Find some encouragement today with this message in song that just speaks to my soul.
Monday, October 31, 2016
Friday, October 28, 2016
From the Shepherd's Heart...Friday, October 28, 2016
We are coming close to the end of the sermon series through Habakkuk. This Sunday morning and evening we will look at Habakkuk 3: 3-16 with two messages. The one Sunday morning is "When God Shows Up." I want to take this message in two directions: first, when God shows up in the life of Habakkuk it was the turning point for him. The greatest need in the church is for us to know God.
Second, I want to go beyond Habakkuk and say, when God shows up in the life of the church, it has the potential to change our culture. What can change America? A revival in the church resulting in a spiritual awakening in our nation.
I often hear, "It has never been this bad before in America. This is the worse it has ever been. We must be getting close to the coming of the Lord because it has never been this bad." History reveals otherwise. I will show you this Sunday when and where it has been much worse in America and a spiritual awakening happened.
We must not lose hope of the power of the gospel, but it must happen first in the church. Revival comes to God's people, spiritual awakening happens in the culture.
Sunday night we will host a Gideon speaker as he will be sharing a few minutes in the service. What an honor to hear what God is doing through the sharing of the Word of God. Then at the close of the service, we will receive a love offering for the Gideon ministry. Then Sunday night, I will preach "Our God the Mighty Warrior" from Habakkuk 3.
Love you and I count it an honor to be your pastor and preacher!!!
Second, I want to go beyond Habakkuk and say, when God shows up in the life of the church, it has the potential to change our culture. What can change America? A revival in the church resulting in a spiritual awakening in our nation.
I often hear, "It has never been this bad before in America. This is the worse it has ever been. We must be getting close to the coming of the Lord because it has never been this bad." History reveals otherwise. I will show you this Sunday when and where it has been much worse in America and a spiritual awakening happened.
We must not lose hope of the power of the gospel, but it must happen first in the church. Revival comes to God's people, spiritual awakening happens in the culture.
Sunday night we will host a Gideon speaker as he will be sharing a few minutes in the service. What an honor to hear what God is doing through the sharing of the Word of God. Then at the close of the service, we will receive a love offering for the Gideon ministry. Then Sunday night, I will preach "Our God the Mighty Warrior" from Habakkuk 3.
Love you and I count it an honor to be your pastor and preacher!!!
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
From the Shepherd's Heart...Wednesday, October 26, 2016
I
know "officially" Thanksgiving is a month away, but it is always a
good time to give thanks and I want to give a BIG THANK YOU.
This
church is a great church, first and foremost, because we have a GREAT Savior. Jesus Christ is our Head and He, alone, is the reason for
anything good anyone ever does.
But
this church is also great because of the people. Just THIS month, this is what this church has done and I
want to say "thanks" to all who have been serving. Your generosity of
spirit and service makes it all possible.
We
had a GREAT first ever 5K Run, Car Show
and Fall Festival. Thanks to Petrova Tillery, Billy and Linda Junior,
Jonathan and Ray Harris, Danny Abernathy, Patrick Farmer, Porsche Reese, Jimmy
and Renee Traylor, Whitney Traylor, Craig and Melinda White, Whitney Wigley,
Crystal Hall, Greg and Sharon Wigley, Rebekah Hogsed, Heath and Ashley Jackson,
Tyler Murdock, Scott Clifton, Kim Galloway, Caleb Wigley, Susan Helms, Betty
McBryar, Dewitt and Rhonda Jackson, Tabatha Graben, Patti Carson, Kyle McLain,
Sonia Morales and Jessie Gamez.
UPWARD FOOTBALL
Thanks
to Drew Hogsed, Commissioner, and our Upward Team: Gary Blevins, Donald Coots, Drew Hogsed, Greg Wigley and
Whitney Wigley.
Cheerleader
Leaders: Tracy Coots, Lindsey
Garrett, and Emily Mays
Coaches: Jamie Hutchison, Nathan Moore, Josh
Clifton, Michael Evett, Jessie Gamez, Chad Rains, Johnny Stewart, Joseph Helms,
Craig White, Greg Wigley, Isaac Mays, Drew Hogsed, Jathan Underwood, Shannon
Williams, Tim Devlin, Greg Mashburn, Alex Mays, Mark Huber and Lane Fortner.
We had several who served as
Referees, then our faithful video crew of Danny Abernathy and Eddie Garrett,
sound crew, concession stand servers (Donald Coots, Michael Underwood, Keith
Williams, Tony Williams).
We hosted the DeKalb Baptist annual meeting last Monday. Thanks to Tom Bradley and Garry Galloway for your extra work to see that all went well. Thanks to Tony Williams and Dewitt Jackson for cooking a wonderful meal. Thanks, to many who brought delicious desserts.
We hosted the DeKalb Baptist annual meeting last Monday. Thanks to Tom Bradley and Garry Galloway for your extra work to see that all went well. Thanks to Tony Williams and Dewitt Jackson for cooking a wonderful meal. Thanks, to many who brought delicious desserts.
Thanks
to our Fellowship Team for
decorating and serving: Connie
Clark, leader; Amy Blevins, Glenda
Gray, Crystal Hall, Michael and Susan Helms, Joseph Helms, Billy and Linda
Junior, Renee Traylor, Sharon Wigley, and Delia Williams.
Then
we served the Plainview Football Team
and thanks to all these who served:
Petrova Tillery, Craig and Melinda White, Abbie and Amy Blevins, Paula
Carroll, Abbie Carson, Betty McBryar, Caroline and Christy Cooper, LaKala
Willingham, Keith Beatty, Jimmy
Traylor, Rodney Chandler and Monty Price.
Then
our Hope Puppet Shows this week. Hope
Puppet Junior Team led by Greg Wigley, Director; Mandy Helms, Susan Helms,
Isaac Mays and Sharon Wigley and 23 puppeteers.
4-Given Drama Team led by Kim Galloway and
Emily Mays and 16 team members. Hope Puppet Team led by Greg Wigley and
27 puppeteers plus 16 cast members.
Others
who served: Jeremy Taylor, Eddie
Garrett, Cody Coots, Olivia Garrett, Shane Hiett, Garry Galloway, Petrova
Tillery, Katrina Moore, Kim Galloway, Mandy Helms, Michael Helms, Tim Delvin
and Virginia Browning.
These
served on the Registration Team: Keith Beatty, Leader; special thanks to
Crystal Hall for stepping in for Keith this week; Whitley Phillips, Becky Dean, Petrova Tillery, Andrea
Hutchison, Regina Huber, Mary Ann Evans, Danny Abernathy, Pam Evett, Elizabeth
Devlin, Patti Carson, Betty McBryar, Amanda Martin, Christy Cooper, Traci
Roper, Andrea Rains, Nelson and Lacy Overby, Melissa Evans, Rebekah Hogsed,
Daphne Garrett, Mark Huber, Jonathan and Ray Harris, Gary and Amy Blevins,
Jessie Gamez, Michael and Susan Helms.
Our total is 3,354 people saw the Puppet show last week. WOW - thanks to EVERYONE who made it such a success.
Love
you each one of you and count it an honor to serve my Lord and you here!!
Monday, October 24, 2016
What Happens to Those Who Never Heard the Gospel? by Matt Smethurst
The man on the island. Perhaps you’ve encountered him in a friend’s argument against Christianity. Maybe you’ve even voiced the objection yourself.
How could a good and loving God condemn to hell someone who’s never heard of him?
When it comes to this emotionally vexing issue, there are two dominant positions among professing Christians: inclusivism and exclusivism. While both views maintain that Jesus is the only way to God, only one insists on the necessity of conscious faith in him.
Allure of Inclusivism
Inclusivism is the belief that salvation is only through Jesus Christ, but that there may be persons who are saved without knowing it. They are redeemed by the person and work of a Christ they do not consciously embrace. Simply put, Jesus may save some who never hear of him.
Inclusivists often cite Romans 2:1–16, a passage taken to imply that salvation is possible apart from God’s special revelation. The content of general revelation—both the created order without (Rom. 1:19–20) and the moral law within (Rom. 2:14–15)—provides sufficient knowledge for salvation. As Millard Erickson explains, “The rise of more inclusive views of salvation, even among evangelicals, is based on a belief in the efficacy of general revelation for a salvific relationship to God” (Christian Theology, 123).
Additionally, many inclusivists appeal to the precedent of Old Testament saints who were saved without knowing the name of Jesus. Erickson writes:
What if someone were to throw himself . . . upon the mercy of God, not knowing on what basis that mercy was provided? Would not such a person in a sense be in the same situation as the Old Testament believers? The doctrine of Christ and his atoning work had not been fully revealed to these people. Yet they knew there was provision for the forgiveness of their sins, and that they could not be accepted on the merits of any works of their own. They had the form of the gospel without its full content. And they were saved. (138)
But doesn’t this parallel trivialize Christ’s saving work? Not at all, Erickson insists, for Jesus is still the source of every saving benefit:
The basis of acceptance would be the work of Jesus Christ, even though the person involved is not conscious that this is how provision has been made for his salvation. . . . Salvation has always been appropriated by faith. . . . Nothing has been changed in that respect. (138)
What matters to God, the inclusivist says, is human faith responding to the “light” he has provided at a given time or place. It’s unwarranted, then, for anyone to claim to know the fate of the unevangelized. One pastorput it this way: “I believe the most Christian stance is to remain agnostic on this question. The fact is that God, alongside the most solemn warnings about our responsibility to respond to the gospel, has not revealed how he will deal with those who have never heard it.”1
Many inclusivists appeal to God’s character in defense of their view. Because “God is love,” the argument goes, he’d never condemn someone who didn’t even have a chance to be saved (1 John 4:8, 16). “I agree that inclusivism is not a central topic of discussion in the Bible and the evidence for it is less than one would like,” Clark Pinnock admits. “But the vision of God’s love there is so strong that the existing evidence seems sufficient to me.”
Evidence of Exclusivism
In contrast to inclusivism, exclusivism is the view that redemption is possible through only faith in the gospel.2 This has been the predominant Christian position throughout church history and remains so among Bible-believing evangelicals today.3 Several texts are commonly cited in its defense. Here are five.
1. Romans 1
First, though inclusivists sometimes employ Romans 1:18–23 to highlight the importance of general revelation, on closer reading the text actually supports the exclusivist view. Paul’s argument is that God’s revelation in nature is sufficient only to condemn, not to save. Though the man on the island “knows God” (v. 21), he “suppresses the truth” (v. 18) perceptible in nature and is therefore “without excuse” (v. 20). Humans aren’t guilty because they haven’t heard the gospel; they’re guilty because they haven’t honored their Creator. In other words, not because of the absence of something (faith), but because of thepresence of something (rebellion).
So will God condemn the innocent tribesman who has never heard the name of Christ? No, because there are no innocent tribesmen.
Scripture simply does not picture fallen humans as having some vague but noble desire for mercy and forgiveness. Moreover, we seem to have an inescapable pull toward enacting our faith in ritual, liturgy, and sacrifice. So what does the man on the island do? In the imagination of the inclusivist, he just cries out for vague mercy and forgiveness, claiming no merits of his own. In the real world, however, he probably participates in a form of idolatrous folk religion that contradicts and undermines the gospel of grace. (Daniel Strange’s work is helpful here, particularly his insight into how non-Christian religions are “subversively fulfilled” in the gospel of Christ.)
2. Romans 10
Second, the necessity of gospel faith for salvation is on display in Romans 10:
For “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? . . . So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ. (Rom. 10:13–15, 17)
The chain of logic in Paul’s mind is straightforward:
- The only way to be saved is to call on Christ’s name.
- The only way to call on Christ’s name is to believe the gospel.
- The only way to believe the gospel is to hear the gospel.
- The only way to hear the gospel is to be told the gospel.
The reality of another means of salvation besides faith in “the word of Christ” is difficult to square with this passage.
3. John 14
Third, we must do justice to Jesus’s declaration, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6; cf. 10:7, 9). Though inclusivists sometimes object that this statement says nothing explicit about faith, the idea is surely implied. The whole aim of John’s Gospel, after all, is to convince readers to believe and be saved (John 20:30–31), as the preceding context makes plain (John 3:36; 5:23–24; 6:35; 7:38; 8:19, 24, 42; 11:25; 12:46). The apostle addresses belief no less than 97 times throughout the book. In light of the entire context, then, “through me” means “through faith in me.”
4. Acts 4
Fourth, the apostle Peter declares: “And there is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). Note he doesn’t merely say that there’s no other savior under heaven—something with which inclusivists would agree—but specifically that there’s no other name. Apparently, knowing this savior’s name—his precise identity—is necessary.
5. Acts 10
Finally, there’s a particularly revealing story in Acts 10. God hears the prayers of a devout Gentile named Cornelius and instructs him to send for “a man who is called Peter” (v. 5). Arriving the next day at Peter’s house, Cornelius’s men announce: “Cornelius, a centurion, an upright and God-fearing man, who is well spoken of by the whole Jewish nation, was directed by a holy angel to send for you to come to his house and to hear what you have to say” (v. 22).
Peter then journeys with the men to Cornelius’s house, where the centurion addresses his apostolic guest: “Now we are all here in the presence of God to hear all that you have been commanded by the Lord” (v. 33). What’s interesting is that Cornelius wasn’t expecting any random message but specifically—as an angel had told him—a “message by which you will be saved, you and all your household” (Acts 11:14). In other words, it was a message without which Cornelius would have remained, despite all of his religious sincerity, eternally lost.
Why do I point to this story? Two reasons. First, because if a genuine unreached “seeker” were to exist, why wouldn’t we expect God to reveal the gospel message to him or her—whether through a missionary or a dream—just as he did to Cornelius? Second, and more importantly, because if ever there was a candidate for salvation through general revelation, surely it would’ve been Cornelius! He was as devout and God-fearing as possible given the “light” he’d received. But as the chapter unfolds, it becomes clear that even extraordinary religious sincerity isn’t enough. It was necessary for Peter to leave his home and travel more than 30 miles to deliver a message without which, Scripture suggests, even the most spiritually responsive person in the world cannot be saved.
Why This Matters
So what happens to those who never hear the gospel? The question isn’t some vague theological abstraction; it’s practically relevant and eternally serious. Your view of missions, for example—in terms of both its nature and its urgency—will be directly shaped by your view of the man on the island’s fate. (It’s also worth asking, if divine condemnation results from rejecting Christ, why love wouldn’t compel us towithhold him from the unevangelized.)
Still, one may wonder, isn’t exclusivism unfair? Though it may feel that way at times, in the final analysis we must trust the wisdom of an unfathomably good and merciful God. Perhaps this answer sounds like a cop-out, but it’s not. It’s the posture of humility. After all, it is not our place to subject the Creator to our finite and fallen notions of fairness. Our task is to take him at his word and trust his heart. His ways are higher and different than ours (Isa. 55:8–9). He needs no counselor, for he is good and does good (Ps. 119:68; Rom. 11:34). The Judge of all the earth will do right (Gen. 18:25). And above all, we must stare at Calvary, the summit of wisdom and the intersection of justice and love. There, on a Roman tree, the Judge of all the earth hung in the place of rebels who wanted nothing to do with him.
“Visit many good books, but live in the Bible,” Charles Spurgeon once advised. The most important thing we can do when faced with an emotionally charged topic like this is to open the Word of God, pray for humility and understanding, and then embrace what it says.
1 It’s worth distinguishing between more explicit inclusivists (who insist God will save some who’ve never heard) and more agnostic types (who claim they don’t know for sure). Even Herman Bavinck is not dogmatic in his exclusivism in light of God’s unilateral sovereignty.
2 Infants and those with mental disabilities that preclude processing didactic information are believed by many (if not most) exclusivists to be in a separate category. Naturally incapable of exercising conscious faith, they cannot be included in the Romans 1 picture—that of a rebellious humanity “without excuse” on the basis of the fact that they “know” God and yet actively “suppress the truth.” An infant cannot be judged according to works (Rom. 2:6; 1 Pet. 1:17). Many exclusivists believe God deals graciously with such non-sentient image-bearers, on the basis of Christ’s work, apart from personal faith.
3 For accessible book-length treatments, see Christopher Morgan and Robert Peterson’s (eds.) Faith Comes by Hearing: A Response to Inclusivism (IVP Academic, 2008) and John Piper’s Jesus, the Only Way to God: Must You Hear the Gospel to Be Saved? (Baker, 2010). For a more academic consideration, see Daniel Strange’s The Possibility of Salvation Among the Unevangelized: An Analysis of Inclusivism in Recent Evangelical Theology (Wipf and Stock, 2007).
Monday, October 17, 2016
Leaders Do Not Look to a Lottery by David O. Cofield
The state of Alabama is experiencing financial challenges
like our the federal government
and many other states. Our
leaders are saddled with the task of what to do in such a crisis.
In 1998, Governor Don Siegleman was elected Governor of the
state of Alabama on a pro-lottery platform and the following year it was
soundly defeated in a state-wide vote.
This year, Governor Bentley and others in the Senate and
House purposed a state-wide lottery to help raise revenue for Medicaid and
other state needs. He promised a
state-run lottery would be a "permanent solution" to the state's
financial problems.
We know this is not true.
When asked repeatedly why senators and representatives were
promoting this and the lottery legislation, the same line was given, "The
people want to vote on it."
While there may be truth in that statement, the overarching
truth is real leaders in the state of Alabama do not look to a lottery.
Leadership is not permitting the people to do whatever they
want to do. Leaders are not in our
place of government to simply poll the people to determine what they want and
then propose legislation to provide it.
The very purpose of a leader is they see problems other
people do not see, create solutions to those problems and then sell the people
on the problem and solution.
Leaders do not permit the people to lead, otherwise they vacate their role
as a leader.
In fact, if the majority of the people wanted something that
a leader knew was bad for them, he has a moral obligation to seek to show why
their way is wrong and propose a more suitable solution.
Even thought Governor Bentley was the one proposing this
lottery this year, at least last year he proposed tax increases to meet the
financial demands. That is
leadership.
No Alabamian wants to pay more taxes, but if the state is
having financial issues that demand more revenue; then it is the responsibility
of leaders to convince the people of Alabama of that need and convince them of
the best and right solution.
Since the lottery bill failed in August, I will not use this
space at this time to share why a lottery is a bad economic idea; other than to
say it is the worse form of taxation.
And for us who believe the lottery is a bad idea, let us
know the lottery did not fail in August due to our representatives having a
change of heart and voting it down.
It failed because the supporters of gambling did not get all they wanted
in this bill (casinos); thus they voted the lottery bill down so they can come
back at a later time and get the lottery plus more gambling.
But my point today is leadership.
The core of a leader is they see a better future for the
people they are leading and they must move to deliver it. The problem is the people do not see
it.
President John Adams was quoted in a book by his name
written by David McCollough as saying, "The people I lead may not know
what they need. But one thing I know, a man must be sensible of the errors of
the people, and upon his guard against them, and must run the risk of their
displeasure sometimes, or he will never do them any good in the long run."
Leaders lead against the tide of displeasure against them,
not the approval of people behind them.
Ronnie Floyd in his book "Forward"
says, "Leaders are able to lead people to go further than they would have
gone on their own."
They see a better future, they want a better future.
Whether it is Thom Rainer, Ronnie Floyd, John Maxwell, John
Kotter - leadership always take a people to a better future.
President Barak Obama was elected with the sun of a
"Hope and change" shining brightly in our faces. Even though I did not vote for him, I
still was hopeful in 2008 that he could deliver that for America.
That is partially what a leader does. He creates a brighter future in our
minds, but then delivers it.
To our elected officials in Alabama, be authentic leaders -
show us a better way and lead us there.
Wednesday, October 12, 2016
From the Shepherd's Heart...Wednesday, October 12, 2016
What a big weekend we had with:
* 5K and Fun Runs
* Fall Festival
* Car Show
* BBQ Cookoff and plates
The final totals are not in but we were able to raise a lot of money for our Mobile Mission Trip.
Thanks to all who were involved in the planning and implementation of the weekend.
Reminder - tonight the Adults will be meeting in the Locker Room at 6:10 due to Puppets needing the Auditorium. Everything is going tonight and I hope you will be here.
Pray for Roxanne as she as minor surgery tomorrow to remove the stimulator.
Sunday begins Puppet week and what a wonderful week it will be. I appreciate Greg and all who work so hard to make this a tremendous week. Just a note...I am in the script this year. BEWARE!!
Love you church family.
Parent..Child Dedication Services by David O. Cofield
One of the joys of serving as a pastor is dedicating parents-children to the Lord. I have had the privilege of dedicating my own grandchildren plus other family members plus hundreds of precious children in the churches I have served.
I know many churches do group dedications on special days like Mother's Day, Father's Day or Sanctity of Human Life Sunday. While this is great, I prefer to have dedications on a more personal basis throughout the year.
Since the service takes less than 5 minutes, I see it is appropriate to do a service for just one family at the close of a service.
So, if you would like to have a parent-child dedication service, please email me or contact me personally to schedule a day. Normally, we can do whatever day is best for you and your family.
I know many churches do group dedications on special days like Mother's Day, Father's Day or Sanctity of Human Life Sunday. While this is great, I prefer to have dedications on a more personal basis throughout the year.
Since the service takes less than 5 minutes, I see it is appropriate to do a service for just one family at the close of a service.
So, if you would like to have a parent-child dedication service, please email me or contact me personally to schedule a day. Normally, we can do whatever day is best for you and your family.
Monday, October 10, 2016
What God Does With Your Sin by Tim Challies
Sometimes it’s better to show than to tell. Sometimes it’s more effective to rely on illustration than description. Maybe this is especially the case when we are distressed, ashamed, or sorrowful, when emotions threaten to displace reason. In those moments, God comforts us not only with descriptions of what he does with our sin, but also with vivid illustrations. Are you distressed by what you’ve done? Do you hear whispers that you have sinned beyond God’s desire or ability to forgive? Let these illustrations comfort you. Listen to—no, see!—all that God does with your sin.
God throws your sin into the sea (Micah 7:19). Here is a clear reference to the Exodus when God rescued his people by drowning Pharaoh and his army in the sea. John MacKay says, “The Egyptians were prevented from catching up with the fleeing Israelites and reversing their deliverance. The freedom of the people of God will not be marred by some consequence of their past sin catching up with them to spoil their delight in the provision God has made for them.” Not a single Egyptian soldier crawled onto the bank to continue to torment Israel. Not a single one of your sins will continue to torment your soul.
God treads your sin underfoot (Micah 7:19). God doesn’t only drown your sins in the sea, but he also stomps them under his feet. Richard Phillips explains the illustration this way: “God responds to our sins the way a protective parent destroys a snake in the children’s playground.” He throws it to the ground, stomps on it, reduces it to nothing. He grinds it underfoot until it is dead and gone.
God throws your sin behind his back (Isaiah 38:17). God drowns it, he stomps, and he also tosses it away. You would only throw something that is insignificant to you, something you are willing to forget about. Your sin has been so thoroughly dealt with that it is as if God tossed it behind him where he can no longer see it, where he no longer cares about it.
God blots out your sin (Isaiah 43:25). To blot out sin is to so utterly destroy it is as if it never existed. While “blotting out” is often a judgment of wrath against God’s enemies, here it is a judgment of mercy toward his friends. John Oswalt says, “In this instance what he does is to erase from the record every trace of the transgression and sin of his people, not once but continually and forever so that he cannot remember it.” He blots it out of his books, out of his mind, out of his memory, out of the ways he would otherwise treat you. It’s gone!
God forgets your sin (Hebrews 8:12). God’s forgetfulness is a repeated promise and encouragement in both the Old Testament and the New. The God who blots out sin must also forget those sins, to forget them in the sense of never again bringing them to mind and never again making you face the consequences of judgment for them.
God removes your sin (Psalm 103:12). This was David’s proclamation in Psalm 103: “As far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us.” How far is east from west? Infinitely far! How far has God removed your sin from you? Every bit as far as that.
God covers your sin (Romans 4:7-8). David marveled that God removed his sin, and he equally marveled that God covered his sin. “Blessed is the one whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.” There is no greater blessing than this, to have your sins covered by another. Paul also marvels at this fact in Romans 4. If it brought comfort to David and Paul, shouldn’t it bring comfort to you?
God takes away your sin. When John the Baptist saw Jesus he said, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world!” (John 1:29). Through Jesus, God would take away your sin. This act of taking away means something like “bear off” or “carry away.” Through the sacrifice of Jesus, your sin would be carried away like an unbearable burden, borne away by one fit to carry it.
God cancels the debt of your sin (Colossians 2:14). Sin creates a legal debt, a conviction of the law-breaker in the courtroom of the law-giver. God cancels that debt on your behalf by issuing a verdict of not guilty. “And you, who were dead in your trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made alive together with him, having forgiven us all our trespasses, by canceling the record of debt that stood against us with its legal demands. This he set aside, nailing it to the cross” (Colossians 2:13-14). You are not guilty!
God washes your sin (Isaiah 1:18). Your sin is like bloodstains on a white dress. They stand out, they mark, they mar, they ruin. But God promises “Come, now, let us reason together, says the Lord: though your sins are like scarlet, they shall by white as snow; though they are red like crimson, they shall become like wool.” He washes those sins from scarlet to snow, from crimson to pure wool.
God forgives your sin (1 John 1:9). Your sin creates disunity between you and your creator, but God graciously forgives that sin. “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”
So, what does God do with your sin? He throws it behind his back, drowns it in the sea, treads it underfoot, blots it out, forgets it, removes it, covers it, takes it away, cancels it, washes it, and forgives it. And God can do and will do all of this in the present because of one thing he did in the past.
God laid your sin on Jesus. To understand this, we need to zoom back in time a little to the Old Testament sacrificial system. In that system a goat—a scapegoat—would be seen to symbolically take on human sin. It would then be sent to wander in the wilderness away from God’s people. Here’s how God commands it in the book of Leviticus. “And Aaron shall lay both his hands on the head of the live goat, and confess over it all the iniquities of the people of Israel, and all their transgressions, all their sins. And he shall put them on the head of the goat and send it away into the wilderness by the hand of a man who is in readiness. The goat shall bear all their iniquities on itself to a remote area, and he shall let the goat go free in the wilderness.” The goat would never return, symbolizing that the people’s sin would never return upon them.
This unusual act finds its fulfillment in Jesus. Here it is God who lays his hand on Jesus, God who lays your sins upon Jesus, and who banishes Jesus from his presence. Your sin was laid on Jesus so he could deal with it on your behalf. And, praise God, he did! What does God do with your sin? Everything necessary to reconcile you to himself and everything necessary to give you confident comfort today and every day.
Friday, October 7, 2016
From the Shepherd's Heart...Friday, October 7, 2016
I am excited to be back in the pulpit this Sunday morning and evening at Rainsville First.
I will continue the series "What in the World is Going On?" based on Habakkuk. Sunday morning I will be sharing "Getting a Fresh Understanding of God" based on Habakkuk 2: 1-4.
Then Sunday night I will share briefly from that great verse Habakkuk 2:4 and shared about "Pride vs Faith" and then conclude the service around the Table of the Lord (Lord's Supper).
God is moving among us. I love being "the preacher" God has assigned for this time at RFBC. Thank you for praying for me. Love you.
I will continue the series "What in the World is Going On?" based on Habakkuk. Sunday morning I will be sharing "Getting a Fresh Understanding of God" based on Habakkuk 2: 1-4.
Then Sunday night I will share briefly from that great verse Habakkuk 2:4 and shared about "Pride vs Faith" and then conclude the service around the Table of the Lord (Lord's Supper).
God is moving among us. I love being "the preacher" God has assigned for this time at RFBC. Thank you for praying for me. Love you.
Wednesday, October 5, 2016
From the Shepherd's Heart...Wednesday, October 5, 2016
I love how our church is responding to guests. I hear often from guests how friendly our church is.
Let me say "genuine" friendliness is attractive. If the church is programmed to be friendly, that is not as impressive. We are doing well in
* having individuals serving as Greeters.
* persons shaking hands with others before and after a service.
Let me offer two-three more suggestions of how we can go to the next-level of friendliness.
* Connect with guests in the parking lot by "just being there at the right time." Help someone with an umbrella if it is raining; helping young parents with a diaper bag, make sure guests know of their reserved parking places, senior adult parking places and parking for parents with small children, and walk with them to the entrance where a Greeter is waiting for them.
* In Sunday School or in the auditorium, you ask a guest their name resulting with you sharing your name and then introduce them to someone else. If you really want to make an impact, then remember their name at the close of the class or service.
* Ask the person how you may serve them (offering to show them where restrooms are, where the Auditorium is) or better, "How may I pray for you?"
* Make sure the guests know about the Pastor-Wife Reception and make sure they come by - even bring them at the close of the service.
Let's take the next steps toward being the most friendly church anyone has ever attended and will want to come back.
Monday, October 3, 2016
From Father to Son — J.R.R. Tolkien on Sex by Albert Mohler
This article originally appeared on March 11, 2014.
The astounding popularity of J.R.R. Tolkien and his writings–magnified many times over by the success of the “Lord of the Rings” films–has ensured that Tolkien’s fantasy world of moral meaning stands as one of the great literary achievements of our times.
In some sense, Tolkien was a man born out of time. A philologist at heart, Tolkien was most at home in the world of ancient ages, even as he witnessed the barbarism and horrors of the 20th century. Celebrated as a popular author, he was an eloquent witness to permanent truths. His popularity on university campuses, extending from his own day right up to the present, is a powerful indication of the fact that Tolkien’s writings reach the hearts of the young, and those looking for answers.
Even as Tolkien is celebrated as an author and literary figure, some of his most important messages were communicated by means of letters, and some of the most important letters were written to his sons.
Tolkien married his wife Edith in 1916, and the marriage was blessed with four children. Of the four, three were boys. John was born in 1917, Michael in 1920, and Christopher in 1924. Priscilla, the Tolkiens’ only daughter, was born in 1929.
Tolkien dearly loved his children, and he left a literary legacy in the form of letters. Many of these letters were written to his sons, and these letters represent, not only a hallmark of literary quality, but a treasure of Christian teaching on matters of manhood, marriage, and sex. Taken together, these letters constitute a priceless legacy, not only to the Tolkien boys, but to all those with whom the letters have been shared.
In 1941, Tolkien wrote a masterful letter to his son Michael, dealing with marriage and the realities of human sexuality. The letter reflects Tolkien’s Christian worldview and his deep love for his sons, and at the same time, also acknowledges the powerful dangers inherent in unbridled sexuality.
“This is a fallen world,” Tolkien chided. “The dislocation of sex-instinct is one of the chief symptoms of the Fall. The world has been ‘going to the bad’ all down the ages. The various social forms shift, and each new mode has its special dangers: but the ‘hard spirit of concupiscence’ has walked down every street, and sat leering in every house, since Adam fell.” This acknowledgement of human sin and the inevitable results of the Fall stands in stark contrast to the humanistic optimism that was shared by so many throughout the 20th century. Even when the horrors of two world wars, the Holocaust, and various other evils chastened the century’s dawning optimism of human progress, the 20th century gave evidence of an unshakable faith in sex and its liberating power. Tolkien would have none of this.
“The devil is endlessly ingenious, and sex is his favorite subject,” Tolkien insisted. “He is as good every bit at catching you through generous romantic or tender motives, as through baser or more animal ones.” Thus, Tolkien advised his young son, then 21, that the sexual fantasies of the 20th century were demonic lies, intended to ensnare human beings. Sex was a trap, Tolkien warned, because human beings are capable of almost infinite rationalization in terms of sexual motives. Romantic love is not sufficient as a justification for sex, Tolkien understood.
Taking the point further, Tolkien warned his son that “friendship” between a young man and a young woman, supposedly free from sexual desire, would not remain untroubled by sexual attraction for long. At least one of the partners is almost certain to be inflamed with sexual passion, Tolkien advised. This is especially true among the young, for Tolkien believed that such friendships might be possible later in life, “when sex cools down.”
As any reader of Tolkien’s works understands, Tolkien was a romantic at heart. He celebrated the fact that “in our Western culture the romantic chivalric tradition [is] still strong,” though he recognized that “the times are inimical to it.” Even so, as a concerned father, Tolkien warned Michael to avoid allowing his romantic instinct to lead him astray, fooled by “the flattery of sympathy nicely seasoned with a titillation of sex.”
Beyond this, Tolkien demonstrated a profound understanding of male sexuality and the need for boundaries and restraint. Even as he was often criticized for having an overly negative understanding of male sexuality, Tolkien presented an honest assessment of the sex drive in a fallen world. He argued that men are not naturally monogamous. “Monogamy (although it has long been fundamental to our inherited ideas) is for us men a piece of ‘revealed’ ethic, according to faith and not to the flesh.” In his own times, Tolkien had seen the binding power of cultural custom and moral tradition recede into the historical memory. With the “sexual revolution” already visible on the horizon, Tolkien believed that Christianity’s revealed sex ethic would be the only force adequate to restrain the unbridled sexuality of fallen man. “Each of us could healthfully beget, in our 30 odd years of full manhood, a few hundred children, and enjoy the process,” Tolkien admonished his son. Nevertheless, the joys and satisfactions of monogamous marriage provide the only true context for sexuality without shame. Furthermore, Tolkien was confident that Christianity’s understanding of sex and marriage pointed to eternal, as well as temporal pleasures.
Even as he celebrated the integrity of Christian marriage, Tolkien advised Michael that true faithfulness in marriage would require a continual exercise of the will. Even in marriage, there remains a demand for denial, he insisted. “Faithfulness in Christian marriage entails that: great mortification. For a Christian man there is no escape. Marriage may help to sanctify and direct to its proper object his sexual desires; its grace may help him in the struggle; but the struggle remains. It will not satisfy him–as hunger may be kept off by regular meals. It will offer as many difficulties to the purity proper to that state, as it provides easements. No man, however truly he loved his betrothed and bride as a young man, has lived faithful to her as a wife in mind and body without deliberate conscious exercise of the will, without self-denial.”
Tolkien traced unhappiness in marriage, especially on the part of the husband, to the Church’s failure to teach these truths and to speak of marriage honestly. Those who see marriage as nothing more than the arena of ecstatic and romantic love will be disappointed, Tolkien understood. “When the glamour wears off, or merely works a bit thin, they think they have made a mistake, and that the real soul-mate is still to find. The real soul-mate too often proves to be the next sexually attractive person that comes along.”
With these words, Tolkien advised his middle son that marriage is an objective reality that is honorable in the eyes of God. Thus, marriage defines its own satisfactions. The integrity of Christian marriage requires a man to exercise his will even in the arena of love and to commit all of his sexual energy and passion to the honorable estate of marriage, refusing himself even the imagination of violating his marital vows.
In a letter to his friend C.S. Lewis, Tolkien advised: “Christian marriage is not a prohibition of sexual intercourse, but the correct way of sexual temperance–in fact probably the best way of getting the most satisfying sexual pleasure . . . .” In the face of a world increasingly committed to sexual anarchy, Tolkien understood that sex must be respected as a volatile and complex gift, bearing potential for great pleasure and even greater pain.
With deep moral insight, Tolkien understood that those who give themselves most unreservedly to sexual pleasure will derive the least pleasure and fulfillment in the end. As author Joseph Pearce, one of Tolkien’s most insightful interpreters explains, sexual temperance is necessary “because man does not live on sex alone.” Temperance and restraint represent “the moderate path between prudishness and prurience, the two extremes of sexual obsession,” Pearce expands.
Explicit references to sexuality are virtually missing from Tolkien’s published works, allegories, fables, and stories. Nevertheless, sex is always in the background as part of the moral landscape. Joseph Pearce understands this clearly, arguing that Tolkien’s literary characters “are certainly not sexless in the sense of being asexual but, on the contrary, are archetypically and stereotypically sexual.” Pearce makes this claim, notwithstanding the fact that there is no sexual activity or overt sexual enticement found in Tolkien’s tales.
How is this possible? In a profound employment of the moral spirit, Tolkien presented his characters in terms of honor and virtue, with heroic men demonstrating classical masculine virtues and the heroines appearing as women of honor, valor, and purity.
Nevertheless, we would be hard pressed to understand Tolkien’s understanding of sex, marriage, and family if we did not have considerable access into the realities of Tolkien’s family and his role as both husband and father. Tolkien’s letters, especially those written to his three sons, show the loving concern of a devoted father, as well as the rare literary gift Tolkien both possessed and employed with such power.
The letter Tolkien wrote Michael in the year 1941–with the world exploding in war and civilization coming apart at its seams–is a model of fatherly concern, counsel, and instruction. We should be grateful that this letter is now accessible to the larger world, and to the rest of us.
From the vantage point of the 21st century, Tolkien will appear to many to be both out of step and out of tune with the sexual mores of our times. Tolkien would no doubt take this as a sincere, if unintended, compliment. He knew he was out of step, and he steadfastly refused to update his morality in order to pass the muster of the moderns.
Writing to Christopher, his youngest son, Tolkien explained this well. “We were born in a dark age out of due time (for us). But there is this comfort: otherwise we should not know, or so much love, what we do love. I imagine the fish out of water is the only fish to have an inkling of water.” Thanks to these letters, we have more than an inkling of what Tolkien meant.
The post From Father to Son — J.R.R. Tolkien on Sex appeared first onAlbertMohler.com.
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