out of love. God allowed Job to go through pain in order to help Job know him more. God wanted to Job to see that he was really nothing compared to the Lord. Once he knew that then God could bless him even more.
As difficult as it is to hear in the midst of great difficulty, escaping is not an answer, its a Band aid. Instead of escaping, hold on to the one thing you do have - a relationship with God through His Son Jesus. God knows suffering because He suffered for you. And He wants you to know Him more. In the process you will see that feeling sorry for ourselves doesn't cut it with God. Be open and naked before him. When all else is stripped away, let Him see the real you. It may not be pretty, but that's when He can really begin to cleanse, wash, purify, and bless you.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, June 21, 2007
God The Master Player
Does it ever bother you that God incites Satan to attack Job? You see it right in chapter 1. God asks Satan where he's been and then says "have you considered my servant Job?" It's almost like he wants all that bad stuff to come on Job - who is a pretty righteous guy according to the Lord.
Yep, I think that's exactly what happened. That kind of troubles me. You mean God can actually encourage something bad to happen to me? It's true. Isaiah says he creates both good and evil (read: calamity, not moral evil).
So what's going on? Well, I think God is playing Satan. I think He knows all along exactly what Satan will do, how Job will react, and how He will get good out of the situation. It doesn't make Satan any less culpable for his actions or the problems any less serious for Job, but it does make the outcome certain - and good.
If you are going through tough times remember Job - not to get depressed (I don't recommend reading Job when you are in the midst of a trial) but realize that Job was never out of God's hands. His end was better than his beginning. God really does work ALL things together for the good of those that love Him and are called according to His purpose. His purpose. God the master planner.
Pastor Tom
Yep, I think that's exactly what happened. That kind of troubles me. You mean God can actually encourage something bad to happen to me? It's true. Isaiah says he creates both good and evil (read: calamity, not moral evil).
So what's going on? Well, I think God is playing Satan. I think He knows all along exactly what Satan will do, how Job will react, and how He will get good out of the situation. It doesn't make Satan any less culpable for his actions or the problems any less serious for Job, but it does make the outcome certain - and good.
If you are going through tough times remember Job - not to get depressed (I don't recommend reading Job when you are in the midst of a trial) but realize that Job was never out of God's hands. His end was better than his beginning. God really does work ALL things together for the good of those that love Him and are called according to His purpose. His purpose. God the master planner.
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Esther Was No Pushover
You've probably read the story of Esther before. It's the story about a young woman from Israel, brought up by her cousin in Babylon and made queen of the country. she ended up in a place where she could influence a king and save her people from annihilation.
The story has been the subject of villain/hero morality plays by the Jewish community for generations. When Haman comes on the stage everyone boos and when Esther wins the day there is great cheering.
But I noticed when reading this story again that Esther was no cartoon cutout, no caricature, no stereotype.
She was actually a pretty astute judge of character and situation. When it came time appear before the king she took the advice of a palace official (instead of feeling confident in her own opinions in this foreign situation). She foiled a plot to kill the king despite the fact that Babylon was an enemy of Israel by sharing intelligence. Then she threw the real enemy, Haman, off guard and appealed to her husband's love for her in stopping his plot to wipe out the entire nation.
Placed in a strange situation, faced with death if she did nothing, and death if she acted, Esther used her beauty, character, intelligence, and patience to do God's work. She did it all in a foreign land with customs she was not used to and with no one to really lean on - except God.
It gives me hope that when I am placed in situations where things seem out of control, I can be calm knowing that the Lord is with me and may have me where I am, no matter how difficult, "for such a time as this." (Esther 4:14).
Pastor Tom
The story has been the subject of villain/hero morality plays by the Jewish community for generations. When Haman comes on the stage everyone boos and when Esther wins the day there is great cheering.
But I noticed when reading this story again that Esther was no cartoon cutout, no caricature, no stereotype.
She was actually a pretty astute judge of character and situation. When it came time appear before the king she took the advice of a palace official (instead of feeling confident in her own opinions in this foreign situation). She foiled a plot to kill the king despite the fact that Babylon was an enemy of Israel by sharing intelligence. Then she threw the real enemy, Haman, off guard and appealed to her husband's love for her in stopping his plot to wipe out the entire nation.
Placed in a strange situation, faced with death if she did nothing, and death if she acted, Esther used her beauty, character, intelligence, and patience to do God's work. She did it all in a foreign land with customs she was not used to and with no one to really lean on - except God.
It gives me hope that when I am placed in situations where things seem out of control, I can be calm knowing that the Lord is with me and may have me where I am, no matter how difficult, "for such a time as this." (Esther 4:14).
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
The Discipline Took
After Israel returned to the land, rebuilt the Temple, then rebuilt the wall around Jerusalem, a great celebration broke forth. There were choirs and singing and raising of hands and walking around on top of the new wall - all seemed great.
Then in Nehemiah 13:1 "On that day they read from the Book of Moses in the hearing of the people. And in it was found written that no Ammonite or Moabite should ever enter the assembly of God."
Here was a big test. Israel had been disciplined because despite Joshua telling not to "mix" with the nations around them, the people did just that. Joshua's warnings had come true that the gods of the people became a "snare" for them and they bowed down and served them. Joshua warned that God would remove them from the land, and He did just that.
Now that they were back, what would happen? They obviously still had ties to the descendants of the people God had said not to mix with. Would they just ignore the years of discipline? No. When they heard God's Word they responded and "separated from Israel all those of foreign descent." (vs 3).
Not only that, but they removed enemy influence from their worship (throwing Tobiah out of the Temple). In addition, the people started giving to the work of God, and dedicating themselves to following God's Law by observing the Sabbath (though they needed some encouragement from Nehemiah).
This shows fruit from God's discipline. Does this happen to you? Are there times when your own disobedience has lead to an experience of discipline from God? Then when the discipline is over, isn't it nice to see the fruit? You feel free from that which bound you and you want to pick up in your service and worship to God.
It's never fun to go through discipline, but it sure is nice to see God work good things in our lives through it. So celebrate!
Pastor Tom
Then in Nehemiah 13:1 "On that day they read from the Book of Moses in the hearing of the people. And in it was found written that no Ammonite or Moabite should ever enter the assembly of God."
Here was a big test. Israel had been disciplined because despite Joshua telling not to "mix" with the nations around them, the people did just that. Joshua's warnings had come true that the gods of the people became a "snare" for them and they bowed down and served them. Joshua warned that God would remove them from the land, and He did just that.
Now that they were back, what would happen? They obviously still had ties to the descendants of the people God had said not to mix with. Would they just ignore the years of discipline? No. When they heard God's Word they responded and "separated from Israel all those of foreign descent." (vs 3).
Not only that, but they removed enemy influence from their worship (throwing Tobiah out of the Temple). In addition, the people started giving to the work of God, and dedicating themselves to following God's Law by observing the Sabbath (though they needed some encouragement from Nehemiah).
This shows fruit from God's discipline. Does this happen to you? Are there times when your own disobedience has lead to an experience of discipline from God? Then when the discipline is over, isn't it nice to see the fruit? You feel free from that which bound you and you want to pick up in your service and worship to God.
It's never fun to go through discipline, but it sure is nice to see God work good things in our lives through it. So celebrate!
Pastor Tom
Monday, June 18, 2007
Distracted
Last time I talked about the dangers of taking on the task of becoming transformed into the character of Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit. This time we look at the enemies tactic once direct threats don't work.
In Nehemiah 6 we see two old adversaries up to their old tricks, just as our old adversary, the Devil, never gives up, only changes his tactics.
When Sanballat and Tobiah hear that Nehemiah was rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem they first tried to get Nehemiah to engage them in conversation about it - but Nehemiah would not stop the work to talk about it. Often the enemy wants us to engage in self talk about whether we should fully commit out lives to God.
Instead, Nehemiah said "I am doing a great work and I cannot come down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and come down to you?" (6:3). Don't engage the enemy in this attempt. One, you will be in danger of talking yourself out of the task, and two, while you are reconsidering you are stopping the work.
When that didn't work these guys sent an open letter trying to say that Nehemiah had taken over as king. It impugned his motivations and questioned his goals. Becoming like our Lord is not for our glory but for his alone. People might question you, call you "goody two shoes" or make open accusations against you before others. Don't let that deter you either.
Finally Sanballat and Tobiah actually hired a false prophet to try to lure Nehemiah into stopping by suggesting there was a plot to kill him. With God's wisdom Nehemiah saw through it. The idea was to get Nehemiah to hide away for fear. The enemy taunts us with what might happen to us too: "what will people think of you if you stop doing that?" "Love your enemies? They'll wipe the floor with you!" and the like.
Let our prayer be like Nehemiah's who said: "But now, O God, strengthen my hands."
Pastor Tom
In Nehemiah 6 we see two old adversaries up to their old tricks, just as our old adversary, the Devil, never gives up, only changes his tactics.
When Sanballat and Tobiah hear that Nehemiah was rebuilding the wall of Jerusalem they first tried to get Nehemiah to engage them in conversation about it - but Nehemiah would not stop the work to talk about it. Often the enemy wants us to engage in self talk about whether we should fully commit out lives to God.
Instead, Nehemiah said "I am doing a great work and I cannot come down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and come down to you?" (6:3). Don't engage the enemy in this attempt. One, you will be in danger of talking yourself out of the task, and two, while you are reconsidering you are stopping the work.
When that didn't work these guys sent an open letter trying to say that Nehemiah had taken over as king. It impugned his motivations and questioned his goals. Becoming like our Lord is not for our glory but for his alone. People might question you, call you "goody two shoes" or make open accusations against you before others. Don't let that deter you either.
Finally Sanballat and Tobiah actually hired a false prophet to try to lure Nehemiah into stopping by suggesting there was a plot to kill him. With God's wisdom Nehemiah saw through it. The idea was to get Nehemiah to hide away for fear. The enemy taunts us with what might happen to us too: "what will people think of you if you stop doing that?" "Love your enemies? They'll wipe the floor with you!" and the like.
Let our prayer be like Nehemiah's who said: "But now, O God, strengthen my hands."
Pastor Tom
Friday, June 15, 2007
Taking On A Dangerous Assignment
After the repair of the Temple, the children of Israel began to rebuild the wall around the city of Jerusalem. I've heard many teachings equating the repair of the gates to the repair of the human soul by the power of the Holy Spirit. Today I won't address that, but the process of undertaking that repair job at all.
When the Apostle Paul talks about the process of changing a life that has been renewed through the blood of Jesus Christ he uses a word that means "renovation." It's a good word when you look at what was happening in Jerusalem. The wall had been torn down and left in rubble. It's worse than if you started with nothing on the ground. If you ever watch "Extreme Makeover Home Edition" you see them go in and literally tear a house down, leaving a huge pile of junk on the ground. Until they clear that out of the way the work cannot continue.
There are a lot of analogies to the human soul or spirit as well. We are born with a nature that is i opposition to God. This old nature is killed when we come to Christ but like a corpse on an autopsy table, doesn't just go away. In fact there is a lot of junk left over in our lives - old habits, attitudes, negative experiences, sins, consequences from actions, etc.
Picking around all that rubble in order to rebuild our lives around the strength of the Spirit can be dangerous and arduous. What I noticed today was how the enemies of Israel tried to discourage the work. They tried questioning motivations, to threatening attack - anything to keep them from going on.
For us, that old nature and the Devil will try to discourage us from continuing the work of renovation in our lives, which is generally seeking God to rebuild our character into one that reflects His character.
So what did Israel do? In Nehemiah 4:17 "Those that carried burdens were loaded in such a way that each labored on the work with one hand and held his weapon with the other." So they worked while ready at any moment to defend their right to work.
For us, we need to be prepared to defend our right to allow God renovate our lives. It is easy to become discouraged as we see those around us continuing in sin and enjoying it. It is easy to give up when the enemy shouts at us that we can never succeed, whispers in our ears that it would be easier to give in than to keep working, or attacks us to scare us into stopping.
My encouragement to us all is not to listen, but be ready with the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God, to answer back "he who has begun a good work in you will continue it."
Pastor Tom
When the Apostle Paul talks about the process of changing a life that has been renewed through the blood of Jesus Christ he uses a word that means "renovation." It's a good word when you look at what was happening in Jerusalem. The wall had been torn down and left in rubble. It's worse than if you started with nothing on the ground. If you ever watch "Extreme Makeover Home Edition" you see them go in and literally tear a house down, leaving a huge pile of junk on the ground. Until they clear that out of the way the work cannot continue.
There are a lot of analogies to the human soul or spirit as well. We are born with a nature that is i opposition to God. This old nature is killed when we come to Christ but like a corpse on an autopsy table, doesn't just go away. In fact there is a lot of junk left over in our lives - old habits, attitudes, negative experiences, sins, consequences from actions, etc.
Picking around all that rubble in order to rebuild our lives around the strength of the Spirit can be dangerous and arduous. What I noticed today was how the enemies of Israel tried to discourage the work. They tried questioning motivations, to threatening attack - anything to keep them from going on.
For us, that old nature and the Devil will try to discourage us from continuing the work of renovation in our lives, which is generally seeking God to rebuild our character into one that reflects His character.
So what did Israel do? In Nehemiah 4:17 "Those that carried burdens were loaded in such a way that each labored on the work with one hand and held his weapon with the other." So they worked while ready at any moment to defend their right to work.
For us, we need to be prepared to defend our right to allow God renovate our lives. It is easy to become discouraged as we see those around us continuing in sin and enjoying it. It is easy to give up when the enemy shouts at us that we can never succeed, whispers in our ears that it would be easier to give in than to keep working, or attacks us to scare us into stopping.
My encouragement to us all is not to listen, but be ready with the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God, to answer back "he who has begun a good work in you will continue it."
Pastor Tom
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Getting It Right
A lot had happened to Israel by the time Ezra the priest returned to Jerusalem to rebuild the Temple. It all began when God brought His people into the Promised Land and warned them about getting tangled up in the gods-who-are-not-really-gods in the land. They didn't listen and ended up rebelling against Yahweh and becoming indistinguishable from the people around them.
God removed them from the land as a discipline and then allowed them to return seventy years later. But even as they were celebrating the rebuilding of the Temple, Ezra was troubled. It seemed that some of the people had started intermarrying once again with the people of the land. This could have started the cycle all over again with rebellion and discipline.
Ezra made a strong plea to them to put away these marriages and remain faithful to God. What happened this time is encouraging:
(Ezra 10:2-3) "We have broken faith with our God and have married foreign women from the peoples of the land, but even now there is hope for Israel in spite of this. 3 Therefore let us make a covenant with our God to put away all these wives and their children, according to the counsel of my lord and of those who tremble at the commandment of our God, and let it be done according to the Law. Arise, for it is your task, and we are with you; be strong and do it."
Israel had made promises before that they would remain faithful. But I like how this is put: "let us make a covenant with our God." This wasn't an idle promise but they took it seriously. Then the encouragement to take action on the covenant, and that others would be there to support them.
I like that. When God reveals something in us that needs to be addressed, may we respond like the Israelites: taking it seriously, making a strong promise to God to give this area to him, then seek the support of other brothers and sisters we trust to pray with us and support us in this work.
Pastor Tom
God removed them from the land as a discipline and then allowed them to return seventy years later. But even as they were celebrating the rebuilding of the Temple, Ezra was troubled. It seemed that some of the people had started intermarrying once again with the people of the land. This could have started the cycle all over again with rebellion and discipline.
Ezra made a strong plea to them to put away these marriages and remain faithful to God. What happened this time is encouraging:
(Ezra 10:2-3) "We have broken faith with our God and have married foreign women from the peoples of the land, but even now there is hope for Israel in spite of this. 3 Therefore let us make a covenant with our God to put away all these wives and their children, according to the counsel of my lord and of those who tremble at the commandment of our God, and let it be done according to the Law. Arise, for it is your task, and we are with you; be strong and do it."
Israel had made promises before that they would remain faithful. But I like how this is put: "let us make a covenant with our God." This wasn't an idle promise but they took it seriously. Then the encouragement to take action on the covenant, and that others would be there to support them.
I like that. When God reveals something in us that needs to be addressed, may we respond like the Israelites: taking it seriously, making a strong promise to God to give this area to him, then seek the support of other brothers and sisters we trust to pray with us and support us in this work.
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Weeping For Sorrow/Joy
After many years walking away from God, Yahweh disciplined Israel by taking them into captivity to Babylon. Jerusalem was destroyed, along with the Temple. The people stayed in Babylon for seventy long years.
The discipline worked. When Persian King Cyrus declared that the Temple could be rebuilt and Judah and Benjamin returned to the land, Israel never again fell into idolatry.
Today I wanted to focus on a little verse tucked away in the book that details the rebuilding of the Temple: Ezra. The people returned and laid the foundation of the Temple. In celebration all the people gathered and praised the Lord with loud shouts.
But among them were some priests and Levites who remembered the original Temple. When they saw the new foundation they "wept with a loud voice" (Ezra 3:12). No doubt they cried remembering the bitterness in which they left, the people who died, and the loss of their country.
So now read what happened next:
(Ezra 3:13) "... though many shouted aloud for joy, 13 so that the people could not distinguish the sound of the joyful shout from the sound of the people's weeping, for the people shouted with a great shout, and the sound was heard far away."
The reason I think this is significant is that we are not that much different. As we see God build a new life in us through the foundation of the Lord Jesus Christ, we too remember how we were before. We remember the sin that destroyed us and the rebellion that pulled us away from the Lord. We weep with sorrow and with joy at the same time.
We are joyful for the new life and sorrowful for all that we have done against the Lord. And you know what? That's okay. We know that one day, God will wipe away all those tears and all that will be left is the joy of knowing that we will be with Him for all of eternity.
Pastor Tom
The discipline worked. When Persian King Cyrus declared that the Temple could be rebuilt and Judah and Benjamin returned to the land, Israel never again fell into idolatry.
Today I wanted to focus on a little verse tucked away in the book that details the rebuilding of the Temple: Ezra. The people returned and laid the foundation of the Temple. In celebration all the people gathered and praised the Lord with loud shouts.
But among them were some priests and Levites who remembered the original Temple. When they saw the new foundation they "wept with a loud voice" (Ezra 3:12). No doubt they cried remembering the bitterness in which they left, the people who died, and the loss of their country.
So now read what happened next:
(Ezra 3:13) "... though many shouted aloud for joy, 13 so that the people could not distinguish the sound of the joyful shout from the sound of the people's weeping, for the people shouted with a great shout, and the sound was heard far away."
The reason I think this is significant is that we are not that much different. As we see God build a new life in us through the foundation of the Lord Jesus Christ, we too remember how we were before. We remember the sin that destroyed us and the rebellion that pulled us away from the Lord. We weep with sorrow and with joy at the same time.
We are joyful for the new life and sorrowful for all that we have done against the Lord. And you know what? That's okay. We know that one day, God will wipe away all those tears and all that will be left is the joy of knowing that we will be with Him for all of eternity.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Until There was no Remedy
2 Chronicles 36:15-16 The Lord, the God of their fathers, sent persistently to them by his messengers, because he had compassion on his people and on his dwelling place. 16 But they kept mocking the messengers of God, despising his words and scoffing at his prophets, until the wrath of the Lord rose against his people, until there was no remedy. (ESV)
This Scripture stood out to me like a light on a hill on a dark night. It represents the last words before Jerusalem fell to the Babylonians and Israel was carried off into exile. But it also could be spoken to today's world as well.
God is still sending messengers, speaking the gospel of grace and forgiveness for all who will repent of their sins and make Jesus their Lord. It is not out of vindictiveness or judgment that He speaks but out of "compassion on his people." God desires no one to perish and has created a way of escape from a world that will be destroyed because of rebellion and sin.
But as in the days of 2 Chronicles, people today mock the messengers of God, "despising his words" and scoffing at those who say that ultimate judgment is coming against anyone who rebels against the Lord and His Son.
In the end the wrath of God will rightly rise up against sin and there will be "no remedy" outside of Jesus Christ.
May we all listen intently when God speaks through his prophets and apostles. We have everything at stake.
Pastor Tom
This Scripture stood out to me like a light on a hill on a dark night. It represents the last words before Jerusalem fell to the Babylonians and Israel was carried off into exile. But it also could be spoken to today's world as well.
God is still sending messengers, speaking the gospel of grace and forgiveness for all who will repent of their sins and make Jesus their Lord. It is not out of vindictiveness or judgment that He speaks but out of "compassion on his people." God desires no one to perish and has created a way of escape from a world that will be destroyed because of rebellion and sin.
But as in the days of 2 Chronicles, people today mock the messengers of God, "despising his words" and scoffing at those who say that ultimate judgment is coming against anyone who rebels against the Lord and His Son.
In the end the wrath of God will rightly rise up against sin and there will be "no remedy" outside of Jesus Christ.
May we all listen intently when God speaks through his prophets and apostles. We have everything at stake.
Pastor Tom
Monday, June 11, 2007
Serving God at a Foreign Altar
Manasseh was an evil king over Judah. He led Israel back into idolatry after the wonderful example of Hezekiah had passed. But when God finally got through to him he repented big time. By then the damage was done, and it had an interesting effect on the people that lasts to this day.
When Manasseh repented of his sin it says in 2 Chronicles 33 that he removed the altars to the foreign gods and threw them out of Jerusalem. He also commanded that Judah serve Yahweh. The response of the people was this: (17) "Nevertheless, the people still sacrificed at the high places, but only to the LORD their God."
So the people went out to a place where Baal, Ashteroth and other abhorrent gods had been worshiped and tried somehow to redeem them into something pleasing to God - even though the Lord was very clear about where and how He was to be worshiped - at the Temple in Jerusalem as a picture of the coming Messiah Jesus. This was the same problem that Jeroboam had many years before and why Israel deserted Yahweh by serving a calf and calling is LORD. It wasn't.
How does this apply to you? Simply put, you cannot say, think, or do things that are clearly not in the character of Jesus and claim that you are worshiping and serving Him. If you get drunk all the time and just say "praise the Lord" there is something wrong. If you serve at the altar of Mammon (money) and just say "God is in this!" you are sadly mistaken.
I'm not saying that you need to make yourself perfect - that's the job of the Holy Spirit as you yield your life in submission to Him. But to think that you can twist the worldly system and call it godly is only a recipe for trouble. You also can't twist the Word of God to mean that approaching God through any other means than the God-man Jesus will work. It won't.
You can't earn your way to God. You can't change Jesus into the brother of Satan and think you are worshiping Him or that His blood will cover you. Jesus cannot be manipulated into something that we fashion. The good news is that by repenting and coming to Jesus on His terms there is forgiveness and cleansing and a wonderful life that will never end!
Pastor Tom
When Manasseh repented of his sin it says in 2 Chronicles 33 that he removed the altars to the foreign gods and threw them out of Jerusalem. He also commanded that Judah serve Yahweh. The response of the people was this: (17) "Nevertheless, the people still sacrificed at the high places, but only to the LORD their God."
So the people went out to a place where Baal, Ashteroth and other abhorrent gods had been worshiped and tried somehow to redeem them into something pleasing to God - even though the Lord was very clear about where and how He was to be worshiped - at the Temple in Jerusalem as a picture of the coming Messiah Jesus. This was the same problem that Jeroboam had many years before and why Israel deserted Yahweh by serving a calf and calling is LORD. It wasn't.
How does this apply to you? Simply put, you cannot say, think, or do things that are clearly not in the character of Jesus and claim that you are worshiping and serving Him. If you get drunk all the time and just say "praise the Lord" there is something wrong. If you serve at the altar of Mammon (money) and just say "God is in this!" you are sadly mistaken.
I'm not saying that you need to make yourself perfect - that's the job of the Holy Spirit as you yield your life in submission to Him. But to think that you can twist the worldly system and call it godly is only a recipe for trouble. You also can't twist the Word of God to mean that approaching God through any other means than the God-man Jesus will work. It won't.
You can't earn your way to God. You can't change Jesus into the brother of Satan and think you are worshiping Him or that His blood will cover you. Jesus cannot be manipulated into something that we fashion. The good news is that by repenting and coming to Jesus on His terms there is forgiveness and cleansing and a wonderful life that will never end!
Pastor Tom
Friday, June 08, 2007
I'm Too Dirty For God
If you've been following along as we read through 2 Chronicles you know that Israel and Judah's kings were not always godly, and many times very ungodly. Judah had a better record than Israel, but not by that much. Kings like Ahaz did terrible things, including actually shutting up the Temple, purposefully keeping the people from worshipping Yahweh (2 Chronicles 28:24).The people went along with these bad kings and themselves abandoned God.
So along comes Hezekiah. One of the very first things Hezekiah did when he became king - within the first month - was re-open the Temple. He re-organized the priests, restarted the sacrifices and started up the feasts once again.
One of the feasts reinstated was Passover. I find an interesting verse in chapter 30. It says that "the Levites had to slaughter the Passover lamb for everyone who was not clean, to consecrate it to the LORD. For a majority of the people ... had not cleansed themselves, yet they ate the Passover otherwise than as prescribed. For Hezekiah had prayed for them, saying, "May the good Lord pardon everyone who seeks his heart to seek God, the Lord, the God of his fathers, even though not according to the sanctuary's rules of cleanness."
Basically the people had been away from God so long they didn't know or were not used to the prescribed preparations for the Passover - yet the king, and the Lord, wanted them to celebrate anyway.
Do you sometimes feel so far away from the Lord, so dirty in sin, so unprepared to enter His presence that you simply don't? We need to remember that we don't come to God clean, we come to be cleaned. It doesn't matter what you have done, how long it has been, or how strange it might feel. Come before Him and worship. He is a good God and longs to draw close to you and show you His forgiveness and love.
Pastor Tom
So along comes Hezekiah. One of the very first things Hezekiah did when he became king - within the first month - was re-open the Temple. He re-organized the priests, restarted the sacrifices and started up the feasts once again.
One of the feasts reinstated was Passover. I find an interesting verse in chapter 30. It says that "the Levites had to slaughter the Passover lamb for everyone who was not clean, to consecrate it to the LORD. For a majority of the people ... had not cleansed themselves, yet they ate the Passover otherwise than as prescribed. For Hezekiah had prayed for them, saying, "May the good Lord pardon everyone who seeks his heart to seek God, the Lord, the God of his fathers, even though not according to the sanctuary's rules of cleanness."
Basically the people had been away from God so long they didn't know or were not used to the prescribed preparations for the Passover - yet the king, and the Lord, wanted them to celebrate anyway.
Do you sometimes feel so far away from the Lord, so dirty in sin, so unprepared to enter His presence that you simply don't? We need to remember that we don't come to God clean, we come to be cleaned. It doesn't matter what you have done, how long it has been, or how strange it might feel. Come before Him and worship. He is a good God and longs to draw close to you and show you His forgiveness and love.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Will Anyone Miss You?
Today I want to talk about Jehoram. Jerhoram was king over Judah after Jehoshaphat, who was a good king who followed the Lord and brought the people back into Yahweh worship. Jehoram was the anti-Jehoshaphat.
Jehoram had a bunch of younger brothers his fathered loved and lavished with gifts. He killed them all. Jehoshaphat did not seek the Baals but sought God. Jehoram not only sought the Baals but forced Judah to do the same. Jehoshaphat prayed to the Lord and saw victory. Jehoram abandoned God and saw defeat. He was a horrible leader and king.
What I wanted to point out was how his life ended. It was pretty horrible - basically the Lord struck him with a disease and his bowels came out. Yuck! So then he died and look at this: "And he departed with no one's regret" (2 Chronicles 21:20). Wow.
It got me to thinking. What actions and attitudes do we have now that will form opinions of us when we are gone. Hopefully unlike Jehoram, we are serving God and seeking to be transformed into His image. I hope that when we die that people will regret it because of the good things God did through us and how those things positively affected other lives. What will people say about you after you are gone? Just something to think about.
Pastor Tom
Jehoram had a bunch of younger brothers his fathered loved and lavished with gifts. He killed them all. Jehoshaphat did not seek the Baals but sought God. Jehoram not only sought the Baals but forced Judah to do the same. Jehoshaphat prayed to the Lord and saw victory. Jehoram abandoned God and saw defeat. He was a horrible leader and king.
What I wanted to point out was how his life ended. It was pretty horrible - basically the Lord struck him with a disease and his bowels came out. Yuck! So then he died and look at this: "And he departed with no one's regret" (2 Chronicles 21:20). Wow.
It got me to thinking. What actions and attitudes do we have now that will form opinions of us when we are gone. Hopefully unlike Jehoram, we are serving God and seeking to be transformed into His image. I hope that when we die that people will regret it because of the good things God did through us and how those things positively affected other lives. What will people say about you after you are gone? Just something to think about.
Pastor Tom
Good News - Bad News
There is this great little story in 2 Chronicles 18 that I love. Israel and Judah have split, and Jehoshaphat is king in Judah and Ahab king in Israel. They get together and (supposedly) ask the Lord whether they should go up in battle against Syria. What happens is both very funny and very sad.
Israel had already abandoned worshipping Yahweh and worshipped a calf God they called Yahweh but wasn't. Ahab called prophets of this false religion together to "hear the Lord." They all said "Go up, for God will give it into the hand of the king."
Something didn't sit well with Jehoshaphat and he asked "Is there not here another prophet of the Lord whom we may inquire? And the king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, "There is yet one man by whom we may inquire of the Lord, Micaiah the son of Imlah; but I hate him for he never prophesies good concerning me but always evil."
Hmmm. Perhaps, Ahab, because you need to hear that you are evil and need to repent like the kings of Judah had and stop worshipping a demon-god and instead really listen to and serve the one true God Yahweh.
He doesn't see it that way, of course, and when Miciaiah comes in and prophecies it comes about exactly as he says.
The word for us, I think is not to be afraid of bad news from the Lord. If you are reading the Word or listening to a Bible study and something really hits you that feels uncomfortable. Ask God to reveal what He is up to. What is He trying to say to you? Perhaps there are areas of repentance needed in your life.
Also, its usually a mistake when, after hearing from the Lord, you surround yourself with people or messages that say what you want to hear - what makes you feel comfortable. Spending time with God doesn't always make us comfortable but it always makes us more like Him.
Pastor Tom
Israel had already abandoned worshipping Yahweh and worshipped a calf God they called Yahweh but wasn't. Ahab called prophets of this false religion together to "hear the Lord." They all said "Go up, for God will give it into the hand of the king."
Something didn't sit well with Jehoshaphat and he asked "Is there not here another prophet of the Lord whom we may inquire? And the king of Israel said to Jehoshaphat, "There is yet one man by whom we may inquire of the Lord, Micaiah the son of Imlah; but I hate him for he never prophesies good concerning me but always evil."
Hmmm. Perhaps, Ahab, because you need to hear that you are evil and need to repent like the kings of Judah had and stop worshipping a demon-god and instead really listen to and serve the one true God Yahweh.
He doesn't see it that way, of course, and when Miciaiah comes in and prophecies it comes about exactly as he says.
The word for us, I think is not to be afraid of bad news from the Lord. If you are reading the Word or listening to a Bible study and something really hits you that feels uncomfortable. Ask God to reveal what He is up to. What is He trying to say to you? Perhaps there are areas of repentance needed in your life.
Also, its usually a mistake when, after hearing from the Lord, you surround yourself with people or messages that say what you want to hear - what makes you feel comfortable. Spending time with God doesn't always make us comfortable but it always makes us more like Him.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
"This Thing Is From Me"
In my last blog entry I talked about Rehoboam and how he listened to the harsh advice from his peers rather than heeding the merciful words from his elders. This didn't go over too well with the people he ruled. In fact, it led to the dividing of Israel as a nation. Oddly, though, God said He was in it.
In 2 Chronicles 11, Rehoboam recognizes that he's got to do something to restore his kingdom. He doesn't do it with diplomacy or with saying that he was wrong (something his grandfather David would have done) but seeks to go to arms against his brothers. He raises any army of 180,000 men for the job.
But Shemaiah the prophet comes to him and says (2 Chronicles 11:4) "Thus says the Lord, you shall not go up or fight against your relatives. Return every man to his home, for this thing is from me." This time Rehoboam listened to good advice and a blood bath was averted, for the time being.
The point that hit me from this revelation was that there may come a time when you have blown it, and you think "I've got to fix this with whatever means are at my disposal." And your solution to the problem may be worse than the problem you were trying to fix.
I made that mistake once in dealing with someone who was acting inappropriately. Instead of coming alongside and discipling this person I made changes to the ministry I was involved with. In the end I alienated a lot of people and caused more harm than good. God is good, however. Years later we were reconciled and growth took place.
But next time I might just give away my pride and realize that although I blew it, God is in it to work "all things together for the good of those who love Him and are called according to His purposes." Then I'll let patience and repentance guide me into His will.
Pastor Tom
In 2 Chronicles 11, Rehoboam recognizes that he's got to do something to restore his kingdom. He doesn't do it with diplomacy or with saying that he was wrong (something his grandfather David would have done) but seeks to go to arms against his brothers. He raises any army of 180,000 men for the job.
But Shemaiah the prophet comes to him and says (2 Chronicles 11:4) "Thus says the Lord, you shall not go up or fight against your relatives. Return every man to his home, for this thing is from me." This time Rehoboam listened to good advice and a blood bath was averted, for the time being.
The point that hit me from this revelation was that there may come a time when you have blown it, and you think "I've got to fix this with whatever means are at my disposal." And your solution to the problem may be worse than the problem you were trying to fix.
I made that mistake once in dealing with someone who was acting inappropriately. Instead of coming alongside and discipling this person I made changes to the ministry I was involved with. In the end I alienated a lot of people and caused more harm than good. God is good, however. Years later we were reconciled and growth took place.
But next time I might just give away my pride and realize that although I blew it, God is in it to work "all things together for the good of those who love Him and are called according to His purposes." Then I'll let patience and repentance guide me into His will.
Pastor Tom
Monday, June 04, 2007
Youth = Wisdom?
Let's face it. We live in a culture dominated by youth ideals. Everyone wants to be young or act young or do and buy the things that young people do or buy. This actually started back in the 60's when a generation of American youth decided that anyone over 30 should not be trusted. It has hurt our country and has permeated the church. But it really began much much earlier.
In 2 Chronicles 10 Rehoboam, Solomon's son, has taken over the throne of Israel. The people come and complain that Solomon's taxes were too burdensome. So Rehoboam has a decision to make. First he went to the old men who had served his father. They told him to be kind to the people and they will serve him forever. That was probably good advice as the taxes needed to build the Temple were no longer needed.
Regardless, Rehoboam rejected that counsel "and took counsel with the young men who had grown up with him" (2 Chronicles 10:8). These young men suggested an even harsher way of ruling than Solomon. That should have clued Solomon in right there that there was a problem. Often times the folly of youth is that no matter what way is right, doing things a different way than a previous generation is mandatory.
There are times when a young person has great wisdom, and there are times when a more mature person is a jerk. The lesson is that we should by no means cast out the wisdom of the mature, and we should by all means test the advice we receive based on the character of God.
Pastor Tom
In 2 Chronicles 10 Rehoboam, Solomon's son, has taken over the throne of Israel. The people come and complain that Solomon's taxes were too burdensome. So Rehoboam has a decision to make. First he went to the old men who had served his father. They told him to be kind to the people and they will serve him forever. That was probably good advice as the taxes needed to build the Temple were no longer needed.
Regardless, Rehoboam rejected that counsel "and took counsel with the young men who had grown up with him" (2 Chronicles 10:8). These young men suggested an even harsher way of ruling than Solomon. That should have clued Solomon in right there that there was a problem. Often times the folly of youth is that no matter what way is right, doing things a different way than a previous generation is mandatory.
There are times when a young person has great wisdom, and there are times when a more mature person is a jerk. The lesson is that we should by no means cast out the wisdom of the mature, and we should by all means test the advice we receive based on the character of God.
Pastor Tom
Friday, June 01, 2007
What You Don't Ask For
I don't want to put down Solomon, he was a great king and a really humble man. In 2 Chronicles 1 God appears to Solomon and says "Ask what I shall give you" (vs 7). Solomon asks for wisdom to lead the people of Israel. But Solomon should also have thought about what he didn't ask for.
God is pleased because Solomon didn't ask for long life or riches or the lives of his enemies. And so God gives him the wisdom, and the riches and long life.
What intrigues me is the very next verse. The first thing Solomon does is to go out and buy 1,400 chariots and 12,000 horsemen. There are two problems with this. The first is that God told Israel that when they had a king that they should not multiply horses and chariots (Deut 17:16). So Solomon is disobeying God. The second is that Solomon didn't need them. He should have relied on God as Joshua and Israel did during the taking of the land.
I noticed that in the list of things that God gave he left out "the life of those who hate you." Perhaps God was testing Solomon a little bit. I'm not saying this is so, but maybe Solomon was trying to fill in the gaps in God's promise to him.
So the lesson for us is: when you do right, when your attitude is like Jesus and you think "yes - I did okay that time!" don't then let your guard down. The temptation will be to fall into doing something wrong in another area of your life.
Remember all of God tells you in His Word and trust in Him to accomplish all of it through you. He doesn't need our assistance, really!
Pastor Tom
God is pleased because Solomon didn't ask for long life or riches or the lives of his enemies. And so God gives him the wisdom, and the riches and long life.
What intrigues me is the very next verse. The first thing Solomon does is to go out and buy 1,400 chariots and 12,000 horsemen. There are two problems with this. The first is that God told Israel that when they had a king that they should not multiply horses and chariots (Deut 17:16). So Solomon is disobeying God. The second is that Solomon didn't need them. He should have relied on God as Joshua and Israel did during the taking of the land.
I noticed that in the list of things that God gave he left out "the life of those who hate you." Perhaps God was testing Solomon a little bit. I'm not saying this is so, but maybe Solomon was trying to fill in the gaps in God's promise to him.
So the lesson for us is: when you do right, when your attitude is like Jesus and you think "yes - I did okay that time!" don't then let your guard down. The temptation will be to fall into doing something wrong in another area of your life.
Remember all of God tells you in His Word and trust in Him to accomplish all of it through you. He doesn't need our assistance, really!
Pastor Tom
Thursday, May 31, 2007
A Willing Mind
1 Chronicles 28:9 "...know the God of your father and serve him with a whole heart and with a willing mind, for the Lord searches all hearts and understands every plan and thought ..."
This was David's charge to his son, Solomon, as he prepared to turn over the kingdom of Israel. I just really liked how David characterized a life that is open to the Lord, especially the part about the "willing mind."
I wonder sometimes how willing our minds are. In our world today there are many whose minds are anything but willing when it comes to the things of God. They hear God's Word and dismiss it because it doesn't seem to jive with science or political correctness. Even Christians can find themselves unwilling to in their minds to accept that God is who He says He is. We tend to believe our minds before we believe the Lord.
My challenge to us today is to allow your mind to be open and willing to be taught, challenged, and changed by God's Word.
Pastor Tom
This was David's charge to his son, Solomon, as he prepared to turn over the kingdom of Israel. I just really liked how David characterized a life that is open to the Lord, especially the part about the "willing mind."
I wonder sometimes how willing our minds are. In our world today there are many whose minds are anything but willing when it comes to the things of God. They hear God's Word and dismiss it because it doesn't seem to jive with science or political correctness. Even Christians can find themselves unwilling to in their minds to accept that God is who He says He is. We tend to believe our minds before we believe the Lord.
My challenge to us today is to allow your mind to be open and willing to be taught, challenged, and changed by God's Word.
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Judgment And Mercy
There is a really interesting story in 1 Chronicles 21. It's the story of one of David's greatest blunders which the Lord turned around into a wonderful act of mercy.
David ordered a census of Israel. I won't go into why this was wrong but suffice it to say that God did not order it or want it. So when David went ahead there as judgment to pay. God gave David a choice: three years of famine, three months of a foreign enemy, or three days of "the sword of the Lord."
David chose the three days of God's judgment saying "Let me fall into the hand of the Lord, for his mercy is very great" (1 Chronicles 21:13). Those three days were terrible, with 70,000 of Israel perishing.
Now get this scene: the angel of the Lord (many think this represents the pre-incarnate Christ) is poised over Jerusalem to destroy it. God has mercy as David cries out his guilt "It is I who have sinned and one great evil" (vs 17). Instead of destroying, God orders David to set up an altar.
He buys the threshing floor of Ornan. Though Ornan offers it for free David says "I will not take for the Lord what is yours, nor offer burnt offerings that cost me nothing."
This altar becomes the site of the Temple.
The Temple then becomes a picture of the sacrifice for all sins that Jesus would make. So here you have Jesus who bears both the sword of judgment and the altar of mercy. This is a good picture for us to remember. We will all face Jesus. You will either face Him as the Lamb who allowed the judgment of God to fall on Him for you, or you will face Him as the judge who not spare those who have sinned outside of His grace.
The next time you feel God's judgment gathering like a sword over your head, remember this section and give your heart to the mercy of God through the sacrifice of Jesus.
Pastor Tom
David ordered a census of Israel. I won't go into why this was wrong but suffice it to say that God did not order it or want it. So when David went ahead there as judgment to pay. God gave David a choice: three years of famine, three months of a foreign enemy, or three days of "the sword of the Lord."
David chose the three days of God's judgment saying "Let me fall into the hand of the Lord, for his mercy is very great" (1 Chronicles 21:13). Those three days were terrible, with 70,000 of Israel perishing.
Now get this scene: the angel of the Lord (many think this represents the pre-incarnate Christ) is poised over Jerusalem to destroy it. God has mercy as David cries out his guilt "It is I who have sinned and one great evil" (vs 17). Instead of destroying, God orders David to set up an altar.
He buys the threshing floor of Ornan. Though Ornan offers it for free David says "I will not take for the Lord what is yours, nor offer burnt offerings that cost me nothing."
This altar becomes the site of the Temple.
The Temple then becomes a picture of the sacrifice for all sins that Jesus would make. So here you have Jesus who bears both the sword of judgment and the altar of mercy. This is a good picture for us to remember. We will all face Jesus. You will either face Him as the Lamb who allowed the judgment of God to fall on Him for you, or you will face Him as the judge who not spare those who have sinned outside of His grace.
The next time you feel God's judgment gathering like a sword over your head, remember this section and give your heart to the mercy of God through the sacrifice of Jesus.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Where Do Blessing and Victory Come From?
I've just returned from a couple of weeks on holiday - a great relaxing time to rejuvenate and recuperate. As I got back into 1 Chronicles today I was struck by the way God worked in and through King David.
In chapter 16 we see David bring up the Ark of the Tabernacle and set it up in Jerusalem. I noticed that in verse 4: "Then he appointed some of the Levites as minister before the ark of the Lord, to invoke, to thank, and to praise the Lord."
I like that, by the way. We too should ask God's presence in our daily lives, thank him and praise him for what he has done and is doing. David then launches into a wonderful psalm of praise.
Directly from that he thinks "Behold I dwell in a house of cedar, but the Lord is under a tent." (17:1). He wants to build a temple but Nathan tells him that is Solomon his son that will build it. Then the Lord tells David that he will establish his throne forever (vs 12). What a promise!
What does this invoke in David? Humility. Later in chapter 17 he says "Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house, that you have brought me thus far?"
After this, in chapter 18, David defeats the Philistines and subdues them - something Israel had tried to do ever since arriving in the Promised Land.
So the pattern we see here is: worship that leads to blessing, blessing that leads to humility, humility that leads to victory. A great example for us to follow!
Pastor Tom
In chapter 16 we see David bring up the Ark of the Tabernacle and set it up in Jerusalem. I noticed that in verse 4: "Then he appointed some of the Levites as minister before the ark of the Lord, to invoke, to thank, and to praise the Lord."
I like that, by the way. We too should ask God's presence in our daily lives, thank him and praise him for what he has done and is doing. David then launches into a wonderful psalm of praise.
Directly from that he thinks "Behold I dwell in a house of cedar, but the Lord is under a tent." (17:1). He wants to build a temple but Nathan tells him that is Solomon his son that will build it. Then the Lord tells David that he will establish his throne forever (vs 12). What a promise!
What does this invoke in David? Humility. Later in chapter 17 he says "Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house, that you have brought me thus far?"
After this, in chapter 18, David defeats the Philistines and subdues them - something Israel had tried to do ever since arriving in the Promised Land.
So the pattern we see here is: worship that leads to blessing, blessing that leads to humility, humility that leads to victory. A great example for us to follow!
Pastor Tom
Friday, May 11, 2007
Sinner or Hero?
When you read about David's mighty men in 1 Chronicles 11 and 12 you get pretty impressed. Guys like Benaiah who killed a lion in a pit on a snowy day and snatched the spear out of a seven and a half foot tall Egyptian guy. They weren't called mighty men for nothing. Thanks to them Jerusalem was conquered, the Philistines were overcome and Israel had peace from its enemies and a king was protected that was a man after God's own heart.
So its interesting to go back to the time when all these guys joined David. You wouldn't exactly call them "mighty" at that point. Back in 1 Samuel 22, when David was not king, but on the run from King Saul who was trying to kill him. David went and hid in a cave. Joining him there: "everyone who was in distress, and everyone who was in debt, and everyone who was bitter in soul." Sure doesn't sound like any "mighty men" to me. And yet these I think are the same guys that later are heroes of Israel.
Do you sometimes feel bitter or in distress or in debt? Do you feel like hiding in a cave and that God could never really use you? Take heart. God turned the disaffected into the mighty and he can do the same for you. How did it happen? These guys rallied around a man who loved God with all his heart. For us, we gather around one of David's descendants, Jesus Christ. Spend time with Him and He can turn you into a hero too!
Pastor Tom
So its interesting to go back to the time when all these guys joined David. You wouldn't exactly call them "mighty" at that point. Back in 1 Samuel 22, when David was not king, but on the run from King Saul who was trying to kill him. David went and hid in a cave. Joining him there: "everyone who was in distress, and everyone who was in debt, and everyone who was bitter in soul." Sure doesn't sound like any "mighty men" to me. And yet these I think are the same guys that later are heroes of Israel.
Do you sometimes feel bitter or in distress or in debt? Do you feel like hiding in a cave and that God could never really use you? Take heart. God turned the disaffected into the mighty and he can do the same for you. How did it happen? These guys rallied around a man who loved God with all his heart. For us, we gather around one of David's descendants, Jesus Christ. Spend time with Him and He can turn you into a hero too!
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
Lost and Found
Have you ever lost something of great value? Most of the time you know it and you search frantically for it with that sick feeling in your stomach. But what if you lost something of tremendous worth and knew it not?
That's the position Israel and its king find themselves in. 2 Kings 23 finds Israel on the heels of the absolute worst king ever - completely evil and worse than the evil nations around them. A new king comes to power: Josiah. Josiah sends his staff to the Temple to find out what happened to the money given for the upkeep of the structure.
When there the men discover a book - but not just any book, but the Book of the Law. This book, God's Word, is carried very gingerly to King Josiah, because it contains the failings of the kings and the nation and God's retribution against those sins.
Josiah reacts correctly: 2 Kings 22:11 "And when the king heard the words of the Book of the Law he tore his clothes."
He repented and God relented and said he would spare Josiah from seeing the destruction and discipline planned for Israel.
So are you without something of great value to you and you don't know it? Perhaps for you, like Josiah, it is God's Word. Without the washing of His Word we too can drift off into sin. Also like Josiah, we should rediscover the book, blow off the dust, and let the words wash over us. Yes there might be hard words to hear, but they are also words of life and of great value.
Pastor Tom
That's the position Israel and its king find themselves in. 2 Kings 23 finds Israel on the heels of the absolute worst king ever - completely evil and worse than the evil nations around them. A new king comes to power: Josiah. Josiah sends his staff to the Temple to find out what happened to the money given for the upkeep of the structure.
When there the men discover a book - but not just any book, but the Book of the Law. This book, God's Word, is carried very gingerly to King Josiah, because it contains the failings of the kings and the nation and God's retribution against those sins.
Josiah reacts correctly: 2 Kings 22:11 "And when the king heard the words of the Book of the Law he tore his clothes."
He repented and God relented and said he would spare Josiah from seeing the destruction and discipline planned for Israel.
So are you without something of great value to you and you don't know it? Perhaps for you, like Josiah, it is God's Word. Without the washing of His Word we too can drift off into sin. Also like Josiah, we should rediscover the book, blow off the dust, and let the words wash over us. Yes there might be hard words to hear, but they are also words of life and of great value.
Pastor Tom
Monday, April 30, 2007
Accountable
Sometimes we make the error of assuming that because we know God that we can pretty much do whatever we want. Not only is that pretty arrogant, it's also wrong.
King Manasseh of Judah may have thought that because his father Hezekiah followed Yahweh that that pretty much gave him a free pass. Manasseh was an evil guy through and through. For other kings that turned away from God the Scriptures often describe them as following the ways of Jeroboam, but Manasseh followed the ways of the kings around them. He burned his son in the fire and did worse sins than the Amorites that God wiped out when he brought Israel into the land.
But God did not let Manasseh lead the nation into utter abhorrent sin without cost. Just because they were the Chosen People did not mean that God would not deal with them severely.
In 2 Kings 21:11 "I am bringing upon Jerusalem and Judah such disaster that the ears of everyone who hears it will tingle."
If we sin without the blood of Jesus Christ covering us, we will be encounter just such a disaster: separation from God, not for 70 years like Israel, but for eternity. If we continue to sin as believers God will deal with us with severe discipline. His aim is to bring us back to Him, the source of all goodness. All we must do is repent - change our minds about our sin and agree with God.
We are accountable to God. Though He disciplines us, it is a good thing. Peter tells us that God disciplines every son whom He loves.
Pastor Tom
King Manasseh of Judah may have thought that because his father Hezekiah followed Yahweh that that pretty much gave him a free pass. Manasseh was an evil guy through and through. For other kings that turned away from God the Scriptures often describe them as following the ways of Jeroboam, but Manasseh followed the ways of the kings around them. He burned his son in the fire and did worse sins than the Amorites that God wiped out when he brought Israel into the land.
But God did not let Manasseh lead the nation into utter abhorrent sin without cost. Just because they were the Chosen People did not mean that God would not deal with them severely.
In 2 Kings 21:11 "I am bringing upon Jerusalem and Judah such disaster that the ears of everyone who hears it will tingle."
If we sin without the blood of Jesus Christ covering us, we will be encounter just such a disaster: separation from God, not for 70 years like Israel, but for eternity. If we continue to sin as believers God will deal with us with severe discipline. His aim is to bring us back to Him, the source of all goodness. All we must do is repent - change our minds about our sin and agree with God.
We are accountable to God. Though He disciplines us, it is a good thing. Peter tells us that God disciplines every son whom He loves.
Pastor Tom
Friday, April 27, 2007
Holding Fast
As you read through the book of 2 Kings it gets a little depressing. King after king in both Judah and Israel "do what was evil in the sight of the Lord." Then comes Hezekiah. What a breath of fresh air.
Hezekiah, it says in 2 Kings 18:3, "did what was right in the eyes of the Lord, according to all that David his father had done." Hezekiah broke down the pillars and anything else that Israel had used as a way to worship other gods.
But I noticed something else that I hadn't seen before - its in verse 6: "and he held fast to the Lord."
You know, in our world where money and power and youth and beauty and political correctness are worshiped as gods, it is vital more than ever for us Christians to be like Hezekiah. We need to break down those altars in our lives and homes and we need to "hold fast" to the Lord.
Our culture is like a hurricane wind that seeks to blow Christianity out of the water and carry us away in a whirlwind of rhetoric and argument against the character of God. Hold on to Him no matter what your culture tells you.
And, by the way, as you hold fast to Him, He is holding fast to you. Just read John 15 for more on that.
Pastor Tom
Hezekiah, it says in 2 Kings 18:3, "did what was right in the eyes of the Lord, according to all that David his father had done." Hezekiah broke down the pillars and anything else that Israel had used as a way to worship other gods.
But I noticed something else that I hadn't seen before - its in verse 6: "and he held fast to the Lord."
You know, in our world where money and power and youth and beauty and political correctness are worshiped as gods, it is vital more than ever for us Christians to be like Hezekiah. We need to break down those altars in our lives and homes and we need to "hold fast" to the Lord.
Our culture is like a hurricane wind that seeks to blow Christianity out of the water and carry us away in a whirlwind of rhetoric and argument against the character of God. Hold on to Him no matter what your culture tells you.
And, by the way, as you hold fast to Him, He is holding fast to you. Just read John 15 for more on that.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, April 26, 2007
The Godly Influence
Judah was in a pretty bad way in 2 Kings 11. Athaliah was ruling over the nation - a brutal and evil woman. She was so evil that she ordered all the possible heirs to the throne killed. But thanks to the foresight and courage of a woman and a priest, the nation changed.
Jehosheba took Joash, the dead king Ahaziah's son and hid him away. Later Jehoiada the priest guarded him and raised him. When it was time they declared Joash king. During all the time Johoiada was alive, many wonderful things happened in Judah, including the repairing of the Temple.
The simple lesson is that it is a valuable thing to have a godly influence over a young person. Joash's father Ahaziah was an evil man, and Athaliah the grandmother was horribly evil, but a couple of adults who took the time to nurture and protect an evil man's son reaped tremendous benefits.
Take the time to teach the young and care for them. Even if their parents do not know the Lord, who knows what good you will create in the presence of evil?
Pastor Tom
Jehosheba took Joash, the dead king Ahaziah's son and hid him away. Later Jehoiada the priest guarded him and raised him. When it was time they declared Joash king. During all the time Johoiada was alive, many wonderful things happened in Judah, including the repairing of the Temple.
The simple lesson is that it is a valuable thing to have a godly influence over a young person. Joash's father Ahaziah was an evil man, and Athaliah the grandmother was horribly evil, but a couple of adults who took the time to nurture and protect an evil man's son reaped tremendous benefits.
Take the time to teach the young and care for them. Even if their parents do not know the Lord, who knows what good you will create in the presence of evil?
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Who Is With You?
Do you ever feel surrounded by life? You wake up in the morning and go out to get the morning paper and realize that your circumstances are conspiring against you like an army surrounding your house. You despair and are ready to give up.
That's actually just where the Lord wants you. I know it sounds strange, but it is the way He works over and over. Barren women who could not have children did, a land that could not be overthrown was, and lives that could never be redeemed - are.
I'm reminded of the story in 2 Kings 6. Elisha's servant got up one morning to get the paper and saw his city surrounded by a terrible army. He panicked and said "what shall we do?" But Elisha asked God to give him a new perspective - a godly perspective. If you know the story, God opened the servant's eyes and he saw that the army surrounding him was surrounded itself by an army of angels with chariots of fire.
Elisha then said this: "2 Kings 6:16 Do not be afraid, for those who are with us are more than are with them."
When you feel life surrounding you like an opposing army, realize that if you belong to God through Jesus Christ, there is a much larger army of angels and God's Holy Spirit that will deliver you safely to his kingdom - that nothing can happen to you outside of God's power to redeem - and that He will in fact take care of you and cause all things to work together for the good in your life.
Pastor Tom
That's actually just where the Lord wants you. I know it sounds strange, but it is the way He works over and over. Barren women who could not have children did, a land that could not be overthrown was, and lives that could never be redeemed - are.
I'm reminded of the story in 2 Kings 6. Elisha's servant got up one morning to get the paper and saw his city surrounded by a terrible army. He panicked and said "what shall we do?" But Elisha asked God to give him a new perspective - a godly perspective. If you know the story, God opened the servant's eyes and he saw that the army surrounding him was surrounded itself by an army of angels with chariots of fire.
Elisha then said this: "2 Kings 6:16 Do not be afraid, for those who are with us are more than are with them."
When you feel life surrounding you like an opposing army, realize that if you belong to God through Jesus Christ, there is a much larger army of angels and God's Holy Spirit that will deliver you safely to his kingdom - that nothing can happen to you outside of God's power to redeem - and that He will in fact take care of you and cause all things to work together for the good in your life.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Who Ya Gonna Call?
When life really gets tough, the trials mount up, and life is at stake, a lot is revealed about a person's character and who he or she trusts.
In the beginning chapter of 2 Kings this happens to Ahaziah. Ahaziah becomes king of Israel and promptly falls through the lattice in his upper chamber in the palace. As he lay dieing, Ahaziah calls out for help. He tells his servants to inquire of Baal-zebub, one of the demon-gods left over from the Canaanites.
Besides the fact that there was no real Baal-Zebub god, the problem here is that Ahaziah is trusting in someone other than the LORD God. In fact, Elijah stops the servants of Ahaziah with these words:
2 Kings 1:3 "Is it because there is no God in Israel that you are going to inquire of Baal-Zebub?"
It is a rhetorical question. There was a God in Israel: Yahweh. Ahaziah is turning away from the only real God to go after a fake god in his time of trouble. God wants him to acknowledge who God really is. The trouble is that Ahaziah knows he has sinned and that to face God he must face his rebellion against God, so he thinks he can find answers outside of God. He can't.
Neither can we. When life gets tough we don't want to reach out to God because to do that we must deal with our sin and our failures. So we go to any source we can to find answers: self help books, pop-psychology, friends advice, fake healing scams, getting money wherever we can, or even lying and cheating to get ourselves out of trouble.
It won't work. Trouble won't go away. The only way to permanently deal with it is to face your sin and failures, take them to the cross where God put them to death, and then seek Him with all of your heart. The answer won't always be what you want - Ahaziah's answer from God was that he was going to die - but it will be the answer God wants, and that is always the best answer.
Pastor Tom
In the beginning chapter of 2 Kings this happens to Ahaziah. Ahaziah becomes king of Israel and promptly falls through the lattice in his upper chamber in the palace. As he lay dieing, Ahaziah calls out for help. He tells his servants to inquire of Baal-zebub, one of the demon-gods left over from the Canaanites.
Besides the fact that there was no real Baal-Zebub god, the problem here is that Ahaziah is trusting in someone other than the LORD God. In fact, Elijah stops the servants of Ahaziah with these words:
2 Kings 1:3 "Is it because there is no God in Israel that you are going to inquire of Baal-Zebub?"
It is a rhetorical question. There was a God in Israel: Yahweh. Ahaziah is turning away from the only real God to go after a fake god in his time of trouble. God wants him to acknowledge who God really is. The trouble is that Ahaziah knows he has sinned and that to face God he must face his rebellion against God, so he thinks he can find answers outside of God. He can't.
Neither can we. When life gets tough we don't want to reach out to God because to do that we must deal with our sin and our failures. So we go to any source we can to find answers: self help books, pop-psychology, friends advice, fake healing scams, getting money wherever we can, or even lying and cheating to get ourselves out of trouble.
It won't work. Trouble won't go away. The only way to permanently deal with it is to face your sin and failures, take them to the cross where God put them to death, and then seek Him with all of your heart. The answer won't always be what you want - Ahaziah's answer from God was that he was going to die - but it will be the answer God wants, and that is always the best answer.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Food For the Journey
Elijah was having a great day followed by a terrible day. In 1 Kings 18 we see one of the high points of the war against God's enemies as Elijah sets up an altar and the priests of Baal set up their altar and God sends down fire from heaven on Elijah's altar and nothing happens to the one put up by the priests of Baal - proving which god was the real God.
But right after than Elijah is threatened by Jezebel and he runs away. Not only that, but Elijah is so afraid that he basically lays down under a broom tree and gives up. Here is the mighty prophet of God afraid of a woman and telling God to kill him.
But something interesting happens to Elijah while under that tree. He is not done with his pity party and not finished questioning God and his role. But we see the compassion and understanding of God while Elijah is on his journey.
Twice an angel appears to Elijah and encourages him to eat. The food and water appear supernaturally and the angel says he should eat because "the journey is too great for you." God is helping Elijah not to die, but to survive and continue his wandering until it is over.
Maybe you are having a hard time with something and are maybe even questioning God and perhaps want to just lay down under a broom tree and die. Know this, that God is watching over you, not judging you, and will actually help you in your quest - not to die - but to know Him more and your relationship to Him.
"Come let us reason together," God says. He encourages the journey because it will ultimately bring you closer to Him.
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Spiraling Down
1 Kings 17:25 "Omri did what was evil in the sight of the Lord, and did more evil than all who were before him."
I know this isn't the most encouraging verse, and its far more common than I thought in the annals of the kings of Judah and Israel.
King after king was more evil than the last. It's a sign of the human nature. Humans, without God, will tend to drift downward into sin. Without God man quickly loses sight of what is after the character of God and what is after the character of Satan. We become like our king.
Sometimes we experience sin in the lives of those we trust, or even in our parents or loved ones. The natural tendency might be for that sin to infect us, influence us, move us away from God. It doesn't have to be that way.
When Jesus came and died to pay for those sins, he changed that dynamic. Instead of going from bad to worse in a continually downward spinning spiral, we are transformed, as Paul says, from "from one kind of glory to another" as our character is made to be like God's character.
Don't fret at a world that more and more embraces sin as sainthood, and instead embrace the God who gave all to make us like Him.
Pastor Tom
I know this isn't the most encouraging verse, and its far more common than I thought in the annals of the kings of Judah and Israel.
King after king was more evil than the last. It's a sign of the human nature. Humans, without God, will tend to drift downward into sin. Without God man quickly loses sight of what is after the character of God and what is after the character of Satan. We become like our king.
Sometimes we experience sin in the lives of those we trust, or even in our parents or loved ones. The natural tendency might be for that sin to infect us, influence us, move us away from God. It doesn't have to be that way.
When Jesus came and died to pay for those sins, he changed that dynamic. Instead of going from bad to worse in a continually downward spinning spiral, we are transformed, as Paul says, from "from one kind of glory to another" as our character is made to be like God's character.
Don't fret at a world that more and more embraces sin as sainthood, and instead embrace the God who gave all to make us like Him.
Pastor Tom
Monday, April 16, 2007
Be Careful Who You Love
Solomon appeared at first to be just like his father David - loving the Lord, humble before the Lord. But later something happened, and Solomon following the flesh found himself being bitten by the very thing he liked.
Solomon's weakness was that he loved women of all types. In 1 Kings 11 it says he loved women from tribes the Lord commanded be destroyed and that Israel not intermarry with them. Among those that Solomon was attracted to were Edomite women. These women drew Solomon's heart away from serving God and he instead served the god's of his wives.
Then God showed his anger against Solomon and sent an adversary to torment him. The man is identified in 1 Kings 14:14 "And the Lord raised up an adversary against Solomon, Hadad the Edomite."
Being friends, even lovers, with an Edomite did nothing to stop this enemy of Israel from attacking. Being friends, even lovers of the world will not stop the king of this world, Satan, from attacking you to make you weak and ineffective for God.
Our lesson? Don't think giving into worldly attitudes buys you any goodwill from a system diametrically opposed to God and you as a child of God.
Pastor Tom
Solomon's weakness was that he loved women of all types. In 1 Kings 11 it says he loved women from tribes the Lord commanded be destroyed and that Israel not intermarry with them. Among those that Solomon was attracted to were Edomite women. These women drew Solomon's heart away from serving God and he instead served the god's of his wives.
Then God showed his anger against Solomon and sent an adversary to torment him. The man is identified in 1 Kings 14:14 "And the Lord raised up an adversary against Solomon, Hadad the Edomite."
Being friends, even lovers, with an Edomite did nothing to stop this enemy of Israel from attacking. Being friends, even lovers of the world will not stop the king of this world, Satan, from attacking you to make you weak and ineffective for God.
Our lesson? Don't think giving into worldly attitudes buys you any goodwill from a system diametrically opposed to God and you as a child of God.
Pastor Tom
Friday, April 13, 2007
David Learns His Lesson
In a previous post I suggested that David had problems dealing with family or relationship problems. I noticed that finally, at the end of his life, David learned his lesson.
In 1 Kings 1 David is about to die. His second oldest son Adonijah decides that he would like to be king and gets some allies among David's leaders.
Like David's other sons, Adonijah was not disciplined as a child (vs 6). So he thinks he can just steal away the throne. This time, though, when David catches wind of this plot he acts decisively. He calls Solomon and the High Priest and hands over the throne to Solomon.
The old David, when confronted with the Absolom coup, ran away. This time he confronts the situation and makes it right right away.
I think one of the things that made the difference was that David realized this was his legacy, this was what he was leaving behind to influence the world in his place. And David wanted that legacy to be a godly one.
Our lesson? Take the time to bring your children up in the "training and admonition of the Lord" and watch out for opportunities to create a godly legacy, not avoiding relational problems, but handling them with love and firmness.
Pastor Tom
In 1 Kings 1 David is about to die. His second oldest son Adonijah decides that he would like to be king and gets some allies among David's leaders.
Like David's other sons, Adonijah was not disciplined as a child (vs 6). So he thinks he can just steal away the throne. This time, though, when David catches wind of this plot he acts decisively. He calls Solomon and the High Priest and hands over the throne to Solomon.
The old David, when confronted with the Absolom coup, ran away. This time he confronts the situation and makes it right right away.
I think one of the things that made the difference was that David realized this was his legacy, this was what he was leaving behind to influence the world in his place. And David wanted that legacy to be a godly one.
Our lesson? Take the time to bring your children up in the "training and admonition of the Lord" and watch out for opportunities to create a godly legacy, not avoiding relational problems, but handling them with love and firmness.
Pastor Tom
Thursday, April 12, 2007
Which God do You See?
2 Samuel 22:26-28 With the merciful you show yourself merciful; with the blameless man you show yourself blameless; 27 with the purified you deal purely, and with the crooked you make yourself seem tortuous.28 You save a humble people, but your eyes are on the haughty to bring them down.
I sometimes hear people say that God is mean, unfair, vindictive, and judgmental. How dare he tell us not to judge others when he is so free to judge anyone he pleases and without apparent reason.
Well, for one we misunderstand who God is and who we are. God is pure good. He is so pure that anything that is not good cannot withstand his goodness. For anyone who is not pure it would be like walking unshielded into the middle of a nuclear reactor. You could not hope to survive. But through the washing of the blood of Jesus Christ, who died for all of our impurities, we become like a nuclear reaction ourselves - we become like God.
In the process from a human stand point we are transformed into his image and we actually begin to think like him - to have his character.
God appears differently to different people because to those who belong to him and have his character and act like he acts his purity makes sense. But for those who do not belong to him they experience his repulsion against evil as a foreign entity.
And look also at the character traits: mercy, purity, and humbleness. Gives you a clue what God is like, huh?
Pastor Tom
I sometimes hear people say that God is mean, unfair, vindictive, and judgmental. How dare he tell us not to judge others when he is so free to judge anyone he pleases and without apparent reason.
Well, for one we misunderstand who God is and who we are. God is pure good. He is so pure that anything that is not good cannot withstand his goodness. For anyone who is not pure it would be like walking unshielded into the middle of a nuclear reactor. You could not hope to survive. But through the washing of the blood of Jesus Christ, who died for all of our impurities, we become like a nuclear reaction ourselves - we become like God.
In the process from a human stand point we are transformed into his image and we actually begin to think like him - to have his character.
God appears differently to different people because to those who belong to him and have his character and act like he acts his purity makes sense. But for those who do not belong to him they experience his repulsion against evil as a foreign entity.
And look also at the character traits: mercy, purity, and humbleness. Gives you a clue what God is like, huh?
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Getting What's Due You
David gets some disturbing news as he flees Jerusalem, news that causes him to make an error in judgment. That error could have cost an honest man his life.
In 2 Samuel 16, as David runs from a coup brought about by his son Absalom, he is met by Ziba, servant of the former king's son Miphibosheth. "And where is you master's son?" David asks. "Ziba answered the king, 'Behold, he remains in Jerusalem, for he said, 'Today the house of Israel will give me back the kingdom of my father..."
That was a lie. David believed it, and gave all of Miphibosheth's lands to Ziba. As it turns out, Miphibosheth was lame and when he tried to leave with David, Ziba left without him-no doubt an opportunist. Later, in chapter 19, Miphibosheth comes to meet David as returns, triumphant, to Jerusalem.
What I want to focus on is Miphibosheth's response. When David tells him to split the land with Ziba, Miphibosheth says "Oh, let him take it all, since my lord the king has come safely home."
In essence, this was David's way of telling which man was a liar. But because Miphibosheth is willing to give it all up, presumably David gave it all back to him. It sort of reminds me of what David's son, Solomon did with the baby claimed by two moms.
So how do you react when someone deceives you, lies about you, then steals from you? You get mad, don't you? You want to exact judgment against them, don't you? And if it comes time to get back what was taken you jump at the chance, right?
Well, it was worth more to Miphibosheth to show his loyalty to the king and tell the truth than get what was rightly his. It's a lesson in humility, loyalty, and priority. His relationship with David was more important that getting justice.
Kind of reminds me of when Jesus said that if someone forces you to walk one mile you should walk with them an extra mile. It might put you out, but it might also show that person that the love of God is more important than getting what's yours.
Pastor Tom
In 2 Samuel 16, as David runs from a coup brought about by his son Absalom, he is met by Ziba, servant of the former king's son Miphibosheth. "And where is you master's son?" David asks. "Ziba answered the king, 'Behold, he remains in Jerusalem, for he said, 'Today the house of Israel will give me back the kingdom of my father..."
That was a lie. David believed it, and gave all of Miphibosheth's lands to Ziba. As it turns out, Miphibosheth was lame and when he tried to leave with David, Ziba left without him-no doubt an opportunist. Later, in chapter 19, Miphibosheth comes to meet David as returns, triumphant, to Jerusalem.
What I want to focus on is Miphibosheth's response. When David tells him to split the land with Ziba, Miphibosheth says "Oh, let him take it all, since my lord the king has come safely home."
In essence, this was David's way of telling which man was a liar. But because Miphibosheth is willing to give it all up, presumably David gave it all back to him. It sort of reminds me of what David's son, Solomon did with the baby claimed by two moms.
So how do you react when someone deceives you, lies about you, then steals from you? You get mad, don't you? You want to exact judgment against them, don't you? And if it comes time to get back what was taken you jump at the chance, right?
Well, it was worth more to Miphibosheth to show his loyalty to the king and tell the truth than get what was rightly his. It's a lesson in humility, loyalty, and priority. His relationship with David was more important that getting justice.
Kind of reminds me of when Jesus said that if someone forces you to walk one mile you should walk with them an extra mile. It might put you out, but it might also show that person that the love of God is more important than getting what's yours.
Pastor Tom
Tuesday, April 10, 2007
David's Biggest Weakness
2 Samuel 11-13 are among the darkest times for David. It shows the weakness in this man of God and in his kids.
It's among the few times we see David actually make mistakes. Usually we focus on the big mistake: sleeping with Bathsheba. But if you read all of these chapters there is another weakness that comes to light.
David was an avoider. He didn't like confrontation, especially when it came to problems with relationships. When it came to his sin with Bathsheba he did everything but confront Uriah, Bathsheba's husband. Instead he made up all this stuff to try to either obscure his sin or destroy the man.
Then when David's son Amnon raped his sister Tamar, and Absalom killed Amnon, David did nothing. We know he was angry but we also know that David avoided confronting Absalom and even when his son returned from exile it took a huge blow up just to get the king to bring his son back.
I'm not trying to fault David, especially since many of us avoid conflict and confrontation. Part of the problem is we don't know how to "speak the truth in love."
I think the lesson we take from these chapters is by contrast. When relationships are broken we should really try to fix them, instead of ignoring them hoping they'll get better on their own. They rarely do.
Pastor Tom
It's among the few times we see David actually make mistakes. Usually we focus on the big mistake: sleeping with Bathsheba. But if you read all of these chapters there is another weakness that comes to light.
David was an avoider. He didn't like confrontation, especially when it came to problems with relationships. When it came to his sin with Bathsheba he did everything but confront Uriah, Bathsheba's husband. Instead he made up all this stuff to try to either obscure his sin or destroy the man.
Then when David's son Amnon raped his sister Tamar, and Absalom killed Amnon, David did nothing. We know he was angry but we also know that David avoided confronting Absalom and even when his son returned from exile it took a huge blow up just to get the king to bring his son back.
I'm not trying to fault David, especially since many of us avoid conflict and confrontation. Part of the problem is we don't know how to "speak the truth in love."
I think the lesson we take from these chapters is by contrast. When relationships are broken we should really try to fix them, instead of ignoring them hoping they'll get better on their own. They rarely do.
Pastor Tom
Monday, April 09, 2007
True Humility
What would you think if someone told you that you were going to be rich and powerful - that your family's power would not diminish over time and that even the God of the Universe was pleased with you? That's what happened to David.
I'm just amazed at David's response to a promise God makes to him that "your house and your kingdom shall be made sure forever before me." (2 Samuel 7:16).
What is David's response? "Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house, that you have brought me thus far?" (18).
If there was one thing that David did not suffer from, it was pride. David was among the greatest people that ever lived. He could kill you before you knew it, he was a leaders leader, he was a diplomat, an extraordinarily talented musician and poet, and a kind man to boot.
Yet for all this the key to David's success were not his talents but his attitude towards himself and God. David loved God more than he loved himself. David's life was not his own and he lived to please his master. All the successes were nothing compared with serving Yahweh.
David always knew who the truly great one was. Do we?
Pastor Tom
I'm just amazed at David's response to a promise God makes to him that "your house and your kingdom shall be made sure forever before me." (2 Samuel 7:16).
What is David's response? "Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my house, that you have brought me thus far?" (18).
If there was one thing that David did not suffer from, it was pride. David was among the greatest people that ever lived. He could kill you before you knew it, he was a leaders leader, he was a diplomat, an extraordinarily talented musician and poet, and a kind man to boot.
Yet for all this the key to David's success were not his talents but his attitude towards himself and God. David loved God more than he loved himself. David's life was not his own and he lived to please his master. All the successes were nothing compared with serving Yahweh.
David always knew who the truly great one was. Do we?
Pastor Tom
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Don't Rush - Don't Grab
I have often wondered why David acted like he did. He was the anointed king of Israel yet he ran away from Saul instead of having one of his men kill him. And when Saul died David mourned his loss and executed those responsible. Not only that but David did nothing to overthrow Saul's house once Saul was dead and even came out against those who murdered Saul's military leaders and others.
We see this in 2 Samuel 1-5. David doesn't seem in a hurry to become king, nor does he try to grab for power but sticks to a true character, a godly character, and waits for God to lift him up.
When it was time, David assumed the throne, after a covenant was made with the other tribes. And immediately the fortunes of the nation changed. David captured Jerusalem and defeated the Philistines and God began speaking to the king of Israel again.
As David waited patiently and didn't compromise his character God rewarded him by accomplishing his goals, removing his obstacles and speaking wisdom from His heart.
It's a good lesson for us too.
Pastor Tom
We see this in 2 Samuel 1-5. David doesn't seem in a hurry to become king, nor does he try to grab for power but sticks to a true character, a godly character, and waits for God to lift him up.
When it was time, David assumed the throne, after a covenant was made with the other tribes. And immediately the fortunes of the nation changed. David captured Jerusalem and defeated the Philistines and God began speaking to the king of Israel again.
As David waited patiently and didn't compromise his character God rewarded him by accomplishing his goals, removing his obstacles and speaking wisdom from His heart.
It's a good lesson for us too.
Pastor Tom
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)