Thursday, September 11, 2014

The Diagnosis

"We are in this struggle together.  You have seen  my struggle in the past, and you know that I am still in the midst of it."  Philippians 1:30 

     As I contemplated 9-11 this morning and the war we find ourselves in, I'm almost overwhelmed with the perplexities of it.  It's a very complicated conflict!  This war is not against another nation, although there are nations involved, it's not for the acquisition of land or wealth, although land and wealth are involved and it's not even against an evil empire.  It is simply a war over philosophy, or religion.  It's as if we were all of a sudden fighting the Buddhist, or the Hindus, or the Ku Klux Klan!  It's crazy!
     Now I have to offer a disclaimer right away, so I don't offend anyone.  I know there are Muslims who are not terrorists, who are not out to kill us.  I listen to them on T.V. and have come to admire many of them.  Dr. Jasser is one of the most reasonable, patriots we have in this country today.   It would be like someone looking at the Christian world and equating it all with the KKK, just because they claim Christianity.  For this reason I sympathize with people like Dr. Jasser.  He doesn't want to be identified with the terrorists any more than I want to be lumped in with the KKK  I understand that.  But having offered my disclaimer, I must continue to oppose the thinking of people like the terrorists we are fighting, no matter with whom they align themselves.
     One of the great distractions of this war is that we are now fighting with each other over the semantics of what to call the enemy.  Even the President felt it necessary to offer his disclaimer in his speech last night when he said, "Let's be clear about one thing.  This is not Islam!"  Okay, we get it.  We all know that people can take a body of writing, no matter how "holy" it's believed to be and twist it or select parts of it, to fit their evil desires.  And there are those among us who simply hate Islam.  They, or someone they love, have been offended or hurt by it.  But to be honest there are those among us who hate Christianity for the same reasons.  Evil in the heart of mankind finds a way to hurt and kill no matter what that man calls himself.  But the war we are in is serious.  It is serious because in this case the evil has found a way to concentrate or pool in cells all over the world and it is seeking the destruction of everyone and everything that is not like it.  The word and concept of cancer is a very apt illustration of it.
     So how do we fight cancer in the body?  There are many ways, all which have been effective in different ways and in different bodies.  Some fight it with radiation.  Radiation targets the spot and seeks to kill it at the source.  Some fight it with drug therapy.  Drugs are effective when it has spread to different parts of the body because the drug that seeks to kill it, goes throughout the system.  Some fight it through diet and exercise or a change in their environment that may be causing the cancer.  Some fight it with prayer or the seeking of Divine intervention that will change the source of the evil and defeat it at the heart.  Like I said before, all of these methods have at different times and in different lives been effective.  I'm sure that everyone reading this can point to one of these methods and offer a testimony of how they worked on someone they know.  So knowing this, I don't discount any of them.
     Now, equating this with Islamic Terrorism, shouldn't we be employing the whole package in our fight against it?  I say, send in the Military, (Radiation and Chemotherapy), send in aide workers to parts of the world where the evil is growing, both in or out of our country, (diet and exercise) and send in the missionaries, (prayer and spiritual instruction).
     Because, God has given us the perfect example, cancer and the fight against it, we need to learn from that example, stop fighting with each other over the methods and get on with the war!
This is my, 2 cents!
     Oh and let us not forget the souls who have given their all for the fight.  Today we remember and honor those heroes who have sacrificed to bring this evil to an end.  And in honoring them and watching the ceremonies commemorating 9/11/2002, let's remember that this was the day we received the diagnoses... "You have cancer! You need to take up arms and fight or you're going to die!"   Find your place in the battle and don't walk away from it.

"...for you are fighting the Lord's battles!"  1Samuel 28b

Monday, September 1, 2014

OUR CALL

  "They... of Whom This World Was Not Worthy!" Hebrews 11:38a

"Also, I say to you, whoever confesses Me before men, him the Son of Man will also confess before the angels of God." Luke 12:8a

     As I sat in the pew of my church Sunday morning, worshiping and adoring the Lord Jesus in song, then listening to my very capable, interesting, entertaining Pastor, preach an instructive, faith edifying sermon, surrounded by warm, welcoming, brothers and sisters in Christ, I was happy and comfortable and I left with the glow of a new bride.  Now I know that this introduction is a run on sentence, for all you "grammar Nazi's" out there, but I had to write it like that because it perfectly expressed where I was at that precise moment. And that's important to the story.  Stick with me, you'll understand later.
     I came home, ate lunch and settled down in my recliner for a Sunday afternoon nap.  Then I decided to check in on Facebook before I went to sleep.  There I came across this article:

Photo: NEWS | Iraqi Christian Village: From Sanctuary To Ghost Town In 2 Months

“Believe me, there is nowhere in Iraq that is safe for us.” This is the feeling for tens of thousands of Iraq’s Christians who have been forced from their homes and are now living in desperation just trying to survive. The advances of the militant group ISIS has emptied the Nineveh plain of Christians, forcing them from lands they have occupied for centuries.  Full Story: http://ow.ly/AQ7Ce
NEWS: Iraqi Christian Village: From Sanctuary To Ghost Town in 2 Months!


     I looked at their faces and my heart was touched, so I whispered a prayer for them, reposted the article and went to sleep.
     Then I went back to church last night for a night of singing and fellowship, communion and an ice cream social.  During communion, as I bowed my head and meditated on what the Lord has done for me, these faces edged their way into my mind.  I remembered that father's face, etched deeply with anger and frustration, and that mother's face showing the profound sadness engulfing them.  Then I remembered the kids,... innocent, questioning, insecure.  My heart became extremely heavy and I thought of two scriptures, which I wrote at the beginning of this blog: "Also, I say to you, whoever confesses Me before men, him The Son of Man, will confess before the angels of God." Luke 12:8  Now in my bible that verse is in Red.  That means the words were spoken by Jesus. It suddenly occurred to me that Jesus knows the name of that family and He's shouting it to the "angels of God"!  He's saying something like this, "These are MY people! Look at them, angels!  They could have stayed in their village and converted to Islam, and lived a few more years on the earth.  Instead they are "...wondering over deserts and mountains, hiding in caves and holes in the ground." (Hebrews 11:38b) ...for My Name!"  They are "...too good for this world!" (Hebrews 11:38a)
     I prayed for them again.  This time a sincere, heart felt plea for their safety, their rescue and that their faith would not fail.  Then I realized that this is my "call".  As I sit safely, happily in my pew, fellowshipping with my brothers and sister in the faith, I'm here, not just to absorb it all and leave feeling warm and fuzzy.  But I'm here, in this situation, to be a prayer warrior for these Hebrews 11 Christians.  It doesn't matter what their nationality or even their church affiliation might be.  They ARE my brothers and sisters.  Luke 12:8 is their birth certificate and proof of cutizenship in heaven.  My next prayer was for me and my American brothers and sisters.  It was...

Photo: Please prayerfully consider purchasing "STAND WITH - PRAY FOR" support bracelets from www.UnifiedChristians.com. All profits go to Samaritan's Purse to help provide food and clothing for Christians who have survived the brutal Islamic terrorist slaughter in Iraq. PLEASE SHARE.   

www.UnifiedChristians.com
Unified Christians

     I might add, help us to receive with understanding, "our call"!
                                                                           

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

The Looong View

"Wait on the Lord; Be of good courage, And He shall strengthen your heart; Wait, I say, on the Lord!" Psalm 27:14

     Last Sunday my Sunday School class prayed for a young man who had been in a accident on the streets of Chicago.  It's a tragic story.  He is a father and husband, a Christian who is actively engaged in youth work on those mean streets in that violent city.   This once dynamic, intelligent, young, Christian witness is now incapable of recognizing his loved ones.  The temptation to look up to God and ask "why?", is almost overwhelming.
     When we lived in Oklahoma we knew a pastor and his family who had been through four years of college, three years of seminary, and a year and a half of language school to prepare to go to Africa as missionaries.  When they had been on the field for a year, the wife became very ill and they had to come back to the states so she could receive treatment for an ongoing illness.  They never returned to Africa.  Once again the temptation to ask "why?" is strong.
     Then there is the case of the Cowens.  They trained to go to the mission field of Korea and after a short while, he became ill and had to return to the states where his wife nursed him for the rest of his life, never to return to full time Christian work.  "Why?" There it is again... the haunting, faith degrading, word that tends to disturb us and make us question everything that holds us together as Christians.
      Last week I watched a story on television.  The program was "Who Do You Think You Are?"  If you haven't seen it, I recommend it.  The format is, a celebrity goes in front of the cameras and begins a search for their roots.  They go to archives, and other sources and dig up information about their ancestors to find their family history.
     Last week's episode featured a young actress, who was curious about her father's family, because they were so closed about their background.  They never talked about their relatives and when asked, would evade the subject.  She knew the place they had lived, somewhere in Missouri, and she knew the name of her great grandmother, so she started there.  She found right away that this grandmother had been married and had several children, then for some unknown reason had dropped her husband's name and reverted to her maiden name.  As they dug into the history of this family, they discovered a terrible secret.  Her great grandmother had murdered her husband.  The story was, he woke up one morning and told her that she should go fix breakfast for everyone then prepare to die, because before night fall he was going to kill her.  She went and prepared breakfast then returned to the bedroom and found him sleeping, so she killed him with an axe.
     Now as terrible as this story is, the actress didn't stop there.  She kept digging and she was ultimately glad she did.  She discovered that her great grandmother had been convicted and sent to prison.  She was one of two female prisoners in the Missouri State Prison system at the time.  While in prison she gave birth to a daughter.  When the baby was born they allowed her to keep her in her cell, but they wouldn't provide her with any thing for the child.  Nevertheless she was able to keep her alive and someone, we don't know who, got wind of it and began circulating a petition to pardon the mother and daughter.  The people who signed that petition were some of the most prominent people in Missouri at that time.  She was pardoned after two years by the governor of Missouri and set free to raise her family.  Because of her tragic story, the Missouri prison system was reformed and made more humane and many laws were passed to protect helpless, abused women in that state.  Before she left the state the actress was able to visit her great grandmother's grave and honor her.  After many years and the passing of several generations, this mother's vindication and honor was revealed to her family.  They could now look up to her and be proud of her strength and what she accomplished historically.  What they had been ashamed to mention, could now be told with pride.
     It made me think about how often, when we don't see the end of a matter, it rattles us not to be able to make sense of a thing.  To go back to the previous stories, the pastor from Oklahoma who went to Africa, is now the pastor of one of the largest churches in Oklahoma City.  He is one of the most gifted speakers I've ever heard and has a very effective ministry.  The Cowens returned to the states and she became one of the most famous writers of personal devotionals in the modern church.  Her series on the Sovereignty of God, the Streams in the Dessert series, has inspired and encouraged thousands in the faith.
stock photo of endurance  - Marathon running race people competing in fitness and healthy active lifestyle feet on road - JPG      The end of the story of the young man in Chicago has not yet been written but when it is, those of us who are privileged to read it will be blessed.  We'll see the hand of God in the situation and once again proclaim with the Apostle Paul that "All things work together for good, for those who love God...." (Rom. 8:28)  Until then we need to learn to take the long view.  We need to be satisfied to wait upon the Lord.  Hebrews 11:13 says that the heroes of the faith mentioned in that chapter, from Abel to Sarah, "died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off were assured of them, embraced them and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth."   They had a far view and were satisfied to leave it with God.  Ultimately their faith paid off.  The work of the Messiah was the culmination of what they were promised, but they didn't live to see it.  We have to have the same long view of God's work on this earth.  We must cling to our assurance of His goodness, no matter how disappointed we are at how things turn out.  Rescue doesn't always come in our time but it will come.  Another verse in Hebrews says, "...let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him, endured the cross,..." Hebrews 12: 1b
     There's an old hymn that my own grandmother used to sing as she worked around the house.  I heard it so often as a child that it has implanted itself into my very soul.  The words to this old hymn  are:

"Father along, we'll know more about it,
Father along, we'll understand why.
Cheer up my brother, live in the Sonshine,
We'll understand it, all by and by."

     Lord, give me the endurance of the saints who have gone before me!

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

A BOY, A BOOK, AND A BATTLE

     Another of Pastor Gehrke's sermons, preached at Butternut Bible Church, on August 4, 1977, and still as relevant today.


Today's text:
   Acts 16:1-5


      As I have again and again, been encouraging you to go deeply into our Lord's blessed Word, I have thought to myself, Oh, the blessings we deny ourselves because we wade where God would have us plunge deeply.  God is not pleased for us to have a shallow, surface knowledge of His Word.  We shall be shocked when we arrive in heaven to discover what God had intended, what great plans He desired, but had to lay aside because we refused to study His Word in depth.  The chief weapon of God the Holy Spirit, is the Word.

     Within the four verses above is the culmination of such a story. I am convinced that a creative student of the Word, could write a book about it.  A story that would challenge the mind of every person today, who calls himself a 
Christian.  It is the story of a boy, a Book, and a great battle.  Let us first set the stage.


     The place is Lystra.  Lystra was a bawdy, brawny, frontier outpost filled with the Roman Guard.  It was in the Province of Lyconia in Asia Miner about 45 miles southeast of Iconium.  It was a GI town... a town where the military was stationed, a good place to live for that reason... it was protected.

     It was a place that attracted fine Greek businessmen along with Jews who were equally adept at making the most of a prosperous community.  The Jews who were there were from the dispersion.  As Jews always did and will do, they, though dispersed, adapt and become prosperous and well to do.  One of the families of wealthy Jews in Lystra had a beautiful daughter named Eunice.

     There were as you know, Greeks present.  Some of the Greeks had been enslaved while others, because of the Roman reward system, had become merchants and free men.  One of the Greek merchants who had done well was a young Greek man, who's eye was caught by the young Jewess, Eunice.


      In all probability it started innocently.  Eunice, was a fine, young, attractive woman who had been raised by a wealthy, progressive Jewish family.  In fact they were such a progressive family that she had been taught to read.  Not only could she read but her mother, Lois was also literate.  That was a very progressive thing in a Jewish household because at that time, it was for a woman to do things around the home, not to learn to read!  So Eunice was more than a typical, nicely dressed, young Jewish woman.  She was cultured enough to catch the eye of a wealthy Greek merchant.


     It is not unusual for prosperity to cause the lowering of standards.  Even in the best of families, this can happen.  It happened in this family.  They probably never meant for it to go as far as it did, but it did and the young Greek man and the godly Jewish girl fell in love.


     I suspect the father of Eunice was dead by this time for I cannot imagine a Jew, who so faithfully taught his family the scripture, would ever have allowed the marriage.  This is strictly speculation.  So I will add to the speculation by saying that it wouldn't surprise me to find that the mother of the family, Lois, saw the request for the hand of her daughter through the eyes of one who needed security for them both.  At any rate the two of them were joined in marriage.


     The marriage would be no problem for the Greek man for he was typically Greek and broad minded.  I can hear Eunice setting before him the conditions prior to their marriage.  "Now you must agree, if we have children, they must be brought up to fear God."  He must have replied, "Oh, don't worry, I myself have a great respect for God."

     He might have forgotten to mention that all gods were the same in his Greek culture.  "We are to be broadminded on the subject, and who am I to say that my god is better than yours?"

     So life began to flow and unfold.  A home was started in Lystra.  The Greek husband's business did well and occupied his attention.  Lois moved in with them and life seemed to be all they had ever dreamed it would be.

  
     There in the corner somewhere or maybe up on a shelf in a lovely vase of this upper class home, was a scroll.  And on that scroll was recorded the very Word of God.  Daily, Lois and Eunice read and studied it together.

     Then one day Eunice realized that she was going to have a baby.  It had to be a time of great excitement to the young Greek father.  All the Greek fathers desired sons... a scholar who could compete and excel in athletics and bring pride and honor to the family name.


     And sure enough, Eunice had a baby boy.  They decided they would name him a Greek name and compromised that his name would mean "Honored of God".  I told you he was a broad minded fellow!

     Immediately it began.  Paul, you remember in 2 Timothy 3:15, reminded Timothy, "that, from a babe (brephos, the smallest kind of a babe, possibly even a fetus) thou hast known the sacred writings which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus."
Image result for Pictures of Scrolls
     Lois and then Eunice would take turns.  One would hold the young baby and the other would go to that Book, that old book up there in the lovely vase and take it down and unroll it.  And they would read to the baby from the sacred writings.

"In the beginning, God (Ywh, Jehovah God) created heaven and the earth.  And the earth was waste and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep: and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the deep"

"And God spake all these words, saying, I am Jehovah thy God, who brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage,  Thou shalt have no other gods before me."


     "And when the days of their purification according to the Law of Moses were fulfilled,"... they desired to bring Timothy to the temple to be circumcised.  Eunice approached her Greek husband, knowing that he would not understand.


     "Husband, it is that time."
     "What time is that?"
     "It is that time for me to take him to the temple and have Timothy circumcised."
     "No!  No son of mine shall be subjected to such a foolish and stupid practice.  I will hear no more of this idiotic talk and that is final!"


      That was the beginning, the start of the battle for the mind and soul of Timothy.
   
     Day turned to week, turned to month, turned to year and one day the father came home and looked at the young boy and said, "He is now 6 years old.  It is time to begin his education."  He called a Greek slave/teacher, a man of refinement and letters, but a slave none the less.


     This man would take control of the educational needs of Timothy and all he had to learn.  All the years preceding this time, the reading of that Book, were of no importance to his new teacher.  Now he would be reading to him from other books.  The battle for the mind of Timothy was at full pitch now.  The young boy was taken out of the home and taught the best that money could buy.  He would be taught as well, athletic.  He was going to be living proof that the pride of the Greek father was not just words.  Now there new books brought into the life of Timothy,  the Illyad and Odyssey by Homer for example.

     In these books he would learn that there are many gods.  Gods that were like men, brawny, sensual gods who could run with great speed, and throw with great accuracy and love with great fervor.  They were gods who were bigger than life and they lived on Mount Olympus.  These gods was like the men who worshipped them and were as likely to be drunk and angry as sober and content.

     Then Timothy would come home and Eunice would reach up and get that old Book and would begin to read to him of a holy living God who lived in glorious light, whose radiance was so bright that none could look upon Him.

     Then he would go back to his Greek school and learn of Aristotle's "Golden Mean" which taught that all good lives of men of common sense contain happiness.  What is the good life?  A life of happiness.

     He would also learn what Plato had to teach him, that if a man can discover what is right, he will do it, therefore evil is the result of the lack of knowledge.

     And then he would come home and they would read to him from "That Book", that God was a holy God and He had said:

      Thou salt have no other Gods before Me.
      Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord Thy God in Vain.
      Thou shalt remember the Sabbath and keep it holy.
      Honor thy father and thy mother.
      Thou shalt not kill.
      Thou shalt not commit adultery.
      Thou shalt not steal.
      Thou shalt not bear false witness.
      Thou shalt not covet.

      He would go to his Greek school and hear and read of the great warrior heroes... men who seemed to always succeed for their own sakes.

     And he would come home and they would read from that Book about men who failed miserably, but who's great claim was their repentance and their faith in God, men like, Abraham, Jacob, Saul, David, and Solomon.

     The great battle rages... mother and the Bible, father and the things of his world that would win man's laurels and acclaim.  One old saying of the Greeks said,  "We Greeks do not need a God-Blanket like a woman!" 

     And Timothy looked around and it was obvious that these two worlds did not mesh.  They do not line up for the boy, the Book and the battle.

     In Acts 14 we see that Paul through the pressure of opposition was preaching now in the Province of Lycaonia, having been turned away by the Jews and now is ministering to the Gentiles.  Every where he went the Jews seemed to follow and try to destroy what Paul would accomplish.  That is why he had been forced to flee to Lystra.

     This was the story of when Paul had preached to the people of Lystra and healed a man.  When the people witnessed the healing they tried to worship the disciples, who refused their worship then the Jews stirred up the people against them and they stoned them and Paul and Barnabas barley escaped with their lives.  There's a possibility that in that crowd were Eunice and Lois.  Or maybe they heard the story from other Christian believers in Lystra.  At any rate they became believers and they then told Timothy.  The great battle for the boys mind was won by the Lord Jesus Christ.  He became a believer.

    Now on the second journey of Paul to Lystra, to come back and preach something exciting happened.  They learned that the young convert, Timothy who had been so immersed in the Word of God had been preaching the Word, in "season and out of season".  He was just a young man and some had "despised his youth" but he preached it with authority.  And when Paul came back, the Christians told him that they had a fine preacher in Timothy. And Paul went and heard the young convert and he loved him as a son.  He saw that through the conversion of a child a might victory had been won.


     Spurgeon once returned home and said to a man, "I have been privileged to lead two and a half people to the Lord today." The man said, "Oh, two men and a child?"  "No." Came the reply.  "Two children and a man."

     We need to teach our children to be  Mastered by this Book, not to just master the book.

   Too many people have this turned around.  They win the battle for emotions or even service at different times in their lives but they don't win the battle for their minds.

     When was the last time you shared with your children, the importance of the Word in your own life?  And for you fathers who think, "Oh, that is woman's work."  Is it really?  That was Timothy's father's attitude and we don't read of anything significant in his life except that he was a Greek.

     He was a Greek.  That was God's way of saying, "He really didn't care or believe anything.  He was a Greek.

     And like Timothy's father, so often parents today don't realize how great a struggle is going on for the minds of our children.  We see them busy in this or at, not causing any problems to us or others, faithful to church and we equate that with a committed mind set.  Don't misread your son!  "He'll get his religion later", or "He goes to Sunday School."  You are in a battle and it is in earnest and if you don't realize this every day, you are losing it by default.

     Or maybe the battle for your mind has not yet been won.  Do you just accept your faith because of your emotions or is your mind and heart committed to Christianity?

    We send our children off to secular schools where a secularized teacher pumps their minds full of the world's humanism for most of their day and we don't even know what's happening to them.  We're like the frog being boiled in water. Before he even knows it he's asleep, then before he knows it he's cooked! Satan turns them to humanism from God's grace.  We come to God's Word with our cookie cutter minds and God can't even speak from His Word because we think it is up to us to approve or disapprove what He says to us.  That is the essence of Humanism!

     I don't wonder your are a stubborn man and proud of it.
     I don't wonder that you are a proud, stubborn woman.
     I don't wonder that your children are very understandably walking down the same path you are.

     Eunice and Lois believed that old Book and devoted their lives to studying and reading it and teaching it to their children and because of that, not only by their persistence, but by example, they were able to produce a son who could stand in the face of all the pressures and diversions that Satan and the world would throw at him.

     So, how do we raise a Timothy in such a world as ours?  We raise him by the Book, day after day until the battle for his mind is won!

    

    

    


    




          

                  

Monday, August 4, 2014

"Onward Christian Soldier!"


     Yesterday our pastor preached on Matthew 14:1-12 and used this passage to address the dilemma of suffering and pain in the Christian life.  This is the perfect place to deal with that subject, because it is where we find the story of the beheading of John the Baptist.  It is the story of an unjust end to a faithful servant of God, who was guilty only of preaching the truth!  Not only was his execution unjust, but the executioner was a vile, wicked man, motivated by an evil woman and her sensual daughter.  Everything about the story seems unjust and upside down.  In short, as Pastor said, the whole situation stinks!
     As Christians it leaves us with and unsettled feeling.  It raises questions that we can't answer for ourselves, much less for others.  We just want to look heavenward and ask, "What's up with that, God?  Where is the champion on the white horse?"
     Pastor did a really good job of exposition of this passage and I can't add to that, but it prompted in me a whole world of introspection.  He pointed out at the end of the sermon how "James got the sword while Peter got rescued!"  This spurred me on to think that yes, I have had friends who prayed and were cured of cancer and others who prayed just as fervently and died of the same disease.  I knew of one couple who suffered through the darkest persecution you can imagine and prayed for deliverance daily.They claimed the promises of God from the Psalms, daily, for God to rescue them.  They were defeated by unjust men, in the end.  They very nearly lost their faith.  They both went for years unable to read the bible and believe it.  And in the end it destroyed their relationship with each other and they were divorced.  I'm happy to report that a faithful God kept their faith from failing completely, and they both serve him faithfully today.  But they paid a terrible price.
     So what are we to think, in the face of suffering, when God doesn't seem to be coming through for us?  How are we to process this as we sing about our God who is "Mighty to save!"  Do we join the crowd at the foot of the cross, shaking our fists at Jesus and shouting, "He saved others, Himself He cannot save.  Where is His God now?"
     As I revisited the subject in my own mind, yesterday during Pastor's sermon, I remembered how I had in the past, answered the question for myself.  I remembered how I had observed, when counseling other suffering Christians, how surprised they seemed to be by their situation. They always seemed to ask, "Am I in sin?  Haven't I been serving the Lord?  Have I done something wrong?"  The bottom line question was, "Why is this happening to me?"
     When I thought about this, I remembered thinking, "This person doesn't realize that we are in a War!  One of Pastor's points was that God told us this would happen. In 2 Timothy 2, we have a complete discussion about the Christian and persecution and the suffering of the saints and a promise that it will come.  The early church who suffered the most terrible things because of their faith, were taught to expect persecution and suffering. 
     So why are so many Christians today, shocked and surprised when it touches their lives?  I reiterate... they don't understand that they are in a War!  
Eden...God's perfect world
     To explain this radical sounding statement further, we have to begin at the beginning.  God made a perfect world, then man sinned and everything fell apart.  God stepped in and promised He would send a Savior to redeem mankind and the earth He had given man to occupy.  And although the redemption of the soul of man comes immediately, it is not complete until the end.  In the meantime, according to 2 Timothy 2 we are "soldiers" engaged in spiritual warfare, for the souls of men and women, with a very powerful enemy... Satan,... the devil himself!
      Just as in physical warfare, there will be casualties.  God did make a perfect world, but when man fell, so did his world, not only did weeds, thorns and thistles grow, but so did disease, and evil in the heart of man.  This is the world we live in.  Now some people are willing to accept this truth, but unwilling to accept the truth that once in a while, God breaks into His creation to intervene and rescue man.  The reason He does this, according to my pastor, is to show us He can!  These kinds of "rescues" serve to spread His truth and His power and He uses us, His soldiers, to accomplish this.  Listen to 2 Timothy 2:9 where the Apostle Paul said, "And because I preach this Good News, I am suffering and have been chained like a criminal.  But the word of God cannot be chained."  Paul understood the war and his weapons, and his part in it.  Listen to him in Ephesians 6:11 "Put on all of God's armor so that you will be able to stand firm against all strategies of the devil."  Once again, he saw the war!  
     Still others go to the opposite extreme and expect God to make them supremely happy, cure all their ills and keep them from all pain and suffering.  Never mind that Jesus died on a cross and all the apostles except John, died a martyr's deaths. Then we have the promise of God that "All those who live godly in Christ Jesus, will suffer..."   We must reject both extremes. 
Jesus calls His disciples
     When something bad happens, remind yourself of this.  We are fighting a war!  No person wants war.  That would be irrational.  My grandson came back a year ago from Afghanistan.  He knows the face of war and it's ugly.  No parent wants their young men and women to see the things and have to do the things, that war demands.  But to insure freedom, sometimes you have to fight.  That's what God has called us to do.  When we come to Christ, we enlist in His army.
     In the meantime, my pastor said, "Do what's right and trust the rest to God!"  Don't expect justice.  Expect instead, mercy and grace from God, to handle injustice.  And be blessed and surprised, like the maiden who greeted Peter at the gate, when God steps into our time and space to rescue us! And on the way sing this song to each other: 




I Will Rise by Chris Tomlin


There's a peace I've come to know 
Though my heart and flesh may fail 
There's an anchor for my soul 
I can say "It is well" 

Jesus has overcome 
And the grave is overwhelmed 
The victory is won 
He is risen from the dead 

[Chorus:] 
And I will rise when He calls my name 
No more sorrow, no more pain 
I will rise on eagles' wings 
Before my God fall on my knees 
And rise 
I will rise 

There's a day that's drawing near 
When this darkness breaks to light 
And the shadows disappear 
And my faith shall be my eyes 

Jesus has overcome 
And the grave is overwhelmed 
The victory is won 
He is risen from the dead 

[Chorus:] 
And I will rise when He calls my name 
No more sorrow, no more pain 
I will rise on eagles' wings 
Before my God fall on my knees 
And rise 
I will rise 

And I hear the voice of many angels sing, 

"Worthy is the Lamb" 
And I hear the cry of every longing heart, 
"Worthy is the Lamb" 
[x2]

[Chorus:] 
And I will rise when He calls my name 
No more sorrow, no more pain 
I will rise on eagles' wings 
Before my God fall on my knees 
And rise 
I will rise






Saturday, July 26, 2014

Back to Eden

     Well, last week Kelly and I found a big box of Ted's sermons.  A real treasure for our family and anyone else who appreciated his preaching.  I sorted through them and found some gems.  I also found some with missing pages, which was very disappointing. However, I may publish them anyway and leave the missing pages to one's imagination.  They are that good.
     In light of the fact that we just celebrated the anniversary of the "moon walk", I decided to publish his sermon about that subject that he preached just before the feat occurred.  The only thing I've changed are some typos and misspellings and the translation of the bible he used.  So I hope you all enjoy, "Back To Eden".

Our moon
"We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy but because they are hard..."
                                       President John F. Kennedy

Genesis 2:15 and 3:1
"The Lord God placed the man in the Garden of Eden to tend and watch over it.

                                                                        and


The Garden of Eden
"The serpent was the shrewdest of all the wild animals the Lord God had made.  One day he asked the woman, "Did God really say you must not eat the fruit from any of the trees in the garden?"


"There is a voice that is shouting across the United States today...
 and it's a voice heard... in echo...in fact...
                                                              literally around the world!

It is a voice raised that can claim the attention of most of mankind... and that voice is telling a story.

It is telling a story of brave men... in shinny suits, mounting silvered rockets... riding on red and blue tongues of flame, to the very edge of earth's pull...

It is telling a story... a story that starts with the roar of a booster engine...
           and ends in the coasting silent ride to a literal long ago and far away...

Already... poets are writing their lines... newspapers have bedded
down their stories of success...

"...one giant step for mankind!"
And like some great church responsive reading, that voice, tells of another portion of a mission completed...
                            and the masses fill in with their "amens", and back and forth they go until splash down.   

I wondered...why? then I thought, "Maybe he is just doing what God meant for man to do when God said the He should subdue the Earth and have dominion over it...

But in all candor, I had to eliminate that...

It would be very hard to convince me that the reason we are spending billions going to the moon is to glorify God...

No, we are not making this trip for Him... nor because we wish to subdue the earth.


Back To Eden!
And I don't think we are doing this great and awesome feat out of idle curiosity...

What I really believe is... man is trying to get back to Eden!

There are few if any that would argue that going to the moon is not fantastic... adventurous...spectacular!  There is no question about that.

There are many adjectives we could use to describe the men, the equipment, and the task that is set before us.

And history like today's crowds gone beserk, will note this day with all the pomp and ceremony due it.

And I shouldn't be surprised if we aren't for now and forever more going to be blessed with a "Moonday,... maybe an eighth day of the week!

But there is another side to this day.  There is another side to this tale told and we should be mindful of it.  A voice is trying to be heard above the crowds that will cheer.  It is a side that pleads for our attention... with the quiet voice of reality.  It is a voice that speaks not of frills and thrills, but a voice of hope, that we are heading back to Eden!

     These are truly challenging times...

     We are living in an age where no matter how adventurous the man, no matter how far his vision, no matter how wistful his dreams, mankind can somehow meet the occasion and do just about exactly what he sets out to do!

     I was wondering... what is it about man that makes him so quick to answer a challenge... what makes him so quick to "rise to the occasion"?  There seems to be literally no limit to what man can do... why is he this way?

     In today's scripture we find Adam and Satan challenging God's Law... a Law that if obeyed, promises harmony, fulfillment, joy and peace, that brings with it a "life more abundant".

     But they chose a different course.  They didn't only break God's Law, they broke themselves upon it, as God had promised... "In the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die!"

     The life of freedom and fellowship was sold and man's sin resulted in an infectious condition that affected all mankind and finally hung a beautiful Savior on a cross at Calvary.

     A creation was thrown into disharmony and Paradise possessed became truly, Paradise lost.  Not just for Adam, but for all mankind as sin became universal and death became the wage!

     From that time until today, and as they will tomorrow, man has sought and searched for his way back to Eden. 


God's Judgment!
The way does not seem clear... but there is a way...there is a way we can get back to Eden.

     But it is a way whose path leads through God's unshakeable, never changing, rocks of judgment.  It is a way that leads along shear faced cliffs and deep ravines and along dangerous soul claiming ridges.

     One author had declared that we as a people are living off the "fat of the world".

     I think she was closer to real and pointed truth than even she realized.  We are a people living off the fat of the world!  And while we may not be aware of it, we are like Marie Antoinette who when she was parting the Rhelm, while her people starved said, "They have no bread?  Let them eat cake!"
     There is something terribly wrong when we become more concerned with going to the moon, than caring for the people here on earth.

     Eric Frome said, "While people believe in God, they aren't that concerned with Him, or His kingdom."  And I might add, that kind of faith is not a saving belief in God!

     But just to set the record straight, let me say this, I believe science is a wonderful thing, a gift from God, but like a coin, it has two sides and we want to look at both, so we can more certainly know how to spend it or invest it.

     The great danger in science, as in its discoveries, lies in it's misdirection or misuse.  Because  man is by nature sinful and unclean, too many if not most of science's blessings have become curses to the very people they seek to serve.

     Because our morality does not match our intellect, the misuse of science becomes greater than its use.  Not until man's morality catches up with his intellect will mankind through science, be able to solve more problems than it creates.

     That's why I believe that this moon shot, as tremendous as it is, is just another widening step in the gap that lies between man's morality and his intellect.

Back to Eden, mankind's dream...
     There seems to be a feeling in the air that when man steps on the moon, it will prove something,... they haven't said what,... and man can go from there to greater things, bigger things.  He thinks to himself, "Things are going to get better and all mankind will live better and longer and, we're all going to be heading back to Eden!"

     Omar Bradley said, "If we are going to save ourselves from the instruments of our own intellect, we had better soon get ourselves under control and begin making the world safe for living."

     "If we are going to save ourselves..." therein lies the trouble!
I am sometimes amazed at the foolishness of some of our leaders.  Mankind will not, nor cannot save themselves!

"For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods... knowing good and evil."

     The devil trapped Eve with that line of thought.   Mankind just is not able to withstand the devil without God, neither then or now!  Added to this, mankind is no longer concerned with doing what is right... he is  now more concerned with getting along and adjusting to the wrong!

     But God, who made the moon and is never changing, is concerned with what is right and His voice that echos down through the centuries says that the way back to Eden leads through the cross of Christ!
"I am the way, the truth and the life..."


























Tuesday, July 15, 2014

"The Ways of God, And The Real War On Women "

     Psalm 103:7 says that God "made known His ways unto Moses, His doings to the children of Israel."  One version of the bible translates this word "ways" as "character".  In other words God revealed to Moses who He was.  Have you ever heard or used the phrase... "Oh that just his/her way."? When we hear that we understand that to mean, "Oh that's just the way he/she is."
     The person that utters that statement about another knows that person well.  They are saying, "I know this person and I can assure you that his/her action just reflects or reveals who they are."  That's what the bible is saying here.  It is teaching us that we mere mortals can know the God of the universe.  He wants us to know Him and "how He is".  He will during our lifetimes reveal Himself to us, if we really want to know Him.
     I'm 76 years old and I just last week was made aware again of this "way" of His.  It's always so exciting to find out something "new" about someone you love... especially God!  So naturally I thought about it over and over and naturally I couldn't wait to write about it.
     Another verse from the psalms that I've clung to over the years of wanting and needing God's help and provision in my life, has been Psalm 138.  It too talks about "how God is".   Listen to it from the Living Translation starting with verse 5.


"Yes, they (every king of the earth) will sing about the Lord's ways ...though the Lord is great, He cares for the humble, but He keeps His distance from the proud!  Though I am surrounded by troubles, You will protect me from the anger
of my enemies.  You reach out Your hand, and the power of Your right hand saves me. The Lord will work out His plans for my life for Your faithful love, O Lord, endures forever.  Don't abandon me, for You made me."

    See how much we learn about "who He is" in this Psalm?  But He has more "ways" then is revealed here.  He wants to live with us every day and show us more and more of His unfathomable character.  He wants us to know Him.  How great it that?  God wants little me to know Him!  And not just know Him from reading the bible, but know Him from experience of living with Him every day and looking for His hand in our lives.  Today I want to illustrate this with a story.
Me and my parents at the farm. I was 14 or 15.
    When I was a little girl, my family took an annual summer vacation to my Grandpa and Grandma Stanley's farm. (See The Haunted Farm)  I loved that place and those people.  There were lots of kids to play with, a large farm to explore, good food and love on every corner from aunts, uncles, cousins, Grandma and Grandpa.  It's one of the greatest memories of my childhood.  We went at various months during the summer and each month held it's own special delight.  June was the beautiful month with flowers in full bloom, the weather not as severe as July and August and lazy days in the shade.  Then there was July... hot, hot July.  This is when we got to go swimming in a muddy pond or a nearby creek.  This is when my Dad would load us up in the car and take us to a movie just to get us out of the hot house and into a cool theater for a while.  July was when a cool dipper of water against the cheek was almost heaven.  Then there was August,... harvest time.  I know that's early for you northerners but for Texas, it's August.  Grandpa was making syrup at the mill, my uncle was selling watermelons by the truck loads to nearby farmer's markets (and we were eating the leftovers).  The women were sitting all day on the back porch preparing food for canning, peas, green beans, corn, tomatoes, black-eyes peas, okra, squash, and I was grabbing a salt shaker and running to the garden to glean all of the missed ones for myself.  August was wonderful!  At night before we went to bed, all of the kids, maybe six, eight, or ten of us, depending on how many families gathered there for the harvest, would line up on the big front porch and Grandma would come around with a towel over her shoulder and a wash pan of water and wash each of our feet.  She would say, "Your not going to bed between my clean sheets with those feet!"  It was a great time for us because as she reached each child she would ask about our day and it would be our "turn" to talk to Grandma.  But there was one other thing that happened in August that was significant to me.  August was the time when Grandma washed and dried her quilts. 
     Grandma had probably close to twenty, brightly colored quilts that she and others had made over a lifetime.  Since there was no central heating in that old farm house, quilts in the winter time were a precious commodity.  Every year they had to be washed and hung out to dry so they would be clean and ready for the coming winter.  She would wash them, fold them and stack them in the corner of one of the bedrooms where they would be waiting for some family member to use when the wind started to blow.  I used to love to go to that stack and stand there and look at the different patterns, ask questions about their names and what they meant because each quilt tells a different tale and then listen to an aunt tell the story of each patch of cloth.  They would say, "That's the dress I wore to the prom." or "That's Aunt Kat's dress she made for the such n such." or "That's the baby dress Mama made for Katy when she was one year old."  They all told a story.  I'd literally spend hours there if I could get someone to sit there and talk to me about the stack of quilts.  Not to mention, they were soft and smelled heavenly!  While they hung on my Grandma's clothes line they would absorb the sunshine and the smells of the earth and a hundred different kinds of flowers.  For me it was a trip into all the senses of the farm.
     When my Grandmother died, I was all grown up and overseas with my husband and children.  When I heard about her death I grieved, of course, because I loved her and she loved me but the one thing I thought of that belonged to her that I would have liked to have had, was one of her quilts.  Of course I was in no position to ask for anything.  She had daughters and granddaughters who lived close by, who would divide up her worldly goods, such as they were.  But the quilts meant so much to me and I longed to have one.
     Last year I took a trip to east Texas where I attended the funeral of one of the aunts.  I then went to visit the last of the sisters left on that side of the family.  While we were talking and reminiscing about our times on the farm as children, she said, "I have a room that's full of  Mama and Daddy's stuff.  Would you like to go through it?  There are some interesting things there."
     "I'd love to go through it!" I said.
     So we went into the room filled with old stuff, some of it I recognized and some of it I didn't.  Everything smelled a little musty but even that was a pleasant smell to me.  I looked at the old dishes, some old kitchen tools, an old family bible and a few nick-nacks they had owned, ran my hand over them and tried to remember if I'd seen them before.  Then my aunt said, "Would you like to take something home with you?  You can have anything you like.  I realize you flew down here and there's probably not much here you can take back but your welcome to anything you'd like."
     I said, "Yes, I'd love to have something of my Grandma and Grandpa to show my kids." I looked around again for something I recognized from my childhood.  Then she added, "How about the old bible?  It's full of family history and I know you love history."
     "That would be great." I said, and started leafing through the old pages.  (She told me a story about this bible which will probably appear in another blog.  It's too long to tell in this one.)
     Finally we started to leave the room with me clutching my treasure and wondering how I was going to get the large, fragile old book home in my luggage.  She turned to me and said, "Oh, and there's one other thing you might be interested in.  I have a couple of Mama's old quilts left.  Would you like to see them?"
Grandma Stanley's quilt
     My heart literally skipped a beat.  Grandma's quilts... did she say Grandma's quilts!  Before I could ask the question she was pulling me into another room where there was a large storage closet.  She said, "They are up there on the top shelf."  The two of us old women were trying our best to drag out the quilts from a shelf that was at least three feet over our heads and she said, "Hold on.  I'll go get my son to get it."
     In a short time she had the quilts down and spread out so I could see them and she said, "Take your pick!"
     I was stunned.  They were very old and faded but still in pretty good condition.  She was talking the whole time I stood there trying, to absorb the fulfillment of this dream.  She said, "Mama made these of recycled family clothing, stitched them by hand and stuffed them with cotton from Daddy's cotton fields."
     "I know."  I said, unable to say more because I had a lump in my throat.  She had no idea how much it meant to me and I really couldn't explain it to her at this time.  I ended up putting the bible and the quilt in my luggage that I took home with me and mailing all my clothes that I'd brought to Texas.  "The clothes are replaceable, the bible and the quilt are not."  I explained to my friend, Mary Jo Reed, who was helping me with it.
     Now I tell you this story to illustrate something about the "ways of God".  My aunt didn't know what the quilt meant to me, but my God knew.  He knew the heart of that little girl in 1948 and the desires of the heart of that young woman, when she heard of her Grandma's death, and the heart of the old gal sitting in that room in 2014, and it was His "way" to want to please her.  Just like we want to give something to our children at Christmas that will bring a smile to their faces and delight their hearts, God wants to do the same thing for His children.
     I learned all over again, how God is my Father, who wants to make me happy.  I do a terrible thing when I ignore, or don't recognize His daily goodness to me.  It must grieve Him when I mummer and complain.
    God is good to His children... that's just "who He is"!
    Now one more thing about quilts, they also give us the history of American women...
strong, stalwart, female warriors who settled this country, nurtured families, and passed on a wealth of character and common sense that we still profit from to this day.  Below is a poem that illustrates these sisters from the pass, who we'd be well to remember and imitate.  It reminds me of my Grandmother and my aunts so I'm including it so you'll know them better.

MY OLD QUILTING FRAMES
If my old quilting frames could talk
What tales they'd have to tell.
Of things they heard, while women worked
Or stopped to rest a spell.
For they'd hear of training children
And ornery husbands, too.
Of how to mend young Willie's pants.
 Of peach preserves to do.
 Sometimes the neighbor's ear must burn
 While needles jabbed that quilt.
But mostly kindly things were said
And happy friendships built.
Of all these things my quilting frames
Ne're breathed a single word
But, kept in strictest confidence
The tales they overheard.
...Author Unknown...
     The fact that we don't hold these women up as examples for our daughters to admire, is the real "war on women".

Note: The week after I wrote this blog, another friend came out to do some repairs for me. Before he left I asked if he'd put up my quilt rack on my wall so I could display my Grandma's quilt.  He graciously did this for me and it made me very happy, again.

This is how it looks on my wall now with family pictures perched above it.


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