Genesis 9 – Part 1 – RAINBOWS AND EMPTY ROOMS
A couple of days ago, I saw a rainbow. It was just over there – a few houses away. If only they knew. There, like a mysterious portent of blessing, defying the mist of rain and piercing the imagination with it’s multiplicity of colours, the heart with it’s beauty, and I smiled, as often I do when I see a rainbow. “Look Mum, there’s a rainbow. Isn’t it beautiful?” – I’ve always felt that way about rainbows since I was little.
If the altar was Noah’s expression of his commitment to God, the rainbow is God’s expression of his commitment to Noah and ultimately to me. Thanks Lord, I’m still touched and inspired by your watercolours.
In Genesis 9:8-10 (NASB95) it says, “Then God told Noah and his sons, “I hereby confirm My covenant with you…” but He doesn’t stop there. He says 3 more significant words full of hope and promise for me – “and your descendants,” THAT’S ME! He includes me in the promise He made to Noah. Now that is cool!
He even includes the animals. “and with all the animals that were on the boat with you—the birds, the livestock, and all the wild animals—every living creature on earth.” Why did God worry about the animals? Because God promised Adam and Eve that they would rule over the earth and the animal kingdom. GOD KEEPS HIS PROMISES!
The word “COVENANT” appears 8 times in a very short space in the next few verses. So it must be important. WHAT IS A COVENANT? It’s an agreement, a promise. God says, “Yes, I am confirming My covenant with you. Never again will floodwaters kill all living creatures; never again will a flood destroy the earth.”
“Where do we go from here?” Noah would say, “TRUST IN THE PROMISES OF GOD.” Look for the covenant promises. Make sure you have entered into a covenant relationship with Jesus, not based on my promises to God but on His promises to me (It’s much more reliable that way).
“Then God said, “I am giving you a sign of My covenant with you and with all living creatures, for all generations to come. I have placed MY RAINBOW IN THE CLOUDS. It is the SIGN OF MY COVENANT with you and with all the earth.”
A RAINBOW IS A BEAUTIFUL PICTURE OF CHRIST. Jesus is called the light of the world. A rainbow has 3 primary colours, red, green and purple.
RED SPEAKS OF THE BLOOD OF CHRIST – His sacrifice on the cross for me. Genesis 8:21 says “The intent of man’s heart is evil from his youth;” Jesus paid the price for my sin. “The blood of Christ”, the Bible says, “cleanses from all sin.” Now that’s good to know. Isaiah 1:18 puts it this way “Come now, and let us reason together,” says the Lord, “though your sins are as scarlet, they will be as white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they will be like wool.”
GREEN SPEAKS OF NEW LIFE after the storm. Genesis 8:11 (NASB95) says, “The dove came to him (Noah) toward evening, and behold, in her beak was a freshly picked olive leaf. So Noah knew that the water was abated from the earth.” The olive leaf was a picture of new life after the storm. Jesus said “I came that you might have life and have it more abundantly” Whoever believes in Him will not perish but have eternal life.
PURPLE IS THE COLOUR OF KINGS. When Jesus was being tried, they mocked Him and dressed Him in purple. He is called King of kings and Lord of lords. Jesus knew what it was like to go through a storm. He is still my King of kings and my Lord of lords.
The Rainbow declares to me today and perhaps to you too, “If I have been through a storm, then God still has a future for me.” In fact you can’t have a rainbow, without having a storm or at least rain.
Where did I start all this. Oh yes, with a rainbow. Beautiful. Makes me smile. Just after the rain subsided – a rainbow in the sky from heaven touching earth. In Europe the rainbow is called “the bridge of the Holy Spirit” and as I sit with my computer on a card table in the middle of a mostly empty study (gave away my beautiful desk), the Holy Spirit is here right now.
“WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE, LORD?” Like Noah of old, He says to me “It’s time to trust in Me, as always”. So I build an altar, – surrender my life afresh to Christ as an act of worship. And I offer up my worship to my Lord and Saviour who loves me with an indescribable love, intercede on behalf of my community with a fervency and expectation of Gods miraculous intervention into the circumstances of our everyday lives, renew my dependence on Him, believe in the power of a rainbow, and let the covenant relationship with my Lord wash over me with it’s colours by trusting in His promises.
“Lord You do everything in your time. Thankyou for continuing to complete the work You have begun in my life and in Julie’s life and in my family and Church.
Father, when the storms abate and the floods recede, I am washed by Your promises and stand clean before You, and as I’m looking out this window into the garden beyond, I’m almost expecting to see a rainbow again. It’s there in my heart.
Thankyou Lord Jesus for taking the full force of the storm when you died on the cross, that the ground is now dry for me to walk upon with You.
Holy Spirit, continue to speak with me and guide me. I don’t want to stay huddled up with the security of Your past guidance and afraid to move with Your most recent guidance.
Help me Lord, today, to act upon what You are saying, now. I choose to be obedient today and take the risk of faith. Cover me Lord with the rainbow of Your protection and grace.
Thankyou for establishing Your covenant with me. I commit myself and my family, my Church and my friends to you. Help us make a difference in this world.”
God bless you Church as you marvel at the colours of a rainbow and make this your prayer too. And thanks for sharing my quietime with me.
Pastor Ross
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Genesis 8 - Part 3 - REMOVAL VAN PRAYER
Genesis 8 - Part 3 – REMOVAL VAN PRAYER.
Well, Julie and I have got a house full of boxes and a quietness amidst the echoes, as we see the final things accomplished before our move to Sydney - a trailerload of Church related archives in a cupboard, and a list of people we need to see before we go – especially Dot Hamilton who is old and unable to come to Church now. And the question that people have asked through the ages still finds its way from my stomach to my lips “Where do we go to from here”.
The removal van people said they would be here a day later than they originally said. You wouldn’t believe what repercussions that has for us. So many phonecalls to rearrange things. Julie is amazing. She just does it all despite the frustration. That’s what made me call this “Removal Van Prayer.”
This morning I am looking at how Noah handled the move. I know his move was a little different (he had cats on board), but essentially when he got off the removal van and unloaded the furniture and pets, he was faced with that same question as he looked toward a whole new beginning. He did what we all do with a new beginning – prayed to God. Worship is so important when your heart is heavy about leaving but excited about what is ahead – it’s the only way to handle such Schizophrenic emotions.
As he gets off the Ark (Great name for a removal van), Noah did something that I almost missed – he prayed for us! Just as well really, but I didn’t expect that.
On Tuesday night, we went around to Jeremy’s place with a group of young leaders to share with them some insights – you know, from the vast accumulated wisdom of our years (Just joking – more like from the mistakes we have made). They did something so precious to us – they gathered around at the end of the night and they prayed and even washed our feet. We were so humbled by the honour they gave us so freely. God wants me to be like that – to pray into peoples lives and give voice to deep things that need expression in the very throneroom of our God. God not only wants my heart, but He wants my prayers. If Noah was here today, he would say “If you want to know where to go from here, then intercede (ask on somebody's behalf) for God’s blessings.” Noah prayed for the generations to come as only a man who understands what it means to be saved can pray. You won’t find the prayer there in Genesis 8 but you do find God’s response.
Why did Noah build an altar and offer these animal sacrifices? Was it a sin offering? I’m sure every sacrifice is. But there’s something more. The bible says Noah was a righteous man. Sure, he, like everyone who believes in Christ today, was sinner saved by grace, but it wasn’t only a sacrifice for sins. There’s more to it than that.
I believe there was something else that also inspired Noah to sacrifice those animals? Verse 21 gives us a clue. Don’t drive by too fast or you’ll miss it.
To find the clue you need to look at God’s response - “and the lord was pleased with the aroma of the sacrifice”. Now this is more than just God being pleased with the smell of a good barbecue. In this case the aroma drew God’s favour. That’s not always the case in the Bible. Sometimes, like in Leviticus 26:31, and Amos 5:22, God refuses to smell the sacrifice. And that means divine disapproval and rejection. When the sacrifice rises, if God is pleased with the smell, that means He's pleased with the heart and prayers of the worshiper. If it displeases Him, then He's not pleased with the heart or prayers of the worshiper.
What about my worship? I want so much for it to be a sweet smelling aroma to God. A sweet smelling aroma was a way of saying God heard Noah’s prayer. He was pleased with Noah’s heart. You get an idea of what Noah prayed for as God hears and says to Himself, “I will never again curse the ground because of the human race, even though everything they think or imagine is bent toward evil from childhood. I will never again destroy all living things.” That makes me think that Noah probably prayed “Lord, protect my family. Have mercy on future generations Lord. Have mercy upon the human race” He looked around at a devastated world and his heart cried out for us!
God waited to hear that prayer. The only reason you and I are here, is because the Bible says in 2 peter 3:9 (NLT) “the Lord isn’t really being slow about His promise, as some people think. No, He is being patient for your sake. He does not want anyone to be destroyed, but wants everyone to repent.”
It is time to pray – yes, I need to pray for Julie and myself and our needs, but God calls me to pray for more than just that - pray for my children and my grandchildren, pray for our Church, (I’m still Pastor of an incredible Church for at least 3 days and my prayers for you will continue), pray for the Whitsundays, pray for Queensland, Australia, the world, that God will have mercy upon us and usher in a time of harvest – amen?
And that will require me to renew my dependence upon Christ. Just because I’ve weathered some storms and found God’s favour, doesn’t mean that I am now strong enough to face whatever comes my way. Don’t kid yourself, Ross.
Storms leave me vulnerable. Blessings leave me thinking somehow I deserve it (How fickle my heart can be). What I really need to understand is that all my time here in the Whitsundays, the storms and the fair weather times leave me even more in need of Jesus. Someone said, “The flood didn’t neutralise the influence of the serpent. The Cross defeated the serpent.” (I may have said that, but I’m not sure. It sounds too profound for me).
God bless you Church as you learn the power and value of prayer that reaches out past yourself to others – your children, your grandchildren, your Church, to Julie and Ross (just thought I’d add that in), to our community and ultimately our World.
Pastor Ross
Well, Julie and I have got a house full of boxes and a quietness amidst the echoes, as we see the final things accomplished before our move to Sydney - a trailerload of Church related archives in a cupboard, and a list of people we need to see before we go – especially Dot Hamilton who is old and unable to come to Church now. And the question that people have asked through the ages still finds its way from my stomach to my lips “Where do we go to from here”.
The removal van people said they would be here a day later than they originally said. You wouldn’t believe what repercussions that has for us. So many phonecalls to rearrange things. Julie is amazing. She just does it all despite the frustration. That’s what made me call this “Removal Van Prayer.”
This morning I am looking at how Noah handled the move. I know his move was a little different (he had cats on board), but essentially when he got off the removal van and unloaded the furniture and pets, he was faced with that same question as he looked toward a whole new beginning. He did what we all do with a new beginning – prayed to God. Worship is so important when your heart is heavy about leaving but excited about what is ahead – it’s the only way to handle such Schizophrenic emotions.
As he gets off the Ark (Great name for a removal van), Noah did something that I almost missed – he prayed for us! Just as well really, but I didn’t expect that.
On Tuesday night, we went around to Jeremy’s place with a group of young leaders to share with them some insights – you know, from the vast accumulated wisdom of our years (Just joking – more like from the mistakes we have made). They did something so precious to us – they gathered around at the end of the night and they prayed and even washed our feet. We were so humbled by the honour they gave us so freely. God wants me to be like that – to pray into peoples lives and give voice to deep things that need expression in the very throneroom of our God. God not only wants my heart, but He wants my prayers. If Noah was here today, he would say “If you want to know where to go from here, then intercede (ask on somebody's behalf) for God’s blessings.” Noah prayed for the generations to come as only a man who understands what it means to be saved can pray. You won’t find the prayer there in Genesis 8 but you do find God’s response.
Why did Noah build an altar and offer these animal sacrifices? Was it a sin offering? I’m sure every sacrifice is. But there’s something more. The bible says Noah was a righteous man. Sure, he, like everyone who believes in Christ today, was sinner saved by grace, but it wasn’t only a sacrifice for sins. There’s more to it than that.
I believe there was something else that also inspired Noah to sacrifice those animals? Verse 21 gives us a clue. Don’t drive by too fast or you’ll miss it.
To find the clue you need to look at God’s response - “and the lord was pleased with the aroma of the sacrifice”. Now this is more than just God being pleased with the smell of a good barbecue. In this case the aroma drew God’s favour. That’s not always the case in the Bible. Sometimes, like in Leviticus 26:31, and Amos 5:22, God refuses to smell the sacrifice. And that means divine disapproval and rejection. When the sacrifice rises, if God is pleased with the smell, that means He's pleased with the heart and prayers of the worshiper. If it displeases Him, then He's not pleased with the heart or prayers of the worshiper.
What about my worship? I want so much for it to be a sweet smelling aroma to God. A sweet smelling aroma was a way of saying God heard Noah’s prayer. He was pleased with Noah’s heart. You get an idea of what Noah prayed for as God hears and says to Himself, “I will never again curse the ground because of the human race, even though everything they think or imagine is bent toward evil from childhood. I will never again destroy all living things.” That makes me think that Noah probably prayed “Lord, protect my family. Have mercy on future generations Lord. Have mercy upon the human race” He looked around at a devastated world and his heart cried out for us!
God waited to hear that prayer. The only reason you and I are here, is because the Bible says in 2 peter 3:9 (NLT) “the Lord isn’t really being slow about His promise, as some people think. No, He is being patient for your sake. He does not want anyone to be destroyed, but wants everyone to repent.”
It is time to pray – yes, I need to pray for Julie and myself and our needs, but God calls me to pray for more than just that - pray for my children and my grandchildren, pray for our Church, (I’m still Pastor of an incredible Church for at least 3 days and my prayers for you will continue), pray for the Whitsundays, pray for Queensland, Australia, the world, that God will have mercy upon us and usher in a time of harvest – amen?
And that will require me to renew my dependence upon Christ. Just because I’ve weathered some storms and found God’s favour, doesn’t mean that I am now strong enough to face whatever comes my way. Don’t kid yourself, Ross.
Storms leave me vulnerable. Blessings leave me thinking somehow I deserve it (How fickle my heart can be). What I really need to understand is that all my time here in the Whitsundays, the storms and the fair weather times leave me even more in need of Jesus. Someone said, “The flood didn’t neutralise the influence of the serpent. The Cross defeated the serpent.” (I may have said that, but I’m not sure. It sounds too profound for me).
God bless you Church as you learn the power and value of prayer that reaches out past yourself to others – your children, your grandchildren, your Church, to Julie and Ross (just thought I’d add that in), to our community and ultimately our World.
Pastor Ross
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
Genesis 8 - Part 2 - SAVE OUR ANIMALS! ARK OR ALTAR?
Genesis 8 – Part 2 – SAVE OUR ANIMALS! ARK OR ALTAR?
Julie and I move to Sydney on Monday night. We’ve done all the packing and I still need to pack away the last vestiges of files from my study, a never ending process. We are looking forward to getting to Sydney after a couple of days journey in the car. 26 hours driving time, so I can put on the timer and I won’t have to ask “Are we there yet!” I am looking forward to getting out of that car already at the other end and sorting out what we will be doing.
Noah stepped out of the ark to a whole new world. Now don’t get the wrong view of this. When Noah stepped off the boat, it wasn’t like I have seen in the picture books and children’s stories - all sunshine and a big rainbow, and the animals are all smiling. And there's trees and there's rivers and there's green grass everywhere. I am sure that wasn't what they saw.
They came off that ark, and there was death everywhere and desolation, and a landscape devastated by flood - incredible erosion and upheaval. I’m sure there was plant life, but it probably wasn't profuse. It still had to develop and grow again. It certainly wasn’t like Eden. It would have been the opposite of that. It was a destroyed planet.
And when they walked off, maybe the first thing that they saw were carcasses and dry bones. Massive evidence of death and destruction, the aftermath of judgment.
I bet one of the questions Noah had was “Well lord, where do we go from here?”
That’s the question all of us ask when we’ve had the faith and trust to put your life into God’s hands, and Noah answers that question.
Genesis 8:20 (NIV) says “then Noah built an altar to the lord and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it.”
The first thing Noah did in verse 20 was build an altar. Where do you go when the world you knew has been ripped apart, and all you see is the aftermath of the storm - when you really come to grips with what life would be like without God.
Noah says to me and you, “Build an altar - totally surrender your life to Christ in an act of worship”
Genesis 8:20 (NIV) says “then Noah built an altar to the Lord and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it.”
God didn’t command him to do that. It was a freewill offering. By the way, some people think that there were only 2 of every animal in the ark, but Noah was told to take 2 of every unclean animal and 7 of every clean animal (or domesticated animals) into the ark. (Genesis 7:2-3)
Noah’s reputation with the Animal Rights movement was good until this time, but in the Bible, a burnt offering is primarily a recognition of total devotion to the lord. There were some offerings where you put it on the altar and burned some of it and you ate some of it. But a burnt offering was totally consumed in the fire, and it was a picture of total devotion, total dedication to the Lord. You gave everything to the lord. You didn't keep anything back for yourself. You just gave your all.
If you just got off the Ark you would say, that is very generous offering. Remember, it’s not as if there’s a lot of animals around. In fact there was an animal shortage! Nevertheless, he didn't say "Look, we don't have a lot of animals here to populate the whole world, so I’m just going to hold back a little on the offering side of things. Things are tight at the moment. We have a severe animal shortage.” He didn't do that! He took from every clean animal and every clean bird he had, slaughtered them, and burnt them all totally on the altar, as an act of unrestrained worship. When it came to giving worship to God He didn’t hold back.
By this time the animal rights groups would have notified the authorities. As they held up their placards saying “SAVE OUR ANIMALS FROM EXTINCTION” Noah would have been fined thousands of dollars. Fortunately for Noah, it was the animal rights group that had become extinct!
If you just survived a worldwide flood, would you be giving up your livelihood by giving God the best of all you had. What did Noah need the most? The domesticated animals and he gave one seventh of his livestock to God, as a sacrifice.
This wasn’t just a tithe. Like one woman said to her pastor, “Pastor, I can’t afford a tenth of my income. I’ll have to give you a seventh instead!”
It requires faith to give to God and risk. If the storm is a financial storm, it doesn’t make sense to give.
There is a choice involved in obeying God, and building an Ark. And there is a choice involved in worshiping God and building an altar. No ark, no altar. You won’t know what it’s like to worship, until you appreciate what it’s like to be saved, and then your worship will never be something trivial. It will be a wholehearted expression of thanksgiving.
This is the first mention in the bible of an altar. Cain and abel gave an offering, but there's no indication about an altar. This is the first time an altar is used for the purpose of sacrifice.
You may be asking like Noah, “Where do I go from here?” Here and now is your opportunity to build an altar, to totally dedicate your life to Christ.
Romans 12:1 (NASB) says “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.”
So the altar is a picture of total devotion, total dedication to the Lord, where you give everything to the Lord. You don’t keep anything back. You just give all of yourself to the Lord.
God bless you Church as you declare “I’ve been saved in order to serve unreservedly, total commitment. It’s no longer ark building time. It’s altar building time!” It’s time to give sacrificially! Of time and talent and yes, of treasure. Worship for me must never be just being there on Sunday. It involves sacrifice, giving of myself completely to Christ. He want’s my heart.
Pastor Ross
Julie and I move to Sydney on Monday night. We’ve done all the packing and I still need to pack away the last vestiges of files from my study, a never ending process. We are looking forward to getting to Sydney after a couple of days journey in the car. 26 hours driving time, so I can put on the timer and I won’t have to ask “Are we there yet!” I am looking forward to getting out of that car already at the other end and sorting out what we will be doing.
Noah stepped out of the ark to a whole new world. Now don’t get the wrong view of this. When Noah stepped off the boat, it wasn’t like I have seen in the picture books and children’s stories - all sunshine and a big rainbow, and the animals are all smiling. And there's trees and there's rivers and there's green grass everywhere. I am sure that wasn't what they saw.
They came off that ark, and there was death everywhere and desolation, and a landscape devastated by flood - incredible erosion and upheaval. I’m sure there was plant life, but it probably wasn't profuse. It still had to develop and grow again. It certainly wasn’t like Eden. It would have been the opposite of that. It was a destroyed planet.
And when they walked off, maybe the first thing that they saw were carcasses and dry bones. Massive evidence of death and destruction, the aftermath of judgment.
I bet one of the questions Noah had was “Well lord, where do we go from here?”
That’s the question all of us ask when we’ve had the faith and trust to put your life into God’s hands, and Noah answers that question.
Genesis 8:20 (NIV) says “then Noah built an altar to the lord and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it.”
The first thing Noah did in verse 20 was build an altar. Where do you go when the world you knew has been ripped apart, and all you see is the aftermath of the storm - when you really come to grips with what life would be like without God.
Noah says to me and you, “Build an altar - totally surrender your life to Christ in an act of worship”
Genesis 8:20 (NIV) says “then Noah built an altar to the Lord and, taking some of all the clean animals and clean birds, he sacrificed burnt offerings on it.”
God didn’t command him to do that. It was a freewill offering. By the way, some people think that there were only 2 of every animal in the ark, but Noah was told to take 2 of every unclean animal and 7 of every clean animal (or domesticated animals) into the ark. (Genesis 7:2-3)
Noah’s reputation with the Animal Rights movement was good until this time, but in the Bible, a burnt offering is primarily a recognition of total devotion to the lord. There were some offerings where you put it on the altar and burned some of it and you ate some of it. But a burnt offering was totally consumed in the fire, and it was a picture of total devotion, total dedication to the Lord. You gave everything to the lord. You didn't keep anything back for yourself. You just gave your all.
If you just got off the Ark you would say, that is very generous offering. Remember, it’s not as if there’s a lot of animals around. In fact there was an animal shortage! Nevertheless, he didn't say "Look, we don't have a lot of animals here to populate the whole world, so I’m just going to hold back a little on the offering side of things. Things are tight at the moment. We have a severe animal shortage.” He didn't do that! He took from every clean animal and every clean bird he had, slaughtered them, and burnt them all totally on the altar, as an act of unrestrained worship. When it came to giving worship to God He didn’t hold back.
By this time the animal rights groups would have notified the authorities. As they held up their placards saying “SAVE OUR ANIMALS FROM EXTINCTION” Noah would have been fined thousands of dollars. Fortunately for Noah, it was the animal rights group that had become extinct!
If you just survived a worldwide flood, would you be giving up your livelihood by giving God the best of all you had. What did Noah need the most? The domesticated animals and he gave one seventh of his livestock to God, as a sacrifice.
This wasn’t just a tithe. Like one woman said to her pastor, “Pastor, I can’t afford a tenth of my income. I’ll have to give you a seventh instead!”
It requires faith to give to God and risk. If the storm is a financial storm, it doesn’t make sense to give.
There is a choice involved in obeying God, and building an Ark. And there is a choice involved in worshiping God and building an altar. No ark, no altar. You won’t know what it’s like to worship, until you appreciate what it’s like to be saved, and then your worship will never be something trivial. It will be a wholehearted expression of thanksgiving.
This is the first mention in the bible of an altar. Cain and abel gave an offering, but there's no indication about an altar. This is the first time an altar is used for the purpose of sacrifice.
You may be asking like Noah, “Where do I go from here?” Here and now is your opportunity to build an altar, to totally dedicate your life to Christ.
Romans 12:1 (NASB) says “Therefore I urge you, brethren, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.”
So the altar is a picture of total devotion, total dedication to the Lord, where you give everything to the Lord. You don’t keep anything back. You just give all of yourself to the Lord.
God bless you Church as you declare “I’ve been saved in order to serve unreservedly, total commitment. It’s no longer ark building time. It’s altar building time!” It’s time to give sacrificially! Of time and talent and yes, of treasure. Worship for me must never be just being there on Sunday. It involves sacrifice, giving of myself completely to Christ. He want’s my heart.
Pastor Ross
Monday, January 11, 2010
Genesis 8 – Part 1 - WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
Genesis 8 – Part 1 - WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
I feel as if a flood of memories from the last 10 years is sweeping over me, and like Noah I would like to hear the voice of God say “Come into the ark” where you’ll be safe. Instead, He is saying “GO OUT OF THE ARK” and face whatever is out there. It will be a new beginning. God has lifted me up and brought me safely through some stormy times, and when the fountains of the deep burst open God closed the door of His protection and shielded me. But now it’s time to move on. You can’t stay in the ark forever or it becomes a comfort zone. It was never intended to be a permanent dwelling place, just a temporary safe haven, but that hasn’t stopped me from asking “Lord, I want to know where to go to from here.” Noah gives me some good advice for this new year.
Noah is one of the greatest men who ever lived and he knew how to please God. In fact that’s why he was great. I imagine him as an old man, face weathered, hands boney, pure white hair and beard, older than any man I’ve ever seen, although sometimes I look in the mirror and catch glimse of such a man.
I’m a little seasick, like the first time I went out in a boat in the Whitsundays, but I want to know WHERE TO GO FROM HERE.
If Noah was here he would say, “Where you go from here will be determined by your faith and your faith will be tested by what remains after the storm.”
Noah would say, “Let God close the door on your past.” It’s no use carrying around the baggage of my past. Christ died to forgive me. I accept that forgiveness and find a new future by trusting in Him.
Noah would say, “Wait for God’s timing. Sometimes His timing isn’t ours, which means we have to wait. But waiting doesn’t mean doing nothing. Make good use of today.” Noah prepared for the future, even while he was in the ark. He sent out a raven, then a dove and then removed the covering. When opportunity comes it’s too late to prepare. I need to prepare ahead of time. I can always ask God what I need to do to prepare for your future.
Noah would say “Don’t stay in the ark.” It’s easy to stay in that place where God has met me in the past and never progress beyond that point. God wants my testimony to be up to date
What interests me is Genesis 8:15-16 (NLT)
“Then God said to Noah, “leave the boat, all of you—you and your wife, and your sons and their wives.”
The last time Noah heard the Lord speak was when the Lord said, "Come in to the Ark" and then he doesn't hear anything for a long time - for a year and nearly a month. And then God says, "Go out!" I notice that Noah didn’t ask any questions. I’m sure he was glad to obey! When God has just destroyed the world as you knew it completely, you do as He says, no questions asked.
God bless you Church as you let go of the past and step out in faith and obedience to God this year.
Pastor Ross
I feel as if a flood of memories from the last 10 years is sweeping over me, and like Noah I would like to hear the voice of God say “Come into the ark” where you’ll be safe. Instead, He is saying “GO OUT OF THE ARK” and face whatever is out there. It will be a new beginning. God has lifted me up and brought me safely through some stormy times, and when the fountains of the deep burst open God closed the door of His protection and shielded me. But now it’s time to move on. You can’t stay in the ark forever or it becomes a comfort zone. It was never intended to be a permanent dwelling place, just a temporary safe haven, but that hasn’t stopped me from asking “Lord, I want to know where to go to from here.” Noah gives me some good advice for this new year.
Noah is one of the greatest men who ever lived and he knew how to please God. In fact that’s why he was great. I imagine him as an old man, face weathered, hands boney, pure white hair and beard, older than any man I’ve ever seen, although sometimes I look in the mirror and catch glimse of such a man.
I’m a little seasick, like the first time I went out in a boat in the Whitsundays, but I want to know WHERE TO GO FROM HERE.
If Noah was here he would say, “Where you go from here will be determined by your faith and your faith will be tested by what remains after the storm.”
Noah would say, “Let God close the door on your past.” It’s no use carrying around the baggage of my past. Christ died to forgive me. I accept that forgiveness and find a new future by trusting in Him.
Noah would say, “Wait for God’s timing. Sometimes His timing isn’t ours, which means we have to wait. But waiting doesn’t mean doing nothing. Make good use of today.” Noah prepared for the future, even while he was in the ark. He sent out a raven, then a dove and then removed the covering. When opportunity comes it’s too late to prepare. I need to prepare ahead of time. I can always ask God what I need to do to prepare for your future.
Noah would say “Don’t stay in the ark.” It’s easy to stay in that place where God has met me in the past and never progress beyond that point. God wants my testimony to be up to date
What interests me is Genesis 8:15-16 (NLT)
“Then God said to Noah, “leave the boat, all of you—you and your wife, and your sons and their wives.”
The last time Noah heard the Lord speak was when the Lord said, "Come in to the Ark" and then he doesn't hear anything for a long time - for a year and nearly a month. And then God says, "Go out!" I notice that Noah didn’t ask any questions. I’m sure he was glad to obey! When God has just destroyed the world as you knew it completely, you do as He says, no questions asked.
God bless you Church as you let go of the past and step out in faith and obedience to God this year.
Pastor Ross
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Matthew 5 - Part 20 - YOU THINK YOU'RE SO PERFECT!
Matthew 5 – Part 20 – YOU THINK YOU’RE SO PERFECT!
Jesus says “Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:48). What is that supposed to mean? Like, that’s impossible, right?
In fact there are a number of contradictions in this section of the Bible, until you look further. For instance, Jesus speaks of loving your enemies. I’ve always thought that to be contradiction because if you love someone they are no longer your enemy, but of course, He is saying that although you may love them, they still don’t love you. The enemy bit is theirs not ours.
Then He shocks us again! He says that when we love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us, we do it “in order that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven”. So does that mean that if I don’t love my enemies, I can’t be a child of God anymore? No, I don’t think that’s what He’s trying to get across. What He is saying is that God loved me when I was His enemy, and so if I am a true child of God, then I’ll behave in the same way. I am to be my Father’s Son. I am to see things the way God sees things. When I do that I am doing all that God calls me to do.
But then Jesus goes on to say something ludicrous to me. Or at least at first glance it is ludicrous. Lord, you go on to say “Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”. That’s going TOO FAR! I’M NOT PERFECT, Lord. You know that I fall short of this. So what are you trying to say? Your standard is way too high for me.
But then when I think about it, God couldn’t have very well said to me, “Just do your best, and I’ll accept that.” A perfect God doesn’t give me an imperfect standard to live by. HE DOESN’T LOWER HIS STANDARDS JUST TO ACCOMMODATE ME.
I guess when I love my enemies, then I participate in something that is part of God’s perfect character. I do something perfect in His strength, but I still don’t get to that kind of standard in the everyday part of my life. I still get it wrong at times.
“PERFECTION” in the original Greek has the idea of “COMPLETE” ie “capable of doing everything that God calls us to do”
Colossians 2:10 (NLT) says “So you also are COMPLETE (or “perfect”) through your union with Christ, who is the head over every ruler and authority.”
PERFECT (teleios from télos = goal, purpose) means “one who has accomplished the intended goal (telos).” If something accomplishes what it is designed to do, it is said to be perfect (teleios). A child is imperfect in the sense that they have not yet grown to full maturity. So telios is often translated as “mature”. When something is fully developed then it is said to be perfect. So Telios has the idea of “being complete.”
2 Corinthians 5:21 (NLT) says, “For God made Christ, who never sinned, to be the offering for our sin, so that we could be made right with God through Christ.:”
When I trust in what Jesus did for me on the Cross, then I am complete. God sees me as righteous, ie in right relationship with Him, as perfect and complete, as forgiven of all my sins. Instead of seeing me, He sees what Jesus did for me, and so I stand before Him AS PERFECT.
That doesn’t mean I’m going to be perfect in my everyday relationships. I’m never going to be perfect in that way. I get it wrong all the time. But as the Lord works through me, I live out the kind of life He wants me to live. I am complete. I am doing all that God has called me to do, and in that sense it is PERFECT and I live in a way that is HOLY AND ACCEPTABLE TO GOD. It is a journey of perfection that I am taking. I need to be “filled with the Holy Spirit” Ephesians 5:18) in order to do this.
Romans 12:1-2 (NLT) spells it out better than I can. “And so, dear brothers and sisters, I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all He has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice—the kind He will find acceptable. This is truly the way to worship Him. Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect.”
1 Peter 1:14-16 (NLT) says “So you must live as God’s obedient children. Don’t slip back into your old ways of living to satisfy your own desires. You didn’t know any better then. But now you must be holy in everything you do, just as God who chose you is holy. For the Scriptures say, “You must be holy because I am holy.”
Philippians 3:12-16 (NLT) explains it further,
“I don’t mean to say that I have already achieved these things or that I have already reached perfection. But I press on to possess that perfection for which Christ Jesus first possessed me. No, dear brothers and sisters, I have not achieved it, but I focus on this one thing: Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead, I press on to reach the end of the race and receive the heavenly prize for which God, through Christ Jesus, is calling us. Let all who are spiritually mature agree on these things. If you disagree on some point, I believe God will make it plain to you. But we must hold on to the progress we have already made.”
The Bible is my perfect standard for life and faith, and as I live it out then I display glimpses of the perfection of God in my life. 2 Timothy 3:16-17 (NLT) says, “All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right. God uses it to prepare and equip his people to do every good work.” The Kings James Version says “That the man of God may be PERFECT, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.”
God bless you Church as you live a perfect life (ie complete everything God has called you to do).
Pastor Ross
Jesus says “Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matthew 5:48). What is that supposed to mean? Like, that’s impossible, right?
In fact there are a number of contradictions in this section of the Bible, until you look further. For instance, Jesus speaks of loving your enemies. I’ve always thought that to be contradiction because if you love someone they are no longer your enemy, but of course, He is saying that although you may love them, they still don’t love you. The enemy bit is theirs not ours.
Then He shocks us again! He says that when we love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us, we do it “in order that you may be sons of your Father who is in heaven”. So does that mean that if I don’t love my enemies, I can’t be a child of God anymore? No, I don’t think that’s what He’s trying to get across. What He is saying is that God loved me when I was His enemy, and so if I am a true child of God, then I’ll behave in the same way. I am to be my Father’s Son. I am to see things the way God sees things. When I do that I am doing all that God calls me to do.
But then Jesus goes on to say something ludicrous to me. Or at least at first glance it is ludicrous. Lord, you go on to say “Therefore you are to be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect”. That’s going TOO FAR! I’M NOT PERFECT, Lord. You know that I fall short of this. So what are you trying to say? Your standard is way too high for me.
But then when I think about it, God couldn’t have very well said to me, “Just do your best, and I’ll accept that.” A perfect God doesn’t give me an imperfect standard to live by. HE DOESN’T LOWER HIS STANDARDS JUST TO ACCOMMODATE ME.
I guess when I love my enemies, then I participate in something that is part of God’s perfect character. I do something perfect in His strength, but I still don’t get to that kind of standard in the everyday part of my life. I still get it wrong at times.
“PERFECTION” in the original Greek has the idea of “COMPLETE” ie “capable of doing everything that God calls us to do”
Colossians 2:10 (NLT) says “So you also are COMPLETE (or “perfect”) through your union with Christ, who is the head over every ruler and authority.”
PERFECT (teleios from télos = goal, purpose) means “one who has accomplished the intended goal (telos).” If something accomplishes what it is designed to do, it is said to be perfect (teleios). A child is imperfect in the sense that they have not yet grown to full maturity. So telios is often translated as “mature”. When something is fully developed then it is said to be perfect. So Telios has the idea of “being complete.”
2 Corinthians 5:21 (NLT) says, “For God made Christ, who never sinned, to be the offering for our sin, so that we could be made right with God through Christ.:”
When I trust in what Jesus did for me on the Cross, then I am complete. God sees me as righteous, ie in right relationship with Him, as perfect and complete, as forgiven of all my sins. Instead of seeing me, He sees what Jesus did for me, and so I stand before Him AS PERFECT.
That doesn’t mean I’m going to be perfect in my everyday relationships. I’m never going to be perfect in that way. I get it wrong all the time. But as the Lord works through me, I live out the kind of life He wants me to live. I am complete. I am doing all that God has called me to do, and in that sense it is PERFECT and I live in a way that is HOLY AND ACCEPTABLE TO GOD. It is a journey of perfection that I am taking. I need to be “filled with the Holy Spirit” Ephesians 5:18) in order to do this.
Romans 12:1-2 (NLT) spells it out better than I can. “And so, dear brothers and sisters, I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all He has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice—the kind He will find acceptable. This is truly the way to worship Him. Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect.”
1 Peter 1:14-16 (NLT) says “So you must live as God’s obedient children. Don’t slip back into your old ways of living to satisfy your own desires. You didn’t know any better then. But now you must be holy in everything you do, just as God who chose you is holy. For the Scriptures say, “You must be holy because I am holy.”
Philippians 3:12-16 (NLT) explains it further,
“I don’t mean to say that I have already achieved these things or that I have already reached perfection. But I press on to possess that perfection for which Christ Jesus first possessed me. No, dear brothers and sisters, I have not achieved it, but I focus on this one thing: Forgetting the past and looking forward to what lies ahead, I press on to reach the end of the race and receive the heavenly prize for which God, through Christ Jesus, is calling us. Let all who are spiritually mature agree on these things. If you disagree on some point, I believe God will make it plain to you. But we must hold on to the progress we have already made.”
The Bible is my perfect standard for life and faith, and as I live it out then I display glimpses of the perfection of God in my life. 2 Timothy 3:16-17 (NLT) says, “All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right. God uses it to prepare and equip his people to do every good work.” The Kings James Version says “That the man of God may be PERFECT, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.”
God bless you Church as you live a perfect life (ie complete everything God has called you to do).
Pastor Ross
Friday, January 8, 2010
Matthew 5 – Part 19 – “BUT THE GUY IS A JERK AND DESERVES IT!”
Matthew 5 – Part 19 – “BUT THE GUY IS A JERK AND DESERVES IT!”
Most action movies I have seen have some aspect of revenge in their storyline. And I must admit it, when the bad guy finally gets killed, I am there saying on the inside “The guy was a jerk and deserved everything he got!” Am I the only one? Is “jerk” a swearword?
Some friends of mine were driving me home one night when we came across a drunk man walking home and because we knew him, we offered him a lift. He was an alcoholic friend and we had been encouraging him to take action and get help.
While he was in the car we talked to him about other things, but as he got out I expressed my concern with his drunkenness and encouraged him to find help. All of a sudden he was furious. He dragged me from the car and was extremely offended that I should suggest that he even had a problem. How dare I judge him! He began to hit me in the face. His blows stung at first but as he continued, my head became numbed.
I thought how crazy this was – a drunk man beating me up and I could not even fight my way out of a wet paper bag. It took some time for my friends to get him off me. I had no choice but to offer him the other cheek, but is this the kind of thing Jesus is advocating in Matthew 5:38-48. If I had known how to fight I am sure I would have defended myself and perhaps injured him. As it was, some time later, he apologized to me so sincerely, and we prayed together as he admitted that he really did have a problem.
Jesus says in Matthew 5:38-48 (NLT) “You have heard the law that says the punishment must match the injury: ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say, do not resist an evil person! If someone slaps you on the right cheek, offer the other cheek also. If you are sued in court and your shirt is taken from you, give your coat, too. If a soldier demands that you carry his gear for a mile, carry it two miles. Give to those who ask, and don’t turn away from those who want to borrow. “You have heard the law that says, ‘Love your neighbor’ and hate your enemy. But I say, love your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you! In that way, you will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For He gives His sunlight to both the evil and the good, and He sends rain on the just and the unjust alike. If you love only those who love you, what reward is there for that? Even corrupt tax collectors do that much. If you are kind only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? Even pagans do that. But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.”
Sometimes I look at passages like this and think that Jesus is so naïve. In my arrogance, I am wrong of course. When I think it through it makes a whole lot more sense than first meets the eye. Thanks Lord.
God’s focus seems to be for me to show mercy, rather than get my own back. I can make a choice not to press charges. I am to look for other ways which will preserve the relationship above my rights for justice whenever this is possible.
Actually getting revenge is all about me and the wrong done to me. It’s essentially SELF CENTRED and rather destructive in the sense that it desires to strike out towards another person to gain satisfaction, and that person ends up ruling my life. That can’t be right!
What about when someone gets divorced and they need to go to court and get a settlement? What about taking justice on a murderer? Yeah, I know. Sometimes justice inevitably will be served. Jesus isn’t saying there’s anything wrong with the law. But I know one woman who was ruled by vengeance and holding onto her rights. She was miserable because she lived her life thinking of new ways to get even. Her ex-husband was actually exercising more control than he had ever had over her, without any contact with her at all! When she let it go, she was a much happier person and so much easier to talk to.
Jesus is just saying I don’t always have to take it to the limit and mete out my pound of flesh. He’s not saying I am never to resist evil. Just see the law from the standpoint of wanting to exercise mercy rather than get vengeance or mete out the last bit of justice. I’m glad God doesn’t choose vengeance on me before mercy! Taking my friend to court for beating me up would not have led to anything but misery, for him and me. Jesus says in effect “Don’t look for ways to retaliate! Look for ways to bring something good out of a bad situation. Offer forgiveness.”
Proverbs 20:22 (NLT) “Don’t say, “I will get even for this wrong.” Wait for the Lord to handle the matter.”” Sounds like the Lord is the only One who is really capable of exercising true justice anyway. And He does everything to show mercy first.
1 Peter 3:9 (NLT) repeats this principle for leadership. “Don’t repay evil for evil. Don’t retaliate with insults when people insult you. Instead, pay them back with a blessing. That is what God has called you to do, and He will bless you for it.”
Going a second mile isn’t all that difficult when I see the benefits it has for me. I lose the bad attitude and instead of exercising bitterness and resentment, instead of spending my life griping and complaining and being involved in self pity, I actually enjoy the privilege of being able to serve someone else, form a relationship and maybe reach out to someone for Christ who doesn’t know Him.
Lord, as a Christian I know I am not to retaliate just because I have the right to do so. Help me to live with a focus on blessing others, knowing that You will provide for me. I want my focus to be knowing You, Lord Jesus, and making You known to others. Relationship is more important than rights. Help me to do everything I can do to find agreement first.
God bless you Church as you focus on blessing other people not in getting your own back.
What about the bad guy in the movie? Didn’t he deserve it? Stop! Breathe! Now Rewind!
Pastor Ross
Most action movies I have seen have some aspect of revenge in their storyline. And I must admit it, when the bad guy finally gets killed, I am there saying on the inside “The guy was a jerk and deserved everything he got!” Am I the only one? Is “jerk” a swearword?
Some friends of mine were driving me home one night when we came across a drunk man walking home and because we knew him, we offered him a lift. He was an alcoholic friend and we had been encouraging him to take action and get help.
While he was in the car we talked to him about other things, but as he got out I expressed my concern with his drunkenness and encouraged him to find help. All of a sudden he was furious. He dragged me from the car and was extremely offended that I should suggest that he even had a problem. How dare I judge him! He began to hit me in the face. His blows stung at first but as he continued, my head became numbed.
I thought how crazy this was – a drunk man beating me up and I could not even fight my way out of a wet paper bag. It took some time for my friends to get him off me. I had no choice but to offer him the other cheek, but is this the kind of thing Jesus is advocating in Matthew 5:38-48. If I had known how to fight I am sure I would have defended myself and perhaps injured him. As it was, some time later, he apologized to me so sincerely, and we prayed together as he admitted that he really did have a problem.
Jesus says in Matthew 5:38-48 (NLT) “You have heard the law that says the punishment must match the injury: ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ But I say, do not resist an evil person! If someone slaps you on the right cheek, offer the other cheek also. If you are sued in court and your shirt is taken from you, give your coat, too. If a soldier demands that you carry his gear for a mile, carry it two miles. Give to those who ask, and don’t turn away from those who want to borrow. “You have heard the law that says, ‘Love your neighbor’ and hate your enemy. But I say, love your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you! In that way, you will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For He gives His sunlight to both the evil and the good, and He sends rain on the just and the unjust alike. If you love only those who love you, what reward is there for that? Even corrupt tax collectors do that much. If you are kind only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? Even pagans do that. But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.”
Sometimes I look at passages like this and think that Jesus is so naïve. In my arrogance, I am wrong of course. When I think it through it makes a whole lot more sense than first meets the eye. Thanks Lord.
God’s focus seems to be for me to show mercy, rather than get my own back. I can make a choice not to press charges. I am to look for other ways which will preserve the relationship above my rights for justice whenever this is possible.
Actually getting revenge is all about me and the wrong done to me. It’s essentially SELF CENTRED and rather destructive in the sense that it desires to strike out towards another person to gain satisfaction, and that person ends up ruling my life. That can’t be right!
What about when someone gets divorced and they need to go to court and get a settlement? What about taking justice on a murderer? Yeah, I know. Sometimes justice inevitably will be served. Jesus isn’t saying there’s anything wrong with the law. But I know one woman who was ruled by vengeance and holding onto her rights. She was miserable because she lived her life thinking of new ways to get even. Her ex-husband was actually exercising more control than he had ever had over her, without any contact with her at all! When she let it go, she was a much happier person and so much easier to talk to.
Jesus is just saying I don’t always have to take it to the limit and mete out my pound of flesh. He’s not saying I am never to resist evil. Just see the law from the standpoint of wanting to exercise mercy rather than get vengeance or mete out the last bit of justice. I’m glad God doesn’t choose vengeance on me before mercy! Taking my friend to court for beating me up would not have led to anything but misery, for him and me. Jesus says in effect “Don’t look for ways to retaliate! Look for ways to bring something good out of a bad situation. Offer forgiveness.”
Proverbs 20:22 (NLT) “Don’t say, “I will get even for this wrong.” Wait for the Lord to handle the matter.”” Sounds like the Lord is the only One who is really capable of exercising true justice anyway. And He does everything to show mercy first.
1 Peter 3:9 (NLT) repeats this principle for leadership. “Don’t repay evil for evil. Don’t retaliate with insults when people insult you. Instead, pay them back with a blessing. That is what God has called you to do, and He will bless you for it.”
Going a second mile isn’t all that difficult when I see the benefits it has for me. I lose the bad attitude and instead of exercising bitterness and resentment, instead of spending my life griping and complaining and being involved in self pity, I actually enjoy the privilege of being able to serve someone else, form a relationship and maybe reach out to someone for Christ who doesn’t know Him.
Lord, as a Christian I know I am not to retaliate just because I have the right to do so. Help me to live with a focus on blessing others, knowing that You will provide for me. I want my focus to be knowing You, Lord Jesus, and making You known to others. Relationship is more important than rights. Help me to do everything I can do to find agreement first.
God bless you Church as you focus on blessing other people not in getting your own back.
What about the bad guy in the movie? Didn’t he deserve it? Stop! Breathe! Now Rewind!
Pastor Ross
Labels:
Eye for an eye,
Justice,
Matthew 5,
Retaliation,
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Turn the other Cheek
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Matthew 5 – Part 18 – SO WHAT YOU’RE SAYING IS THAT GOD CAN’T MAKE UP HIS MIND?
Matthew 5 – Part 18 – SO WHAT YOU’RE SAYING IS THAT GOD CAN’T MAKE UP HIS MIND?
Occasionally I meet Christians who say “God is telling me to go and do this or that” and then the next minute God seems to have changed His mind. I remember one guy who made God look like He didn’t know how to make up His mind at all! One day it was “God wants me to do this.” and the next day it was something totally different. That’s not the unchangeable God I know and read about in the Bible.
So what I really want to talk about is OATHS AND SWEARING!
Jesus chooses to teach some radical principles to His disciples up on the mountain. Who can question that He knew what He was doing. And so far, I’ve got to admit, it is all applicable to me as a Christian leader.
Jesus spoke about Oaths and Swearing. He says in Matthew 5:33-37 (NLT) “You have also heard that our ancestors were told, ‘You must not break your vows; you must carry out the vows you make to the Lord.’ But I say, do not make any vows! Do not say, ‘By heaven!’ because heaven is God’s throne. And do not say, ‘By the earth!’ because the earth is His footstool. And do not say, ‘By Jerusalem!’ for Jerusalem is the city of the great King. Do not even say, ‘By my head!’ for you can’t turn one hair white or black. Just say a simple, ‘Yes, I will,’ or ‘No, I won’t.’ Anything beyond this is from the evil one.”
He says don’t go making promises and assurances that you may not be able to keep or being profane in your language by bringing God’s name into it. Just let your yes be yes.
So let me get this straight - Don’t make promises but keep them anyway. Have the character to do the right thing anyway and speak in a way that is straightforward.
I guess Jesus is thinking of the 3rd commandment as He teaches this principle. Exodus 20:7 (NLT) says, “You must not misuse the Name of the Lord your God. The Lord will not let you go unpunished if you misuse His Name.” Leviticus 19:12 (NLT) makes this even clearer - “Do not bring shame on the Name of your God by using it to swear falsely. I am the Lord.”
Now these passages from the Old Testament don’t say “DON’T MAKE AN OATH” but they do encourage us not to make an oath and not keep it. Numbers 30:2 (NLT) says “A man who makes a vow to the Lord or makes a pledge under oath must never break it. He must do exactly what he said he would do.” but Jesus says “DON’T MAKE OATHS AT ALL!” What, doesn’t Jesus trust us? What happens if I go to court and have to swear on the Bible to tell the whole truth? Somehow I think Jesus knows that I am capable of stretching the truth, of exaggerating and just plain lying at times.
Annanias and Sapphira dropped dead after lying to God about giving all their land to the Church. In Acts 5:4 (NLT) Peter says to them “The property was yours to sell or not sell, as you wished. And after selling it, the money was also yours to give away. How could you do a thing like this? You weren’t lying to us but to God!”
Jesus says vows and swearing aren’t necessary. He simplifies the law to the basics.
God is the only one who is really capable of keeping an oath. Hebrews 6:17 (NLT) says “God also bound himself with an oath, so that those who received the promise could be perfectly sure that he would never change his mind.”
Lord, thankyou that I can trust in You to come through with what You have promised. Help me to honour Your Name in the way I speak.
God bless you Church as you “Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” (Colossians 4:6 (NIV))
Pastor Ross
Occasionally I meet Christians who say “God is telling me to go and do this or that” and then the next minute God seems to have changed His mind. I remember one guy who made God look like He didn’t know how to make up His mind at all! One day it was “God wants me to do this.” and the next day it was something totally different. That’s not the unchangeable God I know and read about in the Bible.
So what I really want to talk about is OATHS AND SWEARING!
Jesus chooses to teach some radical principles to His disciples up on the mountain. Who can question that He knew what He was doing. And so far, I’ve got to admit, it is all applicable to me as a Christian leader.
Jesus spoke about Oaths and Swearing. He says in Matthew 5:33-37 (NLT) “You have also heard that our ancestors were told, ‘You must not break your vows; you must carry out the vows you make to the Lord.’ But I say, do not make any vows! Do not say, ‘By heaven!’ because heaven is God’s throne. And do not say, ‘By the earth!’ because the earth is His footstool. And do not say, ‘By Jerusalem!’ for Jerusalem is the city of the great King. Do not even say, ‘By my head!’ for you can’t turn one hair white or black. Just say a simple, ‘Yes, I will,’ or ‘No, I won’t.’ Anything beyond this is from the evil one.”
He says don’t go making promises and assurances that you may not be able to keep or being profane in your language by bringing God’s name into it. Just let your yes be yes.
So let me get this straight - Don’t make promises but keep them anyway. Have the character to do the right thing anyway and speak in a way that is straightforward.
I guess Jesus is thinking of the 3rd commandment as He teaches this principle. Exodus 20:7 (NLT) says, “You must not misuse the Name of the Lord your God. The Lord will not let you go unpunished if you misuse His Name.” Leviticus 19:12 (NLT) makes this even clearer - “Do not bring shame on the Name of your God by using it to swear falsely. I am the Lord.”
Now these passages from the Old Testament don’t say “DON’T MAKE AN OATH” but they do encourage us not to make an oath and not keep it. Numbers 30:2 (NLT) says “A man who makes a vow to the Lord or makes a pledge under oath must never break it. He must do exactly what he said he would do.” but Jesus says “DON’T MAKE OATHS AT ALL!” What, doesn’t Jesus trust us? What happens if I go to court and have to swear on the Bible to tell the whole truth? Somehow I think Jesus knows that I am capable of stretching the truth, of exaggerating and just plain lying at times.
Annanias and Sapphira dropped dead after lying to God about giving all their land to the Church. In Acts 5:4 (NLT) Peter says to them “The property was yours to sell or not sell, as you wished. And after selling it, the money was also yours to give away. How could you do a thing like this? You weren’t lying to us but to God!”
Jesus says vows and swearing aren’t necessary. He simplifies the law to the basics.
God is the only one who is really capable of keeping an oath. Hebrews 6:17 (NLT) says “God also bound himself with an oath, so that those who received the promise could be perfectly sure that he would never change his mind.”
Lord, thankyou that I can trust in You to come through with what You have promised. Help me to honour Your Name in the way I speak.
God bless you Church as you “Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” (Colossians 4:6 (NIV))
Pastor Ross
Labels:
Matthew 5,
Oaths,
Sermon on the Mount,
Swearing
Matthew 5 – Part 17 – WHAT IS SO WRONG WITH SWEARING? EVERYONE DOES IT!
Matthew 5 – Part 17 – WHAT IS SO WRONG WITH SWEARING? EVERYONE DOES IT!
Why is the F*** word and and the Sh** word used so freely today? Jesus doesn’t directly include this in what He says about oaths in Matthew 5 but it is there by way of application and other passages enlarge on this area of sin, so I am taking a detour. The spirit of what Jesus is saying in Matthew 5:33-37 is “watch how you speak. Don’t use God’s name as a swearword because God says there are consequences to doing that. It is unnecessary and it is so dishonouring to God. In fact speak and act with integrity.”
My mother speaks of times when her mother would wash her mouth out with soap in an effort to get across the filthiness of the way her children cursed or used their words to lie about things. Imagine the fuss if we were to bring that back into practice! Sometimes when I hear young people speak to eachother I’d love to give it a try.
Listen to what Romans 3:10-18 (NLT) says,
“As the Scriptures say,…“Their talk is foul, like the stench from an open grave. Their tongues are filled with lies.” “Snake venom drips from their lips.” “Their mouths are full of cursing and bitterness.” … “They have no fear of God at all.””
People who constantly say “Oh my God” still make me cringe as they bring God into the conversation in the most unGodly ways, and “Christ” is just a swearword or curse or slangword. I so find that so difficult to listen to.
Christians can be just as crass as unbelievers at times. I am surprised by young people who see nothing wrong with using language that speaks about the privacy of the sexual act in a such a common way and with such disregard. I am equally surprised at so called mature Christians who speak about excrement in the foulest of ways. How gross is such language and why would we want it to be so common by using it in everyday speech?
Sometimes, if you took away the swearwords, I wonder what kind of vocabulary would be left. Some people would find it difficult to talk at all.
Let me say this to Christians who don’t get it about swearing, and don’t dismiss this as the ravings of an old man - apart from showing no consideration to others, your cursing shows that you have a real problem with what you think is acceptable to God. It shows how thoughtless, insensitive and selfish you are to others. It shows you are unwilling to stand up and be counted when you are called to live as Salt and Light (See my previous blog about what it means to be Salt). You just want to be part of the crowd and blend in with a culture of crude talk. Crass language also shows how hard your heart is towards God and how much disregard you have for what He has to say. It is foolishness and a sure indication of depraved thinking that has no place in your life. You are worth more than this! Cursing certainly doesn’t have it’s basis in anything that is Godly! It is an indication of salt mixed with dirt that has lost all usefulness to God.
There, I’ve said it! And don’t pass it off too quickly! Please. I really care enough about you to say the tough things as well. Look at what God has to say about it in the Bible.
James 3:8-9 (NLT) says “but no one can tame the tongue. It is restless and evil, full of deadly poison. Sometimes it praises our Lord and Father, and sometimes it curses those who have been made in the image of God.”
I am surprised constantly by the way in which we speak to eachother, husbands and wives particularly. James is right, “Who can tame the tongue?” The answer to that is that only Jesus can tame the tongue, if we respect what He says and live our lives in tune with Him.
God bless you Church as you “Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” (Colossians 4:6 (NIV))
Pastor Ross
Why is the F*** word and and the Sh** word used so freely today? Jesus doesn’t directly include this in what He says about oaths in Matthew 5 but it is there by way of application and other passages enlarge on this area of sin, so I am taking a detour. The spirit of what Jesus is saying in Matthew 5:33-37 is “watch how you speak. Don’t use God’s name as a swearword because God says there are consequences to doing that. It is unnecessary and it is so dishonouring to God. In fact speak and act with integrity.”
My mother speaks of times when her mother would wash her mouth out with soap in an effort to get across the filthiness of the way her children cursed or used their words to lie about things. Imagine the fuss if we were to bring that back into practice! Sometimes when I hear young people speak to eachother I’d love to give it a try.
Listen to what Romans 3:10-18 (NLT) says,
“As the Scriptures say,…“Their talk is foul, like the stench from an open grave. Their tongues are filled with lies.” “Snake venom drips from their lips.” “Their mouths are full of cursing and bitterness.” … “They have no fear of God at all.””
People who constantly say “Oh my God” still make me cringe as they bring God into the conversation in the most unGodly ways, and “Christ” is just a swearword or curse or slangword. I so find that so difficult to listen to.
Christians can be just as crass as unbelievers at times. I am surprised by young people who see nothing wrong with using language that speaks about the privacy of the sexual act in a such a common way and with such disregard. I am equally surprised at so called mature Christians who speak about excrement in the foulest of ways. How gross is such language and why would we want it to be so common by using it in everyday speech?
Sometimes, if you took away the swearwords, I wonder what kind of vocabulary would be left. Some people would find it difficult to talk at all.
Let me say this to Christians who don’t get it about swearing, and don’t dismiss this as the ravings of an old man - apart from showing no consideration to others, your cursing shows that you have a real problem with what you think is acceptable to God. It shows how thoughtless, insensitive and selfish you are to others. It shows you are unwilling to stand up and be counted when you are called to live as Salt and Light (See my previous blog about what it means to be Salt). You just want to be part of the crowd and blend in with a culture of crude talk. Crass language also shows how hard your heart is towards God and how much disregard you have for what He has to say. It is foolishness and a sure indication of depraved thinking that has no place in your life. You are worth more than this! Cursing certainly doesn’t have it’s basis in anything that is Godly! It is an indication of salt mixed with dirt that has lost all usefulness to God.
There, I’ve said it! And don’t pass it off too quickly! Please. I really care enough about you to say the tough things as well. Look at what God has to say about it in the Bible.
James 3:8-9 (NLT) says “but no one can tame the tongue. It is restless and evil, full of deadly poison. Sometimes it praises our Lord and Father, and sometimes it curses those who have been made in the image of God.”
I am surprised constantly by the way in which we speak to eachother, husbands and wives particularly. James is right, “Who can tame the tongue?” The answer to that is that only Jesus can tame the tongue, if we respect what He says and live our lives in tune with Him.
God bless you Church as you “Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.” (Colossians 4:6 (NIV))
Pastor Ross
Labels:
Cursing,
Matthew 5,
Sermon on the Mount,
Swearing,
The Tongue
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Matthew 5 - Part 16 - GOD WANTS ME TO BE HAPPY, SO LET'S GET A DIVORCE!
Matthew 5 - Part 16 - GOD WANTS US TO BE HAPPY, SO WHY DON'T WE GET DIVORCED?
Years ago, Julie and I began to have difficulty in our marriage. I was spending all my time pastoring a small Church and our relationship was being neglected. It suffered to the point where I needed to take time out of ministry and we needed to do some repair work. That was a major decision and we know what it's like to go through the difficult process, the road less travelled, of restoring that which has been lost, and for me, of learning what it means to be a better husband. It's horrible at first, but when we made that choice, at the end of the day we are still married and I have an even better relationship with Julie than I had before. God is so good!
I am always disturbed when Christians take the dreadful step of divorce. If Christians can't make their marriages work, who can? My heart breaks for them because they have usually left it too late before they come for counselling. Christians like to hide the fact that their marriages aren't working, especially at Church. By the time they do come, they simply want to justify their decision. They tell me things like "God would not want me to live the rest of my life with someone I don't love, would He?" or "God wouldn't want me to be so unhappy?" I tell them as best I can that there is more to a marriage than an emotion of self centred well-being, but that doesn't always go down that well!
Now I know it's not simply a matter of, as one person put it, "being married but not engaged". That's worse still! But when a couple divorces, it is heartbreaking to see the aftermath of hurt and devastation which touches the lives of their children for years to come, and the legal and emotional battles that are fought to break that covenant. By the time you are divorced, you have had to violate a number of very binding promises you have made before God and eachother. That alone has devastating and lasting consequences for us emotionally, socially and spiritually - in every way. It is no wonder that God says "For I hate divorce!" says the Lord, ... "To divorce your wife is to overwhelm her with cruelty,...so guard your heart; do not be unfaithful to your wife." (Malachi 2:16 (NLT))
In Matthew 5, Jesus is teaching His disciples some leadership principles on the mountain, preparing them for ministry and all of a sudden He comes up with radical new ways of interpreting the topic of DIVORCE. It is so radical that even many Christians today ignore it! Jesus makes the outrageous claim that "a man who divorces his wife, unless she has been unfaithful, causes her to commit adultery. And anyone who marries a divorced woman also commits adultery." (Matthew 5:32).
Are we to take Him literally? YES!!!
Now notice that Jesus has just finished speaking about ADULTERY and now he speaks about DIVORCE. The two things are so often related. He says Adultery is more than the actual sexual act. He is more concerned about the thought life that gives rise to Adultery and says that lust is already an act of adultery. Then He speaks about the real meaning of divorce.
The horrible thing about adultery is that it breaks the connection between husband and wife. The covenant relationship along with faithfulness, hopes for the future, love for eachother, and trust are all broken. If you are Christians, then the physical, emotional, AND SPIRITUAL connections are broken (Matthew 19:5-6).
So what do we get from all this? First of all God hates divorce (Malachi 2:16) Divorce is permitted when Adultery has taken place, but the reason it is permitted is for the protection of the innocent party due to the sin of the other party. Sin always gets in the way of enjoying what God wants for us. Divorce is only permitted because of sin and is not a part of God's original plan for our marriages.
Jesus said in Matthew 19:8, "Moses permitted divorce only as a concession to your hard hearts, but it was not what God had originally intended"
Unless there is unfaithfulness in the marriage, as a Christian, God expects that you will have the same attitude toward divorce as He does, and you will see it as a violation of His expressed purpose for your marriage.
Divorce in the case of adultery means that the innocent party no longer has to remain trapped in a hopeless and intolerable situation. Remarriage is permitted for the innocent person, and I use the term "innocent" as referring to the one who has not committed adultery. Jesus may permit divorce in these limited circumstances but never commands divorce. God shows clearly in Hosea 1-3 that a wife who has committed adultery can be forgiven and restored. I presume this applies to a husband as well.
Where a divorce is not because of adultery or because an unbeliever initiates the divorce, the Bible says there can be, and we are to seek, reconciliation, or else remain unmarried. 1 Corinthians 7:10-11 says, "A wife must not leave her husband. But if she does leave him, let her remain single or else be reconciled to him. And the husband must not leave his wife." When you get a divorce where no adultery took place, then in God's eyes you are still married. Marrying someone else means that you place yourself in a position of committing adultery, because God doesn't recognise the validity of the divorce unless adultery took place. That's how specific the Bible is about marriage and divorce.
Now, let's get rid of the legal side and speak about hope for marriages.
When someone receives Christ as their Lord and Saviour, it means you begin a new life. According to John 3 you are born again and in 2 Corinthians 5:17, a genuine Christian has become a "new creature". It means that it is not only possible but necessary to live out what God has revealed about marriage and divorce from the point of his or her relationship with Christ. Marriage, after all is a beautiful picture of the relationship of Christ and His Church.
"This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun!"
Someone said "This does not mean that Christ immediately erases painful memories, bad habits or the underlying causes for past marital problems, but that He begins a process of transformation through the Holy Spirit and the Word of God. A sign of becoming a Christian will be a willingness to obey what Christ has revealed about marriage and divorce through the Word of God."
What am I saying in all this?
Seek to honour Christ in your life and in all your relationships and mostly in your marriage. I read somewhere that we need to be careful what you let into our senses--what we see, what we hear, and where we go. Whatever we allow in our minds is going to have a great impact on us. Pray for purity. Avoid potentially tempting situations, like travelling alone, or going to places alone where you will be vulnerable. Stay accountable to your spouse and build your marriage.
God bless you Church as you treasure the marriages you have and as you take the road less travelled to find the answers you need to have a great marriage.
Years ago, Julie and I began to have difficulty in our marriage. I was spending all my time pastoring a small Church and our relationship was being neglected. It suffered to the point where I needed to take time out of ministry and we needed to do some repair work. That was a major decision and we know what it's like to go through the difficult process, the road less travelled, of restoring that which has been lost, and for me, of learning what it means to be a better husband. It's horrible at first, but when we made that choice, at the end of the day we are still married and I have an even better relationship with Julie than I had before. God is so good!
I am always disturbed when Christians take the dreadful step of divorce. If Christians can't make their marriages work, who can? My heart breaks for them because they have usually left it too late before they come for counselling. Christians like to hide the fact that their marriages aren't working, especially at Church. By the time they do come, they simply want to justify their decision. They tell me things like "God would not want me to live the rest of my life with someone I don't love, would He?" or "God wouldn't want me to be so unhappy?" I tell them as best I can that there is more to a marriage than an emotion of self centred well-being, but that doesn't always go down that well!
Now I know it's not simply a matter of, as one person put it, "being married but not engaged". That's worse still! But when a couple divorces, it is heartbreaking to see the aftermath of hurt and devastation which touches the lives of their children for years to come, and the legal and emotional battles that are fought to break that covenant. By the time you are divorced, you have had to violate a number of very binding promises you have made before God and eachother. That alone has devastating and lasting consequences for us emotionally, socially and spiritually - in every way. It is no wonder that God says "For I hate divorce!" says the Lord, ... "To divorce your wife is to overwhelm her with cruelty,...so guard your heart; do not be unfaithful to your wife." (Malachi 2:16 (NLT))
In Matthew 5, Jesus is teaching His disciples some leadership principles on the mountain, preparing them for ministry and all of a sudden He comes up with radical new ways of interpreting the topic of DIVORCE. It is so radical that even many Christians today ignore it! Jesus makes the outrageous claim that "a man who divorces his wife, unless she has been unfaithful, causes her to commit adultery. And anyone who marries a divorced woman also commits adultery." (Matthew 5:32).
Are we to take Him literally? YES!!!
Now notice that Jesus has just finished speaking about ADULTERY and now he speaks about DIVORCE. The two things are so often related. He says Adultery is more than the actual sexual act. He is more concerned about the thought life that gives rise to Adultery and says that lust is already an act of adultery. Then He speaks about the real meaning of divorce.
The horrible thing about adultery is that it breaks the connection between husband and wife. The covenant relationship along with faithfulness, hopes for the future, love for eachother, and trust are all broken. If you are Christians, then the physical, emotional, AND SPIRITUAL connections are broken (Matthew 19:5-6).
So what do we get from all this? First of all God hates divorce (Malachi 2:16) Divorce is permitted when Adultery has taken place, but the reason it is permitted is for the protection of the innocent party due to the sin of the other party. Sin always gets in the way of enjoying what God wants for us. Divorce is only permitted because of sin and is not a part of God's original plan for our marriages.
Jesus said in Matthew 19:8, "Moses permitted divorce only as a concession to your hard hearts, but it was not what God had originally intended"
Unless there is unfaithfulness in the marriage, as a Christian, God expects that you will have the same attitude toward divorce as He does, and you will see it as a violation of His expressed purpose for your marriage.
Divorce in the case of adultery means that the innocent party no longer has to remain trapped in a hopeless and intolerable situation. Remarriage is permitted for the innocent person, and I use the term "innocent" as referring to the one who has not committed adultery. Jesus may permit divorce in these limited circumstances but never commands divorce. God shows clearly in Hosea 1-3 that a wife who has committed adultery can be forgiven and restored. I presume this applies to a husband as well.
Where a divorce is not because of adultery or because an unbeliever initiates the divorce, the Bible says there can be, and we are to seek, reconciliation, or else remain unmarried. 1 Corinthians 7:10-11 says, "A wife must not leave her husband. But if she does leave him, let her remain single or else be reconciled to him. And the husband must not leave his wife." When you get a divorce where no adultery took place, then in God's eyes you are still married. Marrying someone else means that you place yourself in a position of committing adultery, because God doesn't recognise the validity of the divorce unless adultery took place. That's how specific the Bible is about marriage and divorce.
Now, let's get rid of the legal side and speak about hope for marriages.
When someone receives Christ as their Lord and Saviour, it means you begin a new life. According to John 3 you are born again and in 2 Corinthians 5:17, a genuine Christian has become a "new creature". It means that it is not only possible but necessary to live out what God has revealed about marriage and divorce from the point of his or her relationship with Christ. Marriage, after all is a beautiful picture of the relationship of Christ and His Church.
"This means that anyone who belongs to Christ has become a new person. The old life is gone; a new life has begun!"
Someone said "This does not mean that Christ immediately erases painful memories, bad habits or the underlying causes for past marital problems, but that He begins a process of transformation through the Holy Spirit and the Word of God. A sign of becoming a Christian will be a willingness to obey what Christ has revealed about marriage and divorce through the Word of God."
What am I saying in all this?
Seek to honour Christ in your life and in all your relationships and mostly in your marriage. I read somewhere that we need to be careful what you let into our senses--what we see, what we hear, and where we go. Whatever we allow in our minds is going to have a great impact on us. Pray for purity. Avoid potentially tempting situations, like travelling alone, or going to places alone where you will be vulnerable. Stay accountable to your spouse and build your marriage.
God bless you Church as you treasure the marriages you have and as you take the road less travelled to find the answers you need to have a great marriage.
Labels:
Adultery,
Divorce,
Marriage,
Matthew 5,
Sermon on the Mount
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
Matthew 5 - Part 15 - SEX, ADULTERY, LUST AND GOUGIN YOUR EYE OUT!
Matthew 5 - Part 15 - SEX, ADULTERY, LUST AND GOUGING YOUR EYE OUT!
Too often when Julie and I watch a movie, I am forced to turn it off or over because of the coarse nature of the movie, particularly relating to the sex scenes. It is taken for granted that sex is a necessary part of most movies. I disagree! I don’t need to watch simulated sex between two people in my living room! I notice that although I make an active choice to turn the channel over or turn the movie off, that there is something inside me that would like to entertain watching a little bit longer. I know it would be wrong, but the desire is there. Jesus is not afraid to confront the big issues of men’s lives, like sex and our thought lives. He verbalizes what we know to be true...
"You have heard that it was said, ’YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT ADULTERY’; but I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart. (Matthew 5:27-28 (NASB))
I notice when Jesus confronts me, He goes for the heart. He addresses the core issues that I face in my thought life.
All around me I see that adultery causes such devastation and hurt in a marriage, and so often leads to the end of a marriage, and as a Christian man I agree that I don’t want to be involved in adultery, yet I am amazed at what I am capable of tolerating in my life unless I actively choose to deal with it. I need to be vigilant in this important area.
Jesus tells His disciples at the outset of ministry that purity is essential. He uses language that is forceful and exaggerated to get his point across to a group of fishermen who may well have been used to coarse jokes and lack of boundaries concerning women. He says in Matthew 5:29-30 (NASB) "If your right eye makes you stumble, tear it out and throw it from you; for it is better for you to lose one of the parts of your body, than for your whole body to be thrown into hell."
OK, so how gross is this picture? Sure, He’s not being literal but don’t water this down! This is important! Decide ahead of time not to feed lust! Jesus is saying that what we focus on determines our actions. Jokes, movies, and magazines can give our senses permission to feed lust.
Jesus is using what we call graphic hyperbole (obvious and intentional exaggeration) to get His point across. Obviously, Jesus is not advocating self mutilation to deal with lust. That would not actually solve the problem of a man’s thoughts anyway. So what is He saying to me and you? He is saying "Deal with the cause! Focus your attention on other things that don’t feed lust. Take whatever action is necessary so that you don’t stumble in this area. Don’t indulge sinful patterns of thinking." Such thinking inevitably chooses inappropriate behaviour which can lead to the devastating consequences of adultery.
So does this mean if I think of a woman in the wrong way, then I’ll go to hell? Jesus is associating such behaviour and thinking as sin and all sin is deserving of hell and continuing to feed lust is behaviour that belongs to someone who does not have a personal relationship with Christ in the first place.
Jesus isn’t saying sex is sinful or wrong. The Bible speaks about marriage from the beginning and encourages Adam and Eve to "be fruitful and multiply" so God invites them to have sex. How do I commit adultery? I mean I know how, but what I’m getting at is that our definition is too restricted. According to Jesus it happens as I look at a woman with lust in my heart, not just the act having sex with someone elses wife. Sex outside marriage is obviously wrong and lustful thoughts, according to Jesus, are already tainted by the sin of adultery!
James 1:14-15 (NASB) says "... each one is tempted when he is carried away and enticed by his own lust. Then when lust has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and when sin is accomplished, it brings forth death."
So how do I win the battle over lust? I do whatever is necessary! It might mean staying away from certain places, or certain people. It might mean refusing certain social functions where I know the conversations will be suggestive. It might mean excusing myself and showing others by example that I don’t approve of suggestive jokes and conversations that lead to lust.
It will be determined by what I focus on. Philippians 4:8 (NASB) says, "Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is honourable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on these things."
2 Cor. 10:5 says "we are taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ,"
Jesus says what the heart focuses on determines how I will live.
1 Thessalonians 4:3-6 (NASB) makes God’s perspective crystal clear.
"For this is the will of God, your sanctification; that is, that you abstain from sexual immorality; that each of you know how to possess his own vessel in sanctification and honour, not in lustful passion, like the Gentiles who do not know God; and that no man transgress and defraud his brother in the matter because the Lord is the avenger in all these things, just as we also told you before and solemnly warned you."
One final thing - I need to admit to God what happens in my heart when I go wrong, and repent when I find myself drawn into the area of lust.
God bless you Church as you put Galatians 5:16 (NIV) into practise and as you "... live by the Spirit, ... you will not gratify the desires of the sinful nature."
Too often when Julie and I watch a movie, I am forced to turn it off or over because of the coarse nature of the movie, particularly relating to the sex scenes. It is taken for granted that sex is a necessary part of most movies. I disagree! I don’t need to watch simulated sex between two people in my living room! I notice that although I make an active choice to turn the channel over or turn the movie off, that there is something inside me that would like to entertain watching a little bit longer. I know it would be wrong, but the desire is there. Jesus is not afraid to confront the big issues of men’s lives, like sex and our thought lives. He verbalizes what we know to be true...
"You have heard that it was said, ’YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT ADULTERY’; but I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart. (Matthew 5:27-28 (NASB))
I notice when Jesus confronts me, He goes for the heart. He addresses the core issues that I face in my thought life.
All around me I see that adultery causes such devastation and hurt in a marriage, and so often leads to the end of a marriage, and as a Christian man I agree that I don’t want to be involved in adultery, yet I am amazed at what I am capable of tolerating in my life unless I actively choose to deal with it. I need to be vigilant in this important area.
Jesus tells His disciples at the outset of ministry that purity is essential. He uses language that is forceful and exaggerated to get his point across to a group of fishermen who may well have been used to coarse jokes and lack of boundaries concerning women. He says in Matthew 5:29-30 (NASB) "If your right eye makes you stumble, tear it out and throw it from you; for it is better for you to lose one of the parts of your body, than for your whole body to be thrown into hell."
OK, so how gross is this picture? Sure, He’s not being literal but don’t water this down! This is important! Decide ahead of time not to feed lust! Jesus is saying that what we focus on determines our actions. Jokes, movies, and magazines can give our senses permission to feed lust.
Jesus is using what we call graphic hyperbole (obvious and intentional exaggeration) to get His point across. Obviously, Jesus is not advocating self mutilation to deal with lust. That would not actually solve the problem of a man’s thoughts anyway. So what is He saying to me and you? He is saying "Deal with the cause! Focus your attention on other things that don’t feed lust. Take whatever action is necessary so that you don’t stumble in this area. Don’t indulge sinful patterns of thinking." Such thinking inevitably chooses inappropriate behaviour which can lead to the devastating consequences of adultery.
So does this mean if I think of a woman in the wrong way, then I’ll go to hell? Jesus is associating such behaviour and thinking as sin and all sin is deserving of hell and continuing to feed lust is behaviour that belongs to someone who does not have a personal relationship with Christ in the first place.
Jesus isn’t saying sex is sinful or wrong. The Bible speaks about marriage from the beginning and encourages Adam and Eve to "be fruitful and multiply" so God invites them to have sex. How do I commit adultery? I mean I know how, but what I’m getting at is that our definition is too restricted. According to Jesus it happens as I look at a woman with lust in my heart, not just the act having sex with someone elses wife. Sex outside marriage is obviously wrong and lustful thoughts, according to Jesus, are already tainted by the sin of adultery!
James 1:14-15 (NASB) says "... each one is tempted when he is carried away and enticed by his own lust. Then when lust has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and when sin is accomplished, it brings forth death."
So how do I win the battle over lust? I do whatever is necessary! It might mean staying away from certain places, or certain people. It might mean refusing certain social functions where I know the conversations will be suggestive. It might mean excusing myself and showing others by example that I don’t approve of suggestive jokes and conversations that lead to lust.
It will be determined by what I focus on. Philippians 4:8 (NASB) says, "Finally, brethren, whatever is true, whatever is honourable, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is of good repute, if there is any excellence and if anything worthy of praise, dwell on these things."
2 Cor. 10:5 says "we are taking every thought captive to the obedience of Christ,"
Jesus says what the heart focuses on determines how I will live.
1 Thessalonians 4:3-6 (NASB) makes God’s perspective crystal clear.
"For this is the will of God, your sanctification; that is, that you abstain from sexual immorality; that each of you know how to possess his own vessel in sanctification and honour, not in lustful passion, like the Gentiles who do not know God; and that no man transgress and defraud his brother in the matter because the Lord is the avenger in all these things, just as we also told you before and solemnly warned you."
One final thing - I need to admit to God what happens in my heart when I go wrong, and repent when I find myself drawn into the area of lust.
God bless you Church as you put Galatians 5:16 (NIV) into practise and as you "... live by the Spirit, ... you will not gratify the desires of the sinful nature."
Monday, January 4, 2010
Matthew 5 - Part 14 - WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN SOMEONE HATES YOU?
Matthew 5 - Part 14 - WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN SOMEONE HATES YOU?
I remember years ago that a man wrote a nasty letter to me and included in it a curse and all kinds of false accusations. To this day, I don't know why he wrote it. It was so vicious and untrue, but he had built up a case against me and it all bubbled out in this letter. It included distorted views of what I had said in messages, and I had no idea he felt this way against me. I went to see him but when he saw me coming he slammed the door in my face and refused to speak with me. When eventually I got some of his friends to speak with him, he agreed to see me and I did all I could to get the relationship right again. It was hard work, and my first desire was to defend myself against the curse and false accusations. But Jesus suggests in Matthew 5 that the relationship is even more important than the case.
Matthew 5:23-26 gets to me every time. It's one of those passages you just can't escape.
"So if you are presenting a sacrifice at the altar in the Temple and you suddenly remember that someone has something against you, leave your sacrifice there at the altar. Go and be reconciled to that person. Then come and offer your sacrifice to God. "When you are on the way to court with your adversary, settle your differences quickly. Otherwise, your accuser may hand you over to the judge, who will hand you over to an officer, and you will be thrown into prison. And if that happens, you surely won't be free again until you have paid the last penny."
Jesus teaches the Disciples on the mountain some leadership principles. He even get's into the law and how it's important it is for a Disciple of Christ to settle legal matters quickly and out of court. He says it's not so much about the legal matters as it is about the relationship you have with the person. The principle of settling disputes quickly has to do with being reconciled with your brother (I think "a brother" here is not referring to just anyone and everyone, but specifically to the people with whom we have some kind of relationship, even if it's just a legal one as in this case).
Jesus goes beyond the legal matters again. The CASE you have against someone is not as important as the RELATIONSHIP you have with them. Jesus emphasizes that the RELATIONSHIP IS ALWAYS MORE IMPORTANT. Sometimes we don't want it to be more important. We would rather just avoid a person who has something against us, especially if it's legal, but God says that reconciliation is important. We are to do our part in keeping the peace with others where possible. It may not always work out, like with Jesus Himself, but we are to do our part in seeking reconciliation. That's the way of the Cross.
This passage says settling disputes out of court is more desirable than taking it through court and having to pay all kinds of costs and destroying the relationship with the person altogether.
Most of the time I don't have a lot of trouble doing this. I have had people threatening to take legal action against me because of some of the decisions I have made in the past, but so far I have been able to talk things through and find a resolution and maintain the relationship without taking it through the courts. Lord, help me to do this, especially when I can find a thousand and one reasons not to.
God's answer to anger is always reconciliation. If someone has something against you, act quickly. If there's a problem with a brother, especially a Christian brother or sister, and you find that they are building up an emotional bad attitude towards you, do something about it. Notice that it is them that has something against you and yet it is YOU who are to take the initiative in getting things right with them.
Sometimes I think it is so petty, it is not worth dealing with, but Jesus says it is important you help someone who has a bad attitude towards you. It may affect their ability to worship God and no-one would want to do that.
1 John 4:20-21 (NLT) really outlines the principle.
"If someone says, "I love God," but hates a Christian brother or sister, that person is a liar; for if we don't love people we can see, how can we love God, whom we cannot see? And He has given us this command: Those who love God must also love their Christian brothers and sisters."
RECONCILIATION IS THE PREREQUISITE OF WORSHIP. At the very heart of worship is reconciliation.
Some people think it's actually better not to go to Church so they don't have to see the person they feel so angry with. The idea is not to stay away from Church if you have a bad relationship with your brother or sister! The idea is to get right with your brother or sister quickly because worship is so important. WORSHIP IS A PRIORITY. RECONCILIATION IS A PREREQUISITE, and that involves helping eachother to get things right.
Colossians 3:13 (NLT) says, "Make allowance for each other's faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others."
God bless you Church as you do always seek reconciliation no matter how right you may think you are. Let relationships be more important than forming a case against your brothers and sisters. Let WORSHIP BE A PRIORITY and because of this, let RECONCILIATION BE A PREREQUISITE.
I remember years ago that a man wrote a nasty letter to me and included in it a curse and all kinds of false accusations. To this day, I don't know why he wrote it. It was so vicious and untrue, but he had built up a case against me and it all bubbled out in this letter. It included distorted views of what I had said in messages, and I had no idea he felt this way against me. I went to see him but when he saw me coming he slammed the door in my face and refused to speak with me. When eventually I got some of his friends to speak with him, he agreed to see me and I did all I could to get the relationship right again. It was hard work, and my first desire was to defend myself against the curse and false accusations. But Jesus suggests in Matthew 5 that the relationship is even more important than the case.
Matthew 5:23-26 gets to me every time. It's one of those passages you just can't escape.
"So if you are presenting a sacrifice at the altar in the Temple and you suddenly remember that someone has something against you, leave your sacrifice there at the altar. Go and be reconciled to that person. Then come and offer your sacrifice to God. "When you are on the way to court with your adversary, settle your differences quickly. Otherwise, your accuser may hand you over to the judge, who will hand you over to an officer, and you will be thrown into prison. And if that happens, you surely won't be free again until you have paid the last penny."
Jesus teaches the Disciples on the mountain some leadership principles. He even get's into the law and how it's important it is for a Disciple of Christ to settle legal matters quickly and out of court. He says it's not so much about the legal matters as it is about the relationship you have with the person. The principle of settling disputes quickly has to do with being reconciled with your brother (I think "a brother" here is not referring to just anyone and everyone, but specifically to the people with whom we have some kind of relationship, even if it's just a legal one as in this case).
Jesus goes beyond the legal matters again. The CASE you have against someone is not as important as the RELATIONSHIP you have with them. Jesus emphasizes that the RELATIONSHIP IS ALWAYS MORE IMPORTANT. Sometimes we don't want it to be more important. We would rather just avoid a person who has something against us, especially if it's legal, but God says that reconciliation is important. We are to do our part in keeping the peace with others where possible. It may not always work out, like with Jesus Himself, but we are to do our part in seeking reconciliation. That's the way of the Cross.
This passage says settling disputes out of court is more desirable than taking it through court and having to pay all kinds of costs and destroying the relationship with the person altogether.
Most of the time I don't have a lot of trouble doing this. I have had people threatening to take legal action against me because of some of the decisions I have made in the past, but so far I have been able to talk things through and find a resolution and maintain the relationship without taking it through the courts. Lord, help me to do this, especially when I can find a thousand and one reasons not to.
God's answer to anger is always reconciliation. If someone has something against you, act quickly. If there's a problem with a brother, especially a Christian brother or sister, and you find that they are building up an emotional bad attitude towards you, do something about it. Notice that it is them that has something against you and yet it is YOU who are to take the initiative in getting things right with them.
Sometimes I think it is so petty, it is not worth dealing with, but Jesus says it is important you help someone who has a bad attitude towards you. It may affect their ability to worship God and no-one would want to do that.
1 John 4:20-21 (NLT) really outlines the principle.
"If someone says, "I love God," but hates a Christian brother or sister, that person is a liar; for if we don't love people we can see, how can we love God, whom we cannot see? And He has given us this command: Those who love God must also love their Christian brothers and sisters."
RECONCILIATION IS THE PREREQUISITE OF WORSHIP. At the very heart of worship is reconciliation.
Some people think it's actually better not to go to Church so they don't have to see the person they feel so angry with. The idea is not to stay away from Church if you have a bad relationship with your brother or sister! The idea is to get right with your brother or sister quickly because worship is so important. WORSHIP IS A PRIORITY. RECONCILIATION IS A PREREQUISITE, and that involves helping eachother to get things right.
Colossians 3:13 (NLT) says, "Make allowance for each other's faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others."
God bless you Church as you do always seek reconciliation no matter how right you may think you are. Let relationships be more important than forming a case against your brothers and sisters. Let WORSHIP BE A PRIORITY and because of this, let RECONCILIATION BE A PREREQUISITE.
Labels:
Matthew 5,
Reconciliation,
Sermon on the Mount,
Worship
Sunday, January 3, 2010
Matthew 5 – Part 13 – AM I GOING TO HELL FOR CALLING SOMEONE A FOOL?
Matthew 5 – Part 13 – AM I GOING TO HELL FOR CALLING SOMEONE A FOOL?
I’ve been thinking about “Murder”. Not committing murder but the subject of “murder”. Jesus uses “murder” as a teaching unit on the mountain for His disciples. But He takes the view that it’s what happens on the inside that matters. He says something really interesting in Matthew 5:21-22 (NASB).
"You have heard that the ancients were told, 'YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT MURDER' and 'Whoever commits murder shall be liable to the court.' "But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother shall be guilty before the court; and whoever says to his brother, 'You good-for-nothing,' shall be guilty before the supreme court; and whoever says, 'You fool,' shall be guilty (enough to go) into the fiery hell.”
Notice the progression, from “the court” to “the supreme court” to “the fiery hell” – human court, human high court, to hell - Strange progression. “Hell” doesn’t seem to fit. You would think that He would have said “human court, human high court, GOD’S COURT,” and then spoken about judgment. But instead it’s “curse your brother and go straight to hell, do not pass go”.
It seems strange that getting angry and calling your brother a fool would make you guilty of hell. Is this what Jesus means? The NASB softens it down by adding the words “guilty ENOUGH TO GO into the fiery hell.” but literally it says “whoever says ‘Fool’ will be sent to fiery hell.”
Am I going to hell for calling someone a fool? If I am then chances are you will join me. I don’t know of anyone who has not shot out an angry statement against someone like this. So let’s see if there’s more here than meets the eye. If I’m going to hell for cursing someone then it’s worth examining!
First of all let’s look at the accusation.
Calling a man a “fool” in those days was to call him an unbeliever. Psalm 14:1-3 spells it out by saying
“Only fools say in their hearts, “There is no God.” They are corrupt, and their actions are evil; not one of them does good! The Lord looks down from heaven on the entire human race; He looks to see if anyone is truly wise, if anyone seeks God. But no, all have turned away; all have become corrupt. No one does good, not a single one!”
So call someone “a fool” and you were casting doubt on his moral character and his spiritual standing before God. Tiger Woods has recently had his character and reputation destroyed by his foolish actions – his affairs.
To call someone “a fool” was to destroy his reputation. So Jesus is saying “If you destroy a brothers name and reputation, you are liable to the most severe judgment of all – “hell””.
Now the word for “hell” is interesting. According to William Barclay, it literally referred to the Valley of Hinnom, to the South West of Jerusalem. William Barclay says “It was notorious as the place where Ahaz had introduced into Israel the fire worship of the heathen God Molech, to whom little children were burned in the fire. ... (2 Chronicles 28:3). Josiah, the reforming king, had stamped out that worship, and had ordered that the valley should be forever after an accursed place. ...(2 Kings 23:10). In consequence of this, the Valley of Hinnom became the place where the refuse of the Jesusalem was cast out and destroyed. I was a kind of public incinerator. Always the fire smouldered in it, and a pall of thick smoke lay over it, ... So Gehennah, the Valley of Hinnom, became identified in people’s minds with all that was accursed and filthy , the place where useless and evil things were destroyed. That is why it became a synonym for the place of God’s destroying power, for hell.”
So this is what I think Jesus is saying,
“Murder is always wrong and it will always be condemned and brought before a human court. But you need to realise that I’m more concerned with the root cause, the inward infestation of sin in a person’s heart, the anger that get’s a foothold because it is allowed uncontrolled and free reign to rule over a persons heart. This careless and vengeful anger can destroy the character and reputation of others and is just as worthy of the highest judgment as murder. In fact it comes from the pit of hell and deserves the same kind of judgment. It’s your inward heart that gives way to sin and sin condemns you. I’m not only talking about the big sins but all sin is worthy of God’s severest judgment.”
To me, Jesus has already spelled out those who will find salvation, those who recognise that they are spiritually poor and who has no place to go but to trust in God. He’s already spoken of the heart attitude needed - someone who mourns over their sin, not one who allows it to rule their lives. He’s talked about the meek, that inward controlled strength that only Christ can give. He’s spoken of those who hunger and thirst for righteousness and those who obtain the mercy of God, the pure in heart, the peacemakers who lead others to have peace with God.
Then to give real contrast to these, He now speaks of those who allow sin to rule in their hearts. Such sin is to be condemned, no matter how small.
What about you? Do you have a relationship with Christ? You may not be guilty of murder but Jesus is saying that even getting angry can be a sin and is worthy of hell. Christ came to die for us and pay the penalty for the largest and smallest of such sins. Have you received the forgiveness that He offers?
It’s what happens on the inside that Jesus is concerned about.
God bless you Church as you look towards what is happening on the inside rather than the externals. It is how you respond in the heart to Christ internally that determines what how God responds to you eternally. Submit your life to Him today.
Pastor Ross
I’ve been thinking about “Murder”. Not committing murder but the subject of “murder”. Jesus uses “murder” as a teaching unit on the mountain for His disciples. But He takes the view that it’s what happens on the inside that matters. He says something really interesting in Matthew 5:21-22 (NASB).
"You have heard that the ancients were told, 'YOU SHALL NOT COMMIT MURDER' and 'Whoever commits murder shall be liable to the court.' "But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother shall be guilty before the court; and whoever says to his brother, 'You good-for-nothing,' shall be guilty before the supreme court; and whoever says, 'You fool,' shall be guilty (enough to go) into the fiery hell.”
Notice the progression, from “the court” to “the supreme court” to “the fiery hell” – human court, human high court, to hell - Strange progression. “Hell” doesn’t seem to fit. You would think that He would have said “human court, human high court, GOD’S COURT,” and then spoken about judgment. But instead it’s “curse your brother and go straight to hell, do not pass go”.
It seems strange that getting angry and calling your brother a fool would make you guilty of hell. Is this what Jesus means? The NASB softens it down by adding the words “guilty ENOUGH TO GO into the fiery hell.” but literally it says “whoever says ‘Fool’ will be sent to fiery hell.”
Am I going to hell for calling someone a fool? If I am then chances are you will join me. I don’t know of anyone who has not shot out an angry statement against someone like this. So let’s see if there’s more here than meets the eye. If I’m going to hell for cursing someone then it’s worth examining!
First of all let’s look at the accusation.
Calling a man a “fool” in those days was to call him an unbeliever. Psalm 14:1-3 spells it out by saying
“Only fools say in their hearts, “There is no God.” They are corrupt, and their actions are evil; not one of them does good! The Lord looks down from heaven on the entire human race; He looks to see if anyone is truly wise, if anyone seeks God. But no, all have turned away; all have become corrupt. No one does good, not a single one!”
So call someone “a fool” and you were casting doubt on his moral character and his spiritual standing before God. Tiger Woods has recently had his character and reputation destroyed by his foolish actions – his affairs.
To call someone “a fool” was to destroy his reputation. So Jesus is saying “If you destroy a brothers name and reputation, you are liable to the most severe judgment of all – “hell””.
Now the word for “hell” is interesting. According to William Barclay, it literally referred to the Valley of Hinnom, to the South West of Jerusalem. William Barclay says “It was notorious as the place where Ahaz had introduced into Israel the fire worship of the heathen God Molech, to whom little children were burned in the fire. ... (2 Chronicles 28:3). Josiah, the reforming king, had stamped out that worship, and had ordered that the valley should be forever after an accursed place. ...(2 Kings 23:10). In consequence of this, the Valley of Hinnom became the place where the refuse of the Jesusalem was cast out and destroyed. I was a kind of public incinerator. Always the fire smouldered in it, and a pall of thick smoke lay over it, ... So Gehennah, the Valley of Hinnom, became identified in people’s minds with all that was accursed and filthy , the place where useless and evil things were destroyed. That is why it became a synonym for the place of God’s destroying power, for hell.”
So this is what I think Jesus is saying,
“Murder is always wrong and it will always be condemned and brought before a human court. But you need to realise that I’m more concerned with the root cause, the inward infestation of sin in a person’s heart, the anger that get’s a foothold because it is allowed uncontrolled and free reign to rule over a persons heart. This careless and vengeful anger can destroy the character and reputation of others and is just as worthy of the highest judgment as murder. In fact it comes from the pit of hell and deserves the same kind of judgment. It’s your inward heart that gives way to sin and sin condemns you. I’m not only talking about the big sins but all sin is worthy of God’s severest judgment.”
To me, Jesus has already spelled out those who will find salvation, those who recognise that they are spiritually poor and who has no place to go but to trust in God. He’s already spoken of the heart attitude needed - someone who mourns over their sin, not one who allows it to rule their lives. He’s talked about the meek, that inward controlled strength that only Christ can give. He’s spoken of those who hunger and thirst for righteousness and those who obtain the mercy of God, the pure in heart, the peacemakers who lead others to have peace with God.
Then to give real contrast to these, He now speaks of those who allow sin to rule in their hearts. Such sin is to be condemned, no matter how small.
What about you? Do you have a relationship with Christ? You may not be guilty of murder but Jesus is saying that even getting angry can be a sin and is worthy of hell. Christ came to die for us and pay the penalty for the largest and smallest of such sins. Have you received the forgiveness that He offers?
It’s what happens on the inside that Jesus is concerned about.
God bless you Church as you look towards what is happening on the inside rather than the externals. It is how you respond in the heart to Christ internally that determines what how God responds to you eternally. Submit your life to Him today.
Pastor Ross
Saturday, January 2, 2010
Matthew 4 - HOW TO TEST YOUR NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS
Matthew 4 - How to TEST YOUR NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS
Well it’s a NEW YEAR - 2010!
The new year is always a good opportunity to EVALUATE your spiritual life, to reflect on whether you’re being CARELESS or COMMITTED in YOUR SPIRITUAL LIFE
Everyone has the opportunity to think about the DIRECTION you are going.
The beginning of a new year is an IDEAL TIME to stop, LOOK UP and get our bearings and not just formulate some RESOLUTIONS for the new year but also to TEST THE VALUE OF YOUR RESOLUTIONS.
HAGGAI 1:5 says "Consider your ways!"
Don Whitney came up with 10 QUESTIONS to ask prayerfully in the presence of God.
I’d like to share them with you
1. What’s one thing you could do this year to increase your enjoyment of God?2. What’s the most humanly impossible thing you will ask God to do this year?3. What’s the single most important thing you could do to improve the quality of your family life this year?4. In which spiritual discipline do you most want to make progress this year, and what will you do about it?5. What is the single biggest time-waster in your life, and what will you do about it this year?6. What is the most helpful new way you could strengthen your church?7. For whose salvation will you pray most fervently this year?8. What’s the most important way you will, by God’s grace, try to make this year different from last year?9. What one thing could you do to improve your prayer life this year?10. What single thing that you plan to do this year will matter most in 10 years? In eternity?
Great questions!
It is great to evaluate our lives, to make PLANS AND GOALS.
MAKING RESOLUTIONS is not the real problem. After all Proverbs 21:5 (NASB77) says "The plans of the diligent lead surely to advantage, ..."
It is TESTING THOSE RESOLUTIONS AGAINST THE YARDSTICK OF THE BIBLE that is often neglected.
At the beginning of Jesus ministry He had made A RESOLUTION TO HEAD TOWARDS THE CROSS.
He had been BAPTISED and God was WELL PLEASED WITH HIM but in the very next chapter He is TESTED AND TEMPTED in the wilderness.
Your SPIRITUAL RESOLUTIONS this year will be TESTED. They always are when you determine to live for God
HOW CAN I TEST MY NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS AND MY COMMITMENT TO CHRIST.
In Matthew 4, Jesus is LED BY THE SPIRIT to be tempted by Satan. Why would Jesus go into the wilderness to be tempted? Not only that but did you notice that it is THE SPIRIT who LEADS Jesus into the wilderness to be TEMPTED by the devil! You’d think the Holy Spirit would want Him to be LED AWAY from anything to do with temptation and the devil but no, Jesus is led to CONFRONT SATAN head on!
How strange that God would do this, and why?
And if that can happen to Jesus, WHAT ABOUT ME? Am I going to be LED INTO TEMPTATION like Jesus was? Is God going to PUT ME IN HARM’S WAY deliberately? It doesn’t make any sense.
The Lord’s prayer says "Lead us NOT into temptation". Why then is Jesus LED INTO THE WILDERNESS to be TEMPTED by Satan? It doesn’t seem to add up. How are we to understand this? I want to start this new year well. Does that mean God will put me in THE FIRING LINE.
Now those questions are IMPORTANT if we are going to start the new year well.
But let’s be clear, it’s always good to ask God to KEEP YOU FROM EVIL, nevertheless God DOES choose to PLACE US IN POSITIONS that will TEST OUR FAITH, NOT so that we will FAIL THE TEST, but so that we will WIN OVER TEMPTATION and be stronger in our faith.
That shouldn’t stop me from asking to be kept from evil. The good thing about it is that I know when God ALLOWS ME TO BE TESTED it will never be beyond what I am able to endure.
Now let’s get a handle on this passage.
Firstly I want to look at the word TEMPT. When we use that word it always has a BAD MEANING. It means TO ENTICE someone to do THE WRONG THING, to PERSUADE SOMEONE TO SIN. And that’s exactly what the devil has in mind.
But in the Greek language "to tempt" actually has A GOOD MEANING. It means to TEST SOMEONE, NOT SO THAT THEY’LL FAIL, BUT SO THEY WILL SUCCEED. And from God’s point of view that why Jesus was led by the Spirit of God to be tempted. In Genesis 22 God TEMPTED ABRAHAM. God didn’t tempt him to sin! He tempted him in the sense of TESTING HIM. TEMPTATION is always an opportunity TO DO THE RIGHT THING.
THAT’S WHAT HAPPENS TO JESUS in MATTHEW 4. HE DOES THE RIGHT THING.
Hebrews 2:17-18 (NLT) says "Therefore, it was necessary for Him to be made in every respect like us, His brothers and sisters, ...Since He himself has gone through suffering and TESTING, HE IS ABLE TO HELP US WHEN WE ARE BEING TESTED."
So you can expect your new years resolutions to be tested. If they are not tested they’re not worth much!
But you ask "How do Jesus’ temptations relate to me?" Just because He got through HIS TEST doesn’t automatically mean I will.
By the way, what about those temptations? They don’t seem such A BIG DEAL! THE DEVIL attacks with a 3 pronged fork, but when I first read them I thought that they WEREN’T ALL THAT TEMPTING -
turn stones into bread,
throw yourself off the pinnacle of the temple,
and worship Satan.
As if Jesus is going to say, "Sure, I’ll throw Myself off the temple and worship Satan!". It didn’t seem to me like these would tempt me if I were Jesus. I can think of BETTER TEMPTATIONS! I mean what about some kind of SEXUAL TEMPTATION! Jesus was 30 and not married. What better way to get at Him than by tempting Him with ILLICIT SEX. Or how about a GET RICH QUICK SCHEME, say by FINDING COINS IN EVERY FISH you catch. Jesus did this for tax purposes. Why not for a MAJOR INCOME SOURCE? Who would not want to go FISHING with Jesus and earn a FORTUNE on the side as well? Catch huge catches of fish on the other side of the boat and then get a coin in each one. Then sell the fish! Huge profit!
But somehow the temptations with which Satan challenges Jesus were the ones that Jesus found the MOST DIFFICULT of all. They may not seem much to me, but to Jesus they were huge! Now the question I’ve got to ask is why? And the only answer I seem to get is that somehow these temptations ENCAPSULATE the kinds of temptations WE ALL EXPERIENCE!
HOW DO THEY DO THIS? Let’s try to find out.
Satan wanted Jesus to turn stones into bread. In Matthew 4:3-4 (NLT) it says,
"During that time the devil came and said to Him, "If You are the Son of God, tell these stones to become loaves of bread."
The word for "IF" in Greek has the idea "IF AND IT IS TRUE". A better translation would probably be "SINCE You are the Son of God..." Satan knew who Jesus was! God the father had just said, "This is my beloved Son" in verse 17. He also knows Jesus is HUNGRY. He hasn’t eaten for 40 DAYS. It wasn’t sinful to be hungry and He could have turned these STONES TO BREAD easily.
The test GOD ALLOWS Jesus to experience is the SAME TEST He will take you through, as you seek to put your NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS into practice.
Here’s the test in summary. I call it...
1. THE PROVISION TEST or "the who am I trusting in?" test.
(Show Powerpoint with someone who is crosseyed). This guy has INGROWN EYEBALLS because he continually FOCUSES ON HIMSELF.
The question is "Will you USE YOUR GIFTS and ABILITIES for your OWN SELFISH PURPOSES? OR WILL YOU USE THEM FOR GOD AND OTHERS?
Will you TRUST IN YOUR OWN SELF SUFFICIENCY TO PROVIDE FOR YOUR NEEDS THIS YEAR? OR WILL YOU TRUST IN GOD TO PROVIDE FOR YOU? The moment Satan gets your eyes looking inward then you will never be fit for service.
Matthew 6:31-33 (NLT) goes on to say
"So don’t worry about these things, saying, ‘What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’ These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers, but your heavenly Father already knows all your needs. Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and He will give you everything you need."
So the first thing satan tries to do with Jesus is to get Him looking at HIS OWN NEEDS rather than looking at what God wants. He says in effect, "Use your miraculous powers to serve Your own purposes and forget about using them to serve God?"
He says to us "Use your strengths TO SERVE YOURSELF. Don’t worry about anybody else. Just serve your OWN APPETITES"
The first temptation is directed at PHYSICAL APPETITIES.
Now remember Jesus FED 5000 PEOPLE with BREAD AND FISH. That’s using His gifts for God.
God is saying to you this morning, "WILL YOU USE YOUR GIFTS YOUR ABILITIES, YOUR MOTIVATIONS, YOUR PERSONALITY AND YOUR EXPERIENCES TO ACHIEVE YOUR OWN SELFISH PURPOSES, OR WILL YOU USE THEM IN SUBMISSION TO ME AND MY PURPOSES FOR YOUR LIFE? THIS YEAR WILL YOU SEEK FIRST MY KINGDOM PURPOSES?"
Jesus made a clear choice. Hear what He says in MATTHEW 4:4-11 (NLT)
Jesus told him, "No! The Scriptures say, ‘People do not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.’"
Right answer!
Jesus used THE WORD OF GOD to focus on what God wanted for Him, rather than meeting His immediate physical appetites. What about you this year?
This year your new years resolutions will mean nothing unless you are READING GOD’S WORD and applying it to your life to get His perspective on things and giving you control over your physical appetites and selfish desires.
Getting God’s perspective from His Word will be one of the most UNSELFISH things you will do!
Jesus was tempted in 3 areas
1. THE PROVISION TEST
"Am I being selfish or am I submitting to God?"
2. THEN CAME THE PRESUMPTION TEST
"Am I testing God or taking a step of faith?"
You see Satan tries to get Jesus to BUNGY JUMP from the pinnacle of the temple WITHOUT A ROPE, 140 METRES UP, 45 STORIES ABOVE the base of the Kidron valley.
He says in Matthew 4:6 (NLT)
Since "you are the Son of God, jump off! For the Scriptures say, ‘He will order His angels to protect You. And they will hold You up with their hands so You won’t even hurt Your foot on a stone.’"
If Satan can’t tempt you with the APPETITES OF THE BODY, he will attempt to tempt you with APPETITES OF THE SOUL!
So firstly THE PROVISION TEST, "Am I being selfish or am I submitting to God?" and then the next TEST IS
2. THE PRESUMPTION TEST
"Am I testing God or taking a step of faith"
It wouldn’t tempt me to jump off a temple, but Jesus knew that HE WOULD BE PROTECTED. What harm would it have done? Nevertheless, Jesus sees right through this and Jesus simply says in Matthew 4:7 (NLT) "The Scriptures also say, ‘You must not test the Lord your God.’" In other words "Don’t live on the EDGE OF PRESUMPTION with God!" What some of us pastors like to call the "CUTTING EDGE MINISTRY" is sometimes more appropriately called "THE CRUMBLING EDGE OF PRESUMPTION WITH GOD."
Don’t get me wrong, we are called to take the RISK OF FAITH, but NOT the RISK OF PRESUMPTION.
WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE? THE RISK OF FAITH is daring to act on GOD’S WORD in GOD’S WAY. The RISK OF PRESUMPTION is often no more than trying to IMPRESS SOMEONE by THE SPECTACULAR use of my gifts. And GOD TESTS US not the other way round.
Ask "am I testing God or taking a step of faith"
1. So the test of PROVISION
2. The test of PRESUMPTION
3. And thirdly the test of POWER
Satan is persistent if nothing else. In MATTHEW 4:8-9 (NLT) it says,
"Next the devil took Him to the peak of a very high mountain and showed Him the kingdoms of the world and all their glory. "I will give it all to You," he said, "if You will kneel down and worship me.""
Satan appeals to Jesus by offering Him a shortcut to POWER. I’ll GIVE IT ALL to You, he says, and You won’t even have to GO TO THE CROSS. JUST WORSHIP ME!
So this temptation is directed TO THE APPETITIES OF THE SPIRIT.
JUST COMPROMISE AND YOU’LL GET WHAT YOU WANT. But the AUTHORITY OF RULE doesn’t come with a CROWN OF POWER from the enemy. It comes with a CROSS OF SUFFERING and humility.
Satan says "I’ll give you POWER WITHOUT THE PAIN, A CROWN WITHOUT THE CROSS"
Satan will always get you to COMPROMISE for SHORT TERM POWER, SUCCESS and APPLAUSE. So ask yourself this year "Am I compromising my faith for short term power or am I committed to God for His eternal purposes?"
Jesus once again chooses the right thing. In MATTHEW 4:10 (NLT) He says,
"Get out of here, Satan," Jesus told him. "For the Scriptures say, ‘You must worship the Lord your God and serve only Him.’"
Here’s how to test your new years resolutions
1. THE PROVISION TEST
Who am I trusting in?
2. THE PRESUMPTION TEST?
Am I testing God or taking a step of faith?
3. THE POWER TEST
Am I compromising or am I committed?
Ask yourself
Am I being led by the Spirit
Will my faith in God be strengthened
Am I hearing from God as I read His Word.
Will I refuse to be intimidated and disheartened
Will it involve me having to compromise
And with those things in mind lets also
1. RECOGNISE YOUR AREAS OF WEAKNESS
Jesus was hungry but remained resolute
2. REALISE THAT YOU ARE VULNERABLE
Jesus was facing a test but He came through
3. BE EMPOWERED BY GOD
4. DREAM BIG DREAMS
5. EXPECT GOD TO PROVIDE FOR YOU
6. EXPECT GOD TO PROTECT YOU
7. EXPECT GOD TO INTERVENE INTO YOUR CIRCUMSTANCES
8. DON’T PUT LIMITS ON WHAT GOD CAN DO
9. EXPECT MIRACLES
10. ACCEPT OPPORTUNITIES TO SERVE THAT STRETCH YOUR FAITH
11. AND HAVE A WONDERFULLY BLESSED NEW YEAR
Well it’s a NEW YEAR - 2010!
The new year is always a good opportunity to EVALUATE your spiritual life, to reflect on whether you’re being CARELESS or COMMITTED in YOUR SPIRITUAL LIFE
Everyone has the opportunity to think about the DIRECTION you are going.
The beginning of a new year is an IDEAL TIME to stop, LOOK UP and get our bearings and not just formulate some RESOLUTIONS for the new year but also to TEST THE VALUE OF YOUR RESOLUTIONS.
HAGGAI 1:5 says "Consider your ways!"
Don Whitney came up with 10 QUESTIONS to ask prayerfully in the presence of God.
I’d like to share them with you
1. What’s one thing you could do this year to increase your enjoyment of God?2. What’s the most humanly impossible thing you will ask God to do this year?3. What’s the single most important thing you could do to improve the quality of your family life this year?4. In which spiritual discipline do you most want to make progress this year, and what will you do about it?5. What is the single biggest time-waster in your life, and what will you do about it this year?6. What is the most helpful new way you could strengthen your church?7. For whose salvation will you pray most fervently this year?8. What’s the most important way you will, by God’s grace, try to make this year different from last year?9. What one thing could you do to improve your prayer life this year?10. What single thing that you plan to do this year will matter most in 10 years? In eternity?
Great questions!
It is great to evaluate our lives, to make PLANS AND GOALS.
MAKING RESOLUTIONS is not the real problem. After all Proverbs 21:5 (NASB77) says "The plans of the diligent lead surely to advantage, ..."
It is TESTING THOSE RESOLUTIONS AGAINST THE YARDSTICK OF THE BIBLE that is often neglected.
At the beginning of Jesus ministry He had made A RESOLUTION TO HEAD TOWARDS THE CROSS.
He had been BAPTISED and God was WELL PLEASED WITH HIM but in the very next chapter He is TESTED AND TEMPTED in the wilderness.
Your SPIRITUAL RESOLUTIONS this year will be TESTED. They always are when you determine to live for God
HOW CAN I TEST MY NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS AND MY COMMITMENT TO CHRIST.
In Matthew 4, Jesus is LED BY THE SPIRIT to be tempted by Satan. Why would Jesus go into the wilderness to be tempted? Not only that but did you notice that it is THE SPIRIT who LEADS Jesus into the wilderness to be TEMPTED by the devil! You’d think the Holy Spirit would want Him to be LED AWAY from anything to do with temptation and the devil but no, Jesus is led to CONFRONT SATAN head on!
How strange that God would do this, and why?
And if that can happen to Jesus, WHAT ABOUT ME? Am I going to be LED INTO TEMPTATION like Jesus was? Is God going to PUT ME IN HARM’S WAY deliberately? It doesn’t make any sense.
The Lord’s prayer says "Lead us NOT into temptation". Why then is Jesus LED INTO THE WILDERNESS to be TEMPTED by Satan? It doesn’t seem to add up. How are we to understand this? I want to start this new year well. Does that mean God will put me in THE FIRING LINE.
Now those questions are IMPORTANT if we are going to start the new year well.
But let’s be clear, it’s always good to ask God to KEEP YOU FROM EVIL, nevertheless God DOES choose to PLACE US IN POSITIONS that will TEST OUR FAITH, NOT so that we will FAIL THE TEST, but so that we will WIN OVER TEMPTATION and be stronger in our faith.
That shouldn’t stop me from asking to be kept from evil. The good thing about it is that I know when God ALLOWS ME TO BE TESTED it will never be beyond what I am able to endure.
Now let’s get a handle on this passage.
Firstly I want to look at the word TEMPT. When we use that word it always has a BAD MEANING. It means TO ENTICE someone to do THE WRONG THING, to PERSUADE SOMEONE TO SIN. And that’s exactly what the devil has in mind.
But in the Greek language "to tempt" actually has A GOOD MEANING. It means to TEST SOMEONE, NOT SO THAT THEY’LL FAIL, BUT SO THEY WILL SUCCEED. And from God’s point of view that why Jesus was led by the Spirit of God to be tempted. In Genesis 22 God TEMPTED ABRAHAM. God didn’t tempt him to sin! He tempted him in the sense of TESTING HIM. TEMPTATION is always an opportunity TO DO THE RIGHT THING.
THAT’S WHAT HAPPENS TO JESUS in MATTHEW 4. HE DOES THE RIGHT THING.
Hebrews 2:17-18 (NLT) says "Therefore, it was necessary for Him to be made in every respect like us, His brothers and sisters, ...Since He himself has gone through suffering and TESTING, HE IS ABLE TO HELP US WHEN WE ARE BEING TESTED."
So you can expect your new years resolutions to be tested. If they are not tested they’re not worth much!
But you ask "How do Jesus’ temptations relate to me?" Just because He got through HIS TEST doesn’t automatically mean I will.
By the way, what about those temptations? They don’t seem such A BIG DEAL! THE DEVIL attacks with a 3 pronged fork, but when I first read them I thought that they WEREN’T ALL THAT TEMPTING -
turn stones into bread,
throw yourself off the pinnacle of the temple,
and worship Satan.
As if Jesus is going to say, "Sure, I’ll throw Myself off the temple and worship Satan!". It didn’t seem to me like these would tempt me if I were Jesus. I can think of BETTER TEMPTATIONS! I mean what about some kind of SEXUAL TEMPTATION! Jesus was 30 and not married. What better way to get at Him than by tempting Him with ILLICIT SEX. Or how about a GET RICH QUICK SCHEME, say by FINDING COINS IN EVERY FISH you catch. Jesus did this for tax purposes. Why not for a MAJOR INCOME SOURCE? Who would not want to go FISHING with Jesus and earn a FORTUNE on the side as well? Catch huge catches of fish on the other side of the boat and then get a coin in each one. Then sell the fish! Huge profit!
But somehow the temptations with which Satan challenges Jesus were the ones that Jesus found the MOST DIFFICULT of all. They may not seem much to me, but to Jesus they were huge! Now the question I’ve got to ask is why? And the only answer I seem to get is that somehow these temptations ENCAPSULATE the kinds of temptations WE ALL EXPERIENCE!
HOW DO THEY DO THIS? Let’s try to find out.
Satan wanted Jesus to turn stones into bread. In Matthew 4:3-4 (NLT) it says,
"During that time the devil came and said to Him, "If You are the Son of God, tell these stones to become loaves of bread."
The word for "IF" in Greek has the idea "IF AND IT IS TRUE". A better translation would probably be "SINCE You are the Son of God..." Satan knew who Jesus was! God the father had just said, "This is my beloved Son" in verse 17. He also knows Jesus is HUNGRY. He hasn’t eaten for 40 DAYS. It wasn’t sinful to be hungry and He could have turned these STONES TO BREAD easily.
The test GOD ALLOWS Jesus to experience is the SAME TEST He will take you through, as you seek to put your NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS into practice.
Here’s the test in summary. I call it...
1. THE PROVISION TEST or "the who am I trusting in?" test.
(Show Powerpoint with someone who is crosseyed). This guy has INGROWN EYEBALLS because he continually FOCUSES ON HIMSELF.
The question is "Will you USE YOUR GIFTS and ABILITIES for your OWN SELFISH PURPOSES? OR WILL YOU USE THEM FOR GOD AND OTHERS?
Will you TRUST IN YOUR OWN SELF SUFFICIENCY TO PROVIDE FOR YOUR NEEDS THIS YEAR? OR WILL YOU TRUST IN GOD TO PROVIDE FOR YOU? The moment Satan gets your eyes looking inward then you will never be fit for service.
Matthew 6:31-33 (NLT) goes on to say
"So don’t worry about these things, saying, ‘What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’ These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers, but your heavenly Father already knows all your needs. Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and He will give you everything you need."
So the first thing satan tries to do with Jesus is to get Him looking at HIS OWN NEEDS rather than looking at what God wants. He says in effect, "Use your miraculous powers to serve Your own purposes and forget about using them to serve God?"
He says to us "Use your strengths TO SERVE YOURSELF. Don’t worry about anybody else. Just serve your OWN APPETITES"
The first temptation is directed at PHYSICAL APPETITIES.
Now remember Jesus FED 5000 PEOPLE with BREAD AND FISH. That’s using His gifts for God.
God is saying to you this morning, "WILL YOU USE YOUR GIFTS YOUR ABILITIES, YOUR MOTIVATIONS, YOUR PERSONALITY AND YOUR EXPERIENCES TO ACHIEVE YOUR OWN SELFISH PURPOSES, OR WILL YOU USE THEM IN SUBMISSION TO ME AND MY PURPOSES FOR YOUR LIFE? THIS YEAR WILL YOU SEEK FIRST MY KINGDOM PURPOSES?"
Jesus made a clear choice. Hear what He says in MATTHEW 4:4-11 (NLT)
Jesus told him, "No! The Scriptures say, ‘People do not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.’"
Right answer!
Jesus used THE WORD OF GOD to focus on what God wanted for Him, rather than meeting His immediate physical appetites. What about you this year?
This year your new years resolutions will mean nothing unless you are READING GOD’S WORD and applying it to your life to get His perspective on things and giving you control over your physical appetites and selfish desires.
Getting God’s perspective from His Word will be one of the most UNSELFISH things you will do!
Jesus was tempted in 3 areas
1. THE PROVISION TEST
"Am I being selfish or am I submitting to God?"
2. THEN CAME THE PRESUMPTION TEST
"Am I testing God or taking a step of faith?"
You see Satan tries to get Jesus to BUNGY JUMP from the pinnacle of the temple WITHOUT A ROPE, 140 METRES UP, 45 STORIES ABOVE the base of the Kidron valley.
He says in Matthew 4:6 (NLT)
Since "you are the Son of God, jump off! For the Scriptures say, ‘He will order His angels to protect You. And they will hold You up with their hands so You won’t even hurt Your foot on a stone.’"
If Satan can’t tempt you with the APPETITES OF THE BODY, he will attempt to tempt you with APPETITES OF THE SOUL!
So firstly THE PROVISION TEST, "Am I being selfish or am I submitting to God?" and then the next TEST IS
2. THE PRESUMPTION TEST
"Am I testing God or taking a step of faith"
It wouldn’t tempt me to jump off a temple, but Jesus knew that HE WOULD BE PROTECTED. What harm would it have done? Nevertheless, Jesus sees right through this and Jesus simply says in Matthew 4:7 (NLT) "The Scriptures also say, ‘You must not test the Lord your God.’" In other words "Don’t live on the EDGE OF PRESUMPTION with God!" What some of us pastors like to call the "CUTTING EDGE MINISTRY" is sometimes more appropriately called "THE CRUMBLING EDGE OF PRESUMPTION WITH GOD."
Don’t get me wrong, we are called to take the RISK OF FAITH, but NOT the RISK OF PRESUMPTION.
WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE? THE RISK OF FAITH is daring to act on GOD’S WORD in GOD’S WAY. The RISK OF PRESUMPTION is often no more than trying to IMPRESS SOMEONE by THE SPECTACULAR use of my gifts. And GOD TESTS US not the other way round.
Ask "am I testing God or taking a step of faith"
1. So the test of PROVISION
2. The test of PRESUMPTION
3. And thirdly the test of POWER
Satan is persistent if nothing else. In MATTHEW 4:8-9 (NLT) it says,
"Next the devil took Him to the peak of a very high mountain and showed Him the kingdoms of the world and all their glory. "I will give it all to You," he said, "if You will kneel down and worship me.""
Satan appeals to Jesus by offering Him a shortcut to POWER. I’ll GIVE IT ALL to You, he says, and You won’t even have to GO TO THE CROSS. JUST WORSHIP ME!
So this temptation is directed TO THE APPETITIES OF THE SPIRIT.
JUST COMPROMISE AND YOU’LL GET WHAT YOU WANT. But the AUTHORITY OF RULE doesn’t come with a CROWN OF POWER from the enemy. It comes with a CROSS OF SUFFERING and humility.
Satan says "I’ll give you POWER WITHOUT THE PAIN, A CROWN WITHOUT THE CROSS"
Satan will always get you to COMPROMISE for SHORT TERM POWER, SUCCESS and APPLAUSE. So ask yourself this year "Am I compromising my faith for short term power or am I committed to God for His eternal purposes?"
Jesus once again chooses the right thing. In MATTHEW 4:10 (NLT) He says,
"Get out of here, Satan," Jesus told him. "For the Scriptures say, ‘You must worship the Lord your God and serve only Him.’"
Here’s how to test your new years resolutions
1. THE PROVISION TEST
Who am I trusting in?
2. THE PRESUMPTION TEST?
Am I testing God or taking a step of faith?
3. THE POWER TEST
Am I compromising or am I committed?
Ask yourself
Am I being led by the Spirit
Will my faith in God be strengthened
Am I hearing from God as I read His Word.
Will I refuse to be intimidated and disheartened
Will it involve me having to compromise
And with those things in mind lets also
1. RECOGNISE YOUR AREAS OF WEAKNESS
Jesus was hungry but remained resolute
2. REALISE THAT YOU ARE VULNERABLE
Jesus was facing a test but He came through
3. BE EMPOWERED BY GOD
4. DREAM BIG DREAMS
5. EXPECT GOD TO PROVIDE FOR YOU
6. EXPECT GOD TO PROTECT YOU
7. EXPECT GOD TO INTERVENE INTO YOUR CIRCUMSTANCES
8. DON’T PUT LIMITS ON WHAT GOD CAN DO
9. EXPECT MIRACLES
10. ACCEPT OPPORTUNITIES TO SERVE THAT STRETCH YOUR FAITH
11. AND HAVE A WONDERFULLY BLESSED NEW YEAR
Friday, January 1, 2010
Matthew 5 - Part 12 - AM I GOING TO HELL JUST FOR BEING ANGRY?
Matthew 5 - Part 12 - AM I GOING TO HELL JUST FOR BEING ANGRY?
I have always wondered about the statement Jesus makes in Matthew 5:21-26. There are some pretty strong statements made like...
Murder someone and you'll go to court but "if you are even angry with someone, you are subject to judgment!" (ie before a judge in court) 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." (Matthew 5:21)
That's pretty heavy stuff. Curse someone and go to hell! Anyone with a bad temper hasn't got a chance! Murder someone and I expect to go to court but curse someone and go to hell seems to me to be a bit harsh, especially coming from the mouth of Jesus!
Jesus is talking to His disciples on the mountain and this is the leadership lesson! Get mad at someone and curse him and you go to hell! Wooh! How do you feel with this encouraging word so far?
The key words in this passage are Murder, Anger, Cursing. Murder I have no difficulty with and this all has to do with Jesus definition of murder. Jesus says anger is worse! Cursing someone is worse! What is he trying to say here, because if what He means in English is the same as what He's trying to get across in the original language, then I'm in serious trouble, and so are you, no doubt. We in this together!
Some manuscripts (not the oldest and most reliable) add the words "angry with his brother WITHOUT A CAUSE", but that doesn't help much either, if you still go to hell! Man, sometimes I'm just angy without a reason and anyone who gets in the road becomes a target! Sometimes they don't even know it but other times they become, lets say....aware!
Maybe there is an out if you don't have brothers. I don't have any brothers so that lets me off the hook. Still, I get the sneaky suspicion that "brother" refers to someone close, not the literal one. In fact that's how the term is used here. Anybody I am in relationship with can be a brother, so that doesn't help me much.
So the overall topic is to do with MURDER. At least I don't have a problem with this. Even the 10 Commandments says "you must not murder" (Exodus 20:13). Life is important to God. It is not to be taken, but considered to be a precious gift of God.
Jesus goes deeper. He says the problem is not just the outward act of murder, but the inward cause - anger. Jesus says we interpret this law on a superficial level, but we need to get the spirit of what God is really saying. Jesus always goes to the heart, and He's more concerned with the inward causes such as anger, and other emotions that, at times, we allow to rule our lives. He's saying that the real problem is living life according to an uncontrolled inner life. Anger expresses itself in all kinds of ways. In hatred and in slandering someone, road rage, jealousy, and stepping on someone elses happiness.
So murder is obviously wrong but so are bad feelings against another person. Jesus says it's not just small scale bad, it's a serious sin.
I think Jesus is speaking about the kind of anger that lingers, and broods and refuses to forget, the kind of anger that hungers for revenge and sometimes actively seeks it. This is the kind of anger that is selfish and lasting, and has malice towards others. It's a scary kind of emotion. It is the anger that carries with it a curse from hell.
JUSTIFIED ANGER
The bible says "Be angry and sin not", but this is speaking of a justified anger, that is angry with sin, and it is never selfish and it is always disciplined and controlled. Jesus dealt with the money changers in the temple with this kind of anger (John 2:13-16).
So I think that the kind of anger here in this passage that Jesus speaks of is something that a Christian must not tolerate in his or her life. We are to deal with our anger quickly, otherwise it has consequences.
Ephesians 4:26-27 (NASB)
"BE ANGRY, AND yet DO NOT SIN; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and do not give the devil an opportunity."
Colossians 3:8 (NLT) says that once you become a Christian...
"... now is the time to get rid of anger, rage, malicious behaviour, slander, and dirty language."
1 John 3:15 (NLT) carries the association with murder to say that if you have this kind of malicious lasting, unrepentant anger then you are not a Christian in the first place.
"Anyone who hates another brother or sister is really a murderer at heart. And you know that murderers don't have eternal life within them."
Ecclesiastes 7:9 (NASB and NLT) says anger is associated with fools. A fool in the OT refers to someone who does not know God.
"Do not be eager in your heart to be angry, For anger labels you as a fool."
BUT WHAT ABOUT HELL? If I get angry with the kind of anger that is spoken of here, then am I a fool who is already bound for hell, because I do not have a relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ? Is that what He means?
Well there's more to say about this but it will have to wait until next time.
ARE YOU GOING TO BE THROWN INTO HELL FOR HAVING THIS KIND OF ANGER? Is there something more to what Jesus is saying. I think there is, but you'll have to wait until next time.
God bless you Church as you refuse to hold on to that cold hearted, long lasting, callous and vicious, lingering and brooding, malicious and selfish, slandering and jealous, curse filled kind of anger that finds it's source in hell. That kind of anger has no place in our lives.
Pastor Ross
I have always wondered about the statement Jesus makes in Matthew 5:21-26. There are some pretty strong statements made like...
Murder someone and you'll go to court but "if you are even angry with someone, you are subject to judgment!" (ie before a judge in court) 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." (Matthew 5:21)
That's pretty heavy stuff. Curse someone and go to hell! Anyone with a bad temper hasn't got a chance! Murder someone and I expect to go to court but curse someone and go to hell seems to me to be a bit harsh, especially coming from the mouth of Jesus!
Jesus is talking to His disciples on the mountain and this is the leadership lesson! Get mad at someone and curse him and you go to hell! Wooh! How do you feel with this encouraging word so far?
The key words in this passage are Murder, Anger, Cursing. Murder I have no difficulty with and this all has to do with Jesus definition of murder. Jesus says anger is worse! Cursing someone is worse! What is he trying to say here, because if what He means in English is the same as what He's trying to get across in the original language, then I'm in serious trouble, and so are you, no doubt. We in this together!
Some manuscripts (not the oldest and most reliable) add the words "angry with his brother WITHOUT A CAUSE", but that doesn't help much either, if you still go to hell! Man, sometimes I'm just angy without a reason and anyone who gets in the road becomes a target! Sometimes they don't even know it but other times they become, lets say....aware!
Maybe there is an out if you don't have brothers. I don't have any brothers so that lets me off the hook. Still, I get the sneaky suspicion that "brother" refers to someone close, not the literal one. In fact that's how the term is used here. Anybody I am in relationship with can be a brother, so that doesn't help me much.
So the overall topic is to do with MURDER. At least I don't have a problem with this. Even the 10 Commandments says "you must not murder" (Exodus 20:13). Life is important to God. It is not to be taken, but considered to be a precious gift of God.
Jesus goes deeper. He says the problem is not just the outward act of murder, but the inward cause - anger. Jesus says we interpret this law on a superficial level, but we need to get the spirit of what God is really saying. Jesus always goes to the heart, and He's more concerned with the inward causes such as anger, and other emotions that, at times, we allow to rule our lives. He's saying that the real problem is living life according to an uncontrolled inner life. Anger expresses itself in all kinds of ways. In hatred and in slandering someone, road rage, jealousy, and stepping on someone elses happiness.
So murder is obviously wrong but so are bad feelings against another person. Jesus says it's not just small scale bad, it's a serious sin.
I think Jesus is speaking about the kind of anger that lingers, and broods and refuses to forget, the kind of anger that hungers for revenge and sometimes actively seeks it. This is the kind of anger that is selfish and lasting, and has malice towards others. It's a scary kind of emotion. It is the anger that carries with it a curse from hell.
JUSTIFIED ANGER
The bible says "Be angry and sin not", but this is speaking of a justified anger, that is angry with sin, and it is never selfish and it is always disciplined and controlled. Jesus dealt with the money changers in the temple with this kind of anger (John 2:13-16).
So I think that the kind of anger here in this passage that Jesus speaks of is something that a Christian must not tolerate in his or her life. We are to deal with our anger quickly, otherwise it has consequences.
Ephesians 4:26-27 (NASB)
"BE ANGRY, AND yet DO NOT SIN; do not let the sun go down on your anger, and do not give the devil an opportunity."
Colossians 3:8 (NLT) says that once you become a Christian...
"... now is the time to get rid of anger, rage, malicious behaviour, slander, and dirty language."
1 John 3:15 (NLT) carries the association with murder to say that if you have this kind of malicious lasting, unrepentant anger then you are not a Christian in the first place.
"Anyone who hates another brother or sister is really a murderer at heart. And you know that murderers don't have eternal life within them."
Ecclesiastes 7:9 (NASB and NLT) says anger is associated with fools. A fool in the OT refers to someone who does not know God.
"Do not be eager in your heart to be angry, For anger labels you as a fool."
BUT WHAT ABOUT HELL? If I get angry with the kind of anger that is spoken of here, then am I a fool who is already bound for hell, because I do not have a relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ? Is that what He means?
Well there's more to say about this but it will have to wait until next time.
ARE YOU GOING TO BE THROWN INTO HELL FOR HAVING THIS KIND OF ANGER? Is there something more to what Jesus is saying. I think there is, but you'll have to wait until next time.
God bless you Church as you refuse to hold on to that cold hearted, long lasting, callous and vicious, lingering and brooding, malicious and selfish, slandering and jealous, curse filled kind of anger that finds it's source in hell. That kind of anger has no place in our lives.
Pastor Ross
Labels:
Anger,
Cursing,
Hell,
Matthew 5,
Sermon on the Mount
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