Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Some highlights of Rick Warren's recent interview of Senator Mccain

The following are some highlights from an interview that took place at Saddleback Church on August 16, 2008.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Olympians Competing for Christ

Ryan Hall, representing the United States as a marathon runner in the 2008 Olympic Games, proclaims his faith in Jesus Christ as the reason he runs.



Laura Wilkinson will represent the United States as a diver in the 2008
Olympic Games. When she’s not diving, Laura travels around the country
speaking at The Revolve Tour, a Christian conference for girls.



Scott Rigsby thought life was over the day a car crash took both his legs. Although not over, his life would never be the same, going from one filled with hopes for the future to one filled with countless surgeries, prescription drug addiction and depression.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Where do you belong?

Luke 5:27-39

Have you ever felt like you just didn’t belong? All of us have had times in our lives when we felt like we didn’t belong to a certain group of people, either because of personalities, race, beliefs, gender, or whatever…you name it. Today we’re gonna look at Levi’s call and how he turned from his old ways to belong to the kingdom of God. You see, Christ invited both the crowds and leaders to turn from their old ways in order to belong to a new and greater community; a community that was not bound by rules and traditions, but by relationships. However the truth that Jesus represented could not be put into their old system, but had to replace it.

Levi was a tax collector or what we might call a toll collector. Tax collectors were not very well thought of in first century Judaism because they were servants of Rome and a symbol to the Jews of Roman occupation. Levi’s job was to tax the traders who were bringing supplies in and out of the town. Their merchandise would be inspected by Levi who would tax them on certain items. His job was that of a customs agent, like what you might see at the airports. Only instead of looking through your luggage to insure the safety of everybody on the plane, he would be looking through your luggage to find something to charge you money.

Levi’s call takes place at the beginning of Jesus’ ministry. Jesus had returned from the wilderness where he was tempted by the devil and began teaching in the synagogues, performing miracles and healings, and forgiving sins. Now Jesus was in the area of Galilee when he was being closely followed by the religious elites. It was here where Levi received his call to be a disciple and the Pharisees challenged Jesus and the disciples about eating and drinking with sinners.

vv. 27-30 After this, Jesus went out and saw a tax collector by the name of Levi sitting at his tax booth. “Follow me,” Jesus said to him, 28 and Levi got up, left everything and followed him. 29 Then Levi held a great banquet for Jesus at his house, and a large crowd of tax collectors and others were eating with them. 30 But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law who belonged to their sect complained to his disciples, “Why do you eat and drink with tax collectors and ‘sinners’?”

The final fulfillment of the reign of God is pictured in the Gospels as a glorious feast (29-30). By celebrating with these people, Jesus indicated that they had received Gods forgiveness & would share in the reign of God.

The term “Follow me” means to become a disciple. It was a great honor for Levi who would have been normally excluded from the religious circles. The Banquet was an act to repay the honor Levi had received from Jesus. They were also held to mark important social changes in one’s life.

vv. 31-32 Jesus answered them, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. 32 I have not come to call the righteous, but the sinners to repentance.”

Repentance means the changing of one’s mind, or turning from sin and disobedience.

2 Cor 5:17 states “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!”

Rom 12:2 says “Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.”

vv. 33-35 They said to him, “John’s disciples often fast and pray, and so do the disciples of the Pharisees, but yours go on eating and drinking.” 34 Jesus answered, “Can you make the guests of the bridegroom fast while he is with them? 35 But the Time will come when the bridegroom will be taken from them; in those days they will fast.”

Repentance does not consist of mourning & fasting rather it is through joyful discovery of a new opportunity. The sign of repentance is not mourning, but the joy of finding & being found. Joy is the appropriate sign of repentance.

Luke 15:7 “I tell you there will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to repent.”

Luke 15:10 “In the same way, I tell you, there is rejoicing in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner who repents.”

vv. 36-38 He told them this parable: “No one tears a patch from a new garment and sews it on an old one. If he does, he will have torn the new garment, and the patch from the new will not match the old. 37 And no one pours new wine into old wineskins. If he does, the new wine will burst the skins, the wine will run out and the wineskins will be ruined. 38 No, new wine must be poured into new wineskins.

The new teaching of the kingdom of God could not be contained in the old forms of the Law, but must be expressed in new ways. Jesus is not attempting to patch up Judaism, rather he is teaching something radically new.

v. 39 And no one after drinking old wine wants the new, for he says, ‘The old is better.’”

A fresh new revelation had come in Christ, which demanded a new form of worship which the Pharisees and religious elite were not willing to accept.

It was the rules and traditions of the religious elite that prevented many from having a real relationship with God. Today it is our own personal rules and traditions that bind us and prevent us from having a real relationship with God and belonging to His Kingdom.

We can belong to a new and greater community by turning and leaving those things that bind us and prevent us from having a real relationship with God. What are you doing right now that is preventing you from having a relationship with God? Is there something in your life that you need to shed? Are you angry, hurt, jealous of others, or afraid? Do you need to be forgiven? Do you need to forgive? Are the sins in your life consuming you? Whatever it is, Jesus called us to repentance. To change our minds and turn from those things that are not only binding and preventing us from having a real relationship with God, but others as well. Jesus said, “The time has come, the Kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe…(Mk 1:15)”

Right now, Jesus is inviting you to turn from your old life by leaving everything and become a follower of Christ and belong to a new and greater community; a community that is not bound by rules and traditions, but by relationships. The truth Jesus represents cannot be put in your current system, but must replace your old ways. How can you have a fuller relationship with God? You can begin by doing such things as re-dedicating your life to Christ, study the Bible, pray, and attend church on a regular basis.

If you have not yet accepted Christ into your life, all you need to do is simply follow the ABC's:

“A” Admit. Admit that you are a sinner who needs a Savior. Rom 3:23 states, "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God." Rom 6:23 "For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus." 1 Jn 1:8-9 says "If we claim to be without sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness."

“B” Believe. Believe that Jesus is your Saviour and accept him into your heart. Acts 4:12 states, "Salvation is found in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given to men by which we must be saved." And Jn 3:18 states, "Whoever believes in Him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son."

“C” Choose. Choose to follow Jesus. Eph 2:8-9 states, "For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God--not by works, so that no one can boast." In Mark 1:17 Jesus states, "Come, follow me."

Need prayer?

Father God, right now I ask you to speak into my heart. There are things that I am doing in my life that has caused me to wonder whether I truly belong to you God. Help me shed those things that are getting in the way of my relationship with you. I want to give myself to you Lord and belong to your kingdom. In Jesus' name I pray. Amen.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

The Barbarian Way



Robert the Bruce was the Scottish noble whose character is most remembered for betraying [William] Wallace, but he later rose up to lead Scotland to freedom after Wallace's execution. He died in 1329 at the age of fifty-four. Shortly before his death, Robert the Bruce requested that his heart be removed from his body and taken on crusade by a worthy knight. James Douglas, one of his closest friends, was at his bedside and took on the responsibility. The heart of Robert the Bruce was embalmed and placed in a small container that Douglas carried around his neck. In every battle that Douglas fought, he literally carried the heart of his king pressed against his chest.

In the early spring of 1330, Douglas sailed from Scotland to Granada, Spain, and engaged in a campaign against the Moors. In an ill-fated battle, Douglas found himself surrounded, and in this situation death was both certain and imminent. In that moment Douglas reached for the heart strapped around his neck, flung the heart into the enemy's midst, and cried out, "Fight for the heart of your king!" One historian quoted Douglas as shouting, "Forward, brave heart, as ever thou were wont to do, and Douglas will follow his king's heart or die!" The motto of the Douglas clan to which the present duke belongs is even to this day simply, "Forward."

Although anyone who understands the heart of God knows that the Crusades were a tragic lesson in missing the point, the power of this story awakens within me a primal longing that I am convinced waits to be unleashed within everyone who is a follower of Jesus Christ. To belong to God is to belong to His heart. If we have responded to the call of Jesus to leave everything and follow Him, then there is a voice within us crying out, "Fight for the heart of your King!"

Yet Christianity over the past two thousand years has moved from a tribe of renegades to a religion of conformists. Those who choose to follow Jesus become participants in an insurrection. To claim we believe is simply not enough. The call of Jesus is one that demands action. Jesus began His public ministry with a simple invitation: "Come, follow me." His closing instruction to His disciples can be summarized in one word, "Go!" The tribe of Jesus, above all people, should rightly carry the banner, "Forward."

I know the imagery of this story is nothing less than barbaric, but maybe that's the point. The invitation of Jesus is a revolutionary call to fight for the heart of humanity. We are called to an unconventional war using only the weapons of faith, hope, and love. Nevertheless, this war is no less dangerous than any war ever fought. And for those of us who embrace the cause of Christ, the cost to participate in the mission of God is nothing less than everything we are and everything we have.

Strangely enough, though, some who come to Jesus Christ seem to immediately and fully embrace this barbarian. They live their lives with every step moving forward and with every fiber of their being fighting for the heart of their King. Jesus Christ has become the all-consuming passion of their lives. They are not about religion or position. They have little patience for institutions or bureaucracies. Their lack of respect for tradition or ritual makes them seem uncivilized to those who love religion. When asked if they are Christians, their answer might surprisingly be no, they are passionate followers of Jesus Christ. They see Christianity as a world religion, in many ways no different from any other religious system. Whether Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, or Christianity, they're not about religion; they're about advancing the revolution Jesus started two thousand years ago.

This is the simplicity of the barbarian way. If you are a follower of Christ, then you are called to fight for the heart of your King. It is a life fueled by passion--a passion for God and a passion for people. The psalmist tells us to delight ourselves in the Lord, and He will give us the desires of our hearts (Psalm 37:4). When Christianity becomes just another religion, it focuses on requirements. Just to keep people in line, we build our own Christian civilization and then demand that everyone who believes in Jesus become a good citizen.

Its' hard to imagine that Jesus would endure the agony of the Cross just to keep us in line. Jesus began a revolution to secure our freedom. The new covenant that He established puts its trust not in the law, but in the transforming power of God's Spirit living within us. The revolution of the human heart would fuel the life and vitality of this movement. We would delight in God, and He would give us the desires of our hearts. With our hearts burning for God, we would move forward with the freedom to pursue the passions burning withing us. (Erwin McManus, The Barbarian Way)

Monday, May 5, 2008

Romans 2:16--"...on the day when, according to my gospel, God will judge the secrets of men through Christ Jesus."

Men will finally be judged by their own thoughts, which either accuse them of guilt or defend them according to the good which they have done; for then not words or works, which might deceive, but their own inner-most thoughts witness concerning them publicly, just as these now witness in them, telling them what they are and what they have done. From our own (guilty) conscience certainly only accusing thoughts can come, because our works are vain before God, unless He himself is efficacious in us by His grace. We of course, may easily excuse ourselves. But that does not mean that we have satisfied God or fully kept His Law. But from whom, then, do we obtain the thoughts that (truly) excuse us? Only from Christ and in Christ; for if the conscience of a believer in Christ reproves, accuses and condemns him as an evil-doer, he quickly turns from himself to Christ and says: “He has atoned for my sins. He is just and my Justifier, who died for me. He has made His righteousness my own and my sins His own. But if He has made my sins His own, then I no longer have them but am free from them. And if He has made His righteousness my own, then I am righteous because of His righteousness, for He is God, blessed forever.” Far greater is He who defends me than that which accuses me, indeed, infinitely greater. God is my Defender, while my heart is my accuser (Luther's commentary on the Epistle to the Romans [2:16]).

Sunday, May 4, 2008

"My Father was a Wandering Aramean..."

Ok, so you're probably wondering what the heck is the above quote all about. It is based on a sermon given at Mars Hill Church on 10/27/07. Before I begin, I would like to explain the meaning behind it and get some feedback from you about your story.

The quote is actually derived from the book of Deuteronomy, chapter 26 (v. 5). Just to give you a little bit of a background, the book of Deuteronomy is located at the end of the first 5 books of the Law (or the Torah) in the Old Testament. The Torah was the law given to the Israelites when they were brought out of Egypt. It was given to a generation who had been wandering in the desert and God was going to bless them. Right now in the story however, they are poor. They have very fresh memories of oppression, suffering, and slavery. God is going to bring them into a new land, but he tells them that when they enter that new land, when He blesses them and gives them a new life, He wants them to remember Him (vv. 1-9). He basically says, "When I bring you to this new place, it is going to be a great temptation to forget your story."

When the Israelites enter the new land, possess it and live in it, God wants them to say three things:

1. (v. 3) "I declare this day to the Lord my God that I have entered the land which the Lord swore to our fathers to give us."

God wants them to declare that they have entered the new land and what God has done for them. Sometimes we are tempted to believe that God doesn't want to bless us, that we should feel guilty for what we have. But God delights in taking these refugees, these people that have suffered and pours out His blessings on them.

So what is God asking? He is asking them to take the fruits of their blessing (v. 2) and declare that God has blessed them and kept His promise (v. 3).

2. (v. 5) "My father was a wandering Aramean, and he went down into Egypt and sojourned there, few in number; but there he became a great, mighty and populous nation."

Another translation reads, "My father was a homeless refugee..." Now think down the road. Hundreds of years have passed since Egypt and the Israelites wandered in the desert and Israel has become a rich and powerful nation. God is essentially saying to them, I want you to always remember your story: you were once a homeless, wandering refugee. Never forget your story. Remember the Egyptians subjected you to hard labor and there is pain in your story. God wanted Israel to never forget that pain. He wanted them to always remember their story, to remember that time of suffering in their past.

(v. 7) "Then we cried out to the Lord..." Israel had reached that place of desperation; that time when they had no other hope. Part of their story was not just to remember their suffering, but that time when they cried out to God.

(v. 8) "And the Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand and outstretched arm and with great terror and with signs and wonders." They were not only to remember their pain and their crying out, but also God's great deeds. So when they came into the land, they not only declared it and told it with all its pain, but they were also to declare what God had done for them.

3. (v. 13) "I have removed the sacred protion from my house, and also given it to the Levite and the alien, the orphan and the widow..."

When they bring their first fruits and put it in a basket (v. 2), that food is given to the Levite, the widow, orphan, and alien. The Levites were those who were, by decision, unable to care for themselves because they were too busy caring for others. The widow, orphan and alien, by their circumstance, were unable to care for themselves. So God is essentially saying to these wandering refugees, "When you come into this land, when I bless you as I have promised to do, I want you to not only declare what I have done, but of who you are. I want you to tell your story. Then I want all of that fruit, all of the results of your faith to work out for justice, for the weak and poor--for others."

The question then becomes, will they remember that their father was a wandering Aramean? God is basically telling the Israelites, "Years from now things are going to go really, really well for you and I know human nature." Human nature is when things go really, really well--you forget God because you are fine and everything is going great. Human nature is also when you crash and burn and say, "God where were you?!" and God's response would probably be, "Where were you?! Because I've been here the whole time." So human nature is when things go really well, we simply forget.

What does it all mean? Don't forget your story! Because when you are prosperous and successful every force around you is going to want you to think that it is all about you and you are going to forget just how bad it was. You are going to forget God's grace and that life is a gift.

How do you keep your story alive? By extending to others what God has extended to you. In extending grace to somebody who needs it, you are reminded what God has done for you. Face it, there are times when all of us have said, "What do I have to do with that person?" Or, "What do I have to do with those people over there in that country?" Why care about them? Because God says that when you become successful, when everything is ok, it will be very easy to forget about what it was like back then in your own life.

So what is your story? What has God done in your life (big or little)? What are those events that have shaped you? How has God touched your life? Was it through a car accident, illness, surgery, death of a loved one, bankruptcy, divorce, or recovery from an addiciton? Or perhaps was it through something beautiful like being loved by another when you didn't deserve it, being forgiven, supported, the birth of a child, or perhaps seeing the strength of someone else who is suffering?

Is there pain in your story? Is there suffering? Was there ever a time when you just cried out to God? What is your, "My father was a wandering Aramean...?" It can be brief or long, anonymous or named. I'd love to hear your story.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Into the Wild

This movie is one of my favorites! It is an inspirational movie about the end of Chris McCandless' life. If you get a chance to see it, I highly recommend it. My philosophy about life runs parallel in many aspects. I Hope you enjoy the following clip.


Thursday, April 10, 2008

Saturday, March 29, 2008

The Bible vs. The Book of Mormon



This is a great video that compares and contrasts The Bible with The Book of Mormon. It covers the historical, archaeological, geographical, and anthropological evidence of the books. If you have about an hour to watch it, it will be well worth your time. I highly recommend it!

"Go Down, Death"---Wintley Phipps

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

High Noon tribute



I have always had a deep appreciation for black and white movies since I was a kid, particularly the old westerns. Arguably the greatest old western ever made is called "High Noon" starring Gary Cooper, Lloyd Bridges, and Grace Kelly (1952). The theme of the movie is set against a retiring town Sheriff who sacrificed his whole life protecting the community in which he lived, only to be abandoned by that same community during his hour of most need. Against all odds, he alone goes on to defend that community against a gang of revenge seeking criminals.

One of the best scenes is a speech given by Gary Cooper's long time friend and mentor. Cooper goes to him for help and advice. Against the advice that Gary Cooper expects to hear, he is given the following description of a lawman's life:

"It's a great life. You risk your skin catchin' killers and the juries turn 'em loose so they can come back and shoot at you again. If you're honest, you're poor your whole life, and in the end you wind up dying all alone on some dirty street. For what? For nothin'...for a tin star. People gotta talk themselves into law and order before they do anything about it. Maybe because down deep they don't care...they just don't care. It's all for nothin' Will...it's all for nothin'."

It is truly an amazing movie about a man who refuses to give up his principles and sacrifice his character in the face of conventional wisdom, even when it may cost him his own life.

If you like old westerns, I'm sure you'll love this one. And if you haven't already seen it, I would encourage you to watch it sometime. It is the greatest showdown in the history of cinema!

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

The greatest in their kingdom...

Have you ever wondered how others view you? Do they see the same person that you see of yourself?

I often wonder how my children view me as their father. If I looked at myself through their eyes...would I see the same man? Would I understand myself, as the man who stands before them? Do I really fulfill their expectations about how strong I really am...or am I just a shell of what they believe me to be? Would I end up failing them if they saw me for who I truly was? I wonder if we as parents need to worry more about fulfilling our children's expectations of who we are, instead of worrying about whether or not they are going to fulfill our expectations about who they will become.

You see, the disciples once came to Jesus and asked him about who would be the greatest in the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 18:1). They had become so self absorbed in what they could potentially become in the eyes of other men, that they had lost sight of what was truly important. They too, had become a shell in the eyes of others. The outside looked great and it appeared that they had it all together; but inside they had become empty and filled with what the world was telling them about what it took to be great.

Jesus had recognized this and responded in such a profound and unusual manner, that it had shocked their very core. Jesus said, "I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven." (Matthew 18:3) The Greek word used for change (strepho) means in a moral sense to essentially alter or adopt another course...to turn around or even repent.

What does this mean? Sometimes we are living double lives. What our children see is a shell of whom they believe us to be. But inside, we are someone else. Does the phrase, "Do as I say, not as I do." sound familiar? More often than not, it is those secrets lurking in our hearts that can, at anytime, expose us for who we really are and the results can be destructive. Ask yourself, "If I saw myself through my child's eyes, what would I really think? Would I be proud of whom I really am...or would I be hurt by what I saw?"

The point is that unless we change the way we think and look through the eyes of our children, we will always be a shell to those we love. If you have not experienced the damage that can be caused by the emptiness inside, then now is the time to change before it happens. If you have been effected by this experience, it is not too late for change.

Listen to what the hearts of your children have to say. Look through your child's eyes to see your life for what it really is. Right now they cry out to you! Your children are what is most important, and only by becoming like one in your heart will you be made complete and whole. Only then will you will never disappoint or hurt them. Jesus said, "Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom..." (Matthew 18:4)

May you be great in the eyes of your children. May you come to see that the hardest expectation to fulfill is from your own child. May you learn to change your course and look through the eyes of your baby to see yourself as everything they believe you to be. And finally, may you truly come to be...the greatest in their kingdom.

Monday, March 10, 2008

When All Is Said and Done--Tyrone Wells



When all is said and done
And I'm looking back upon this race I've run
And when my heart gives in.
I know you will be beside me precious friend
It's just the same from the beginning to the end
When all is said and done.

If I lose my way
And I wander down this open road for days
And if the sun should fall
And the dancing we once did becomes a crawl
Let the memories move like shadows on the wall
If I lose my way.

When I'm coming home
And I walk across the bridge of death alone
I will fix my eyes
On the One who's waiting on the other side
It's my old friend with countless others there beside
When I'm coming home

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

"This promise is for you."

On the very first occasion when someone stood up in public to tell people about Jesus, he made it very clear: this message is for everyone.

It was a great day--sometimes called the birthday of the church. The great wind of God's spirit had swept through Jesus' followers and filled them with a new joy and a sense of God's presence and power. Their leader, Peter, who only a few weeks before had been crying like a baby because he'd lied and cursed and denied even knowing Jesus, found himself on his feet explaining to a huge crowd that something had happened which had changed the world forever. What God had done for him, Peter, he was beginning to do for the whole world: new life, forgiveness, new hope and power were opening up like spring flowers after a long winter. A new age had begun in which the living God was going to do new things in the world--beginning then and there with the individuals who were listeing to him. "This promise is for you," he said, "and for your children, and for everyone who is far away" (Acts 2:9).

There were two times in my life when I had been filled with "a new joy" as described above. The first was when I had truely accepted Jesus into my life. As a child, I grew up blindly accepting the possibility that Jesus was God incarnate, but I never truly understood why. It was not until after I was an adult, after I had suffered from addictions, pain, loneliness, and experienced miracles and happiness in my own life, that I began to search for a deeper truth in life. I began really reading the bible for the first time, seeking answers to questions regarding its authority, reliability, and truthfulness. Afterall, the last thing I wanted to do was get involved in some wacky religion and defend something I knew nothing about. I had many questions and concerns. I had a hard time accepting anything at face value. The more I read scripture, the more I researched it. I read books and articles that supported scripture and also books and articles that attempted to disprove scripture. I researched other religions in an effort to find God there, or to see if he was "everywhere." The more I researched however (between theology, philosophy, archeology, science, and history) I found scripture to be more and more reliable. I found the world to be more and more deceptive.

And so the day that I had truly accepted Christ into my life, I began to experience a whole new joy, a sense of peace that I never new existed. I began to look at the world differently...for the first time in my life I began to look at the world through the eyes of God. I saw the world completely different. It was a breath of fresh air and a time when I was filled with a new joy and a sense of God's presence and power. Like Peter, it was not long before when I struggled in my own search and journey. After all, it is hard in today's world to find God when there are so many distractions and various (sometimes crazy) things being thrown at you from all directions.

When I did find out who God truly is, it was an amazing trasformation. I too found myself on my feet wanting to explain to everyone that something had happened to me, which had changed my world forever. What God had done for Peter, he was beginning to do for me: new life, forgiveness, new hope and power were opening up in me like spring flowers after a long winter.

The second time was after approximately 13 years of searching and growing in faith, I was finally baptized as a believer last month. It was amazing. It was though I had put on a new self...I will never be the same. A new age in my life has begun in which the living God is continuing to do new things in my life. I thank God everyday for being fortunate enough to have found Him, and that He has an active role in my life. I could not imagine going through my entire life without ever have known Him. Since accepting Christ into my life, it has been a life of change and freedom...of new promise. But it is not just for me, "this promise is for you." What God has done for me, He can do for you. What God has done for us, He can do for the whole world.

If you are not a Christian and have questions, or want to know how to have a personal relationship with God, let me know, I would love to answer any questions or respond to any comments. May God's grace and peace be with you.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Third Day-Thief

Lifehouse "Everything" Skit

This is a great skit that speaks for itself. If you haven't seen it yet, enjoy. If you have seen it, I'm sure you'll watch it again. Don't mind the 70's style Jesus suit (it's standard issue..LOL), but just pay attention to the message that it gives. It's pretty powerful.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

"My father was a wandering Aramean..."

Ok, so you're probably wondering what the heck is the above quote all about. It is based on a sermon given at Mars Hill Church on 10/27/07. Before I begin, I would like to explain the meaning behind it and get some feedback from you about your story.

The quote is actually derived from the book of Deuteronomy, chapter 26 (v. 5). Just to give you a little bit of a background, the book of Deuteronomy is located at the end of the first 5 books of the Law (or the Torah) in the Old Testament. The Torah was the law given to the Israelites when they were brought out of Egypt. It was given to a generation who had been wandering in the desert and God was going to bless them. Right now in the story however, they are poor. They have very fresh memories of oppression, suffering, and slavery. God is going to bring them into a new land, but he tells them that when they enter that new land, when He blesses them and gives them a new life, He wants them to remember Him (vv. 1-9). He basically says, "When I bring you to this new place, it is going to be a great temptation to forget your story."

When the Israelites enter the new land, possess it and live in it, God wants them to say three things:

1. (v. 3) "I declare this day to the Lord my God that I have entered the land which the Lord swore to our fathers to give us."

God wants them to declare that they have entered the new land and what God has done for them. Sometimes we are tempted to believe that God doesn't want to bless us, that we should feel guilty for what we have. But God delights in taking these refugees, these people that have suffered and pours out His blessings on them.

So what is God asking? He is asking them to take the fruits of their blessing (v. 2) and declare that God has blessed them and kept His promise (v. 3).

2. (v. 5) "My father was a wandering Aramean, and he went down into Egypt and sojourned there, few in number; but there he became a great, mighty and populous nation."

Another translation reads, "My father was a homeless refugee..." Now think down the road. Hundreds of years have passed since Egypt and the Israelites wandered in the desert and Israel has become a rich and powerful nation. God is essentially saying to them, I want you to always remember your story: you were once a homeless, wandering refugee. Never forget your story. Remember the Egyptians subjected you to hard labor and there is pain in your story. God wanted Israel to never forget that pain. He wanted them to always remember their story, to remember that time of suffering in their past.

(v. 7) "Then we cried out to the Lord..." Israel had reached that place of desperation; that time when they had no other hope. Part of their story was not just to remember their suffering, but that time when they cried out to God.

(v. 8) "And the Lord brought us out of Egypt with a mighty hand and outstretched arm and with great terror and with signs and wonders." They were not only to remember their pain and their crying out, but also God's great deeds. So when they came into the land, they not only declared it and told it with all its pain, but they were also to declare what God had done for them.

3. (v. 13) "I have removed the sacred protion from my house, and also given it to the Levite and the alien, the orphan and the widow..."

When they bring their first fruits and put it in a basket (v. 2), that food is given to the Levite, the widow, orphan, and alien. The Levites were those who were, by decision, unable to care for themselves because they were too busy caring for others. The widow, orphan and alien, by their circumstance, were unable to care for themselves. So God is essentially saying to these wandering refugees, "When you come into this land, when I bless you as I have promised to do, I want you to not only declare what I have done, but of who you are. I want you to tell your story. Then I want all of that fruit, all of the results of your faith to work out for justice, for the weak and poor--for others."

The question then becomes, will they remember that their father was a wandering Aramean? God is basically telling the Israelites, "Years from now things are going to go really, really well for you and I know human nature." Human nature is when things go really, really well--you forget God because you are fine and everything is going great. Human nature is also when you crash and burn and say, "God where were you?!" and God's response would probably be, "Where were you?! Because I've been here the whole time." So human nature is when things go really well, we simply forget.

What does it all mean? Don't forget your story! Because when you are prosperous and successful every force around you is going to want you to think that it is all about you and you are going to forget just how bad it was. You are going to forget God's grace and that life is a gift.

How do you keep your story alive? By extending to others what God has extended to you. In extending grace to somebody who needs it, you are reminded what God has done for you. Face it, there are times when all of us have said, "What do I have to do with that person?" Or, "What do I have to do with those people over there in that country?" Why care about them? Because God says that when you become successful, when everything is ok, it will be very easy to forget about what it was like back then in your own life.

So what is your story? What has God done in your life (big or little)? What are those events that have shaped you? How has God touched your life? Was it through a car accident, illness, surgery, death of a loved one, bankruptcy, divorce, or recovery from an addiciton? Or perhaps was it through something beautiful like being loved by another when you didn't deserve it, being forgiven, supported, the birth of a child, or perhaps seeing the strength of someone else who is suffering?

Is there pain in your story? Is there suffering? Was there ever a time when you just cried out to God? What is your, "My father was a wandering Aramean...?" It can be brief or long, anonymous or named. I'd love to hear your story.