Wednesday 30 January 2013

The Sabbath & Obedience

There are many today in our frenetic society who pay little or no attention to the Sabbath. I am not referring here literally to the specific days of the week set aside by the Muslim, Jewish and Christian traditions, but the concept of Sabbath rest itself. This is a weekly day where work and concerns of the world are supposed to be set aside so that concentrated attention and thanksgiving can be given to the things that God has done in one's life. Sabbath rest is necessary for reflection, listening and formulation of godly response for the coming week. Without it we are just flailing around under our own less than sufficient and sin-driven power.
Hebrews four, though, goes even farther...suggesting that not taking a Sabbath is disobedience which demonstrates a lack of faith, a hardening of our hearts which results in an inability to receive and live the good news, falling back into our pre-conversion worldly ways. Sabbath isn't an optional unimportant choice. It is an imperative of faith.
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Wednesday 23 January 2013

Hopelessness is an Optical Illusion!

Hopelessness is an Optical Illusion!

When life gets blurry, God wants us to see through the obstacle of our illusions to the kingdom reality.  One day, as Jesus and his disciple came upon a blind man, the disciples immediately saw an obstacle. They were captured by an illusion.  They didn’t even ask or expect Jesus to do something for the man. They didn’t ask if there was any hope for this guy. They didn’t ask Jesus to heal him. All they said was, “Who could we blame?”  They wrote the man off automatically. When you come upon a situation and the first thing you see is an obstacle that leads to a place of hopelessness, there’s nothing else to do but find someone or something to blame for it. Sadly, that is often the first response, even for Christians!  However, it is not a kingdom response. It is an elusion.

Jesus does not allow the disciples to go there. In John 9:3 (NIV) Jesus says, “Neither this man nor his parents sinned,” said Jesus, “but this happened so that the works of God might be displayed in him.  In many ways an optical illusion is a lot like an elusion, because, when we are captured by what we see, we often end up avoiding the reality…trying to turn what we see into something it isn’t. An optical illusion is when what you see doesn’t equal what is real.

 

Now…a caveat here…I am not saying that the obstacles we face in life are not real.  They are very real.  Nor am I saying that the pain associated with those struggles in is not real.  It is very real.  However, as believers…as Christians, in the moment that we find ourselves in a place of hopelessness, where there is nothing to do but assign blame, we are actually dealing with an illusion. What God wants us to do is to see through it to His glory and provision. When things get fuzzy and life throws you an obstacle, we are called to push beyond the illusion of hopelessness, because Christians are a people of hope. If we don’t have hope, and there isn’t something a lot better than this, what is the point in believing at all?

Wednesday 2 January 2013

More on Multiplication Through Reproduction

Here is another interesting quote from Neil Cole's Organic Church.  "Christianity is always just one generation away from extinction....Yet because of the power of multiplication, we are also one generation away from worldwide fulfilment of the Great Commission."  (p.105). Cole's premise is that if a believer were to lead just one person a year to Christ, and then disciple them to do the same, the whole world could be reached within 35 years!  

Just one disciple...that shouldn't be all that difficult....and certainly within the realm of possibility. However, that would take intention and courage, sacrifice and perseverance.  It would need to become the single most important activity of our individual journey of faith.  I am not entirely sure of the math, but it seems to me that if our little congregation of 15 were to follow this principle and each new believer in turn lead one person a year to faith in Jesus, we would be 480 strong in five years and in ten years could conceivably make disciples of the whole present population of Squamish!   

Now think about what could happen if every believer in every church in our community were to take the Great Commission seriously.  The numbers are staggering and the possibilities are endless.  And yet we struggle, bound by fear of failure and weak faith.  Do we even believe that God could use us as His instruments?  Do we trust that the Holy Spirit will resource and empower us to fulfil this calling?   Perhaps not....for if we did, things would look a lot different around here.

So, my prayer today is that the perfect love of Jesus will so infuse each of us that all fear is cast aside and that we will be empowered and enabled to disciple disciples who will disciple disciples until the whole population within our sphere of  influence will come to an abiding and confident faith in Christ.     Amen

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Tuesday 1 January 2013

Community

This week as I was thinking and praying about a teaching and ministry focus for our fledgling, but growing church, it occurred to me that we were probably ready for some in depth work around what it really means to be a community of believers. At work the wee hours of this first day of the New Year I was re-reading Neil Cole's  Organic Church and came across a wonderful quote that strikes at the heart of what I have been thinking about how to transform us from a small group who gather occasionally for worship and study, into a body marked by deep and enduring relationships.

Cole speaks of church reproduction rather than multiplication, and insists that we don't need seminars and courses to learn how to reproduce. It is in our DNA...a natural part of the human condition. "Inbred in all living things is a desire to reproduce. It drives us.".   He goes on to suggest that reproduction is the product of intimacy. "Even among churches, reproduction is the product of intimacy - with Christ, His mission, His spiritual family, and the lost world." (p.93) 

So, I am thinking I will spend some considerable time over the next couple of months teaching my brothers and sisters what it means to be in intimate relationship with Jesus, with other believers and with the community around us.

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