22

Jump Start # 1522

Jump Start # 1522

John 20:4 “The two were running together; and the other disciple ran ahead faster than Peter and came to the tomb first”

  Excitement—it’s more than an emotion, it changes our thinking and our days. Here where I live, we are expecting a massive snow storm today. Lots of snow is coming. The newscast has folks excited. Kids will be out of school, there will be rush on at stores to stock up on things and those that drive snow plows will be getting ready. Excitement. I was at a ballgame this week and saw a new Big Ten record for the most three pointers. That was exciting. When the new Star Wars movie opened, there was a lot of excitement. New babies bring excitement and joy. When a soldier returns home from duty there is a lot of excitement as he first greets his family. Baptisms are exciting.

 

Our verse today illustrates excitement. Jesus was dead. He was quickly buried. The disciples hunkered down through the Sabbath. As the first day of the week dawned, some women went to the tomb. They expected to find His body in the grave. They intended to further anoint it with spices. They even wondered how they were going to move the massive stone in front of the grave. As they reached the grave, the stone had been moved. Angels were present. They were told to go tell the disciples. John reports that Mary Magalene ran to tell Peter and the others. Peter and another disciple ran to the tomb. This is where our verse is found.

 

They ran. They were excited. They had to see for themselves. They didn’t say, “When we get finished here and get around to it, we’ll check it out.” Nor, did they take a slow, casual walk, stopping to chit-chat with others along the way. They ran. They both ran. The other disciple, probably Mark, out ran Peter. Huffing and puffing, they looked into the tomb for themselves. There they saw the linen wrappings, but no Jesus. Later, they would encounter the Lord, risen and alive.

 

We do not have empty tombs to run into but there are plenty of things for us to be excited about spiritually.

 

First, the search for truth ought to be an exciting quest. Finding the answers that bug us and learning God’s will leads us from one truth to another. That chase, that journey opens all kinds of doors. Often that experience can lead to big changes in our lives. As we learn the will of God and what God wants of us, doors open to better relationships. We become free from guilt as we obey the Lord. We become challenged to do things in the kingdom that we never thought we could. Learning and becoming are the wonderful and exciting aspects of studying God’s word. Doubts evaporate away. Questions get answered. We move from fear and darkness to love and assurance. It is exciting! Bible classes are exciting!

 

Second, the worship and praise of God is exciting. I love Sundays! My church family knows that. I tell them that all the time. Sunday is the best day of the week. Things are different on Sundays. Our schedules are different on Sundays. We come together as a church on Sundays. We see each other on Sundays. We pray as a family on Sundays. We sing together. We remember the Lord’s death together. We get our souls fed and our spirits lifted on Sundays. We learn that we are not alone on Sundays. Don’t drag into the church house late. Get there early. Get there, not yawning and rubbing your eyes, but bright eyed and ready to go. We come to worship God! Exciting! Wonderful! Powerful! Some race out of the church building when services are over as if they can’t wait to get out of that place. I hope that’s not the reason. It ought to be just the opposite. We ought to be racing to get there.

 

Third, thoughts of Heaven ought to be exciting to us. When we realize that we, through God’s grace, are going to Heaven, that ought to just fill our hearts and move us through the darkest of days. Heaven. God’s home. We don’t just get to walk through, as if on a tour. We don’t stay for a weekend and then must go home. His home becomes our home. It is the final end of the journey. There is no other place to be. Home. Safe. Secure. Angels. Love. Righteous folks. God. Those thoughts ought to excite you. Don’t you want to go there? Don’t you wish we could go today? Sure there are things that we’d miss here, but nothing so great as to keep us from missing Heaven.

 

I think spiritual excitement was missing in many of the Revelation churches. Ephesus had lost their first love. Laodicea was lukewarm. Sardis was dead. These congregations were still meeting and worshipping and some were still walking through things God wanted them to do, but something was missing. It became more duty than love. It became more effort than it should have. What was missing was faith. What was missing was the excitement for the Lord. They no longer ran to the Lord, as Peter did in our verse. Shuffling through life, sighing, weighed down with burdens, tired, complaining, seeing nothing good, failing to count your blessings, no longer thankful—that’s the image when I think of those churches. I see that same thing in the faces of some. They assemble because they have to, not because they want to. If God gave them the option, and they could find the verse that read, “You do not have to worship on Sunday,” they wouldn’t. They find and receive very little benefit from their relationship with God or their church family. It’s just something that they have to do.

 

How sad. No one made them be this way. It was their choice. And, they are hurting themselves the most. They will not get it. They will not see what others see. They become poor representatives of God’s kingdom. They are not the poster image of a successful and growing Christian. Guilt is what keeps them coming. They have just enough religion in them to keep from quitting, but not enough to make any positive difference in their lives. And, to the tone of this article, they are certainly not excited about the Lord.

 

Peter ran. The other disciple out ran Peter. Their minds were running faster than their legs. They got to the tomb and the stone was moved. They looked in and He was not there. Could it be possible? Did it really happen? Excitement!

 

How about you? Are you walking to God, slowly, going at your own pace, or are you running towards Him?  Sunday is coming! Are you excited!

 

Roger

 

21

Jump Start # 1521

Jump Start # 1521

Luke 8:33 “As these were leaving Him, Peter said to Jesus, ‘Master, it is good for us to be here; let us make three tabernacles; one for You, and one for Moses, and one for Elijah”- not realizing what he was saying.”

  Our verse today comes from the amazing transfiguration of Jesus. The Lord had revealed just a few days before this that He was going to Jerusalem and that He was going to suffer many things by the priests and scribes and be killed and be raised up on the third day. This wasn’t the first time that Jesus talked about His coming death, but now He gave some details. The place: Jerusalem. Those involved: chief priests and scribes. The result: He would die and be raised up again. Peter rebuked Jesus for saying that.

 

Now, just days from that revelation, Jesus is transfigured with Moses and Elijah and they are discussing His departure or exit. How fitting since Moses was taken by the Lord and actually buried by God and Elijah never died. Those two, representing the Law and the prophets had unique “exists”. Their presence there was more for the three apostles, Peter, James and John, than for Jesus. Their presence indicated that they were still “alive.” The three apostles had been sleeping. They would be sleeping when Jesus was later praying in the garden. Sleepy disciples would make a title for a good lesson some day. They awaken, and there is Jesus, Moses, and Elijah. Jesus is different. He has been transfigured. His face and clothes were radiant with light. The light wasn’t upon Him like a spotlight, but the light was coming from Him. He was showing these three His glory. He pulled back the curtain and showed them “this is what God looks like.” They hadn’t seen that before. To them, Jesus was more man than God. He could do unique and special things, but He still seemed like one of them. Not now. Now they saw Him as He truly is. Both Peter and John would refer to this event in their writings.

 

The awakened Peter declares that he wants to honor all three. He wants to honor them equally. He wants to build three memorials, tabernacles or tents for them. While Peter is talking, God speaks from the Heavens. He interrupts Peter. He declares that Jesus is His Son and then, “Listen to Him.” God didn’t say, “listen to THEM,” but “HIM.” Listen to Jesus. Jesus is not an equal to Moses and Elijah. The words of Jesus are not equal to the Law and the Prophets. Listen to Jesus. That’s always been the need of the hour. We, like Peter, tend to talk too much and we need to just hush and listen to what Jesus says through the word.

 

Our thoughts are taken from what Peter said. He wanted to honor all three, Moses, Elijah and Jesus. Luke adds that Peter was “not realizing what he was saying.” My friend Kenny, who has written a commentary on Matthew suggested, Don’t try to figure out what Peter meant by those three tabernacles. He didn’t know what he was talking about. If Peter didn’t know, then how can we?

 

That’s the point. That’s us. So often, we as well, do not know what we are saying, yet, just like Peter, we feel compelled to have to say it anyway. So we talk about things and give advice about things that we do not understand. That’s a sure recipe for disaster.

 

Sometimes we preachers can be guilty of this. We try to wear every hat imaginable and we travel down the road of counselors, often getting involved in some very complicated issues that are way beyond us and before long, we are “not realizing what we are saying.” What we say may be bum advice. It may actually make things worse. I tell folks that I can help them spiritually and point things out from the Bible, but I’m not a trained counselor and many things are way beyond me. Get some help may be better advice than saying things you do not understand. Find a good conservative counselor who is pro marriage.

 

Sometimes we can give advice about what another ought to do without really knowing the situation. We hear one side of the story or we hear bits and pieces and that’s all it takes to form an opinion, make a judgment and tell others what we think they ought to do. That can be dangerous, especially if we are talking about things that we do not know. Sometimes when both sides of the story is revealed, it changes things and especially what we would now say. Solomon’s “a time to speak and a time to be quiet” doesn’t fit many folks anymore. It seems everyone has something to say and no one wants to be quiet.

 

It is amazing that everyone these days are experts in just about every area of life. It is amazing that folks who devote their entire lives to the music industry or Hollywood can be experts in politics, or morals or religion. They, much like Peter, speak things without realizing what they are saying.

 

So, what should Peter have done? It’s easy to backseat drive. It’s easy, after the fact, to come up with all kinds of “you should have done this” ideas. The most obvious thing is that Peter should have thought things out before he spoke. That’s hard to do, especially for those who are like Peter. I’m one of those. Quick to talk. Always with an opinion. Ready with the answer. Pulling back and being quiet is hard. Understanding that some things are not our business is hard.

 

As hard as it is to be quiet, having to retract and try to take back what you already said, can be painful and disastrous. So much damage can be done by saying things without “realizing what we are saying,” that it can ruin relationships. When someone says, “I didn’t mean what I said…” My first thought is, “why did you say it, if you didn’t mean it?” That’s hard to figure out.

 

Peter didn’t realize what he was saying. Do you think we could learn from this? Do you think we could put the brakes on our mouths? Can we put a “guard upon our mouths?” as the O.T. declares?

 

If one of the chosen had trouble with this, it shouldn’t surprise us that you and I struggle with this. Watch what we say to our mate and our families. Sometimes we can be nicer to strangers than we are to the people we love the most. Watch what you say to co-workers. They judge you by what you are saying. There is more to it than just the immediate conversation. They are forming an opinion about you, your church, your faith and even your God by the way and by what you say. Be careful. Watch what you say to brethren. Your words can be oxygen to a soul or it can be a death blow that crushes their spirit and hope. Be careful.

 

Peter didn’t realize what he was saying…

 

Roger

 

20

Jump Start # 1520

Jump Start # 1520

Hebrews 12:16 “that there be no immoral or godless person like Esau, who sold his own birthright for a single meal”

  Oh, Esau. Well do we remember his story. He was the first born of his twin Jacob. He was the hunter, loved by his father. The first male carried all kinds of privileges. The family estate was generally divided into two halves. The first born male got one half. The rest of the sons divided the other half. That was a huge economic advantage for the first born. The family name was generally traced through the first born son. Esau was riding high. It was his for the taking. But after hunting he returned famished. He thought he was going to die. He wanted something to eat and his twin, deceived, tricked and fangled his way into the deal of a life time. A bowl of stew for his birthright. He must have thought, ‘What good is the birthright if I am dead.’ So, the trade was made. It was foolish, not thought out, and not reversible. He got a meal and Jacob got the “rights.”

 

Our text refers to Esau as “immoral” and “godless.” Pretty harsh terms for someone who was tricked. Maybe it’s there so we do not walk in his same steps, but we do. We do, way too often.

 

When we trade the eternal for the physical, we are standing in the soup line with Esau. A few more bucks, a greater promotion, but the cost has to be our family, our character, our integrity or much worse, our soul. Esau would be hungry again. I expect before the day ended, he was looking for a snack. By the next morning, he would definitely be hungry. What would he trade now? He gave away the best that he had.

 

That’s the trouble we get into when we trade our souls for pleasure, passion, promotion, or prestige. What is there remaining of value for us? We have given away the best and now, here we are, needing again. That soup line with Esau begins to look all to familiar to us.

 

Esau traded the lasting for the temporary. Birthrights didn’t become obsolete. They didn’t have an expiration date on them. Food however, only lasts for the moment. Food, for now, is great. But even when our bellies are full, they don’t stay that way. Another day, and we are hungry again. How foolish to trade something that lasts for something that never lasts. Esau did that. We can do the same. Illicit sexual pleasures, a night of drinking, some cheating here, some embezzling there, we know it’s wrong, but it’s fun. It’s the thrill. It’s where the excitement is. It’s the stuff people brag about on Monday mornings. Those romps in land of sin bring guilt and shame but we don’t think much about them. Another weekend and another trip to the land of sin. This doesn’t last. Another trip. Then another trip. The temporary never lasts. The temporary never satisfies. There always has to be another trip. There always has to be more. The soup line behind Esau becomes longer and longer when our minds are filled with the now. God wants us to set our minds on things above. Seek ye first the kingdom of God—those powerful expressions remind us to look past the temporary for the lasting.

 

Esau thought only of himself. His choice affected his lineage. He put them in a position beneath Jacob’s family. Thinking only of our self often cripples our family and can nearly ruin them spiritually. For instance, a dad gets mad with the folks at church. He’s had enough. He’s finished. He quits. He promises that he’ll never go back again. Not only is this dad sealing his own fate, but his kids now grow up not knowing the Lord. Sure, they’ll learn about the Bible, but it may come from a college professor who floods them with theories of doubt and skepticism. They’ll learn about relationships, but it won’t come from God. It may come from worldly friends who will teach them to use others for their benefit. They’ll learn about love and sex, not the Bible way, but from a boyfriend or a girlfriend who has no morals. You see, this dad who threw in the towel, wasn’t thinking about his family. His kids grow up and they marry people of the world. They have kids and they will never know anything about God. Generations could be ruined because of one Esau decision.

 

Esau is profane. He is godless. His choices reflect that. You and I stand right beside Esau, with the bowl in our hands, waiting for our portion of stew, when we fail to make the spiritual choices. The spiritual choices are often harder than the temporary choices. The spiritual choices often do not put us on the easy street. The spiritual choices often lead us to standing alone. The spiritual choices are the right choices.

 

Esau and a cup of stew. How simple. How shallow. How empty. How much like us. Will we ever learn? Will we toss aside the pursuit of happiness for the pursuit of holiness? Will we stop singing and dancing with the wolves who want to devour us? Will we ever understand that God’s ways are always the best ways.

 

A bowl of stew. That’s all it took for Esau to sell out.

 

Roger

 

19

Jump Start # 1519

Jump Start # 1519

Psalms 71:14 “But as for me, I will hope continually, and will praise You yet more and more.”

  Hope is sunshine to the soul. Hope is what drives a person. Hope keeps a team in the game. It is because of hope that the cancer patient will continue with treatments. Without hope, life leaks out of us. Without hope, we give up and go home. When all hope is lost, we become defeated and destroyed. Peter wrote that people will ask about the “hope that is in you.” God’s people live with hope. Their hope is not in peace on earth, but peace within the heart. Their hope is not in now, but in the eternal. Their hope is in the God of second chances. Forgiveness allows hope to grow within us.

 

The shepherds of the congregation where I am a member have chosen “Walking in Hope,” to be our theme this year. Powerful expression that is found in so many wonderful Bible lessons. The four lepers who walked into the empty Syrian camp gave hope one last chance. The remarkable stories of Ruth, Hosea, the prodigal son are lives touched by hope and grace.

 

Our verse today sounds similar to Joshua’s great, “As for me and my household, we will serve the Lord,” statement. “But as for me…” that’s where faith, hope and trust always lie. It must be “as for me.” I want and I wish everyone had hope in the Lord, but they don’t. I can’t make them. We can’t force folks to church. We can’t force people to be nice, generous and righteous. A concern that many have is why are there so many raunchy TV shows these days. It isn’t just Hollywood. If these shows were not being watched, the ratings would tank and they would be canceled. The fact that there seems to be a steady increase in mindless shows that lack decency and morals is an indication that the public is wanting them. Their hope is not in the Lord.

 

But as for me…that’s a great statement. I can be one that goes along with the masses, doing what everyone else is doing, or I can stop and go a different direction. As for me, indicates that I really am not moved by what others think. If I was, then I’d do what they do. But as for me, shows that I am not afraid to have an independent thought and walk a direction that others may never go. But as for me, I have chosen the Lord. But as for me, I have looked at things, given thought to things and I have chosen the Lord.

 

I have noticed that many who fuss at God, the Bible or His church, are merely repeating what others have said. They don’t know for themselves. They are just in a herd and they are all traveling the same direction. When asked about some of their concerns, they repeat something that they read off the internet. It hasn’t been thought out and it isn’t consistent and most times not even accurate. It’s enough to get them fired up and it’s enough to keep them following the herd away from God.

 

But as for me, I will hope continually… This hope didn’t just begin. He has been hoping. He continues to hope. He hopes when others are not. He hopes when some have given up the hope. He continues the hope.  Our hope isn’t a one time event that takes place at salvation. The promises of God, the trust that we have in Him is something that affects us daily. Our hope continues. Our hope continues when the country sours. Our hope continues when bad things happen to us. Our hope continues when others are telling us to give up.

 

I think of Job’s pitiful wife. There with Job at the all those fresh graves of her children, her husband now stricken and hit every way possible, financially, socially, physically, emotionally, she tells him to “curse God and die.” Give up. Don’t hope anymore. Job didn’t listen to her. Job didn’t leave her. He continued to hope.

 

Can you do that? Can you keep hoping when things are not good? Can you keep hoping when everyone around you is screaming, “The sky is falling.” Keep hoping.

 

The last expression of our verse flows naturally out of the hope expression. It’s hard to praise God when there is no hope. Most won’t and most can’t do that. But given hope, praise will happen. Praise for answered prayers. Praise for the promises of God. Praise for God being God. Praise of thanksgiving. Songs of praise. Prayers of praise. A joyful heart and a heavenward outlook come with those who hope and praise.

 

I will praise yet more and more. Wow, isn’t that refreshing. Instead of “do we have to go to church,” it’s, “can’t we go again?” And it’s not just church, because the Psalmist didn’t have “church” as we think of it, but it’s a heart that is praising God on it’s own. The “but as for me…” flavors the rest of this verse. While others at work are gossiping, I will praise the Lord. While others are complaining, I will praise the Lord. The Psalmist didn’t need someone else to get him to do this, he did it on his own.

 

But as for me…

 

But as for me makes us ask, “How about you?”

 

Roger

 

18

Jump Start # 1518

Jump Start # 1518

Titus 1:10 “For there are many rebellious men, empty talkers and deceivers, especially those of the circumcision, who must be silenced because they are upsetting whole families, teaching things they should not teach for the sake of sordid gain.”

  His name was John and he lived a long, long time ago. Today, most have never heard of him, outside a small circle of religious historians. John was part of the powerful Catholic church that controlled Europe. His eyes had become opened by the Englishman Wycliffe, the translator of the Bible. Fueled by that influence John opposed the foundations upon which the Catholic church stood. He authored several books that were widely read throughout the Bohemian villages where he lived. The strong arm of the church came down hard against him. Several official edicts were written to silence him. There were councils held to squash his influence. Finally, in a desperate show of power, his books were gathered and burned, and after being imprisoned for nearly a year, John was led to the stake and was burned alive. The accounts, maybe a bit fabricated by now, claims that he was singing hymns until the wind shifted and the flames came into his face. His ashes were gathered up and tossed into the river. It was hoped that fear would quiet everyone and things would return to normal. But they didn’t. This was just the start. Behind John would be others, including Martin Luther, who opened the door to the Reformation Movement. John Huss, was an early influence to those more powerful reformers. John Huss was one of many that was burned alive by the Catholic church.

 

I read about John Huss last week. He was singing hymns until the winds shifted and blew the flames into his face. That line stayed with me. There were several points of disagreement that I would have with John Huss, but his remarkable courage impresses me. It is shocking to think that it wasn’t atheists or Muslims that put John to death, but those who thought they were Christians. Sometimes Christians can do the most unchristian things.

 

All of this brings us to the topic of what to do with those who have a rebellious spirit and are influencing others. In a perfect world, everyone agrees. In Mr. Roger’s neighborhood, everyone gets along. But we don’t live in Mr. Roger’s world. In many congregations, there is a mixture of backgrounds, ideas and thoughts. The process of growth involves teaching and patience. There is a need for a congregation to be of one mind, one heart and one voice. But every once in awhile, there comes that rebel. He sees things differently. He is not satisfied with the Biblical pattern. He wants to push buttons and challenge things. He is so far outside of the box that he no longer knows what’s supposed to be in the box. Our thoughts today, focus upon what is a congregation to do?

 

Paul wrote to Titus about such people. They were teaching things that they should not be teaching. They were upsetting families. He refers to them as deceivers and empty talkers. Paul’s words, “they must be silenced.” That’s wonderful, but how? Obviously, burning a man alive at the stake would silence him, but this isn’t what God wants. Here are a few thoughts.

 

1. Honest questions must be answered Biblically and truthfully. There is nothing to fear from questions if someone is following the word of God. When an atmosphere prevails that no questions are allowed to be asked, then worse things happen. People will want to break free from the strong arm that they feel is upon them. The Bereans “Searched the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so.” That’s the way to address questions. Look. Study. Find the answer. It is here that we find out one’s true character and motive. If someone is not satisfied with a Bible answer, then he may have another motive. There are those who want to draw disciples after them. The elders at Ephesus were warned about that. Someone that is not content to do what the Bible says, is not walking with God. He is forging his own path and such a rebel will lead others with him.

 

2. The context of our passage is addressed to the shepherds of the church. They are the ones given the charge of “silencing” those who are teaching what they ought not to teach. Later, in the third chapter, Titus is told, “avoid foolish controversies and genealogies and strife and disputes about the Law, for they are unprofitable and worthless” (3:9). Some folks just like to argue. Some folks are not happy unless things are stirred up. Some like to introduce some controversy just to sit back and watch the verbal exchange. Those that do such things forget that among the listeners are those young in the faith and those that are not mature in the faith and those that are just coming to see the faith. Those topics can tear the heart out of such people. They are worthless. They are not good. Some things ought not to be said unless one has carefully thought them out and given serious thought to who is going to hear him. AVOID such things. This is where a Bible class teacher must teach. He cannot allow rebels to take over the class and steer it in the way they want. Move on. Get back to the text. Tell the person we will discuss this in private.

 

3. Titus was also told, “reject a factious man after a first and second warning, knowing that such a man is perverted and is sinning, being self-condemned” (3:10). The rebel who persists in going down roads the Bible does not teach must be “rejected.” The Romans were told to “mark” such a man. This happens after the man has been warned more than once. The warnings ought to be laced with Bible teachings. Here is why we don’t go along with what you are saying. Here is why what you are saying is not correct. Here is what God says. Give proof. Show the pattern. Teach the Bible. Warn him. Warn him again. If he persists, then he is to be rejected. Fellowship is broken. He is no longer considered to be walking with God. No rock throwing. No stacking up straw and sticks to burn someone. Leave the door open. Maybe he’ll learn. Maybe he’ll see. Maybe he’ll come back changed. But to do nothing is to allow wolves among the sheep. To do nothing is wrong.

 

Now, the things we are discussing aren’t happy little topics that put sunshine in our souls. But these are the very things that many congregations face and are torn up about. We are not talking about “doing things a certain way because we’ve always done them that way.” No. We are not talking about traditions. We are not discussing trying new ways of getting the old, old message out. We are talking about those who want to do things differently than what the BIBLE teaches. Some congregations need some reviving and restoration because they are hopelessly stuck in traditions with no one at the helm. I understand the heart of the rebel. I push change all the time. I would have done well among the reformers. However, all change, all questions, all ideas must always be checked by the Bible. If it’s not according to God’s pattern, we must set it aside. That simple. That’s it.

 

In too many places, some are allowed to say anything, even things not according to the Bible, and nothing is done. Families are upset. Faith is shattered. The congregations exist but they do not thrive. Unity is shot. Tension and uneasiness fills the air.

 

Those who are not content to do things God’s way, must be shown that they have no influence among God’s people. This take real leadership. This is where elders must have a backbone and the courage to stand with God. Some folks can get more upset about a scratch on their car than the mood and the direction that the church is going. Shame on us for that.

 

Stand up, stand up for Jesus is more than a wonderful hymn, it is the way that things must be. As for me and my household, Joshua said, we will serve the Lord. Those that won’t, then we must part company.

 

Standing alone with the Lord is far more important than standing with a crowd that is going the wrong direction. Poor John Huss was burned alive. He wasn’t given honest answers to his questions. History teaches us. The Bible teaches us even more.

 

Roger