27

Jump Start # 1299

Jump Start # 1299

Hebrews 11:4 By faith Abel offered to God a better sacrifice than Cain, through which he obtained the testimony that he was righteous, God testifying about his gifts, and through faith, though he is dead, he still speaks.

 

Abel, the son of Adam and Eve, the first person to be murdered, is remembered all these centuries later in our passage today. God had not forgotten. To the suffering Hebrews, Abel is an example of one who did right. The righteous suffered. His death did not end him, nor did it end his influence.

 

Recently, a friend sent me some books that belonged to her husband. He was a preacher and a friend. He died suddenly nearly two years ago. I wanted a book with his name in it. That meant a lot to me. It was a reminder and a tribute to a great lover of God. Finding a new space on my bookshelves for these books made me consider many of these other books that I have. Many have the names of earlier owners. Many were written back in the 1800’s. The writers and first owners of those books are long gone, but here these books sit on my shelves, still teaching, still doing good. These old books are a lot like us. We will be gone someday, but the good we do will still teach and help others.

 

We often call this a legacy. We all leave something behind for others. Our initial thought is of an inheritance. There is a new show that I have been fascinated with called, “Strange Inheritances.” It’s about unusual and most times very expensive items that one generation has left for another. But our legacy is more than just the stuff we leave behind. We leave an impression, an image. Abel was gone, but his voice was still heard. As a grown child, we remember our parents and often do not appreciate all that they did until we are parents and they are gone. The legacy of honesty. The legacy of hard work. The legacy of devotion to God. Those are all footprints that we leave behind. We touch lives in ways that we do not realize. Through the years we notice others and their example leaves an impression upon us. My friend Billy has been gone for a while now. I still use his pens that he made. When I walk into the church building, I still see him by the front doors, greeting people and standing there with his arms opened wide to give me a bear hug. Billy, like Abel, is gone, but he still speaks. That will be true of all us, whether good or bad. We are all planting trees in the garden of life. Most of us will never enjoy the shade from those trees, but others, who are following us will.

 

We don’t think much about our legacy, other than possibly having a will and life insurance. We just live each day doing what we think we ought to do. But as each day is filed away, there are impressions left. Co-workers, church members, and especially our family are left with a view of us. The dishonest co-worker doesn’t see beyond himself. He does things that are not right. Co-workers notice. It’s known secretly around the office. That’s how that person will be known. That’s the impression he has left. For others, it may be sudden out bursts of anger. They blow their top at work, at home and in stores. People remember. Folks may remember you as always being at church services. Every time the doors were opened, you were there. They will remember that. Others will remember the smile. Others will remember and have benefited from the generosity.

 

Being dead, he still speaks. That is a fascinating expression. What does Abel say?

 

  • Abel tells us that doing right is always right. He is most remembered for the sacrifice that he made. His brother, Cain, offered God vegetables. God rejected that sacrifice. Cain got mad. He should have been mad at himself. Instead, he was mad at Abel. Abel didn’t do anything to him, nor anything wrong. Cain killed Abel. Right is always right.

 

  • The innocent suffer at the hands of the guilty. Abel tells us that. If Abel was doing right, why didn’t God shield him and protect him? The answer is that the world is broken and death is one of the consequences of that brokenness. Death comes in many ways. Death comes at all ages. God has appointed man to die.

 

  • Abel is honored by God for simply doing what he was supposed to do. Abel didn’t write any books of the Bible. He didn’t preach. He wasn’t a prophet. He didn’t do any miracles. He wasn’t a missionary. He didn’t build churches. He was just Abel. He loved God and obeyed Him. He did what he was supposed to do. You may be a stay at home mom and think “I haven’t done anything worth while for the Lord.” You are. You are teaching your children. You are doing what Abel did, just what you are supposed to do. You might be one who sits in worship and hears about preachers going overseas and preaching in country after country. You may think, I’m not doing a thing. Maybe. Maybe you are. Maybe you are doing what Abel did. You are helping those preachers by supporting them. You are helping to keep a congregation going the right direction. You are doing what you are supposed to do. This is what Abel tells us.

 

  • Abel tells us that in the end, pleasing God is never forgotten. God remembered. God wanted the Hebrews to remember Abel. When you read the list of greats in Hebrews 11, you have people who fought armies, left their homes, built an ark, marched around cities, hid spies, fought giants, and Abel who sacrificed to God. What he did was just as important as the others. He is named. He is on the list. It was by faith that he is united with all those others. It is by faith that we too are added with God’s faithful.

 

Abel still speaks. You still speak. You will continue to speak after you are gone. You will leave an impression and footsteps. Those footsteps will either point to Jesus and Heaven or they will point one away from God.

 

Legacy—we all are involved in this. By and by, as Dan Fogelberg once sang, we all become forefathers. The son becomes the father and each of us leave a legacy for others. We are planting trees in which others will sit in the shade some day. Make sure you do a good job!

 

Roger

 

26

Jump Start # 1298

Jump Start # 1298

Psalms 46:10 “Cease striving and know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.”

  I read recently that a detailed research study was conducted by Cornell University on the best way to survive a zombie apocalypse. The study revealed that the chances of survival in most U.S. cities would be limited to only a few weeks. However, the study showed that in remote areas that are not heavily populated and especially in elevated areas, the survival rate could last several months. The conclusion reached was the those in the eastern U.S. should travel to mountains of Colorado, Utah and Montana, in order to survive.

Several things were of interest to me in this study.

First, zombies do not exist. I am a fan of Walking Dead and my wife is convinced that there could be some in the woods behind our house, but the reality is medically, spiritually and logically, zombies do not exist. How do you study something that does not exist? How do you do a “detailed study” on something that isn’t there?

 

Second, it took a detailed study to come up with a conclusion that most twelve year olds could tell you? Common sense says get away from people, if zombies were real. But they are not.

 

Finally, no studies are free. Who paid for this? Why would someone pay for this? What a waste of money and time. Is this where academia has gone? Universities studying non-existent zombies and coming up with an escape plan that will never be used? It would not surprise me if some universities started offering classes in Zombie 101. Then, some college kid will switch his major to zombies, and spend four years running up student loans and getting a degree in advanced zombieism  that will do absolutely nothing for him. Where is he gong to get a job? What good are those studies?

 

What is baffling in all of this is that for many who head up these studies, they have more belief in zombies than they do God. They would think a threat of running into a zombie is more likely than running into God after we die. More people would be interested in things that do not exist than things that do exist. Bring up the subject of UFO’s and you’ll find all kinds of interests, theories, studies and books written. Pass out flyers announcing a lecture on UFO’s or zombies and the house will be packed. Do the same with a lecture on God and only the church family shows up. Why? Superstition, speculation and wild assumptions can draw the attention of us more than what we really know. Even among believers, we can chase ideas that cannot be known and spend a lot of time discussing, debating and trying to figure out things that do not advance our relationship with the Lord nor build our faith. The curious mind can become unglued and led to areas that are false, dangerous and counter productive to our faith.

 

Our verse today declares, “Know that I am God.” Know Him. Believe Him. Paul said, “I know whom I believe.” The proof of God is around us in nature. The universe, without saying a word, declares God, as Psalms 19 states. Then there is the Bible. Proof. Witnesses. Evidence. Real names. Real places. Accurate. Sensible. Real. We need to pour our efforts into knowing Jesus, the real Jesus. Watch Him. See Him. Notice how He is around people. Notice that He never screamed, “Leave Me alone.” Notice, He never turned and said to Peter, “You bother me.” He never lost His focus. He never got side tracked. He never got bogged down and forgot why He was here and what He was doing. See Jesus around people. He saw things that others didn’t. He cared when others didn’t. He allowed others to interrupt Him, question Him and even challenge Him. He was thoroughly examined by the critics. He was, as Peter declares, the chief stone that was rejected. Those closed minds and stubborn hearts had no room for the real Jesus. He didn’t fit into their mold, their theology nor their thinking. We must be sure that the same doesn’t happen to us.

 

The current flavor of the month that is rapidly spreading across this country is for someone to declare that they are spiritual but not religious. That doesn’t make much sense. It’s falls into the zombie category for me.   What it typically means, especially to the twenty and thirty year old crowd, is that I like Jesus but I don’t belong to any church, have room for any doctrine, rules, teachings or structure. “I’m a Jesus person,” as one  declared in a leading magazine. Boiled down this means, I like Jesus when it’s cool to like Jesus and when it fits into my schedule. However, when it doesn’t, this amazing Jesus will allow me to party with my friends, being a bit loose in my morals and let my hair down. Spiritual without religious means I don’t pay much attention to the Jesus of the Bible. Commitment, sacrifice, dedication doesn’t fit into the Spiritual but not religious crowd. They don’t get worked up about whether Jesus is coming back, what we are supposed to do and any of those things. Just sit around in a circle, hold hands, and repeat, “I love Jesus,” over and over. It seems that these folks missed the hippie movement so they have their Jesus movement. Churches are catering to such nonsense. Books are being written that promote this stuff. You won’t find the Bible saying anything positive about this.

 

Jesus said to deny self, take up your cross and follow Me. Jesus said, seek first the kingdom of God. Jesus said if you love Me, keep My commandments. Jesus said, if you are not with Me, you are against Me. Jesus said. Oprah confessed many years ago that her god accepts homosexuals. That is true. Her god does. I don’t know who her god is, but like the spiritual but not religious crowd, we can make up a god that fits our thinking. Instead of we changing, some try to change god. The problem with that is you cannot change the real God. We must conform to Him.

 

Zombies, UFO’s, Spiritual but not religious—they are all very similar. Unfounded. Ungrounded. And sadly, without God. Don’t get caught up in chasing after the wind. Don’t waste time on things that do not matter. Set your mind on things above. Fill your heart with what is true and right. Our faith rests in the one true and living God.

 

Be still and know that I am God.

 

Roger

 

25

Jump Start # 1297

Jump Start # 1297

Mark 9:22 “It has often thrown him both into the fire and into the water to destroy him. But if You can do anything, take pity on us and help us!”

  Our verse today comes from the amazing demonstration of Jesus’ power over the demons. Here a parent pleads with Jesus. His son has a demon. He’s had it since birth. The demon made the child mute. He would foam at his mouth and grind his teeth. The demon would slam the child to the ground and in the most horrific nightmare of all, the demon would throw the child into fire or into water. The demon was trying to kill the child. What a terrible state this parent was in. The child could not be left unattended. There would be multiple burns upon the child when he was thrown into the fire. What a danger he was.

 

The child had been taken to the disciples but they were unable to do anything. The child was then taken to Jesus. Rolling on the ground, foaming at the mouth, the boy seemed to be in a helpless condition. Jesus commanded the unclean spirit to leave the child and he did.

 

Jesus had something else to cast out other than this demon. There was some unbelief in the father. He asked Jesus, ‘if You can do anything?’ Jesus heard that. He repeated it back to this scared parent. Jesus said, “If you can?” There is no “if” with Jesus. All things are possible with Jesus. He wanted to cast out unbelief as well as casting out the demon.

 

It’s hard for parents to see their children suffering. When our children come home from school with stories of being picked on and bullied, most parents are ready to face the bully and tell him a thing or two. It’s hard seeing our children sad, sick, lonely, heart broken or disappointed. Why Satan chose to possess this young child all his life is hard to understand. Why he picked on a child speaks volumes about how indifferent and mean he is about others. Satan simply doesn’t care.

 

There appears to be a great difference in what was really important here. For the parent, getting the demon out was priority number one. He wanted pity for his child. Yet, from Jesus’ perspective, the unbelief and doubt of the parent was a greater concern. The demon was simple for Jesus to fix. Say the word and the demon would wake up on Pluto, never to bother anyone again. That was easy for Jesus. What was hard was getting people to see who He really was. Faith was something that Jesus couldn’t put into others. He would give them the reasons to believe and trust, but they had to latch on to faith and open their hearts up to who Jesus really was. Jesus could force a demon out but He couldn’t force faith in. That was up to man.

 

Faith is still up to us. The proof is there. It’s in the Bible. Every reason we need to know that the Bible is from God and that Jesus is the risen Christ is there. Page after page demonstrates the power, compassion, wisdom and divinity of God. It’s up to us to believe. That takes a bit of work on our part.

 

Faith is born out of the word of God. Romans tells us that. Without the word, we really can’t believe. We wouldn’t know what to believe. The word points us to God. Trusting that word is what establishes faith. The more Bible that is in us, the more faith that we will have. Things happen when we put more Bible into us. First, our conscience gets working properly. A conscience that is driven by the word of God will produce guilt and sorrow. Those things leads us to changing our lives. Without that working conscience we no longer are embarrassed by what we say, do or wear. In Jeremiah’s time, the people no longer blushed. Their conscience wasn’t working. This is why some folks can say the most obscene things and it doesn’t bother them. This is why some can stand before an audience, like at the Oscars, wearing only tiddy-whiteys and not be embarrassed. I wouldn’t go to the mailbox looking like that. Why can some do that? No conscience. Their spiritual needle is malfunctioning and they have no Bible in their hearts. The Bible affects us in many ways. The more Bible that is in us, the more we become like Jesus. It’s hard to read about Jesus and still be a goon to others. It’s hard to see how forgiving Jesus is and not be led to forgive others, ourselves. It’s hard to see how giving Jesus is and remain selfish. The Bible has an affect upon us.

 

Faith must be guarded, fed and grown. Faith isn’t a one time event. It’s something that runs deeper and deeper the more we spend time in God’s word. Faith gets us through tough times. Faith sees hope and answers when others can’t. Faith remains calm in a crisis. Faith knows. Faith assures.

 

Jesus is always interested in faith. This father in our passage today, was concerned about demons. Jesus was concerned about faith. After Jesus kindly rebuked the father, the text tells us that he “cried out and said, “I do believe; help my unbelief.” I love that. He didn’t whisper that. He didn’t move his lips and those around ask, “What did he say?” He cried out. He shouted it. He said it for all to hear. He said it for Heaven to hear. I do believe, help my unbelief.

 

Wouldn’t it be awesome to hear someone shout that out in worship. Sometimes we are a bit to refined for my liking. I doubt anyone in that crowd hushed him. I don’t think anyone would have said, “keep it to yourself.”  We have a song, “Lord, I believe,” but much too often it’s sung mildly. Shout it out from the roof tops. Lord, I believe. Who cares if someone sees you. Who cares if others turn their heads in astonishment. This father had a growing faith. He had tossed the “if” word out of the equation. If was gone. Faith doesn’t have room for if. Faith stands in absolutes. Jesus can.

 

LORD, I BELIEVE! Can you say that? Can you say it and mean it?

 

Roger

 

24

Jump Start # 1296

Jump Start # 1296

Mark 9:6 “For he did not know what to answer; for they became terrified.”

  Our verse today is taken from the account of the transfiguration. Jesus, Peter, James and John  are on a high mountain. Suddenly, Moses and Elijah appear. They speak with Jesus. They discuss this coming departure. The three disciples witness this. Peter wants to build three tabernacles to honor all three. This is where our verse is found. Peter didn’t know what to say. He was scared. He had never seen anything like that. While Peter is speaking, the Father speaks from Heaven.

 

There are many fascinating and curious things about this account. Jesus was changed. He was transfigured. He face was bright. His clothes were bright. And these two Old Testament heroes, Moses and Elijah were there. How did Peter know who they were? Did he over hear their names in the conversation? I don’t think they were wearing name tags. Maybe God simply revealed who they were.

 

In all of this, there is an interesting statement. Peter speaks. He did not know what to say. He was terrified. Scared. Afraid. It dawned on me when I read this recently, how many times the disciples were frightened.

 

  • Remember when they were in the boat and there was a violent storm? Jesus was asleep on the cushion in the boat. They woke Jesus up, fearing that they were going to perish. They were afraid. Then Jesus calmed the storm and they were even more afraid. They were afraid of the one who could change the weather.

 

  • Then there was another time on the sea. Peter saw Jesus walking on the water and asked if he could do the same. Peter started to walk. The text tells us that seeing the wind and the waves, he started to sink. He became scared. He was afraid.

 

  • Remember when Jesus was arrested and tried by the Jews? Peter stayed in the courtyard, warming himself by a fire. There he was accused of being a follower. He got scared. He denied it.

 

All of this within three short years. Following Jesus, didn’t mean sitting in church buildings listening to Jesus lecture. It was out there in storms, facing opposition, going through things they never had before. Following Jesus, for these first disciples, brought fear to them on many occasions.

 

This got me thinking. I don’t remember when the last time I have really been scared. Sure, I’ve sat through scary moments in a movie, but it’s not real. I just tell myself, it’s a movie. I sat in a few roller coasters that made me afraid. Again, I knew it would be over very quickly. There have been near accidents, that give you that sudden thrust of fear, but it passes. Most of us are rarely afraid. It’s hard for us to imagine what Peter and John experienced in those brief three years.

 

Maybe this is why Jesus so many times would say, “Fear not.” Fear does something to us on the inside. It gets us upset. It rattles our cages. It drives faith out.

 

The two areas that I have truly seen fear is when a person faces the consequences of the wrong that they have done. A young person is arrested. A man loses his job because of dishonest dealings. A wife is divorced for having an adulterous affair. This is when we notice fear. What’s next? What have I done? The wish is to rewind life and change things. A family is split apart and will never be the same again. The house must be sold. What’s next? Satan blinds us to those fearful consequences of sin.

 

The other time I see fear is near the end of life when someone doesn’t know Jesus. They want to think that they will go to Heaven, they want to believe that there is a Heaven, but they have spent a lifetime away from God and know they are scared. Life is running out of them and they just don’t know. It’s different for the believer. He has read, trusted and believed in the Lord for a long time. He knows what happens at death. The believer understands resurrection, second coming and judgment. His trust is in the mercy of God. He has faith. Death isn’t the unknown. He faces death ready to see his savior.

 

Fear. Those first disciples experienced it often. Following Jesus put them in situations that they had never been before. Those fearful moments made them trust the Lord. That was faith building. Later, after Jesus returned to Heaven, these same disciples would courageously preach Jesus name. They would be jailed, threatened, warned but that wouldn’t stop them. They seemed fearless. They had incredible courage. They were driven by faith.

 

There is a lesson for us. Maybe we ought to step out a bit more in faith. What is often uncomfortable for us is not achieved because of fear. There may be that person in your life that you know you need to talk to about Jesus. You want to, but you are afraid. Maybe there is a person in your family that you need to have a talk with about some of their choices. You dread doing that, so you don’t. Maybe you’ve gone along with things at work, when you shouldn’t have. Fear has made you a coward and made you engage in things that are not right. Maybe there are things going on at church that are not right. It seems everyone else is fine with it. You are bothered. Fear keeps you silent. Maybe fear of family keeps you from worshipping as you ought to. Maybe the fear of what friends might say, keeps you from standing up against things that are wrong.

 

There comes a time when we, too, must deal with our fears. We must trust in the Lord and do the right thing. Our fears are more about what others may think about us or what they might say. Often, one courageous voice will find others who are in support, but they were silent because of fear.

 

We must put aside our feelings and do what is right. Those early disciples conquered their fears. We must do the same and walk with the Lord in holiness and righteousness.

 

Fear not…those words only mean something if there is a fearful situation. Denying self, taking up the cross and following Jesus is the key to overcoming fear. Faith drives fear out.

 

Roger

 

23

Jump Start # 1295

Jump Start # 1295

Galatians 6:10 “So then, while we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, and especially to those who are of the household of the faith.”

Opportunity—it often comes just now and then. A person who is sharp, aware and alert, will make the most of those opportunities. For most of us, opportunity passes, and later on we look back and sure wish we had done things differently.

 

I was teaching about grace yesterday in a class entitled, “Understanding Grace.” We were looking at the prodigal. There is a classic illustration of wasted opportunity. The father of the prodigal had spent a lifetime building his estate. His rebellious son demanded his share, then and now. The generous father gave it to him. There was opportunity. Imagine what good that young man could have done with that fortune. With his father still alive for advice, he could have set himself up for years to come. He could have made it possible for future generations of the family to benefit from his wise and careful planning. What an opportunity. He blew it. He didn’t think past the weekend. He spent it all. He foolishly spent it all. It was gone. What it took his father years to build, the reckless son threw away in a very short time. He came home broke, dirty, guilty and ashamed. He had nothing to show for what was given to him. He wasted a great opportunity.

 

In our verse today, Paul is reminding the brethren at Galatia to do good while they have opportunity. We use the expression, “strike while the iron is hot.” That is a blacksmithing term. The old blacksmith would stick a piece of iron in the fire until the iron was bright red. He’d take that to the anvil and start hammering and hammering that hot iron. It would bend and take a new shape. Back into the fire and then back on the anvil. This process would continue until the smithy had it just the way he wanted it. Then, he would douse the iron into a barrel of water, steam would shoot up into the air and the iron would cool down. At that point  the iron would no longer bend. A strong man could hammer and hammer that piece of iron, but he could not bend it once it had cooled. The expression, “strike while the iron is hot,” means to move quickly while you have opportunity. Once the iron cooled, once the opportunity passed, it’s too late.

 

Paul was wanting the Galatians to help others, especially, other Christians. There was a window of opportunity. First, the need is not always there. Waiting too long, and the person doesn’t need your help any more. Also, waiting too long, and you may not be in the position to help. There was a moment, an opportunity, window, a “striking while the iron was hot,” time period. Don’t waste it. Don’t let it go by.

 

There are many moments like that for us. Sometimes we don’t do as well with the opportunities as we ought to.

 

  • College is such an opportunity, especially if your parents paid for it. That is huge. The number of young people finishing school with staggering student loans is unbelievable. To have school paid for, either by scholarships or parents, is a huge blessings. Many don’t see it at the moment. School is viewed as a semester long summer camp. Little attention is given to studies and too much devoted to playing around. The semester ends and the grades stink. Wasted opportunity.

 

  • Our fellowship is such an opportunity. There is a wealth of really studious, spiritual and godly folks all around us. Some have authored great studies in God’s word. Many are doing great work everywhere they go. What an opportunity to learn from such people. Just to sit and pick their brain and have them iron out the wrinkles in your faith and answer those troubling questions is awesome. The opportunities are there, but how few take advantage of them. All over this country are godly men who are serving as shepherds in congregations. These men have the heart of a servant. Smart, humble, experienced—what a joy it is to know them and to learn from their insights. Do we do that? What a great opportunity.

 

  • Things come up, nearly every day, which are opportunities to share the Gospel. A comment is made by a co-worker, a family member or a neighbor. That is a door cracked open for you to say something. It’s your opportunity to support and defend the Gospel message. It may come in the form of a complaint or criticism someone has about the Bible or the church. That’s a door open to set the record straight. Do it kindly, but do it. A conversation at work switches to knowing each other in Heaven. What a great opportunity to say something. You hear someone talking about how useless their church services are, that becomes an opportunity to say something about what worship is all about. All about us are opportunities. The way to share the gospel is not knocking on a strangers door, but building spiritual bridges with the people that you know. Listen. Be ready. Be thinking.

 

  • Someone that you know has a need. That is opportunity. It may be financial. You can do something. Do you? It may be extending comfort to someone who has lost a loved one. It may be giving advice to someone. It may be nothing more than being a friend to someone. There are opportunities. Strike while the iron is hot. Later on, the financial problems may have worked out. Later on, the person is no longer interested in listening to you. Later on, the iron has cooled and it doesn’t matter what all you do, it’s too late.

 

We must be watchful and ready for opportunities. That means, some evenings I have to go out and spend some time with others. You do that, because the opportunity is there. That means, some Sunday afternoons, there is no time for a nap, because you must meet with someone to encourage them. Strike while the iron is hot.

 

While we have opportunity, Paul says. That opportunity may not always be there. Remember the story of the rich man and Lazarus? There was opportunity. The sick, poor Lazarus was dropped off at the rich man’s gates. The rich man was rich. He had the means to do something. He had the opportunity, right there was Lazarus. The poor man wasn’t in Africa. He was right there at the gates. He let opportunity slip by. The poor man died. Too late. The rich man died. God judged him for not doing what he could.

 

Opportunity. Don’t waste it. Don’t let it go by. The heart of a servant compels us to do what we can.

 

Roger