How God Would Change Us

Posted by on July 9, 2000 under Bulletin Articles

Have you ever been astounded? Have you been so shocked that you were speechless? Has something happened so unanticipated, so unimaginable that your mind spun in silence as you tried to grasp the happening?

If God changed us as a congregation in any way He wished, every one of us would be astounded and shocked speechless. As God announced His desired changes, the unexpected and unimaginable would fill His announcement. Christians would whisper among themselves. “God does not even like that! I know God!” “God condemned that! I know God!” “That deeply offends God! I know God.” As God announced His desires, we would shake our heads in shocked silence.

Every member [man or woman] and every age group [young, middle aged, or elderly] would be astounded. No one would say, “I told you!” The more certain we are about God’s preferences, the more astounding we would find His desires.

Our priorities tend to stress organization, structure, money, buildings, aesthetics, personal preferences, local concerns, area priorities, or regional issues. We tend to measure faithfulness by acceptance of our conclusions and convictions. Our logical conclusions and necessary inferences receive the status of clear Bible principles.

God’s priority is people–people who need compassion, mercy, grace, forgiveness, saving, atonement, redemption, justification, sanctification, and such like. Jesus was impressed by a wealthy tax collector, a Roman military officer, a prostitute, a divorcee, and a dying thief who trusted him. He was not impressed by experts in the technicalities of the law, rich rulers who kept the law, financial successes who built bigger barns, or people who tried to commit without counting the costs.

God wanted basic changes in congregations at Rome, at Corinth, in Galatia, at Ephesus, at Philippi, at Colossae, at Thessalonica, and in Asia Minor. God’s priorities: (1) total trust in Christ; (2) personal behavior consistent with godliness; and (3) respectful, loving treatment of people. Be assured that He wants changes in us. Be certain that His priorities have not changed.

Remember Jesus’ parable of the judgment in Matthew 25:31-46? Those who heard, “Come … inherit the kingdom,” were astounded. So were those who heard, “Depart from me, accursed ones …” The Lord’s priority? Respect for and treatment of the least of people. Astounding! Shocking! Unimaginable!


Adult Studies for the Summer Quarter

Ignorance cannot and does not lead to God’s mind and heart. Apathy quickly becomes ignorance. An hour of worship cannot prepare us to walk with God for a week.

Our adult studies build faith in Jesus, open lives to God’s Spirit, build relationship with God, and encourage behavior based on God’s moral teachings. All adult class teachers received this message: this quarter’s lessons require class members to study.

To assist students, each lesson is posted on our Web site with access to the teacher’s guide. Suggestions for the busy:

  • read the lesson Monday;
  • read the texts Tuesday;
  • think Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday;
  • review the lesson Saturday;
  • participate in class Sunday; and
  • record your impressions in lesson 13 on Sunday after class.

Learn, and allow God to help you with life.

Seeking God’s Help In Elder Selection

Posted by on July 2, 2000 under Sermons

[This lesson was presented extemporaneously by David Chadwell. Special thanks is given to
Helen Pratt for transcribing the tape. The transcription was edited by David Chadwell.]

    I was a member of the Rotary Club in Oxford, Mississippi. Here is the way the club selected their officers (which is probably characteristic of selecting officers in many civic clubs). First, you find somebody who was willing to be an officer. That’s always the first criteria. When you find someone willing to be an officer, there are certain criteria that individual must meet. You examine your candidates to see who meets the criteria. Then you actively pursue that person as you encourage him to accept the responsibility. With our club, it was a graduated approach. The person served in the lowest office position for one year. Each year that person was “bumped up until you worked up” to a higher office — until he was the president of the club.

    I think it is too easy for us to look upon people who function as elders as being like the officers who serve in a civic club. Find somebody willing to accept the responsibility. When you find several persons, consider the possibilities. Select from those possibilities. Eventually, through the process, put the men in position to be officers of a civic club. Unfortunately, too often we consider what occurs within the church as being a civic activity with spiritual implications.

    If that’s the view you have of selecting men to work among us as shepherds, I beg you to consider what scripture has to say. Let scripture change your perspective. Selecting men to be elders is not a matter of finding men to function as officers in a civic club. To that end, I call your attention to Ephesians 4. The verses I wish you to consider are verses 11 through 13. [Christ] gave some as apostles, and some as prophets, and some as evangelists, and some as pastors and teachers for the equipping of the saints, for the work of service and to the building up of the body of Christ until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God to a mature man to a measure of the stature which belongs to the fullness of Christ.”

    You would not claim that a person who decided he wanted to be an apostle could become such if he went through the right election process. You would not declare a person became one of the twelve by seeking the proper human acceptance. You wouldn’t do that. Please understand the function of an apostle in the New Testament was not limited to the twelve. Many functioned as apostles, but they did not receive the commission or charge the twelve received.

    I don’t think we would suggest that a person just decided that he wanted to be a prophet (a significant, active role in the first century church) and said, “Okay, I am going to go through the election process necessary. Then you just recognize me as being a prophet.” If a person didn’t have the word of the Lord, how could he be a prophet? If the Lord didn’t give him that word, how’s he going to be a prophet? It was not merely a human decision.

    Three places in the New Testament denote that God’s work among His people was done on the basis of gifts. God selected those who had gifts. Because they had gifts, they served a special role of ministry or service within His body or His kingdom. The interesting thing in Ephesians 4 is this is one of those three lists of gifts. Some of the lists, like those that are found in First Corinthians 12, we look upon as being special acts of the Holy Spirit. Our discussion automatically focuses on the spiritual aspects of the gifts. But two of those listings of gifts, Romans 12 and Ephesians 4, do not focus on what we classify as spiritual gifts. They do not list things we regard as being miraculous. In fact, some of those gifts are very operative today–evangelists, pastors and teachers. Such gifts are so familiar, have such a “ring of familiarity” about them, that we acknowledge their existence without thought.

    I think if you reflect a little, you are quite aware of the fact that not everybody has the ability (the gift) to be an effective evangelist. To be an effective evangelist, much more is involved than having correct information. If you reflect a little, you wouldn’t say that everybody that knows the information automatically has the gift of teaching.

    I was privileged this last week to study under a man who has an exceptional ability to teach which I truly. I appreciate his extensive information. However, I would never have grasped his information if he did not have the astounding ability to share that information, to make it understandable to me.

    I think that we need a great awareness as we approach asking men to work among as additional shepherds. We need to have a great awareness that we are doing something far beyond electing officers in the civic club, something far beyond saying “Would you like to do this?” We are looking for men who have the gift. This goes far beyond just meeting the qualifications.

    I have worked with a lot of elders in my years. I have worked with elders who were abundantly blessed with the gift. They were a real asset and a real blessing to the body that they served. They served God’s purposes admirably in working with people. I also have worked with elders who did not have the gift. Quite often, because they did not have the gift, they created problems. Sometimes they created problems intentionally. Sometimes they created problems unintentionally. Unintentional problems occurred because their perspective of what needed to be done (and how) didn’t coincide with the emphasis and the purposes of God.

    Note in this passage Paul acknowledged that people had different gifts: some to be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some as pastors, some as teachers. Note the purpose. The overall purpose (this may not stand out in the English text) was for the equipping of the saints. The equipping of the saints fell under two categories, two objectives. Both objectives occurred in the process of equipping the saints, equipping Christians.

    Many times we don’t think of leadership as an equipping responsibility. One of the reasons for the high burnout rate among the elders is this: we expect of them things scripture never expected. We expect them to do virtually everything. Nobody can do everything. No group can take care of all of it. I hope that you will give our current elders and the new elders your encouragement to continue in the direction of finding people who will care for areas of responsibility. Our elders are trying to take care of far too many things. Their task is equipping, not taking care of everything–EQUIPPING.

    What are they to equip Christians to do? They equip Christians to serve, to immerse themselves in the work of service, to immerse themselves in building up the body of Christ. They are to shepherd us in ways which will result in the fact that the West-Ark congregation serves wonderfully in seeking to accomplish God’s purposes.

    At the same time, we are not merely developing an effective way to get people to enter. The elders guide us in ways that help us work with each other so that we stay. It has been said that we have an excellent theology of “getting in,” but we don’t have a good theology about “staying in.” Unfortunately, I think that is pretty accurate. We pride ourselves on knowing very well what to tell a person to “get in,” but the truth is, we haven’t grown much in developing an understanding of how to help people stay in. If you don’t think that is a problem, go home and thumb through your old directory. Look through it.

    How long were roles of giftedness to continue? How long were these first century roles of giftedness to continue? Paul said to a Gentile congregation in Ephesus these roles would continue “until we all attain to the unity of the faith.”

    We need to be very careful about what we define “the faith” to be. ” The faith” is not what we decide the faith to be. “The faith” is what Paul had in mind when he wrote to these Gentile Christians. “The faith” was understanding that the eternal living God was at work in Jesus Christ to bring into existence His people, His body, His kingdom.

    “The faith” was not talking about whether you do or do not have a kitchen in the church building. This is not talking about how you do or do not use the auditorium (heaven forbid we call it the sanctuary). This is not about what does or does not happen in the Family Life Center. Paul wrote to people who had been thoroughly pagan. These people had been converted to Christ.

    It was very difficult to leave your baggage behind. It still is. Many of our problems in today’s church are the result of people bringing their baggage with them. This baggage existed in previous commitments prior to conversion. These Gentile converts had a lot of baggage they brought with them. Look at the first three chapters. Go home and read them. Look at the way Paul tried to get them to understand this: “It is not your pagan past that defines spiritual reality. It is Jesus Christ that defines spiritual reality. Stop looking at your pagan past. Look at what God did in Jesus Christ. That’s the only way you are going to define spiritual reality in God.”

    If they did that, he wanted them to understand “you fix your faith on what God did in Jesus Christ, not on what you thought the pagan gods did.” We have taken “the faith” and applied a thousand different ways to address whatever irritates us or whatever we don’t like. Paul is not talking about such matters. He said to people that came from a very paganistic background, “You no longer define what is happening in the world on the basis of your pagan experiences. You no longer define what is happening politically or in any thing else on the basis of pagan experiences. You see God actively working in our world through Jesus Christ, and you believe it. You believe it!!”

    Further, Paul said to them, “We want to grow to a knowledge of the Son of God. We’re seeking a commonalty in our knowledge of God’s Son.” They knew all about the pagan gods. They had known about the pagan gods for generations. They worshipped the pagan gods in the past. They didn’t have the knowledge of Jesus Christ that they had of the pagan gods. He is telling them, “Knowledge of God’s Son is the objective of men who provide leadership and teaching for us, who seek to equip us to serve, who seek to equip us to build up Christ’s body (not to divide or fracture it). They will lead us in building up Christ’s body so it will become stronger and healthier. This is the way they will do this: they will move us to a faith that focuses totally in Jesus Christ. We will grow to a common understanding of who this Jesus Christ is.”

    It saddens me to see how many Christians have a much better grasp of positions of the Church of Christ than a grasp of the positions of Jesus Christ. That really saddens me. It saddens me because they are not the same thing. They’re not!! There are times that we take a very strong stance on something that represents the Church of Christ. Often that stance depends on our background and our heritage. That stance may not have a thing in the world to do with Jesus Christ.

    Yet, we sometimes affirm that we have come to unity of knowledge. (Often that means the people in agreement with us declare that we have taken “the proper stance.” However, it is NOT the claim that we had reached a common understanding of Jesus Christ.) Coming to unity of knowledge is presumed to be the common agreement about what is important.

    What is important is Jesus, and the commonalty of knowledge that Paul wanted the church at Ephesus to attain was the knowledge of the Son of God. And what would be the result of that knowledge? Maturity. Knowledge of God’s Son would not produce abundant evidence of spiritual immaturity. Knowledge of the God’s Son would produce maturity. How would that maturity be evident? They would begin measuring themselves, Christ’s body, Christ’s community, by the fullness of Christ. The standard of measure would not be how many people thought they should follow a teaching of Christ, how many people were happy about what was taking place, or how many people were happy about the direction. They could look at Christ, and when we saw Christ, they could see themselves increasingly reflect Christ.

    Fundamentally in this text, Paul said this would not happen by their wisdom. They would not become such good people, such marvelous folks, that they (of your own human wisdom and human devices) would become the body of Christ filled with the fullness of Christ.

    The church has not become Christ’s body filled with Christ’s fullness (in human wisdom and behavior) in 2000 years. Do you want to talk about division in the church? You want to talk about personality conflict in the church? You want to talk about issues in the church? How many of those things are focused on issues of the 20th and 21st centuries, not on first century messages from Jesus Christ? It hasn’t happened in 2000 years.

    We are not a people who drink deeply from the spirit of Jesus Christ. We have become very humanistic in our perspective and focus. We have become convinced (even certain) that we can achieve God’s purposes without inviting God to be a part of what we do. Oh, no we can’t!!! If you disagree, look at our approach. It’s our knowledge, it’s our planning, it’s our consideration, it’s what we think is best, it is what we think will work, it is our methodology, it is our system. “No, it’s not.” Yes it is. Only when we really struggle do we say, “God, would You help us out here?” When God helps us out, too often we say, “Thank You, God; we can take it from here.”

    We cannot permit that to happen. We are in partnership with God through Jesus Christ. Unless God is an active partner, God’s purposes will not be accomplished in us. It must not happen. How do we include God in this partnership? First, we put the focus where the focus should be–on Jesus Christ. That’s where it needs to be; that’s where it must always be; that’s where it must remain– ON JESUS CHRIST. Our commitment is to understand Him.

    When you understand Christ, you understand God. If I understand Jesus’ message correctly during his mission, if I understand his message in the gospel of John, this is his emphasis: “If you understand me, you understand God. I can’t say anything except what I see and hear from the Father. So everything you see happening in me came from God. When you see me, you see God.” We don’t want to be like Thomas, “Show us the Father.” We want to understand “If you have seen me, you have seen the Father.” Jesus was not saying that he and God were the same “being.” Jesus said, “If you want to see what God would be like in flesh and blood, look at me. If God the Father were flesh and blood, nothing any differently would happen. He would live like I live; He would emphasize what I emphasize.”

    The emphasis would be the same; the priorities would be the same; the focus would be same. So, if God came down and looked us in the eye and said, “This is what I am about”, there would not be one iota of difference in what He said and in what occurred in Jesus’ life. We need to get back to that faith. We really need to get back to “the faith” in the fact that God was at work in Christ. God will work in us as we focus on Christ.

    The second thing that needs to happen is this: we need to understand that God must be an active partner in what happens. He must be. What we do cannot rest upon human wisdom. It must rest upon divine wisdom. We can’t merely read and claim because we read that our conclusions (reached primarily by our own wisdom) are God’s conclusions. Thus, we are involving God. NO!!!

    “I don’t understand how that works.” I don’t either. Paul didn’t either. Paul said God is beyond our comprehension. Who is it that can search Him out? Who can know His ways? Jewish Christians were told that God accepted Gentile Christians as God’s true children. Paul said (believe it or not) that Gentile Christians were a part of Israel. Talk about short-circuiting the entire Jewish religious system! When Paul told Jewish Christians that the Gentile Christians were Israel, they couldn’t believe it. They couldn’t grasp it. “You must be kidding!” Paul said, “No, I am not kidding. It is time that you realize that you do not possess the ability to understand all the ways of God. You can’t fathom all the things of God. God does things that are beyond your comprehension.”

    I am here to tell you that in the business of us being a community of God’s people, that God will do things in partnership with us that exceed our comprehension. If we are going to limit God by our comprehension, we will not be walking with God. Limiting God to our comprehension takes faith all out of it. “The faith” cannot be focused in us. “The faith” must be focused in God.

    How will we to do that? Let me share with you how people did that from the Old Testament forward. They invited God to be in partnership with them. In this week’s bulletin article, we cited Hosea’s statement (8:4). That was just one reference; there are many references in the Prophets where the prophets say, “One of your big problems is you don’t ask God for help.”

    Illustration: Your child is really struggling with a problem. He or she comes to you and says, “I expected you to help me with this.” You say, “I would have (in fact I wanted to), but you never asked for my help.” To those of us with grown children, do you just go and inject yourself in any problem that occurs? Aren’t you pappa? Aren’t you momma? You see your grown child making a very foolish decision which will absolutely, predictably lead to consequences that are very undesirable. Do you go get your adult child by both shoulders and shake a little sense into his or her head? Do you say, “Look! You are doing it all wrong.” Well, I guarantee you if you do that, it won’t work. If you do that once, he or she will never invite you to help with his or her struggles.

    Sometimes about all we can do is let people make their mistakes. When they make their mistakes and say, “Why did you let me do that?” you tell them the truth: “You didn’t ask me for help. You didn’t invite me to work with you.” We can say, “God, why did You let us do that?” God too often can answer, “You didn’t ask Me to be involved.”

    “God, why weren’t You involved?” “You didn’t invite me. You didn’t want me to be a part of the process.” I think I can predict what all of us would like in our new elders. All of us would like men who have a special kind of heart to be elders, would we not? All of us would like men who would lead in the direction that would encourage us to become more spiritual than we are now, wouldn’t we? We would like men who would help us understand how that we could reflect the light of Jesus Christ. We would like men who would lead us in ways that heal and help within the body and light of Jesus Christ, and lead us in ways to help in attracting people out of the darkness to Jesus’ light. We would like that. We would like to have men in whom we have confidence. We would like men to whom we could go and discuss our problems knowing that they would keep confidentiality. We would like men who didn’t pretend they had all the answers. They won’t, nobody does.

    We would like men who would say, “Yes, I see what is really weighing on your heart; let’s pray about it.” We would like men who would look you in the eye and tell you, “I am grieved that is troubling your life. I want you to know that I am praying about it.” You know they mean it. Every day you had the assurance “They think about me; I am in their prayers.” We would like men who provide spiritual help when they can be of help.

    Isn’t that what we would like? Of course, it is. Do you think that you are gifted enough that you can discern who those men are without God’s help? How many of you can read hearts? How many of you can see what is going on inside a person? Does God read hearts? Yes, He does! Is that not the emphasis from Old Testament to New, that God is the God who reads hearts? Is it not the heart that determines God’s receptivity to the individual? Isn’t that the continuing evidence in the Old and New Testament?

    If we want that kind of man with that kind of heart to be an elder, what do we need to do? The FIRST thing we need to do (not the LAST) is say “God, we want you in this partnership from A to Z. We want to invite You into a continuing partnership in everything we do.”

    Let me share with you what we will do to invite God into the partnership as we select elders. As I stated this morning, as you saw in the bulletin, we set aside 24 hours in which we as the community of Christians ask God to work with our hearts and the hearts of the men who will consider this service. We wish God to work with the whole process because the ultimate is God’s purposes be done, not ours. That is what we want. For twenty-four hours we declare to God that it important to us for God’s purposes to be done. We will ask Him to be active. We, as a congregation, will make a special appeal for God to be involved.

    On the bulletin board are several sheets broken into 30 minute segments. Let me explain carefully what we will do. Number one, if you want, sign the list. Anybody can come and pray at any time. That is the bottom line. Anybody can come and pray at any time. Whatever is convenient for you, do it. It is come and go. If you can come 15 minutes, fine. If you can come 45 minutes, fine. Anybody at any time during the day or night in that 24 hours is invited to come to the building and pray.

    We are designating two rooms (room 100 and room 106) as places for prayer. Room 100 will be for men and women who wish to assemble together with men audibly leading the prayers (if audible prayers are offered). You can choose any method of prayer you wish. Room 106 is set aside for women. If there are groups of women who wish to come and pray as a group, you are encouraged to do so. We have some deeply spiritual women who are quite active in this congregation with WINGS and other such programs. There may be a group of women who just want to get together and pray. Room 106 is for you women who wish to pray together in intercessory prayer on behalf of the congregation.

    What’s the list about on the board? The list on the board just states that someone will be here, physically present and praying. I’ve already signed it for 2:00 a.m. Saturday morning. I wanted one of the difficult times. All the list says is somebody has committed to be at the building at that time. If you sign the list, you are not responsible for all the prayers at that time. You are not the coordinator. You are not responsible for anything. You are only saying, “I will be here.” Anybody who wishes to come will know someone is here. We would like to have somebody here and present all twenty-four hours. The building will be open. The foyer will be open. I hope before this evening, before we go home, a lot of names will be on that list.

    Remember, if you sign the list you are not saying you will lead all the prayers. You are not saying that you are in charge of anything. You are just saying that you will be here at that time. If you want to come 30 minutes, that’s fine. If you want to come an hour, that’s fine. What we are hoping, what I am hoping, is that many of you who are retired can take the daylight hours that are not filled with conflicts such a jobs. Many work and can’t come in the daytime. I am hoping that many who are retired will say, “I will be here.”

    Anybody can come at any time and join the persons here. I hope those of us who have fixed schedules will be present when our schedules permit us to come. I hope by Wednesday night that the list will be full.

    Please remember, anybody can come pray at anytime.

    Somebody asks, “Why do it at the church building? Why not just let’s stay home?” We could. I want this to say something special to us as well as to God. I want it to say to us that we are willing to be inconvenienced because we believe partnership with God is that essential. We want to do something that we wouldn’t ordinarily do. We want our prayers to make an additional statement to God about the fact that this is a serious invitation. We are not about business as usual. We don’t want a future that focuses on business as usual. We want to be more God-centered and Christ-centered as a congregation. We need men to be our shepherds who will help us go in that direction. We need men who will care about us.

    I am asking you to take one of the thirty minute slots and say, “Yes, I’ll be here that thirty minutes.” Sign it. Even if you do not sign the sheets, find a time in that twenty-four hours to come to the building and pray.

    Separate the two things. If you can accept responsibility to commit for one of those 30 minutes, great, we need you. We want to know somebody will be here. If you can’t accept that responsibility, find some time in that twenty-four hours to come and pray. Ask God to be very involved in our process. Use any method of prayer you wish–silent prayers, chain prayers, any kind of prayers you wish to pray; that’s up to you. Just come in quietly, sit down, and be a part of the petition to God.

    With God, we will succeed. Without God, we cannot succeed. I hope you believe that. I hope you believe that enough to be a part of this special day to invite God to be a part of what we do.

    We need men who will be shepherds. Sheep are hard to take care of. Ask any elder. Sheep are hard to take care of. We are hard to take care of. We need men with the gift who care about hearts and who care about eternity to help us. We ask you to help by praying.

    God loved each of us so much that He did something none of us would ever consider doing to create opportunity. He literally let His Son die. He literally let His Son pay the price for every sin we committed. He did that for those in His body, and He did that for those not in His body. We want you to know that He did that for you. If you need to do what Winston and David did this morning, (place God more at the core of your existence, your being) and you want us to pray with you, we would love to pray with you. If you reached the point in your life that you need to form a covenant with God by being baptized into Christ because you have repented, if the core of your being wishes to redirect itself to God’s purposes, we would love to do that. If in any way we can encourage you, if in any way you need Christ, we invite you to him as we stand and sing.

Addendum to sermon after song:

    There is something I want you to pray about. I want you to think about this. There wasn’t enough time to say everything I wanted to say. But I want you to take this home with you. We don’t think about this often, and we need to think about it seriously. In your personal prayers, please pray that God guides us not to hurt anyone. The people that you will recommend for consideration will be among the finest people in this congregation. They are already active in serving. We don’t want their wives hurt, we don’t want the men hurt. It has occurred. It commonly occurs.

    Somebody asks, “Can I submit your name?” The person prays and agonizes over that request, and says, “Yes, you can submit my name.” Your name is submitted, and nothing happens. How can that occur and the person not feel rejected? How can that occur and it not hurt his wife? Whatever happens, we want to do everything within our power to let these people know we love you. We love what you do for this congregation. We want God to give us the insight and the wisdom to show love, not to inflict hurt.

    Sometimes people say to me, “I don’t know how your wife does what she does.” I don’t either; I never have. It takes a special person to do what she does. Something does occur in her life that is extremely difficult, and it is very applicable to this situation. It really distresses her when somebody hurts me. Why? She has no recourse. She can’t even say anything. But she knows when I am hurt. She knows when I am wounded, and it is extremely difficult for her to witness that.

    It will be extremely difficult for any wife whose husband is under consideration. Let there be no wounds – let there be no wounds. Let there be a lot of love. And pray, earnestly pray, not only in those twenty-four hours, but also in your personal prayers. Earnestly pray that not only will we make wise decisions, but that we will make them with such love and with such respect that nobody is hurt.

They Did Not! We Must!

Posted by on under Bulletin Articles

Among the ungodly heart and mind conditions Hosea condemned in Israel was this one: Israel failed to include God in their decisions (Hosea 8:4). Brad, Ted, and I asked the elders to designate 24 hours as a time of special prayer for the congregation. God must be the foundation and the heart of our decision as we select additional elders. We request that members be at the building for a continuous 24 hours of prayer from 6 a.m. Friday, July 7, to 6 a.m. Saturday, July 8.

Room 100 (off the foyer) is designated for mixed groups (men and women) with men as audible prayer leaders. Room 106 (off the foyer) is designated for groups of women who wish to pray together. A sign-up sheet will break this 24-hour period into 30 minute segments. We ask for people to sign the sheet for specific 30 minute segments. This only means that you agree to be at the building at that time and will be in one of the rooms as coordinator. Anyone may come at any time and stay as long as they wish. You do NOT have to sign this list to attend. It is a “come and go” situation.

The prayer time may be used as those present wish: silent prayer, one group leader, multiple group leaders, chain prayers, or a mix of approaches to God in prayer.

Focus this prayer period on the congregation, its spiritual needs, and its spiritual growth and development. Some focus thoughts:

  • Praise God for the blessings He has given the congregation.
  • Thank God for the privileges enjoyed in being His people.
  • Seek God’s guidance as we select additional elders.

Ask God to:

  • Guide our hearts in our actions.
  • Shape our motives in our choices.
  • Work in the hearts of godly men to make this sacrifice.
  • Help us do everything with great sensitivity.
  • Encourage and uphold the wives of the men who agree to be considered.
  • Help us avoid creating pain and grief for these brothers and sisters.
  • Use this occasion to move the congregation to a higher level of love and caring.
  • Help the choices made advance His purposes in the congregation.
  • Help this congregation be what He wants and do what He wants.
  • Help us be a people who genuinely reflect the love and compassion of Jesus.

Our God and Our Chaos

Posted by on June 25, 2000 under Sermons

Do you know someone who truly, genuinely misunderstands you? I do not mean that this person occasionally misunderstands what you said. I do not mean that this person occasionally misunderstands your actions.

I mean this person does not understand YOU. When you speak, this person rarely understands what you said. In fact, he or she responds by saying, “What you mean is …,” but it is never what you meant. This person rarely understands your actions. They never grasp your purposes. When he or she explains what you are trying to do, you just shake your head in disbelief.

You tried to help this person understand you better. You tried to build bridges. You kindly tried to correct incorrect thoughts and ideas. But it was hopeless. The harder you tried, the more he or she misunderstood.

Because this person misunderstands you, he or she also misrepresents you. He or she is not malicious. In fact, this person always tells others what close friends you are. This person loves to talk about how well he or she knows you. He or she is convinced, “I understand you better than you understand yourself.” But the truth is that he or she does not understand you at all. And the truth is the failure to understand you creates a lot of problems for you.

Do you know such a person? Do you have such an acquaintance?

Is this the way you represent God? Do you misrepresent God because you are so certain that you understand God–when you do not know Him well.

  1. The first chapter of Genesis, which is the Bible’s first chapter, is fascinating.
    1. Genesis 1 says something fundamental about our world, us, and God.
      1. It reveals God’s involvement in and interaction with the beginning of our physical world.
      2. It reveals some basic understandings about us.
      3. And it also reveals some basics about God.

    2. “What basic understanding about God does it give us?”
      1. The Bible opens with these words (Genesis 1:1,2):
        In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. The earth was formless and void, and darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was moving over the surface of the waters.
      2. The words, “The earth was formless and void,” can be translated “the earth was waste and empty.”
        1. Before God’s presence expressed itself, there was chaos.
        2. When God’s presence expressed itself, chaos was destroyed.
      3. “So what does that tell us about God?”
        1. The presence of chaos is precisely the opposite of the presence of God.
        2. When God is present, chaos is destroyed.
        3. God replaces chaos with order.
        4. God’s order creatively brings into existence things that are “good.”
      4. God did this and continues to do this through the work of His Spirit.
        1. The business of God’s Spirit is using the presence of God to destroy chaos, to create order, and to bring good into existence.
        2. God always has used His Spirit for that purpose.
      5. Every time things move toward God’s order, the result produces good.

    3. That basic understanding is necessary if faith is to exist in any person.
      1. Do you believe that God produces order out of chaos?
      2. Do you believe that when God produces order out of chaos, good comes into existence?

  2. The fact that chaos and order are natural enemies provides us a basic insight into God.
    1. Evil is the enemy of God, and God is the enemy of evil.
      1. Evil opposes order and promotes chaos.
      2. God opposes chaos and promotes good.

    2. Consider that truth in a very practical way.
      1. God promotes order, stability, and good in human relationships.
        1. How many of you have a relationship that would be described as chaotic?
          1. I am talking about a relationship that causes struggles and problems.
          2. I am talking about a relationship that is more likely to experience bad instead of good.
          3. I am talking about a relationship that commonly causes you and the other person trouble.
        2. When this relationship moves toward God, it moves toward orderliness, stability, and good.
        3. When this relationship moves away from God, it moves toward chaos, instability, and problems.
      2. God promotes order, stability, and good in marriage relationships.
        1. How many of you would describe your marriage relationship as chaos?
          1. I mean it is very troubled and has frequent problems.
          2. I mean it causes both of you constant anxiety.
          3. I mean your interaction causes distress and frustration.
        2. When your marriage relationship moves toward God, it moves toward the orderliness of respect, the stability of love, and good produced by honor.
        3. When your marriage relationship moves away from God, it moves toward the chaos of disrespect, the instability of lovelessness, and the problems of contempt.
      3. God promotes order, stability, and good in parent-child relationships.
        1. How many of you parents would describe your relationship with your child as chaos?
          1. I mean it is commonly confrontational.
          2. I mean it is hostile because you antagonize each other.
          3. I mean your horrible attitudes, horrible words, and horrible treatment of each other end in frustration, anger, and distress.
        2. In those times that the relationship moves toward God, there is the orderliness of respect, the stability of love, and good produced by honor.
        3. In those times that your relationship moves away from God, there is the chaos of disrespect, the instability of lovelessness, and the problems of contempt.

    3. If you do nothing more than honestly examine human relationships, something becomes obvious.
      1. God’s creative force moves all human relationships to a higher level of good.
      2. Evil’s disruptive force moves all human relationships to a lower level of confusion and chaos.
      3. That is why respect, love, and kindness expressed in the proper treatment of people is a fundamental reflection of faith in God.
        1. It is not just a matter of commands and laws.
        2. It is not just a system imposed on us by divine authority.
        3. It is the intentional union of ourselves with the eternal force that opposes chaos.

  3. What God did in creation in Genesis 1, He did again through recreation in Jesus Christ.
    1. The man or woman who exists in Jesus Christ has been recreated.
      1. Listen to Paul’s statement to the Ephesian Christians (Ephesians 4:22-24):
        that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.
      2. Listen to Paul’s statement to the Colossian Christians (Colossians 3:9,10):
        Do not lie to one another, since you laid aside the old self with its evil practices, and have put on the new self who is being renewed to a true knowledge according to the image of the One who created him-
      3. Listen to John’s statement about Jesus (John 1:1-5):
        In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things came into being through Him, and apart from Him nothing came into being that has come into being. In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men. The Light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it.
      4. Listen to Jesus’ statement about people and the light (John 3:19-21):
        This is the judgment, that the Light has come into the world, and men loved the darkness rather than the Light, for their deeds were evil. For everyone who does evil hates the Light, and does not come to the Light for fear that his deeds will be exposed. But he who practices the truth comes to the Light, so that his deeds may be manifested as having been wrought in God.”

    2. The man or woman who belongs to Christ has been recreated by God.
      1. As God’s new creation, he or she opposes the chaos in his or her life.
      2. Behavior that sustains the chaos must end.
      3. Attitudes and emotions that sustain the chaos must end.
      4. That is the purpose of baptism.
        1. The one who trusts God by turning from evil’s chaos is baptized.
        2. He or she is baptized to let God destroy the chaos by recreating him or her in Christ.
        3. Baptism is not some mysterious religious ordinance.
        4. The person baptized consciously unites himself or herself with the God who destroys chaos and recreates the person.

    3. Consider the progression.
      1. God destroyed chaos and replaced it with good.
      2. God made man and woman and placed him and her in the center of every good thing God made.
      3. Evil could not replace God’s creation with chaos, but evil could pervert God’s creation by placing chaos in the lives of people.
      4. From the moment Satan introduced the world to evil, chaos plagued the lives and relationships of people.
      5. But God sent Jesus to remove us from the control of chaos and recreate us.

[Prayer: God, help us understand that You rescue us from chaos, and help us live by trusting Your deliverance. Be the source of our strength as we reject chaos in our lives.]

All of us struggle against the forces of chaos in our lives. Do you want to see how much you trust God? Do you want a genuine measure of your faith? We show that we truly trust God when we give our specific struggles with chaos to God in the confidence that God can restore order in our lives and move us toward good.

Is that what you do with your chaos? Or do you declare, “God cannot help me with this”?

If You Could Be God For a Day …

Posted by on June 18, 2000 under Sermons

What would you do if you had the governor’s powers and options for one week? If you could do anything the law allowed a governor to do, what would you do?

What would you do if you had the powers and options of the president for one week? If you could do anything the law permits a president to do, what would you do?

If you had the right and the power to rewrite the tax laws of this nation, what would you do? What changes would you make in the tax code?

If you had the right and the power to change the Social Security system, what changes would you make? How would you make the system different?

Suppose you were given those rights and powers with a condition. The condition: you had to personally witness the impact of your choices on the lives of each man, woman, and child affected by your decisions.

  1. Suppose for just one day, 24 hours, you could function in God’s position.
    1. For just one day:
      1. You could see what God sees.
      2. You could hear what God hears.
      3. You saw and knew the hearts and the motives of every individual.
      4. You saw and knew every expression of evil in people and their actions.

    2. Suppose that just for one day you saw everything evil that occurred in the entire world.
      1. Suppose worldwide you saw every child who was abused, and you saw every child abuser.
        1. You knew what happened within each child because of the abuse.
        2. You knew exactly why the abuser committed those horrible acts and used those horrible words.
      2. Suppose for just one day worldwide you saw every spouse who was abused, and you saw the husband or wife who was the abuser.
        1. You knew what happened within the adult who was abused.
        2. You knew exactly why the abuser committed those horrible acts and used those horrible words.
      3. Suppose just for one day worldwide you saw every person who was raped.
        1. You knew what happened to the life of each rape victim.
        2. You knew exactly why each rapist committed the act.
      4. Suppose that just for one day worldwide you saw every assault, every injustice, every murder, every person in despair, and every person in grief.
        1. You saw how the life of every victim was affected.
        2. You knew the motives of every person who committed the evil.

    3. And suppose on that day that you had God’s power.
      1. What would you do?
      2. How would you use your knowledge and power?

  2. Before the Babylonian empire captured the nation of Judah and placed them in captivity, God gave Judah a special message through His prophet Isaiah.
    1. God through Isaiah made it very clear that their evil had reached a level that He could no longer ignore or forgive.
      1. They were so thoroughly evil and rebellious that they were like a person that did not have a single, healthy place on his or her body (1:4-6).
      2. Their worship so sickened God that He hid His eyes when they sacrificed and closed His ears when they prayed (1:10-15).
      3. The city of Jerusalem was like a prostitute who helped murders and thieves take advantage of widows and orphans (1:21-23).
      4. God promised that the time of reckoning would come soon, and He would punish all their evil (1:24-31).

    2. As God continued to speak to Judah through Isaiah, basically Isaiah declared two things.
      1. God documented their evil and proved they were a wicked people.
      2. God promised that vengeance and devastation would consume Jerusalem and all the people of Judah.

    3. And it happened.
      1. Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, starved Jerusalem into submission.
      2. Israelites were taken as captives to Babylon; they lost the “good life” and became slaves.
      3. The city of Jerusalem and the temple were completely destroyed.
        1. The city and its walls were reduced to rubble.
        2. The rubble served as a home for wild animals.

  3. After Judah was taken captive into Babylon, God through Isaiah invited Judah to come home to Jerusalem (Isaiah 55).
    1. Read Isaiah 55:1-13 with me.
      “Ho! Every one who thirsts, come to the waters; And you who have no money come, buy and eat. Come, buy wine and milk Without money and without cost. Why do you spend money for what is not bread, And your wages for what does not satisfy? Listen carefully to Me, and eat what is good, And delight yourself in abundance. Incline your ear and come to Me. Listen, that you may live; And I will make an everlasting covenant with you, According to the faithful mercies shown to David. Behold, I have made him a witness to the peoples, A leader and commander for the peoples. Behold, you will call a nation you do not know, And a nation which knows you not will run to you, Because of the Lord your God, even the Holy One of Israel; For He has glorified you.” Seek the Lord while He may be found; Call upon Him while He is near. Let the wicked forsake his way And the unrighteous man his thoughts; And let him return to the Lord, And He will have compassion on him, And to our God, For He will abundantly pardon. “For My thoughts are not your thoughts, Nor are your ways My ways,” declares the Lord. “For as the heavens are higher than the earth, So are My ways higher than your ways And My thoughts than your thoughts. For as the rain and the snow come down from heaven, And do not return there without watering the earth And making it bear and sprout, And furnishing seed to the sower and bread to the eater; So will My word be which goes forth from My mouth; It will not return to Me empty, Without accomplishing what I desire, And without succeeding in the matter for which I sent it.” For you will go out with joy And be led forth with peace; The mountains and the hills will break forth into shouts of joy before you, And all the trees of the field will clap their hands. Instead of the thorn bush the cypress will come up, And instead of the nettle the myrtle will come up, And it will be a memorial to the Lord, For an everlasting sign which will not be cut off.
    2. The chapter’s structure is fascinating.
      1. First God speaks (55:1-5).
        1. “All you exiles who realize how much you need Me, come to the waters.”
        2. “I will bring you to My blessings; it will not be you; it will be Me.”
          1. “You do not need money.”
          2. “You need to trust my grace, my goodness.”
        3. “I will be as dependable and as merciful to you as I was to David.”
        4. “If you trust Me, as David did, you will be a witness to the world to show what I can do.”
      2. Then Isaiah speaks (55:6,7).
        1. “God is calling you; come to Him while you can locate Him.”
        2. “Turn to Him, and He will have compassion on you, and pardon you.”
      3. Then God speaks (55:8-11).
        1. “Do not try to figure Me out; just trust Me enough to come to Me.”
        2. “My purposes will be accomplished; what I say will happen; depend on it!”
      4. Then Isaiah speaks (55:12,13).
        1. “Go with joy while God calls you and find peace.”
        2. “If you will trust God and return to Him, the whole creation will applaud you.”
        3. “Everything that opposed your return will now help you.”

  4. Judah could not understand God’s compassion, mercy, and grace.
    1. “You mean the God who destroyed us because we were wicked now wants us to come back to Him?”
      1. “You mean the God who knew how murderous, arrogant, idolatrous, materialistic, and evil we were would just take us back?”
      2. “You mean the God who was sick of our worship, who refused to look at our sacrifices, who refused to listen to our prayers would take us back?”

    2. And God answered, “Oh, yes, if you will repent and trust me, I will take you back.”
      1. “I will not only take you back, but I will bless you.”
      2. “I will not only take you back, but I will make you my people.”
      3. “I will not only take you back, but I will make an eternal agreement with you.”

    3. And Judah said, “But God, that is not the way we would do it–destroy us, make us slaves, and then restore us–we would not do it that way.”
      1. And God replied, “Of course you would not.”
      2. “I do not reason like you reason; I do not react like you react; I do not think like you think.”
      3. “I think and act in ways that you never think and act.”
      4. “My ways and your ways are different; my thoughts and your thoughts are different.”
      5. “Trust me, repent, and come.”

[Prayer: God, help us stop trying to figure You out. Instead, help us follow You because we trust You.]

Can you forgive, accept, and restore loving relationship with a parent who abused you? a spouse who rejected you? a boss who exploited you? A person who caused you enormous pain? Probably not. We do not do things like that.

God can. God does. He can and does because He is filled with compassion, mercy, and grace. And that is why I am glad that none of us ever are God for a day.

How Do We Measure Trust?

Posted by on under Bulletin Articles

“Faith” is one of our “religious words.” Christians have a “religious vocabulary.” We took common words with ordinary meanings and made them religious words with special meanings. Consider an example. When do we have faith in our husbands or wives? in our children? in our parents? in our God? Is our concept of faith in God different from our concept of faith in a person?

The best word in current English language to accurately reflect the concept of faith is trust. When do we trust our husbands or wives? our children? our parents? That which expresses trust in key human relationships expresses trust in God.

How do we measure trust in human relationships? What do we mean when we say, “I trust you!” How can someone determine our trust exists and measure it? In that same manner, trust exists and is measured in relationship with God. God determines if it exists and to what extent it exists in the same way we determine a person trusts us.

If a person tries to reduce trust to words and good intentions, we are not impressed. Forgetfulness and empty words attack trust. Deceit and exploitation destroy trust.

We expect of God what we cannot expect of people. When we reduce trust to words or good intentions, we expect God to be impressed. When we are forgetful, deceitful, use empty words, use acts that exploit, or even say to God, “I do not trust You in this matter,” we still expect God to “understand” that we believe in Him.

How does God measure our trust? In the same way we measure another person’s trust. The truest measure of trust is not demonstrated when we are secure within ourselves. The truest measure of trust is demonstrated through our insecurities. Trusting when we know that we can “make everything okay” cannot measure our confidence in God. Trusting when we are vulnerable and afraid powerfully measures our confidence in God.

Trust is inseparably linked to the feeling of security. We prefer to trust when security is not in question. However, when our security is not in question, little or no trust is required or expressed. Great trust expresses itself in the face of great insecurity. Trust in that which is trustworthy creates peace in the face of insecurity.

We cannot demonstrate great faith in God “when we have it covered.” We demonstrate great faith in God when we trust Him while everything declares we are insecure. When God is our source of security as we confront our vulnerability, we trust God.

Finding the Wealth

Posted by on June 11, 2000 under Sermons

All of us hear our share of weird statements about our work. That is because people who never did our work do not understand our work. I do not understand the work that many of you do, and many of you do not understand the work I do. I would not swap jobs with many of you, and many of you would not swap jobs with me.

Is it not true that some people admire you because they cannot understand how you do what you do? Is it not true that some people think you “have it made”?

Both reactions are frequently expressed to me concerning my work. This week someone said in all sincerity, “I do not see how you do it. How do you do what you do week after week?” And there are people who think I “have it made.” “You just have to talk two or three times a week, and really you just work hard one day a week.”

When we were on the mission field we received letters from American friends who said, “I do not see how you live in those conditions.” At that same time, we had visits from African friends who wanted to be as prosperous as we were.

Consider a thought that most of us will acknowledge to be true. Meaningful work that produces blessings always requires sacrifice and the determined commitment.

  1. Paul never visited the Christians who lived at Colossae.
    1. He invested a major effort to teach in the city of Ephesus.
      1. Acts 19 states that Paul taught in the Jewish synagogue for three months, then left that teaching environment because some in the synagogue publicly spoke evil of his teachings (Acts 19:8,9).
      2. He then began teaching daily in the school of Tyrannus for two years (Acts 19:9,10).
        1. As a result, people throughout Asia heard the word of the Lord.
        2. People came to Ephesus from all over Asia.
        3. Some of these visitors studied with Paul and took what they learned home with them.
        4. On occasions Paul sent men to specific cities to study with the people.
        5. Paul’s work in Ephesus produced the congregation in Colossae.
      3. When this congregation heard that Paul, their spiritual mentor, was in prison, it had to discourage them.
        1. Paul also was concerned by the report he received about the focus and foundation of the Colossian Christians’ faith.
        2. So, from prison, Paul wrote them a letter, and we call this letter Colossians.

    2. Read with me Colossians 2:1-7.
      For I want you to know how great a struggle I have on your behalf and for those who are at Laodicea, and for all those who have not personally seen my face, that their hearts may be encouraged, having been knit together in love, and attaining to all the wealth that comes from the full assurance of understanding, resulting in a true knowledge of God’s mystery, that is, Christ Himself, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. I say this so that no one will delude you with persuasive argument. For even though I am absent in body, nevertheless I am with you in spirit, rejoicing to see your good discipline and the stability of your faith in Christ. Therefore as you have received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in Him, having been firmly rooted and now being built up in Him and established in your faith, just as you were instructed, and overflowing with gratitude.

  2. Paul wanted them to realize that it was not easy for him to do what he did.
    1. I do not think that Paul was making a pitch for their sympathy.
      1. In this letter Paul emphasized some sobering truths.
      2. It was extremely important for them to consider carefully the things Paul shared in this letter.
      3. It was spiritually critical for them to understand the importance of Jesus Christ.

    2. How they received what Paul said would be greatly influenced by their view of Paul.
      1. If they saw Paul’s life as a life of convenience, that would affect the way they received his message.
      2. If they understood that Paul struggled, and they were partially the cause for his struggles, they would receive his message quite differently.
      3. Paul said, “I want you to know that I greatly struggle for you.”
      4. “My struggles are not just for you, but for all the Christians in that region that have never seen me in person.”

    3. Paul wanted them to have four experiences.
      1. He wanted their hearts to be encouraged.
      2. He wanted them to be knit together in love; he wanted a powerful closeness based on love to bind them together.
      3. He wanted them to discover and possess the wealth.
      4. He wanted them to have the complete assurance that is produced by understanding.

    4. Those four things would be the result of this essential knowledge: they had to have true knowledge of God’s mystery.
      1. Last Sunday night we discussed Paul’s use of the word mystery.
      2. A mystery was something that had been hidden in the past but was now clearly revealed.
      3. The true knowledge of God’s mystery was based on knowing Jesus Christ.
      4. Let’s use a question to focus our understanding on Paul’s point: how can you understand God and what He is doing?
      5. There were different ideas at Colossae about how a person could understand God and determine what God was doing.
        1. Some thought the way to know God and understand what He did was to possess a special kind of knowledge that only a few people had.
        2. Some thought the way to know God and what He did was to approach God through mysterious sets of mediators in the other world.
        3. Some thought the way to know God and what He did was to use the self-denial of asceticism.
        4. Some thought the way to know God and what He did was to practice the correct religious rites.
      6. Paul said that there is only one way to understand God and what He does: the only way is to understand Jesus Christ.
        1. All the treasures of God’s wisdom are hidden in Jesus Christ.
        2. All the treasures of God’s knowledge are hidden in Jesus Christ.
        3. You do not need a mysterious knowledge that is not available to most people.
        4. You do not need some divine forces in the other world to be your guide.
        5. You do not need to practice self-denial in pointless ways as though it produced spiritual power.
        6. You do not need to learn a secret set of religious rites.
        7. You need to develop and grow in your knowledge of Jesus Christ.
      7. Paul said, “I am telling you this so no one else can delude you (mislead you through deception) by making you believe it takes something more than Jesus Christ to understand God’s work and purposes.”
        1. “My body may be away in prison, but I am with you in spirit.”
        2. “I want to rejoice in your good discipline: I want the joy of knowing you will continue to place your faith in Christ and not place it in something else.”
        3. “I want to rejoice because you stabilize your faith by putting it in Jesus Christ.”
      8. “Never forget what you received in Jesus Christ.”
        1. Jesus Christ died on the cross for them to destroy their sins.
        2. Jesus Christ gave them the assurance of resurrection from the dead.
        3. Jesus Christ made them spiritually alive.
        4. Jesus Christ made them God’s children.
        5. Jesus Christ placed them in God’s kingdom as citizens.
        6. Jesus Christ placed them in God’s family.
        7. Jesus Christ was their constant access to the grace and mercy of God.
      9. “When you decide how you are going to live and act on a day by day basis, remember what Jesus Christ did for you.”
        1. Be firmly rooted in Jesus Christ.
        2. Be built up in Jesus Christ.
        3. Establish your faith in Jesus Christ.
        4. This is what you were taught.
      10. When you realize all that God has done and is doing for you in Jesus Christ, overflow with gratitude.

I want you to see something very clearly. Christians at Colossae placed their faith in something other than Jesus Christ. Christians believed that the key to understanding God was something other than understanding and trusting Jesus Christ. Christians believed that the key to salvation was something other than understanding and trusting Jesus Christ.

That should frighten all of us. It should frighten us to know that people who call themselves the “Christ-like ones” can build their spiritual identity and existence on something besides Christ. It should frighten us to examine our own lives and the church and see how little is actually based on our knowledge, our understanding, and our trust of Jesus Christ.

We discover God’s eternal wealth when this happens: we have a true knowledge of God’s mystery. The true knowledge of God’s mystery is Jesus Christ.

Leading Us Into God’s Purposes

Posted by on under Sermons

In our lives there are some key relationships that assist us in becoming a complete person. These key relationships are essential to our development as a person. If these key relationships are absent, we face major obstacles in our personal development. If these key relationships oppose us, we face major problems in our personal development. If these key relationships bless us, we mature naturally into the person that we are capable of being.

Two of those key relationships are our relationships as a child with our mother and our father. There is no way to exaggerate the blessing of being loved and encouraged by both mother and father. There is no way to exaggerate the personal problems created by being ignored or rejected by either mother or father.

In our spiritual lives there are some key relationships that assist us in becoming a complete spiritual person. These key relationships are essential to our development as God’s son or daughter. If these key relationships are absent, we face major obstacles in our spiritual development. If these key relationships oppose us, we face major problems in our spiritual development. If these key relationships bless us, we mature naturally into the spiritual person we are capable of being.

There are several key spiritual relationships. One of them is being a living part of the relationship between a congregation and a kind, godly, loving elder. Any Christian who is a part of that relationship is powerfully encouraged to mature spiritually.

  1. We know that the first congregation, the church in Jerusalem, had elders.
    1. Initially the Jerusalem elders worked with the apostles in providing leadership for those who believed in and were baptized into Jesus Christ.
      1. This probably was not new to Jewish Christians because Jewish elders exercised a key leadership role in Israel from the earliest days of their history.
      2. The fact that the Jerusalem congregation had elders is well documented in the book of Acts (Acts 11:30; 15:2, 4, 22; 21:18).
      3. But we know nothing of how these men came to be recognized as elders or what their leadership responsibilities were.
        1. We know they worked with the apostles (Acts 11:30; 15:2,4,22).
        2. We know they received reports on mission efforts (Acts 21:17-20).
        3. We know they helped settle disputes among Christians (Acts 15).
        4. We know they attempted to get Jewish Christians to accept Paul as a Jewish Christian (Acts 21:17-26).
        5. But no scripture specifically states the role and function of the Jerusalem elders as leaders.

    2. We need to pause here and focus on something obvious but seldom considered.
      1. The function elders served among Christians in the first century and the function elders serve today typically do not have a lot in common.
      2. In my understanding, in the first century, Christian congregations did not:
        1. Own property.
        2. Have church buildings.
        3. Have legal recognition as a religion.
      3. Consider what that obviously meant.
        1. They did not have elders’ meetings that focused on property issues.
        2. They did not have elders’ meetings that focused on church buildings.
        3. They did not have elders’ meetings that focused on meeting legal matters.
      4. God’s purposes were centered in people in the first century.
      5. Does that mean that it is wrong for leadership to address property issues, church building issues, or legal matters?
        1. No.
        2. All of those are a part of the reality of our existence.
      6. Then what does it mean?
        1. It means if we want our elders’ time and energy to be focused on property and buildings that they are not focusing on the concerns and purposes of the early church.
        2. It means that the original work of elders focused primarily on caring for people.

    3. Paul is the first person to provide us insight into the role and focus of elders.
      1. Paul and Barnabas completed their first mission trip by going to each congregation established on that trip and appointing elders (Acts 14:23).
      2. At the conclusion of Paul’s last mission trip, Paul asked the elders from Ephesus to meet him in Miletus.
        1. When they came Paul did basically three things (Acts 20:17-35).
          1. He reminded them of the nature of his work among them.
          2. He stated that he would not have opportunity to visit with them again.
          3. He gave them a specific charge.
        2. We could spend some quality time considering the way Paul worked and understanding why he would not be back.
        3. We need to note something very important in his charge because it gives us a key insight into the work and role of elders.
      3. This is what I want you to see and consider in Paul’s charge to these men who were elders in the city of Ephesus. The verse is Acts 20:28.
      4. The context:
        1. The elders were to be on guard for themselves and the flock.
        2. The congregation at Ephesus was the flock.
        3. They occupied the work and role of elders by the appointment of the Holy Spirit.
        4. The congregation would be endangered by men who were concerned about themselves but not about the congregation–these men would behave like wolves killing sheep.
        5. Some of these destructive men would be some of them.
        6. They needed to be alert.
      5. Now look at verse 28:
        1. NAS–they were to “shepherd the church of God.”
        2. KJV–they were to “feed the church of God.”
        3. RSV–they were to “care for the church of God.”
        4. TEV–they were to “be shepherds of the church of God.”
        5. NIV–they were to “be shepherds of the church of God.”
        6. JB–they were to “feed the church of God.”
        7. NEB–they were to be “as shepherds of the church of the Lord.”
      6. The imagery of the whole charge is that of a shepherd.
        1. Christians were the “flock” or the sheep.
        2. They were to provide oversight, which is what a shepherd did.
        3. They were to see that the flock was fed, which is what a shepherd did.
        4. They were to be alert and vigilant, which is what a shepherd did.
      7. In the first statement that gave a charge to elders, it is obvious that elders provided leadership and care for believers.

  2. Very soon you will be selecting men to lead us as our elders.
    1. A couple of years ago we did a series of lessons on elders.
      1. We saw that in 1 Timothy 3 and Titus 1 that those qualifications were not intended to be a check list.
      2. They were descriptions of men who were capable of being spiritual guides in the city of Ephesus and the city of Crete.
      3. We will quickly make those lessons available to anyone who wishes to study them.

    2. But please keep this in mind as we prayerfully approach our decision.
      1. We want spiritual men with godly hearts who care about people.
      2. We want men that you respect and trust as God’s men committed to God’s word and God’s purposes.
      3. We want men that you would approach with your personal struggles in the confidence that you would be understood, encouraged, and helped.

    3. What do we want these men to do? We want them to lead us to greater spirituality. How?
      1. We want them to help us be living sacrifices as we place our lives on God’s altar (Romans 12:1).
      2. We want them to help us fulfill the law of Christ. Galatians 6:1 says the law of Christ is to bear one another’s burdens.
      3. We want them to help us fulfill the royal law of loving our neighbors as ourselves (James 2:8).
      4. We want them to help us make Christ Lord of our hearts and to be able to explain to people why we let him be Lord (1 Peter 3:15).
      5. We want them to help us be God’s living temple that allows God’s Spirit to live in us (1 Corinthians 3:16).
      6. We want them to help us be a kind, tenderhearted, forgiving people who act like Jesus acted (Ephesians 4:32).
      7. We want them to help us rescue the struggling, restore the fallen, and help anyone find strength and hope in Jesus.

  3. Follow me very carefully, because this is all related.
    1. Many times Jesus stressed the fact that God increases His gifts to those who use His gifts to serve His purposes.
      1. This is the principle: God increases opportunity for those people who use what He gives them for His glory and purposes.
      2. Listen:
        1. Matthew 25:29 For to everyone who has, more shall be given, and he will have an abundance; but from the one who does not have, even what he does have shall be taken away.
        2. Matthew 13:12 For whoever has, to him more shall be given, and he will have an abundance; but whoever does not have, even what he has shall be taken away from him.
        3. Mark 4:25 For whoever has, to him more shall be given; and whoever does not have, even what he has shall be taken away from him.
        4. Luke 8:18 So take care how you listen; for whoever has, to him more shall be given; and whoever does not have, even what he thinks he has shall be taken away from him.

    2. If we want God to send us more people to help, we need to diligently serve and help the people God has sent us.
      1. Jesus helped every kind of struggling person that God wants us to help in the grace, the forgiveness, and the hope of Jesus Christ.
      2. Jesus helped every kind of person from the demon possessed to the public sinner, from the adulterer to the divorced, from the spiritually misguided to the ignorant.
        1. God will draw to us those who struggle with evil when we will help them.
        2. God will draw to us those who struggle with sexual sin when we will help them.
        3. God will draw to us those who struggle because of failed marriages and homes when we will help them.
        4. God will draw to us those who struggle spiritually when we will help them.
        5. God will draw to us those who struggle in ignorance when we will help them.
      3. Just like Peter was directed to Cornelius in Acts 10, just like Paul was directed to the struggling, Jesus will direct people to us when we can and will help them find deliverance from their struggles in Jesus Christ.
        1. “David, do you really believe that?”
        2. With all my heart.
        3. “Why?” Because I have spent my entire life watching God do that.

    3. We must add men to our eldership who believe that God will give us opportunities when we will use them for His glory.
      1. We need men to lead us as we learn how to help more people.
      2. We need men to guide us so that God says of us, “Let me send him there; they will help him. Let me send her there; they will help her.”

[Prayer: help us be the kind of congregation to which You entrust more people.]

Two requests: help us find that kind of man to join our elders. Help us increasingly become that kind of congregation.

When Importance Cannot Be Exaggerated

Posted by on under Bulletin Articles

Exaggeration can be impossible. Consider a simple illustration: the choice of a college or university for your child. “The importance of that decision is obvious! It determines your child’s career preparation.” As important as career preparation is, the importance of that decision goes far beyond occupation and income.

Commonly, that decision determines who becomes your child’s spouse. That marriage determines the quality of your child’s life for over fifty years. It determines the quality of his or her adult spiritual life. It determines who your grandchildren are. It is the primary decision that affects what happens in your family the next generation. That decision determines far more than job opportunities and earning potential.

In the immediate future our elders will initiate a process for selecting additional elders. This process will differ from our last process. The decision will be yours. The elders want you to participate. They want your interest and your active involvement.

The importance of this decision cannot be exaggerated. Men who serve as elders serve for several years. More than anyone else, elders’ ideas, concerns, and interests determine the direction and involvement of a congregation.

The single greatest physical asset a congregation can have is an eldership filled with godly men who combine spiritual minds with loving, kind hearts. The greatest single physical obstacle a congregation can have is an eldership filled with men who are obsessed with control and addicted to power. The Bible acknowledges God looks at hearts. As we select men to be shepherds, God must show us how to look at hearts.

As our elders begin this process, let nothing distract your prayers, thinking, and actions from God’s purposes. We want men who will help us come closer to God. We want men who will help us be spiritual people. We want men who will focus us on God’s purposes. We want men who will encourage us to allow God to rule this congregation through the lordship of Jesus Christ. We want men who will help us be a compassionate, forgiving congregation that draws its life from God’s mercy and grace.

Pray. Be informed. Focus on God’s purposes. Be an example of love and kindness.

God’s Mystery and My Salvation

Posted by on June 4, 2000 under Sermons

What is the most profound, life altering experience that has happened in your life?

For some people the experience blinds them or at least restricts their vision. It makes them cynical, distrustful, angry, suspicious, and resentful. They become people who transform blessings and opportune circumstances into curses. They delight in destroying the hope of other people.

For some people the experience opens their eyes and increases their vision. It has a positive impact on the way they understand other people, the way they see themselves, the way they view the world, and the way they relate to God. They transform hardship and pain into blessings. They delight in giving other people hope.

The person whose life altering experience opens his or her eyes to hope and possibilities is blessed. The people whose lives are touched by such a person are blessed.

  1. Paul had a life altering experience on the road that led to Damascus, Syria.
    1. That experience is discussed three times in Acts: chapters 9, 22, and 26.
      1. The accounts are brutally honest about the kind of man Paul was prior to his life altering experience.
        1. He obtained permission from the Jewish high priest in Jerusalem, Palestine, to visit the Jewish synagogue in Damascus, Syria, and arrest any Jew who professed to be a Christian (Acts 9:1,2).
        2. He persecuted Jewish Christians by imprisoning men and women and voting for their deaths (Acts 22:4; 26:10).
        3. He was hostile toward the name of Jesus Christ (Acts 26:9).
        4. When he visited synagogues, he used physical pain to attempt to make Jewish Christians blaspheme (Acts 26:11).
        5. He said, “I was furiously enraged at them” (Acts 26:11).
        6. All of this was done as expressions of religious zeal and faith in God.
      2. Of himself, Paul wrote in 1 Timothy 1:13 that formerly he was a blasphemer, a persecutor, and a violent aggressor.

    2. Then a sudden experience literally changed everything.
      1. With blinding brilliance, a bright light put him on the ground.
      2. Jesus asked Paul why Paul was persecuting him.
      3. Jesus sent him on into Damascus to learn what he must do.
      4. Jesus also commissioned him as a servant and a witness to open the understanding of Jewish people and of people who knew nothing about God.
      5. Instantly Paul’s entire life totally changed.
        1. The man Paul said was an impostor was in fact God’s Son.
        2. The man Paul said was Israel’s greatest enemy was in fact Israel’s Savior.
        3. The man Paul said was not raised from the dead was in fact resurrected.
        4. The man Paul said was a liar was in fact God’s greatest spokesman.

    3. I am certain some of us are tempted to say, “I wish I had a defining experience in my life like that.”
      1. Are you sure?
      2. Instantly, Paul knew everything he believed was wrong.
      3. Instantly, Paul knew everything he did to express his faith was wrong.
      4. Instantly Paul knew everything he assigned to God’s purposes was wrong.
      5. Instantly, Paul knew that 100% of his religious understanding was wrong.
      6. Instantly, Paul’s relationships changed: his past friends would be his enemies, and if he had friends, they would come from the people he persecuted.
      7. Instantly, Paul knew, if God let him live, everything about his life had to change immediately.
      8. Do you think you could handle that?

  2. With that understanding as a background, read with me Colossians 1:24-29.
    Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I do my share on behalf of His body, which is the church, in filling up what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions. Of this church I was made a minister according to the stewardship from God bestowed on me for your benefit, so that I might fully carry out the preaching of the word of God, that is, the mystery which has been hidden from the past ages and generations, but has now been manifested to His saints, to whom God willed to make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. We proclaim Him, admonishing every man and teaching every man with all wisdom, so that we may present every man complete in Christ. For this purpose also I labor, striving according to His power, which mightily works within me.
    (In this reading I want to focus your thinking and understanding on three things.)
    1. The Damascus road experience completely changed the way that Paul looked at pain and suffering.
      1. Before that experience, he inflicted the pain and caused the suffering: “My faith should produce suffering in the lives of people who believe in Jesus.”
        1. He dragged men and women out of their homes in Jerusalem.
        2. He visited synagogues to abuse men and women who believed in Jesus.
        3. He put men and women in prison for believing in Jesus.
        4. He voted for their deaths.
      2. After the Damascus road experience he was a physical threat to no one.
        1. After that experience he endured pain for Jesus and Christians.
        2. After that experience he wanted to endure pain and suffering for Jesus Christ and for Christians.
      3. After that experience, Paul was happy to suffer for Jesus and for Christians.
        1. “Paul, what is wrong with you? You consider physical pain and suffering caused by faith in Jesus Christ as blessing and opportunity?”
        2. That is precisely what he told the Christians at Colossae.
        3. He said that he rejoiced to suffer for them and for Christ.
        4. “Paul, you must be crazy!” No, he was not crazy.
      4. He rejoiced in suffering for Christians or for Christ for three reasons.
        1. First, he understood and appreciated what Jesus’ willingness to suffer did for him.
        2. Second, his suffering for the Colossian Christians increased their opportunity for spiritual growth and maturity.
          1. If he was to be a missionary in that region, he had to suffer.
          2. If he did not suffer, the gospel would not be shared in that region.
        3. Third, Jesus wanted the Colossians to hear what Jesus did for them, and Jesus’ message could not be shared without suffering.
      5. For Paul, the issue was not centered in physical pain; the issue was centered in God’s purposes in Jesus Christ.
        1. If serving God’s purposes produced suffering, so be it.
        2. If serving God’s purposes produced pain, Paul rejoiced that he could suffer the pain.

    2. The Damascus road experience opened Paul’s mind to the mystery of God.
      1. First, we need to understand the concept of “mystery” as Paul used it.
        1. A mystery was not understood in the past, but now is clearly revealed.
        2. In the past, neither Israel, the prophets, nor the angels understood the purposes of God’s work.
        3. They understood God was at work, they had faith in the fact that God was at work, but no one understood God’s purposes.
      2. That is not based on my speculation.
        1. In verse 26 Paul plainly said, “the mystery … has been hidden from the past ages and generations, but now has been manifested to his saints.”
        2. Listen to Peter’s words in 1 Peter 1:10-12: As to this salvation, the prophets who prophesied of the grace that would come to you made careful searches and inquiries, seeking to know what person or time the Spirit of Christ within them was indicating as He predicted the sufferings of Christ and the glories to follow. It was revealed to them that they were not serving themselves, but you, in these things which now have been announced to you through those who preached the gospel to you by the Holy Spirit sent from heaven–things into which angels long to look.
        3. Before the Acts 2 day of Pentecost, no one understood God’s purposes–His purposes were a mystery.
          1. Israel did not understand.
          2. The prophets did not understand.
          3. The apostles did not understand.
          4. No one understood at Jesus’ crucifixion.
          5. No one understood at Jesus’ resurrection.
          6. No one understood the first 49 days after the resurrection.
          7. It was not fully understood before Acts 10 when people who were not Jews or converts to Judaism were converted to Jesus Christ.
          8. The truth is that we do not fully understand today because we have not fully opened our minds and hearts to the revelation of the mystery.
          9. Too many times we focus the mystery in the church.
          10. We understand the mystery when we understand what God did and is doing in Jesus Christ.
        4. The basic understanding that the Colossian Christians needed was an understanding of God’s purposes and work in Jesus Christ.
        5. The basic understanding that we need is a biblical understanding of God’s purposes and work in Jesus Christ.

    3. The Damascus road experience opened Paul’s mind to this truth: our hope of heaven depends on Christ living in us.
      1. The key to eternal salvation:
        1. For first century Israel was “Christ in you.”
        2. For first century people who worshipped other gods was “Christ in you.”
        3. For first century people who believed in no god was “Christ in you.”
        4. For any person in any age is “Christ in you.”
        5. For us is “Christ in you.”
      2. We desperately need to restore Jesus Christ to his God-given place.
      3. Let me illustrate our desperate need.
        1. Too many Christians believe that they are saved because they can say they had membership in the right church.
        2. God will ask, “Did Christ live in you?”
        3. Too many Christians believe that they are saved because they attend where the right acts of worship occur on Sunday morning.
        4. God will ask, “Did Christ live in you?”
        5. Too many Christians believe that they are saved because they did church approved works.
        6. God will ask, “Did Christ live in you?”
      4. Too many place their hope of salvation in the wrong things.
      5. There is only one hope of salvation: Christ in you.

When your eyes are opened to God’s purposes in Jesus Christ, it is a life altering experience. When you see God’s purposes in Jesus Christ, you will never be the same. Who you are changes. How you think changes. What you value changes. How you behave changes. The kind of husband or wife, father or mother, son or daughter you are changes. The way you use life changes.

Why? You understand what Paul understood on the Damascus road. You understand God’s purposes in Jesus.