Religious Fervor

 

The chilling truth as to why we can’t understand religious extremists.

Click the start arrow on the video or the link below to view the video.

Religious Fervor

Hate Cannot Drive Out Hate:  Only Love Can Do That

Martin Luther King, Jr. jpg

The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral,
begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy.

Instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth.

Through violence you may murder the hater, but you do not murder hate.
In fact, violence merely increases hate.

So it goes.
Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars.

Darkness cannot drive out darkness:  only light can do that.
Hate cannot drive out hate:  only love can do that.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Happy New Year!

Great is thy faithfulness squareHappy New Year! That exclamation rings with hope for a new year full of new beginnings. There’s a spirit of optimism that things left undone in the old year can be tackled in the new with renewed strength and vitality. There is also the anticipation of new adventures and new horizons to be explored. However, why do we wait until January 1st for a rebirth of all things hopeful. The fact is that God is all about rebirth and restoration. We know that if anyone is in Christ he is a new creation. Old things have passed away and everything has become new. However, that spirit of newness is not limited to the point at which we were born again. It can be a daily experience if we trust what he has said in Lamentations 3 – His mercies are new every day. That spirit of optimism and hope can be ours on January 1st and every other day of the year – on the day we are reborn into the family of God and on every other day of the year. Great is God’s faithfulness. We will hope in Him today, tomorrow, and the day after that because His mercies are new every day and His steadfast love never ceases.

The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases;
his mercies never come to an end;
they are new every morning;
great is your faithfulness.
“The Lord is my portion,” says my soul,
“therefore I will hope in him.”

Lamentations 3:22-24 (ESV)

Baseball – America’s Pastime

God Bless America

Baseball – America’s Pastime

That’s quite a claim in the middle of football season and yet, here we  are about to begin the 6th game of the 2019 World Series and the excitement is growing with each outing.  (I fully expect tonight’s game to be the final game of this World Series with the Astros “taking back” what they owned just 2 years ago.)  Baseball, hot dogs, and apple pie were touted as America’s favorites in a Chevrolet ad campaign in the 70’s. And we all agreed – except for the grumpy Ford owners – that these things represented America. In so many ballparks a new symbol of our country has emerged as the song “God Bless America” has become as common as “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.”  This practice took hold after 9-11-2001 and has continued to this day.  Perhaps, as we watch the Astros win this year’s Series, we could pause to thank God for allowing us to live in a country that gives us such events and we could also pause to ask God to truly Bless America with an outpouring of His Spirit on our nation.

Now . . . . Play Ball!

Life in the Midst of Autumn

Jobb 33.4

Often we feel like Autumn – dying; shedding leaves; cold; dull brown instead of vibrant green with life.  In the Autumn periods of life we may question why our Creator is allowing us to wither and die on the vine.  God has not abandoned us, but is rather supporting us through this time.  He knows that Winter is coming and He is preparing us for the harsh brutality of the next season in our life.  Sounds depressing?  No!  Three reasons come to mind.  The first and most obvious is that Spring is coming (after we have endured the cold times) when we will once again enjoy the warm sunshine of His love and His Spirit flowing through our spiritual hearts.  The second is that the slow progression of Autumn allows us time to rest gently in His arms before we experience the worst of the trials ahead.  And third, there is a beauty in Autumn that always draws us in.  We stop and reflect on the changing of the colors and that pause alone – that pause to soak up the richness of the season – that pause alone causes us to look to the One Who created the seasons.  We look to One Who provides beauty in each season of life.  We look to the One Who walks with us through each season of life knowing that in Him we run, we dance, we play, we sing, we hope and in Him we crawl, we sway, we mourn, we cry, and we even share our deepest despair.  May we enjoy the beauty that is Autumn and may we rest safely in the arms of the One Who will surely sustain us in the Autumns of our lives.

Our “To-Do” List for God

Jonathan Edwards, in his book Humble Attempt to Promote Explicit Agreement and Visible Union of God’s People, In Extraordinary Prayer, (the title goes on for quite a bit more) wrote the following as the second point of his treatise:

THE GOOD WHICH SHALL BE BROUGHT BY PRAYER: GOD HIMSELF. Scripture says, “They shall go to pray before the Lord, and to seek the Lord of Hosts.” The good that they seek for is “The Lord of Hosts,” Himself. If “seeking God” means no more than seeking the favor or mercy of God then “praying before the Lord,” and “seeking the Lord of Hosts” must be looked upon as synonymous. However, “seeking the Lord” is commonly used to mean something far more than seeking something from God. Surely it implies that God Himself is what is desired and sought after.

Our prayers should first and foremost be an expression of our love for God and of our desire to know Him more and more – every day and in every way.   As Edwards wrote, we should be focused on seeking God, not seeking something from God.  Too often our prayers become a To-Do list for God rather than an opportunity to praise Him and thank Him for Who He is and what He has done.  And too often our To-Do list is offered before we take the time to confess our sins in order to remove barriers that have separated us from the One to Whom we bring our list.  How arrogant of us to think this to be acceptable.

In Psalm 63 David expresses praise for God when he was in the wilderness of Judah running for his life.  He didn’t lead off his prayer with “smite my enemies.”  He offered up praise to God knowing that God would deal with the problems he was facing.  In fact, he says just that in the last three verses.

Psalm 63

A psalm of David – at a time when David was in the wilderness of Judah.

1 O God, you are my God;

I earnestly search for you.

My soul thirsts for you;

my whole body longs for you

in this parched and weary land

where there is no water.

2 I have seen you in your sanctuary

and gazed upon your power and glory.

3 Your unfailing love is better than life itself;

how I praise you!

4 I will praise you as long as I live,

lifting up my hands to you in prayer.

5 You satisfy me more than the richest feast.

I will praise you with songs of joy.

6 I lie awake thinking of you,

meditating on you through the night.

7 Because you are my helper,

I sing for joy in the shadow of your wings.

8 I cling to you;

your strong right hand holds me securely.

9 But those plotting to destroy me will come to ruin.

They will go down into the depths of the earth.

10 They will die by the sword

and become the food of jackals.

11 But the king will rejoice in God.

All who swear to tell the truth will praise him,

while liars will be silenced.

 

May we go to God in prayer – praising and honoring our Lord and Savior – knowing that when “seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness,” the needs we have will be met by the One Who loves us and wants to do our To-Do list.

One more thing – often that To-Do list seems rather insignificant once we enter into the presence of the Holy God.  For when we delight ourselves in the Lord He will give us the desires of our heart.  However, our desires change when we delight ourselves in the Lord.  His desires become our desires and His To-Do list becomes our To-Do list.  And isn’t that what we really want – to do His will?

One Solitary Life

I developed this version of the essay “One Solitary Life” by Dr James Allan Francis by using his words and other phrases that I have heard and used in stating the significance of Jesus Christ. It is a powerful statement that is true in its content and will strike true in the heart of anyone who considers it with an open mind and searching soul.

Click on the video or link below to view the video.

One Solitary Life