I started a podcast for Bethlehem Church this week.
The podcast is called After Thoughts because it goes beyond what I am able to share in the sermon each week.
This week I am talking about what it is important to anchor our lives on the reality that Jesus is the truth.
Thursday, June 25, 2020
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
Patience is Required
It is hard to be patient.
Our culture has trained us to be impatient. You and I expect to have things now.
Remember when the internet first started to become a thing?
There was the process of connecting through the phone line. Then websites and content took their sweet time to load. Streaming videos would not have been possible since the constant stopping and buffering would have been unbearable.
Now, we expect our internet experience to be instantaneous and smooth.
Our expectations have changed to the point that if images and videos don't load lighting quick we are moving on to something else.
Impatience isn't isolated to our online experience. It colors everything that we do.
It is one of the reasons why consumer debt is unbelievably high in the United States. We want what we want right now. We don't want to wait and save for it. With easy credit all we have to care about is, "What is the monthly payment?"
While impatience affects our lives in many different ways, one of the most impactful ways is in the area of discipleship.
We can be manipulated into have some sort of "religious experience" that makes us feel good. This is why feelings and emotional experiences are a poor foundation to build faith on. Once the feeling leaves and the experience fads into the past, it is easy to doubt God and wonder if any of it was really real in the first place.
True discipleship is a slow process.
It requires patience and a commitment to endure the ups and downs life throws our way.
The goal of discipleship is not an experience, feeling, or even acquiring all the right knowledge.
The goal is becoming holy.
I know holiness sounds rather dull and boring. Our pictures of holiness have to do with a life of strict discipline and quiet solitary life.
Let's face it. Satan has done a great job of turning what should be our greatest desire into something that we want to avoid.
I want to encourage you to think about holiness in this way: holiness is to live the life of Jesus.
Imagine living life with the compassion, mercy, wisdom, confidence, strength, and love of Jesus.
Through discipleship we seek to be conformed to the image of Jesus. That takes time as we learn to be guided by the Spirit rather than the flesh and how to love God and people the way they need to be loved.
Discipleship doesn't happen over night and it takes faith, commitment, and work, but it does lead to a life of no regrets.
A life worth living is found on the road of discipleship.
Be patient and stay committed and you will discover the life God created you to live.
Our culture has trained us to be impatient. You and I expect to have things now.
Remember when the internet first started to become a thing?
There was the process of connecting through the phone line. Then websites and content took their sweet time to load. Streaming videos would not have been possible since the constant stopping and buffering would have been unbearable.
Now, we expect our internet experience to be instantaneous and smooth.
Our expectations have changed to the point that if images and videos don't load lighting quick we are moving on to something else.
Impatience isn't isolated to our online experience. It colors everything that we do.
It is one of the reasons why consumer debt is unbelievably high in the United States. We want what we want right now. We don't want to wait and save for it. With easy credit all we have to care about is, "What is the monthly payment?"
While impatience affects our lives in many different ways, one of the most impactful ways is in the area of discipleship.
"Millions of people in our culture make decisions for Christ, but there is a dreadful attrition rate. Many claim to have been born again, but the evidence for mature Christian discipleship is slim...There is a great market for religious experience in our world; there is little enthusiasm for the patient acquisition of virtue, little inclination to sign up for a long apprenticeship in what earlier generations of Christians called holiness."
Eugene Peterson, A Long Obedience in the Same Direction, p.16
We can be manipulated into have some sort of "religious experience" that makes us feel good. This is why feelings and emotional experiences are a poor foundation to build faith on. Once the feeling leaves and the experience fads into the past, it is easy to doubt God and wonder if any of it was really real in the first place.
True discipleship is a slow process.
It requires patience and a commitment to endure the ups and downs life throws our way.
The goal of discipleship is not an experience, feeling, or even acquiring all the right knowledge.
The goal is becoming holy.
I know holiness sounds rather dull and boring. Our pictures of holiness have to do with a life of strict discipline and quiet solitary life.
Let's face it. Satan has done a great job of turning what should be our greatest desire into something that we want to avoid.
I want to encourage you to think about holiness in this way: holiness is to live the life of Jesus.
Imagine living life with the compassion, mercy, wisdom, confidence, strength, and love of Jesus.
Through discipleship we seek to be conformed to the image of Jesus. That takes time as we learn to be guided by the Spirit rather than the flesh and how to love God and people the way they need to be loved.
Discipleship doesn't happen over night and it takes faith, commitment, and work, but it does lead to a life of no regrets.
A life worth living is found on the road of discipleship.
Be patient and stay committed and you will discover the life God created you to live.
Monday, June 22, 2020
Be Humble and Respectful
People are different.
I know that isn't breaking news, but it is worth remembering. You and I are different in dozens, if not hundreds of ways. That is a good thing
The world would be a boring place if everyone believed and acted the same way.
The world advances when people of different backgrounds and skills work together. Everything from making a ham sandwich to creating a pencil to assembling a car requires a division of labor that benefits the world.
Diversity is one of God’s great blessings to the world.
Even though we acknowledge the blessing of diversity, the number 1 reason we judge other people is because they are different from us.
They do things different than we would do them, they believe different ideas than what we believe, they value different things than what we value, or they have a different set of morals than what we have.
These differences lead us to call other people weird, stupid, ignorant, immoral, and evil.
Our prideful side whispers in our hearts that our way is the right way and if that person doesn’t do it our way they are wrong. This reality (even though we wouldn’t actually admit to it) causes us to be very harsh with one another.
We see it in our discussion of politics, in our conversations about religion and theology, in our relationships at work, and our interactions with our neighbors.
Be careful about the way you view other people.
If you label people as weird, ignorant, or wrong simply because they do things differently than you do, you doing what Jesus asked you not to do.
Matthew 5:21-22
I know that isn't breaking news, but it is worth remembering. You and I are different in dozens, if not hundreds of ways. That is a good thing
The world would be a boring place if everyone believed and acted the same way.
The world advances when people of different backgrounds and skills work together. Everything from making a ham sandwich to creating a pencil to assembling a car requires a division of labor that benefits the world.
Diversity is one of God’s great blessings to the world.
Even though we acknowledge the blessing of diversity, the number 1 reason we judge other people is because they are different from us.
They do things different than we would do them, they believe different ideas than what we believe, they value different things than what we value, or they have a different set of morals than what we have.
These differences lead us to call other people weird, stupid, ignorant, immoral, and evil.
Our prideful side whispers in our hearts that our way is the right way and if that person doesn’t do it our way they are wrong. This reality (even though we wouldn’t actually admit to it) causes us to be very harsh with one another.
We see it in our discussion of politics, in our conversations about religion and theology, in our relationships at work, and our interactions with our neighbors.
Be careful about the way you view other people.
If you label people as weird, ignorant, or wrong simply because they do things differently than you do, you doing what Jesus asked you not to do.
Matthew 5:21-22
“You have heard that our ancestors were told, ‘You must not murder. If you commit murder, you are subject to judgment.’ But I say, if you are even angry with someone, you are subject to judgment! If you call someone an idiot, you are in danger of being brought before the court. And if you curse someone, you are in danger of the fires of hell.In order to live the way of Jesus we need to be humble and patient.
The apostle Paul wrote; “Always be humble and gentle. Be patient with each other, making allowance for each other’s faults because of your love. Make every effort to keep yourselves united in the Spirit, binding yourselves together with peace.” (Ephesians 4:2-3, NLT)
Without humility we will cast judgement on others and treat them harshly. A lack of humility will prevent us from embracing the diversity God designed within the world.
This is especially crucial to do with people who are ideologically opposed to us. It is too easy to disregard what they have to say and to treat them as second class citizens. Yet, as followers of Jesus we are called love our neighbors and our enemies. To do that we have to treat them with respect.
This is especially crucial to do with people who are ideologically opposed to us. It is too easy to disregard what they have to say and to treat them as second class citizens. Yet, as followers of Jesus we are called love our neighbors and our enemies. To do that we have to treat them with respect.
Be humble and be respectful of the diversity that is all and us.
Friday, June 19, 2020
Listen to Jesus: Evaluation
This is the third sermon I preached in a series called Listen to Jesus.
God created us to bear His image in this world. We don't naturally bear His image, we have to be taught how. Jesus came to teach us how to demonstrate God's character in this world.
God created us to bear His image in this world. We don't naturally bear His image, we have to be taught how. Jesus came to teach us how to demonstrate God's character in this world.
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