Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 11/18/14, "Day of Praise"

"He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God." -
Micah 6:8

Please forgive me, but I can't remember what stories I have or have not shared with all of you. I tell you that for two reasons:
1) I want to be humble, like God tells us in today's verse, and
2) I want you to have mercy on me, like God tells us in today's verse, in case I repeat a story.

Anyhows, y'ever eaten "Humble Pie"? Dutn't taste too good goin' down. But shur is good fer da soul.

I never thought that I thought too highly of myself, but I learned with Humble Pie that you better not think so highly of how humbly you feel about yourself. You know it's kind of like saying, "I'm proud of how humble I am."

Ok, ok, the story about Humble Pie. Well, I was at a Fellowship of Christian Athletes National Conference in Black Mountain, NC. I know I told you about coming back from it and being high as a kite for Jesus, but I don't think I told you what happened there.

The speaker, one night, told us all that if we really wanted to taste (get it? "taste") the depth of Jesus' love, then we needed to eat some Humble Pie. He said we needed to go up to someone who was hard to love and tell 'em that we loved 'em.

Well, he finished talkin', and I started thinkin' real hard about some people in my life, when, lo and behold, I felt a tap on my shoulder. I turned around, and there was this guy from my high school. And this guy, well, let's just say he didn't run with the most popular crowd. It's not
that I really did either, run with the popular crowd, that is, but I sure as the world knew that I was more popular than him, and I was smarter than him, and I was a better athlete than him, and I was better at...well, you get the point.

And you probably have guessed, by now, where this is goin'.

It's like I said at the outset; I never thought that I thought too highly of myself, but I learned with Humble Pie that you better not think so highly of how humbly you feel about yourself.

And boy did I get a big ol' helpin' of that thar Humble Pie when the boy that I was more popular than, smarter than, more athletic than, well, he looked me in the eye, smiled as if he was about to say somethin' nice to somebody who's hard to love, just like the speaker challenged us.

And he did.

Just like the speaker challenged us, he said, "Chris, I love ya' man." And he didn't say it like, ya know, "Oooooh, you're so greaaaaaat, and I admire you so muuuuuch because you're more popular than me, and smarter than me, and more athletic than me, and I just think you hung the moon."

Nope, he said it like, "Man, you're hard to love."

Ditn't taste too good goin' down. But shur was good fer da soul.

As you can tell, I will never forget my friend, who ironically had initials J.C., just like the most highly exalted one, Jesus Christ, who humbled me by pointing out my sin and then lifted me back up higher than I was by loving me up on his cross.

Let us not think too highly of ourselves. For we know that "He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God." - Micah 6:8

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, November 17, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 11/17/14, "Day of Praise"

"But as for me, I am filled with power,
with the Spirit of the LORD,
and with justice and might,
to declare to Jacob his transgression,
to Israel his sin." - Micah 3:8

Notice, in today's verse, that Micah is inspired by God to

1) celebrate who he is and what he has in the LORD, as he says, "I am filled with power, with the Spirit of the LORD, and with justice and might" and

2) recognize, (because of who he is and what he has in the LORD), what he must do for the LORD, as he says his work is "to declare to Jacob his transgression, to Israel his sin."

In sum, 1) Micah has an identity in the LORD and 2) he has a job to do for the LORD.

These two principles, that Micah knows, stand in contrast to "the prophets who lead [God's] people astray" (Micah 3:5). "As for the prophets who lead my people astray, they proclaim 'peace' if they have something to eat, but prepare to wage war against anyone who refuses to feed them."

Notice the "principles" of these horrible prophets!
1) They have peace with people who feed/serve them.
2) They are at war with people who do not feed/serve them.

Micah listens to God and makes the connection between being and doing. The bad prophets do not. Micah wants to serve because of who he is. The bad prophets want to be served. (Cf. Jesus' words in Matthew 20:28 and Mark 10:45)

And who has a book of the Bible named after them? Micah or the bad prophets? Micah!

And so it is with every book of the Bible. If they're named after a person, it's a person who made the connection between being and doing. They were all sinners, to be sure, for whom Jesus died, but they listened to God and made the connection.

There's no book of the Bible named, "The dude who expected everybody to serve him."

I will never forget the church secretary who quit after two weeks on the job, saying, "I thought this would be church work, but this is work!"

I don't remember her name.

No one else will ever have a book of the Bible named after them. But, being made in the image of God, we all long to leave our mark in the world. We long to have our name carved into the Tree of Life. We long to be remembered, as Abraham Lincoln said, as someone who did something for God.

For this to happen, like Micah, we are called to celebrate our identity and gifts in the LORD and then to do something with God's gifts and in God's strength for the LORD.

In so doing, we thank God for his goodness, we encourage others to do the same, and we sleep well at night, knowing our little ol' life made a difference in a great big world.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 11/15/14, "Day of Praise"

"Hate evil, love good; maintain justice in the courts. Perhaps the LORD God Almighty will have mercy..." - Amos 5:15

My wife, Amanda, and I were originally planning to visit my daughter, Cassidy, at her college in Columbus, MS today, but because of a church member's funeral today, we're not able to go. The thought of road-tripping to Cassidy reminded me of road-tripping with Cassidy and the following devotion from a couple years ago about that road trip.

We were surprised that the huge parking lot was empty except for a few cars. Moreover, none of the people from the cars were around. So, when my youngest, Cassidy and Caden, and I parked our car in downtown Memphis this past Memorial Day, we weren't exactly sure if we should walk down the right side of the parking lot or the left.

We should've gone right.

As it was, we had gone to the left, working our way toward the National Civil Rights Museum, which came to mind as I read more from the prophet Amos in today's Daily Bible reading. Through Amos, God demands that we treat the Cushite the same as the Israelite (Amos 9:7). God demands that foreign people be treated with the same love and respect as our "home boys." Just as God sends his grace on all people, God calls us to love, respect, and do justice toward all people, regardless of race, nationality, creed, etc.

So, Cassidy, Caden, and I are walking toward the National Civil Rights Museum in downtown Memphis early on Memorial Day, May 28. As we walk past the parking lot and cross to the next block, we realize "we're not in Kansas anymore, Toto."

We've stepped into a poor, broken-glass riddled, mostly abandoned neighborhood. And the next thing we know, we hear "rah, rah, rah, rah, rah." At least that's what it sounded like to me as the Alice in Wonderland-sized Rottweiler barreled towards us with what was surely more than the supposed 130-pound max carried by these "Rottweil butchers' dogs" (German: Rottweiler Metzgerhund).

They were first called "Rottweil butchers' dogs" because they carried carts filled with the meat that the butcher had butchered after the dog had hunted it down for butchering.

My children and I started looking for the cart that would carry us away to the butcher after our new friend got done with us. Mr. Rottweiler was barking and barreling towards us from a "Samford and Son" looking property, but Fred Samford was nowhere to be found to call back his version of man's best friend.

So on comes the butcher dog, racing at the speed of light, until...

He crashes into the chain link fence about ten inches away from our delicious-looking thigh meat.

That's the first time I ever heard three people pray in unison, thanking God for the beauty of chain link fence.

And we immediately thanked God for his mercy.

In the very next instant, as if God himself used his finger to lift up our heads and turn them to the right, we saw the sign on the National Civil Rights Museum just one block to the right. We raced there faster than a Rottweil butchers' dog.

And as we passed the very place where the civil rights leader, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was assassinated on April 4, 1968, 6:01 PM central time (as the Lorraine Motel itself where Dr. King was killed has been transformed into the Museum), our little experience of mercy with the Rottweil butchers' dog made us keen to God's demand through Amos, "Hate evil, love good; maintain justice in the courts. Perhaps the LORD God Almighty will have mercy..." - Amos 5:15

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, November 14, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 11/14/14, "Day of Praise"

"Be wise, my son, and bring joy to my heart; then I can answer anyone who treats me with contempt." - Proverbs 27:11

I was 16. I had just gotten back from Black Mountain, North Carolina and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes National Conference. It had been a mountaintop experience on a mountaintop. I was spiritually higher than ever before.

And I was probably too zealous.

I had never really talked about Jesus to other people. So, like a teenage boy calling a girl on the phone for the first few times, sharing Jesus the first few times was filled with awkwardness and butterflies.

My football teammates were less than impressed.

In fact some, were downright mean.

I was crushed.

I went to our head football coach, Fred Walton, not because he was the head football coach, but because I knew his heart. It was strong and, at the same time, gentle.

Somehow in my spirit I knew that, in the words of today's verse, Coach Walton could "bring joy to my heart; then I can answer anyone who treats me with contempt." (Proverbs 27:11)

He and I sat together, just the two of us, at the top of our very large gym. It was like we returned to the mountaintop, which both lifts up your heart and also from which you can gain perspective.

Coach Walton gave me strength and renewed my joy. I came to realize that, of
course, it wasn't him, but it was the Holy Spirit of the Living God working through him and through the faith that God had worked in him.

I would need every ounce of it because a couple months later, I broke my ankle at the start of the 2nd game of my senior year. Once again, some of my teammates ridiculed me, my abilities, my previous football awards, and my faith.

I was depressed.

But Coach Walton, physics professor Wally Owens, and Coach John Brooks were all men of God's Spirit in Christ who daily encouraged me and were God's
instruments for restoring some semblance of joy.

I am forever grateful.

And I want to thank God for them by doing for others what they did for me.

Indeed for all of us who will believe that Christ is truly alive and wants to work powerfully in us and through us by His Spirit, we can be world-changers and heart-restorers for others in the name of the LORD.

"Be wise, my son, and bring joy to my heart; then I can answer anyone who
treats me with contempt." - Proverbs 27:11

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, November 13, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 11/13/14, "Day of Praise"

"Remove the dross from the silver, and a silversmith can produce a vessel; remove wicked officials from the king's presence, and his throne will be established through righteousness." - Proverbs 25:4-5

When I was a kid in the 70's, I remember listening to and talking to my father about cars. Specifically, I remember wondering why so many Japanese-made cars, like Hondas, rusted so badly. As I understand it, the reason they rusted so badly is that they were made of lesser-quality metals.

Too many impurities.

Too many impurities create a product that can't withstand the weather and time. At least nowhere near as long as higher quality materials.

God made us all to love to praise the Lord. God made us to love to bring glory to his name. This is our true self.

But in today's Bible verses, God says that it's really hard to praise the Lord and bring glory to his name if our lives are filled with too many impurities, too much dross, too much "wickedness," which God tells us in Romans 14 is anything we do apart from faith in God and his word.

To be sure "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:23), but God calls us to be who God made us to be and to care whether or not God can build, not Japanese-made cars out of us, but his kingdom!

Yes, we fall short, and God is gracious! But do we want, in our heart of hearts, to be high quality "material" with which God can build his kingdom? Or are we apathetic to the whole endeavor?

In Mark 9:24, we hear a father cry out, "I believe, Lord; help my unbelief." In a similar fashion, God would have us cry out, "I want to be a great servant of your kingdom, Lord; please help me where I fall short!"

Dear God, please, help us! Refine us and purify us by your grace and teaching and discipline to be fine material for the spread of the Gospel of Jesus and the advancement of your kingdom in the hearts of all people. Amen.

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Day of Praise

We, 11/12/14, "Day of Praise"

"Honor the Lord with your wealth, with the firstfruits of all your crops; then your barns will be filled to overflowing, and your vats will brim over with new wine." - Proverbs 3:9-10

So add today's verses to the list. Genesis 14, Malachi 3, Matthew 23, Hebrews 7, and today's verses from Proverbs 3:9-10. Through all of these, God speaks plainly of Biblical tithing, which is the promise of God to bless those who bring the "firstfruits" of our labor, the first 10%, to the LORD so as to honor, exalt, and share him with the world.

My own simple testimony is this: since I was a junior in High School, when God moved me to read the Bible from cover to cover for the first time, I have seen that tithing "works."

I know that giving 10% of income, as a starting point for giving to God's work, seems like a lot, but I've found that God is always true to his promise. In sum, you can't outgive God!

And ya know, there's so much more that I could say with conviction about this tithing thing, about giving the first 10% of your income to the work of the LORD, but it's on my heart just to stop today. And here's why.

You're either going to believe what is God's promise, not mine, or you're not going to believe the promise.

And upon, hopefully, believing, you're either going to act on the promise and (continue to) bring the tithe or not.

It's your choice.

Christ's saving work has set you free (John 8:33) from being a slave to thinking like the world thinks and set you free to choose and to be a servant of thinking and acting like God counsels and models.

I'm not trying to make anybody feel guilty. That's not what Day of Praise is all about.

I'm just trying to tell you that God wants you to taste (Psalm 34) some blessings that only God has to offer.

So in a simple prayer, I pray you'll (continue to) give tithing a try, giving 10% both to God and also to the spread of his word.

You won't regret it.

It is God who promises you won't.

"Honor the Lord with your wealth, with the firstfruits of all your crops; then your barns will be filled to overflowing, and your vats will brim over with new wine." - Proverbs 3:9-10

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 11/11/14, Veterans Day, "Day of Praise"

"After a long time the master of those servants returned and settled accounts with them. The man who had received the five talents brought the other five. 'Master,' he said, 'you entrusted me with five talents. See, I have gained five more.'" - Matthew 25:19-20

If you are a "The Cup Is Half Empty" person, then you would say, "If you don't use it, you lose it." And that perspective is indeed a part of the parable in today's verse.

However, I prefer "The Cup Is Half Full" outlook, which leads you to say, "When you use it, you get more." And that perspective is the part of the parable that is today's verse, 'Master,' he said, 'you entrusted me with five talents. See, I have gained five more.'

One of our year-long classes at church is studying Arthur Burk's Biblical study of the redemptive spiritual gifts. (Google it! It's fascinating stuff.) One of the primary truths about spiritual gifts that Burk points out is "When you use it, you get more." Specifically, when you use the primary spiritual gift that God's given you, you get more spiritual gifts from God.

I'll let you explore that spiritual gifts application more on your own.

What I want to close with is another application of the "When you use it, you get more" principle, which applies both to the use of God-given gifts and also to Veterans Day.

Veterans have a special God-given gift, namely, a courage and conscious willingness to stand in harm's way for the sake of other people. And not just for the sake of other people but also for the benefit of other people. In other words, "When they use it (their gift), we get more."

It is because of Veterans using their God-given gift that I had the freedom to assemble (with other Christians) on Sunday.

It is because of Veterans using their God-given gift that I had the freedom to practice my religion (with those other Christians) on Sunday.

It is because of Veterans using their God-given gift that I have the freedom to speak (from a pulpit to those other Christians) on Sundays.

And so on. And so on. And so on.

Thank a Veteran today.

And tomorrow.

And as often as you can.

"When they use it, we get more."

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, November 10, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 11/10/14, "Day of Praise"

"Whoever heeds discipline shows the way to life, but whoever ignores correction leads others astray." - Proverbs 10:17

Little in life is harder...

Than the giving...

And receiving...

Of rebuke, counsel, and discipline.

But little in life is more important.

This is not some obscure teaching. Instead, in the Bible, God repeatedly speaks of the love, life, and wisdom that are gained and imparted from the receiving and giving of rebuke, counsel, and discipline.

It is hard to receive rebuke, counsel, and discipline because we don't want anymore "bosses" than are required to get our paycheck.

It is hard to give rebuke, counsel, and discipline because we don't want conflict as much as we want "friends," that is, people who like us.

But, praise God, there is more to life than paychecks and people liking us.

In today's verse, God calls us to value two things: 1) "the way to life" as greater than a paycheck and 2) not "leading others astray" as greater than people liking us.

As with all these Days of Praise, there is so much more we could say, but the bottom line is this: God's word plainly and repeatedly tells us that no man or woman is wise unto the truly good life in and of themselves.

God himself made us this way, that is, God made us to need one another for the giving and receiving of God's word.

So today, as you interact with others, listen intently for God's rebuke, counsel, and discipline. And when it's your turn to speak, do so boldly, with confidence in the Lord and love for the person.

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 11/08/14, "Day of Praise"

"Many are the plans in a person's heart, but it is the Lord's purpose that prevails." - Proverbs 19:21

Don't ya just love our life in the LORD through Christ? Seriously! I love it and pray that you do too.

One of the top things I love is that Almighty and Sovereign God wants to be, and is, involved in our lives in a myriad of ways.

One of the greatest ways that God is involved with us is that God works to "guide us into the way of peace" (Luke 1:79) so that, as in today's verse from Proverbs, God says that we might have plans, but the Lord's purpose prevails.

The thing I love about this is that we don't have to worry about making a mistake because, whenever we make a decision and go with it, God will do one of two things: either affirm the decision or work to get us back on track.

God does this because "God is for us" (Romans 8:31), God has good plans for us (Jeremiah 29:11), and God wants us "to have life to the full!" (John 10:10)

So, let's get busy living!

And we do that by trusting God's repeated promise (from Exodus 15:13 to John 16:13) to guide us, by the Holy Spirit, into all the blessings that God has prepared for us.

So, have a great day! Live, believing that "many are the plans in a person's heart, but it is the Lord's purpose that prevails" (Proverbs 19:21).

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, November 7, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 11/07/14, "Day of Praise"

"Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it." - Proverbs 4:23

My wife, Amanda, and I are serving at Fall Camp, which is the Fall (Thursday - Sunday) version of the weeklong Special Camp we served at this past Summer. Fall Camp for Senior-aged adults and Special Camp for middle-aged adults are camps for God's dear ones with intellectual disabilities. Everything here is simple: food, rocking chairs, walks, bingo, a field trip, fishing, ice cream sundaes, and short, simple devotions, like today's Bible verse and reflection.

I have known people who have known today's verse for years. And depending on which ones of those people you're talking about, today's verse is either blessedly simple or tragically simple.

It is blessedly simple for those who know the verse and do it--for those who actually guard what goes in their heart.

And today's verse is tragically simple for those who know the verse and don't do it--for those who do not guard what goes into their heart.

God's appeal to us to guard our heart is simple. But, as Jesus tells us in Matthew 7 with the parable of the wIse and foolish builders, how much such wisdom to "guard our heart" positively impacts your life will totally depend on whether or not you do it.

It's a simple concept. Even children can understand it by way of an all-time favorite children's song.

(VS 1) Oh, be careful little ears what you hear (repeat)
For the Father Up above,
Is looking down in love,
So be careful little ears what you hear.

(VS 2) Oh, be careful little eyes what you see, (repeat)
For the Father up above,
is looking down in love,
So be careful little eyes what you see.

(VS 3) Oh, be careful little mouth what you say, (repeat),
For the Father up above,
Is looking down in love,
So be careful little mouth what you say.

(VS 4) Oh, be careful little hands what you do (repeat),
For the Father up above,
Is looking down in love,
So be careful little hands what you do.

(VS 5) Oh, be careful little feet where you go (repeat)
For the Father up above,
Is looking down in love,
So be careful little feet where you go.

(VS 6) Oh, be careful little mind what you think (repeat)
For the Father up above,
Is looking down in love,
So be careful little mind what you think.

(VS 7) Oh, be careful little heart what you love (repeat)
For the Father up above,
Is looking down in love,
So be careful little heart what you love.

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, November 6, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 11/06/14, "Day of Praise"

"Acquitting the guilty and condemning the innocent--the LORD detests them both." - Proverbs 17:15

If you ever want a measure of how much God loves you, just remember Proverbs 17:15. In that verse, God tells us that he detests both the setting free of a guilty person as if he were not guilty and that God also detests the sentencing to death of an innocent man as if he were guilty!

In the suffering and cross of Jesus, we shared in both those detestable things as humanity asked for Barabbas, the insurrectionist, to go free and asked that Jesus, the innocent, be sentenced to death and crucified.

Furthermore, the name "Barabbas" means "child or son of God." And his offense of "insurrection" is a fancy way to say "sin or rising up against the ruler [God]". In other words, we, like Barabbas, are children of God who have risen up in sin against God, but we also, like Barabbas the guilty, were set free from the penalty and sentence of death, as Jesus, the innocent, took our place on the cross that we deserved.

We were on both sides of the equation of the two things that God detests.

And yet God, who doubly detests the sentencing that all humanity unjustly laid on his Son, freely sent and gave his Son to die for us so that we might live anew.

And God tells us this in John 15:13, "Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one's life for one's friends." So imagine how great is the love when one dies for someone they don't know or dies for someone who has done something they detest.

Friends, we're quickly approaching Veterans Day weekend. It's a time to remember and give thanks for countless people who died or were willing to die for their friends and for strangers and even for people who have done things that they and God detest. But let's not wait until the last minute to remember and give thanks for all who have died for us and/or served us so that we might go free. No, America, let's bless God now and every day, giving thanks for those who served and gave their lives, that, in the strength of Jesus Christ crucified and raised, we would gladly do the same.

Die to self; live in love.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Day of Praise

We, 11/05/14, "Day of Praise"

"'Why has the Lord done such a thing to this land and to this temple?' People will answer, 'Because they have forsaken the Lord'" - 2 Chronicles 7:21-22

Based on the testimony of God's word and general observation of life, one of the hardest things for people to learn is the place of good works in the life of grace.

After all, if grace is God giving us good things that we don't deserve, then why do we need to do any good works at all? Such is the question in Romans 6 in the Bible.

But the answer to the question of the place of good works in the life of grace is actually very simple. Our good works, or lack thereof, do not change God's heart toward us. God always loves us and wants to be in a relationship with us so that we can have a great life in him now and forever.

However, our good works, though they don't change God's heart toward us, they do impact our heart toward God. As Jesus says in John 15, our good works, works done with faith in God and love for God, are the way to stay in a relationship with God. We get into a relationship with God by his gracious initiative. We stay in the relationship with God by "good works," which, again, are deeds done with faith in God and love for God, as we hear in Romans 14. Jesus says it this way in John 15, if you stay in my love and keep my commands, you will bear much fruit, but apart from [the relationship with] me, you can do nothing [that endures positively with life].

In Hebrews 12, especially, God plainly tells us that God disciplines (that is, acts to teach) us when we don't do good works of faith and love, in order to teach us how good relationships with God and one another work...or don't work.

God is always graciously faithful to the relationship with us. Period. Even when we're not. But God graciously loves us so much that he wants us to know the unmatched joy of actively being in a relationship with him. So he graciously teaches us the place of good works.

Think about it. Please. Because one of the hardest things for us people to learn is the place of good works in the life of grace.

Dear God, please be gracious, according to your will, plainly revealed through your Son, Jesus Christ, and help us to learn and live out the place of good works in the life of grace, so that we trust you alone to create us, give us "daily bread", and save us for eternal and everlasting life. But help us to see the joy of good works, as you have ordained such works to be the way to stay in and enjoy a relationship with you through faith in you and love toward others. Amen

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 11/04/14, "Day of Praise"

[And Samuel said to the people,] "Yet do not turn aside from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart. And do not turn aside after empty things that cannot profit or deliver, for they are empty." - 1 Samuel 12:20b-21 (ESV)

Amanda and I are still getting settled into our house after our honeymoon. Translation: her stuff is all in its proper place and my stuff, well, I'm a guy, so, oh well. I'm glad she's patient!!!

One of my things that's still not put up is the box her wedding ring was in. The box is in the back seat of my car, on the floor, right behind the driver's seat.

Yesterday, I was getting out of my car, and, as I observed the ring box with "Diamonds Direct" clearly printed on the top for all the world to see, I thought to myself, "That ring box is really a temptation for somebody to try to break into my car." And then I got to thinking about how much work somebody might put into breaking in and stealing the box. And then I thought about how much they'd be willing to risk to steal the box, ya know, like going to jail. And then I thought that maybe they weren't really thinking about the risk at all because they were so eager to get the box that their vision of riches shut down their brain from thinking. And then I thought how sad all of that would be because of what's actually in the box.

Namely, nothing.

There's nothing in the box. Oh sure, it's a nice enough box, and it says "Diamonds Direct" on the outside, but there's absolutely nothing on the inside.

The nice box is empty.

Just like a lot of stuff that people chase in this world.

Today is a workday. What are you chasing after with your work today? In today's Bible verses, God clearly says through Samuel, "And do not turn aside after empty things that cannot profit or deliver, for they are empty." (1 Samuel 12:21 (ESV))

So what should we chase after with our work? God gives that answer too in today's Bible verses, "Serve the Lord with all your heart."

Passage after passage in the Holy Bible says that if we'll just trust God at the center of all things (Genesis 2), love God above all things (Matthew 22), and seek God first before all things (Matthew 6), then we'll be given everything else that we need and more!

So, have a great day with Jesus!

And remember to "not turn aside from following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart. And do not turn aside after empty things that cannot profit or deliver, for they are empty." (1 Samuel 12:20b-21 - ESV)

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, November 3, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 11/03/14, "Day of Praise"

"[Solomon prayed] 'When your people go to war against their enemies, wherever you send them, and when they pray to the Lord...then hear from heaven their prayer and their plea, and uphold their cause.'" - 1 Kings 8:44-45

When I was in college, I was blessed to have Christian fellowship on campus with a man named Bob Schindler. Bob was with the Navigators ministry on college campuses and also worked a full-time engineering job, in addition to being a great husband and father.

Bob loved the Lord.

Bob loved the Lord so much that trust in the Lord was a natural fruit. Bob asked his engineering company if he could work half-time because that would still provide adequate income for his family and he could devote more time to Jesus through campus ministry. His company said, "No!"

Bob decided to trust the Lord's calling. After explaining to his company his burden to have more time for ministry as he had requested from them, he left his engineering job. It was a hardship and a battle in many ways on Bob and his family.

It would be wrong to say, "They prayed." No, instead, they continued to pray. The emphasis is on "continued," because, in the spirit of today's Bible verse, Bob saw the life of faith as full of little wars that constantly try to destroy our faith. As should we all.

As it turned out, when the Schindlers prayed to the Lord, God heard "from heaven their prayer and their plea, and upheld their cause." (1 Kings 8:45) As it turned out, months after Bob left his engineering job because of his dedication to campus ministry, his company came back to him, recognizing his immeasurable value to their company, and they worked out a plan to bring him back to their company in a way that still freed him for campus ministry, just as Bob had asked for to begin with.

Today's Monday! Give your employer an honest day's work. But work to the glory of the Lord so that you and yours and your company will all see the blessings of God for those who love him and trust him and pray.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, November 1, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 11/01/14, "Day of Praise"

"But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience." - Romans 8:25

This was from last year at Halloween, but it's so memorable for me that I really want to share it again.

So I'm giving out ice cream and a "Jesus loves you" to every child and adult who came to our door last night. Once I found a rhythm, I'd start by giving a plastic spoon to a couple folks at a time, saying, "Here's a spoon," while they all were noticing the big bucket of Blue Bell ice cream that was clearly sitting in front of me.

Well, one boy, about eight, clearly did not notice the ice cream. As he approached my porch stairs where I was sitting, I reached over the Cookies 'n Cream and said, "Here's your spoon." As I turned to grab his kid cup and the scooper, I noticed him look curiously at the spoon, and then he turned to leave, saying, "Thank you!"

I started to chuckle and said, "Wait! What about your ice cream?" He turned back and with genuine astonishment said, "Oh! Wow! And there's ice cream?"

So, I scooped some up, told him "Jesus loves you!", and sent him on his way, as again he said for the second time what 95% never said at all, namely, "Thank you!"

Two quick things to take with us today, November 1st, which is All Saints Day. First, whatever comes your way, learn from the spoon-boy, and be thankful. It might be small. It might be strange. But, be like the boy, and be thankful. After all, a thankful heart is a happy heart. And all the saints, who've truly encouraged me through the years have been characterized by a genuine faith in Jesus and a thankful heart, no matter what came their way, even if it was just a plastic spoon.

And second, learn again from the spoon-boy, but this time by his mistake. Don't be in a rush and so quick to presume. Again, like all the believers who've genuinely inspired me, when something first comes your way, take a deep breath; wait at least a moment; and see if there's more to the story or the gift. We live in a world where everything is fast, and everyone's in a rush. But today's Bible verse is clear: hope, wait, and be patient. Something more is often on the way.

But if not, be thankful for the spoon!

And remember! Jesus loves you too!

"But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience." - Romans 8:25

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, October 31, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 10/31/14, "Day of Praise"

"And the Lord God made for Adam and for his wife garments of skins and clothed them." - Genesis 3:21

I've seen some good Halloween costumes in my years.

There was the year that my sweet daughters, about six and four at the time, were dressed as Dorothy and Toto from "The Wizard of Oz." They were absolutely adorable.

There was the year that I'm sure that I saw both Jabba the Hutt and Herman Munster. Whew!

And then there was yesterday, the day before Halloween, mind you. I was sitting in my car, finishing a call in a parking lot, when this guy walked by me in a "pants-on-the-ground" costume. The strange thing was that this guy had a 3-inch Ace elastic bandage wrapped around the outside of his right, blue jean, pant leg from his shin to his thigh. I'm sure. I am absolutely sure that if it hadn't been for the Ace bandage that I would've been hearing Ray Stevens sing "The Streak." But even with the Ace bandage, the poor guy's "costume" was totally, uuuuuh, shall we say, inadequate.

Kinda like, the first man and woman who ever lived.

That first man and woman were doing just fine living "un-costumed" until they decided that they knew more than Almighty God himself, who made them, and they decided to eat the forbidden fruit, which was the fruit of wanting to be their own God. Their tragic decision exposed them. And, unable to find a Walmart or ToysRUs in those days, they put together a costume of fig leaves so as to hide themselves, which is what a costume is for, is it not?

But their fig-leaves costumes were altogether inadequate, not because the costume didn't cover their bodies, but because the costume didn't cover their shame.

Shame, mind you, is feeling bad about who you are, which is altogether distinct from embarrassment, which is feeling bad about what you've done. Embarrassment always eventually wears off because it's only on the outside, like an invisible costume. But shame? Oooooo! Shame goes deep within our soul and challenges our very self-worth, along with challenging our will to even continue on in life since shame whispers to us that we're worthless and no one would even notice if we were gone.

Shame cannot be covered with a costume.

Shame can only be truly covered in blood. That's why "the Lord God made for Adam and for his wife garments of skins and clothed them." (Genesis 3:21) In essence, God covered the first people with animal skins, which were the first blood sacrifices. But even those animal-blood sacrifices and coverings were inadequate and had to be repeated year after year.

That's why God sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to die on the cross for us. Jesus's death was an everlasting blood sacrifice. That's why God's Word, in Romans 13:14, says, "But put on the Lord Jesus Christ." All who put on the Lord Jesus Christ will truly be covered forever and have their shame removed.

Everything else is just a costume.

"And the Lord God made for Adam and for his wife garments of skins and clothed them." - Genesis 3:21

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, October 30, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 10/30/14, "Day of Praise"

When Jesus saw his mother there, and the disciple whom he loved standing nearby, he said to her, "Woman, here is your son," and to the disciple, "Here is your mother." From that time on, this disciple took her into his home. -- John 19:26-27

It's a simple model. Jesus didn't let anythIng get in the way of making sure that his mother was cared for, not even his work, not even his work of saving the whole world, not even his work of savIng the whole world while he was in immeasurable pain on the cross.

Jesus loved his mother and made sure that she was provided for.

Jesus, who is God the Son, is our model.

Celebrate all the great things about your mother today and everyday, not just six months from now when Mother's Day rolls around again. Pray for your mother's needs each day. If possible, call your mom and chat and tell her you love her! And let's do our very best to make sure that the needs of our mothers are taken care of, just like Jesus did with Mary.

Hi, Mom, I love you!

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Day of Praise

We, 10/29/14, "Day of Praise"

"When the time drew near for David to die, he gave a charge to Solomon his son. 'I am about to go the way of all the earth,' he said. 'So be strong, act like a man'" - 1 Kings 2:1-2

He seemed like a giant. Maybe he was. Every time a boy on our 4-year old t-ball team did something good, he lifted us up from the ground and high into the air so that it seemed we were on the top of the world. I think his name was Coach Carter.

That's what older men do for boys and young men. They lift them up. That's what older women do for girls and young ladies.

I'm grateful that, when I was a kid, my father and mother were involved in our community so that many men lifted me up as a boy through church and scouts and sports and school.

To be sure, I'm grateful for the women who've lifted me up, but I'll speak to that another time.

For today, it's the older man speaking to boys and younger men that I focus on, specifically in today's Bible verse where David charged his son, "Be strong, and act like a man."

There are lots of awesome women in my life, but the charge "Be strong, and act like a man" has its greatest impact when it comes to me from another man, especially an older man. After all, he can really know what it means to "Be strong, and act like a man."

For years, after I first got here to Birmingham, a man named Larry Felix used to constantly say to me, "Be strong!" Every time he said it, it made me think of Coach Carter, lifting me high in the air as a 4-year old. It also made me think of St. Paul, in Ephesians 6:10, saying, "Finally, be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power."

This world needs more strong men. And it starts with the church having more strong men, who recognize their ability to lift up another man by charging him to "Be strong; be strong in the Lord and in his mighty power!"

And in so doing to say what David said to his son, "Be strong, and act like a man."

C'mon, Men, stop sitting in the stands as a spectator. The world needs you. Get involved. Engage boys and younger men, and be a Coach Carter, who with your life and your deeds and your words, lIfts up that boy or that younger man as David said long ago, "Be strong, and act like a man."

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 10/28/14, "Day of Praise"

"Yet you do not know what your life will be like tomorrow. You are just a vapor that appears for a little while and then vanishes away." - James 4:14 (NASB)

Saturday night, my son, Caden, had gone with neighbors to the Auburn University football game where they met up with my oldest daughter Calley, who's a senior at Auburn. After the game, my kids and neighbors were in the car together and were t-boned by another car. Calley wrote the following blog as she reflected on the accident:

Sometimes, life happens quickly.

You look up and everything that was so familiar has suddenly changed.

My baby brother (six years younger, but 5 inches taller than me) came to a football game with me. At one point he left the student section to go get concessions and I thought to myself, "Oh my, should I let him go alone? Caden, do you have your phone?" Then I realized that at his age, let alone size, he was perfectly able to do things alone. I was likely in more danger than he of walking through the stadium unaccompanied.

It happened fast. He grew up. He's changed.

As I was being driven home after the game, we got into a wreck that totaled the car. The guy came out of nowhere and hit my side of the car very hard and very fast. Other than a slight crick in my neck and a headache in the passenger of the front seat, we were unharmed.

It happened fast. One minute we were driving, the next we were slammed off the road.

Now technically you could make a case that one event was actually faster than the other. I disagree. Because in either of these situations you could miss your opportunity.

That opportunity may look different depending on who is seizing it. For me, the opportunity is open to share the gospel of Jesus Christ. He took upon himself the penalty for our infinitely missed opportunity.

You see, we had the opportunity to live forever with God. But we missed it trying to be God (instead of be WITH God). We missed it and it was forever lost.

Christ can be for you what He has been and is for me. By claiming Him as Savior and naming Him as Lord, we can gain back our opportunity and be with God forever.

I didn't share the gospel with my brother daily until he was grown up. I didn't share the gospel with my neighbors until we were standing beside a totaled car.

Praise the Lord that Jesus did not only make His opportunity, but He made my opportunities through His grace. Will you take this opportunity to make Jesus your Savior and Lord? Will you take this opportunity to share Jesus with your neighbor?

Life happens fast. Don't miss the opportunity.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, October 27, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 10/27/14, "Day of Praise"

"The Lord is my light" - Psalm 27:1

When I was a teen, a pastor told me that the life of faith, in response to God's love, includes three things: 1) love God, 2) love people, and 3) love puzzles.

The puzzles part, he told me, is where a Christian always tries to listen to others and get to know them. It's what Jesus called "seeking and saving." As you listen to more and more people and get to know them, you try to fit the pieces of people's lives together with others, like a puzzle, helping people work together with their commonalities and various God-given gifts so that they can encourage each other in Christ and reach out to the surrounding community, inviting others to Christ.

It's the Biblical picture of the "Body of Christ" where different parts of the body fit together into one body, like puzzle pieces fitting together into one picture.

It's a great image. But there's one major requirement for doing puzzles--light.

I've never been able to do a puzzle in the dark, especially the puzzle of working together as the Body of Christ. And praise God that we don't have to.

In today's verse, we hear that the Lord is our light so that we don't have to put energy into our fears or anything else that would prevent us from listening to one another, working together, and bringing lives together, like puzzle pieces, in Jesus Christ.

In John 8:12, Jesus reiterates how he shines as light so we can see what we're doing. He says, "I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life."

Ultimately, what Jesus helps us to see is God and the people in our lives and how, in following Jesus, our lives can come together in mutual encouragement and loving service to other people around us so that they can see and serve God too.

As you go about your day today, look at the people (family, friends, and even strangers), believing that Jesus is shining as light for the world so that we can see plainly how our lives can fit together as one...

Namely, like a puzzle, which when finished, shows one picture, namely, God's light and love for us all in Jesus Christ.

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, October 25, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 10/25/14, "Day of Praise"

"As the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for you, my God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God?" - Psalm 42:1-2

Apparently, they were everywhere. That's why they had hunting season. But when I was a kid, I thought that deer were only on my Pap Yost's farm in central Pennsylvania.

I don't think I ever told anybody, but I thought the deer lived just inside the woods. At the top of the big hill, that was not quite a mountain.

My Pap had a big cornfield that ran from the top of the big hill, down the hill, and then across the flat to the farm house and buildings. In my mind there was a beautiful brook that ran between the bottom of the hill and the flat.

In my mind, one of the beautiful things about the brook was that it was a place for the deer to drink. I could see the deer coming down the big hill and drInking from the brook.

But I never saw them do that. I never saw them drink from the brook because, in my mind, they were afraid. They were afraid it was hunting season.

So they thirsted. The deer panted for streams of water, but stayed away because of their fears.

In today's verse, God says that we're like the deer. God says that as the deer pants for streams of water, so my soul pants for my God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God, so much so that we ask ourselves, "When can I go and meet with God?"

And God would know because God made the deer...and us.

God knows that fear keeps deer and us away from life-giving water. So God sent Jesus to wIpe away fear and everything else that keeps us from God.

And Jesus wiped away fear and everything else that keeps us from God so that your soul that thirsts for God would know the answer to the question in today's verse.

"When can I go and meet with God?"

Anytime you want.

Christ is risen. To be with you. And quench the fears and thirst of your soul.

Drink of him today, and be blessed.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, October 24, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 10/24/14, "Day of Praise"

"How good and pleasant it is when brothers live together in unity!" - Psalm 133:1

I am the richest man in the world. And I'd like nothing more than to share my riches with you.

Ya see, I have a great brother. Really. He's a couple years older than me. His name is Ben, which is short, of course, for Benjamin, which, in Hebrew, literally means "son of the right hand." "Son of the right hand," scripturally speaking, means "one who pours out blessing."

And that's what my brother does.

With only one very small exception (when we were teenagers) that I can remember in 50 years, my brother, Ben, constantly "pours out blessing" on me.

The chief blessing that he has poured on me all these years is that he believes in me. No matter what anyone else says, no matter what I do, my brother believes in me.

And by believing in me, my brother helps me to see Jesus.

Because that's what Jesus does for us all; he constantly pours out blessing on us all.

And the chief blessing that Jesus pours on us is that he believes in us. No matter what anyone else says, no matter what we do, our brother, Jesus, believes in us.

Jesus, who is God the Son, believes in us so much that while we were enemies with God he poured out blessing, poured out his life, poured out his blood, every drop of it, to wipe away the sin and guilt of all people who would believe in him, who believes in us, so that we can be in unity with God and with one another, pouring out our lives with blessing for each other in the strength of our brother, Jesus the Son of God, and to the glory of God the Father.

"How good and pleasant it is when brothers live together in unity!" - Psalm 133:1

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 10/23/14, "Day of Praise"

"I have hidden your word in my heart
    that I might not sin against you." - Psalm 119:11

What's in it for me?

I'm confident that we're all familiar with that phrase. We usually, if not always, use "what's in it for me?" as a way of responding to someone who wants us to do something where they're going to come out ahead and/or there's a risk involved for us.

Throughout Psalm 119 we're called to praise and purity and pursuit of the LORD. I can hear someone, in response to all that we're called to in Psalm 119, asking God, "What's in it for me, God? What's in it for me? You want all this from me, but what's in it for me?"

Of course, God is God. And as God does with so many in the Bible who brazenly ask, "What's in it for me?", God in Psalm 119:11 is implicitly asking, "No, my child, I'm God; you're a mere mortal. I need to ask you, 'What's in it for me?'. What's in it, that is, your heart, for me? What's in your heart for me?"

And the Psalmist responds, "Your word, Lord, your word is in my heart. I have hidden your word in my heart. So if the day ever comes when a Bible is nowhere to be found, then I can draw your word from my heart. When my children have a situation, I can draw your word from my heart. When I have reason to praise you, I can draw your word from my heart. When I am discouraged because the world or another sinner (like me) has hurt my heart again, I can draw your word from my heart so that my heart may be hurting but my heart will not fail because your word, O Lord, your word is hidden in my heart."

There's a boy at church who comes up to me every week and beams like a star in the night as he eagerly tells me the Bible verse(s) he has memorized since last week. If you could see him as he shares the verse(s), you would know that he knows "What's in it for me?" He knows the light and life and joy that's in a heart that is filled with God's word.

And he inspires me to the same.

Dear Lord, help me, help us all, to spend time with you through your word, that, hiding your word in my heart, I may taste all that's in it for me and then draw your word from my heart so I can speak it to others, inspiring them to hide your word in their heart too. Amen.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Day of Praise

We, 10/22/14, "Day of Praise"

"[Jesus] said to them, 'Come and you will see.'" - John 1:39

Whenever I leave a hospital room, I purt near injure myself. What happens is that I leave the room, find the stairwell door, stand next to the wall, put on my reading glasses, check my phone for various communications, go into the stairwell, start down the stairs, and realize I'm not seeing the stairs clearly because I still have my reading glasses on. My depth perception is totally distorted unless I remove my reading glasses. Only then, can I see clearly.

That's what Jesus is talking about in today's Bible verse. Something's got to happen in every matter of everyday in order for us to see clearly. Of course, it's not the removal of reading glasses that Jesus is recommending. What Jesus tells us is that we must come to him. In order for us to clearly see every matter of everyday, we must come to Jesus with each and every thing. .

Chris Rice captures this truth in an untitled song that I just call "Come to Jesus". I hope you'll take a moment to read through the lyrics and then maybe click on the link at the end to hear him sing the song, which is a simple invitation to clearly see so many matters if we'll simply come to Jesus, our Savior Lord.

Chris Rice's song goes like this:

Weak and wounded sinner
Lost and left to die
O, raise your head for love is passing by

Come to Jesus
Come to Jesus
Come to Jesus and live

Now your burden's lifted
And carried far away
And precious blood has washed away the stain

So sing to Jesus
Sing to Jesus
Sing to Jesus and live

And like a new born baby
Don't be afraid to crawl
And remember when you walk sometimes we fall

So fall on Jesus
Fall on Jesus
Fall on Jesus and live

Sometimes the way is lonely
And steep and filled with pain
So if your sky is dark and pours the rain

Then cry to Jesus
Cry to Jesus
Cry to Jesus and live

Oh, and when the love spills over
And music fills the night
And when you can't contain your joy inside

Then dance for Jesus
Dance for Jesus
Dance for Jesus and live

And with your final heartbeat
Kiss the world goodbye
Then go in peace, and laugh on glory's side

And fly to Jesus
Fly to Jesus
Fly to Jesus and live

Fly to Jesus
Fly to Jesus
Fly to Jesus and live

rtsp://r6---sn-jc47eu7l.googlevideo.com/ClULENy73wIaTAl9VQrivWIDPBMYJCAkFC3kskZUMOCoAUIJbXYtZ29vZ2xlSARSBXdhdGNoYMqtteCR3JusUoIBBWh0bWw1igELWmJQbElHcVdpR2cM/4C54D510597184785C4B8DF56E0CB877E6654306.995D4182574B2AD52C96D3A7BDC1CA1957416ED2/yt5/1/video.3gp

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 10/21/14 - "Day of Praise"

1 Thessalonians 4:13 - "But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope." (ESV)

So, what does that look like? What does it look like to "not grieve as others do who have no hope"?

Here's an image.

Yesterday, our church served the funeral of a family whose eight and a half month old son died suddenly and inexplicably. Before the funeral, the adults were grieving in various ways: understandable wailing, sitting in silence, chain-smoking on the patio, and other ways. But as the adults grieved in these ways, there were two unrelated children, a boy age six and a girl age two, who lived an image I'll never forget.

Just outside the front door of our worship sanctuary, there are two flower beds with newly planted, so not deeply rooted, pansies. The six year old boy carefully picked a pansy flower from the plant and gave it to a woman. The two year old girl saw him do that and picked a flower too, but with her flower came the whole not-so-deeply-rooted plant. Many of the adults, in their grief, fussed at the little girl. The little boy, without saying a word, watched all the fussing, looked down at the flower patch, held out his hands to the girl to ask for the flower, pinched off the flower from the plant, gave the flower to the girl, stooped down and replanted the plant, including firming the soil around it. Then he wiped off his hands, looked at an older man, and calmly asked if he could view the deceased infant one more time before the funeral began. All of that from a six year old boy, calmly gardening and enjoying God's beauty in the face of death, in stark contrast to the adult smoking, wailing, silence, and fussing.

It's an image of huge hope in the God of life even while acknowledging the huge reason to grieve.

It must be another of the many reasons why Jesus says that the kingdom of heaven belongs to those who are like children.

Dear Lord, There are so many challenges and sorrows that come at us each day. Help us, today, to be your children, for that is what we are, so that we may have hope in you in the face of our grief, comfort in the midst of our sorrows, and wisdom and calm in the face of our challenges. Grant this, O LORD, for Jesus' sake. In Jesus' name we ask this. Amen.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, October 20, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 10/20/14, "Day of Praise"

"LORD, who may dwell in your sacred tent?
   Who may live on your holy mountain?" - Psalm 15:1

It's a blessing to have a friend, a true friend, that you can count on through thick and thin. A true friend is also wise because, in knowing you, they are often able to see things about you that you yourself are missing, things that you really need to see.

If such is true for a human being, that they can see things about you that you really need to see but that you yourself are missing, then how much moreso for God.

God, being omniscient (all knowing), can see things about us that are critical for us to see because, God says, some of what God sees about us is destroying our relationships with God and others.

The collective spirit of our country is rapidly going the way of moral relativism, that is, people want to see things the way they want to see them and do things the way they want to do them.

God is looking at our morally relativistic country and saying, "I'm better than a true friend. I'm seeing things that you're not seeing that you really need to see because the way you're going is killing you, and your ways are killing our relationship."

Today's verse from Psalm 15:1 asks the question, "Who can dwell with God?" The rest of the psalm basically gives a description of the "blameless." The "blameless," biblically speaking, are not those who have not sinned, for God tells us plainly that all have sinned. Instead, the blameless are sinners who receive God's word and say, "Please LORD, help me to see what you see so that I may dwell with you."

Our country needs more blameless people. We need more people who will stop asking for a free pass mor"ally", financi"ally", relation"ally", and the rest of the "-ally"s.

And we need more people who will say, "Okay, LORD! Let it start with me! I'm a sinner. My ways don't work. So with the eyes of Jesus and in the strength of Jesus Christ whose righteousness alone makes it possible for me to be in your presence, help me to see what you see that I need to see, and give me your help and strength to amend my life that it may be pleasing in your sight and that I may dwell in your sacred tent, now and forever."

I'm in. What about you?

Here's the whole of the psalm.

Psalm 15 - A psalm of David.
 1 LORD, who may dwell in your sacred tent?
   Who may live on your holy mountain?
2 The one whose walk is blameless,
   who does what is righteous,
   who speaks the truth from their heart;
3 whose tongue utters no slander,
   who does no wrong to a neighbor,
   and casts no slur on others;
4 who despises a vile person
   but honors those who fear the LORD;
who keeps an oath even when it hurts,
   and does not change their mind;
5 who lends money to the poor without interest;
   who does not accept a bribe against the innocent.
Whoever does these things
   will never be shaken.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 10/18/14, "Day of Praise"

"[David prayed to God,] 'When I am in distress, I call to you,
   because you answer me.'" - Psalm 86:7

There aren't many things in life that you can count on 100%.

Truth be told, there's only one.

You can only count on the LORD God 100% of the time.

Martin Luther said that a god is anything in which you put your trust. It's best to put your trust in the LORD God, since you can only count on the LORD God 100% of the time.

Wouldn't you agree that it's foolishness to trust something or somebody you can't rely on 100%? Maybe even madness? But we do it all the time! Aaaaaah, Lord have mercy!

David knew that the Lord does.

Have mercy that is.

That's why David called to the Lord whenever he was in distress. David knew from experience, time and time again, that when he called out, "Lord," that the Lord was present and listening.

Do you?

Not just do you believe, but do you call on the Lord, saying, "Lord," as if he's present and listening?

Try it. You'll be blessed. Because he is.

Happy Saturday! The Lord is present and listening for you!

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, October 17, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 10/17/14, "Day of Praise"

"And a poor widow came, and put in two copper coins, which make a penny." - Mark 12:42 (RSV)

Ya know, sometimes ya just get the blahs. For whatever reason, ya just don't have that bounce in your step. And I have a hunch about that; ya know, why ya get the blahs and all.

I think the reason people get the blahs and lose that bounce in their step is because of the little things. Aaaaaall those little things that have to get done each and every day. Ya gotta, get it on up. Make the bed. Get yourself together, which includes a bundle of little things. Get a bite to eat. Rush out the door. Deal with traffic. And all that's just to get to the start of the million little things at work that you've got going on. And that's a short list if you have kids or aging parents to serve and get going too!

The little things. The myriad of endless little things.

They have the power to knock the wind out of your sails, take the bounce out of your step, and fill your spirit with the blahs.

But they also have the power to change the world.

Yep, it was a little thing, so little that nobody in the world noticed, except for Jesus. Nobody noticed except the Son of the Living God. But so impressed was Jesus by that itsy bitsy little thing that he used it to teach us a majorly big lesson.

About trusting God. About true faith. About finding peace and security in God instead of possessions. About sharing with the poor. About seeing yourself as rich because of God's love instead of less than rich because you still don't have enough stuff.

Jesus taught a big ol giant lesson about all that and more from a little thing. A thing so little that it was worth a penny to the world, a penny that today we don't even stoop down to pick up because it's so worthless.

But to Jesus, well, to Jesus that little worthless penny was worth a big ol praise from God. A pat on the back from THE MASTER of the GREAT BIG GIANT UNIVERSE!!!

So...

The next time you're feeling a little blahsy and the bounce is missin from your step, stop! Just stop and take account of the source. It's probably those little things. A million little things that ya gotta do to get through your day.

And then...

You can take a moment and look again. And see those million little things differently. Like an old widow long ago. Who seized a little thing as an opportunity.

To please the Lord.

And change the world.

It's all in how you choose to see it.

"And a poor widow came, and put in two copper coins, which make a penny." - Mark 12:42

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 10/16/14, "Day of Praise"

"The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it." - John 1:5 (NIV)

Have you ever felt small and insignificant?

After days of bad storms, Amanda and I finally got to take our night tour into Dismals Canyon. The whole park is so isolated that it's literally so dark at night that you can't see your hand in front of your face. So add the effect of the canyon depths to the camp darkness, and we couldn't even begin to describe how dark it is.

But shining through the darkness are these little, tiny, invisible-to-the-naked-eye-even-in-the-light creatures called DISMALITES. Our sweeter-than-sweet-tea but tall-as-the-canyon's-Champion-Tree guide, Kevin, and the Dismals Canyon website describe Dismalites this way: "Past twilight the canyon lights up with tiny bioluminescent creatures we call Dismalites. These 'glowworms' require a select habitat to survive and are unique to only a few places on Earth. They are 'close cousins' of the rare glowworms found in Australia and New Zealand."

If I understood correctly, Dismalites are basically the larvae of a rare species of gnat. Again, in sum, they are tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny.

But as tiny as they all may be, as small and insignificant as they all may seem, the light of just one itsy bitsy Dismalite cannot be overcome by the darkness.

Looking at a Dismalite is like looking at a little star, far, far away in a vast, dark, and never-ending universe except the Dismalite is shining through a darkness that's as close as your nose and as close as your hand that you can't see but use to keep from running into the rock in the deep dark canyon.

And no matter how deep the canyon. No matter how isolated the park. No matter how late at night. The darkness cannot overcome the light of a little, tiny, invisible-to-the-naked-eye-even-in-the-light Dismalite.

And that's the way it is with each and every one of our lives.

Ya see friends, when we believe in Jesus Christ, it doesn't matter how small and insignificant we may feel. It doesn't even matter how small and insignificant we actually are. When we believe in Jesus Christ, we have the light of the world dwelling in us and shining through us. And when darkness comes to the lives of our family and friends and neighbors and coworkers, the world has nothing to say because the world is cloaked in darkness. But we who believe have a calm and a peace and a word that brings light to the deepest darkness, calm to the roughest storm, and peace to the neediest soul.

Yes, we are all small and insignificant in the grand scheme of things. But because of Jesus Christ, we, like a Dismalite, have the power to shine our best when things get toughest for those we're given to love.

"The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it." - John 1:5 (NIV)

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 10/14/14, "Day of Praise"

"[Jesus said,] 'You are the salt of the earth.'" - Matthew 5:13a

So Amanda and I were driving from Dismals Canyon, where we're staying, to Natural Bridge Park about 30 minutes away. All of this is in the proverbial "middle of nowhere." So when we both noted that we were hungry and wanted to get a bite to eat, there wasn't a whole lot to choose from. Translation, nothing to choose from.

Except "D's Cafe."

So we stopped. Got out of the car. Stepped to the other side of the dog at the door. And went in.

We stopped again.

Empty food warmers. Almost empty food warmers. Along with patrons and employees that time, hygienists, dentists, barbers, and English teachers forgot.

The Holy Spirit whispered, "Come on in."

So we did.

Everything tasted like my Gram Yost's. (That's my mom's late mom, Helen, for whom my sister Cheryl's daughter is named.) To say "Everything tasted like my Gram Yost's" is to say it was all salty. The country fried steak, the gravy, the mashed taters, the green beans, and, especially, the pinto beans, which must've bathed in salt for a week. Even the chocolate pudding and cake had a hint of salt. It's all done that way for the preservin'. Ya know, saltin' it to make sure the food stays good. Until the food warmer's empty, or almost empty. It's the country way.

It's God's way.

Because as salty as the food was, it was nothin' compared to the people. Ya know, the patrons and employees that time, hygienists, dentists, barbers, and English teachers forgot. Country people.

God's people.

People who made sure the hospitality and the care and the interested questions and the "ya' got enough of this, that, or the other?" stayed good. And that my wife got escorted to the clean restroom instead of "the guys' dirty ol' restroom." Until the food warmer's empty, or almost empty. Ya know, until the last people had eaten before closing.

It's the country way.

It's God's way.

Ya know, to be salt. And make sure the goodness and the love is spread around til the end.

"[Jesus said,] 'You are the salt of the earth.'" - Matthew 5:13a

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, October 13, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 10/13/14, "Day of Praise"

"Surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life." - Psalm 23:6

Today's verse is a sImple encouragement.

Every shepherd has sheep dogs, right? I love the image that Jesus, the Good Shepherd, has two sheep dogs, named "Goodness" and "Mercy". They bring up the rear and make sure that none of the flock stray. The Lord Jesus is the Good Shepherd and the Master of his "sheep dogs" Goodness and Mercy. So "surely goodness and mercy will follow me all the days of my life." - Psalm 23:6

What a blessed life we share in Jesus.

Have a great day.

God is good. All the time.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 10/11/14, "Day of Praise"

"He restores my soul." - Psalm 23:3

Sometimes the luster needs to be restored to the silverware. Sometimes a friendship hits a bump in the road and needs to be restored. Sometimes a picture is misplaced and needs to be restored to its proper place.

Sometimes our souls need to be restored.
Maybe your soul has lost its luster like silverware; it doesn't shine anymore; it's become tainted.

Maybe your soul is broken; a relationship with God or spouse or child or parent or friend or coworker has hit a snag; you're hurting and struggling with the strain.

Maybe your soul has fallen; your self-esteem has taken a hit; you've lost your place at a job or with some people who mean a lot to you.

Who knows?

God knows.

Remember.

The LORD is your shepherd. He knows what you need and when you need it.

He knows when your soul needs to be restored. He knows if it's lost its luster. He knows if it's broken. He knows if it's fallen out of place.

He promises.

He'll restore your soul.

Trust him so you can live today in peace.

And not only peace, he'll also restore your joy!

After all, "He restores my soul!" (Psalm 23:3)

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, October 10, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 10/10/14, "Day of Praise"

Knowing that many of you don't read Saturday's devotion until Monday, I'll share with y'all today that Amanda and I are getting married tomorrow, Sat. Oct. 11 in Chattanooga, TN at 12:30 p.m. local time in a small, family ceremony.

For those who don't know, Amanda's last name is Green, so she's becoming Amanda Green DeGreen. You can chuckle because we laughed about the possibility of her name becoming Green DeGreen on the first day we met when we sensed that God had brought our lives together for a very special relationship. We humbly ask for your prayers.

Now, on to the devotion!

"As [David] went, he said: 'O my son Absalom! My son, my son Absalom! If only I had died instead of you--O Absalom, my son, my son!'" - 2 Samuel 18:33

When I was a senior in high school in east Tennessee (Kingsport), the World's Fair was in east Tennessee (Knoxville). One of the fun things at the World's Fair for groups of high school and college students was to make lines.

Lines to nowhere.

All ya did was stand in the middle of a plaza and form a line of 8-20 students or so as if you were in line for some World's Fair exhibit or show. The next thing ya know, there's a couple hundred people from all around the world who had joined the line because they wanted to see the "exhibit" or "show" too. Then the students would just walk away into the crowd, leaving the unwitting crowd to wait in a line for nothing, no exhibit, no show, nothing.

Whose line are you standing in?

According to his flesh, the incarnate Messiah, Jesus, came from the line of David. Of course, David needed a Savior for his sin too, but David is said to have had a "heart for God," which means that he did things as in today's verse, where he weeps over the death of his son, Absalom, the very son, who tried very hard to kill his father, David.

That the Messiah would come from the line of David means that the Messiah would display a perfect "heart for God" and a perfect love for people, even those who would kill him.

To stand in David's line means that we too have a heart for our enemies. For God desires not the death of sinners. God wants not the death of his enemies.

Instead God wants us sinners to be sorry for our sin, then repent, and then believe that God reconciles us to himself when we put our faith in His Son, who we crucified and killed on a cross.

May God lead us so that we do not become the butt of a World's Fair joke and join a line that's going nowhere.

Instead may we be part of a line like David's, that was perfected in Jesus the Christ, where the line is full of "hearts for God," full of loving prayers for enemies, and full of The Way to eternal and everlasting life.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 10/09/14, "Day of Praise"

"In all Israel there was not a man so highly praised for his handsome appearance as Absalom." - 2 Samuel 14:25

All I have to say about today's verse is "So what?" So what if Absalom was handsome?

He was a troublemaker. He made trouble for his peers. He made trouble for women. He made trouble for the authorities. He made trouble for the people. He made trouble for God.

Please dear friends, don't lose heart if you're not as handsome or beautiful as you'd like to be. God's looking at something else in you anyway.

In 1 Samuel 16:7, we read, "The LORD does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart."

If you REALLY want to be attractive, work on being attractive to God, which means work on being attractive on the inside of your being.

That's what counts to God. So, that's what counts.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Day of Praise

We, 10/08/14, "Day of Praise"

"But that is not what God desires; rather, he devises ways so that a banished person does not remain banished from him." - 2 Samuel 14:14

It doesn't matter who said it. They are wise words indeed, "God...devises ways so that a banished person does not remain banished from him." - 2 Samuel 14:14

As it was, the wise woman from Tekoa said those words. But she was instructed by wise Joab to say those words. And we would be wise to have such words on the tips of our tongues too.

For such wisdom is a major blessing of the Living God.

Because of sin, we were estranged from God, banished from God's kingdom and
presence.

But God devised a way so that we banished people do not remain banished from God.

Jesus is The Way (John 14:6).

As Absalom was estranged because of his sin, an enemy of King David, but worse, we were estranged because of sin, an enemy of the King, our God.

But the good news is that God devised a way for us enemies of God through the cross and resurrection of Jesus; we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son (Romans 5:10).

And then he sent us, in the strength of the risen Christ, to do the same (2
Corinthians 5:18).

Is someone "banished" from your life? Kept at arms length because they hurt
you? Humble yourself, and ask God for wisdom to be reconciled. It will probably take time and patience, but, through Jesus, God has devised The Way.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Day of Praise

Tu, 10/07/14, "Day of Praise"

"His attendants asked him, 'Why are you acting this way? While the child was alive, you fasted and wept, but now that the child is dead, you get up and eat!'" - 2 Samuel 12:21

How do you meet the day? And how do you meet the things within it?

In today's verse, King David is asked a question that helps us to think about the ways we meet the things that come our way. In sum, it's a puzzle to his servants why David fasts while his child is alive and eats when his child dies.

David's response is a model for us in how to faithfully meet our day. In sum, David is humble in his asking while things are still unfolding and hopeful in God when things have come to conclusion.

The application for us is simply this. Ask God humbly for the way we'd like things to go with the day in general and also with specific things within it. God wants to know your hopes.

Then when specific things are done through the day, like a test or a meeting or a talk, give it to God with hope and trust, and believe that it's in God's hands.

Humble asking and hopeful acceptance.

It's the formula for a wonderful day, regardless the size of the matters.

May your day be so wonderful with Jesus.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Monday, October 6, 2014

Day of Praise

Mo, 10/06/14, "Day of Praise"

"Once again there was a battle between the Philistines and Israel. David went down with his men to fight against the Philistines, and he became exhausted." - 2 Samuel 21:15

Have you ever been exhausted? Just tired to the bone exhausted?

Knowing most of you really well, I know that's a silly question. The question then becomes, "Will it ever end? Will those periods, and for some of you, will the life of exhaustion ever end?"

In today's verse, God's word says that the source of the exhaustion was a battle...another battle.

As I write this, I pause.

I see so many of you. Most of you. Actually, it's taking a while because there's a lot of you, but I see all of you that I know. With each of you, I can remember a time or times that you were exhausted...from battling...again.

The battles that I remember for each of you are different, though some are similar. I remember feeling the burden with you. In many cases, I didn't know what to say.

Ultimately, in every case, we have only one thing to say to one another that really encourages us to persevere...to keep going...to put one foot in front of the other while we have breath...to believe that there is joy awaiting if we will fight the good fight of faith.

One thing encourages us in the face of exhaustion born from another of life's battles.

The name of Jesus.

For in him is Easter. In him is victory over all that exhausts us. Over sin, death, the devil, and the grave.

As the old Easter hymn calls us to sing and believe from the depth of our being::

"The strife is o'er, the battle done.
Now is the victor's triumph won;
Now be the song of praise begun.
Alleluia!

The powers of death have done their worst, But Christ their legions has dispersed.
Let shouts of holy joy outburst.
Alleluia!

The three sad days have quickly sped,
He rises glorious from the dead.
All glory to our risen head!
Alleluia!

He broke the age bound chains of hell;
The bars from heaven's high portals fell.
Let hymns of praise his triumph tell.
Alleluia!

Lord, by the stripes which wounded you
From death's sting free your servants too That we may live and sing to you.
Alleluia!"

Praise God!

(Notes: Hymn #143 from Lutheran Worship, Author: Giovanni P. da Palestrina, Tune: Victory, 1st Published: 1695)

Praise God!



Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Saturday, October 4, 2014

Day of Praise

Sa, 10/04/14, "Day of Praise"

"Then all the people left, each for their own home, and David returned home to bless his family." - 1 Chronicles 16:43

Big blessings are full of little things.

In today's verse, David returned home to bless his family. How can we do the same? That is, how can we return home to bless our families? And how do you do it if nobody's there?

The keys are in the touch and in the hands.

In Mark 10:16, we read, "And [Jesus] took the children in his arms, placed his hands on them and blessed them." In Luke 24:50, we read, "When he had led them out to the vicinity of Bethany, he lifted up his hands and blessed them."

The keys are in the touch and in the hands.

Jesus, the Son of God, came into this world and touched us with his hands in appropriate ways. In so doIng, he blessed us. He also lifted up his hands and asked blessings on us. He also stretched out his hands and received the nails of judgment for our sin so that we might believe and be blessed.

Christianity is not just a religion. It's a lifestyle. God raised Jesus Christ to touch us daily with blessing by the power of the Holy Spirit.

God gave all of us hands so that we would use them to bless, genuinely being for everyone, acknowledging their existence with a spirit of kindness, and maybe even touching them on the hand or shoulder if it can be done appropriately. Decades ago, some people helped me realize how important it is to others, when we enter a room, especially in our home, that we walk around and touch as many as possible with a word or handshake or hug.

May God bless the work of your hands today. May God bless those that you touch in Jesus' name.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Friday, October 3, 2014

Day of Praise

Fr, 10/03/14, "Day of Praise"

My daughters are coming home today, Friday, from college for the weekend. It reminded me of a very special Good Friday reflection that my daughter, Calley, wrote a couple years ago for her blog www.voguemind.blogspot.com on Good Friday, April 6, 2012.

Enjoy. Be blessed. And praise God! Calley wrote:

The PASSION

If only I could capture in words what has been done here. But our language is so ineffective at communicating the Glory of the CROSS. That's because it's made by man.

This is so crazy to me. Think about this. I will NEVER EVER EVER IN A BILLION MILLION YEARS begin to fathom the tiniest inkling of Jesus Christ's great love for me or the significance of HIS DEATH as it pertains to my real life, the LIFE WITH MY GOD. It's just impossible. Ok, so Jesus knew that. He knew I was incapable of grasping my own need to be sanctified. That I didn't even know I wasn't living. That all my futile attempts to make atonement were just that, futile. He knew all this.

AND HE WENT AND DIED ON THE CROSS ANYWAY. Not anyway, actually more like BECAUSE.

I don't mean to be yelling this. I am emphasizing those words. So it's not an angry raising of the voice. How could it be? It's an "I'm in absolute awe and I want everyone else to be" emphasizing voice.

It gets crazier. Further beyond belief.

Now that He bought me, HE asks one thing that I give to HIM in return, since I owe HIM all now. He asks for my broken and contrite heart. He asks for me.

I don't know if any of y'all feel this way, but I don't feel in any way shape or form worthy to give myself to a KING. Or my baggage. My pain. My confusion, shame, sorrow, chaos, anger, etc. ad nauseum. Why is that fair? Why does HE give himself and then take on my BAD?

My mind is just not comprehending.

I have never felt a more beautiful gracing moment. What can compare? That question can't even be asked.

What is keeping me from running down the concourse, calling all my friends, and knocking on every neighbor's door? The same thing that put my SAVIOR ON THE CROSS in the first place.

I beseech you brothers and sisters. Stop and realize that we have been bought. The price has been paid. You, I AM REDEEMED. And I continue to be made new. Even more often than every day. Because God's gift goes beyond the constraints of earthly timing. It's more than every instant. Life is here. It is here.

Woah.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Day of Praise

Th, 10/02/14, "Day of Praise"

"Have mercy on me, my God, have mercy on me,
   for in you I take refuge.
I will take refuge in the shadow of your wings
   until the disaster has passed." -
Psalm 57:1

I hope you enjoy Bible study. it's important.

Take today's Bible verse and one key phrase within it: "I will take refuge in the shadow of your wings."

Not everybody does..."take refuge in the shadow of God's wings" that is.

Study it.

Study the words "shadow" and "shade" in the Bible. It's like studying "darkness."

God's word in the Bible says that there are two responses when "shadows" or "shade" or "darkness" come someone's way.

The unbeliever says, "See, you can't see God, therefore there is no God."

The believer says, "God has me covered; that's why there's a shadow." As in Psalm 17:8, "Keep me as the apple of your eye; hide me in the shadow of your wings." The believer, in essence, receives "shadows" and "darkness" as a privileged place, a place where they're the "apple of God's eye," which means "the desire of God's eye" and the love of God's heart.

That's radical faith.

We all taste "darkness" and "shadows" and "shade" in this world. Dear God, please give us some of that radical faith to go with it so that we, like David and ultimately like Jesus on the cross, might find "refuge in the shadow of your wings." Amen.

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Day of Praise

We, 10/01/14, "Day of Praise"

"So Saul asked God, 'Shall I go down and pursue the Philistines? Will you give them into Israel's hand?' But God did not answer him that day." - 1 Samuel 14:37

Have you ever asked God a question, and God did not answer?

You're not alone.

Job didn't get an answer from God. In Job 30:20, he says, "I cry out to you, God, but you do not answer; I stand up, but you merely look at me."

The Psalmist didn't get an answer from God. In Psalm 22:2, he says, "My God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer, by night, but I find no rest."

But, even when God seems silent, there is a promise for us to hold.

Through Zechariah the prophet, in Zechariah 10:6, God has promised us this, "I will strengthen...and save...I will restore...because I have compassion...I had not rejected them, for I am the LORD their God and I will answer them."

God's promise to answer is given to those who trust the LORD. Jesus puts it this way in John 8:47, "Whoever belongs to God hears what God says."

And those who belong to God are those who believe what Jesus said earlier in John 8:33-34. He says that anyone who sins is a slave to sin. In other words, we must be redeemed, bought back, from the power of sin. Jesus also says there that it's only through faith in his redeeming work that we're set free from sin so we can know the truth of God.

So then recognizing your need, believing in Jesus, and believing in his redeeming work for you on the cross, you are given a promise to hold while you wait for God to answer your prayer. In 2 Kings 20:5, "This is what the LORD...says: I have heard your prayer and seen your tears; I will heal you."

So, where does that leave us? Try this on for size. The original question we asked today was this, "Have you ever asked God a question, and God did not answer?"

And what God's word teaches us is this: For those who trust in the LORD, though we may still be waiting for a specific answer, there's a definite promise for us to hold, "I am the LORD and I will answer. I have heard your prayer and seen your tears; I will heal you."

Let us be found believing!

Praise God!


Pastor Chris
"The gospel is the story of Jesus [what God's only Son has done for us that we can't do for ourselves], spoken as a promise." - Robert Jenson