Funny thing, Christmas used to be my most favorite time of year. In many ways it is still a very exciting time but not in the same way. The birth of Christ is a significant event on the Christian calendar but I have to say that as of late I have not looked forward to the singing of Christmas carols or the happy little sermons on things like, "Don't get overwhelmed in the trappings of the Christmas season". I've heard it all before and I don't care to hear it again. I sometimes think that we blend in with the "world" too much this time of year. Our words and actions are much too similar. Of course it is a great time to reach out to those who don't know the Lord. People who would be offended at a Christian card other times of the year, are much more open to them at Christmas.
Our pastor has been preaching a little differently this Christmas season. Because the word "advent" means "coming" he has taken the first "advent" of Christ and gone on to highlight His second "advent" or Second Coming. I have particularly enjoyed this series. To study the words in Revelation at Christmas has given me a whole new excitement. Instead of just looking back and celebrating His birth, we are directed to look forward and anxiously anticipate His second coming to earth! What a glorious time that will be. The new city of Jerusalem is a celebration of redemption. Praise God making a way back to a relationship with Him for eternity!
Philippians 4:8 Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.
Sunday, December 19, 2004
Tuesday, December 14, 2004
Mercy
Beautitudes (5) -- The Quality of Mercy...
Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Mt 5:7
Mercy is one of the qualities apparent in those whom God is filling with his righteousness. Jesus himself showed us what it meant to be merciful. He relieved suffering and dealt with the results of sin. He spent time with the social outcasts, healed the sick, and comforted those in distress. He told the parable of the Good Samaritan as an illustration of mercy in action. The injured man had no claim on the Samaritan, who yet saw his need, pitied him and took spontaneous and costly action to bring relief.
Mercy is not a natural human quality, nor is a forgiving spirit. Our natural reaction is often to be vindictive, retaliatory and intolerant toward others, leaving them to suffer the results of their own stupidity or obstinacy. But that was not the way of Jesus. It was not that he was easy-going, ignoring or condoning sin. In fact it was just because he could not overlook it that he paid its penalty for us, and he asks us to show the same mercy, even to those to whom we have no contractual obligation. We should be prepared to spend time with the difficult patient or the terminally ill. We should be ready to see where there is a need and how best we can meet it, even beyond the call of duty.
In this beatitude at first it appears as if God's mercy towards us is a reward for our mercy toward others. That is not so. Rather the motive for our mercy is that we have seen our need and have found God's mercy for ourselves. The more we know his mercy in experience, the more our lives will show this characteristic of our heavenly Father.
If I am not merciful there is only one explanation;I have never understood the grace and the mercy of God.
D Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Further reading: Lk 10:30-37. Titus 3:4-8. 1 Jn 4:19-21.
Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. Mt 5:7
Mercy is one of the qualities apparent in those whom God is filling with his righteousness. Jesus himself showed us what it meant to be merciful. He relieved suffering and dealt with the results of sin. He spent time with the social outcasts, healed the sick, and comforted those in distress. He told the parable of the Good Samaritan as an illustration of mercy in action. The injured man had no claim on the Samaritan, who yet saw his need, pitied him and took spontaneous and costly action to bring relief.
Mercy is not a natural human quality, nor is a forgiving spirit. Our natural reaction is often to be vindictive, retaliatory and intolerant toward others, leaving them to suffer the results of their own stupidity or obstinacy. But that was not the way of Jesus. It was not that he was easy-going, ignoring or condoning sin. In fact it was just because he could not overlook it that he paid its penalty for us, and he asks us to show the same mercy, even to those to whom we have no contractual obligation. We should be prepared to spend time with the difficult patient or the terminally ill. We should be ready to see where there is a need and how best we can meet it, even beyond the call of duty.
In this beatitude at first it appears as if God's mercy towards us is a reward for our mercy toward others. That is not so. Rather the motive for our mercy is that we have seen our need and have found God's mercy for ourselves. The more we know his mercy in experience, the more our lives will show this characteristic of our heavenly Father.
If I am not merciful there is only one explanation;I have never understood the grace and the mercy of God.
D Martyn Lloyd-Jones
Further reading: Lk 10:30-37. Titus 3:4-8. 1 Jn 4:19-21.
The Politically Correct Christmas
Why is there such an absence of Christ in Christmas. After all, without Him there would be no such celebration. I was really pleased tonight at our son's school open house. There were angels on the walls for decoration. The music piped over the intercom was distinctly Christian. The school choir also sang "Joy to the World" and "Away in a Manger", among their selections. They may seem like small things but I am glad that our principal is open to expressing Christmas with some of its original theme.
I was talking with an EA from another school and she was telling me that in their school "Joy to the World" was sung by the primary classes only with the lyrics re-written to express the shopping frenzy during the holidays. Not one mention of the birth of Christ in any of their productions.
I get tired of the world being so politically correct that we take the entire meaning out of the holiday.Can you imagine changing the whole meaning of something like Ramadan to suit our tastes?? It would NEVER happen.
I was talking with an EA from another school and she was telling me that in their school "Joy to the World" was sung by the primary classes only with the lyrics re-written to express the shopping frenzy during the holidays. Not one mention of the birth of Christ in any of their productions.
I get tired of the world being so politically correct that we take the entire meaning out of the holiday.Can you imagine changing the whole meaning of something like Ramadan to suit our tastes?? It would NEVER happen.
Saturday, December 11, 2004
The True Vine
I heard a wonderful illustration regarding a non Christian.
Being a non Christian is much like being a cut flower stem in a vase of water.
The flower stem is alive because of the water but it is also slowly dying because it is cut off from the true life source.
When a person comes to know Jesus as Savior, it is like the flower is then grafted into the True Vine.
When connected to this vine it will then have everlasting life. It will never die.
Simple but complete.
Being a non Christian is much like being a cut flower stem in a vase of water.
The flower stem is alive because of the water but it is also slowly dying because it is cut off from the true life source.
When a person comes to know Jesus as Savior, it is like the flower is then grafted into the True Vine.
When connected to this vine it will then have everlasting life. It will never die.
Simple but complete.
Monday, December 06, 2004
Indispensable Man
"Indispensable Man"
Saxon White Kessinger
Saxon White Kessinger
Sometime when you're feeling important;
Sometime when your ego's in bloom
Sometime when you take it for granted
You're the best qualified in the room,
Sometime when you feel that your going
Would leave an unfillable hole,
Just follow these simple instructions
And see how they humble your soul;
Take a bucket and fill it with water,
Put your hand in it up to the wrist,
Pull it out and the hole that's remaining
Is a measure of how you'll be missed.
You can splash all you wish when you enter,
You may stir up the water galore,
But stop and you'll find that in no time
It looks quite the same as before.
The moral of this quaint example
Is do just the best that you can,
Be proud of yourself but remember,
There's no indispensable man.
I recently was reminded of this over the last month. I am a nurse and I work for a visiting agency. I was working in another town for the last year and a half and had a chance to transfer to the town I live . It was hard to leave clients that I had really begun to build up a relationship with. Many were sad, a couple cried when I told them I was moving (I say this in all humility). Guess what??? They are all doing just fine with their new nurse and most all like her very well. I am replaceable. Sometimes I believe God places us in peoples lives only for a season. It is our duty to make the very best of that season.
If we hang on to a certain place when there is a door that clearly shows us to leave, we may hinder the work that God has for someone else to do.
If we hang on to a certain place when there is a door that clearly shows us to leave, we may hinder the work that God has for someone else to do.
Saturday, December 04, 2004
The Tree Of Life
I heard an interesting teaching today regarding good and evil that has caused a paradigm shift in my thinking. While I have often gleaned over Genesis chapter 2 I haven't actually assimilated all the truth until now,
"GOD took the Man and set him down in theGarden of Eden to work the ground and keep it in order. GOD commanded the Man,
"You can eat from any tree in the garden,
except from the Tree-of-Knowledge-of-Good-and-Evil.
Don't eat from it. The moment you eat from that tree, you're dead."
(The Message)
Of course I have always focused in othe the "evil" part of the tree but it my focus was challenged when it was pointed out that the tree was the knowledge of not only evil but of "good".
In my flesh, I guess that I have always thought that I was able to tell the difference between good and evil. Didn't God gift me with discernment? Yes. But is discernment a licence to judge good and evil? No. Only God can do that....for example:
When a marriage breaks up we think that this is not good.....but what if through the break up of that marriage, God brings both spouses to the end of themselves that they realize the need for a Savior? Then that break up is not bad....but good in God's eyes.
I know even as I write the word "good" in that situation, it gives me some discomfort. We are so used to catagorzing certain events into "Good" and "Evil" columns.
God truely wants us to give over all of ourselves to Him. We must go and sit at the Tree of Life. We are to eat of it's fruit. The Lord truely wants us to place our burdens at the foot of that Tree.
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