Wednesday, July 2, 2014

July 2


JOSHUA 4
“Heap of Birds,” now there is an unusual name. That was the last name of a guest lecturer that the OSU art department had on campus. I wonder, “What is the significance of that name?” “What is the glory behind it?” Here at the crossing at Gilgal, Israel created a heap of stones. There intentionally was glory behind it. It was to be a reminder to generations to come of how the Lord caused them to cross the Jordan on dry ground. It was a memorial not only for Israel’s generations but also for all the peoples of the earth. It has significance even for me for I am one of those who in the flesh are not part of the descendants of Israel. It speaks to me of the miraculous provision of the Lord. It speaks for all ethnic groups for here is a heap of stones that speaks to an event which transcends the cultural biases of all ethnic groups. It is simple and clear, “The Lord delivers His people.” Indeed we serve a glorious King. Speak His glory to someone today!
--Pastor john

PSALM 1
Is pleasure a choice? Dictionary.com states that pleasure is, “1) The state or feeling of being pleased. 2) enjoyment or satisfaction derived from what is to one's liking; gratification; delight.” I often fall into the trap of thinking that pleasure is more or less a spontaneous state that arises as a response to my experiences. While pleasure can be that, the deepest pleasures are something more. Back in the 70’s there used to be a T-shirt that said, “Candy is dandy, but sex won’t rot your teeth.” It was the age before the eruption of AIDS and the multitude of STDs. It was an age of the pursuit of pleasure for the sake of pleasure. It was an age that at times professed sex as being little different than any other bodily function. I even remember it as being equated to drinking water. I also remember Josh McDowell quipping, “Let me tell you, there is a whole lot of difference between drinking a glass of water and experiencing sex.”
We are now culturally and corporately reaping the rewards of pursuing that short-term pleasure gratification. More than half of our young people are infected with STDs. Abortion remains unabated. The greatest contributor to poverty is single parent households. We no longer understand what marriage and family should be. Culturally, we have walked with the ungodly; we have stood in the path with sinners; now we are sitting in the seat of scoffers. Marital union (sex), marriage and family were meant to reflect the image of God and to reflect the marriage of Christ and the church. What was meant by God to be a pleasure and a delight of the deepest kind has become a confusion and battleground. What happened?
The allure, the delight, of pleasure varies greatly according to many factors. In many ways, the pleasure experienced is directly proportional to the choices one makes on the road to the experience. In many ways the deepest pleasures are the result of many choices that postpone an immediate shallower pleasure for a deeper longer lasting pleasure at a later time. Hebrews 11:25 tells us that Moses chose to ‘suffer affliction with the people of God’ rather ‘than to enjoy the passing pleasures of sin.’ Why would anyone choose affliction over pleasure? Moses knew that a greater pleasure awaited him down the road if he chose affliction now. He had to lose his position in Pharaoh’s court, experience 40 years of living in the desert herding sheep and goats, 40 years of leading a stubborn and rebellious people. He chose that to experience communion with God. During the last 40 years of his life, he had occasion to enjoy the pleasure of speaking with the Lord face to face as a man speaks with his friend. Indeed, Moses is currently experiencing unimaginable pleasure in the presence of the Lord.
I like that famous quote of C.S. Lewis found in The Weight of Glory, and Other Addresses:
It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.
The Lord calls us to take delight in His Law, to meditate upon it day and night. Meditation takes effort and work. There are many other things that might promise greater short term delights. Watching television takes less effort than meditating upon the Lord, and in that sense, it promises to bring greater short term pleasure, but it is passing. The Lord requires us to make the choice to meditate upon his Law. We make it a delight. Yes, pleasure in the Lord is a choice. As Moses made the choice for a present affliction in order to receive a future pleasure, so too, we choose meditation upon/with the Lord as a delight in order to receive the pleasure of speaking with Him face to face and the eternal pleasure of His presence.
Would I choose to turn down the alluring propositions of the most beautiful Hollywood actress? Absolutely! Why? Because the long-term benefits of pursuing pleasure with my wife are so much greater. Should I choose focusing upon the needs of my wife above my own needs? Absolutely! Why? Because the long-term benefits will bring greater pleasure to me, because in so doing I am bring Glory to God, because that is what He does. Pretty self-centered isn’t it? Yes, but that is the way God designed it!
Yes pleasure is a choice. The deepest pleasures always require postponing a present pleasure for future reward. It requires the ability to see the future. It requires the ability to spend time in His law. Those who say that they do not have time to spend daily reading and meditating upon the word of God are lying to themselves. What they are really saying is that they prefer the passing pleasures of the present above the eternal reward of His glory. What they are really saying is that they have time to walk in the counsel of the ungodly but not the Lord. What they are really saying is that they have time to stand in the path of sinners but not with the Lord. What they are really saying is that they have time to sit with the scorners but not the Lord. Yes pleasure is a choice, let us pursue a pleasure of the deepest kind, the pleasure of His presence. Let us find Him in the word! Let us put off lesser pleasures that keep us from pursuing Him! For His presence and glory are greater and deeper! Indeed we serve a glorious King. Speak His glory to someone today!
--Pastor john

JEREMIAH 27
For almost one hundred years the USA has been, if not the top world power, then one of the top world powers. Certainly from the time that I was born until recently, we have been the most powerful nation on earth. It is the glory of God to appoint the boundaries of the nations and to declare who can live within them. But God brings an end to all nations. He humbles them all at the appropriate time. That is part of His glory. What if He came to us through a prophet to tell us that we must submit to another nation? There would be a great uproar against that prophet!
The Lord gives Jeremiah a horrible task. He gives him the mission of going to the king and telling him to submit to the king of Babylon. It is nothing short of sedition! But Jeremiah knows the greatness of the Lord. He is steadfastly submitted to the lordship of his Lord. After all, He is the One who made the heavens and the earth. He is the One who set the boundaries of the seas. By His great power and outstretched arm He gives whatever He wants to whomever He wants. Why then am I so focused on my boundaries, or my housing, or my wealth, or my health? It is all under His control anyway. Jeremiah was so focused on the glory of the Lord that most of the time he could not but help the horrible tasks assigned to him. It was the only way to continue to experience the glory of the Lord. Indeed we serve a glorious King! Speak His glory to someone today!
--Pastor john

ACTS 11:1-30
Well ministry to the Gentiles isn't secure yet. There are still tens of thousands back in Jerusalem, who did not see the vision of either Peter or Paul. Yes they had probably heard about Paul's conversion and commission by now. But, they probably chalked it up to the ravings of a madman, especially since Paul had left the area and had been gone for over three years now. They hadn't heard about Peter's vision or Cornelius' vision, or about the evidence of the Baptism of the Holy Spirit at Cornelius' conversion. All they knew was that Peter had entered the house of a Gentile! And, gasp, he ate with them. This goes against 1400 years of tradition on how God had worked with the Children of Israel!
It’s a good thing Peter was backed against the wall (see yesterday's comments). He would have caved otherwise. But it is the glory of our Lord to demonstrate His desire so that for all times it might be demonstrated that it is not about tradition. It is about His glory. It is His glory to bring people of all culture and subcultures to make them one, to bring people of one generation and another generation to make them one. It is His glory to change them so that they cease complaining about their brothers and sisters who are different. The church today has much to learn from this. Anyway, as I was saying, Peter was backed against the wall. He was being called on the carpet for breaking tradition. All that He could do was recount what the Lord had done. None of what had happened had been of his initiative. Having heard the story, most of the cooler heads in the group saw the Lord was in it. The church approved the ministry to the Gentiles. The glory of Jesus has prevailed. 1400 years of tradition is broken. Now that indeed is amazing.
But publicly announcing the possibility of breaking tradition and actually doing it are two different things. Almost everyone is still afraid to do it. But there were some men (funny, they're un-named) who grew up in Cyprus and Phoenicia (they grew up playing with Gentiles) who took bold steps. Horror of horrors they spoke the glory of Christ to Gentiles in Antioch (a long way away from Jerusalem). And the glory of God fell upon them, the hand of the Lord was with them. Barnabas, ever the son of encouragement, put 2+2 together. He traveled all the way to Tarsus, found Paul who had been commissioned to go to the Gentiles and brought him to Antioch to begin teaching the Gentiles about Jesus. Somebody finally got it right.
After a year of ministry, the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ was so great among the Gentiles of Antioch that the non-believing Gentiles began to call the believers, "Christians," which means little Christ or of Christ. The glory of Christ was so great upon them that others recognized Christ in them. O that Jesus would do that in us!
God has a sense of irony. He warned and sent a famine to Judea. Apparently many of the Jewish believers in Judea were in dire straights. And the Jerusalem church was too impoverished to help each other. How did God provide for them? He used the Gentile believers of Antioch to send relief. Those people, with whom the Jews would not eat because their tradition said it would make them unclean, God sent by their hands food for the Jewish believers to eat. And He used Saul/Paul of all people to deliver it. That is ironic. That is also glorious. Our Lord breaks down barriers that divide people! In the words of Randy Matthews, who was rejected by the church for his contemporary music, "It took a carpenter to tear down my walls, it took a stronger hand than mine." Jesus is glorious in the way He tears down walls. Indeed we serve a glorious king! Speak His glory to someone today!
--Pastor John

No comments:

Post a Comment