Saturday, October 31, 2009

Oct 31 - What a Great Day in Christian History

This is a post today from Dr. John Thweatt, a friend and pastor of First Baptist Church, Pell City.

What comes to mind when you think about October 31? If the first thing that comes to your mind is Halloween…I am afraid we have not done a good job teaching you Christian History.
492 years ago today, was a day that changed the course of the church for all time. On that day Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the door of the Wittenberg Chapel. His desire was to begin a debate about abuses that he saw by the Papacy and the church. He had no intention on beginning a new church or even a movement. He simply wanted to see the church “reformed” that is re-formed by God’s word and in the image of Christ.

Out of the Reformation came five “battle” cries. These expressed the basics of the Gospel for their day. They have not changed over the past 491 years . . . indeed over the past 2000 years . . . though we sometimes forget them or we let other things push them aside. The
five battle cries of the Church then are the same battle cries for the Church today:
Sola Scripture — By Scripture Alone
Solo Christo — By Christ Alone
Sola Gratia — By Grace Alone
Sola Fide — By Faith Alone
Soli Deo Gloria — To God Alone belongs the Glory

I’ll close with a clip from a movie on the life of Luther and by saying along with Luther in regard to the five battle cries–”Here I stand.”

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Thursday, October 29, 2009

Preaching Sunday, Nov 1 in Atlanta

I am looking forward to preaching Sunday (Nov. 1) at Truth Tabernacle of Praise in Stone Mountain, GA at 10:30 a.m. (Eastern). This is the church my friend, Bobby Atkins, pastored before moving to Highland Terrance Baptist Church, Greenville, TX.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Why You Need the Old Songs too

There is no one who loves the new songs and the old, like me. I have always said that I'm not giving up on the hymns and I want me children to know the hymns. But I also like the "old songs" - some that I heard my Dad sing years ago. Now let's be truthful, not all the "old songs" are biblical. So we don't keep anything just because it's "old."

The other day I was singing one of choruses of one of them but couldn't remember the verses. I wondered if I could even find it, but the first hymnal I picked up had it. And when I begin singing it, there was an immediate "Spirit gush." Here are the words:

"There is a balm in Gilead to make the wounded whole;
There is a balm in Gilead to heal the sin-sick soul.

Sometimes I feel discouraged, And think my work's in vain,
But then the Holy Spirit Revives my soul again."

WELL GLORY!

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Another message about the Poor

WOW - you saw my post about the poor on October 22. Well, today I am checking Tweeter and see Josh Harris, Pastor, Covenant Life Church, preached Sunday a message on the poor. Read his notes here. Is God telling me something? us something?

Monday, October 26, 2009

Notes from Sunday October 25, 2009

Here are the notes from the message yesterday from Daniel 5 "The Last Generation in a Society." Read here.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

"I've Never Lost My Praise"

When it comes to music, there are three things that I love more than anything: a strong, anointed female voice, black gospel music (with that B3 Hammond organ) and jazz (come on, I did live in New Orleans). Well, when you put two of those things together, you get this video of "I've Never Lost My Praise." This song I first heard by my favorite choir - Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir. You can see a homemade video of them singing it here or you can listen to their song here.

But if you want to see a good video and equally good musically, then listen to this lady sing it from Chicago. And watch it all the way to the end when the Pastor responds.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

What about the poor?

This past Sunday in my preaching through the book of Daniel, we noted in Daniel 4:27 that God told Nebuchadnezzar through Daniel in regard to what the king needed to do to "break off your sins by being righteous, and your iniquities by showing mercy to the poor. Perhaps there may be a lengthening of your prosperity."

This is in light of Daniel 4:4 where it is reported that Nebuchadnezzar "was at rest in (his) house, and flourishing in (his) palace." He was safe and secure from his enemies and he was living in the lap of luxury.

It is interesting that God mentions specifically "the poor." Warren W. Wiersbe in his commentary on Daniel Be Resolute says this on page 54:

"Daniel also knew how many times in the Law of Moses the Lord spoke of Himself as the protector and defender of the poor, the aliens, and the oppressed. Perhaps Nebuchadnezzar had exploited the people in pursuing his extensive building operations, and wealth that should have helped the poor had been used to gratify the selfish appetites of the proud king.

"If a king judges the poor with fairness, his throne will always be secure." Proverbs 29:14 (NIV), ....

God has much to say about the poor and our responsibility to them.

Just read through a few verses:

Exodus 22:25 ".. you don't charge interest when you lend money to the poor."
Deut. 15:7 "If there is among you a poor man of your brethren...you shall not harden your heart nor shut your hand from your poor brother."
Deut. 24:14 "You shall not oppress a hired servant who is poor and needy, whether one of your brethren or one of the aliens ..."
Psalm 82:3-4 "Defend the poor and fatherless; do justice to the afflicted and needy. Deliver the poor and needy, free them from the hand of the wicked."
Jeremiah 22: 16 "He judged the case of the poor and needy;..."
Prov. 29:7 "The righteous considers the cause of the poor,..."
Galatians 2:10 "They desired only that we should remember the poor..."
Deut. 15: 11 "You shall open your hand wide to your brother, to your poor and your needy..."
Matthew 26:11 "For you have the poor with you always...."
Matthew 25: 42-45 "for I was hungry..thirsty..a stranger..sick and in prison..."
Isaiah 3:15 "What do you mean by crushing My people and grinding the faces of the poor?"
Amos 5:11 "...You tread down the poor and take grain taxes from him..."

I'm afraid America is much like Nebuchadnezzar "secure and flourishing" and not carrying enough for the poor.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

The sufficiency of Scripture

In my study of Daniel, I came across this quote of Dr. Wayne Grudem on the sufficiency of Scripture: "The sufficiency of Scripture means that Scripture contained all the words of God he intended his people to have at each stage of redemptive history, and that it now contains all the words of God we need for salvation, for trusting him perfectly, and for obeying him perfectly."

Source: Grudem, Wayne. Systematic Theology. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1995.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Sermon Notes from Sunday, October 18, 2009

Here are the sermon notes from this past Sunday, October 18, 2009 in the sixth message from the Book of Daniel entitled "So What that God Rules?" Read them here.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

In light of eternity, let's grow old and wiser

I had the honor this past Monday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Pauline Newland at the Oak Grove Baptist Church, Mt. Carmel, TN. I was there because this was the funeral of the mother of Bro. Randall Newland, a member of our church at CrossRoads.

Through the years I have had the privilege of expanding my knowledge of the great family of God through funerals of persons that I had not gotten to know in their life, but came to know them in their death.

Mrs. Newland left behind a husband of over 60 years, four sons and had served in her church for thirty years as the organist. She had a stroke over 15 years ago resulting in major changes in her life, her family and church family.

As I sat at the funeral, I thought of the saying that often I've heard and may be even said, "I wish I had the wisdom of years when I had the energy of youth." That saying means that when we have energy (young), we lack wisdom. And when we have wisdom (older), we lack the energy to do much about it.

As I pondered that, I thought how ungodly and unBiblical that statement is. In light of eternity, we are not wasting our growth in wisdom.

Abraham had the most faith the older he got and was able to have the son of promise, lay that son of promise on the altar of sacrifice and believe God would be able to raise his dead, burnt body back to life (Hebrews 11:19). I will take Abraham in his old age long before I will take him in his earlier days.

Paul said, "We do not lose heart. Even though our outward man is perishing, yet the inward man is being renewed day by day."

As believers, we are getting ready for eternity. Thus, we must become weaker in the body and stronger in the spirit. Weaker in the body because if we never got sick, broken, and old; then we might not have a yearning for heaven - our eternal home. We need to be stronger in the spirit because we will not lose what we have learned about God when we die. The closer we get physically to God's home should cause us to get spiritually fuller the closer we get.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Sunday Sermon Notes 10-11-09

This past Sunday was the fifth in the series from Daniel based out of Daniel 4 entitled "God RULES." You can read the notes here.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Let the Father Love You

The following is from C.J. Mahaney and you can read the original here. Read carefully - at least twice. Let the Father love you.

Puritan John Owen penned an unforgettable statement about God’s love: “The greatest sorrow and burden you can lay on the Father, the greatest unkindness you can do to him, is not to believe that he loves you.”*


Stop for a moment and reflect on that sentence—it could change your life.

Now, let me ask you three questions: Do you believe in God’s personal and passionate love for you? Are you delighting in God’s unconditional love? Or have you laid a sorrow and burden upon your adopted Father by questioning his love for you or refusing to believe that he loves you?

If you are uncertain of God’s love for you—or simply unfamiliar with the gift of adoption—I want to encourage you to restrict your spiritual diet for a season so that you might experience the greatness of God’s love. This is more than an academic exercise; this study is a means to experiencing God’s affection, closeness, and generosity as Father. Immerse yourself in an extended study of this topic, this passage (Galatians 4:1–7), and other passages on this topic.

Why devote so much time to studying the doctrine of adoption? For fresh motivation I close with words from J.I. Packer:

If you want to judge how well a person understands Christianity, find out how much he makes of the thought of being God’s child, and having God as his Father. If this is not the thought that prompts and controls his worship and prayers and his whole outlook on life, it means that he does not understand Christianity very well at all.…Our understanding of Christianity cannot be better than our grasp of adoption.**

----------------

Notes:
* John Owen, Communion with God (Banner of Truth, 1991).
** J.I. Packer, Knowing God (IVP, 1993), pp. 201–202.

Monday, October 12, 2009

The future of the Southern Baptist Convention

Last week at Union University, Jackson, TN a conference marking the 400th anniversary of the Baptist movement was held "Southern Baptists, Evangelics and the future of Denominationalism." Here are some quotes (all taken from Baptist Press) that I found interesting from the conference:

From David Dockery, President of Union:

"Denominationalism "is primarily an American phenomenon," Dockery said. "Not because America is the only place where denominations can grow and proliferate, but because the freedoms in America have enabled denominations to expand, to flourish and to break off from those from which they were birthed. ...


"Unfortunately -- I say this carefully and a bit dreadfully -- I believe this development has resulted more in the Americanization of Christianity than the Christianization of America," he continued. "Because of this, we need to think in a fresh way about denominations. We need to think anew about the structure that will be able to carry forth the Christian movement in the 21st century."


From Al Mohler, President of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary:


Young Southern Baptists must not be fixated on numbers or statistics but must fix its gaze on faithfulness to God's Word, the task of taking the Gospel to the nations and the glory of God, Mohler said.


"Those (numbers) are not unimportant, but it is the heart of the denomination that is the bigger issue ˜ the clarity of our vision, the essential importance of our mission," Mohler asserted. "It is going to be yours and you are going to decide what to do with it."


The SBC is experiencing the death of cultural Christianity because the faith no longer holds the spiritual franchise it once did in the Bible Belt, Mohler said.


"Any denomination that bases its future on the confidence of cultural Christianity deserves to die with that culture when it dies," he said. "It [a new identity] is not something we can create with a new slogan, for new slogans will not save us. There is a need for a resurgence of Great Commission passion, vision, commitment and energy in our denomination."


"The Great Commission was the singular reason why the Southern Baptist Convention came together in 1845," Mohler added. "It was the cause of the Gospel that called Southern Baptists together and only the cause of the Gospel will keep us together, only the cause of the Gospel is sufficient as a reason for us to be together."


A refocusing on the Great Commission is going to be costly, Mohler said, because it will require asking questions that have not been asked within the SBC for several generations and dealing with issues not previously considered.


"We were not called simply to receive what has been handed to us in terms of structures and continue it because of brand loyalty," Mohler said. "We've been called to be a church on mission.


ultural Christianity and "easy-believism" must no longer rule the day in the SBC and in local church bodies, Mohler said. The younger generation must be willing to plant its feet upon sound doctrine and faithful Gospel missions if local churches and the denomination are to have a healthy future, he said.


"Do not give your life to the SBC because your grandmother was a Southern Baptist," Mohler said. "Please do not invest your energies in the Southern Baptist Convention because you want to save something as an important artifact of American religion and southern culture and whatever else.


"Give yourself to the SBC because you see this really can be a denomination that is transformed by a resurgence of Great Commission passion to reach the world for the glory of God, a denomination ready to ask the hard questions and to let goods and kindred go in order to do what God would have us do in the generation ahead," Mohler urged. "I am not imploring you to leave the Southern Baptist Convention; I am imploring you to save it."


From Daniel Akin, President of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary:


Church planting in "unreached and unserved areas of our nation is little more than a trickle," Akin said. "Why we plant more churches in Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, North Carolina and Tennessee than we do in New York, Illinois, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Washington and California is absolutely incomprehensible to me."


Every Southern Baptist congregation should be "a church-planting church and every church a Great Commission church," Akin added. "This must be more than a slogan. It must be a reality."


"We must streamline our structure, clarify our identity and maximize our resources," Akin said. "A younger generation wants a leaner, quicker and more missional convention that pursues the unreached and under-served in our nation and around the world.


"That is where they are going and our leadership at every level will either get on board or be left behind," Akin added. "In other words, we will change the way we operate, whether we like it or not."


Akin warned against nostalgia for the status quo of past decades, which could be an obstacle to revitalization.


"Many Southern Baptists are trapped in a time warp," Akin stated. "They are aiming at a culture that went out of existence years ago. They use mid-20th century methods and pine for a nostalgic golden age. They are convinced if we would just go back to the way things were, we would experience a spiritual renaissance that would restore the good old days. ... We are not going back. We will move forward into the future, whether we like it or not."

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Sunday's Sermon Notes "Contrasting Faith Claims"

This past Sunday was the fourth in the series from Daniel based out of Daniel 3 entitled "Contrasting Faith Claims." You can read notes here.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Supreme Court Decision on the Public Display of the Cross

Dr. Al Mohler has done it again. He has written today an excellent blog "The Cross of Christ is Not a Secular Symbol." The issue is the Supreme Court has started debate today on the display of a cross at the Mojave National Preserve in California. Read the blog here and be reminded that the cross is not a secular symbol and must not be "reduced to a generic symbol of death and the memory of loved ones." Read here.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Tithing - Law or Grace?

Randy Alcorn has become one of my favorite authors as he has written on the issues like suffering, heaven, legalism and grace, and possessions. You can see a full listing of his books here. Here is his take on tithing. Is it legalism? Is it for New Testament and New Covenant believers. Click here to read.

Friday, October 2, 2009

destructive Divisions in the Church, Part IV

In Matthew 13, Jesus gives us several parables about the Kingdom of Heaven. These parables are not to tell us what Kingdom living in Heaven are like, but instead what Kingdom living on earth is like.

Matthew 13:33 "He told them still another parable: 'The kingdom of heaven is like yeast that a woman took and mixed into a large amount of flour until it worked all through the dough."

As far as I know, this is the only time in Scripture that leaven is pictured in a good light. Normally is it always linked to bad or evil (Matthew 16:11, I Corinthians 5:6-7). But the point here is that a little leaven (yeast) will overtake the entire dough eventually.

God never intended for His kingdom to be hid in our hearts, homes and churches; but instead "be a city on a hill" and put the "light on a stand so everyone in the house can see." (Matthew 5: 14-15

The Western world is about the only place where we will see this divide. Does such a dichotomy exist in Africa? Saudi Arabia? India? This divide is an anomaly. If Christ is the Truth, then it penetrates everything we are and everywhere we go.

One last story. A man was converted at the age of 15. This is the time of life when young men and women are "wondering what they will be in life." He felt he wanted to serve God, but had always wanted to be a lawyer. So he went to Law school, get a law degree and joined a firm. Yet, he was unhappy and unfulfilled. He thought he might have missed God's call and that God was punishing him for not "serving Him full-time." He spoke to a pastor wondering if he should go to seminary and "become a minister."

That pastor caused him to see that he could serve God just as good where he was, if not better, because most lawyers deal with people in crisis: divorce, seeking justice, etc. So that lawyer begin to see his law practice as an extension of God's kingdom and he was greatly fulfilled.

Oh, how we need to penetrate the office complexes, industrial assembly lines and the classrooms with Truth people who don't just have "Sunday clothes" and "work clothes."

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Destructive Divisions in the Church, Part III

The second division that has caused great destruction is the divide between the sacred and the secular. Christians live are called to live in two separate worlds, but one of them is to be Heaven. But too many Christians commute between the private world of family and church where their faith is expressed freely and the public world of work and recreation where their faith expression is suppressed.

When asked, "What does it mean to be a Christian on your job?" most will respond with something like being honest, having a prayer meeting before work or a Bible study during lunch. While these are all good and should occur, we need to see that even our work places can be areas where our faith and truth prevail.

Remember Esther? "For such a time as this you have come into the Kingdom." It may be at that board meeting or office meeting that standing for the truth, or seeking to bring justice to a wronged person is exactly why God has you there.

When the public square is condoned off from our faith, our lives become fragmented and splintered.

Two statistics that just do not go together: they tell us more people are going to church but America is becoming more secular. If this is true, then the disconnect and the divide is alive and well.

The last word...tomorrow.