Saturday, September 30, 2023

This Lord's Day (October 1, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church

The Mount Rushmore of Israel’s history would include Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob and maybe since the American Rushmore has four, we would add David to Israel’s historic monument.
 
As you look closely at the faces, Abraham you recognize; Isaac you understand; and David, of course. But Jacob? Yet Jacob is mentioned 349 times in the Old Testament and 19 times God is referred to as “The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.”
 
God self-identifies Himself in that fashion to Moses in Exodus 3: 6 and Peter said he is “The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob” when he was preaching in Solomon’s Porch in Acts 3:13.
 
But Jacob just doesn’t seem to belong, or is that just me?  For when we look at the life of Jacob we see a person who struggles and fails seemingly more than he triumphs.  In fact, Hosea captures his life in 12: 3 and 12 as well as anyone in Scripture when he used four verbs:  struggled, fled, served, and tended.  That sums him up. 
 
And when his name is changed from Jacob to Israel in Genesis 32: 28, God says, “Your name shall no longer be called Jacob, but Israel, for you have struggled with God and with men and have prevailed.”
 
What did Jacob become?  The Prince of Israel.  Not the Prince of Bel-Air.  Not Prince William of England.  Not a prince in shining armor.  But the Prince of Israel.
 
Genesis 32: 28 (KJV) “Your name will no longer be Jacob, but Israel, for as a prince thou hast power with God and with men…”
 
So why Jacob?  Maybe because when the flesh is weak and a person looks like an impossibility for any good, God sees another picture and makes this weak, failing person a trophy of His grace. Yes, to His grace.
 
Jacob is a story of grace.  Struggles, sin, deception, and bad choices will not stop God’s plans and purposes for you all because of His grace.
 
Someone once said if you are not preaching grace so abundant that some think you are soft on sin, then you are not most likely preaching grace rightly.  The song is right, “Grace, grace, God’s grace, grace that is greater than all my sin.”
 
Romans 5: 20 (Message) “For wherever sin exists in abundance and is multiplying and constantly expanding, that is precisely the time and place where grace is poured out in a far greater, surpassing quantity.”
 
So, after concluding the life of Abraham in September 2021, we will resume our study in Genesis this Sunday as we look at “The Making of a Prince:  The Life of Jacob.”
 
This Sunday, “Where It All Began” as we look at Jacob and his twin brother, Esau’s, birth recorded in Genesis 25: 19-28.

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Sunday School 101 - Part Three

We have built a case in the past two Wednesdays for Sunday Sunday to be the most important ministry in our church.  If that is so, then who is the most important person in the life of a Sunday School class.

While everyone is important, the teacher or leader is the single most important person in the class.  They are the one who is responsible to God, the Pastor, their class, and the church for the total work and organization of their class.

They should lead in the selection of the other leaders in the class (secretary, care group leaders, an associate teacher, and other leaders, as needed). 

The most important aspect of leadership is leading by example.  Just as a church will not rise above and maintain a spiritual level higher than its leaders, neither will a Sunday School class.  The leader sets the bar for the rest of the class.

Just as with the whole church, there are individuals who will walk closer to God and be more spiritually mature than its leaders, but the church as a whole will never rise above its leaders.  There may be (and most will be) persons in every Sunday School class who are spiritually on a level higher than the teacher, the whole class will never be able to rise above the teacher's level and remain there.

II Thessalonians 3:9 instructs us to "make yourselves an example of how you should follow us."

The teacher/leader should be an example in:

* Personal growth...developing a growing relationship with Jesus through daily Bible study and prayer. It is out of the overflow of your life you will lead your class effectively and passionately. 

* Commitment...to support the total work of the church, attending all services habitually, as possible.

* Reaching...by possessing a commitment to reach people.

* Conduct...by living a life holy and acceptable of others to follow.

* Giving...by systematically giving at least a tithe to the general fund of the church, plus special offerings as promoted.

* Attendance...by seeking to arrive in the class before any other person, making attendance a top priority, and notifying the proper persons as soon as possible when one must be absent.

* Cooperation...by cooperating in spirit and word with the Pastor, elders, ministerial staff, Deacons, and other small group leadership.

* Prayer...believing one can do nothing of lasting value without being a person of prayer.

* Fellowship...lead your class to develop a culture of loving one another, caring for one another, and wanting to be with one another.

* Ministry...leading out in caring for your members by reaching out to them regularly just to check on them but especially in times of need; and developing a class organization of others caring for smaller portions of the class (care group leaders).

As the teacher goes, so goes the class.  

It is a heavy responsibility (James 3:1), but if you have not been called to be the Pastor of the local church, then the next greatest privilege is to lead (shepherd, pastor) a smaller group of God's people.  To all who serve in this position, I bless you. 

#David O. Cofield

Monday, September 25, 2023

The Sufficiency and Supremacy of the Scriptures

One of the most recognizable teachings of Jesus is Luke 16 with the rich man and Lazarus. Both die, but Lazarus, the beggar in abject poverty, is carried to Heaven while the rich man goes to Hell.  In his eternal torments, the unnamed rich man makes a request for Father Abraham to send Lazarus to his house for he has five brothers there who are following his footsteps and headed to this same place of torment. 

Father Abraham responds "They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them." (verse 29). When Abraham confirms eternity is set and cannot be changed, the rich man continues to push his notable position by showing deep concern believing his brothers will not respond to "Moses and the prophets," so let someone rise from the dead and then they will respond.

We often hear persons, well-meaning like this rich man, want to do all types of things to entice and engage those who are without Christ assuring us nothing is wrong with doing whatever we can to win people to Jesus.

But apparently, God does not feel the same way.  In this passage filled with teaching about one's relationship with money and hell, the eternal and unchanging Word of God is affirmed as the sole authority and means for which people respond to saving and life-changing faith.

We have no tool in our possession greater than the Word of God.  The Scripture is sufficient to reveal everything needful for our salvation, for the Christian life, for the establishment of right doctrine, and for the living out of a successful Christian life.

This truth is no greater seen than in the Lord's church. The Word of God preached and proclaimed is the first and most essential mark of the church.  The location of the pulpit in our churches is front, center, and elevated about all else.  We even see this more exaggerated in European culture when the preacher had to climb several steep steps to reach the pulpit. 

Under the preaching of the Word of God, sinners are convicted and converted plus the church is brought to maturity confirming to the likeness of Christ.  There are many means of ministering to one another and helping one another, but nothing rises to the place and priority of the preached Word of God.

In verse 17 Jesus affirmed, "It is easier for heaven and earth to pass away than one stroke of a letter of the Law to fail."  (NASB).  God's word is permanent and unchanging.

The bottom line of this teaching is summarized this way by Dr. Albert Mohler, Jr.: "One who will not hear the Scripture will not hear anything or anyone else. They will not repent, even if they are confronted with one who has risen from the dead.  The one who did rise from the dead told us this on his own divine authority." 

#David O. Cofield

Saturday, September 23, 2023

This Lord's Day (September 24, 2023) - at Rainsville First Baptist Church


Our very own, Mark Busby, will be speaking this Sunday morning in our 10:15 service.  Mark and his family (Mie, Michelle, and John) serve our Lord and the Kingdom through our International Mission Board in Osaka, Japan.  We can't wait to hear Mark and welcome him home.

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Sunday School 101 - Part Two

This is the second post on Sunday School.  I remind you I write on this Wednesday blog focusing on the local church and its ministries (particularly Rainsville First Baptist Church).

Last week we confirmed Sunday School is the most important ministry of the church. Why?  

*It is for all ages.  Our entire Sunday School is for our entire church population.  We have classes from bed babies through our senior adults.  Each Sunday School is graded so guests will know when they visit this particular class the medium age the class will be.  We don't want a 35-year-old couple to walk into a classroom of senior adults without their prior knowledge.  Disclaimer: a person does not have to go to the class of their age group.  Every person is free to attend the class that best fits their personality, group dynamics, and teaching style.  

* It is for those who are followers of Jesus Christ and those who are not.  

* Class members may or may not be members of the church.  In fact, we highly encourage (and almost demand) a person is a member of Sunday School before they become a member of the church.

* The focus of the class is the teaching of the Word of God, but it is not the only thing Sunday School does.  If it was, then we would gather everyone into one central location and get the best Bible teacher to teach everyone.  Bible study is vital, but it is not everything.

* It is the church "organized and mobilized" to carry out the function of the church.  

* It is here there is accountability for attendance, caring for one another, ministry in times of need, fellowship, prayer, and enhancing personal and corporate worship.

* It is the place where someone will call on you when you are sick, there has been a death in your family, and there is a need for meals to be provided to get you through a difficult season.  If you are not involved in a Sunday School, you may not have anyone to reach out to you to provide ministry in times of need.  Sunday School is the hub of ministry.

* Everyone can be involved using their spiritual gifts. 

* It is the place of natural outreach.  You have friends, family members, and neighbors who are in your sphere of life who need Bible study, community, prayer, fellowship, direction, and purpose in their life and your Sunday School class is the natural place to invite them to come to a Sunday gathering or a party the class is having.

* Enrollment is the key.  A person may enroll in a Sunday School anytime and anywhere.  Persons may be enrolled in their home, office, hospital, or in the class.  A person can join a Sunday School class the first time they attend.  Enrollment gives the class the right to minister to them.  

It is my opinion that enrollment of Sunday School is the single most important number in the life of a local church.  It is the number of those who are attending, involved, and assigned places of ministry. 

If you are not a member of a Sunday School class, then I pray this blog motivates you to get involved this Sunday.

If you are a leader in the church, recognize the absolute importance of the Sunday School ministry in your church.  Commit to learn everything you can about it.  Commit to be a leader in your class. Commit to get others in your church involved.

If you are a pastor, I believe Sunday School is the most important ministry you have under your leadership.  Learn about it, encourage its growth, be involved in a class yourself, and watch your church grow and retain growth. 





Monday, September 18, 2023

When God Laughs

I recently finished preaching through Luke 16 when I was shocked at verse 14 when Luke records the response of the Pharisees that they "rolled their eyes at him," "ridiculed," and "mocked" him. The entire chapter is about one's relationship to money and material possessions and the religious crowd showed their cards by mocking Jesus because "they were lovers of money."

What follows in verses 15 through 18 seems to be totally out of place.  Jesus responds with these remarks:

* God knows your heart

* The Kingdom of God is now prominent

* The Word of God will not change

* The issues around marriage and divorce have not changed even though most of you teach otherwise.

It would seem Jesus would fire back with some word of derision to them or show His superiority.  Instead, he just tells them their response to Him does not change any of the truth for which they are dealing.

He hits them with topics of exposure of their error and affirms, that while they may believe anything they wish, their beliefs will not change the truth.

In our pluralistic culture today where beliefs are as personal as one's DNA, it is God who has given each of us the mind and will to believe whatever we wish.  And most of the time our reaction to God's unchanging truth is the same as the Pharisees - we sneer, roll our eyes and mock God. From Hollywood to comedians to even family and friends, the truth is mocked and considered out-of-date.

But God will get the last laugh. Truth does not have an expiration date.  Heaven and earth will pass away before even the smallest element of God's truth will change (verse 17). And in the end, God will be laughing at man's folly.

Psalm 59:8 "But You, O Lord, shall laugh at them;..."

Proverbs 1: 26 "I also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your terror comes."


Friday, September 15, 2023

This Lord's Day (September 17, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church

This Sunday is a day the church at Rainsville First has looked forward to for a long, long time.  It is our Debt-Free Celebration Service. 

The Auditorium where we currently meet was finished in 2007 which has been a tremendous blessing to the growth of our church, as well as for our community.  In 2009, the church borrowed $2.1 million and on August 16, 2023, the final payment was made.  We are DEBT-FREE!!!!

God has greatly blessed this congregation through the faithful and available people to see this debt eliminated.  God brought me to this church in 2015 and the debt was $1.68 million.  We really did not start making additional principal payments until October 2016, so in less than seven years the church erased a $1.6 million dollar debt.

Let me be clear to those who may read this blog outside of Rainsville First.  The number one goal of the church was never to become debt free, but was the ongoing ministry of being the church through evangelism, missions, and discipleship resulting in a maturing process of following Christ.  The payment of the debt was a by-product.  We never had any big, organized campaigns - it was an overflow of the faithfulness of God's people to give.

So this Sunday we celebrate and celebrate is the right thing to do.  Yet the service will not be designed to honor committees or individuals, but instead to center around praise to the Lord. 

The main focus of the service will be the church having Communion as we give praise to God for His Son who gave His life so we could eternally be free from our sins, death, and hell.

The "burning of the note" will be done as we honor the past and look forward to the future as the oldest continuously tenured member of our church and the youngest tenured member of our church burns the note.

We will sing, shout, weep, throw our hands up, and maybe even dance.  

Here are the songs we will sing:

"To God Be the Glory"

"I Thank God"

"What's He's Done"

"Firm Foundation"

After the service, we will have lunch. We have set up to feed 300 people with the church providing BBQ, chicken fingers, and drinks.  We are asking the church to bring side dishes and desserts.

What a day we are anticipating.  Maybe just a taste of Heaven to come.

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Sunday School 101 - Part One

I don't remember the first pastor who said to me years (and years, and years) ago that Sunday School is the most important ministry in your church.  I am now in year 46 of being a pastor but I quickly learned in the size churches I was privileged to pastor that I had to learn the basics of Sunday School to grow and keep a growing church.  I'm glad I did.

Too many pastors ignore Sunday School or pass it off to another staff member.  In my opinion, that is a mistake.  Here is the definition I have developed over the years for Sunday School:  Sunday School is the church organized and mobilized. 

Let me just briefly unpack the definition here and then over the next several weeks I will do more.

Sunday School is an organization that must be run like an organization.  There must be levels of ministers  who understand their role, position, and responsibilities.  If it breaks down at any level, then the Sunday School suffers.  I will share over the next several weeks (most likely more than you want, but not more than you need) ministry descriptions for these positions.  It is MANDATORY to have an organization structure to Sunday School.

And Sunday School is the church mobilized.  It is the church moving to carry out its purposes and plans.  There is no, and I said NO, ministry greater than the Sunday School because of the capacity it has to move the church totally to fulfill the purpose and plans of the church.

In some ways, Sunday School is the church in smaller quantities.  It is the way to teach, minister, care, provide accountability, perform missions and outreach, as well as lead its members to worship.

I can't wait for these next few weeks.  Stay tuned.


Monday, September 11, 2023

Portraits of our Father - Luke 15 - Part Five

 One of the greatest chapters in the Bible (Luke 15) ends with quite a turn.  If the opening and middle of this chapter have not been hurdles high enough for these Jews to topple, this last one causes them to simply stop and go home.

While Jesus is telling these stories on the heels of them grumbling that He "receives sinners and eats with them," now He is telling them His Father is the one who not only receives sinners but rejects the pious religious people.

As the story of the younger son is ending with dancing, shouting, and eating the fatted calf; his older brother hears the noise of the party and begins to enquire about what is going on.  Which tells me the party was a "quick turnaround" for the elder son most likely left home that morning to work having never heard from his younger brother only to return in the evening to hear the brother has returned and his father is doing a party in his honor.

The older son is "angry and would not go in." (Luke 15: 28) The Message reads, "The older brother stalked off in an angry sulk and refused to join in."

Angry over good news?  Yes, but only to those who believe someone who acted so wrongly and shamefully, like his younger brother, should never be celebrated, AND no one has ever celebrated you for your hard work.  Plus, you never done anything like this to the family name.  The elder son even celebrated himself by saying "These many years I have been serving you; I never transgressed your commandment at any time..."

Religious blindness and pride stinks in the nostrils of the Father even worse than the stench of pigs.  And while boys wallowing with pigs can be washed up and restored; seldom do those with religious pride ever have their eyes open to be washed from their filthliness.

This boy sat at the father's table every morning and night, talked with him throughout the week, and obeyed all his father had ever asked.  But sadly never understood the heart of the father.  He never saw the heartbreak of his heart and the desire for a relationship not based on work.

All these Jewish leaders Jesus is talking to are represented by the older son.

Our Father rejects a status based on the good we think we are and how much we have done for Him.  His heart beats for a relationship based on grace and not works. 

If you would like to read all nine sermons I preached from Luke 15 in 2016, simply click here.

Wednesday, September 6, 2023

The Good Life


Last week I was traveling from middle Kentucky through Virginia toward Lynchburg, VA.  I was "off the beaten path" on a two lane road somewhat aggravated.  I am an interstate guy, but was not willing to drive a few extra hours to go back into Tennessee to pick up the interstate.  So I was excited when I had four-lane highways until...this two lane road became mine for about an hour.

As I drove through the country and then small towns, I begin to just look at my surroundings as I was forced to slow down and "the surroundings" were close at me.  I saw the small cemetaries, the white churches, the nursing homes, the schools, and the small houses with pasture land.

As I did, I thought about the people who lived there.  This is life.  They know their neighbors.  They attend the small country church.  They bury their loved ones in the cemetery.  They live here.

I love the internet.  It is the "world-wide-web," - remember.  We can know about a building on fire in Johannesburg, South Africa and the deaths as quickly as a building on fire on the other side of town. We can think about the ramifications of Kim Jon Un meeting Putin next week to talk about an arms deal. We can can follow the Ukraine-Russian war daily.   

But is this really life? And as a Christian, and a pastor, I'm not talking about "eternal life" or "abundant life."  I'm talking about day-by-day living.

We want to make our social posts and see how many "likes" we get. We want to watch people on Tik Tok that we don't know to make us laugh and yet we become discontented with what we do.  We read about people's arguments on Facebook and carry subconsciously their hurt. 

But the world you know, the small towns, the little churches, the small houses, the old cemetaries....and the people who make them up, that is real life - the good life.  I remember Zechariah 4:10 "For who has despised the day of small things?" I'm afraid too many of us are in that category and we need to refresh our minds to celebrate what the good life is really like. 

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

How to Build (or Break) a Habit by Jon Bloom

 If we want to be faithful followers of Jesus, we need to pay careful attention to our habits. Because we hand over much of our lives to our habits, much more than we probably realize.

James Clear, author of Atomic Habits, describes a habit as “a behavior that has been repeated enough times to become automatic” (44). Neurologically speaking, habits are “mental shortcuts learned from experience,” behaviors that our “conscious mind [passes off] to our nonconscious mind to do automatically” (46).

Now, take a moment and consider how many actions you’ve taken today while your conscious thoughts were focused on something else. Did you get dressed? Did you eat? Did you tie your shoes or a necktie? Did you apply makeup? Did you operate a smartphone? Did you walk through a cluttered room without breaking anything? Did you drive a vehicle or ride a bike? Did you do so on a busy street? If you were to log, for a week, all the simple and complex tasks you do that require little to no conscious awareness on your part, you would be amazed. And you’d come away with a deeper appreciation for the massive influence your habits wield on your life.

Behaviors that become automatic, ones we stop noticing after they become habitual, are powerful — for good or for ill. Which is why it’s important for us to occasionally take notice of them. And all the more because the benefits or consequences of our habits compound over time.

Compounding Power of Habits

Clear explains the compounding power of habits:

The same way that money multiplies through compound interest, the effects of your habits multiply as you repeat them. They seem to make little difference on any given day and yet the impact they deliver over the months and years can be enormous. It is only when looking back two, five, or perhaps ten years later that the value of good habits and the cost of bad ones becomes strikingly apparent. (16)

For people like us, who like fast results from our efforts and immediate gratification of our cravings, this is a sobering discovery. It helps explain why we often struggle to stick with new resolves. It also helps explain why we formed many of our bad habits in the first place (and why we find them hard to break). If we look to short-term outcomes to measure our success, we’ll likely be discouraged. Because, as Clear says,

Your net worth is a lagging measure of your financial habits. Your weight is a lagging measure of your eating habits. Your knowledge is a lagging measure of your learning habits. Your clutter is a lagging measure of your cleaning habits. (18)

And I would add that your spiritual health and growth and fruitfulness are lagging measures of your spiritual habits. Acquiring good habits and breaking bad ones require patience, perseverance, and faith — exercises that yield many and varied benefits themselves.

We’ve all been taught that if we want to achieve something, we need to set goals. In principle, that’s true. Yet how many goals have you set that have gone unachieved? Why didn’t they work for you? In part, because defective systems trump good aspirations. In other words, your habits undermined your goals. Goals get us nowhere without the good habits required to achieve them.

Building a Habit in Four Steps

So, how do we build the habits required to achieve the prize we desire? And how do we break habits that are impeding our pursuit?

When it comes to habit-building (and breaking), there isn’t just one way. Clear, however, provides four helpful steps he’s gleaned — first from his very difficult experience after suffering a serious head injury, but also from extensive research in the neuroscience of habit formation. The four steps are cuecravingresponse, and reward. Clear describes how they work together like this:

The cue triggers a craving, which motivates a response, which provides a reward, which satisfies the craving and, ultimately, becomes associated with the cue. Together, these four steps form a neurological feedback loop — cue, craving, response, reward; cue, craving, response, reward — that ultimately allows you to create automatic habits. (50)

Understanding how this “habit loop” works also helps us when it comes to breaking bad habits.

Below, I attempt to concisely take Clear’s general insights and help us see how we can benefit from them as Christians. Keep in mind that these steps merely describe strategies for habit-making and breaking from the neurological perspective. For Christians, forming habits will always involve more than neuroscience: it will involve faith in God’s promises, joy in Christ, and reliance on the Spirit. So, as you read, exercise your ability to take common-grace knowledge and apply it for spiritual purposes.

1. Cue

Every habit we develop begins with a cue, something that “triggers your brain to initiate a behavior” — a behavior your brain associates with a desired reward (47). Hunger is an obvious example; it’s a cue to eat. Over time, we develop lots of cues around eating: certain times of the day, certain places, certain events, certain activities, certain moods, and so on.

The same is true of all our habitual behaviors. Seeing the television remote, the Bible on the table, the phone notification, the running shoes, the vending machine, the prayer list, the sensual image — all these can become behavioral cues.

Make good cues obvious: When it comes to creating a good habit, we need to identify new cues that our brains associate with the desired behavior and then think through ways to make the cues more obvious to our brains. Clear suggests we fill out the sentence “I will [BEHAVIOR] at [TIME] in [LOCATION]” and then place cues strategically as brain triggers (71). With repeated practice over time, our brains will associate these cues with the beneficial behavior.

Make bad cues invisible: Breaking bad habits also can begin by removing cues that prompt detrimental behavior. Clear says, “Many people think they lack motivation when what they really lack is clarity” (71). So, he advises us to look for these unhelpful cues and write them down. Then think through ways to reduce or eliminate the kind of “sight” that triggers our brains.

Let me give you a personal example of changing cues. Because I decided I wanted to set my mind on things above before going to sleep, instead of “things that are on earth” (Colossians 3:2), I decided to charge my smartphone in another room (removing a cue that triggers my undesired behavior) and set my Bible or a spiritually edifying book on my nightstand (inserting a cue that triggers my desired behavior).

2. Craving

The power of a cue is that it produces a craving. Clear points out that a craving is

the motivational force behind every habit . . . [because] without craving a change, we have no reason to act. What you crave is not the habit itself but the change in state it delivers. (48)

In other words, when we think we crave a soda or cigarette or sitcom or social media plunge, it’s not really those things we crave. What we crave is the pleasure or relief our brains associate with those behaviors. In fact, researchers have found that typically more dopamine is released in our brains when we anticipate the pleasure than when we actually engage in the behavior.

Make good cravings attractive: When it comes to creating and sticking with a good habit, willpower isn’t enough. Our brains must learn to associate a new behavior with a craving — the anticipation of the behavior producing some reward. Ideally, the ultimate goal this behavior helps us achieve provides sufficient motivation. Often, at first, we need to find creative ways to make the behavior itself attractive until our brains more clearly associate the behavior with our ultimate goal.

Make bad cravings unattractive: When it comes to breaking a bad habit, again, the inverse is true. We need to teach our brains to stop associating a learned detrimental behavior with a craving for pleasure. We do this by explicitly rehearsing the ways the behavior actually works against our greater pleasure until our brains interpret it as an undesirable and unattractive means of pleasure.

Any of us who’ve tried to change our eating habits in order to drop weight or promote better bodily health understands the importance of these two strategies. Because given how persuasive cravings can be, if we didn’t find creative ways to enhance the attractiveness of healthy foods and decrease the attractiveness of unhealthy foods before our brains made the craving switch, we most likely reverted back to our bad habits.

3. Response

A craving pushes us to respond in a way that will achieve the desired reward. When a particular response is repeated enough times (depending on a number of factors, this might be few or many times), it becomes a habit (like drinking a soda, smoking a cigarette, watching a sitcom, or plunging into social media).

Make good responses easy: When it comes to creating a good habit, “simply putting in your reps is one of the most critical steps you can take” (144). Of course, some habits are easy to establish, while others are very challenging. Either way, “much of the battle of building better habits comes down to finding ways to reduce the friction associated with our good habits” (155). We need to look for ways to minimize obstacles and increase convenience when it comes to desired behaviors. We all know that the easier a behavior is, the more likely we are to do it.

Make bad responses difficult: When it comes to breaking a bad habit, we do the opposite. As Clear says, “When friction is high, habits are difficult” (158). So, we need to look for ways to “increase the number of steps between [us] and [our] bad habits” (213). This is where recruiting accountability partners and restricting our future choices by “burning bridges” are often helpful.

I have a dear friend who put this strategy into practice. A number of years ago, he was actively fighting a sinful habit of viewing online porn, but his job required him to be frequently online. So, he subscribed to a service developed by a Christian ministry that tracked his online behavior and made it visible to his accountability partners. Making it more difficult and painful to indulge his destructive habit helped him break free from it.

4. Reward

In the end, the only reason we develop a habit is to pursue a reward. As Clear says,

The cue is about noticing the reward. The craving is about wanting the reward. The response is about obtaining the reward. (48)

As Christian Hedonists, we say amen! We believe that the ultimate reward of every good habit — great or small, easy or difficult — is to increase our satisfaction in God. That’s why Paul sought to “discipline [his] body and keep it under control” (1 Corinthians 9:27), so that he could “press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 3:14). Paul was pursuing the great, imperishable Reward: that he might “gain Christ” (Philippians 3:8). And Christ is a reward for whom it’s worth building and breaking every habit necessary to obtain.

As I mentioned earlier, in this fallen age our brains don’t always make the association between a particular habit and our ultimate reward. And so, “immediate reinforcement helps maintain motivation in the short term while [we’re] waiting for the long-term reward to arrive” (192).

Make it satisfying: When it comes to creating a good habit, we are wise to look for ways to make it feel as rewarding as it is. Because “we are more likely to repeat a behavior when the experience is satisfying” (185). And since “one of the most satisfying feelings is the feeling of making progress” (204), creating or using some kind of habit-tracker can provide the kind of incentive to keep us going.

Make it unsatisfying: When it comes to breaking a bad habit, you can probably fill in the answer yourself: find ways to make it costly. Again, inviting an accountability partner to monitor your behavior and/or committing to an undesirable consequence can provide enough disincentive to avoid the harmful behavior.

Habits Are Allies or Enemies

Why have I given so much space here to habits? Because of the massive influence they wield in our lives. And because they do so largely outside of our conscious awareness. When our habits serve our goals of living in a manner worthy of our calling and gaining Christ, they are invaluable spiritual and physical allies. When they impede those goals, they are spiritual and physical enemies. Given the compounding effects they have on us over time — for good or for ill — we are wise to occasionally take notice of them so that we can make the necessary adjustments.

I hope what I’ve covered encourages you to think more about your habits, and that you go on to learn more from what both Scripture and neuroscience have to teach you. Because I’ve only just scratched the surface. Habits are complex, affected by our genes, our temperaments, our experiences, our family and friends, our churches, our cultures, our health, our preferences, our strengths and weaknesses, our unseen spiritual influences, and more.

We’ve all been given a race of faith to run. And if we run faithfully with endurance, laying aside every encumbering weight and sin, we are promised a glorious, incomparable, imperishable, eternal prize: Jesus Christ. Paul exhorts us to “run that [we] may obtain [him]” (1 Corinthians 9:24). So, we take our habits seriously. Because they influence the way we run — for good or for ill.

Monday, September 4, 2023

Portraits of our Father - Luke 15 - Part Four

If one thought the Jews didn't like Jesus' stories about a shepherd and a woman, then wait for the fury as Jesus talks about a Jewish father.  No, the idea of it being a Jew and a male is not the issue, but rather what this Jewish father did.  

Jesus moves on to tell a story that surely ranks as one of the best-known of all Jesus ever told. This further reveals the receptivity of God for sinners as He tells the story of the youngest son of a father who essentially said, "I wish you were dead so I could get my inheritance."  The father relents to the wish and gives him his inheritance to wish the son leaves home and wastes it all in unrighteous and unruly living.  When all his "money friends" leave him, the boy finds himself taking a job feeding that which every Jew hates - pigs.  But it was there "he came to his senses" and saw himself resulting in him going home willing to be just a servant, not a son.  That is when the father saw him coming and met him with hugs, kisses, and all kinds of restoration to the family as a son.

So what about this story would raise the fury of all the Jews.  This father should have never given the boy the inheritance, instead, he had every right to disown him, going to the public square to publicly announce his verdict, assuring the boy never got a penny.  Instead, the father took the disgrace of the son and to make matters worse, when the boy came home, he ran to him, kissed him, and restored him.  It was beneath the dignity of a Jewish man to run.

This father acted in such a disgraceful and undignified way causing every Jew hearing this story almost want to throw up.  And yet Jesus is saying, "This is what God our Father is like."

Our Father has given us so much that we squandered on ourselves and others leaving us bankrupt and broken.  We feel as low as we could go without any hope of ever being restored to a right fellowship with God. But God did not further push us down but instead was there to meet us when we came running back to Him.  He graciously and gloriously forgave, kissed us, and restored us to sonship with all its rights and privileges.  He further throws the biggest party to celebrate the return of this son who disgraced and humiliated him.  What a Father!!

If you would like to read all nine sermons I preached from Luke 15 in 2016, simply click here.

Saturday, September 2, 2023

This Lord's Day (September 3, 2023) at Rainsville First Baptist Church

We will conclude our journey through Luke 16 this Sunday with one of the most recognizable teachings of Jesus.  It is about the rich man and Lazarus and how the tables were turned on them in eternity from their earthly state.  Lazarus was a beggar lying at the rich man's gate ignored of even the scraps from his table.  Both died with Lazarus going to Heaven and the rich man to hell.  

Yet, when we preach and teach this story, the main focus is on the revelation of hell seen here.  And indeed it is a powerful, moving description of the place of eternal torment.

But the main teaching of Luke 16: 14-31 is not hell, but one's attitude toward money and material possessions in this life and how it is a mirror for what to expect in eternity.

We will look at this text and application this Sunday as we gather for the Lord's Day worship with His people.