Daily Devotions Wednesday October 22, 2008

I will not be posting a devotional for the next few days. I’ll be back on line on Monday.

Daily Devotions

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Salvation

 

Today’s Scripture:   Romans 3:22-24  This righteousness from God comes through faith in Jesus Christ to all who believe. There is no difference, for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. 

 

Of all the stories I’ve been reading about people who made a difference in someone’s life, I’ve discovered a glaring omission. I haven’t received a single story yet of someone who came to saving faith in Jesus Christ because of the influence of another person. Now I’m convinced that there are many such stories, and you probably have one. You may even be the subject of someone else’s story of salvation because you showed them the way to Jesus. But I am concerned about something. Why, when we think of the people who made a difference in our lives, don’t we immediately think of the person who was responsible for telling us about Jesus? Isn’t our salvation the greatest gift we have ever received, and didn’t it make the biggest difference in our lives?

 

I believe the answers to these questions have serious implications in our lives today. We have become people who move about in life with very little concern for the lost people around us. We are so enamored by the blessings of our own lives, filled with pleasures and possessions, that we are blinded to the spiritual condition of those around us who are still in the bondage of sin. We would do anything and make any sacrifice to accomplish our own goals, but find it difficult to influence another life for Christ. We make plans to see a Packer game, go on a trip, buy a new car or boat or camper, or invest in any other item or activity that will perish with this world, and yet we will let lost people around us perish with it. What does that say about our personal value system?

 

Roger Storms, pastor of First Christian Church in Chandler, Arizona, tells this story: “One Sunday, a car had broken down in the alley behind our facilities, and the driver had jacked up the car and crawled underneath to work on the problem. Suddenly, we heard him scream for help. The jack had slipped, and the car had come down on top of him. Someone shouted, ‘Call 9-1-1!’ and a couple of people ran for the phone. Several of our men gathered around the large car and strained to lift it off the trapped man. Nurses from our congregation were rounded up and brought to the scene. Somehow the men were able to ease the car’s weight off the man and he was pulled free. Our nurses checked him over. He was scratched up and shaken, but otherwise okay. When this man was in peril, people did all they could to help—risking themselves, inconveniencing themselves. Whatever was necessary to save this man, they were ready to try. How we need this same attitude when it comes to rescuing those in greatest peril—the danger of losing life eternally!”

 

C.S. Lewis said, “The glory of God, and, as our only means to glorifying him, the salvation of human souls, is the real business of life.” The real business of life! So I have a simple suggestions to help us all get back to the real business of life – every day, at the close of every prayer, whether it’s at meals or in your devotions, ask God to use your life to win one soul to Christ today. How can we claim to pray in Jesus’ Name if we aren’t praying for His number one priority for our lives? We must begin to get  serious about bringing people to Jesus, and the best place for that to start is in our prayers.

 

Steve Sjogren is the pastor of a church in Cincinnati, Ohio. One Monday morning he was feeling particularly discouraged and announced to his wife Janie, “I’m quitting the ministry! And this time I mean it.” Janie had heard this kind of talk before so she suggested, “Why don’t you go for a drive and think things through? Usually that helps when you’re stressed out. And while you’re out, could you be a sweetheart and pick me up a burrito?” Steve drove around for about an hour, complaining to the Lord the whole time. Finally, he was in the fast-food drive-thru to pick up Janie’s burrito when he sensed the Lord speaking to him. He is very careful to say he did not hear an audible voice … nothing came over the drive-thru speaker. In a subtle, quiet way he sensed the Lord impressing this message on his heart, “If you open your door I will give you a gift.” Even though he felt silly, Steve figured he had nothing to lose, so he opened the car door, looked down and saw embedded in the asphalt, a tarnished penny. This is what he says about the experience: “I reached down to pry out the coin and held it in my hand feeling less than thankful for this ‘gift.’ The Lord spoke to me again: ‘Many people in this city feel about as valuable as discarded pennies. I’ve given you the gift of gathering people who seem valueless. Though these are the people that the world casts off, they have great value to me. If you will open your heart, I will bring you more pennies than you know what to do with.”

 

So start praying for pennies. Spiritual pennies. Ask God to use your life to make a difference in the life of someone else by showing them the love of Jesus and leading them to salvation. Be intentional about it. Make it a part of every prayer you pray. Before you say “in Jesus Name, Amen” you should always say “Jesus, save someone today, and use me to do it.”

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Tuesday October 21, 2008

Daily Devotions

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Redemption

 

Today’s Scripture:   Ruth 4:13-15  So Boaz took Ruth and she became his wife. Then he went to her, and the LORD enabled her to conceive, and she gave birth to a son. The women said to Naomi: “Praise be to the LORD, who this day has not left you without a kinsman-redeemer. May he become famous throughout Israel! He will renew your life and sustain you in your old age. For your daughter-in-law, who loves you and who is better to you than seven sons, has given him birth.”

 

Last week we looked at the story of Ruth, a woman who stepped out of her homeland and left her own family to follow her mother-in-law, Naomi. Her personal sacrifice really made a difference. But that’s not the end of the story. Ruth meets a man named Boaz. He is a wealthy land owner. He is a relative of Naomi’s husband who died. He is about to fall in love.

 

I would challenge you to study the incredible concept of redemption in the Old Testament – something we don’t have the time or space to do here. But in short, redemption is the “buying back” of what had been lost. The social and cultural system of the Old Testament honored family names, heritage, and ownership. If a man died without having a son, a relative of the man was to marry the widow and produce an heir that would carry on the family name and ownership of property. The relative was called the kinsman-redeemer. Without a son to carry on the family name, the name would be lost, and all rights of ownership would be lost. The kinsman-redeemer was the rescuer of what would be lost.

 

Boaz was second in line to redeem Naomi’s family name and property. After following the proper protocols, he jumped to the front of the line when the relative in front of him declined the opportunity. This required him to make a financial sacrifice to purchase the land. It also required him to marry a foreign woman whom he barely (or barley, if you read the story carefully) knew. But what a difference his sacrifices would make for all of us. His willingness to become the redeemer of another person’s name and heritage brought joy to all those in the land. Naomi’s position in society was secured. She would not be left homeless and nameless. The other women praised the Lord because of Boaz. Ruth would fulfill her calling to bear a son and carry on the heritage of Naomi’s family line. You and I would be blessed by all of this because the son born to Boaz would be the grandfather of King David, whose family heritage would culminate in the birth of our Redeemer Jesus Christ.

 

I would challenge you to reflect on the story of Ruth and the need we all have for a Redeemer to buy back the lives we had lost to sin. But I also challenge you to think of the way Ruth and Boaz stepped out of their own little worlds and made sacrifices for others. I have a friend like that. He is always stepping out of his world to enter the world of others and help people. He is always ready to go anywhere and do anything that will supply a need. His name is George, and today, he needs our help. Last night a fire destroyed George and Janice’s home. They will need our help. They will need clothing. They will need help with the inventory of all their possessions for the insurance company. They will need help cleaning and sorting through all the stuff that’s left. They will need food. They may even need a place to stay for a while as they make decisions about rebuilding. It’s our turn to step out of our worlds and make sacrifices for them, the same way they have done for so many others. We get to be kinsmen-redeemers of sorts, because we are relatives in the body of Christ.

 

For those of you who get these devotionals and aren’t part of our church, please pray for George and Janice Hepfler. Then look around – there are people where you live that need help. For all of us, there are people everywhere who need a Redeemer. They will only see Him if you show Him to them by stepping out of your world and into theirs. Every one of us has been given the opportunity and the provision to participate in the process of redemption. Somewhere around you is a person who is lost and needs to be bought back. The sacrifices you make to meet their needs will be the way they see the Redeemer. It’s time we realize we are their kinsmen, and they need us.

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Monday October 20, 2008

Daily Devotions

Monday, October 20, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Growing Together

 

Today’s Scripture:   Romans 5:1-5  “Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us.”

 

I have always hated running. I don’t mind running so that I can stretch a single into a double in a church softball game, or running down a pass thrown to the corner of the end zone, or even running up the hill of a golf course to see if the shot I just hit went in the hole. But running just for the sake of running some more has no appeal to me. But I do admire those who do love to run. I admire their endurance and their perseverance. I guess my problem is I’m not much into suffering for the sake of building muscle. I’ve had to realize that one doesn’t come without the other, both in the physical and the spiritual.

 

The Apostle Paul tells us in Romans five that we have two things for which to rejoice – the hope of the glory of God, and the suffering that produces a full understanding of that hope. I wonder if we haven’t sacrificed true hope on the altar of leisurely and luxurious living. I wonder if we need a fresh lesson in the school of suffering to teach us to persevere. Maybe then we will develop real Christ-like character and find the true hope of glory that never disappoints us because we are living under the Divine influence of God’s love rather than love for self.

 

Over the weekend I received an email from a reader of these devotionals who is not on my distribution list. She gets them through a friend who forwards them to her. She pointed out something very interesting about this passage of Scripture. She discovered that growing in character isn’t an individual activity, but a group one. Here’s her story of someone who made a difference in her life.


My high school cross country coach, Bud Swanson (whose first name admittedly was Harold, but no one would ever think to call him that) was the most unstoppable man I had ever met.  Daily he ran the long miles with the varsity team (though he always made sure to drop back to encourage those who were huffing and puffing).  Daily he told us the importance of a healthy diet (I never drank a full can of Coke after he said it would ruin an entire week of training).  Daily after practices he would have us stretch in silence and think about all the ways we could improve our mile times, all the ways we were stronger than the other teams, all the ways we were going to succeed in the next race.  He’d always say that, be it a cross-country race, a hard exam or any struggle we insecure teenage girls encountered in our lives, we could close our eyes and safely jump from any unimaginable height, as long as we had a cape in which we trusted without fail.  Bud ran right, ate right and thought right – and made sure we did the same for ourselves.

That’s why I was so surprised during my junior year of high school when he told us he had stomach cancer, and why – four months later – he died.

A little while after, I happened upon Romans 5, one of my favorite pieces of Scripture to read – only this time I read it differently than I ever had before: we rejoice in our sufferings, it says.  Not only do I have the ability to persevere through my own suffering and find hope, but because we are all connected – because we are all hands and feet and arms and legs and ears and eyes of the body of Christ – his family, his students, and I myself were able to gain character, hope and peace through Bud’s suffering, through his perseverance. 

 

Isn’t that great? We are connected, and when one part of the Body of Christ to which we belong suffers, we all suffer. And when we suffer together, we all grow in perseverance, character and hope. Unfortunately, our tendency is to become isolated during suffering, while God intends intimacy. If only we could get our eyes off of the need for immediate pleasure, gratification, or personal benefit, we could discover the incredible truth of hope growing through suffering.

 

But the needs of the individual have overwhelmed the betterment of the body. Our own personal agenda has taken priority over the building of the body of Christ. The desire to run the race has been extinguished by the dislike of training. Much of our time is spent avoiding suffering under the guise of making life better. We strive for satisfaction and stifle suffering. We pursue pleasures rather than perseverance. We chase after capital and careers instead of character. We hurry after happiness at the expense of real hope. Look around. Hope is fading. People are looking for it in all the wrong places and from all the wrong people. We may be in for a time of suffering. It is during this time that we who are in Christ will grow in perseverance, character and hope. Let’s do it together.

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Thursday October 16, 2008

Daily Devotions

Thursday, October 16, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Sacrifice Makes a Difference

 

Today’s Scripture:   Ruth 2:10-12  At this, [Ruth] bowed down with her face to the ground. She exclaimed, “Why have I found such favor in your eyes that you notice me—a foreigner?” Boaz replied, “I’ve been told all about what you have done for your mother-in-law since the death of your husband—how you left your father and mother and your homeland and came to live with a people you did not know before. May the LORD repay you for what you have done. May you be richly rewarded by the LORD, the God of Israel, under whose wings you have come to take refuge.”

 

I felt like I missed out. I regretted parts of my youth because of it. I understand why it had to happen the way it did, but I was jealous of those who had it differently. I’m glad that for the most part it’s different for me now.

 

“What are you talking about, PJ?” I’m talking about family. I grew up in a family that moved a lot. From the time I was born until the time I left home for college, my family never lived in the same place for more than four school years at a time except once. I went to two different high schools in two different states. I never developed close friendships. Every time I was settled in we would move. Yet it was in the last of those moves in the middle of my senior year of high school that I met someone who had never moved. She was classmates in high school with the same friends she had known since she was old enough to walk and talk. Extended family meant everything to her. Aunts and uncles and cousins were all close and spent lots of time together. She understood and appreciated, and still does to this day, the value of staying connected to family. In fact, it’s probably the most significant part of her life.

 

That’s why I admire her so much for what she did. She left it all behind to marry me and move out of her home state for the first time in her life. She sacrificed her closeness to family and went from seeing them consistently to seeing them only two times per year. We are so blessed to have been brought to a place in our ministry and service to Jesus that He has chosen to allow us to live close to our family. It is very important to us.

 

Yet as I have grown, I have also come to deeply respect the sacrifices made by people who don’t have that blessing. People like Ruth, who left her homeland and her family to follow Naomi back to her homeland and support her. People like Dudley and Inge Donaldson, who will soon be leaving their family and friends to go to Swaziland as missionaries for at least two years. Sure, the pain of separation still hurts: it hurts a lot. But when we look beyond that pain and let God finish the story, we find rich rewards at the end.

 

Ruth left everything to go to a foreign land to be with her mother-in-law. Who does such a thing? But word got around. People in the new land were impressed with her commitment, her sacrifice, and her love. Then, while at work in the fields one day, a man named Boaz told her how much everyone respected what she had done. Then he says this – May the LORD repay you for what you have done. May you be richly rewarded by the LORD, the God of Israel, under whose wings you have come to take refuge.” As you read that statement, what stands out as the most significant thing Boaz said to her? If we are thinking according to our own desires, then we would answer that the rewards from the Lord are most important. But if we are thinking according to our faith, we must answer that it was the fact that Ruth had chosen to take refuge under the wings of God that is most significant. Ruth made the choice that all of us must make at some point of our lives – to be committed to God above all else, even family.

 

My wife made that commitment. Thank you, Denise, for sacrificing your family to start ours. My dad made that commitment. Thank you, Dad, for following God wherever and whenever He led you. Dudley and Inge have made that commitment. Thank you, my friends, for being willing to go anywhere at anytime that God calls. You have all made the correct choice to take refuge under the wings of God. You are the people who make a difference, like Ruth did for Naomi. You are the people who look the most like Jesus, who gave up His heavenly to become one of us and save us from our sin. You are the people who truly live out the words of the great old hymn Under His Wings. Thank you!

Under His wings I am safely abiding;
  Though the night deepens and tempests are wild,
Still I can trust Him, I know He will keep me;
  He has redeemed me, and I am His child.
    
Under His wings–what a refuge in sorrow!
  How the heart yearningly turns to His rest!
Often when earth has no balm for my healing,
  There I find comfort, and there I am blest.

Under His wings–oh, what precious enjoyment!
  There will I hide till life’s trials are o’er;
Sheltered, protected, no evil can harm me;
  Resting in Jesus I’m safe evermore.

 

Under His wings, under His wings,
      Who from His love can sever?
    Under His wings my soul shall abide,
        Safely abide forever.

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Wednesday October 15, 2008

Daily Devotions

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Faith Makes a Difference

 

Today’s Scripture:   Joshua 3:5-8  Joshua told the people, “Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the LORD will do amazing things among you.” Joshua said to the priests, “Take up the ark of the covenant and pass on ahead of the people.” So they took it up and went ahead of them. And the LORD said to Joshua, “Today I will begin to exalt you in the eyes of all Israel, so they may know that I am with you as I was with Moses. Tell the priests who carry the ark of the covenant: ‘When you reach the edge of the Jordan’s waters, go and stand in the river.’”

  

At the conclusion of the first session of The Truth Project, Dr. Del Tackett asks a question. It is a deeply penetrating question. It is a question that exposes the truth of what we believe. Think about this for a moment – “Do you really believe that what you believe is really real?” You may have to repeat it a few times to let it sink in. For me, there are two significant questions that arise from that one. First, “In whom or in what have I placed my faith?”, and second, “Is what I call faith really faith?” In other words, is what I believe in real, and if it is, is my belief in it real enough to make a difference?

 

Now I know I have started out in the deep end of the pool, and you may only feel like wading today, but let’s go swimming anyway. If you must, just tread water with me for a while. For the second time in his life Joshua stands before the Jordan River which served as a boundary to the Promised Land. He had crossed it once before in traditional fashion when he was sent by Moses as a member of a twelve man spy ring to search out and design a strategy for conquering the territory God had given them. Ten of those spies returned in fear and saw no way of conquering the land. They were not present this time, having died in the wilderness over the past forty years with all of the other people who believed their faithless report. Only Joshua and the other faithful spy, Caleb, were present. Joshua was now the leader of the nation, and he faced another faith challenge.

 

The fear of the enemy that lived across the river had been conquered. The people were ready to take possession of the land. But now the river itself became the test of their faith. Joshua 3:15 tells us that the river was at flood stage. Historical records tell us that when it flooded, the river went from wading depth and an average width of 100 feet, to a rushing river of 12 foot depth that would overflow the banks of the ravine and flood out into the plains. It was considered an historic feat to cross the river during flood stage, and would be impossible for an entire nation with women, children, animals, and baggage to accomplish. It would seem logical that the people would question God’s timing to have brought them to this point during flood stage, and to question his location, knowing that just a few miles downstream there was a flatter and shallower area of the river that rarely flooded. Why would God ask them to cross at this time and at this place where they would have to struggle so hard? God was asking them the question, “Do you really believe that what you believe is really real?”

 

We don’t have any record of the names of the men who first demonstrated that their faith was real, but we know that their faith made a difference for everyone else. All the people were asked to be ready to move when the Ark of the Covenant moved. They were told what would happen. As soon as the priests carrying the ark stepped into the rushing water, the water would be stopped, and the people would all be able to cross over on dry ground. I wonder how many times during the three days prior to this event, as they camped by the river, they had retold the story of Moses and their ancestors escaping the Egyptian army by crossing over the Red Sea on dry ground? Some of them may have even been there and were old enough to remember when it happened. They could testify to the power of God. All of them had seen the power of God during the last forty years as He provided for them and brought them to this place of conquest. They all knew who God was, and what He was capable of, but did they really believe that what they believed was really real? Would their faith make a difference in their actions?

 

So here come the priests, carrying the Ark. The people are ready to move. How much doubt would we have had as we watched? How much doubt would we have had if we were on of the priests? Would we have to admit that what we call faith isn’t really faith because it didn’t produce actions that proved we really believed God was real? Not these priests. They walked right up to the edge of the rushing river that had overflowed its banks. The exact edge of the drop off was indiscernible through the muddy water. How many steps would they be able to take before they would drop into the twelve foot ravine and be washed away? Most of us would have to admit that our eyes would have been on the water and we would have been thinking about the second step. But that would have demonstrated a lack of faith, because God had said that the first step would stop the river. The thought of being washed away was itself washed away by true faith. They took God at His word, and obeyed. Their faith made a difference.

 

You see, true faith in the one True God will be proved by obedience to God. Unquestioning obedience. Activity always proves the placement of faith. Choices always prove what we really believe to be real. So as you look at your life today, and as you consider your choices and your current condition, can you say that you really believe that what you believe is real about God is really real? It will be worth the time and effort to think through that. Otherwise you may never know true faith.

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Monday October 13, 2008

Daily Devotions

Monday, October 13, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Looking Past Appearances – Part 2

 

Today’s Scripture:   Joshua 2:1  Then Joshua son of Nun secretly sent two spies from Shittim. “Go, look over the land,” he said, “especially Jericho.” So they went and entered the house of a prostitute named Rahab and stayed there.  

 

I want to follow up on last week’s last devotional with a story I received from a friend. This story illustrates perfectly the point we were making about looking past appearances to see the potential a person has for love once their life is overwhelmed by the love of God. Here’s her story:

 

About twelve years ago we learned that our first grandson, Preston had died at 4 months of age.  When we drove to Bismarck and entered my son’s home, we couldn’t believe the ‘motley’ array of young people there.  Long hair, tattoos, piercings–it was unbelievable to these small town country people!!  It didn’t take long, though, until we saw that those young people–far from ‘motley’–were the most loving and caring young people that we had met.  They offered comfort to the grieving family that no one else was able to do.  They took care of countless errands for the young couple.  Our hearts were touched as we realized that God used people that WE considered unworthy to do the many things we could not do ourselves.  God bless those young people for what they did for my son and for what they did for US!!

 

That story reminds me of the words of the Apostle Paul who said to the church at Corinth,

Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things—and the things that are not—to nullify the things that are, so that no one may boast before him. It is because of him that you are in Christ Jesus, who has become for us wisdom from God—that is, our righteousness, holiness and redemption. Therefore, as it is written: ‘Let him who boasts boast in the Lord.’”

 

The one thing we must all realize is that our offense at the appearance of others cannot be compared to the offense God experienced at the sight of our hearts. Prior to being washed in the blood of Jesus, we were repulsive to God. Yet He looked beyond our sin and saw our need. Then He met our need. None of us can boast before the Lord, because none of us had anything of value to present Him. He took His total value and sacrificed Jesus in our place. It is because God initiated contact with undeserving and repulsive people that we are in Christ Jesus today. All that we are and all the we can do is by His grace.

 

So next time you see someone who looks different or acts differently than your standards dictate, don’t act in fear of what they might do to you. Think instead of what God can do for them, and then act in His love. After all, He did it for you.

 

Pastor John

 

Daily Devotions Thursday October 09, 2008

Daily Devotions

Thursday, October 09, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Looking Past Appearances

 

Today’s Scripture:   Joshua 2:1  Then Joshua son of Nun secretly sent two spies from Shittim. “Go, look over the land,” he said, “especially Jericho.” So they went and entered the house of a prostitute named Rahab and stayed there.  

 

Several days ago I was enjoying breakfast with some friends and family at my favorite restaurant. While we were waiting for our food, a young man and woman walked in and sat down at the booth next to our table. I must confess to an immediate internal reaction of pride that manifested itself in judgmentalism. He was covered in tattoos, had multiple piercings, and had earlobes that had been pierced and the holes stretched so they held two inch discs. His girlfriend was equally pierced and tattooed, except for the ears. As I sat at the table I found that I had formed a pretty solid opinion of who these people were just by their appearance. I was amazed and ashamed at how quickly I jumped to conclusions.

 

As we continued to talk at our table, I overheard the young man say, “I just can’t decide whether I want the Palm 800 or the new Blackberry.” Instantly I knew I could offer him some advice, since I have had both. I thought about how I would approach him to give him my information that would help him make a decision. Then the Holy Spirit brought down the hammer. I suddenly realized that this was a man of normal mentality, normal desires, and normal goals for life. But I had judged him by his appearance and deemed him to be different. So different, in fact, that I wanted to alienate myself from him rather than draw close to him.

 

Suddenly the Holy Spirit was showing me that he could use anyone from any background and of any appearance if they only had someone tell them the most vital of all information, the love of Jesus Christ for sinners. I sat there almost in a trance for the next few minutes, imaging what my church people would think if this man walked into church some Sunday. Many would probably judge him by his appearance the same way I did. I was ashamed. Why is it, I wondered, that we respond to people based on their past rather than their potential? Now I knew that I must talk to him. I would not necessarily talk to him about faith, but I would force myself to look beyond his exterior to the need that he had expressed, and I would meet that need. While doing that I would pray that he would see in me the love of Jesus.

 

When our meal was over, I stood up and moved two steps over to his table. I excused myself, and apologized for interrupting their breakfast. I told him I had overheard his concern about cell phones, and that I had owned both. I shared my experience with each one and gave him my advice. He thanked me, and I walked away. As I did, I overheard him say to his girlfriend, “That was sure nice of him to do that.” Mission accomplished. How God will use that in his life is up to Him. How God used it in my life is making a difference.

 

When the men of Israel went to Jericho to spy out the city, little did they know that God had been preparing the way for them. He had been bringing fear upon the people because of His previous displays of power on behalf of the Israelites. These two men chose an inconspicuous way to enter the city – they went to the home of a prostitute. They had no intention or forethought that this person was a potential convert. They thought that her need for money would result in their safety. They were only looking out for themselves. But God had other plans. God had prepared her heart to be His follower. The spies responded with the love of God. She would be accepted and rescued when the city was attacked. Her past meant nothing any more. Only what God was going to do with her mattered. It mattered so much that when we read the lineage of the life of Jesus, we will find Rahab mentioned. She was the great, great grandmother of King David.

 

What a lesson for all of us to learn. The people we think are the most deserving of judgment are the ones most needful of God’s grace. We can make a huge difference if we will just learn to extend God’s grace to them. The spies did that for Rahab. Ananias did that for Saul after he met Jesus on the road to Damascus. Barnabas did it for Saul when he arrived in Jerusalem. Peter learned he must do it for the Gentiles and went to the home of Cornelius. Ultimately Jesus did it for each one of us. We must be more convinced of the power of God to save than we are of the power of a person’s past to condemn. We must start making a difference for Jesus by joining Him in His mission to make a difference in people’s souls, no matter what they have done or what they look like. After all, is anyone more undeserving than we were?

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Wednesday October 08, 2008

Daily Devotions

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Listen To Good Advice

 

Today’s Scripture:   Exodus 18:17-19  Moses’ father-in-law replied, “What you are doing is not good. You and these people who come to you will only wear yourselves out. The work is too heavy for you; you cannot handle it alone. Listen now to me and I will give you some advice, and may God be with you.  

 

Seven years ago I was approached by a young man in our church who had an idea. He had obviously been thinking about this idea for some time. As it turned out, the idea was not his, but God’s. He was just the messenger.  He told me that he had been thinking about leadership, and how we should be training people for future leadership positions. He commented on how strong the current leadership was, but wondered what would happen if they were suddenly gone. Who would take their places? How would the church continue to move forward?

 

As he spoke, I thought about my own training for leadership. I wondered how I was ever deemed fit to be promoted to store manager in a major corporation at age 22. I reflected on the training that I had had gone through to earn that respected position. As I thought, he kept speaking. He shared the analogy of war. He had brought a picture he had printed of soldiers sitting in trenches in full armor, preparing to jump up and charge. He said these soldiers would be the next wave. They were ready to make their mark when the call came. Then he said, “The church needs to be preparing the next wave of men for leadership.”

 

As a result of that conversation, Next Wave was established. It has become a vital part of our ministry, and a passion of my heart. Its purpose is to train men to be ready for leadership. These men make a two year commitment that in some cases, like our present class, turns into three years. They meet every week for prayer, character development, theological teaching, and leadership training. Three years ago we had our first graduates. One of them is a Deacon in our church. One of them is our Youth Pastor. One of them had to drop out of that first class, but is back again and is already taking a leadership role in our men’s ministry. One of them has been a discipleship leader for new believers and currently serves on our building team. Not all of them chose to immediately involve themselves in leadership. Some of them are still growing and maturing, but when the time comes for them to answer the call, they will be ready.

 

Soon we will have another graduating class. Some of them are already serving in areas of leadership in our church. One is our worship minister. One serves in the worship ministry and leads one of our Connection Groups. One shows a passion for building relationships that will result in people coming to Christ. One is serving the Lord by making sure a person with disabilities is able to get to church on Sunday. One has a true servant’s heart for helping people. All of them are growing, and being prepared to be the next wave of leadership for our church.

 

Four weeks ago a new group of eight men started their two year commitment. I am excited to see what God is going to do with their lives, and how they will be used to minister to the local church. I am reminded of a quote from Amadeo P. Giannini, the founder of the Bank of America, who said, I leave everything to the young men. You’ve got to give youthful men authority and responsibility if you’re going to build up an organization. Otherwise you’ll always be the boss yourself and you won’t leave anything behind you.

 

Moses’ father-in-law, Jethro, made a difference because he was willing to give advice. He told Moses that he couldn’t do it all alone, and that he needed to select, train and appoint leaders over the people of Israel. Moses needed to delegate responsibility to people who could be trusted to lead. I have come to the conclusion that the single most important role any of us have is to train those who will follow us. Parents are to train their children to carry on the values of God in society. Employers are to train their employees to carry out the goals of the company. Pastors are to train the people of the church to do the work of God. But we who have a tendency, for whatever reason, to be the boss, will have problems. We must learn to train and delegate. That’s the model that God has left for us. C.S. Lewis said, He seems to do nothing of Himself which He can possibly delegate to His creatures. He commands us to do slowly and blunderingly what He could do perfectly and in the twinkling of an eye. Creation seems to be delegation through and through.

 

So to the young man who reminded me of how I was trained for ministry goes my deepest gratitude. Thank you to the young man whose vision became the reality of Next Wave. He was a graduate of the first class, and is serving the Lord today as a musician in our worship ministry, in addition to being my personal encourager and initiator of great ideas. He was and continues to have the right to be my Jethro. Now I can be confident that I will leave something behind me. I am excited to see how God is going to continue to use John Rieland in leadership at our church. I can only hope that each of you has a Jethro like him, and that you will listen when God sends one to you to give you advice. In fact, maybe you are to be a Jethro to someone else. It will make a difference.

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Tuesday October 7, 2008

Daily Devotions

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Serving Makes A Difference

 

Today’s Scripture:   Matthew 25:35-40  “For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me.”  Then the righteous will answer him, “Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you, or thirsty and give you something to drink? When did we see you a stranger and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? When did we see you sick or in prison and go to visit you?” The King will reply, “I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.”  

 

Three years ago, right after hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the Spirit of God clearly directed me to lead our church to adopt a sister church in the storm-ravaged area of southern Louisiana. In the years since, people from our church have made multiple trips to the bayou to help rebuild homes in an attempt to introduce the owners of those homes to the Savior who can rebuild their lives. I want you to meet the pastor of the church we adopted, and see what a difference his life is making in the lives of people who have once again been devastated by two hurricanes this summer. His name is Jerry Moser, and his story was told in an October 2nd article in The Baptist Message magazine. The article was entitled Sawmill helps pastor minister to needy, lost.

BAYOU DULARGE, Louisiana – This verse (Matt. 25:35-40) fittingly describes the work Pastor Jerry Moser has been doing in the tiny south Louisiana fishing community of Bayou DuLarge for the last 26 years. With a portable sawmill, a knack for carpentry, and a giving heart, Moser has ministered to needy families on Bayou DuLarge whether they are a member of his tiny church or not. He is a beacon in a sea of despair and poverty. 

 

“Brethren helping brethren,” Moser said. “I believe it is what our Lord commanded us to do. Helping the most unlikely is how the salvation and righteousness of God is going to be revealed to the people of the world. I believe if the church is attractive enough to outsiders, and by that I mean if  people see how we love all men, care for our brethren, and help our neighbors in times of need, it might get them to thinking they may want to be a part of a church like this.”

 

Storms like Gustav and Ike – especially Gustav, with its high winds – are a boon for Moser’s sawmill ministry, providing opportunities for him to reach people in need. After Gustav, the pastor has devoted a large portion of his time to cutting up fallen trees. He also gets a number of calls from people offering him their storm-damaged trees. He takes all that he can get. Over the years, Moser has cut hundreds of thousands of board feet, and has put it to good use, either ministering directly to those in need or selling what he can to make ends meet for church and family.

 

“A lot of this lumber is used in helping the people in this community to rebuild after a storm,” Moser said. “With the price of lumber these days, it comes in handy, especially for those who don’t have a lot to work with in the first place.”

 

Over the years, Moser and volunteers from numerous churches in Louisiana and across the nation have helped the people of this community – mostly Catholic – to rebuild after each devastating storm.

 

“I can’t tell you the number of storms that have passed through here,” Moser said. “But each is an opportunity from God to reach lost people. When our church began this repair/rebuild ministry, at least three quarters of the people we helped after a storm were not saved,” Moser said. “Today, as we prepare to help the community rebuild and recover, two-thirds of the people we will help are members of our church.”

 

Moser, though, is concerned about how many will come back to rebuild.

“We are on a marsh island that is only 16 inches above sea level. It is slowly sinking into the Gulf of Mexico,” Moser said. “After Hurricane Rita in 2005, many people knew they had to get their houses raised up off the ground. We were able, with the help of a lot of volunteers from a lot of different churches, to get some houses repaired, rebuilt, or raised up on new foundations,” the pastor continued. “Those houses rode out these last two storms pretty well. But there were some that we were just not able to get to quickly enough to help get them up off the ground. These families were not as fortunate, and I am afraid some may not stay. They may move closer to the city [Houma]. I would hate to see them leave, but some are no longer physically up to the challenge or just don’t have the money to rebuild,” Moser said.

 

Regardless of how many make that decision, Moser, whose church building – Bayou DuLarge Baptist – sits on pilings ten feet off the ground, plans on staying and helping people to rebuild and recover.

 

“Our young adults may be the ones that need the most help,” Moser said. “We need to help them – we need to extend out our hands and help them get back up on their feet. Brethren helping brethren. It is what God wants us to do,” Moser said. “And it is what I plan to do as long as God allows me to do so.”

 

What a great testimony to the compassion of Christ. If you were to spend any time at all with Jerry, as I have, you would know that he is sincerely in love with Jesus and sincerely His servant. You would see the touch of Jesus on people’s lives who would never had known Him unless they had seen Him in person – in the person of Pastor Jerry. Lives that are lived with such a sacrificial spirit truly make a difference.

 

On October 24th, several of us from our church and our community are planning another trip to the bayou to help with the rebuilding. We will be gone for one week, and we will work hard. But we will make a difference. Will you consider joining us, either in person, in prayer, or in financial support? Thank you. You are serving Jesus when you help, and it makes a difference.

 

Pastor John

Daily Devotions Monday October 6, 2008

Daily Devotions

Monday, October 06, 2008

 

Current Study: People Who Made a Difference         

 

Today’s Topic: Inadequacy

 

Today’s Scripture:  Exodus 4:13-16  But Moses said, “O Lord, please send someone else to do it.” Then the LORD’S anger burned against Moses and he said, “What about your brother, Aaron the Levite? I know he can speak well. He is already on his way to meet you, and his heart will be glad when he sees you. You shall speak to him and put words in his mouth; I will help both of you speak and will teach you what to do. He will speak to the people for you, and it will be as if he were your mouth and as if you were God to him. 

 

It happened in a small church during Vacation Bible School.  The teacher says she will never forget what happened. Her class was interrupted on Wednesday about an hour before dismissal when a new student was brought in. The little boy had one arm missing, and since the class was almost over, she had no opportunity to learn any of the details about the cause or his state of adjustment. She was very nervous and afraid that one of the other children would comment on his handicap and embarrass him. There was no opportunity to caution them, so she proceeded as carefully as possible. As the class time came to a close, she began to relax. She asked the class to join her in their usual closing ceremony. “Let’s make our churches,” she said. “Fold your hands together. Here’s the church and here’s the steeple, open the doors and there’s…” The awful truth of her own actions struck her. The very thing she had feared that the children would do, she had done. As she stood there speechless, the little girl sitting next to the boy reached over with her left hand and placed it up to his right hand and said, “Davey, let’s make the church together.”

 

There isn’t one of us who doesn’t relate to feelings of inadequacy. I don’t even want to start trying to count the number of times I have backed away from an opportunity because of doubt and fear that I was not capable, just like Moses. But God has people prepared to step in and step up. People who will be strong where we are weak. People who will encourage us. People who will put their hands together with ours and accomplish the work of God.

 

God himself did that with each one of us when we were in our worst state of inadequacy. When we were incapable of changing the condition of our lives in relation to sin, God sent Jesus to step in for us and step up to the cross. Jesus became our eternal Advocate. He stands before the Father in heaven and continually represents us. (1 John 2:1) As a part of His advocacy program, He has sent His Spirit to dwell in us as our ever-present guide and helper. Just think, there is never a reason to feel inadequate, because the fullness of God dwells within us and empowers us to accomplish our unique purpose in the body of Christ. Because we have an Advocate we are adequate!

 

The VBS story told earlier is a great parable of how we are to come together in the Body of Christ as advocates for one another. Somewhere, probably closer to you than you think, is a person who feels inadequate. They feel handicapped. They feel unneeded. They feel unable to participate and contribute. You can make a difference. You are God’s advocate to them. And something amazing happens when you reach out to help them – you will find them helping you as well. Moses needed a spokesman. Aaron needed direction. Together they conquered a nation.

 

There’s no telling how much God can accomplish through people who get connected. Hearts will be made glad when people see you making a difference. Inadequacies will be overwhelmed by partnership. People will see and hear God.

 

So today, let’s change the statement of Moses by adding two words – “O Lord, please send someone else to do it with me.” Then be willing to be either Moses or Aaron. Together we can make a difference, because we have an Advocate who makes us adequate.

 

Pastor John