Monday, June 27, 2016

Monday Morning Encouragement - 6.27.16

Good morning!  

In the early church there were immediately certain things the church was devoted to. 

Acts 2:42
And they devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers.

One of those is fellowship. 
But, what is fellowship? Well, fellowship is not merely potluck dinners, supper clubs, men’s breakfasts, or youth pizza nights. Yes, these are times in which fellowship can occur…however these are merely the soil in which true fellowship might grow. 

But what is sown in order to reap true fellowship is not simply time together, but rather gospel-centered love. 

So, what is fellowship? Or more importantly, “What is Christian fellowship?”

Fellowship means being committed to community, membership and gathering together… living life together… sharing everything!!! We see this in verse 44:

Acts 2:44
And all who believed were together and had all things in common

We were created to be a part of the people of God. We were created to have significant relationships.

What was the first thing that was NOT good in creation??? It is not good that man be alone. He needed help fulfilling the creation mandate to multiply and fill the earth. God’s mission is always fulfilled in community. 

A lot of people think as long as they have their bible, TV preacher and twice a year appearance at church then they are fine, but there is no such thing as a rogue/solitary Christian. We need the fellowship of the Body of Christ.

We need the unity that is provided in Christ through his work on the cross. Other Christians are the extension of Christ’s grace to us. 

This is why hospitality is commanded in Romans 12:13 (‘seek to show hospitality’). We need to cultivate Christian relationships and reed on the grace He provides through his people. 

Therefore, I hope you will seek to show hospitality to one another. Extend God’s grace through the use of your home that others may be built up and encouraged in their faith. 



Blessings!
Pastor Chris

Monday, June 20, 2016

Monday Morning Encouragement - 6.20.16

Good morning!  

“The Lord your God is in your midst,
    a mighty one who will save;
he will rejoice over you with gladness;
    he will quiet you by his love;
he will exult over you with loud singing.”
   - Zephaniah 3:17


God the Father has no form. No body for us to see or touch. He is so “big” that we cannot even comprehend Him, we can’t wrap our minds around the concept of “God.” 

But He loves us. He showed that love by sending his Son to take on the form of flesh to live the perfect life we couldn’t live and die the death for sins we could not pay. When we repent and believe in Jesus, we are accepted into a right relationship with the Father through the Son by the Spirit. 

Most of us have a clear mental image of Jesus and his life and suffering for us. 

It is more difficult with the Father. The parable of the prodigal son is a great image though, isn’t it? The father greeting his son with open arms and unconditional love. That is amazing! 

My favorite mental image of the Father though is in this verse from Zephaniah. It speaks of God’s joy over us and his love calming our fears. It is that last line though that grips my imagination. 

“He will exult over you with loud singing.”

The root word for ‘exult’ is from the Latin for ‘leap up.’ So, try to picture the Father… the Creator and King over all creation, holy and highly exalted on his throne… passionately jumping up and down singing loudly over you! 

THIS is our Father’s love for you! When He saves you, adopts you, welcomes you into his loving arms, He keeps on celebrating. He rejoices over you and exults over you with unabashed, undignified, loud singing. HE LOVES HIS CHILDREN.

As we move on from Father’s Day, let’s remember the love of our heavenly Father. Let’s be transformed by the loving work of Christ on the cross and return that love to Him by exulting in Him with lives that fully reflect his glorious righteousness! 



Blessings!
Pastor Chris

Monday, June 13, 2016

Monday Morning Encouragement - 6.13.16

Good morning!  

"Anyone whom you forgive, I also forgive. Indeed, what I have forgiven, if I have forgiven anything, has been for your sake in the presence of Christ, so that we would not be outwitted by Satan; for we are not ignorant of his designs."
- 2 Corinthians 2:10-11

Many times I think we assume Satan will attack us through our circumstances or through internal struggles and fears. That is certainly true, but there is a much more devious and destructive plan of attack he has that Paul identifies in these verses. 

Follow Paul's logic with me...

1. Paul seeks to forgive because…
2. He does not want to be outwitted by Satan since…
3. He is not ignorant of Satan's plans.

The conclusion I draw is that one of Satan's schemes to defeat the Church is to sow a spirit of unforgiveness in our hearts toward one another. This is an extremely crippling attack on the Church because it reaps disunity and divisiveness. 

Think about it: If we do not forgive others when we have been wronged then we will nurse those hurts until they infect our spirit with a cancerous bitterness. We will distrust others; isolate ourselves; insulate ourselves. The Christian life will become cynical and viewed as merely an individual affair instead of a community of faith. The end result is a church that is defeated from within because the life-giving grace of the Gospel has been dammed up at the source. 

We must not be ignorant of this strategy. That means that every little insult or unintentional wrong has the potential to turn into a unity-killing missile aimed right at your heart. 

Are you on the lookout for this prowling lion (1 Peter 5:8) who would destroy the work of the Spirit through unforgiving hearts? 

The only weapon of defense against him is the Gospel. In Christ not only are we completely forgiven by God but we also have Christ's capacity to forgive others as well. 

Consider the power of seeing forgiveness firsthand in the account of the centurion at the cross of Jesus who was most likely converted to Christ after having watched Him die ("Truly this man was the Son of God!" Mark 15:39). But it was the way Jesus died that affected him. Part of his amazement was probably due to Jesus uttering "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do" (Luke 23:34). Even in the middle of His greatest agony and greatest humiliation, Jesus was still praying for forgiveness for those who rejected Him and killed Him.

That same spirit of forgiveness is within us as we are in Christ, so that even as we are wronged and insulted, we are still commanded to forgive as we have been forgiven. Let us access that most powerful aspect of the Good News today, and like Paul, let us us seek to forgive others that we would not be outwitted by Satan. We are not ignorant of his design. Let us seek Gospel wisdom in magnifying the grace of Christ in forgiving others.

May the Lord bless you richly in Christ today!!!


Blessings!
Pastor Chris

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Monday Morning Encouragement - 6.6.16


Good morning!!!

Yesterday’s sermon was understandably challenging for all of us. Being judgmental of others is a sneaky, subtle sin. It has a legitimate foundation in its desire to identify and call out sin. It errs when its desire to call out others’ sin neglects our own sin and then executes punishment for those it deems to fall short of God’s law. 

But it IS important for us to help others with their sin. Galatians 6:1; Matthew 18:15-17 and other passage encourage (and even command) us to do this for others in love. There wasn’t enough time on Sunday to address everything we need to be able to perform this ministry of rebuking sin the right way. Below are some encouragements and specific helps from a pastor named Kevin DeYoung. What I am including is a summary of several blog posts he made several years back. (Here is a link to the full posts). 

This is a little long, but these are very helpful and worth the read! 


When to Rebuke

1. The more hurtful the action or error. If your friend keeps talking about Calvinism and Arminianism and thinks the last book of the Bible is Revelations, a corrective word at the right moment might be in order but a full-fledged rebuke is not. On the other hand, when someone’s sin is ruining a marriage, killing a church, grinding down your small group, or destroying their own soul, you had better get on the rebuking train. And fast.

2. The more potential there is for the issue to escalate into a bigger problem. For example, say you are over at a friend’s house and you hear her snap rather inappropriately at her children. You could probably overlook the incident. But if your friend snapped at three other families’ children in the hallway at church, you better talk to her. There’s a real possibility this mole hill will becomes a mountain unless she does something to address her mistake.

3. The more the person is blind to it. Christians who make mistakes and feel terrible about it don’t need a rebuke. They need the Savior. But it’s a different story when your brother or sister doesn’t see the problem. Suppose you begin to notice that one of the couples in your small group never seems to get along. You sense coldness and hostility in their marriage. But they’ve been open with the group that they are seeing a biblical counselor for help. Probably no need to rebuke what they already see. But if they were blind to their problems, someone needs the courage to confront.

4. The more habitual the problem is. An errant swear word is bad, but depending on the situation may not require your rebuke. But where there’s a habit of letting the filth fly, reproof is in order. When Christians fall into sin they need a hand up. When they fall into the same sin in the same place day after day, they need a kick in the pants first.

5. The more you will be held account for your silence. We don’t all have to rebuke the President when we think he makes a mistake. We can in a free country, but unless we are his advisors, friends, or family it isn’t incumbent upon us to do so.

Likewise, we don’t have to rebuke every wayward Christian author, pastor, or church (that would be daunting). No one is responsible for speaking into everyone’s life on every issue (praise God for that). But for your children, your spouse, your close friends, your accountability partner, your flock, that church member who invited correction in his life–for these people our silence in the face of sin will not be golden.

6. The more the name of Christ is dishonored. We must distinguish between honest struggles that are part of the normal upward trajectory of the Christian and flagrant sins that embarrass the cause of Christ. Yes, every sin dishonors Christ. But some are more egregious, more public, more high-handed. These are especially harmful to our Christian witness and deserve a sterner rebuke.

7. The more the gospel is threatened. Young zealous Christians sometimes don’t get this one. Every theological error looks and smells exactly the same to them. But they are not all the same. Some matters are of first importance, which means others must be secondary or tertiary.

I read a book not too long ago about the controversy in the Dutch church a hundred years ago over presumptive regeneration. Things get pretty hot and heavy, with lots of invective flying back and forth. That’s overkill for that issue. But on the other hand,  some people can watch justification go out the window and barely raise an eyebrow.

How to Rebuke

1. Know whom you are rebuking. Learn to distinguish among the different animals in the ecclesiastical barn. For starters, there are pigs–not worth your time. Save your pearls of wise rebuke for someone else. Then there are the sheep. Deal gently with them if you can. But as for the wolves, they need a firm whack with the rod. And when it comes to the top dogs, remember to show them extra respect. But when they mess up in front of everyone and keep on doing it, “rebuke them in the presence of all, so that the rest may stand in fear” (1 Tim. 5:20).

If you can keep these animals in mind it will save you a lot of trouble.  Don’t go whacking the junior high school student who breaks curfew the first time or the high schooler who isn’t sure the Bible can really be trusted.  Use the staff and bring them back to the pen. Too often we blast the sheep and coddle the wolves, and waste all our time on the pigs. The one thing we may get right is to address the top dogs. We like to take people down. But we are no doubt quicker to speak than we are to listen.

2. Know who you are. Some people hate conflict. They probably need more of it. Others run into it. They need to chill. If you can’t wait for your next opportunity to rebuke, take a little Sabbath from being the Holy Spirit in everyone’s life. It’s like C.S. Lewis said, the hard saying of Jesus are only good for those who find them hard. Anyone who is eager to rebuke is not ready to do so.

3. Check your heart. Are you getting in his face so you can serve your notice of indignation, or are you going to serve their sanctification? Consider this wisdom: “Whoever restrains his words has knowledge, and he who has a cool spirit is a man of understanding” (Prov. 17:27). And, “A hot-tempered man stirs up strife, but he who is slow to anger quiets contention” (Prov. 15:18). In other words, check yourself before you wreck yourself. Or as James puts it, “Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person by quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger, for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God” (James 1:19-20).

4. Check your eye. As in, is there a plank in it.

5. Don’t be loud if you can be soft. Galatians 6:1 says restore your brother gently. 2 Timothy 2:25 tells us to correct our opponents with gentleness. A gentle answer, Proverbs tells us, turns away wrath (15:1). It was always Paul’s desire to come in a spirit of gentleness; the rod was only a last resort (1 Cor. 4:21; cf. 2 Cor. 13:10). You see a pattern here? Try gentleness first. Don’t be the one whose rash words are like sword thrusts (Prov. 12:18).

Immature Christians only have one decibel level. Some don’t know how to whisper and some don’t know how to scream. The goal is to administer the rebuke as softly and gently as possible. In most situations, the trumpet blast should come only after you’ve tried the flute first. Don’t launch the nukes at the first sign of trouble. Try diplomacy, then sanctions, then warnings, then strategic targets, then air, then sea, then ground, then start consulting about the big red button. Don’t punch them in the gut if an arm around the shoulder will do the trick.



Blessings!
Pastor Chris