Saturday, May 30, 2015

"GREEK FIRE"

          "The tongue ia a fire, a world of iniquity. The tongue is set 
           among our members that it defile the whole body, and sets
               on fire the course of nature; and  it is set on fire by hell. 
                                                 JAMES 3:6


Greek fire was a chemical solution that was used in ancient warfare by the Byzantine Empire against its enemies. According to the one online source. It was developed around AD672 and was used with devastating effect especially in the sea warfare because it could be burn on water. What was Greek fire? Its actual chemical composition remains a mystery. It was such a valuable military weapon that the formula was kept an absolute secret and was lost to the ravages of history. Today reseachers continue to try to replicate that ancient formula, but without success.
        One source of catastrophic destruction among believers in Christ, however. Is not a mystery. James tells us that the source of ruin in our relationship is often a very different kind of fire. He wrote. "The tongue is a fire, a worlf of iniquity. The tongue is so set among our members that it defiles the whole body" (James 3:6). Those strong words remind us how damaging unguarded words can be to those around you.
       Instead of creating the kind of verbal "Greek fire" that can destroy relationships, families, and churches, let's yield our tongue to the Holy Spirit's control and allow ours words to glorify the Lord.

Friday, May 29, 2015

"HEAVEN"

       "Men of Galilee," they said, "why do you stand here looking into sky?
        This same Jesus who has been taken from you From you into heaven, 
         will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven."
                                                    ACT 1 : 11


WHEN MABEL CLARK's HUSBAND passed away people would comfort her, saying, "Im so sorry you lost your husband." Mabel would answer, "I didn't lose him; I know exactly where he's at He's in heaven!" Mabel believed the report of the one who came from heaven Jesus Christ.
        In the same way, you wouldn't have had to convince Johnny Cash there is a heaven. In his book, Man in Black, Cash told how his brother Jack sustained a severe injury in a wood shop accident. He was in a coma for a week and was not expected to live longer.
       In the hospital room, Cash said, "I bent over his bed and  put my cheek against his and said, 'Good bye, Jack. ' But suddenly he awakened from the coma and asked, 'Why is everybody crying over me? Did you see the river?"
       Jack began to describe a river separating heaven and hell then Jack asked, "Mama, can you hear the angels singing." His last word were, Oh Mama, I wish you could hear the angel singing."  And then he died. It was this encounter with the supernatural that impacted the life of Johnny Cash."
       In the Upper Room, shortly before the crucifixion. Jesus talked about heaven. He let the disciple know that He is the way, the truth and the life, the only  way to heaven. Find out for yourself, dear friend, by reading from the only One who can give you a firsthand account.
                                  

Thursday, May 28, 2015

"WHY GOD HAS NOT EXPLAIN"

"The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things revealed belong to us and our children forever, that we may follow all the words of this law"
DEUTERONOMY 29:29(KJV) 
 
KEVIN KOMPELIEN and his wife were confronted with the "Why-has-this-happened?" question when their son, then 12 years old, was diagnosed with cancer.
  As he spoke of the challenge to what he believed Kevin shared, "I found myself looking for answers. As I studied the Scriptures and prayed I became more and more aware that I cannot explain to myself and other what God has not explained to me."
  If the "Why question" is a defined of our faith, did God leaves us ill-equipped to face this dark night of the soul? On the other hand, if God had gone to great lenghts and given us checklists and diagrams take us through dark valleys would we even then understand?
  It's impossible to fully understand what God hasn't explained to us. Yet God has not ignored the issue, nor should His seeming silence keep us from running to Him in times of need. Job of the old Testament struggled with this issue. He lost his children, his income and livelihood, his friends, and even the respect of his wife. In the end Job recognized God's sovereignty and greatness and learned that He is a refuge.
  "I to realize that God was more than enough, " kevin said as he thought of his difficulty and the faithfulness of God. You can as well. Realizing that God is enough is one of the most important lessons you will ever learn. It enables you or me to trust His Word when you cannot see His hand.

"ROAD CONSTRUCTION"

                       "We have been delivered from the,...so that we 
                             should serve in the newness of the spirit"
                                                   ROMAN 7:6


Here in Michigan we joke that we have two seasons: winter and road construction. Harsh winters damage road surfaces, so repair crews begin their work as soon as the ice melts and the ground thaws. Although we call this work "construction," much of what they do looks like "distruction," In some cases, simply patching holes is not an options. Workers have to replace the old road with new one.
         That's what it can feel like when God is at work in our lives. Throughout the Old Testament, God told His people to expect some major  renovation on the road between Him and them (Isa.62:10-11; Jer.31:31). When God sent Jesus, it seemed to the Jews as if  their way to God was being destroyed. But Jesus wasn't destroying anything. He was completing it (Matt.5:17). The old way paved with laws became new way paved with the sacrificial love of Jesus.
         God is still at work replacing old ways of sin and legalism with the way of love that Jesus completed. When He removes our old ways of thinking and behaving. It may feel as if everything familiar is being destroyed. But God is not destroying anything: He is building a better way. And we can be  confident that the end result will be smoother relationships with others and a closer relationship with Him.

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

"STAY CONNECTED"

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


I woke up one morning and discovered that my Internet connection was not working. My service provider conducted some test and concluded that my modem needed to be replaced, but the earliest they could do so was the next day. I panicked a little when I though about being without the internet connection for 24 hours! I thought, How am I going to survive without it?
       Then I asked myself, Would I also panic if my connection with God was disrupted for a day? We keep our connection with God alive by spending time in His word and in prayer. Then we are to be "doers of the word" (James 1: 22-24).
        The writer of Psalm 119 recognized the importance of a connection to God. He asked God to teach him His statutes and give him understanding of His law (vv.33-34). Then he prayed that he would observe it with his whole heart (v.34), walk in the path of God's Commandments (v.35), and turn away his eyes from looking at worthless things (v37). By meditiation on God's world and then applying it, the psalmist stayed "connected to God"
        God has given us His Word as a lamp to our feet and a light to our path to lead us to Him
  



Monday, May 25, 2015

"WHEN FAITH CHALLENGES THE DARKNESS"

          "Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and
                Falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me"
                                              MATTHEW 5: 11


In 1996, a house in North Korea was demolished. As the rubble was being cleared away, a well-worn Bible, along with a small notebook containing the names of worshipers, was found lodged between two brick. In most places of the world, the Bible would have been set aside. And the work continued, but not in North Korea. The discovery resulted in the deaths of five men who were accused by the North korean government of running an illegal church."
        "Christianity is particularly threatening." Writes Barbara Demick in the Los Angeles Times, "If only because it has been extensively plagiarized by North Korea's propaganda writers. For example, doctrine has it that Kim John II's birth was heralded by bright star in the sky, in the story of Jesus' birth."' Instead of thanking God for their rice, sparse as it may be, children are taught to say, "Thank you, Father Kim."
        Noth Korea is not the only nation where christians are persecuted. It is also true in Vietnam , Cambodia, China, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Africa, and The Muslim countries. All over the world, God's children continue to bravely suffer for His glory.
        "Dear Friends," wrote Peter in the first century, "do not be surprised at the painful trial you are suffering, as though something strange were happening to you . But rejoice that you participate in suffering of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed. If you are insulted because of the name of Christ, you are blessed, for the spirit of glory and of God rests on you" (1Peter4:12-14).
                            



Sunday, May 24, 2015

"THE REFINERER"

               "I will refine them like silver and test them like gold. They
              Will call on my name and I will answer them; i will say, they
                are my people,' and they will say, 'The Lord is our God"
                                          ZECHARIAH 13:9


An Acquaintance of mine tells of taking a group of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship students to africa where they visited one of the world's highest-producing gold mines. Deep in the cavernous heart of the earth, miners would dig the dirt and mud would be processed, then refined, then the ore placed in a vast, fiery furnace.
       At the end of the tour, the guide took them into a room where sitting on a table was a gold bar. He then said, "If you can pick this up with one hand, it's yours to keep," In the group was football player who was immediately elected to take the challenge. People had gone to prison for taking gold, and all he had to do was pick it up, and he would become an instantly rich man
       He gripped the bar of gold with all his might. His muscles tensed, the veins in his arms bulging from the exertion, but try as he might, he couldn't move it.
       In the scripture text for today's selection, God tells the prophet that He will refine His people and test them like gold. The refining process, often disguised as difficulty, is never pleasant but afterwards produced a faith that can withstand the tests of time. The end result is a relationship that clearly defines God's loves for His people and the reciprocal trust that allows those who go through the fire to praise and worship Him.
       In all probability the prophet Zechariah remembered God's promise recorded by Isaiah,"The fire will not burn you." A loving father controls the whole process and He will take you through your trial.


"OUTSIDE THE STRONGHOLD"

         For he is the living God and he endured forever, his kingdom
                 Will not be destroyed, his dominion will never end
                                             DANIEL 6: 26


When the world around you is collapsing,your inner world may also feel like it's coming apart. Your heart cries out, "God,have you failed me? Where are you when I cry out for Your help?"
         I've read accounts of Arctic explorers stranded on an ice flow. They would helplessly watch as the ice underfoot gradually melted. As they began to sink, they could only hope for rescue.
         Life can sometimes make you feel like you're sinking you feel insecure because of your relationships collapsing, your health failing, or your resources dwindling.
         Don't despair or give up here's why:
         When the prophet nahum was proclaiming what would soon happennto Nineveh, he wrote, "The Lord is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble; and He knows those who trust in Him" (Nahum1:7NKJV).
         Nahum says, "God is good!" Do you believe that? If you don't, you are much like a stranded person on an ice flow who refuses help from a rescue boat, thinking, " Perhaps they are trying to trick me."
        Failing to recognize that we live in a broken world, some blame God for not preventing the tragedies that rock their world, especially their personal lives. This world is not heaven; it's a battlegroung. Don't blame God for the evil that some perpetrate. Instead, thank Him for His faithfulness and goodness.
        Nahum tells us that a step of faith is involved. Faith has two elements: belief and trust. You need to stand on what you believe. Faith anchors our soul to the One who never fails. Our Rock, our Fortress and our Redeemer

Saturday, May 23, 2015

"Healer our God"

         "And they rebuild the ancient ruine, reparing cities long ago destroy,
               reviving them though they have lain there many generations"
                                                 ISAIAH 61:4 TLB


When sickness confined Him to bed, L.B. Cowman put a map above his bed and prayed for the world. He then wrote about how God met him in his suffering. A book came out of his writing. Streams in the Desert, that was so loved by chinese leader chiang Kai-shek. In fact, it was this book and the Bible that were placed in his casket at his death. Cowman's book, punctuated with pain, continues to be of the bestselling Christian books in China.
        Sometimes God allows the breaking that eventually produces something of far greater value. George Sweeting says, "An ordinary bar of steel costs only a few dollars. If it is hammered into horseshoes, its price doubles. Made into needles, its value escalates a hundred times. Fashioned into springs for fine watches, its worth becomes incalculable."
        Jacob also experienced brokeness. When he feared for his life as his brother Esau and armed men approached him, he turned to the Lord. That encounter was characterized by his struggle, or wrestling, with the angel of the Lord. From that point on, Jacob walked with limp the sign of his broken body and spirit. But God gave him a new name, Isreal, and used him to give birth to a nation.
        Allow God to help you in your pain and helplessness. Never forget that His healing strength and sustaining presence allow the broken places in your life to get stronger.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

"Yesterday, today and Tomorrow"

                            "That all the people of the earth may know 
                                the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty."
                                                    Joshua 4:24


Recently I realized that all of the photos and mementos in my office represent the past. I considered removing them. But wondered if those remindered of people, places, and events might serve some many purpose beyond nostalgia. To Void being mired in the "yesterdays" of life, I needed to discover the value of those items for today and tomorrow.
        When God's people crossed the Jordan River into the promised Land, He told their leader. Joshua, to choose 12 men, have each one take it to their campsite that night (Josh. 4:1-5). Joshua set up the stones as a memorial so that when future generation asked. "What do these stones mean to you? They could tell them about God's faithfulness in holding back the water while they crossed (vv.6-7).
       As followers of Christ, its good for us to have tangible evidence of God's help in the past. Those momentos remind us that His faithfulness continues today. And we can follow Him confidently into the future. Our "stones" may also help others know that God's hand is mighty, as they encourage us to fear the Lord our God forever(v.24).
        The memories of what God has done for us can become building block for today and tomorrow

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

"Why Jesus Called Men"

         "Come follow me," Jesus said and I will make you fishers of men."
                                              MATTHEW 4:19


As the Morning Light pierced the eastern sky over the village of Bethsaida, two brothers, Peter and Andrew, arose ate breakfast, and headed for their boats. Little did they know that the events of that day woukd change the direction of their lives.
       They had no sooner thrown their net into the water when a stranger dressed in a seamless Galilean robe walked by. He saw them and said, "Follow Me!" It was both an invitation and a command.
        When Jesus called them, there was an immediate connection, and they walked away from theirs nets to follow Him. Later that morning Jesus recruited James and John, another set of brothers from the same village.
       But what was it that was so compelling about His invitation? Was it the tone of His voice or the look in His eyes? Was it His personality? Or was there something, perhaps deep in their hearts, that made them ponder the possibility that this was the Massiah who would throw off the tyranny of Rome?
       In the month that followed, Jesus recruited another eight men to be part of that executive committee, the inner circle of ordinary men following an extraordinary person. We call these men apostles.
      The invitation of Jesus to the apostles continues to echo through the corridor of time. He still summons men to follow Him today. Why follow Him? Simple! When you follow Him, you get to know Him, and when you love Him, you obey Him. As a result, you will be prompted to lead your family and love your wife as He loved the church. As you grow in your love for God, ask Him to enable you to love others as He did. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

"HE IS MAKING A WAY WHERE THERE SEEMS TO BE NO WAY"

         "I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten.
                                                  JOEL 2:27


None of us can say that we have no regets. Often we are led down paths of bad choices some paths longer than others which can have a lingering effect on the mind, body and soul. 
         A friend of mine spent a number of years living a life of achohol and drug abuse. But God did an amazing work in his life and he recently celebrated 25 years of being free from substance abuse. He now runs a sucessful business, has a devoted wife. And his children loves Jesus. He has a passion to reach out to others who are in the ditch of life. And he serves as a wise and loving mentor in the rescue operations of their lives.
        God never gives up on us! Even if we've made  poor choices in the past that have left us with regrets, we can choose how we will live now. We can choose to continue destructive living. Simply swallow in regret, or we can run to Christ believing that He has ways to restore. . .the years that the swarming locust has eaten" (Joel 2:25). When we repentantly seek His healing grace and freeing power. He's love mercy.
        While some consequences from the past may remain. We can be confident that God has a good and glorious future for those who trust in Him!

"I AM REDEEM"

                            "Let the redeem of the Lord say so those
                               he redeemed from the hand of the foe"
                                                PSALM 107:2


Throughout my life. I've accumulated a lot of stuff. I have boxes of things that at one time were important but over time have lost their intrigue. And, as an unrepentant collector, I've realized that piece to add to the collection. Then my attention turns toward to hunt for the next item.
        While we pile up many things the are important to us, very little of its really precious. In fact, over time I have learned that the most precious things in life are not material items at all. Rather, it's the people who have loved me and built into my life who are precious. When I find my heart saying, "I don't  know what I'd do without them," I know that they are indeed precious to me. 
      So when Peter refers to Jesus as "a chief corner stone, elect preicious" (1Peter 2:6). It should be resonate in ours hearts that He is truly precious our prized possesion above everything and everyone else. Where would we be today without the constant unfailing companionship of His faithful presence, wise and perfect guidance, merciful patience, comfort, and transforming reproof? What would we do without Him? I can't even imagine!

"PEOPLE BE LIKE BUT, YOU CHANGE FOR A BETTER"

          "When he came to his senses, he said, "How many of my Father's
             hired men have food to spare, and here I am Starving to death! 
             I will set out and go back to my father And say to him: "Father,
                        I have sinned against heaven and Against you."
                                                     LUKE 15:16-18


What would you call a person who sees the road sign clearly marking the highway to the right destination yet deliberately goes a different direction?
           The name "Jonah" might come to mind. This man. Knew exactly where he was supposed to go but chose ti turn his back on God's direction.   
           After he boarded a ship , a great storm ensued. Not long after, Jonah finally recognized that he was the problem. Jonah's detour resulted in unexpected calamity. But God gave him a second chance, and he got it right this time and went God's way.
          In the New Testament we read about Jesus telling the story of a young man who took a detour that landed him in disgrace, misery, and poverty. Jesus said that the turning point for the prodigal son was "when he came to himself." He changed direction and headed the way God wanted him to go.
         Many people perhaps including you have missed God's best. Instead of living with failure, it's give to say, "Ok, how do i get where God wants me to go from whete I am today?"
         You can't always retrace yours steps, but you can get to where you should go from where you are. Change directions and it can change your life. God and your family will be more forgiving than you think.

Monday, May 18, 2015

"NEVER BE AFRAID"

"For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the son he loves. 
COLOSSIANS 1:13(KJV) 

  "Why was Jesus Sent to Die on the cross? The answer of that question involves every one of us. And that also brings into focus another question, "What is sin?" Isaiah, in a passage that is prophetic in nature, says that all we like sheep have gone astray and that God laid on Him the sinfulness of us all. Going back to the Garden, we observe that our first father Adam turned his back on God's will and chose to go his own way. Paul said, "All have sinned!" And the word all is inclusive. Saying the same thing in another way, he said, "There is no one righteous; not even one" (Roman 3:10). In His own time, God sent His Son to be the ultimate sacrifice, to give His life as penalty for our sins. Thus God accepted His death in place of our death. Christ crucifixion was so moving that Rembrandt, the great Dutch painter of the seventeenth century, painted a graphic portrayal of it. Jesus was writhing in agony, and in the faces of those who stood at the foot of the cross Rembrandt depicted strong emotions. Yet one of the most significant things about his painting is that Rembrandt painted the image of his own face. It was his way of saying, "I was there, too! I helped put Him on that tree!"
  What Jesus Christ did was to pay the price for your pardon, but a pardon is valid only when the person involved willingly accepts it. It's up to you to acknowledge that your sin took Him there and up to you to accept His forgiveness and cleaning. The good news is that the penalty of your sins has been paid. That's what the passion of Jesus Christ is about.

"THE WISDOM OF CROWDS"

                  " Where there is no counsel, the people fall; but 
                     In the multitude of counselors there is safety"
                                           Proverb 11:14

1 Corinthian1:18-25


       The online description of the wisdom of crowds reads, "in this fascinating book. New Yorker business columnist james surowieki explores a desceptively simple idea: Large groups of people are smarter than elite few. No matter how brilliant better at solving problems fostering innovation coming to wise decisions, even predicting the future."
       The author uses a variety of things, ranging from pop culture to politics, to present one basic thought: more often than not. The crowd get right. It's an interesting theory, but one that would probably be debated during election years or when someone's favorite contestant is voted off a reality TV show.
       While the Bible makes it clear that the wisdom of crowds may not be reliable and can be dangerous (Matthew7:14-14). There is another way collective wisdom can be helpful. In proverb 11:14 we read, " where there is no counsel. The people fall: but in the multitude of counselors there is safety." One of the benefits of the body of Christ is that we can assist one another in part by working together to seek God's wisdom. When we join together to pursue God's purposes. We find safety in His provision of each other and receive His wisdom for the challenges of life.

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

"JUDGMENT IN THE CONQUEST"

 "For it was of the Lord to harden their hearts, that they should come against Israel in battle, that the might utterly destroy them"
 JOSHUA 11:20a

  In less than three chapters of Scripture we have seen Israel move from a mere foothold in the Land of Promise to possession of "all this land." But the brevity of the account of  Israel's conquest is no indication of the actual duration of the war the nation fights. Indeed, the author of the book here tells us that "Joshua made war a long time" with the kings of Canaan, some commentators believe that several years pass before Israel subdues all the Canaanites in the land. In truth, God had told Israel that the conquest would not be achieved overnight. He had said that He would drive the Canaanites out, but it would happen "'little by little"' (Ex.23:30) so that heavy warfare would not devastate the land . Thus, even the lenghty time it takes to achieve the conquest is an expression of God's goodness and grace. And in the end, with God's overwhelming help, Joshua does take all the land. Yes, some Canaanites remain, as we will see, but Israel has the upper hand now. The Canaanites are reduced, demoralized, and defeated.
      The primary reason for the lenght of the conquest is the stubborness of the Cannatines' hearts. We're told in tiday's passage that no city within the land, with the notable exception of Gibeon, makes peace with Israel. As Matthew Henry notes, "they never so much as desired conditions of peace." And the Holy Spirit here reveaks the reason for this pride of heart the Cannanites are hardened by God. These sinful, immoral, idolatrous people had a time of Grace. After all, the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac and Jacob lived among them, worshiping the one true God (Gen.12:6-7). But they not turn from their evil ways and their opportunity for repentance passed (Gen.15:16). Therefore, God brings the decendant of the patriarchs back to Canaan as instrument of Judgement. To achieve His purpose, He does with the Canaanites as He did with Pharaoh (Ex.10:1) to effect His people's release from Egypt and to bring Judgment on their slavemasters: He hardened theirs hearts so they will not repent. He withdraws His Spirit and gives them over to their sin. Thus, the Canaanites relentlessly attack Israel, even though each battle is fresh evidence that fighting is futile. They prefer to fight and die rather than serve and live. And so God's Judgment falls upon them.

Monday, May 11, 2015

JUST 'CAUSE

                     "All things were made by Him; and without him 
                           was not any thing made that was made"
                                                    John 1:3


Imagine nothing. I'm not asking you to not imagine anything, that is to stop imagining. That is hard enough. I want you to get busy and imagine nothing. Are your eyes closed as an aid to conjuring up the image? Is your mind large enough to grasp this tiny little thing?
       Nothing is perhaps one of the three great brain teasers in our world. We usually find ourselves tied in knots or with a charley-horse between the ears when we think on infinity, eternity are too big for our finite minds, nothing is too small.
        We get in trouble with it as soon as we call it an it. There is an it to it, but it's not a nothing,  it's something. That  is, we can talk about something, a concept. The thing itself isn't anything, it is nothing. Bit even though nothing is nothing, there is something we can glean from it --- ex nihilo, nihil fit; from nothing nothing comes.
       What does nothing have to do with unconditional election? Everything. There are any number of approaches to defenfing the Biblical doctrine of unconditional election. There are several strong proof texts we can use. There are implications, arguably necessary ones, we can draw from other texts. We can take the Edwardsian view of the will and work from there. Or we can start from the beginning, which is before the beginning. 
       Once there was God and nothing else. This, too, stretches the mind. We first try to imagine vast expenses of nothing, a sort of infinite sea of black. Bit there was no exoanse abd no black. Then we try, treading on dangerous ground, to envision the triune God, who is invisible. Nevertheless, the father, Son, and Holy Spirit were, and nothing else was. There was no time when they were not, though there was a they were not. If we really understood this, there would be no doubters as to the sovereign of God in this works of providence or of election. Because there was God and nothing else, there are no condition of which He is not the ultimate cause. Because the Bible begins with "In the beginning God," the Bibles teaches unconditional election.
       When we deny this truth, we deny one of the most fundamental of truths: the law of causality. This law recognizes that every effect must have a sufficient cause. If something happens, it happens because something causes it to happens. That's a fancy way of saving that you get nothing form nothing. There never was nothing. We know this for two reasons, first, the Bible doesn't begin with "In the beginning nothing," but " In the beginning God...." Second, if there ever was nothing, there would be nothing now. You  can't get something from nothing. Even in metephysics, there's no such thing as a free lunch.
       Let's suppose, for the sake of argument, that the elect are in fact nade such conditionally. The most common view is that God elected those who He saw, down the corridor of time, would choose Him. But in this argument, anything could serve as God's condition for election. He might have elected all those with odd-numbered shoe sizes. Both shoe size and the choice of God look like conditions. They serve as measurable ways of separating the elect and the reprobate. The trouble is that, in both of these instances, and indeed, with any such condition, part of the equation is hidden. If we push the cause for the condition back far enough, eventually we get to "In the beginning God."
      What, for instance, would God have forseen if He had peered down the corridor of time? Only those things of which He was the ultimate cause. Thus, if He forsaw that I would choose Him. Our Arminian friends try to squirm away from giving any kind if meritorious answer for that why, knowing that we're not supposed to have reason to boast. But it doen't help. Whether I chose Him in this make-believe unplanned future because I was smarter or dumber, more or less pious, begs the same question again:
       How did I get that way? I can't make myself smarter or more pious unless I am already smarter or more pious than the reprobate. Not even Cinderella's stepsters could choose, or change, their shoe sizes. The trail will lead back to God. If He foresaw that I would choose Him because of my Piety, He was foreseeing the necessary fruit of the piety that He Gave Me in the First Place.
        Even assuming that the difference is not meritorious doesn't help. Suppose God looked down the corridor of time and saw that I would choose Him. The reason, the thing that would separate me from the lost, would be the godliness of my parents, their faithful work to raise me in the nuture and admonition of the Lord. I certainly didn't choose my parents, and so cannot take any credit. But who did choose my parents? God did. And who gave them the godliness to raise me in such a way? God did. The final answer is always, "God did."
       In short, if yhere were conditions for election, then God determined who would meet those conditions.asking how He made the choice as to who would be given the conditions simply moves the question back one step. He must have unconditionally elected those who would be elect. Naturally, causes are rarely if ever so individual. Effects usually come about because of the convergence of several casual factors. We can rarely, ever, pinpoint those causes. But God can. If there were some sort of secret recipe of causes that would bring the faith that saves or the hypothetical faith that God foresees in election--even if it takes a combination of godly parents, personal piety, and hearing the ad for the Billy Graham crusade on the radio-- God still makes the soup. He wrote the recipe and mixes the ingredients.
       Unconditional election is simply another way of saying that God is the sovereign one, and that He alone is the ultimate cause of whatever comes to pass. To be sure, He uses secondary causes: the faithful proclamation of the word, the heartfelt prayers of the saints, the work of apologists and preachers, ads on the radion, even the conscience of the yet-unregenerate elect. But it is He who uses these things to bring about what He purposed from before all time, when there was God and nothing else.


"Your Lion Wallet"

            And they did not do as we expected, but they gave themselves
                first to the Lord and then to us in keeping with God's will.
                                             2 corinthians 8:5


Jesus was once confronted by hypocritical religious leaders who disparaged what a woman did for Him in the house of simon the leper. She poured her perfumed and anointed His feet. 
         "Why not sell the perfume and give the money to the poor?" They prodded, ignoring the fact that, had they been honest, they would have kept the money for themselves, Jesus explained, "The poor you will always have with you, and you can help them at any time you want. But you will not always have me" (Mark 14:).
           Paul on the other hand, commended the Corinthians who "gave as much as they were able, and even beyond their ability," pointing out that they first gave themselves to the Lord (2 Corinthians 8:3-5). When you have given God your heart, then what you have is easily placed on the altar as well.
          A widely circulated e-mail by unknown writer contends that "If you have food on your table, clothes on your back, a roof over head, and a place to sleep in the night, you are richer than 75% of the rest of the people in the world. If you have savings in the bank, money in your wallet, and coins in a piggy bank or dish on your night stand, you are among an elite 8% of the world's population."
         Can you answer "yes to some of these conditions? If yes, then you might be wealthier than you think you are. What you have belong to the Lord it will free you of a great obligation and allow you to become a tool in His hands. But they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing

Thursday, May 7, 2015

"Taking up Your Cross is a choice"

                     "As they led him away, they seized simon from cyrene, 
                      Who was on his way in from the country, and put the 
                        cross on him and made him carry it behind Jesus"
                                                   LUKE 23:26


An old Story was told of a boy's choir who wanted to begin their concert by marching down the aisle of the church. Bearing crosses, they would be singing, "Onward Christian soldiers, marching as to war....." 
      Not so," cried the rector of the church. "We will not have barbaric crosses in the church." So the crosses were collected and stacked behind the door in the church office. Not to be outstaged, however, the boys sang, "Onward Christian soldiers, marching as to war, with the cross of Jesus hid behind the door." Taking up your cross is a choice.
      When the cross is removed, there is no Gospel, only a religious form void of meaning and purpose. When you think you can follow Jesus without taking up your cross, you are as foolish as one who expect to enjoy a garden without having to cultivate the soil.
     Jesus stated His premise in simple yet strong words, He must take up his cross..."when Christian, the main character of John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, got to the cross, his burden began rolling downhill and was consumed by the open tomb. What a beautiful picture of ridding ourselves of the burdens that weight us down and keep us from running and leaping with joy!
      It is impossible to have the fellowship of christ apart from following Him by taking up your cross. When you follow christ, you no longer control your destiny, but neither do you have to worry about the future. You follow Him one step at a time.



A Merciful Sentence

"And that day joshua made them woodcutters and water carriers for the congregation and for the altar of the Lord,  in the place which he would choose, even to this day"
Joshua 9:27(KJV) 

Joshua now sentences the Gibeonites for their deception. His question--- "'Why have you deceived us saying, "We are very far from you," when you dwell near us?"'--- is rhetoritical in nature. It is, essentially, a statement of the Gibeonite' crime. And because they committed such a crime, Joshua says, they are cursed. As Canaanites living in the land promised to Israel, they were under the curse of the herem, God's command that all Canaanites be killed. By their duplicity they have gained their lives, but they remain under a curse and thus shall live out their lives as woodcutters and water carriers. It will be their lotto perpetually fulfill two of the most menial, toilsome, repetive tasks confronting the people of their time. In this condemnation of the Gibeonites to lowly servitude, Matthew Henry and some other comentators see the fulfillment of the curse Noah pronounced on his grandson Canaan: "'Cursed be Canaan; a servant of servants  he shall be to his brethen"' (Gen.9:25).
It would seem that this outcome would be most unpleasant for the Gibeonites, who, we are told, are citizen of a great city (Josh.10:2). Yet they seem to accept it with equanimity, and their reply to Joshua reveals the reason. They explain that they knew Israel was commanded to exterminate them, and therefore they "'were very much afraid for (their) lives."' It has become clear to them now that the Israelite leader plan to keep their oath and permit them to live. Thus, even subjugation to menial servitude seems to be a blessing compared with what happened to the inhabitants of Jericho and Ai.
  In truth, their subjugation ia a blessing. In order to placate the grumbling Israelites, the leaders had prosposed that the Gibeonites be made woodcutters and water carriers "'for all the congragation"' (9:21). But Joshua mitigates the sentence by assigning them to serve not just the people but also "'the house of my God"' (9:23). Thus, they are given work that required their personal attendance upon the altar of God which would bring them to the knowledge of the law of God, "henry writes. In other word, they are given a ring-side seat to the Israelites'worship, a situation the Lord can use to call some of them to faith if He pleases to do so.Thus, Israel's God once again show His mercy even in the midst of judgment and condemnation.

 

Saturday, May 2, 2015

"HIS EYE IS ON THE SPARROW"

         " Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them
                will fall to the ground apart from the will of your father."
                                           MATTHEW 10:29


English sparrows. They're worth barely a penny, Jesus said so. Yet of the world's nine thousand bird species, Jesus singled out the least-noticed and most insignficant of birds to make a point.   
         If God takes time to keep tabs on every sparrow who it is where it's going whether or not its needs are being met then surely He keeps special tabs on you. Intimately. Personally. And with every with every detail in mind.
        The Bible may point to eagles to underscore courage and power, and it may talk about doves as symbols of peace and contentment. But God's Word reserved sparrows to teach a lesson about trust. Just as God tenderly cares for a tiny bird, even making note of when it is harmed.or when it falls to the ground, He gently reminds you that He is worthy of your greatest trust, your deepest confidence.
         
         How do you a approach God today? Maybe you feel like a ragamiffin 
         house sparrow clinging to an empty birdfeeder with no one to care. 
         Stop and remember the facts behind Matthew 10:29. God does care.
         He notices.
              Try trusting the Lord today as would a sparrow. No question asked
         No fears that He won't come through. Relax in the protection and 
         provision of your great God.

         Father, it's astounding to think that with so many things to care for,
        You have a heart for people the world considers small and insignificant.
        Forgive me for not believing that You not only notice but intimately care 
        Every detail of my life. Help me today to believe You for the small things. 
        mayI see every detail as an opportunity to trust You.

Friday, May 1, 2015

"A SPIRITUAL JOLT"

        "Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" So they said, "Believe on the
        Lord Jesus Christ, and you will be saved, you and your household"
                                            A C T 16:30b-31


        With their bodies aching and their feet uncomfortably held in the stocks, Paul and Silas cannot sleep in their prison cell. But they neither surrender to despair nor lament their sufferings. Instead, they go to God with there pettions and praises, bolstering their faith by reminding themselves of their and loving God.
         Earlier in Acts, we twice saw apostles free from jail by angels. Now, however, God intervenes in another way he sends a violent earthquake that causes the doors to swing open and the chain to come loose from the walls, although the prison all miraculously escape injury, none makes a break for freedom; perhaps they understand that these events are somehow connected to Paul and Silas, and they stay near them For protection. The jailer, however, waking in response to the jolt of the earthquake and seeing the open doors, assumes that all the prisoners have fled. That means his life is forfeit, so in despair he prepares to commit suicide. But while he cannot see the prisoners inside the dark jail, whose eyes are well adjusted to the darkness of the prison, can see him, and he calls out to tell jailer that he need not die, for all the priisoners are still present.
       In response, the jailer rushes into the prison , and falls before paul and Silas in humble submission  He then leads them out and asks them the most important question any human being can ask: """Sirs, what must I do to be saved?"' He has recognized the spiritual power in these men and wishes to know of salvation.
        The missionaires answer is simple: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ """ they are telling him to "place his complete confidence and trust in Jesus and to acknowledge Him as his Lord," Dr. Simon
 Kistemaker says, they also attach a promise: if the jailers believer, he and his household will be saved. Paul and Silas are not promising salvation for the entire household if the jailer alone believers; in fact, they preach christ to his family and servants in verse 32. They are simply saying that the offer of salvation is open to all of them. In God's grace, they that accept that offer and undergo baptism that very night. And this man who only hours  before had roughly incarcerated Paul and
Silas as their jailer, now washes their wounds and feeds them as their new brother in Christ. And he rejoices over his family's salvation.