Sunday, February 22, 2009

The Gospel writer, Mark, tells us that just prior to the event the Church calls the Transfiguration Jesus tells a group of people, including His disciples, that some of those standing there would “not taste death until they see the kingdom of God after it has come with power”(Mark 1:1). Nine verses later, as Jesus, Peter, James and John are coming down the mountain He gave the three men “orders not to relate to anyone what they had seen, until the Son of Man rose from the dead” (Mark 1:9).

The story of the transfiguration in the Gospel of Mark is sandwiched between two thoughts about the resurrection of Jesus Christ. I have to believe that in His resurrection “the kingdom of God” is revealed to have “come with power.” But prior to the resurrection none of what he was doing would really make sense. So, the word from Jesus was “don’t tell anybody about what happened on the mountain until I have risen from the dead.”

The resurrection is the clarifying reality concerning the life of Jesus. On the Mount of Transfiguration three men experienced the reality of the wonder that is God revealed in Jesus, but they weren’t ready to talk about it. Jesus still had work to do, drawing people to Himself. In time, the reality of it would explode out of a tomb, but not yet.

Today we live in light of the resurrection. The kingdom of God has come in power. The authority that raised Jesus from the dead is with us and the Father’s Word to us is, “This is My beloved Son, listen to Him” (Mark 9:7). And, we do well to do so.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

I am wondering if any of us really know how lonely it would be to be isolated from human touch. No hand shakes, no hugs, no high-fives – just distance and alienation and a sense of estrangement. Present but not really; marginalized, separated, and alone.

“And a leper came to Jesus, beseeching him and falling on his knees before Him, and saying, ‘If You are willing, You can make me clean” (Mark 1:40). This leper knew about loneliness and isolation. It was forbidden to touch a leper, and if a mistake was made there was a huge cleansing ceremony that had to be administered to the poor unfortunate soul who did the touching. And, the leper knew the rules so he didn’t touch Jesus. He just fell at Jesus’ feet and begged for mercy.

“Moved with compassion, Jesus stretched out His hand and touched him” (Mark 1:41). You read it right. Jesus broke the rules of social engagement and touched this alienated, estranged, marginalized, separated and lonely man. He touched Him. Can you believe it?

“I am willing; be cleansed” (Mark 1:41). Jesus not only touched the man He healed him to the point of his being clean once again; clean to enter back into society, clean to take up his life again, clean to mingle among people, clean to be a part of conversations again, and clean to be embraced by loved ones.

And the Jesus who was willing to touch the leper is willing to touch us, too. He is willing to give us back our lives, to welcome us into His community so that we can experience His unfathomable grace.

Saturday, February 07, 2009

The Christ we see in Scripture fully engaged Himself in the lives of people. Wherever He went He embraced people with the life of God. Wherever He went He brought health and vitality, dignity and respect, love and forgiveness. Wherever He went He preached the Word of God.

What does it mean to be a church built upon the life of Jesus? What would a people look like who were under the influence of God in Jesus? What would distinguish them from others? How would the people in their world know that they had been with Jesus and that Jesus was guiding and directing and orchestrating their lives?

I’m not sure we should look for easy answers to our questions but I am confident that they are questions worth asking. I’m also quite sure that whatever the answers might be for us they will not be discovered from a distance. I am quite sure that Jesus has called us to Himself, to be where He is. And, I am quite sure that wherever Jesus is He will be doing what He has always done – embrace people with the life of God, bring health and vitality, dignity and respect, love and forgiveness, and preach the Word of God.

I have thought about something Jesus did all through His ministry as He lived in the midst of people. Mark 1:35 summarizes it well when it says, “In the early morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house, and went away to a secluded place, and was praying there.”

I am wondering if it is not in the place of prayer where our questions will most likely be answered. To build our lives, our church, on the life of Jesus is to do more than just be “out there” with people. We certainly do need to be “out there” with people but perhaps first, before we dare engage anybody with the life of Jesus, we need to be in the place of prayer and worship where we can commune with God. It seems to me that we’re not going to be of much help to anybody if we are not intimately connected with the One person we believe is the Holy One of God (see Mark 1:24).

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Mark’s gospel tells a wonderful story of an event that took place in the Synagogue in Capernaum (See Mark 1:21-28). To us it is a miracle story but to Jesus it’s an event in which His divine personhood is revealed.

A man with an unclean spirit was released from that spirit; or, as Mark says, “the unclean spirit…came out of him” (26). From a prison in his inner life, the man is set free. Suddenly we know that for him the future will be different from the one we would expect him to have given his situation. Jesus spoke into the man’s life, and he was set free.

Interestingly enough, the unclean spirit had engaged Jesus in a conversation that ended with the spirit saying, “I know who You are—the Holy One of God” (25). It seems the spirit knew more about Jesus than the others in the sacred place that day. Apparently, Jesus wasn’t interested in a conversation with an unclean spirit and He rebuked it abruptly by saying, “Be quiet, and come out of him!” (24). Just like that a man gets his life back.

Jesus’ action that day got everybody’s attention it seems. Suddenly we hear people saying of Him, “What is this? A new teaching with authority! He commands even the unclean spirit, and they obey him” (27).

Are you captivated by the authority that is in Jesus? The people who observed Him in action in the Synagogue that day became captivated by Him. In fact, in a spirit of amazement they started talking about Him, and the conversation went far beyond the walls of the building.

And He is among us today, with the same authority, the same power, the same influence. No wonder they started talking about Him.

I wonder how their conversations went.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Start walking with Jesus and your story really gets intriguing. This is one of many ways to speak of what it is like to get connected up with Jesus. He shares the truth, He calls people into His life, challenges them to reconsider what they once believed to be true, to believe in God, and to join Him on a journey of walking into tomorrow from within the embrace of God.

So it was that Simon and Andrew and James and John got connected up with Jesus. They were fishermen by trade but had apparently been impacted by what they heard in the preaching of Jesus. Then one day Jesus ups and calls them to walk away from their trade and to follow Him. They would still be fishermen, He said, but in a completely different way.

Men and women need God but men and women don't naturally gravitate toward God so God has a force of men and women who, in a sense, fish for men and women. That is, they invite others to consider the possibility of Jesus, and to come to Him. There testimony: God has changed my life for the better. It can happen to you, too."

Jesus told His disciples that the kingdom of God was at hand (Mark 1:15) and that they were invited into this kingdom. Simon and Andrew and James and John heard the message, received it, turned around and embraced the life of Jesus. It changed their destiny, even though at the time they probably had no idea what was coming down the pike at them.

"Follow Me," Jesus said (Mark 1:17). Isn't that enough? Join up and start following Jesus. You don't have to have every T crossed and every I dotted. Follow Him. He will build your life as you journey with Him. The kingdom of God is here. Wherever Jesus is, all the possibilities of God are present.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

In the Gospel of John we read the story of the conversion to Christ by one Nathanael (John 1:43-51). His friend, Philip, had discovered Jesus and had invited Nathanael to discover Him, too. Nathanael wasn’t particularly impressed with it all when he found out that this supposed Messiah was from Nazareth. To him, that was pushing the sensibility envelope a bit too far. “Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?” he asked. For him it was a rhetorical question, the obvious answer being, NO.

When he met Jesus, however, something happened in him. Jesus seem to know him and to appreciate who he was. This intrigued Nathanael and something in his spirit drew him to Christ and to an amazing proclamation, “Rabbi, You are Son of God; You are the King of Israel” (vs. 49).

This did not end the discussion. Jesus responded by saying to Nathanael something to the effect that he hadn’t seen anything yet. “You will see the heavens opened,” Jesus told him, “and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man” (vs. 51).

What happened to Nathanael was just a beginning. Jesus was going to work a work of grace in his life and in the lives of all His disciples, and in our lives, too, that would reveal He is indeed the long awaited Messiah.

Start walking with Jesus and the story really gets intriguing.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

WITH THE HOLY SPIRIT

Thirty years after His birth in a manger Jesus steps out of obscurity and into the waters of the Jordan to be baptized by one John the Baptist. Except for a couple of snapshots of isolated events, we don’t know much about those thirty years. The Gospel of Luke tells us that during this time “Jesus kept increasing in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men” (Luke 2:52), and that’s about all we know. The Gospel of Mark picks up the story at what appears to be Jesus’ inauguration into public ministry.

After waiting His turn in line Jesus came up out of the waters met by “a dove descending upon Him. Then a voice spoke to Him, “You are My beloved Son, in You I am well-pleased” (Mark 1:10-11). Those who witnessed the event said that it was the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove that descended upon Jesus and that the “voice came out of the heavens.”

John would later declare that Jesus was the one of whom he said, “After me One is coming who is mightier than I…He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit” (Mark 1:7-8; John 1:27; Matt. 3:11).

At the heart of all that Jesus Christ brings to the world is the baptism with the Holy Spirit. Water baptism is huge and I cherish that Sunday afternoon so many years ago that I was baptized, but that beginning led me to something more. I needed God to work a work deep down inside my life where nobody lived but me and where nobody really knew what was going on there except for God and me. I needed an inward work that could not be touched by water but only by the presence of the Holy Spirit.

Jesus came to set our hearts on fire with God. He came to work the works of God deep within our lives. The One of whom the Father said, “In You I am well-pleased,” sets our hearts on fire with God so much so that God can honestly say to you and me that in our lives He is well pleased. Wouldn’t it be great to hear God say, ”Well done good and faithful servant” (Matt. 25:23)?

Saturday, January 03, 2009

On the way home from Jerusalem and the Feast of the Passover, Mary and Joseph realized that their twelve-year-old son, Jesus, wasn’t in the caravan, so back to Jerusalem they go, frantic to find him.

They finally find him in the temple conversing with the teachers. He is listening to them and also asking some questions. He was conducting himself in such a way that “all who heard Him were amazed at His understanding and His answers” (Luke 2:47). Mary and Joseph aren’t thrilled about it all and Mary asks Jesus, “Why have you treated us this way? Behold your father and I have been anxiously looking for you” (Luke 2:48).

The twelve-year old boy responds to her by saying, “Why is it that you were looking for Me? Did you not know that I had to be in My Father’s house” (Luke 2:49)? This response did not clarify things for Mary and Joseph, but apparently it was the end of the matter. The next thing we read is that Jesus “went down with them...and continued in subjection to them” (Luke 2:51). “Jesus kept increasing in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men” (vs. 52), and Mary “treasured all these things in her heart” (vs. 51).

What do we do with this story? I suppose we just let it be and fight the temptation to read too much into it. Apparently God became a real human being and had to learn to live “in subjection” to his parents.” Also, Mary and Joseph had to learn to let go and to let their Son become who He was.

Here we see the spiritual depth of parents who really do live by the tenants of their faith and we see the Spirit at work in a twelve-year-old boy who still has a lot of growing up to do.

Incarnation is a tough reality to embrace, but if God is really going to do it, it had better be real or it will just be fluff. “The Word became flesh and dwelt among us” (John 1:14) as a twelve year old and he submitted himself to parents who loved him. He wouldn’t always be twelve but He would always be Messiah.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Christians believe that God has entered into His own creation, and that He enters the created order so that humanity and nature itself might be redeemed. This thought is simply too much for some, and is summarily dismissed as ridiculous or unthinkable. Yet, at the heart of our Faith is the remarkable belief that “the Word became flesh, and dwelt among” (John 1:14a). One of the men who was closest to Jesus for three years proclaimed, “we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth” (John 1:14b). Surely it is a huge thing to get our minds around, and the fact that God enters into His own creation is indeed a marvelous wonder and mystery.

I am intrigued that what the apostle John wanted us first and foremost to see about Jesus is that He came to us “full of grace and truth.” He wasn’t simply one of us; He was “the true Light which, coming into the world, enlightens every man” (John 1:9). And exactly how did the true Light come when He came to us. He came, “full of grace and truth.”

What do grace and truth look like? They look like Jesus. If grace and truth could be personified they would look like Jesus. He did not come to judge us into submission. He came to lift us up into the very life of God by a grace and truth that astounds the imagination. He came as Light in a dark place and to those who dare “believe in Him,” this Divine Light “gave the right to become children of God” (John 1:12).

May we take the Light and live the life of one who has tasted both grace and truth. God dwells among us and we don’t have to live in the past and we don’t have to live defeated. He calls us to the Light and nobody can ever extinguish this Light (John 1:5). “In Him was life, and the life was the Light of men” (John 1:4).

Let’s get busy living because we have tasted God’s grace and truth.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Merry Christmas Everyone!

May I share this wonderful Christmas devotion from John Henry Jowett's devotional book, My Daily Meditation? It is based on Luke 2:8-20. It touched my heart again this year as it has done so for many, many Christmas days over the years.

The heavens are not filled with hostility. The sky does not express a frown. When I look up I do not contemplate a face of brass, but the face of infinite good will. Yet when I was a child, many a picture has made me think of God as suspicious, inhumanly watchful, always looking round the corner to catch me at the fall. That “eye,” placed in the sky of many a picture, and placed there to represent God, filled my heart with a chilling fear. That God was to me a magnified policeman, watching for wrong-doers, and ever ready for the infliction of punishment. It was all a frightful perversion of the gracious teaching of Jesus.

Heaven overflows with good will toward men! Our God not only wishes good, He wills it! “He gave His only begotten Son,” as the sacred expression of His infinite good will. He has good will toward thee and me, and mine and thine. Let that holy thought make our Christmas cheer.


Wednesday, December 24, 2008

When Gabriel told Mary that she was going to have a baby even though she had not been with a man, her inquiring response was, “How can this be?” (Luke 1:34). How, indeed? For that matter another woman whom throughout her entire life had been called, “barren,” (Luke 1:36) was just three months away for delivering her son, John, who would be called, the Baptist. How, indeed?

Have you ever said to God, in light of His outrageous word, “How can this be?” I hope you have and I hope you never stop asking it. I hope God can be in each of us in such a way that our faith just keeps being stretched and stretched until the only answer that makes sense to us is, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you” (Luke 1:35).

Mary couldn’t get pregnant, but the Holy Spirit came upon her.

Elizabeth couldn’t get pregnant, but the Holy Spirit came upon her.

Because of an evil Herod, Jesus had no chance of getting out of Bethlehem alive, but the Holy Spirit was upon Him.

The cross killed Jesus and the dream for the future died on a hill called, “The skull,” but the Holy Spirit was upon that event.

Death spoke loudly in the life of Jesus but on a Sunday morning He came out of the tomb alive because the Holy Spirit was upon Him.

The Church had no chance of making it out of the first century, but the Holy Spirit was upon the Church.

How can these things be? Because NOTHING WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE WITH GOD” (Luke 1:37).

Case closed, or maybe reopened.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

I feel compelled to share John Henry Jowett’s devotional thought for December 18, found in My Daily Meditation. Enjoy, and be filled with the wonder that is God.

THE SINNER’S GUEST

“He is gone to be guest with a man that is a sinner.”
Luke 19. 1-10.

IT was hurled as an accusation; it has been treasured as a garland. It was first said in contempt; it is repeated in adoration. It was thought to reveal His earthliness; it is now seen to unveil His glory. Our Saviour seeks the home of the sinner. The Best desires to be the guest of the worst. He spreads His kindnesses for the outcasts, and He offers His friendship to the exile on the loneliest road. He waits to befriend the defeated, the poor folk with aching consciences and broken wills. He loves to go to souls that have lost their power of flight, like birds with broken wings, which can only flutter in the unclean road. He went to Zacchæus.

Yes, the Lord went to be “guest with a man that is a sinner,” and He changed the sinner into a saint. The worldling found wings. The stone became flesh. Gentle emotions began to stir in a heart hardened by heedlessness and sin. Restitution took the place of greed. The home of the sinner became the temple of the Lord. “Today is salvation come to this house forasmuch as he also is a son of Abraham.”

Sunday, December 14, 2008

John the Baptist had become somewhat of a fixture in Israel so when Jesus showed up and began to baptize also it evoked a question in someone’s mind and the question led to a discussion about purification (see John 3:22-30). We’re not sure of the nature of the discussion but it led John’s disciples to go to him and tell him that someone was competing with him in this baptism business, and that this someone was a man that John himself had baptized.

I don’t want to speak for John’s disciples but it sounds like they weren’t very excited about the competition. John very quickly laid their concern to rest as he explained to them that this fellow about whom they were upset, in fact, was the one he had been talking about, the one of whom John said, “I have been sent ahead of Him” (vs. 28).

John was present to clear the way for Jesus. John saw Jesus as “the bridegroom” and himself as “the friend of the bridegroom” (vs. 26). He had his duty and it was to point the people to the One who would come after him. His ministry was about Jesus not himself. So it was John explains to his disciples that Jesus “must increase, but I must decrease” (vs. 30).

That Jesus was baptizing was exactly and precisely what John expected. It was okay; in fact, it was huge. It was time for Jesus to break out of obscurity and onto the world scene.

It’s not about us; it’s all about Jesus. We are friends of the Bridegroom, pointing everybody to this marvelous person whose name is, WONDERFUL.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Before Jesus entered into public ministry, God raised up John the Baptist to prepare the way for Him. History had been moving toward this moment for generations and at the appointed time John came saying to the people, ‘Make ready the way of the Lord, Make His paths straight” (Mark 1:3).

I’m not sure God ever does much of anything out of a vacuum. God seems always to set up history for appointed moments. His coming might surprise, even catch us off guard, but it is never without preparation.

For generations God had been speaking to the people about the coming Messiah. Then one silent night He slipped into history, almost unnoticed. For some thirty years Jesus lives in obscurity. Very few people know about the miracle among them. Then John the Baptist shows up proclaiming, “After me One is coming who is mightier than I, and I am not fit to stoop down and untie the thong of His sandals” (Mark 1:7). What a wonderful and humble testimony, but it gets better. John says, “I baptized you with water, but He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit” (Mark 1:8).

Surely, John did prepare the way; and, one day not too long after John’s words a face in the crowd stepped out and submitted Himself to be baptized by one who said of himself that he was “not fit to stoop down and untie the thong of His sandals.” The appointed time had come, and through John’s faithfulness the way was opened up for the Savior of the world to step out of obscurity and onto the world’s stage.

I have wondered if each of us doesn’t in some way have a John-the-Baptist role to play. Could it be that God uses us to open doors and to prepare the way for Jesus to step out of obscurity and into the lives of people who need the Savior?

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Mark 13:24-37 contains a remarkable word from Jesus. Three times He calls the people either to “Keep on the alert” or “be on the alert” (vs. 33, 35, 37). These things He says in the context of a promise that the Son of Man is going to come “with great power and glory” (vs. 26). At that time He says He will “gather together His elect from the four winds” (vs. 27).

Sounds like a very special day in history, doesn’t it! One you won’t want to miss. It will be a day of great joy from some, a day reckoning for some, and a great day of revelation when the world will know that Jesus Christ is who He says He is. And, what do we do until that day? We stay alert. The One who comes into human history as an infant born in a stable will come again into human history as the One before whom all history bows. It’s going to be quite a day.

The baby born in Bethlehem, now an adult, ready to go to the cross and die for the sins of the world, tells His people to stay alert, not to be lulled into complacency, and always to remember that even though heaven and earth will pass away, His words will not pass away (vs.31).

In these days when everything Christian is under assault and Jesus is being marginalized into unimportance, be alert and don’t buy into the lies and fabrications. The world will do to Jesus what it has always done to Jesus. It will nail Him to a cross. And, Jesus will do what He always does. He will burst out of the tombs into which the world lays Him, and He will come forth alive, embracing with redemptive love the very world that killed Him.

Whether or not the world will receive His love is its issue, but make no mistake about it; while heaven and earth are passing away, His “words will not pass away.”

Amen. Come Lord Jesus.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

In Matthew chapter 25, Jesus indicates to us that those who know Him best will be the most involved in works of mercy and compassion. He reveals how important it is to him for His followers to do certain kinds of things such as feed the hungry, give water to the thirsty, embrace the stranger, clothe the naked, visit the sick, and to come alongside the prisoner. Holiness in action, that is the lifestyle to which He calls His people.

Interestingly enough, Jesus equates these works of mercy as ministry to Him. When we embrace others we are embracing Jesus. When we extend mercy to others it is as if we are extending mercy to Jesus. And, get this; many times we don’t even know it is Jesus we are touching by our act of love.

What a freeing thought. We live out our lives in the spirit of holiness, a spirit that is so gracious that we treat everybody the same and all people as if they were Jesus to us. It’s real, honest and non-discriminatory outrageous grace lavished on others. Why would we do this? Because this is the way God has come to us. Outrageous grace has been lavished on us by the life of Jesus and so we lavish grace on others.

It makes perfect sense. Often we sing a song that says, “O to be like Thee, Blessed Redeemer.” Well, Jesus is about outrageous grace, extended to whomever crosses His path. O to be like Thee? Really? Then feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, clothe the naked, visit the sick, visit the prisoner. We are never more like Jesus than when we do these kinds of things. And, remember, He said, “to the extent that you did it to one of these brothers of mine, even the least of them you did it to Me” (Matt. 25:40).

Don’t you just love the Christian life and the fact that when we embrace others we are embracing Jesus? When we extend mercy to others it is as if we are extending mercy to Jesus Christ Himself.

Saturday, November 15, 2008

In I Chronicles 12:32 we learn of certain men who “understood the times, with knowledge of what Israel should do…” They were able to assess the times and conditions facing Israel and offer words of true wisdom and counsel. Where are those “sons of Issachar” today?

What times these are in which we live, times known for many things: uncertainty, ideological worlds in blatant contrast, violence, tension. Call it what we will, the truth is that the world seems to be split down the middle on just about every issue that comes before it.

Some believers are convinced that things are so bad now that Jesus must be coming back very, very soon. I’m not so sure; and even if He is I pray He might tarry a bit longer because the world is in desperate need of His grace.

Be that as it may, in I Thessalonians Paul says, “as to the times and the epochs …let us be alert and sober” (vs. 1, 6). We don’t know when Jesus is coming back, just that He is coming back. This should not frighten us or destabilize our lives. In fact, Paul said of this upcoming and certain event, “Encourage one another and build up one another…” (vs. 11).

Don’t be lulled to sleep or overly preoccupied with when Jesus might come back. Just know that He is, and then go about your life as sons and daughters “of light” (vs. 6). Live and move and have your being in the Lordship of Jesus, having “put on the breastplate of faith and love and as a helmet, the hope of salvation” (vs. 8).

What do we have to say to a stressed out world? We say, “Jesus.” We live the life of faith and hope and love, leaning on the One who is Lord of heaven and earth. We live for the One who died for us” (vs.10). So, be alert and sober, and encourage one another” (vs. 6, 11). It is a great time to be alive for Christ.

Sunday, November 09, 2008

I am intrigued with the politically incorrect posture popularly referred to as intolerance. In this tightly constructed worldview intolerance is the new unforgivable sin, punishable by character assassination or disenfranchisement from the community or, my favorite, made to look like an idiot in the eyes of the so-called tolerant.

In Matthew 25:1-13 we have ourselves a problem. We have Jesus exercising intolerance. How? He says that in this world there are foolish and prudent people. He drew a line and said basically if people were on one side of the line they were foolish and if they were on the other side of the line they were prudent. That is a value judgment on His part, separating people on they basis of their judgments, deeds and attitudes thus making the Savior of the world intolerant.

Or is He? Perhaps He is being truthful and that truth itself draws lines. Perhaps people in this world make decisions that in the end disconnect them from God. They are disconnected not because others are in tolerant. but because they, themselves, draw the line, and disenfranchise themselves.

Take note, too, that in Jesus parable both the foolish and the wise are invited to the wedding feast. No one is left out except those who foolishly refuse to the things necessary to be a part of the festivities. When the party started the foolish were out shopping, preoccupied with activities born of their foolishness.

Moral? “Be on the alert, for you do not know the day nor the hour” (Matt. 25:13). The Bridegroom is on His way. When He gets here will we be ready for Him or out shopping for what we should have already had? Wise or foolish, that’s our issue.

Saturday, November 01, 2008

The passionate desire of the apostle Paul for the church in Thessalonica was, in his words to them, “that you would walk in a manner worthy of the God who calls you into His own kingdom and glory” (I Thes. 2:12). Of this longing for them he said, “we were exhorting and encouraging and imploring each one of you as a father would his own children” (I Thes. 2:11).

Christians are a called people. They are called out of one world into God’s “own kingdom and glory.” Can we get our minds around this? In this world of ours Christians are called to live as citizens of God’s kingdom and glory. This is what defines being Christian.

God has spoken His world into our lives and, like the believers in Thessalonica, by a grace we most likely don’t fully understand, we “accepted it…for what it really is, the word of God” (I Thes 2:13). That word lives in us and, as Paul says, “performs its work in you who believe” (I Thes. 2:13).

Our lives, as Christians, are being worked on by the living Word of God. Is this not a marvelous thing? God’s word “performs its work,” in a hundred or more different ways. We call it mercy, hope, love, power, divine intervention, comfort. Call it what we will in the end it is simply and profoundly, “Amazing Grace.”

What was it the poet said? “O to grace how great a debtor daily I’m constrained to be.”

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Once upon a time the apostle Paul planted a church in the city of Thessalonica. Before the new church became established, however, Paul was forced to leave the city because of great hostility from people who were not receptive to the Gospel. In time Paul heard what was going on in the life of the new church, and He was thrilled.

They had a reputation. They were known for their “work of faith,” their “labor of love,” and “the steadfastness of hope” they had in “our Lord Jesus Christ” (I Thes. 1:3). They had received the Gospel “in much tribulation” but they received it “with the joy of the Holy Spirit” (I Thes. 1:6). God had taken hold of that church and in spite of it’s rough beginning “the word of the Lord … sounded forth from them” (I Thes. 1:8). Theirs is a remarkable story of God and of an open and faithful people who allowed God to be God in their midst.

Every church has it’s own story and not every issue is repeatable in other situations. Yet, for every local church to be faithful to what God is calling forth in it, one thing must be present; that church must be willing to let God be God in the midst her people. This is non-negotiable. If this isn’t happening then that church isn’t really a church.

A key question for every local congregation might just be, “What does it mean in our Faith community for God to be God here?” From there a congregation might go in many different directions.; but, until God is allowed to be God in the midst, every thing else will be an exercise in futility.