What is momentum?

Spiritual Momentum

Spiritual Momentum

In the realm of physics it is P(momentum)=M(mass) x V(velocity).  Mass along with the force of speed equals momentum.

But what about spiritual momentum?  The Christian life should be active and growing.  But many times we are not.  We are stuck in a spiritual rut having lost our momentum.

When this happens we need a revival, a re-awakening to a growing life in Christ.  Revival is about starting anew and then moving forward with God in greater mass and with a more urgent velocity.  It is about regaining our spiritual momentum.

Spiritual momentum comes when we take our life that God is transforming, by the power of the gospel and the work of the Holy Spirit, and we get it in motion, we move forward with Jesus.

But here is a helpful question…

How do you create physical momentum?

Imagine you are on your bike and at the top of a hill.  How do you increase momentum?  You start that bike down the hill, you tilt your weight forward, you reduce your resistance against the wind by tucking inward, and you peddle like mad.  Now you are mass times velocity and you have momentum.

How do you kill momentum?

There are a couple of ways.  Either you can put on the brakes or you can wipe out.

This has application to the spiritual momentum all of us should have.

There are people, the Lord comes into their lives, they are revived, start moving with God, building up spiritual velocity, but because they do not respect the laws of spiritual momentum they fail to do things that increase spiritual momentum with God and instead they do the very things that slow or completely stop the spiritual momentum in their lives.

Sometimes they will put on the brakes!

They get excited about the Lord, but they sense that others are uncomfortable with it and so they succumb to peer pressure and put the brakes on.  They say things like…

“I’ll be more committed to God, but I won’t go all out.”

“I’ll pray more, but I won’t tell others about Christ.”

Can I encourage you?  Don’t put the spiritual brakes on.  Don’t allow the pressure of this world to rob you of your zeal.  That very zeal will drive you ever deeper into the riches of a relationship with Christ.  Refuse to abandon that.

Sometimes they will altogether wipe out!

This is when people spiritually self-sabotage.  They will dive into some sin that just blows up the new tracks with the Lord that they were on and to some measure derails their life.  They wipe out.

Let me encourage you again!  Don’t spiritually wipe out.  If you are contemplating making a sinful choice, STOP!  Don’t do it.  Your spiritual momentum is infinitely more important.

Of course, maybe you have already done one of the above:  put on the brakes or wiped out.  It is not too late.  God is calling you to confess that sin, repent or turn from that direction of living, and return to the things that produce spiritual momentum. (Acts 3:19)  His grace and forgiveness are sufficient to wash you clean and get you back on track.

In fact, if as you are reading this you are feeling conviction over your lack of spiritual momentum then God is already working to bring you back.  To this mass of God’s work in you, all you must add is the velocity of your own obedience.

Obedience is the key to re-establishing spiritual momentum.  Get back to the things that God first called you to do.  Obey him in your thoughts.  Obey him in your actions.  Draw near to God. (James 4:8)

Challenge:  Today, regain your spiritual momentum by turning from your sin and returning to a posture of obedience in all things.

Question:  What are specific things we can do in obedience to God’s Word that will result in the regaining of spiritual momentum?  Share them with us.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

(The following is an excerpt from my e-book, From Dust to Destiny.  To download a copy of the book, click here.  Share with others that they too might have and read a copy.)

What do you think about most?  The majority of us have one or two things we most think about.  Once you get to know someone you can often tell what it is for them.  Usually it is different things at different times of people’s lives.  It might be the acquisition of a material possession, or the achievement of a goal, or the hopes of finding true love.

The Lord is my Shepherd

The Lord is my Shepherd

When I was an 11-year old boy it was fish tanks.  You read me correct, fish tanks.  I had a hobby, fish collection.  I started out with a ten-gallon aquarium in my room with a few guppies.  But soon I got so obsessed I mowed some lawns, earned some money, and bought another ten-gallon tank and loaded it with fish.  My parents bought me a fish encyclopedia.  I knew so much about fish.  When I was at school my mind would drift to my fish.  When I mowed lawns for money I would dream of all the new fish I’d buy.  Soon I bought a 29 gallon tank and collected big fish.

A few years later it was bikes.  I started cycling and I had a dream of owning a Schwinn Super Le Tour 12-speed.  It was expensive.  I had to mow a lot of lawns to come up with the money.  I thought about it constantly.  My mind would continually obsess about earning enough cash to acquire my dream.  Eventually I bought the bike.

In college it was a beautiful girl, Stefanie.  I met her at our University Christian Ministry and couldn’t get her off my mind.  I thought about her when I was in class, thought about her at lunch, thought about her morning, noon, and night.  I asked her out.  We hit it off.  We saw a future in each other.  I thought about her when I was with her and even more when we were apart.  I even taped a picture of her on my bedside wall in the dorm, so my last thought would be of her as I drifted to sleep.  She was the driving obsession of my mind.  And I made her my wife.

Let me ask you an important question.  What is the constant driving obsession in the mind of God?  What is it that God thinks about above all other things?  What is the obsession of the Divine?  The answer is found in the mission of Christ.  Jesus said,…

“The Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost.” (Luke 19:10)        

Through Christ, God is pursuing a humanity that is lost from the hand of God due to sin so that He might rescue us from separation and death redeeming us back to Himself.  God is in hot pursuit of us.  He is the Hound of Heaven seeking to retrieve us from our lost condition and bring us home to him.

 

Jesus came for you, to save you from your sin, and to bring you home to a relationship with God the Father.  He considers you of inexpressible value, worthy of an all out pursuit.  In the Bible, Jesus speaks of this divine passion for your soul through a parable about a Shepherd and his sheep.

In his story the Shepherd represents the Lord and the sheep represents you and me.  He said, “Suppose one of you has a hundred sheep and loses one of them.  Does he not leave the ninety-nine in the open country and go after the lost sheep until he finds it?”  (Luke 15:4)  Of course he does.  It is in the Shepherd’s nature to value each in his flock.  Even if only one is lost, he goes after it, pursues it until he finds the lamb.  I can imagine that shepherd constantly counting his sheep, making sure none are lost, all are with him.

Years ago I was a Youth Minister in a church.  As a part of the job I was responsible for planning trips and outings.  Sometimes I would take them on retreats or to camp.  Other times we would do things for pure fun, like going to a theme park.  Always I would find myself counting them.  If I had brought 23 kids, everywhere we would go I was continually counting.  One-two-five-ten-19-22, “where is Ben, has anyone seen Ben.”  My obsession was to keep tabs on those kids.  If I brought 23 kids to the event, I was going to bring 23 kids back.  Any other scenario was unacceptable.  There were a few times when I lost a kid.  I would not stop searching until I found that child.

That is the way Jesus is with us.  He comes for us, to bring us spiritually home to God.  Rejoicing always follows when he brings us home.  Jesus said, “And when he finds it, he joyfully puts it on his shoulders and goes home.  Then he calls his friends and neighbors together and says, ‘Rejoice with me; I have found my lost sheep.’” (Luke 15:5-6)

Christ tells us that all of heaven rejoices in the same way when our Shepherd God redeems us back to the flock of his family.  He says, there is “rejoicing in heaven” (Luke 15:7) over a sinner who repents and is brought home to the grace of God.  Nothing brings joy to the heart of God more than when you are redeemed to the relationship with him you were always meant to have.

 

Question:  How does the knowledge that God, in Christ, came for you change how you view your life in the day to day?  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

If you are a Christian, you know you should read your Bible every day!  Your Pastor tells you this.  Your Bible Study Leader tells you this.  You have started the practice countless times only to drop off, feel guilty, and then quit altogether.  But what if I gave you easy steps to getting started again and keeping at it?

Get Into Your Bible

Get Into Your Bible

It is not difficult to develop a daily habit of Bible Reading.  Just follow these easy steps…

  1. Confess to the Lord that you have not made a priority of his Word.  The Bible says, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” (1 John 1:9)  Drifting from God’s Word is to drift from God.  When we confess our sins we are acknowledging the drift and drawling near to his grace.  We are making a return to him and displaying a commitment to hear and obey his commands.  This can be the beginning of your personal revival.
  2. Let go of guilt over past failures.  It may sound strange for me to tell you to confess your sin and then follow that by telling you to let go of your guilt.  But it is not strange.  There is forgiveness in the blood of Christ.  He died to pay for all sins.  When we confess our sins, he forgives us and we need not live in that shame any longer.  Maybe you have failed in your daily Bible reading habits in the past.  Be forgiven and leave those failures in the past.  Neglect in your past need not define your future.  Whatever you do, don’t start a new Bible reading habit out of guilt.  God wants you free from guilt.  That is why he gave us Jesus.  Be free and stop beating yourself up over the times you didn’t follow through.
  3. Shift your motive from legalism to one of love.  One sure fire way to sabotage your effort is to pursue Bible reading just so you can say you did, or just so you can somehow fulfill your religious checklist for God.  Why should you read the Bible?  Because through the Scriptures you come to know God more deeply.  You learn of his love for you.  You are inspired to grow in your love for him.  Set love as your motive, love for God.  Love for the God who loves you beyond any measure your mind can comprehend.  When I approach the Scriptures to know God I am drawn to the pages with a reverence and awe.
  4. Stop believing that you can’t understand the Scriptures.  Sure, lots of parts of the Bible are challenging.  Usually this is due to our ignorance about some cultural or historical reality of the ancient world.  But the truth be told the Bible tends to be rather plain in its’ meaning.  If you are stumped by something, seek the answer.  Then you will know more than you did before.
  5. Find a plan that works for you.  Perhaps you could choose to read a chapter of a book of the Bible each day.  For instance, read one chapter of the Gospel of John until you are done.  Then you could read a book in the Old Testament, such as Genesis.  Others want to read the Bible in a year.  The One Year Bible Plan is a great way to do it.  For more information on that plan, check out my other website, www.disciplecast.org.
  6. Change the plan when you want.  There is nothing that says you have to stick with the plan you started with.  If you start with the read through the bible in a year strategy, but then determine that is too much for you, then change your course.  Read just one chapter a day out of a book, or use a devotion guide to help you through various passages of Scripture.  It is ok to change your path.
  7. Think of ways the Bible relates to your life and world every day.  Get in the habit of thinking about what you read throughout the day.  Today I read a parable of Jesus and have been looking for ways it applies to my life and the lives of others throughout my day.  This makes God’s Word come alive.
  8. Don’t beat yourself up if you miss a day.  Seriously, so you miss a day once in awhile.  Let me tell you a secret.  Sometimes I do too.  Beating yourself up about that only makes it harder to get back on track.  Just start where you left off and get back on track without tormenting over it.  You are much more likely to keep at it if you are good to yourself along the way.
  9. Let the Scriptures shape your prayers.  When you read God’s Word let what you learn set the direction of your prayers to the Lord.  God often speaks to me most powerfully when I let the subject of his Word shape the substance of my petitions to him.
  10. Share want you learn with others.  This is when you really see God’s Word work in power.  You were never meant to keep all of these treasures to yourself.  Look for opportunities when you can encourage another with the Words of God that encouraged you.

Challenge:  Start working these steps and get yourself in the habit of daily meditating on God’s Word.

Question:  Do you have any other helpful hints to developing consistent Bible reading habits?  Share them with us.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Years ago I was the pastor of a small town Texas congregation.  In that little community there was a restaurant called “Doc’s.”  They had a strange practice in that place.  They would serve dessert first.  The very first thing the waitress would do would be to place your dessert in front of you.  By the cash register was a small sign, “Eat Dessert First, Life Is So Uncertain.”

Life is Uncertain

Life is Uncertain

Does uncertainty scare you?  It frightens most of us, which can be discouraging considering that life is so uncertain.

We hate that life is uncertain.  We want to feel assured.  We want to have it figured out.  We want to know what to expect.  But life sends us so many surprises.  Some of them are wonderful, some frightful.

I have traveled through life thinking I knew what God was going to do with me for the next several years, only to find that God had an assignment that I never expected to receive.  Five years ago, if you asked me if I would ever want to be a professor at a school, I would have said “no way.”  I was a pastor and that is all I could see for myself.  But then I was invited to serve as an online pastor at Liberty Seminary.  I have since taught hundreds of students while still serving my church as pastor.  What a cool surprise that has increased my opportunities.

But not all surprises are pleasant.  In fact, they can bring you to your knees and call you to deeply question.  Yesterday, I traveled hundreds of miles with my son and a staff member to visit two families in another city.  One family was helping their 5 year old boy fight cancer.  Two and a half months ago, they realized how uncertain life can be when they received that frightening diagnosis.

We also visited a young 18 year old girl who suffered a tragic gunshot wound to the face.  She is a personal friend of our family and a former member of our church.  That family never planned for this.  The trauma they suffer is difficult to comprehend.  They could not have anticipated this.  This is just another example of the uncertainty of life.

So what is the lesson here?  I am leading up to it.  It is this, the only certain thing in this uncertain life is God.

Everything changes in life, nothing is 100% predictable.  But God never changes.  The Scriptures declare…

Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” (Hebrews 13:8)

So what am I saying?  I am saying that YOU cannot be certain of any circumstance.  You cannot be certain about your job, your future finances, the opportunities you will or won’t have in the future, your health, the health of those you love, or even if you will live long or short.

There is only one thing that is certain and it is God.  God is the one who can be certain to us in the midst of uncertainty.

Actually, our relationship with God thrusts us into uncertainty.  Oswald Chambers said it well, “To be certain of God means that we are uncertain in all our ways, we don’t not know what a day may bring forth.”  He goes on to point out that, “We are not uncertain of God, but uncertain of what He is going to do next.”  After all he loads our lives with so many surprises.

So what does it look like to grow in faith?  Growth comes when I accept that the God who does not change in essence and character will always guide me through this life of uncertainty.  Growth comes when I embrace the fact that God’s adventures cannot be predicted.  Growth comes when I place my trust in God and tell him that I will follow him into every uncertainty of my life.

Question:  Do you find comfort knowing that God is in the midst of your uncertainties?  Tell us why.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Lately I have been struggling over what to do in a matter that is important to me.  Should I do this or that?  Should I go that direction or the other?

Seeking Guidance

Seeking Guidance

That got me thinking.  What do you do when you don’t know what to do?  Of course you try to figure it out.  You weigh the pros and cons of any particular option.  You ask for advice from people you respect.

All this is good and it should be done.  But what about the most simple and straightforward step…Asking God.

The Bible says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.” (James 1:5)

By asking God, you are not saying you won’t brainstorm the pros and cons, nor does it mean you won’t seek the advice of others.  The Lord often uses those paths to guide us and Scripture suggests such things (Luke 14:28; Proverbs 20:18).

But ultimately we need to be asking God to guide.  The Bible promises us that he “gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.

So often when we are at a crossroads we become anxious.  It can be stressful when you don’t know what direction you should take.  Sometimes either course seems attractive.  You might even want to do both, but in that situation you can’t.  You have to decide.

Bringing the decision to God can bring peace.  After all, doesn’t God know exactly what he wills for your life?  Isn’t he perfectly capable of leading you into the things he wants for you?  Of course he is!

When you come to God, you can lay the conundrum at his feet.  You surrender the options to him and express your willingness to do whatever he wills.  You continue pondering the options and maybe even the seeking of advice, but this time it is different.  This time you are trusting God to lead.  In some sense the pressure is off because you are not depending all on your own wit, but on God’s guidance.

Why ask God?  Well sure, it is because you want answers.  But God doesn’t always give quick answers.

Why ask God?  Because more important than the guidance is that you would have a deeper dependence on the Lord.

Think about it.  Either direction you go don’t you want to go it with God?  Fellowship with the Lord is always more important than direction with decisions.  Direction comes naturally when communion with God is nurtured.

Are you wrestling with a decision of what to do?  Have you begun asking God, really asking God?  Have you surrendered your will to his?  Have you weighed the pros and cons, read scripture, and sought the advice of others for the expressed purpose of seeing what God would reveal to you in it all?

If the answer is yes, then trust that God will lead, in his timing.  If the answer is no, then why not begin asking today.  Be patient.  Trust him to reveal in time and even more than seeking guidance, nurture your relationship with the Lord.

Question:  Have you wrestled with a decision, sought God’s wisdom, and in time received your answer?  Share it with us.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Quit Fearing Failure

April 25, 2014 — 2 Comments

Someone once asked me, “What would you do with your life if you had no fear?”  That question rattled me.  How would you answer it?  What dreams do you have for your life?  Are they God inspired?  If so, what holds you back from pursuing them?

Fearing Failure

Fearing Failure

For many, the fear of failure prevents them from taking risks and pursuing great things for God.  But why do we fear failure?  Really, why?  Is failure so bad?

Think about it.  Failure is how we learn.  You learn what doesn’t work by trying and failing.  Did you not fall the first time you attempted to walk, what about the first time you tried to ride a bike or swing a bat?  Why do children learn so fast?  They are not afraid to fail, learn from it, and then try again.

Think about how foolish it would be if a little one took his first steps only to fall and then said, “I’ve had enough of that.  I quit.  I can’t do it.”  We expect them to fail along the way.  Why should it be any different for adults.

Zig Ziglar says, “Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly until you learn to do it well.”  If your life is going to be devoted to attempting things of real significance then you must learn to plow through your fear of failure.

Theodore Roosevelt said, “The only man who never makes a mistake is the man who never does anything.”  I don’t want to be a man who never does anything.  I would hope that you, along with me, would want to attempt bold and exciting things for God in our lifetime.

If that is our desire then we had better learn to conquer our fear of failure and move ahead in spite of such fears.

Think of some of these ways we fear failure…

Sometimes…

1.  We fear we are inadequate. Too often we are paralyzed by our fear of failure because we think that since we have failed we must be failures.  Not so!  There is a difference between what happens when a man says, “I have failed three times,” and what happens when he says, “I am a failure.”  Start acknowledging your failures but never discard your own life or value in God’s eyes because you have failed in some areas.  We are all inadequate, but Christ makes us whole in him.

2.  We fear rejection.  Unfortunately people allow this fear to keep them from pursuing God given tasks.  This should not be the case since rejection is something that comes to even the brightest and most talented.

*In 1902, the poetry editor of Atlantic Monthly sent back a collection of poems with this note, “Our magazine has no room for your vigorous verse.”  The poet was Robert Frost.

*In 1905, the University of Bern rejected a doctoral dissertation as “irrelevant and fanciful.”  The writer of that dissertation was Albert Einstein.

*In 1894 an English teacher noted on a teenager’s report card, “A conspicuous lack of success.”  The student was Winston Churchill.

Rejection is a part of life.  The law of averages says you are bound to have some rejection as you are pursuing success.  Accept the fact, don’t fear it.  You will never have a chance at success if you don’t risk the possibility of rejection.

3. We fear we are incompetent.  God promises his empowering and equipping.  We simply have to trust God to give us what we need.  How does that work?  Simple, we move forward in obedience, believing that he will give us the strength, and knowing he provides along the way.

Fearing these things only keeps us from making the attempt.  The fears may be real, but the reasons for allowing such fears to stop us from obeying God’s call are illegitimate.

Challenge:  Ask yourself the question, “What would I do with my life for God if I had no fear?”  I dare you.  Ask it!

Question:  What are some other fears that we often allow to paralyze us from living a life of faith and risk?  Share them with us.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Death hits every person and every family.  Even if you are young, you will know people who will lose someone special to them.  It is one of life’s hardest experiences and it comes to us all.  Knowing how to care for someone during a loss is not just a skill for ministers and chaplains.  It is for all of us.

Ministry to the Grieving

Ministry to the Grieving

Here are some helpful suggestions as you respond to the loss of others…

At the moments right after the loss…

  1. Find a way to quickly respond.  Make a phone call or pay them a quick visit.  Depending on how close your relationship to them is will determine the length or depth of such a contact.  Responding quickly lets them know your care and your care right now.
  2. See if there is anything you can do for the family.  Don’t be pushy about this if there is no obvious thing you can do.  Just gently let your willingness be known.

When visiting the funeral home…

Some people are uncomfortable with funeral homes.  Perhaps it is because of all those crazy spooky movies Hollywood has cranked out.  But funeral homes are not scary places.  They tend to be warm atmospheres with caring staffs.

When people visit a funeral home they do so to affirm a family in loss.  In fact, some of life’s most meaningful moments or most loving expressions of concern can find their expression in the context of a funeral home.  So don’t be nervous about going.

Usually at the Funeral Home there will be some sort of “visitation,” a time when you can come and visit the family.  This is a perfect time for you to visit and extend your sympathy.

Here are some suggestions when you do…

Things best not to say…

  1. “They are better off” or “They are in a better place.”  It is ok if the person suffering the loss says this.  You can affirm it when they do.  And listen, such a statement might be very true.  But that does not mean that the person suffering the loss is ready to see it that way.
  2. “I know exactly what you are going through.”  This can strike people the wrong way.  Of course it might be somewhat true.  All of us have some common experiences.  But even if it is in part true it generally comes off as insulting.
  3. Don’t get philosophical.  You don’t need to try to answer the question of why this has happened.  Doing so does nothing to change the fact that they are hurting.  They need your compassion more than your answers.
  4. Don’t project your situation onto theirs.  It is always best that you don’t start comparing your hurt or pain with theirs.  When you do you communicate that you are more interested in yourself than in them.  Focus on them and their loss.

Some things good to do…

  1. Be there!  Just coming to see them speaks volumes.  Giving them a hug or handshake or sharing with them a kind word is huge.  Your presence is powerful.
  2. You can say, “So sorry for your loss.”  This is true and speaks volumes.
  3. You can send flowers or a memorial gift.  You don’t need to feel obligated to do this for everyone who has a loss, but if you enjoy giving gifts this is a great thing to do.  Flowers are beautiful and often the loved ones provide an opportunity for people to make monetary gifts in memory of their loved one to some church or charity.  It is an option for you if you feel inclined.

What about after the funeral…

The most difficult time of grief is often after the funeral when life is expected to get back to normal.  This is a great time for you to continue your ministry to them.  Sympathy cards, phone calls, and meals can all be ways to continue your support and kindness.

Challenge:  Next time someone you know suffers such a loss, plan on jumping in and showing that you care.

Question:  What are other ways you can show support when someone losses a loved one?  Share them with us.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Almost everyone ends up in the hospital at some time of their lives.  Even if they don’t, they will have a friend or loved one that will.  Learning how to visit someone in the hospital is not just a skill for ministers and chaplains.  It is a skill every person should learn.

Visiting the Hospital

Visiting the Hospital

Many people are intimidated by the hospital, but you don’t need to be.  It is a place of healing and caring.  In most settings you will find hospital staff to be kind and compassionate.  Sometimes the hospital building can be confusing to navigate, but usually there is a front desk where you can ask someone for guidance and directions.

When you visit someone who has been admitted to the hospital, here are some “Do’s” and “Don’ts”…

First, the “Don’ts”…

  1. Don’t stay too long.  They are sick, or hurt.  They probably don’t feel like entertaining guests for long.  They want to know that people care enough to come see them, but they still need their rest.  There are some exceptions.  Family may want you to hang around awhile for comfort and help.  You have to use your best judgment.
  2. Don’t sit on the bed.  You never know what that could do.  You could move the bed and hurt the patient.  You could even sit in something you don’t want to sit in.  One time my friend sat on someone’s bed only to find he was sitting in a pool of urine.  Yuk!  I think you get the picture.
  3. Don’t compare their sickness with other people or with yourself.  This can be offensive.  People don’t want their illness or injury to be compared to others.  Just talk to them about their issue.  Sometimes it is appropriate to mention others who are going through the same thing, but be careful about this.
  4. Don’t stand off at the edge of the room, approach them.  You came to visit, don’t look like you are scared of the patient.
  5. Don’t interfere with hospital staff.  This is the health care professional’s domain.  The patient is there to receive their care first and foremost.  Your visit is very important, but it is a support and not the primary care role while they are in the hospital.

Next, the “Do’s”…

  1. Knock first and open the door slowly.  You don’t want to hit anyone with the door.  You don’t want to come in too fast and catch them in an immodest position (going to the bathroom, getting a sponge bath, dressing, or breastfeeding).
  2. Leave a note if they are not there or if they are busy with hospital staff.  The patient may be getting direct care from nurses or may be away from the room for tests or rehab.  Leaving a note lets them know you care and came.
  3. Consider your tone.  Know who you are visiting and be sensitive to their emotional needs.  It is good to default on the side of being serious rather than joking. But know and assess the person.  Sometimes jesting is in order.  But you have to be careful.
  4. Be sensitive to their modesty needs.  Protect their modest always.  People feel like they lose a lot of dignity in the hospital.  Don’t make that worse.
  5. Do ask if you may pray for them.  Prayer is powerful.  It is powerful because God answers prayers.  But it is also emotionally powerful for the one being prayed for.  When you pray for someone, they experience a connection with God during a time of weakness and vulnerability.  They are often keenly aware of their dependence and can be deeply blessed to be assured of God’s care in their lives.  Make your prayer brief and positive.

The Bible tells us to “carry each other’s burden’s.” (Galatians 6:2)  Visiting someone in the hospital can be one way to do that.

Challenge:  Next time someone you know goes to the hospital, plan on visiting them and showing you care.

Question:  Can you add any other “do’s” or “don’ts” when it comes to hospital visits?  Share them with us.  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

Jesus Is Amazing

April 18, 2014 — 2 Comments

On this Good Friday I just wanted to say that my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ is Amazing!

Amazing Jesus

Amazing Jesus

Why do I say this?  Because he is amazing in all these wonderful ways…

  1. Jesus has an amazing purpose.  Jesus birth was amazing, not like our birth.  He is the Son of God, born of a virgin, conceived of the Holy Spirit of God.  John wrote of his birth saying, “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.” (John 1:14)  He was born with an amazing mission.  We are so impressed with American soldiers who engage in their mission to go into battle and preserve our Nation’s interests and freedoms.  We are so impressed when we hear of doctors and nurses who go to impoverished countries on medical mission to bring healing to the sick and wounded.  But how much more amazing must we find Jesus whose divine mission was to bring lost, sinful humanity back into eternal fellowship with the Holy and Righteous God.
  2. Jesus has an amazing power.  He performed amazing miracles.  He fed the hungry, made the blind to see, cleansed the diseased, and set the demon possessed free.  He showed powerful compassion to the sin wreaked, the handicapped, and the outcast.  But most importantly he gave himself to an amazing atoning death.  For God was pleased to…”through him to reconcile to himself all things…by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.” (Colossians 1:20)  According to God’s Word, we who were sinful deserved to suffer and die for our sin against a Holy God.  But Jesus, who what sinless, did the amazing.  He died as a substitute for our sin.  He died to pay for the sins of humanity.  Spurgeon said, “My sins were the scourges which lacerated those blessed shoulders, and crowned with thorn those bleeding brows;  my sins cried “Crucify Him! Crucify Him!”  and laid the cross upon His gracious shoulders.”  And Jesus displayed his amazing power in the resurrection.  Jesus rose from the dead.  We can never take that lightly.  No one has this power but Christ.  Death could not hold him.  He died for our sins and we know this to be true because there is evidence that he rose again.  Because of this we know he has an amazing power to change our lives.  He rescues us from our past, revolutionizes us in our present, and reserves for us the most glorious and heavenly of futures.
  3. Jesus has an amazing proposal.  He says, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest.” (Matthew 10:28)  He says, if we will receive him we can have his life.  We can know his salvation.  All we must do is turn from our sin and turn to God.  Then we must trust in Christ for our forgiveness and new life.  And lastly we must tread in obedience to Christ as we commit to walk with him.

The Challenge:  This Easter Weekend, revel in the fact that there is a Savior who has come to you with an amazing purpose, power, and proposal.  If you have not taken him up on his proposal, why not do that this very day.  You will be eternally glad you did.

 

Question:  In what ways do you see Jesus’ purpose, power, and proposal changing our world?  You can leave a comment by clicking here.

R.G. Lee, in his book Christ Above All, mentions sixteen characteristics claimed by the Savior.  These characteristics help us begin to see the Majesty of the Son of God.

Jesus Christ

Jesus Christ

So what are these characteristics of this matchless Christ?

1. Pre-existence.  The origin of Jesus does not find its beginning two-thousand years ago.  Jesus always has been.  The Bible says, “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.” (Genesis 1:1)  And John 1:3 declares, “Through him (Jesus) all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.

2. Supernatural Birth.  John 3:16, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son.”  Jesus was and is an uncreated being, the “only begotten Son.”  He was begotten of God and born of a woman.  Lee says of this birth, “Jesus’ birth into our world by virgin womb was a translation at the same time it was an incarnation.  It was a transfer of His person from a previous condition of existence to an earthly one.  It was His being clothed upon with humanity’s nature.” (Lee, 124)

3. Sinlessness.  It would be foolish self-deception for any human being to claim to be without sin.  Yet Jesus, God’s perfect Son, never hit a jarring note, never struck an in-congruent cord.  The Bible says, “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but we have one who has been tempted in every way, just as we are—yet was without sin.” (Heb.4:15)  In Jesus we see all moral, ethical, and spiritual excellencies unmarred and untainted by even the weakest shadow of darkness.

4. Omnipotence.  That means he possessed all power and all authority over all things.  The resurrected Lord claimed, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” (Mt.28:18)  But Jesus did not merely claim such authority, he demonstrated it.

5. Supernatural Mission and Message.  His mission was “to seek and to save what was lost.” (Luke 19:10)  He came to bring a message of salvation, but more than that, he came to be the message.  Jesus said, “I am the way and the truth and the life.  No one comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14:6)

6. Supernatural Wisdom.  He had the wisdom which could penetrate the true nature of the human heart.  “But Jesus would not entrust himself to them, for he knew all men.  He did not need man’s testimony about man, for he knew what was in a man.” (Jn.2:24-25)  Lee writes, “Jesus knew the end from the beginning.  Jesus knew men’s thoughts afar off.  To Jesus the black midnight was as the brightest noonday.” (Lee, 131)

7. Power to Forgive Sins.  No counselor, psychologist, priest, or preacher can, on his or her own power, forgive the sins that have brought you shame before God.  Only God can forgive the sins that offend his holy nature and Jesus, God’s Son, is God and has such power.

8. Power to Impart Eternal Life.  Jesus said, “I am the resurrection and the life.  He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in me will never die.” (Jn. 11:25-26)

9. Equality with God.  Jesus said, “I and the Father are one.” (Jn. 10:30)  He was equal in essence and in nature.  To see Jesus was to see God in the flesh.  To know Jesus was to know the Father God and to understand the nature of the Spirit of God.

10. Dominion Over Mankind.  Jesus is Lord.  He is the authority and he possesses the right to be singularly worshiped by man.  He has the authority to demand allegiance from us.  He said, “In the same way, any of you who does not give up everything he has cannot be my disciple.” (Lk14:33)  Over and over again Jesus comes to people and says, “Follow me!”  He is the head, he is the First and the Last and this King of Kings calls each of us to allegiance, to submit to his loving and life giving authority.

11. Exclusive and Peculiar Knowledge of God.  Jesus said, “All things have been committed to me by my Father.  No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him.” (Matthew 11:27)

12. Right to Receive Worship.  Jesus accepted the worship of people.  Jesus does not accept flattery, he demands of us worship.  We read in Matthew 2:11-“On coming to the house, they saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him.”  The Bible says, “And, behold, there came a leper and worshipped him.” (Matthew 8:2, KJV)

13. Omnipresence.  Jesus said that he would be “with you always.” (Matthew 28:20) Christ, being God is present everywhere.  There is nowhere where he is not.

14. Judge of Men.  Paul declared, “In the past God overlooked such ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent.  For he has set a day when he will judge the world with justice by the man he has appointed.  He has given proof of this to all men by raising him from the dead.” (Acts 17:30-31)

15. Lifted on a Cross that He might Lift Us.  Jesus said, “When I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself.” (John 12:32)  When Jesus was lifted on that cross, our sins were paid for that we might not sink into condemnation for our sin, but rather we might be lifted up in forgiveness and redemption.

16. Make a Personal Return to Earth.  Jesus is coming again.  The Bible declares, “we wait for the blessed hope—the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ.” (Titus 2:13)

Question:  Can you think of other characteristics of Christ that inspire our worship?  You can leave a comment by clicking here.