Viewing the World through God's Word

Category: 2 Thessalonians (Page 5 of 5)

My Tribute

P.AllanAndrae Crouch went home to the Lord January 8th.  He was 72.

Who?

If you were into Christian music in the 70’s, you know.  I knew.  I heard him often, but saw him “live” only once—and then without his group, “the Disciples.”  But his soul was on display.  I saw it in every song he sang, every piano note he played.  As the author of the blog below (please read it) said, “[He] makes contemporary religious music a little more washed-out, flat, and placid. Andrae was all about joy. The joy of his salvation and the joy of creation.”

Reading this blog brought back memories—times I listened to his music with joy, times I tried to sing some of his music, but never could get the same “sound.”

Funny how I’m sentimental over his death.  I’m sure he’s with the Lord, musically rejoicing as only he can.  But I feel a certain sadness.  Funny, isn’t it, how the Lord uses particular people in our lives.  At the time, we just take them for granted, unaware even of the effect they’re having on us.  Only later do we realize the gift they were to us.

Please read the blog below.  If you have any of Andrae’s recordings, play one.  Worship with him.  And rejoice with him, knowing that today he’s still singing joyfully with the Lord.

http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2015/january-web-only/remembering-andrae-crouch-dead-at-72.html

As I listened to his music at the link below, I couldn’t do it without a few tears and a big thank you to our Father.  Enjoy the Lord!

https://video.search.yahoo.com/video/play;_ylt=A0LEV7mcorpUWigA8B0PxQt.;_ylu=X3oDMTB0b2ZrZmU3BHNlYwNzYwRjb2xvA2JmMQR2dGlkA1lIUzAwMl8x?p=Andrae+Crouch+Youtube&tnr=21&vid=8BDC08C99FC44DAD37818BDC08C99FC44DAD3781&l=473&turl=http%3A%2F%2Fts4.mm.bing.net%2Fth%3Fid%3DUN.607997671097436823%26pid%3D15.1&rurl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DCvIxwc90BEI&sigr=11bemkhj3&tt=b&tit=Through+It+All+Andrae+Crouch&sigt=10sku481c&back=https%3A%2F%2Fsearch.yahoo.com%2Fyhs%2Fsearch%3Fp%3DAndrae%2BCrouch%2BYoutube%26type%3DYHS_SF_2300%26param1%3DiyzTqxyuf
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Ferguson 2

O PreacherHere’s another thoughtful, challenging article about events in Ferguson—this one sent me by my friend, Jason Zaccone.  Thanks, Jason!

#Ferguson: A Gospel Issue

I am so tired of waiting,
Aren’t you,
For the world to become good
And beautiful and kind?
-Langston Hughes

It was in my college Liberation Theology class back in 1990 that I first discovered different ‘Gospel’ perspectives – perspectives from those steeped in death and persecution, suffering and scarcity.  We spent evenings at my professors house reading and discussing Gustavo Gutiérrez, Juan Luis Segundo, Leonardo Boff, Jon Sobrino, and a host of African and Asian liberation theologians.  It may have been the first ‘aha’ moment for me, the first realization that the Gospel wasn’t just about getting saved and voting pro-life.

A next significant time came during the year I lived with Tom in the hood in Chicago.  Though I grew up on Long Island with great diversity, I was a suburban kid, mostly protected from the issues Tom grew up with.  Tom was black, and he showed me and told me how different it was for him to leave the apartment and walk down the street.  Here again, I was challenged to wrestle with whether or not the ‘Gospel’ had something to say about Tom’s everyday fear.

In the past 20 or so years, it was been those who I pastor as well as clients I’ve cared for who’ve helped me understand that my life, as a white man with a blonde-haired, blue-eyed wife and daughters, is and will always be different…and privileged.  Even in our mostly Asian neighborhood in San Francisco, we were beloved, celebrities in a way.  I haven’t experienced the kinds of things I’ve heard described by Tom, and by many folks I’ve counseled and cared for.  I haven’t been ignored by waitresses in restaurants, targeted by suspicious law enforcement officers, followed, stared down.  I haven’t been overlooked for a job or a loan.  I’ve rarely felt altogether different.  I haven’t been labeled as “angry” or walked down the street anxiously or wondered what I should wear or how quickly I could walk or what might make me look like a criminal to another.  These have not been my worries.  But they have been Tom’s, and many, many others.

What I’ve seen is that in my privileged white world, the ‘Gospel’ is domesticated.  Ferguson is not on our radar.  I’d dare say for many white evangelicals, today is just another day.  The real scandal would be if some prominent evangelical wrote a pro-LGBTQ book, for instance.  The Gospel is tamed, reduced, narrowed.  It becomes a balm for guilt-ridden souls who crave 140-character tweets reminding us that we’re accepted, but it hardly seems applicable to what is happening in Ferguson.  And, after all, isn’t what is happening there really just about some angry black folks who’ve, once again, made a much bigger deal out of something that clearly was the result of a young black man’s aggression against a police officer?

We don’t get it, friends.  And we can’t, and won’t, until we walk a hundred miles in the shoes of someone very different than us or until our friendships reflect the diversity of society.  Statistics show, in fact, that we have the least diverse social network – 91% white, and only one-percent black.  We naively think that changes in voting rights some forty years ago solved the problem of race.  And as Christians, we become incensed at a Facebook dialogue about abortion or homosexuality, but hardly understand the fury of young black men and women in the streets last night who feel so powerless that throwing stones and burning things provide some outlet, albeit a tragic one, for a voice.  As MLK Jr said, “A riot is the language of the unheard.”  But we’ll say, “You see…they are so angry.  Why do they always have to make it about race?”  I’ve heard this so much that my stomach turns and I’ve finally begun calling people out.

This leads me to the important point that Ferguson is a Gospel issue.  Yes, it’s a justice issue and a race issue.  But it’s a Gospel issue.  Now, if you have a tamed and domesticated Gospel tuned into your particular moral litmus test issues, you won’t see this.  But St. Paul did.  For St. Paul, the core of the Gospel was about reconciliation – God and sinner, Jew and Greek, male and female, slave and free (Gal. 3:28).  This was the necessary implication of justification by faith alone.  Justification was never simply a get out of jail free card, an individualistic guilt-appeasement balm.  Justification opens the gates to freedom, to reconciliation, to wholeness inside and out.  It puts into contact with the outsider, the person who’ll make us feel uncomfortable, the different – a sexual, racial, and geographic outsider (Acts 8), for example.  It puts us into contact these cut-off parts of ourselves.  It levels the playing field; the powerful are brought down and the powerless are brought up.  And the Gospel invitation, particularly for those of us with privilege, is to go down willingly, to be crucified with Christ, to be the ptochos – impoverished, broken, brought to the end of ourselves, dying like that grain of wheat that must fall to the ground to bear fruit.  All for the sake of the other.  We must go, as hard as it is, first to listen.  We must just begin with listening, though our souls have become so attuned to the endless political chatter and certitude of the Hannity’s and Maddow’s.

Jesus would have been in Ferguson last night.  He wouldn’t have paid a whole lot of attention to a decision on the indictment.  He knows better than any of us how “facts” can be aligned with whatever narrative is preferred.  He wouldn’t have been wearing a hat or t-shirt for a particular side.  No, I think Jesus would have been there standing alongside the family of Michael Brown, holding them, crying with them.  I think Jesus would sit with Officer Wilson, naming the fear and anxiety and anger he was feeling, and reminding him that his yoke is easy and his burden is light.  I think he’d be with young men and women who went to bed confused and ashamed that they had participated in violence, looted stores, and started fires.  He’d say, “I get it.  I see the anger.  I’m not going anywhere.  Let’s talk.”

Jesus crosses the barriers.  His Gospel is not domesticated, it is invasive, courageous, pursuing.  God became man, crossing the ultimate barrier, crossing into death, going down, going further than I’d ever want to go.  But we need to, now, with courage.

Far more hinges on how we meet one another from here on out than on an indictment in Ferguson, MO.  Until my white (mostly evangelical) brothers and sisters are as impassioned by this as they are the next Rob Bell book, I don’t see much changing.  And when I say that, I’m not saying that you need to get behind an indictment but get behind your black brothers and sisters, to get into their worlds, their realities, their sufferings.  I’m saying we need to ask questions, to listen, to exercise holy curiosity.  I’m saying that we might have blindspots, might not see so clearly.  I’m saying that we really just don’t get it, at a fundamental level, and must make ourselves available for metanoia.  I’m saying that we need to knock on a black neighbor’s door and say, “I’m sorry I’ve never come by.  I’m confused by everything that is going on, and I wonder if I’m missing something.  I need your help”  We are addicts of privilege and power, and it’s time we acknowledge that we need help.

If we can be fueled by the same passion that led Jesus to cross the ultimate barrier and St. Paul to leave the nest of Jerusalem and cross barriers that left him imprisoned and reviled and ultimately murdered himself, perhaps then we will see the Good News through Isaiah’s eyes:

Then justice will dwell in the wilderness,
    and righteousness abide in the fruitful field.
17 The effect of righteousness will be peace,
    and the result of righteousness, quietness and trust forever.
18 My people will abide in a peaceful habitation,
    in secure dwellings, and in quiet resting places. (Isa. 32)

I pray for peaceful habitation, for quiet and secure dwellings in Ferguson today.

Ferguson

In early August my wife and I, along with seven of our nine children, left for a month-long ministry tour in Africa (Kenya, Zambia, and South Africa). It was a couple of days before we got settled and had any access to media. As such, I was taken aback when I began to receive Google alerts, emails, and Facebook and Twitter messages either demanding that I comment on “Ferguson,” or condemning me for failing to do so. The only problem was, I had absolutely no idea what they were talking about. Who, what, or where was Ferguson? Why was it such a big deal? Why was I being condemned (along with other “high-profile” evangelicals) for “failing to speak out on such an important issue”?I eventually got up to speed. Or at least I found out what all the fuss was about. Over the next several weeks I viewed this issue from a unique perspective. I was an American in Africa watching an issue ignite ethnic tensions in my homeland. It was almost surreal.

Who Am I to Speak?

My first response to Ferguson was to say nothing. I was on the outside looking in. I didn’t know what happened. I didn’t know the communities or the issues surrounding the tensions. Second, I chose to remain silent because people were demanding that I speak—even condemning me for my silence. In this age of “I sure would love to hear your thoughts on” I get tired of the sense of entitlement with which people approach those whom they deem to be popular or high-profile Christians. No one is “entitled” to my opinion. Nor is my faithfulness to God determined by how quickly I respond to “relevant” issues.

As a pastor, I have a responsibility to my flock. If those for whose souls I care (Heb. 13:17) want help thinking through these issues, I am obligated to them. I have a duty to walk them through issues like these to the best of my ability, and with sensitivity to their particular needs. What worries me is that Christians in the age of social media care more what “popular” preachers have to say on issues like this (and whether or not they agree with other “popular” preachers) than they are about taking advantage of an opportunity to work through challenges in the context of Christian community. More importantly, it worries me that so many Christians view themselves primarily as members of this or that ethnic community more than they see themselves as members of the body of Christ.

The Plight of Black Men

Rest assured, I do believe there are systemic issues plaguing black men. These issues are violence, criminality, and immorality, to name a few. And all of these issues are rooted in and connected to the epidemic of fatherlessness. Any truly gospel-centered response to the plight of black men must address these issues first and foremost. It does no good to change the way white police officers respond to black men if we don’t first address the fact that these men’s fathers have not responded to them appropriately.

There is indeed an epidemic of violence against black men. However, that violence, more often than not, occurs at the hands of other black men. In fact, black men are several times more likely to be murdered at the hands of another black man than they are to be killed by the police. For instance, in the FBI homicide stats from 2012, there were 2,648 blacks murdered. Of those, 2,412 were murdered by members of their own ethnic group. Thus, if I am going to speak out about anything, it will be black-on-black crime; not blue-on-black. I want to apply the gospel and its implications in a way that addresses the real issue. If a few black men being killed by cops requires a national “dialogue,” what in the world does the overwhelming number of black-on-black murders require? If the police do not see black men through the proper gospel-centered, image-of-God lens, what does the black-on-black murder rate say about the way we see ourselves?

In addition to violence, black men are plagued with criminality. Low-income black communities like Ferguson know all too well that black criminals preying on their neighbors makes life almost unlivable. Growing up in South Central Los Angeles, I know all too well what it’s like to have bars on the windows and doors for fear that thugs will break in to steal or kill. I remember being robbed at gunpoint on my way home from the store one day. It was one of the most frightening and disheartening events of my life. The fear, helplessness, and anger I felt stayed with me for years. And it taught me an unfortunate lesson: the greatest threat to me was other black men.

The underlying malady that gives rise to all the rest of these epidemics is immorality and fatherlessness. We know that fatherlessness is the number one indicator of future violence, dropout rates, out-of-wedlock births, and future incarceration. And in the black community, more than 70 percent of all children are born out of wedlock! Fatherlessness is the bane of the black community.

Nor is this plague forced on us. It is as common as morning dew, and as overlooked as dust under a refrigerator. Where are the marches against this travesty? Where are the protestors who demand better? Where are the black “leaders” who . . . oh, that’s right, they have just as many illegitimate children as anyone else. Again, it is common knowledge that this is the most immediate root cause of the ills plaguing black Americans.

But What About Racism?

I have been pulled over by police for no apparent reason. In fact, it has happened on more than one occasion. I was stopped in Westwood while walking with a friend of mine who was a student at UCLA. We found ourselves lying face down on the sidewalk while officers questioned us. On another occasion, I was stopped while with my uncle. I remember his visceral response as he looked at me and my cousin (his son). The look in his eye was one of humiliation and anger. He looked at the officer and said, “My brother and I didn’t fight in Vietnam so you could treat me like this in front of my son and my nephew.”

Again, this experience stayed with me for years. And for many of those years, I blamed “the system” or “the man.” However, I have come to realize that it was no more “the system” when white cops pulled me over than it was “the system” when a black thug robbed me at gunpoint. It was sin! The men who robbed me were sinners. The cops who stopped me were sinners. They were not taking their cues from some script designed to “keep me down.” They were simply men who didn’t understand what it meant to treat others with the dignity and respect they deserve as image bearers of God.

It does me absolutely no good to assume that my mistreatment was systemic in nature. No more than it is good for me to assume that what happened in Ferguson was systemic. I have a life to live, and I refuse to live it fighting ghosts. I will not waste my energy trying to prove the Gramscian, neo-Marxist concept of “white privilege” or prejudice in policing practices.

I don’t care what advantages my white neighbor may or may not have. If he does have advantages, God bless him! I no more fault him than I fault my own children who have tremendous advantages due to the fact that they were raised by two educated, Christian parents who loved, disciplined, and taught them. Ironically, when I think about THAT advantage, I am filled with joy and gratitude to God for his faithfulness. People are supposed to bequeath an advantage to their children and grandchildren (Prov. 13:22). Why, then, would I be angry with my white neighbor for any advantage he is purported to have? And what good would it do? How does that advance the gospel? Especially in light of the fact that growing up with the gospel is the ultimate privilege/advantage! It is the advantage that has granted us all “American privilege”! Are we guilty for being citizens of the wealthiest republic in the history of the world? I think not!

As a father of seven black men, I tell them to be aware of the fact that there may be times when they may get a closer look, an unwelcome stop, or worse. However, I do not tell them that this means they need to live with a chip on their shoulder, or that the world is out to get them. I certainly don’t tell them that they need to go out and riot (especially when that involves destroying black-owned businesses). I tell them that there are people in the world who need to get to know black people as opposed to just knowing “about” us. I tell them that they will do far more good interacting with those people and shining the light of Christ than they will carrying picket signs. I tell them, “Never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay’” (Rom. 12:19). And I tell them that there are worse things than suffering injustice. That is why we must heed Peter’s words:

But in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect, having a good conscience, so that, when you are slandered, those who revile your good behavior in Christ may be put to shame. For it is better to suffer for doing good, if that should be God’s will, than for doing evil. (1 Pet. 3:15–17)

In the end, the best lesson my children can learn from Ferguson is not that they need to be on the lookout for white cops. It is far more important that I use this teachable moment to remind them that “God is not mocked, for whatever one sows, that will he also reap” (Gal. 6:7). Moments before his death, Michael Brown had violently robbed a man in a store. A man doing the best he could to make a living. Minutes later, Brown reaped what he sowed, and was gunned down in the street. That is the sad truth.

My sons have far more to fear from making bad choices than they have to fear from the police. The overwhelming majority of police officers are decent people just trying to make a living. They are much more likely to help you than to harm you. A life of thuggery, however, is NEVER your friend. In the end, it will cost you . . . sometimes, it costs you everything.

Husband, Hold Her Hand!

Denise—R.C. Sproul Jr.’s wife—went home to be with the Lord three years ago this December.  She was 46 when she succumbed to cancer.  Last week R. C. posted a blog entitled, “I Wish I Had Held Her Hand More”.  I hope it moves your heart as it does mine.

It’s not, of course, that I never held her hand.  It is likely, however, that I didn’t hold it as often as she would have liked. 

Holding her hand communicates to her in a simple yet profound way that we are connected.  Taking her hand tells her, “I am grateful that we are one flesh.”  Taking her hand tells me, “This is bone of my bone, flesh of my flesh.”

It is a liturgy, an ordinary habit of remembrance to see more clearly the extraordinary reality of two being made one.

It would have, even in the midst of a disagreement, or moments of struggle, communicated, “We’re going to go through this together.  I will not let go.”  It would have also reminded both of that secret but happy truth we kept from each other, that hidden reality that is equal parts embarrassment and giddy joy:  that we’re just kids.  Bearing children, feeding mortgages, facing adult sized hardships never really changes what we are inside.  Holding her hand was like skipping through the park.  Holding her hand was winking at her, as if to say, “I know you’re just a kid too.  Let’s be friends.”

On the other hand, holding her hand more would have communicated to us both my own calling to lead her, and our home.  Hand holding is a way to say both, “You are safe with me” and “Follow me into the adventure.”

It would have reminded me that there is no abdicating, no shirking, no flinching in the face of responsibility.  And as I lead it would be a constant anchor, a reminder that I lead not for my sake, but for hers.

Holding her hand more also would have spoken with clarity to the watching world.  It would have said, “There’s a man who loves his wife.”  It saddens me that so many only learn this after their wife is gone.

Perhaps most of all, however, I wish I had held her hand more so that I could still feel it more clearly.  I wish it had been such a constant habit that even now my hand would form into a hold-holding shape each time I get in the car.  I wish I could fall asleep holding her hand in mine.

I know all this, happily,  because I did hold her hand.  I received all the blessings I describe above.  I just wish I had received them more.  It cost nothing, and bears dividends even to this day.  If, for you, it’s not too late, make the investment.  Hold her hand, every chance you get.  You won’t regret it.

 

Abraham: Gospel Opening Act

P.AllanMusic concerts often start with an opening act.  That’s the band that gets your juices flowing  for the headliner to follow.  Abram (later renamed Abraham) was the Gospel’s opening act.  About 48 A.D. the apostle Paul wrote . . .

“And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham, saying, ‘ In you shall all the nations be blessed'” (Galatians 3:8).

“Beforehand” was 2000 B.C.  Abram was in Haran, a city in today’s Turkey, with his wife Sarai and his nephew Lot, when the LORD said to him . . .

“Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you.  And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing.  I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed” (Genesis 12:1).

The Gospel Beforehand. That’s “the Gospel beforehand”–“in you (Abram) all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”  To be “blessed” is “to be granted happiness, health and prosperity”.  The Gospel (Good News!) is that God intends to bless people from among all the peoples on earth with happiness, health and prosperity” (see previous post, “Welfare for the World”).

Why Knowing The Gospel Beforehand Is Important.  The Bible can be a confusing book to read.  It helps to know one major theme (among several) runs through it from start to finish:  the Gospel.  With Abram it’s like a concert’s opening act.  It’s not what you came for.  It’s a taste of what’s to come, but not the headliner.  So–to change the metaphor–the gospel to Abram is a seed anticipating the flower, an appetizer looking forward to the main course.  The gospel to Abram doesn’t tell us how God will bless all the nations, or when, or why.  The LORD will reveal that progressively through the Old Testament to the New, from Abraham ultimately to Jesus.

Echoes of the Gospel Beforehand.  So later God said to Abram, “Behold, my covenant is with you, and you shall be the father of a multitude of nations.  No longer shall your name be called Abram, but your name shall be Abraham, for I have made you the father of a multitude of nations” (Genesis 17:4,5).

Still later, after Abraham obeyed the LORD and offered his only son Isaac as a sacrifice (only to be stopped by the LORD at the last moment, who then provided a substitute-sacrifice), the LORD promised Abraham, ” . . . in your offspring shall all the nations of the earth be blessed, because you have obeyed my voice” (Genesis 22:18).

Then the echo came to Abraham’s son Isaac:  ” . . . I will be with you and bless you, for to you and your offspring I will give all these lands, and I will establish the oath that I swore to Abraham your father.  I will multiply your offspring as the stars of heaven  . . . And in your offspring all the nations of the earth shall be blessed . . . ” (Genesis 26:3,4).

It echoed again to Abraham’s grandson Jacob:  “Your offspring shall be like the dust of the earth, and you shall spread abroad to the west and to the east and to the north and to the south, and in you and your offspring shall all the families of the earth be blessed” (Genesis 28:14).

The Gospel Beforehand in the New Testament.  After Jesus was crucified, resurrected and ascended, the apostle Peter preached this ringing echo to the Jews in Jerusalem, “You are the sons of the prophets and of the covenant that God made with your fathers, saying to Abraham, ‘And in your offspring shall all the families of the earth be blessed.’ God, having raised up his servant, sent him to you first, to bless you by turning every one of you from your wickedness” (Acts 3:25,26).  This echo tells us that the “gospel beforehand” was preached first to the Jews in Jerusalem.

But it would not be limited to the natural descendants of Abraham. The apostle Paul wrote a resounding echo to the church:  ” . . . Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him as righteousness . . . Know then that it is those of faith who are the sons of Abraham” (Galatians 3:7) . . . “Now the promises were made to his offspring.  It does not say, ‘And to offsprings,’ referring to many, but referring to one, ‘And to your offspring,’ who is Christ” (Galatians 3:16) . . . ” . . . so that in Christ Jesus the blessing of Abraham might come to the Gentiles, so we might receive the promised Spirit through faith” (Galatians 3:14).  This echo reveals Jesus Christ is the offspring of Abraham through whom God now blesses the nations. It reveals that the content of the blessing:  God the Holy Spirit comes to regenerate, indwell and transform people from among all nations.  And it reveals that this blessing comes to those who believe (who trust, who stake everything on Jesus).

Do You Hear the Gospel Beforehand?  For at least 4000 years God has been announcing this gospel, this good news.  With Abraham he announced it like an opening act, like a seed, like an appetizer.  Then he announced a little more here and there throughout the Old Testament.  Then “the Headliner” appeared –Jesus Christ.

Do you see what God has been doing?  Do you realize God started the concert with Abraham?  More importantly, do you hear the beautiful, stirring, climaxing music in Jesus?  Do you believe his gospel song so that you are part of the ongoing symphony?

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Treasure Principle–FREE

Product DetailsHere’s an offer for a free book you may not want.

It’s about giving money away–joyfully.

Randy Alcorn is a bestselling author and founder and director of Eternal Perspective Ministries.  He wrote this little book (4 1/2 by 6 1/2 inches, 95 pages) back in 2001.  My brother-in-law, praising it, gave me a copy.  I found it to be the best book I ever read on the subject.  Alcorn’s writing is clear, crisp, concise and challenging.  John Piper endorsed it like this:  “Supercharged with stunning, divine truth!  Lightning struck over and over as I read it.”

“You can’t take it with you–but you can send it on ahead.”  That’s the Treasure Principle.  Here are its keys:

  • God owns everything.  I’m his money manger.
  • My heart always goes where I put God’s money.
  • Heaven, not earth, is my home.
  • I should live, not for the dot, but for the line.
  • Giving is the only antidote to materialism.
  • God prospers me not to raise my standard of living, but to raise my standard of giving.

I have only two copies.  So, if you’d like one, reply in the Comments section of this post with your name, how I can reach you and why you would like the book.  Be among the first two and it’s yours.

The Church and the 4th of July

O PreacherIt’s hard for me to believe that the U.S. government as it is today is from God.

But what Paul wrote in the days of the Roman Empire is true now:  “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities.  For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God” (Romans 13:1,2).

So we subject ourselves to the government’s laws (even when as it appears these days some government “servants” themselves don’t!).  Still we must, because God commands it and, therefore, paying taxes (Romans 13:7) is worship.  (I’d rather sing.)

Nevertheless, we must remember our primary allegiance is to our God and his kingdom.  ” . . . our citizenship is in heaven, and from it we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ” (Philippians 3:20).  We are a people who live with one foot in the U.S.A. and the other in the Kingdom of God.  We subject ourselves to this nation’s laws because we belong to a King who rules over all, because we believe the day comes soon when ” . . . at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:10,11).  We bow to Jesus now by respecting those in governmental authority over us (Romans 13:7).

But if we don’t do more than that we’ve failed in our mission.  Because God’s kingdom in Christ is sovereign, because God’s kingdom in Christ will outlast all others, because God’s kingdom in Christ is our only hope for a truly righteous and just government, we must spread the news about it.  One way is by living and speaking prophetically–not prophetically as in “foretelling the future” but prophetically as in “calling people to the covenant laws of God.”

I don’t know the Hobby Lobby people personally.  I assume, though, they withstood the Obama care law that required them to provide abortion-causing contraceptives to their employees because they believed the higher law of the kingdom of God.  In other words, they took a prophetic stance.  They insisted they were accountable first to God.  It seems to me we will face more opportunities such as this in the future.  We need to be ready.

Meanwhile, we can point to “the High King of Heaven” by loving the unlovable, by nurturing strong marriages, by raising our children to live like children of the King, and by using the freedoms God has given us in this country to let it be known that we are “strangers and exiles on the earth” who “desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one” (Hebrews 11:13,16).

 

 

 

Sunday Morning Before Worship

O Preacher7:31 Sunday morning.  Lois has worship music playing on a CD.  In a few hours our church will gather for worship.  I sit at my desk praying–thinking really about how I need that worship, how I long for it and love it.

I know worship is more than Sunday morning singing.  It’s living to and for God.  That’s what Paul called us to:  “I appeal to you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship” (Romans 12:1).  So, the right response to God’s mercies in Christ is worshiping by loving my wife and teaching my (grown) children and grandchildren by word and example how to follow Jesus–and simply by seeking to do everything I do to God’s glory (1 Corinthians 10:31).

I know I can worship in private.  At this ordinary desk in the aloneness of my room I can strum my guitar and sing to the Lord.  I can quietly read his holy Word and tell him my troubles or simply sit in his precious presence.  “The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.  He makes me lie down in green pastures.  He leads me beside still waters.  He restores my soul . . . you are with me; your rod and your staff they comfort me” (Psalm 23:1-3a,4b).

But there’s joy in meeting together that I don’t find in daily living for the Lord or in stealing away to be alone with him.  Partly it’s the encouragement the Hebrews’ writer spoke of:  “And let us consider how to stir up one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another, and all the more as you see the Day drawing near” (Hebrews 10:24,25).   I need that in-the-flesh reminder that I’m part of “a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for [God’s] own possession, that [we] may proclaim the excellencies of him who called [us] out of darkness into his marvelous light” (2 Peter 2:9).  I need that group reminder that we are a people “waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ” (Titus 2:13).  And he’s coming soon.

Partly the joy of meeting together for worship is the preaching of God’s Word about which Paul wrote to Timothy:  “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16,17).  The risen Christ has given “shepherds and teachers, to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ” (Ephesians 2:11-13).  I need Christ’s gifted and given men to show me Christ in his Word in a way I can’t find alone.  I need to be nourished by that Word to be a living, contributing part of Christ’s body on earth.

But singing to the Lord–how I love that!  I certainly don’t put singing above the preaching.  But there’s nothing that engages the depth of my soul in worship to the Lord like singing to the Lord.  He is so much greater than mere speaking can express.  The difference between saying, “I love you, Lord”, and singing, “I love you Lord” is incalculable.  It catches up my heart, my emotions, my affections into heavenly places.  It seems to turn our ordinary church sanctuary into holy ground.  For it’s then that I–and we–enter into the very presence of our Father.  It’s then that I sing for joy or almost tremble in fear or bow down in reverence or sit silently overwhelmed by the nearness of God who loved me in my sin and gave his Son to live for my righteousness and die for my rescue from wrath.  He is there.  And I feel his presence.  I sense his presence.  He’s like a terrifying yet gentle sea wave rolling over us, embracing us, drenching us with his glory (at least as much of it as we can bear this side of heaven).

“One thing have I asked of the LORD,
that I will seek after:
that I may dwell in the house of the LORD
all the days of my life,
to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD
and to inquire in his temple” (Psalm 27:4).

“I will praise the LORD as long as I live;
I will sing praises to my God while I have my being” (Psalm 146:2).

” . . . in your presence there is fullness of joy;
at your right hand are pleasures forevermore” (Psalm 16:11).

So it’s Sunday morning before worship.  In my solitary silence I long to meet the Lord in our gathering.  Come with me . . .

 

(*Note:  This is a correction of the previous post.  Sorry!)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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