Ephesians 3:14-18 (NLT)When I think of all this, I fall to my knees and pray to the Father, the Creator of everything in heaven and on earth. I pray that from his glorious, unlimited resources he will empower you with inner strength through his Spirit. Then Christ will make his home in your hearts as you trust in him. Your roots will grow down into God’s love and keep you strong. And may you have the power to understand, as all God’s people should, how wide, how long, how high, and how deep his love is.
Monday, January 17, 2022
Prayer is Essential to Change
Wednesday, January 12, 2022
The Discipleship Road: Repentance
At Bethlehem Church I have started a new sermon series entitled The Discipleship Road. It is loosely based off Eugene Peterson’s book A Long Obedience in the Same Direction. The point of the series is to emphasize the importance of being committed to the discipleship process. Being a disciple of Jesus is a journey that is going to take the rest of our lives.
This first sermon looks at repentance. Repentance starts with the realization that we are in a place that we don’t want to be in or that we are not the person that we want to be. That is motivation that gets us started on the journey.
Text: Psalm 120Tuesday, October 5, 2021
Living a God Honoring Life
We are created in God’s image.
I realize that part of this is human nature. It is hard to give up our agendas and pursue God.
In order to honor and please God, I must have a knowledge of God’s will.
To honor and please God, I need to be a person of prayer.
To honor and please God, I need to obey.
It isn’t easy to live a life that honors and pleases God.
Thursday, September 30, 2021
The Bible is not an Answer Book
I love the Bible.
In fact, I believe that people who follow Jesus should be readers and students of the Bible. In the Bible we discover God, His character, and His will.
Without the Bible we would not be able to follow Jesus or be the people God created us to be.
Last year I lead Bethlehem Church through The Story to give us a good overview of what the Bible is about. One of the things I constantly talked about through that series is that the Bible is gift from God. In all the 30 sermons I preached, I said, “We need to read, study, meditate on, and pray the Bible to be good stewards of the gift God has given to us.”
Even though I have a high view of Scripture, I also understand that it has limitations.
As modern readers of the Bible, we often approach it as if it has the answer to all of life’s questions. That is a primary reason why we read and study the Bible: to have all the right answers.
Instead of viewing the Bible as an answer book, we need to see the Bible as a tool to help create a worldview. It may not provide the answers to all the questions asked in our culture, but it does provide a framework that helps us create a Christian worldview.
I have been pondering how we use the Bible the past few days for a couple of reasons.
1. BibleProject has a podcast series that looks at ancient cosmology. One of the key points in the series is looking at how the Biblical account of creation is in dialogue and debate with the other ancient creation myths.
Many Western Christians, for the past 120 years or so, have used the Bible to provide facts and answers about the beginning of the universe. The problem is that the Bible was not written to answer modern scientific questions. It was written to give God’s people a particular view of the world and to combat the pagan religious views of their neighbors.
Therefore, we shouldn’t expect the Bible to give us definitive answers about the how and when of creation, but we should expect it to give us an understanding about who God is and why He created the world.
2. Preston Sprinkle wrote:
If someone experiences and congruent between their biological sex and their gender, which one determines who they are—and why? What does the Bible say about this question?
That’s the problem. The Bible doesn’t directly ask and answer this question. There’s no verse in, say, Leviticus 28 that says, “If thy gender identity does not match thy biological sex, then thine body is who you really are.” Or whatever. (There is no Leviticus 28, in case you are flipping pages to check.) But the Bible does say quite a few relevant things about human nature and the importance of our biological sex which will position us to cultivate a theologically informed and biblically rooted answer to our question. (Embodied, p. 63)
After doing lots of research, Sprinkle admits that the Bible doesn’t contain the answers to the questions surrounding the transgender conversation. You can’t compile a list of verses that deal specifically with these issues.
Not only is this true for the transgender conversation, but it is true for many of the questions we have today. Our culture is significantly different from the cultures that the Bible was originally written for. We shouldn’t expect to to have answers to our modern questions.
Since the Bible is God’s gift to His people, we can expect that it will give us a proper perspective to see the world.
It is important to make this shift away from seeing the Bible as an answer book to one that helps us create a Christian worldview.
God did not give us the Bible so we can have all the right answers.
Rather, He gave us the Bible so we can become the right type of people.
If we primarily use the Bible to have the right answers, to win arguments, and to point out other people’s sin then we are using the Bible wrong.
The Bible should help form us into the people God created us to be. One of the ways it does that is to create a proper perspective for us to see the world.
Let the Bible form your worldview.
Tuesday, September 28, 2021
The Best Motivation
Our motivations matter.
We can do the right thing for the wrong reasons, but eventually we will be discovered to be a fake.
On the other hand, we can do things wrong and make mistakes, but if we do them for the right reasons those things become lessons that help us get better.
There are many different reasons why a person would follow Jesus.
Fear is a big motivation. We are afraid of going to hell, so we want to follow Jesus to avoid the punishment.
Obligation is another reason. We think, “Jesus died for me, so I guess I had better go to church.” Our obedience is something that we feel like we need to do.
Expectation might be another reason. Our family and friends are Christians, so we feel like we are expected to be Christians as well.
Reward is a motivation for following Jesus. Not only do we want to escape Hell, but we want to enjoy the eternal life God has created for His people. We keep the end in mind to remind us what it is important to follow Jesus.
While all these motivations have their place, they miss the most important reason for following Jesus.
Thursday, September 23, 2021
Don’t Neglect to Train
Practice makes perfect.
This old saying reminds us of a basic truth: In order to do things well we need to learn how to do them.
This is a process that takes time. The repetition that happens through practice is essential for learning fundamentals and building muscle memory. Both are needed to make a new skill become like second nature in our lives.
If we are going to do something well we have practice doing it.
A musician needs to learn how to read music, to play scales, and to keep time before any actual music can even be played. Even then hours of practice are required to play a piece of music well.
A basketball player needs to learn how to dribble, pass, and shoot so he can play with other players. After that hours of practicing the game is needed before an actual game can be played so that both player and team play well.
Practice is a universal law governing how we improve a skill or a talent.
Since this is the case, why have we overlooked the importance of practice when it comes to our spiritual development?
Perhaps it is because we don’t want to be accused of doing “works” to earn our salvation.
Perhaps it is because we don’t have a coach, teacher, or mentor guiding us through what we need to do.
Whatever the reason, we have neglected the development of our spirits.
C. E. Orr in his book How to Live a Holy Life wrote:
One of the main problems for American Christians today is an understanding of spiritual formation. They have confessed their sin, repented, declared their faith in Jesus, and have been baptized, but then they have been abandoned to figure things out for themselves.
The American church lacks true discipleship.
Reflect on what the apostle Paul told Timothy:
Timothy could also devote his time to healthy living and exercise, which would benefit the body, but would have minimal impact on his spiritual formation.
Instead Paul told him to train for godliness.
How do we do that?
If we approach our spiritual formation in Jesus like we approach training and practice in other areas, like music and sports, then I think we can see two commitments we must make.
First, we need to commit to spiritual disciplines. Spiritual disciplines are activities that God’s people have historically done to mature as people of faith. In fact, many of these disciplines are things that Jesus during his time on earth. These disciplines include activities such as Bible study, prayer, fasting, giving, and worship. These things are the equivalent of learning how to play a music scale or learning how to dribble a basketball. They are want teach your mind, heart, soul, and body how to act when faced with the realities of life.
Second, we need to commit to Christian duties. Duties are those things that God expects His people to do. They include things like serving people, forgiving those people who hurt us, sacrificing time and money to help make disciples, and standing up for what is right. These are not things that we do naturally or even enjoy doing, and that is why they become duties. When we do them, because of our love for God, they teach us humility and loving neighbor as ourselves. These duties are much like practice. They are boring, just like playing the same piece of music a thousand different times or going to basketball practice day after day and compete against the same people, but they help you get ready for the concert or game. When we make the choice to do these duties we are preparing to meet the unpredictable choices that we face in life.
If we are going to be like Jesus we need to train to be like him. This training is going to take a lot of hard work on our part and a lot of grace on God’s part, but working together transformation will take place.
We can be conformed into the image of Jesus!
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Friday, September 10, 2021
Trust God to Forgive
I know that I find it hard to confess my sins to God because I am embarrassed about what my sin reveals about my weakness.
Perhaps you struggle with asking for forgiveness because you are afraid of God.
In his book Created to Be God’s Friend, Henry Blackaby wrote:
For us to trust people we have to believe that they have our best interest at heart.
The writer of the book of Hebrews gave us this gem of truth:
Second, we need to confess our sins to God through prayer. God knows our sins, and He has declared His willingness to forgive. Yet, forgiveness requires the acknowledgement that we have done something wrong. This is an act of trust, because we need to believe that God has our best interest at heart. So we confess our sin because we trust that God will forgive us.
Third, we need to worship God. From singing praise songs to serving people in need, it is important that we set our hearts towards God. Worship requires the right motivation more than it requires the right actions. We can go through the motions of worship without love and trust. Worship that is grounded in faith is the type of worship that God desires from us.
Living in these bodies of flesh in this world means that sin will be a part of our lives.
Thursday, September 9, 2021
Committed to the Body
Tuesday, September 7, 2021
A Repentant Heart
As a life long Christian, I know the right things to say.
For instance, when life becomes difficult I know that the right thing to say is, "I am trusting God an His timing."
I may say that, but the reality is that I am full of worry. Rather than praying and doing the next right thing, I distract myself with scrolling through social media or watching YouTube videos. Then I wonder why God never showed up.
It is possible to say that right words while lacking the faith to believe those words.
What is the answer?
David wrote this Psalm after Nathan the prophet confronted him about his sin against Uriah, stealing his wife Bathesheba and murdering him. For a year afterwards David pretended everything was fine, but in reality it wasn't. So when David thought about what he needed to do, in light of Nathan’s words, this is was came to his mind: Repentance.
When we are prideful we believe we change the circumstance of our lives by ourselves. We pursue happiness the way we think is best. We may say all the right things and go though the motions, but the intentions of our heart is on our plans.
I am tired of mouthing the right things and ignoring God.
Monday, September 6, 2021
The Benefit of Principles
Last week I posted this to Facebook:
I believe this is true for the majority of controversial topics that are out there today. We watch a 7 minute segment on Tucker Carlson or Rachel Maddow and think we understand the topic to give our hot take on it. To truly understand topics we need investigate all sides of an argument. That doesn’t mean you can’t have a gut feeling on things (often that is all that we can go on because we can’t properly study every topic out there), but it does mean that we don’t present our gut feelings as THE truth on these topics.
There is no possible way that we can adequately research all the different areas of knowledge that are out there. No one is an expert on everything.
This is why it is okay to go with our gut feelings on things. When we do so we need to keep in mind that our guts could be wrong.
The gut feelings that we have often come from the principles that make up our lives. For instance, when it comes to something like biblical interpretation or reading the Constitution, the principle that guides my understanding is: How would the original readers understand this.
Granted, this is not always easy to figure out, but it helps us establish the original intent, then we are better able to apply that to our lives.
When we have certain principles that guide our lives, they provide shortcuts to through the maze controversial issues that we face in life. They provide a solid ground for us to stand on and they give us a starting point on determining what is true.
Since we don’t have the time or the ability to research all the different topics out there, our principles provide us with a way to navigate the landscape of current opinion as we seek to follow Jesus.
Friday, September 3, 2021
Masks, Vaccinations, and Love
“The most important commandment is this: ‘Listen, O Israel! The LORD our God is the one and only LORD. And you must love the LORD your God with all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength.’ The second is equally important: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ No other commandment is greater than these.” (Mark 12:29-31, NLT)
This has been a common sentiment the last 18 months as we have endured the COVID pandemic.
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