Skip to content

Archive for

New Kitchen LED Ceiling Lights Installed!

As part of our Trustees’ never-ending efforts to modernize and improve our Church, new LED ceiling light fixtures have been installed in our Kitchen!

One of the reasons that we moved this project to the top of our list was our substantially-expanded community food ministry.  Last year, in a pre-coronavirus reality, we provided over 11,000 free, hot, nutritous meals to our community.

This year, stepping up to help fill a deep need in our community, we have provided over 13,000 meals in just 6 months!

These new fixtures provide significantly more light than our old, 1970’s-vintage T10 fluorescent lights that they replace, and do so using less electricity.  (When was the last time you got more for less?!)

Here are the before and after photos of our Kitchen ceiling lights:

Before

Old Kitchen Fluorescent Ceiling Lights

After

New Kitchen LED Ceiling Lights!

As a bonus, the ceiling light above the sink and above the stove have been rewired so they also turn on and off with the main wall switch.

So, celebrate (in a COVID-19-responsible way, of course).  The completion of this project brings a much-needed lighting upgrade to one of the most-used rooms of our Church (thanks to our expanded community food ministry).

Daily Bible Readings – Revised Common Lectionary – October 1-3, 2020

Here for your personal daily devotions are the daily lectionary readings for October 1-3, 2020:


What is the Revised Common Lectionary?

The Revised Common Lectionary is a three-year cycle of weekly lections used to varying degrees by the vast majority of mainline Protestant churches in Canada and the United States.  The RCL is built around the seasons of the Church Year, and includes four lections for each Sunday, as well as additional readings for major feast days.

During most of the year, the lections are: a reading from the Hebrew Bible, a Psalm, a reading from the Epistles, and a Gospel reading.  During the season of Easter, the Hebrew Bible lection is usually replaced with one from the Acts of the Apostles.

The seasons of the Church Year reflect the life of Christ.  Consequently, the gospel lections for each Sunday provide the focus for that day. The other lections for a given day generally have a thematic relationship to the gospel reading for that day, although this is not always the case.

In Ordinary Time, the Revised Common Lectionary offers two sets of readings for the lessons from the Hebrew Bible.

  • One set proceeds mostly continuously, giving the story of the Patriarchs and the Exodus in Year A, the monarchial narratives in Year B, and readings from the Prophets in Year C.
  • In the other set of readings for Ordinary Time, the readings from the Hebrew Bible are thematically related to the gospel lections. Denominations or local churches generally use either the semicontinuous readings or the thematic readings during Ordinary Time. They do not typically move back and forth between the two over the course of a single season.

The gospel readings for each year come from one of the synoptic gospels according to the following pattern:

  • Year A – Matthew
  • Year B – Mark
  • Year C – Luke

Readings from the Gospel of John can be found throughout the RCL.

15 Powerful Bible Verses About God’s Deep Personal Care for You – Verse #3

Do you ever feel like God is far off? Do you need Bible verses about how God cares for you? That maybe he has forgotten about you? That he isn’t that involved in your life? Do you ever wonder if God really cares for you? We will all be tempted to feel like that from time to time. I think we can all relate to how David felt in Psalm 22:

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, from the words of my groaning? Psalm 22:1

We can feel like God has forsaken us. That he is far away. That he doesn’t see our pain or hear our groaning.

One of the greatest challenges believers face on a regular basis, is what will we believe – our feelings and emotions or God’s Word. Our feelings are real. We really feel them. They are strong.

But our feelings are a poor barometer of the truth. Though they are true feelings, they are not always the truth. God’s word is the truth, whether we feel it or not.

So when we FEEL like God is not near, we must remember his Word. We must remember his promises.

Here is powerful Bible verse #3 about how God cares for you.

  1. When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and the flame shall not consume you. Isaiah 43.2

We will all “pass through waters” and rivers of hardship and uncertainty and walk through the fires of life. But God promises, “I will be with you.” Personally. Presently. In the midst of the fire, like he was with Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego

 

Radical Repentance – Free Behind Bars

Prayer in Prison 2Key Bible Verse:  Once you were dead because of your disobedience and your many sins.  – Ephesians 2:1

Bonus ReadingEphesians 2: 2-10

David Berkowitz was sentenced to consecutive life sentences for killing six people and wounding numerous others in New York City.  Known as “Son of Sam,” he terrorized the city for months until his capture in 1977.

Berkowitz confessed to the crimes to avoid the death penalty.  Though up for parole several times, he has consistently been denied freedom.

For many, this seems a fitting end to a madman’s life—dying a slow death in jail haunted by his past crimes.

But that’s not the end.

In 1987, an inmate talked to Berkowitz about Christ.  He gave Berkowitz a Bible.

According to Berkowitz, the book changed his life: “Everything seemed to hit me at once.  The guilt from what I did … the disgust at what I had become. … I got down on my knees and began to cry out. … I asked Jesus to forgive me. … A peace flooded over me. … I knew that my life, somehow, was going to be different.”

Berkowitz now has CDs and videos of his conversion available through Focus on the Family.  He has appeared on Dr. D. James Kennedy’s TV show, and he has endorsements from Chuck Colson.

—Mark Herringshow & Jennifer Schuchmann in Six Prayers God Always Answers

 

My Response: Why might I find it hard to accept that someone like David Berkowitz could be a genuine Christian?

 

Thought to Apply: Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me. —John Newton (British clergyman and former slave-ship captain)

Adapted from Prayer Power (Tyndale, 2008)

 

 

Prayer for the Week:  Dear Father, help me to know that in you there is no condemnation and nothing can ever separate me from your love.

 

 

 

World Communion Sunday – Sunday, October 4, 2020

The first Sunday in October is World Communion Sunday (formerly Fellowship of Suffering and Service) that supports World Communion Scholarships, the Ethnic Scholarship Program and the Ethnic In-Service Training Program.

We will collect a special offering to support the division of chaplains and ministries, Crusade Scholarships and the scholarship fund for minority groups.

Around the globe, countless gifted and qualified people face financial obstacles that hinder them from preparing for the vocation God has given them, especially youth and young adults. For ethnic students who will be the first generation in their families to attend college, or for those people of color who haven’t historically had access to resources that make higher education possible, the road toward education has often been unwieldy.

What would it look like if the church today imitated Jesus’ affirmation of the full dignity and God-given potential of all women and men—especially those who’ve historically been assigned to the world’s margins? On World Communion Sunday your giving helps to provide scholarships for national and international graduate students whom God has gifted to learn and to serve.

Equipping Disciples Like Mary Grace to Serve in Jesus’ Name

As a small child Mary Grace Galapon labored as a housemaid in exchange for food and clothing. Yet, allowed to attend church, she found hope. As a member of The United Methodist Church, your giving on World Communion Sunday has allowed this deaconess, of the Mindanao Philippines Annual Conference, to pursue an education that is now changing her community as she works to eliminate poverty.

Mary Grace’s work, and the impact of hundreds more like her, are possible because you give.

Will You Equip World-Changers?

Will you give generously on World Communion Sunday to make education and vocational impact possible for more students, like Mary Grace? Will you equip gifted and qualified students from around the globe to become the world-changers God created them to be?

Nelson Mandela said, “Education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world.”  And because the people of The United Methodist Church believe that all of God’s children have been created and gifted to build the kingdom Jesus ushered in, we’re resourcing them to do just that. Because of your giving on World Communion Sunday, the most powerful tool to change the world is in more hands.

Central Church

Central Church on WBVP TWICE This Sunday!

Although Central Church has resumed its in-person worship services at 11 am on Sundays, some people may not yet be able to attend due to COVID-19 concerns.

For anyone who does not feel comfortable with attending an in-person worship service, tune in at 10:30 A.M. on Sunday, October 4, to hear a recorded version of this week’s message from Central Church by Pastor Jan!

  • Special Note:  WBVP experienced some technical difficulties on Sunday, September 27 when broadcasting Pastor Jan’s message. 

They will rebroadcast her September 27 message this coming Sunday, October 4 at 12:30 pm in addition to broadcasting the regular October  4 message at 10:30 am.

SO ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4:

  • To hear Pastor’s Jan’s October 4 message, tune in at 10: 30 am;

  • To hear her September 27 message, tune in at 12:30 pm.

Here’s where to tune in:

 

Be sure to tune in this Sunday at 10:30!

 

15 Powerful Bible Verses About God’s Deep Personal Care for You – Verse #2

Do you ever feel like God is far off? Do you need Bible verses about how God cares for you? That maybe he has forgotten about you? That he isn’t that involved in your life? Do you ever wonder if God really cares for you? We will all be tempted to feel like that from time to time. I think we can all relate to how David felt in Psalm 22:

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, from the words of my groaning? Psalm 22:1

We can feel like God has forsaken us. That he is far away. That he doesn’t see our pain or hear our groaning.

One of the greatest challenges believers face on a regular basis, is what will we believe – our feelings and emotions or God’s Word. Our feelings are real. We really feel them. They are strong.

But our feelings are a poor barometer of the truth. Though they are true feelings, they are not always the truth. God’s word is the truth, whether we feel it or not.

So when we FEEL like God is not near, we must remember his Word. We must remember his promises.

Here is powerful Bible verse #2 about how God cares for you.

  1. fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand. Isaiah 41:10

Here God says that he personally will be with us, strengthen, help and uphold us. For this reason, we need not fear or be dismayed when facing or going through tough times.

 

Radical Repentance – A President’s Greatest Need

Gerald Ford Becomes Vice President

Gerald Ford Becomes Vice President

Key Bible Verse:  I want to know Christ and experience the mighty power that raised him from the dead.Philippians 3:10

Bonus ReadingActs 9: 1-30

As a young Michigan Congressman, Gerald Ford met a gospel-film executive named Billy Zeoli who came by his office and gave him a Bible.  Over the next few years, the two men became close.

Among their bonds was a love of sports: Ford had been an All-American football player, and Zeoli had a ministry to pro athletes.  At a pre-game chapel for the Dallas Cowboys, in Washington to play the Redskins, Ford went to hear Zeoli preach on “God’s game plan.”

Ford was especially moved by the sermon and talked with Zeoli afterward about Christ and forgiveness and what it meant.  The inquiry felt real and raw; but was that the moment Ford committed himself to Christ?

“It’s hard to say when a man does that,” Zeoli says plainly.  “That’s a God thing.  But I think that day is the day he looked back to as an extremely important day of knowing Christ.”

When Ford became vice president in 1973, Zeoli began sending him a weekly devotional memo.  Zeoli sent 146 devotionals in all, every week through Ford’s presidency.  Beyond the memos, Ford and Zeoli would meet privately every four or five weeks for prayer and Bible study.

—Nancy Gibbs & Michael Duffy in Time

 

My Response:  One thing I will do this week to get to know Christ better is …

 

Thought to Apply:  Oh, the fullness, pleasure, sheer excitement of knowing God on Earth! —Jim Elliot (slain missionary to Ecuador)

Adapted from “The Other Born-Again President,” Time (1/15/07)

 

Prayer for the Week:  Dear Father, help me to know that in you there is no condemnation and nothing can ever separate me from your love.

 

 

15 Powerful Bible Verses About God’s Deep Personal Care for You – Verse #1

Do you ever feel like God is far off? Do you need Bible verses about how God cares for you? That maybe he has forgotten about you? That he isn’t that involved in your life? Do you ever wonder if God really cares for you? We will all be tempted to feel like that from time to time. I think we can all relate to how David felt in Psalm 22:

My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Why are you so far from saving me, from the words of my groaning? Psalm 22:1

We can feel like God has forsaken us. That he is far away. That he doesn’t see our pain or hear our groaning.

One of the greatest challenges believers face on a regular basis, is what will we believe – our feelings and emotions or God’s Word. Our feelings are real. We really feel them. They are strong.

But our feelings are a poor barometer of the truth. Though they are true feelings, they are not always the truth. God’s word is the truth, whether we feel it or not.

So when we FEEL like God is not near, we must remember his Word. We must remember his promises.

Here is powerful Bible verse #1 about how God cares for you.

  1. For I, the LORD your God, hold your right hand; it is I who say to you, “Fear not, I am the one who helps you.” Isaiah 41:13

God doesn’t simply send an angel to hold your right hand. The God of heaven and earth personally holds your right hand. This is a figurative expression of his closeness to us and his personal care for us. He says that we are not to fear because he personally helps us – “I am the one who helps you.”

 

Radical Repentance – God’s Huge Heart

Prayer in PrisonKey Bible Verse: So now there is no condemnation for those who belong to Christ Jesus.  – Romans 8:1

Bonus readingRomans 8: 31-39

As I met with Fernando in his prison cell, he confessed that he had committed a lot of sins.  He just couldn’t see how God could possibly forgive him.  I drove home the above Bible verse and emphasized the complete forgiveness God offers to those who place their faith in Jesus Christ.

At the end of our short time together, God broke this man.  We got down on our knees and Fernando asked the Lord for forgiveness.

After his release from prison, Fernando moved to London.  During one of our trips to England, Pat and I invited him over to our hotel for tea.  When Pat greeted him in the lobby, he greeted her with the words: “The thing that got me was that your husband assured me from the Bible that ALL my sins were forgiven in one moment, forever, never to be brought up again.”  He could not get over the forgiving heart of God.

A few days later, Fernando told his story to a group of English businessmen.  “I never would have listened to the message of Christ if I hadn’t been in jail,” he admitted.  “I was too arrogant, too proud.  But I was desperate, I was in crisis—and God used it.”

—Luis Palau in High Definition Life

 

My Response: When I struggle with experiencing God’s forgiveness, I will remind myself that God’s heart is huge and his forgiveness is unending.

Adapted from High Definition Life (Revell, 2005)

 

Prayer for the Week:  Dear Father, help me to know that in you there is no condemnation and nothing can ever separate me from your love.

 

 

 

Central Church – Online Worship Service – Sunday, September 27, 2020

On this Sunday, the 17th Sunday after Pentecost, when the coronavirus prevents many of us from gathering in Central Church’s Sanctuary to worship in body, let us join together in spirit for with our online worship experience!

 

 

To begin, simply click on the photo below to join with the folks who have already made their way into our digital Sanctuary:

Central Church

 

 

 

Radical Repentance – A Load of Sin

1884 Methodist Hymnal - #532 - O That My Load of Sin Were Gone

1884 Methodist Hymnal – #532 – O That My Load of Sin Were Gone

Who Said It … Luis Palau

Luis Palau leads the Luis Palau Association—a ministry committed to innovative evangelism worldwide.  He’s shared Christ with more than 1 billion people through such avenues as television, radio, the internet, and festivals.  

Luis has authored nearly 50 books, including A Friendly Dialogue Between an Atheist and a Christian.  He and his wife, Pat, live in Portland, Oregon, and have 11 grandchildren.

 

What He Said … A Load of Sin

Fernando Montero had wealth, prestige, power, influence.  Armed with an MBA from Harvard University, he had climbed the political ladder to become Columbia’s secretary for defense. A t age 37, he ran the nations army and directed its attacks against the powerful Cali drug cartel.  Then something went terribly wrong.

Accused of financing the president’s political campaign with drug money, Fernando landed in a military penitentiary.  Prison officials cut him off from contact with the outside world.

Eventually a friend smuggled a Bible into Fernando’s cell, urging him to read Romans.  The book both intrigued and confused him.

During a visit to Colombia, I was asked to try to visit Fernando.  I agreed.  I thought the guards would turn me away at the gate, but to my surprise, they let me in.

I entered the compound and spent 45 minutes with the weary Fernando.  He told me he had read Romans, but said, “I just don’t get it.”  It became clear that Fernando’s main problem was the load of sin he carried.

Adapted from High Definition Life (Revell, 2005)

 

Prayer for the Week:  Dear Father, help me to know that in you there is no condemnation and nothing can ever separate me from your love.

 

 

 

Central Church on WBVP Sunday!

Although Central Church has resumed its in-person worship services at 11 am on Sundays, some people may not yet be able to attend due to COVID-19 concerns.

 

 

For anyone who does not feel comfortable with attending an in-person worship service, tune in at 10:30 A.M. on Sunday, September 27, to hear a recorded version of this week’s message from Central Church by Pastor Jan!

Here’s where to tune in:

 

Be sure to tune in this Sunday at 10:30!

 

6 Ways to Stop Thinking Fearful Thoughts

thoughtsIf you grew up in the ‘80s and ‘90s as I did, you’re familiar with the idea of mixtapes.

Mixtapes were a way of creating a compilation of music onto one source that played in any Walkman, car stereo, or boombox. To us back then, mixtapes are what playlists are to us today except with about 100 times the effort. If you liked a girl and wanted to give her some music that expressed your deepest feelings, you may have created a mixtape full of Amy Grant songs, maybe a little Backstreet Boys, and some Alanis Morissette. Or, was that just me?

The effort to create a mixtape was a real labor of love. You had to have a duel cassette player that could play the tapes you wanted to record on one side of the player while the blank tape—or reused tape from your last girlfriend—was queued to record on the other side. You had to push play and record at the same time, at just the right time, and stop it dead on when the track was over. By the time you created this dinosaur version of a playlist, it was a few hours of work putting the thing together. Now, do you see why this was such a token of love?

It was not uncommon, in the ‘80s and ‘90s, to be driving down the highway or any sideroad and see the insides of a cassette tape strewn all over. The black, thin, shiny film would catch on the nearby weeds or median for dozens of feet. It was as if that discarded, ruined tape let you know someone’s heart was broken. Another cassette full of music—likely a mixtape—was gutted out and left for dead. Those songs were long gone, just like that couple’s love.

If you’re wondering if I ever drove down the road with the window down unrolling the cassette film with every passing mile marker…you are correct, I did. Destroying a mixtape from a past crush had a sense of finality to it that allowed my healing to begin.

Recording Over the Negative Tracks

If only getting rid of annoying, repeated thoughts was that easy. If only we could get the anxious thoughts plaguing our minds to go away, then maybe our anxiety would stop rearing its restless head. My wife has dealt with her struggles of nagging thoughts that bring about anxiety. I’ve watched her, through tears, say she wishes the thoughts she keeps having would stop so she could go on with normal life. Getting our brain to stop playing certain negative tracks in our mind feels like someone created an awful mixtape of our worst feelings and thoughts, jammed them in the stereo of our mind, cranked the volume to 11, and snapped off all the control buttons. You can’t turn them down or stop hearing the negative tracks if your life depended on it.

The truth is, you can’t stop some of these ‘tracks’ on your own. You have to welcome the power of God to record over these tracks with healthy, fulfilling tracks of love, compassion, grace, and beauty. The Bible implores us to “Take every thought captive to obey Christ.” (2 Corinthians 10:5) We can only do this by the power of Christ dwelling in us. My mind must be renewed for my motives to be rewired and my actions to change. I have to “put on” Christ, Paul writes in Romans 13:14, to stop the gratifying desires of my flesh that drive me to sin and emotional suffering.

“Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.” (Romans 12:2) Without a doubt, my anxious, worried, fearful thoughts are not “acceptable and perfect”—not by my standards or God’s. Renewing my thinking means I must record over the lies—the negative ‘tracks’—I currently believe with the truth God gives me through His Son, His Word, and His Spirit. When Paul says, “Be renewed in the spirit of your minds” (Ephesians 4:23), He is commanding and promising that our tracks can be recorded over with new thinking that changes our lives.

More than Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT)

Many trained counselors, or even simply well-meaning people in our culture and even some churches, will tell us to “Think happy thoughts” and get away from what is bringing us down. This strategy is formally called “Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT).”  It is a form of psychological treatment that some claim is effective for bringing about change in someone’s life who is facing depression, anxiety, and grief, as well as situational sadness and overwhelming circumstances. CBT will challenge a person to stop looking at the past and start focusing on their present problems. The goal of CBT is to change feelings and behaviors by thinking better about life’s situations and circumstances. CBT identifies negative thoughts and attempts to replace them with positive thoughts.

While positive thinking may cause a temporary change in emotion and behavior, it does not provide long-term, lasting results. There are minimal side effects to this method of taking care of our problems other than the massive drawback of someone experiencing failure time and again. Our hope is to find a way not to keep falling into the same hole but eventually crawl out of it.

While CBT can look similar to biblical Christianity, let me be clear: CBT is not the same as biblical transformation through the only true change agent, our Savior Jesus Christ, and the power of the Gospel. While the Bible teaches the power of renewing our minds, we do so rooted, not in mere positivity, but biblical truth. (Romans 12:1–12; Ephesians 4:22–24; Colossians 3:1–10) The Bible tells us that biblical thinking will impact our feelings and actions. (John 13:17; James 1:25; Proverbs 29:18) The goal of our thinking is to please God first. Ephesians 5:10 says, “Try and discern what is pleasing to the Lord.” When I change my thinking for Him, His Spirit will give me the power to either change my feelings or perspective. We must recognize that the power of the mind is more than what we think. It forms what we believe in faith and hold as true.

Recording New Tracks for Our Mind to Play

Paul’s encouragement to the Philippians was necessary because they were experiencing suffering for their faith. Their suffering caused them to be anxious, but they were refusing to let the lies of the enemy win. That is why Paul said to them, “I hear that you are standing firm in one spirit, with one mind striving side by side in faith for the Gospel, and not frightened in anything by your opponents.” (Philippians 1:27–28) They are staying strong and sticking together, even when every outside force—and some inside forces—applied significant pressure to compromise or quit altogether.

Likely, the Roman government was pressuring them, and as Christianity rose, so did its unpopularity. The cultural tension would have caused anxiety for a first-century Christian who was trying not to rock the boat on the political landscape yet live out an authentic faith. There was fear of Rome overthrowing the Church and a fear of the Church conforming to Rome. The Church in Rome had to remain close and focus on something much larger than the dooming circumstances before them if they were to survive their panic of outside attack and internal turmoil. (Philippians 2:1–5)

With worry and fear staring them in the face, the Church in Philippi was encouraged to keep their mind focused on what is more excellent to avoid anxiety. Paul gave a list of descriptors of what things will refocus their minds. His admonishment was to stop the repeat tracks of doomsday background music and start listening to what would refresh, renew, and refocus them in Christ.

“Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.” – Philippians 4:8

First, Paul said, focus on whatever is true. 

Paul starts his list of new thinking by calling their attention to what is true. The word true is defined as “describing something as credible, aligning with reality, reliable, or trustworthy.” Although Paul normally associates truth with the truth about God (Romans 1:18, 25) and truth of the Gospel of Christ (Galatians 2:5, 14; 2 Corinthians 4:2; 11:10), in the context of this list of virtues he affirms whatever is true to be the only proper subject of Christian thought.  Satan is the father of lies. Thinking on that which is false is to think the devil’s thoughts, not God’s thoughts.

Noble. 

When I think of the word noble, I think of some British dignitary. That image is off but close. Something noble is worthy of respect and honor. It is to be taken seriously and treated properly. Paul uses this word to describe the call or standard for godly older men (Titus 2:2), deacons (1 Timothy 3:8), and women (1 Timothy 3:11).

Just.

When we think about what is just, we need to think about two expressions of justice: God’s actions toward us, and our actions of responsibility for God. ‘Just’ has to do with God’s standard of righteousness, and the outplay of His righteousness among His people (Psalm 11:7).

Pure.

In the original language, this word carries the idea that you are standing in awe of someone. This word is usually only attributed to God and communicates thinking on the holy purity of God. It has nuances of uncompromised integrity, which can only be found in God. When I dwell on what is pure, I am thinking about God’s character—all of which is perfect and holy.

Pleasing. 

What pleases your eye is what brings excitement and hope, not simply amusement. A child can be amused with an insect or rainbow, but it’s the anticipation of Christmas Day or a birthday celebration where they truly delight in what they anticipate. Something pleasing is a source of joy for the downcast and is like a fragrance that fills the whole house like a batch of freshly baked chocolate chip cookies.

Commendable. 

That which others look at with admiration is what we may refer to as commendable. These are the respectable things in life that others find joy and pleasure in and want to hear about or be around.

Paul lists these characteristics as the focal point for renewing our minds and giving us fighting power against anxiety. One commentator said, “Those who focus their minds on all that is true and set their minds and wills to do all that Paul has taught by word and example will experience the promise of the presence of the God of peace.” Grasping this kind of peace is the very thing that will move us from living on the defense against Satan and playing for the offense of God’s Kingdom.

Watch Out for Hypervigilance 

Police officers deal with the highs and lows that come from a constant state of hypervigilance. Their job demands them to look at life through the lens of defense, always being on the alert. What may be disturbing to us can trigger an internal reaction for them.

Is that guy reaching for his wallet or a weapon? 

Is that a sound I hear behind me? 

Are those guys following me? 

Is she trying to get away with something? 

The adage “bad guys don’t wear names tags” causes cops to be on guard constantly. This is, in fact, what we expect them to do for us, but it means that they live a lifestyle of hypervigilance.

Always being on alert can be taxing. In the right context, such as being an officer on duty, it can be energizing and even fun. However, when a hypervigilant person returns to their safe place and no longer has to be on the watch out, they often crash emotionally and even physically. This biological response can express itself as laziness, being downcast, or even angry. Cops are not the only ones that experience this hypervigilance. As a pastor, I feel it often. There are environments in my life—even in the church—where I am hypervigilant. My wife will even say to our kids when I get home, “We know Daddy is home, but Daddy doesn’t know he is home yet,” because my mind is still coming down from the battle I was just in at work.

Hypervigilance may be what you are experiencing because of your racing thoughts. Your mind has you constantly on alert, and you can’t seem to calm down. When you do calm down, your emotions plummet, and you don’t feel like doing much of anything.

A hypervigilant life is no way to live. God meant for us to enjoy this world, not walk around afraid in it. Renewing our minds begins with letting go of all-consuming thoughts that keep our highs high and our lows deeper than we care to admit. When we’re hypervigilant, our body plays into this by causing our heart to race, palms to sweat, blood pressure to rise, and breathing to be shallow. When we come out of hypervigilance, we want to lay down. We can’t go on like this—it’s unhealthy for any period. By fixing our minds on what is worth our attention, we can train our outer bodies and inner souls to be still and trust God, even when fear threatens to disrupt our everyday lives.

Destroy the Negative Tracks 

Here are some very practical actions you can take to get the negative tracks to stop playing in your head:

  1. Identify your negative tracks. You may need to write down in long-form or short-form what keeps replaying in your mind. Sometimes by writing them out and seeing them as they are can help you realize how ridiculous they are or the way they may be more imaginary than real.
  2. Flip to the truth. I have taken a stack of 3×5 cards and written one anxious thought on each card. On the opposite side of the card, I write down a Bible verse or a truth that counteracts that anxious thought. Then, I take time each day to flip those cards over, one by one, letting the truth sink in more than the lie. Soon I find that my thinking is renewed and rewired to the truth whenever that anxious thought arises.
  3. Speak them honestly. As we talked about in Chapter 4, sometimes the fresh air of faith must see the darkest thoughts in our minds. We can be brutally honest with God about what’s plaguing us. He can use our honesty as a means of transformation. There is nothing you can say to God that He doesn’t already know or that He doesn’t have the resources to address.
  4. Focus on what is more beautiful. As we looked at earlier, thinking about what is more lovely may help to get over the ugly thoughts that consume us. For me, this comes when I go hold a new baby, walk in the woods, sit on a highpoint and watch the sunset, or savor a beautifully crafted cappuccino. There are a billion overlooked blessings around you in your life right now that could refresh your focus. God’s common graces can provide a way for you to get your eyes off yourself and onto the goodness of God.
  5. Worship in spirit and truth. God made us to worship. Even my dad, who hates to sing (and frankly, is not that good at it), loves it when a room full of people raise their voices to God. My dad would drive in his 1994 Nissan Pathfinder with his Promise Keeper praise album blaring as he sang along. As a kid, I remember his sincere joy from worshiping God through some of our hardest times. On my best days and worst days, there is nothing like listening and singing to music that worships God to get my mind out of the rut it likes to lay in. When we worship in spirit and truth, the lies we believe flee, and God stirs our souls to provide comfort and clarity.
  6. Meditate on Christ. I remember my youth pastor saying, “Thirty seconds of thinking about Christ will cure the worst day and the strongest temptation.” He was right. Simply stopping and thinking about Jesus Christ, His character, His grace, the cross, and His resurrection—these are the most beautiful things to fill our minds. A few seconds of thinking about Christ or reading Scripture about Him has a way of affecting the rest of my day.

Now is the time to roll down the window of your soul and let that mixtape of negative tracks unwind in the wind of God’s truth. It’s time you break up with those thoughts and keep your gaze firmly fixed on the author and perfecter of our faith, Jesus Christ. (Hebrews 12:2)

This article originally appeared at: https://www.joshweidmann.com/six-ways-to-stop-thinking-fearful-thoughts/ .

Letting God Lead – Out of the Wilderness

Wilderness of the ExodusAfter 40 years of wandering in the wilderness, Israel is poised to enter the Promised Land.  But before they can prosper in the “land flowing with mild and honey,” Moses reminds them that they must love God wholeheartedly and obey his commands.

In today’s study passage, we see a clear connection between a deep love for God and obedience to him. The same principle remains true today: “If you love me,” Jesus says in John 14:15, “obey my commands.”

Interact with God’s Word:

Deuteronomy 6

  1. Israel’s economic prosperity was tied to obedience (v. 3).  What kinds of “riches” are promised to those who obey Christ? (See Romans 8:17, 23, 29-30; Col. 1: 12-14.)

 

  1. Practically speaking, how are Christians called to live out verses 4 and 5?

 

 

  1. What does it really mean to “fear the LORD your God” (v. 13)?  (See Hebrews 12: 28-29; Psalm 33: 8-22, Psalm 118:4, Proverbs 23:17.)

 

  1. What “gods” (v. 14) are Christian men in our culture most tempted to worship?

 

 

  1. How are Christians “counted as righteous” (v. 25)?  (See Romans 4: 1-5.)

 

  1. Since we aren’t saved by our good deeds, why do them? (See James 1: 22-25, James 2: 14-26.)

 

Spend Time in Prayer:

Confess ways in the past week you’ve failed to put God first; ask him to help you demonstrate your faith and love for him through both your thoughts and actions.

Deuteronomy 6

A Call for Wholehearted Commitment

“These are the commands, decrees, and regulations that the Lord your God commanded me to teach you. You must obey them in the land you are about to enter and occupy, 2 and you and your children and grandchildren must fear the Lord your God as long as you live. If you obey all his decrees and commands, you will enjoy a long life. 3 Listen closely, Israel, and be careful to obey. Then all will go well with you, and you will have many children in the land flowing with milk and honey, just as the Lord, the God of your ancestors, promised you.

4 “Listen, O Israel! The Lord is our God, the Lord alone. 5 And you must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and all your strength. 6 And you must commit yourselves wholeheartedly to these commands that I am giving you today. 7 Repeat them again and again to your children. Talk about them when you are at home and when you are on the road, when you are going to bed and when you are getting up. 8 Tie them to your hands and wear them on your forehead as reminders. 9 Write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates.

10 “The Lord your God will soon bring you into the land he swore to give you when he made a vow to your ancestors Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It is a land with large, prosperous cities that you did not build. 11 The houses will be richly stocked with goods you did not produce. You will draw water from cisterns you did not dig, and you will eat from vineyards and olive trees you did not plant. When you have eaten your fill in this land, 12 be careful not to forget the Lord, who rescued you from slavery in the land of Egypt. 13 You must fear the Lord your God and serve him. When you take an oath, you must use only his name.

14 “You must not worship any of the gods of neighboring nations, 15 for the Lord your God, who lives among you, is a jealous God. His anger will flare up against you, and he will wipe you from the face of the earth. 16 You must not test the Lord your God as you did when you complained at Massah. 17 You must diligently obey the commands of the Lord your God—all the laws and decrees he has given you. 18 Do what is right and good in the Lord’s sight, so all will go well with you. Then you will enter and occupy the good land that the Lord swore to give your ancestors. 19 You will drive out all the enemies living in the land, just as the Lord said you would.

20 “In the future your children will ask you, ‘What is the meaning of these laws, decrees, and regulations that the Lord our God has commanded us to obey?’

21 “Then you must tell them, ‘We were Pharaoh’s slaves in Egypt, but the Lord brought us out of Egypt with his strong hand. 22 The Lord did miraculous signs and wonders before our eyes, dealing terrifying blows against Egypt and Pharaoh and all his people. 23 He brought us out of Egypt so he could give us this land he had sworn to give our ancestors. 24 And the Lord our God commanded us to obey all these decrees and to fear him so he can continue to bless us and preserve our lives, as he has done to this day. 25 For we will be counted as righteous when we obey all the commands the Lord our God has given us.’

 

 

Prayer for the Week:  Lord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

Letting God Lead – Ready to Suffer?

Key Bible Verse:  I want to know Christ and experience the mighty power that raised him from the dead. I want to suffer with him, sharing in his death.  Philippians 3:10

Dig Deeper:  Philippians 3: 3-14Let God Lead 3

Saints are really sinners on spiritual steroids.  They are people like you and me, people who want to know Christ more and more.  The difference is that they are much more willing than the rest of us to do what it takes to know Christ.

They want to know Christ in his holiness.  They want to know him in his power.  They want to know his love.  They want to know him in his glory.  So far so good, we say.

Saints want to know Jesus completely and love him fully, and that means they want to know him in his humiliation.  They want to know the Christ who is deserted by the disciples and abandoned by the Father.  They want to know not just the resurrection but also the sufferings.

To know God—to be godly in the deepest sense—is to know the suffering of God, the utter grief he knows because of our abandoning him.  This is, in part, what Christ experienced on the cross—the abandonment of all.  It is what we must experience if we are to know Christ intimately and to be like Christ.  It is what we must experience if we are to truly understand, at a place deep in our souls, the measure of God’s love for us.

—Mark Galli in Jesus Mean and Wild

 

My Response: I will take time to reflect on what it means to suffer with Christ and share in his death.

 

Thought to Apply: Wicked men obey out of fear; good men, out of love.—Aristotle (Greek philosopher)

Adapted from Jesus Mean and Wild (Baker, 2006)

 

 

Prayer for the WeekLord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

Our Spiritual Pandemic of Narcissism

Now that we’ve been going through this mess for almost six months, certain areas have surfaced where – if this is all a big life test – we aren’t exactly getting an “A”. For those who follow Christ, there is one area in particular that deserves attention. It is giving into the temptation to turn inward, to give ourselves over to our emotions and felt needs in ways that aren’t spiritually healthy.

The apostle Paul is a helpful corrective here. If anyone knew what it meant to endure hardship, it was Paul. This is how he once described his life circumstances:

“I have… been in prison… been flogged… been exposed to death again and again. Five times I received… the forty lashes minus one. Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, I spent a night and a day in the open sea, I have been constantly on the move. I have been in danger from rivers, in danger from bandits, in danger from my own countrymen… in danger in the country, in danger at sea… I have labored and toiled and have often gone without sleep; I have known hunger and thirst and have often gone without food; I have been cold and naked.” (II Cor. 11:23-27, NIV)

Yet when, once again, Paul was suffering – this time imprisoned in chains in Rome – he wrote these words:

“And I want you to know, my dear brothers and sisters, that everything that has happened to me here has helped to spread the Good News. For everyone here, including the whole palace guard, knows that I am in chains because of Christ. And because of my imprisonment, most of the believers here have gained confidence and boldly speak God’s message without fear.” (Philippians 1:12-14, NLT)

Paul was under military guard, which meant he was not simply imprisoned, but actually chained to a soldier. The guards selected to be chained to prisoners were the worst of the worst. Ignatius, a Christian of the 2nd century who wrote of his own imprisonment while on the way to execution, said he was chained night and day to men he could only call “wild beasts… [who] become worse [even] when treated well.”

So what did Paul post on his 1st-century Facebook page? How good what was happening to him was because it was helping advance the cause of Christ.

That was what he was thinking about.

You won’t find a single word about how awful prison was, how heavy and painful the chains were, whether he was cold, hungry or had been mistreated. He wrote nothing to elicit personal sympathy; nothing that would reflect a preoccupation with self.

This raises something few people ever think about. That maybe instead of asking, “Why is this happening to me? Why aren’t things going the way I want them to go? Why am I stuck with kids working from home, having to wear a face mask, can’t go to the movies?”, maybe the real question should be, “What can all of this hold for my love for others, and my love for God?”

Rather than focusing on all that isn’t going our way, all that we don’t like, all that we wish was different – which is letting ourselves turn inward – maybe we should focus on all that this could allow God to do in us, all that God wants to do through us. In other words, what if we were determined to turn outward?

For most of us, our default position is almost always the same when it comes to pain and sadness, difficulty and challenge: self-pity, self-preoccupation and self-concern. We don’t think about the good that could come of it, much less how it might positively affect other people. Our goal is for people to feel sorry for us, sympathize with us and feel our pain. And then, for us to wallow in it. To focus on all we don’t have, can’t do, isn’t going our way. How we’re inconvenienced or put out.

In other words, we make it all about us. Paul’s attitude was, “It’s not about me.” He felt that what was happening was more about what God wanted to do through him than what was happening to him.

During this pandemic, all of us have lost something. We’ve all lost a certain amount of our personal freedom and had our lifestyles impacted in ways that frustrate and debilitate. Some of us have lost income or even a job. Some of us have even lost a loved one to death itself.

Our chains are real. But no matter how real our chains are – and they were real for Paul – our choice to turn inward or turn outward is just as real. And it was impossible to be with Paul for five minutes and not know which choice he had made.

What would five minutes with you reflect?

If someone were to go on your Facebook page, read your thread of tweets, scroll through your Instagram posts, would they find an inward or outward focus? If they spent time with you in a Zoom meeting or a Facetime call, what would they say about your mindset and spirit? Would they walk away being confronted in new and fresh ways with the power and presence of Christ? After seeing you and listening to you, would they want to lead bolder lives for Christ? Or would they be encouraged to whine and complain and critique more? Do they find joy where they couldn’t find joy, see the good where they couldn’t see the good, see Christ where they didn’t see Christ, because of time with you?

If such a spirit seems almost incomprehensible, perhaps it is because we have a distorted view of the nature of our life in, and with, Christ. As Paul tried to explain to the Philippians:

“For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain. If I am to go on living in the body, this will mean fruitful labor for me. Yet what shall I choose? I do not know! I am torn between the two: I desire to depart and be with Christ, which is better by far; but it is more necessary for you that I remain in the body. Convinced of this, I know that I will remain, and I will continue with all of you for your progress and joy in the faith, so that through my being with you again your joy in Christ Jesus will overflow on account of me.” (Philippians 1:21-26, NIV)

“To live is Christ and to die is gain.” Is that our life motto? Not usually. Left unchecked, a more accurate rendering would be “To live is me and to die just sucks.” And right now, that “living for me,” turned inward engagement of life is the spiritual pandemic we’ve allowed the virus pandemic to spread.

We’re not thinking about how God might want to use this, or use us, during this time. We’re just consumed with what we want, what we need; how we want to be served, ministered to and fed.

Right now, many of you want to worship corporately and publicly and you can’t. You want to have interaction with others and you can’t. But instead of accepting that and turning outward and asking God how He wants to use us during this time, how He wants us to contribute and invest in this time, I’ve heard of people saying or posting things like:

  • “I won’t watch church online.”
  • “I just can’t worship that way.”
  • “I tried it and it wasn’t for me.”
  • “I can’t get anything out of it that way.”

Do you hear how turned inward that is? How that makes it all about us? What if instead we said:

  • “I know people who would never darken the doorstep of a church, but they might check it out online. Since everybody and everything is online, this is my chance to be an invitational machine!”

Or

  • “I can’t be a public worshiper right now, but that just means I can work at being a private worshiper. And if I read the Bible right, that’s the heart of my relationship with Jesus!”

Or

  • “I can’t engage others the way I would like, but I can take it upon myself to be someone who reaches out in every way I can!”

If all we can do during this time is complain about our spiritual needs not being met, we have given ourselves over to… ourselves. It’s called spiritual narcissism. In Greek mythology, Narcissus is the character who, upon passing his reflection in the water, becomes so enamored with himself that he devotes the rest of his life to his own reflection. From this we get our term narcissism, the preoccupation with self. The value of narcissism is the classic “I, me, mine” mentality that places personal pleasure and fulfillment at the forefront of concerns.

In so many places and in so many ways, a spiritual narcissism has invaded the Christian community. Eavesdrop, for a moment, on how some Christians talk or the kinds of things they post:

  • “I want to go where I’m fed” – not where we can learn to feed ourselves, much less feed others.
  • “I need to be ministered to” – as if ministry in the life of the Christ follower is something that happens to us, instead of something we make happen through us for others.
  • We walk out of a worship service and say, “I didn’t get anything out of it” – as if the purpose is what we got out of it, instead of what God got out of it.

Where did that come from? It wasn’t from our Leader. He didn’t talk that way. Jesus said: “I did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give my life as a ransom for many”; “Whoever wants to be first must become last”; “Whoever wants to be great among you must become the slave of all”; “Not my will, but thine” (See Matthew 20:25-28; Luke 22:42).

Yet a spiritual narcissism has invaded our thinking where the individual needs and desires of the Believer have become the center of attention. This is why when someone says, “I don’t want worship online, it’s not for me, I just don’t get anything out of it,” I want to say: “Friend, it’s not about whether you get anything out of it. It’s about whether God got anything out of it from you.”

And the truth we should all celebrate is that the church going online has meant the message of Christ reaching millions more than at any other time history.

In other words, I thank God for the chains.

  –  James Emery White

Sources

Adapted from a message given through the online campus of Mecklenburg Community Church as part of the series “Spiritual Survival in a Pandemic World.”

How to Pray for Those in Authority

“First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people, for kings and all who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life, godly and dignified in every way.”  – 1 Timothy 2:2

Paul was a Pharisee – a religious ruler. In fact, he called himself a “Pharisee of the Pharisees” (Philippians 3:5). Pharisees knew all about the practice of prayer. Unfortunately, they did not have a universal outlook on their prayers; they primarily focused on praying for the nation of Israel.

In his encouragement to Timothy, Paul makes a bold statement that prayer, in various forms, should be made for all men, and urged this young pastor to pray for those in authority. Godless Emperor Nero was on the throne at that time. Yet, the believers were supposed to pray for him?

What a difficult and different approach to governmental authority. Even if we disagree, we are to pray for those who rule the daily affairs of our lives.

The early church had been accused of acting against the decrees of Caesar and having another king, Jesus Himself (Acts 17:7). Their enemies effectively accused them of dissatisfaction with the ruling parties. Yet, Paul encouraged these early believers to look to God as the One who had placed these men in authority (Romans 13:1-7).

If I disagree with the president, shouldn’t I voice my concern? Maybe you should pray first. If I’m being mistreated because of government intervention, shouldn’t I protest or sign a petition? Maybe you should lift up the ruler in prayer, thank God for them, and willingly subject yourself to their leadership – because God has allowed them to rule and has placed them in their position.

We are encouraged to pray for “kings” – those ruling heads of state and CEOs of our government. We pray for those who represent us to the world at large. And we are encouraged to pray for those “who are in authority” – those who are subordinate rulers, regional leaders, and local officials. We pray for those who protect and provide for us on a daily basis.

So how should we pray for those in authority?

  1. Pray that they would have wisdom. This was Solomon’s prayer as he ruled the nation of Israel – that he would have “an understanding mind to govern the people” (1 Kings 3:9). Pray that our leaders would have wisdom to know right and the strength to do it.
  2. Pray that they would have discernment. This is the ability to know right from wrong; to know God’s leading as opposed to the leading of the enemy (1 Kings 3:9). Pray that God would protect them from lies and deception.
  3. Pray that they would be instruments of God. This was Paul’s instruction in Romans 13:4; that rulers, authorities, and governing bodies were actually “servants of God”. Pray that our leaders would lead a society marked by tranquility, godliness, and dignity (1 Timothy 2:2).
  4. Pray for the election of such people. If it is God’s will that our society be marked by peace, dignity, and righteousness, we must pray for people who support this to be elected. Pray for God to raise these people up, and for our nation to embrace those who will promote honor, righteousness, and justice.
  5. Pray with a heart of thanksgiving. This is the peace that comes down from above. When we honor God, trust Him with our daily lives and needs, and commit that to prayer, the “peace of God that passes all understanding will guard our hearts and minds” (Philippians 4:7).
  6. Pray for God’s will to be done. Jesus, in His instructional prayer to the disciples, said, “Your Kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:10). God’s governing and ruling will flows from heaven to earth. He is in complete control.

This article originally appeared at:  https://www.strategicrenewal.com/how-to-pray-for-those-in-authority/.

 

Letting God Lead – Everyday Sacrifices

Your Choices Make YouKey Bible Verse:  I beg you to offer your bodies to him as a living sacrifice, pure and pleasing.  That’s the most sensible way to serve God.  Romans 12:1, CEV

Dig Deeper:  Romans 12:2

What does offering your body to God look like in our everyday lives?

Maybe it’s when you sit down at your computer and there’s a message from “Desperate Debbie” with the subject line “XXX: Click here!”  You close your eyes and pray, “Lord, everything in me wants to check this out.  I pray for your help. Lord, my eyes are only for you.”  Then, by faith, you click “delete.”  Your eyes have become a living sacrifice.

It’s when you turn on the radio to listen to music that tells you to go smoke something, drink something, have sex with somebody, curse somebody, and then you pray, “Lord, I like the song.  Everything within me wants to listen.  Help me, Lord.  By faith, I’m not going to listen.  Jesus, my ears are only for you.”  Then you change station.  Your ears are a living sacrifice.

Maybe you’re with friends and you have a dirty joke that if shared will make you the flavor of the moment.  Yet instead of telling the joke, you pray, “Lord God, I confess I want the attention.  I want the popularity.  Help me, Lord, to obey you.  Jesus, my lips are for you alone.”  Then, by faith, you bite your tongue.  In that moment your lips have become a living sacrifice.

—Jarrod Jones in The Backward Life

 

My Response: How might I apply Jarrod’s devotional to something I struggle with or to a moral choice I’m faced with on a regular basis?

 

Thought to Apply: The problem with a living sacrifice is that it can crawl off the altar.—Rick Warren (pastor, writer)

Adapted from The Backward Life (Revell, 2006)

 

Prayer for the Week:  Lord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

Letting God Lead – Football or God?

Football Player PrayingKey Bible Verse:  You must not have any other god but me.   – Exodus 20:3

Dig Deeper:  Isaiah 43: 10-11

Late one evening in our room at the Steelers training camp, I told Donnie Shell, “I don’t know that I’m going to make this team. … There are other new guys who are looking to do what I did last year—take somebody’s spot.  This is just not going according to plan.”

“Tony, I think you’re at a crossroads,” Donnie said. ” … You tell everybody that God has first place in your life.  Now, when your career looks like it’s teetering, we’re getting a chance to see what really is in first place for you.”

I thought about that all day and then came back to the conversation with Donnie.

“You’re probably right,” I told him. “I feel like I’ve been learning from Christian guys like you and growing. … But all of a sudden, I come to a crisis point, and I begin to panic. …”

Donnie measured me squarely: “All the Lord is trying to do is find out what’s in first place in your life, and right now, it looks like football is.”

I immediately knew Donnie was right, and I felt convicted.

It was the first time I was able to look at football as something God was allowing me to do, not something that should define me. I had to consciously make sure that God was in first place.

—Tony Dungy in Quiet Strength

 

My Response:  If my neighbors were asked what has first place in my life, they would probably say I value this the most: …

 

Thought to Apply: Whatever a man seeks, honors, or exalts more than God, this is the god of his idolatry.—William B. Ullathorne (British Benedictine monk, bishop)

Adapted from Quiet Strength (Tyndale, 2007)

 

 

Prayer for the Week:  Lord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

8 Things Got Daniel Through His Crisis and Will Get You Through This Crisis

A few months back, Mark Driscoll began teaching verse-by-verse through the amazing Old Testament book of Daniel. In God’s perfect timing, the recent crisis that has the globe feeling overwhelmed, exhausted, and uncertain is precisely what Daniel experienced. In his example we learn the following eight things that got Daniel through his crisis and will get you through this crisis:

  1. Ministry of presence from God. God sent an angel to be present with Daniel as he was alone and sends the Holy Spirit to do the same for you. Even when alone, Christians are not isolated because God’s presence is with us.
  2. Being reminded he was “greatly loved” and his suffering was not personal. When our lives are hit with pain and trial, we can think it is personal. As Daniel experienced, his personal pain was not a personal penalty from God.
  3. A humble heart that prays is heard and responded to by God.
  4. A reminder to fear not. The most common command in the Bible is, in some form or fashion “fear not”.
  5. A strengthening touch from God brings peace and courage. Daniel saw a vision of what was coming to the world that he could not change or control. This left him restless and anxious. God did not change his external circumstances but touched him, which changed his internal circumstances. The same is true for you.
  6. A reminder of the reality of spiritual warfare in the world. Behind all the bad news Daniel received and we’ve been receiving is ultimately a lengthy battle between God and Satan that shows up in human death and destruction on the earth.
  7. A focus on the Kingdom of Jesus Christ and battle to get home. The entire storyline of Daniel was the fight for God’s people to worship God in the house of God until they could go to their eternal Home. Every day, our fight is to do the same – worship God until we see God.
  8. A reminder that God knows and rules all of human history. The prophecies fulfilled throughout Daniel are staggering as the same God who knows history also rules history and has it all under control, even when things seem to us to be out of control.

Which of these eight is most helpful to you right now?

Letting God Lead – Freedom in Obedience

Let God Lead 4Key Bible Verse:  And the Lord our God commanded us to obey all these decrees and to fear him so he can continue to bless us and preserve our lives, as he has done to this day.   – Deuteronomy 6:24

Dig Deeper:  Deuteronomy 6

I was asked to lead an organization that I loved.  I had been in business leadership and consulting for more than 30 years.  It seemed like everything I had accomplished had prepared me for this appointment.  From that experience the normal approach would be to develop a formal process for this company with a vision, strategy, and plan, and then to work that plan.

However, I had begun to sense the need to listen for God’s direction, agree with him, and then act in obedience.  Now, this was quite different from how I would normally have approached leadership.

Over the next few months, I continued to ask God for his direction and listened when he gave it.  His direction came through the wisdom of trusted friends, through the hundreds of emails  I received, through prayer, through time spent in the Word of God, and in the correcting and confirming peace sent by God.

The agreement of our board and leadership regarding this new direction gave us the confidence to make hard decisions, change the way we did things, and to carry on—even when things didn’t go as anticipated.  There was freedom and fulfillment in this kind of action.

—Dan Brokke in I³—Identity, Integrity, Impact

 

My Response: A time I experienced freedom and fulfillment through obedience was …

 

Thought to Apply: Obedience is the road to freedom.—C. S. Lewis (British scholar, Christian writer)

Adapted from I³—Identity, Integrity, Impact (Summerside Press, 2009)

 

 

Prayer for the Week:  Lord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

Books of the Bible Study Series – The Book of Psalms

The Book of Psalms, commonly referred to as “the Psalms” is an anthology of 150 individual psalms – sacred songs or poems used in worship. The term translates from Greek, meaning “instrumental music”.

Located in the Old Testament of the Bible, the Book of Psalms is divided into five sections, Books one through five, and is linked to the name of King David.

Of these 150 psalms, all of them contain valuable information about life’s most important questions. When it comes to the memorization of Scripture, there is only one chapter in the Bible that most people have actually memorized and that is the Psalms.

The Psalms include songs of praise that were written to be sung to music. These psalms were written as a form of complete human expression to God, and are powerful examples of the large range of human expression and emotion. Think of them as Jesus’ songbook.

Have you ever felt like life keeps getting worse and worse?

Many of us know what it feels like for everything in life feels like it’s falling apart. Many of us also know what it’s like to be depressed and feel like you’re at the bottom of a dark, deep well, looking up and thinking you’re never going to crawl your way to the top.

If you’ve had this experience or are going through this right now, turn to Psalm 40. This is a song about the pits. Verse 1 says, “I waited patiently for the Lord; He turned to me and heard my cry.”

In the first half of the psalm, verses 1-10, David, the psalmist tells how God got him out of one pit and he sings His praise for doing so. But life was not perfect after this. Rather, it is evident from the second half of the psalm, verses 11-17, that he is in another pit, crying out to the Lord to deliver him from the next one. Because David waited intently on the Lord to rescue him from the first pit, he knew how to wait on the Lord to get him out of the second pit.

When you’re in the pit, wait intently on the Lord and proclaim His goodness when He answers. The pit in your life could be any of a number of life’s trials. The pit can be anything from a breakdown with one of your closest friends, a physical illness, the loss of a job or deep emotional stress. You may be responsible for being in your pit, or you may be a victim of the sin of others. Regardless of the circumstances, trust in God’s timing which often does not coincide with our timing.

 

 

Letting God Lead – Unexplainable…

Letting God Lead 2Key Bible Verses:  The Lord had said to Abram, “Leave your native country, your relatives, and your father’s family, and go to the land that I will show you.”  So Abram departed as the Lord had instructed.  – Genesis 12:1, 4

Dig Deeper:  Genesis 12: 1-9 James 2: 21-26

To embrace life in God, to experience his presence, and to follow his lead will inevitably place you in the realm of the unexplainable.  You’ll find yourself feeling, thinking, speaking, acting, and relating in ways leading unquestionably to the conclusion that “God did it.”

God may lead you to pass up a promotion because of the additional hours and responsibilities that would negatively impact your family and current ministry involvements.

You may be led by God to write a check that will be unexplainable to your financial planner.

You may feel unexplainably prompted to share your faith with someone who previously made it clear he or she had no interest in God.

You may feel unexplainably compelled to befriend and express love to someone whom most others choose to avoid.

Whatever it is, God wants to lead you into this realm of the “unexplainable apart from him”—so your life points to him.

Paul describes this new realm in these words: “Things which eye has not seen and ear has not heard, and which have not entered the heart of man, all that God has prepared for those who love him”  (1 Cor. 2:9, NASB).  Wow!  Count me in!

—Don Cousins in Unexplainable

 

My Response: One unexplainable faith-step I have taken in obedience to God is …

Adapted from Unexplainable (Cook, 2009)

 

 

Prayer for the WeekLord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

Central Church – Online Worship Service – Sunday, September 20, 2020

On this Sunday, the 16th Sunday after Pentecost, when the coronavirus prevents many of us from gathering in Central Church’s Sanctuary to worship in body, let us join together in spirit for with our online worship experience!

 

 

To begin, simply click on the photo below to join with the folks who have already made their way into our digital Sanctuary:

Central Church

 

 

 

Letting God Lead – Giving Up the Right to Lead

Let God LeadWho Said It … Bill Hull

Bill Hull has a passion for helping the church return to its disciple-making roots.  So much so that he considers himself a “discipleship evangelist.”   Having fine-tuned his unique perspectives through 20 years of pastoral service, Bill currently oversees a discipleship ministry called Choose the Life.

Bill’s latest book for the serious Christ-follower is Christlike: The Pursuit of Uncomplicated Obedience.

Bill and his wife, Jane, live in Long Beach, California, and are the parents of two adult sons.

What He Said … Giving up the Right to Lead

The deepest sin of my life is holding on to the right to lead my own life.  

I am a high achiever.  I like to be in control.  I enjoy accomplishment.  I love to “go for it.”  I like to think that I have all kinds of options available to me, that I can create, create, create.  

If I want to be transformed, I have to give that all up.  I first confess my sin of insisting on leading my own life.

That is how I got started on the road to becoming a true disciple.  I humbled myself and asked God to lead me.  I know it sounds trite and common, but when you get it, when you understand what it means to choose the life of following Jesus, it is the most liberating experience in life.

Jesus said it for us: “No one can serve two masters.  Either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other” (Matthew 6:24, NIV).  We must choose.

Adapted from Choose the Life (Baker, 2004)

 

Prayer for the Week:  Lord, it’s easy to say I follow you; it’s much harder to show it by the way I live; help me, with your empowering Spirit, to choose daily to live in obedience to your calling.

 

 

 

Central Church on WBVP Sunday!

Although Central Church has resumed its in-person worship services at 11 am on Sundays, some people may not yet be able to attend due to COVID-19 concerns.

 

 

For anyone who does not feel comfortable with attending an in-person worship service, tune in at 10:30 A.M. on Sunday, September 20, to hear a recorded version of this week’s message from Central Church by Pastor Jan!

Here’s where to tune in:

 

Be sure to tune in this Sunday at 10:30!

 

Just Say No – The Bare Essentials

Mountain ClimberKey Bible Verse:  “And as Christ’s soldier, do not let yourself become tied up in the affairs of this life.”  – 2 Timothy 2: 4

Bonus Reading  2 Timothy 2: 1-7

The story is told of a group of people who were preparing to climb Mount Blanc in the Swiss Alps.

On the evening before the climb, the guide outlined the prerequisite for reaching the top.  Due to the difficulty of the climb, he warned them, one could reach the top by taking only the bare essentials of equipment.  All unnecessary accessories must be left behind.

A young Englishman refused to listen.  He brought along an extra blanket, a cap, and a fancy notebook in his backpack.

On the way to the summit of Mount Blanc, the guide began to notice certain items of excess baggage left behind in the snow.  First the blanket.  Then the notebook.  Later the cap.

This epitomizes what must happen in our lives spiritually if we are to win the race.  Every unnecessary weight must be cast aside if we are to make it to the top.  We must let go of the good if we are to achieve the best.

Running with maximum speed requires stripping down.  Even small encumbrances can keep us from victory.  The difference between victory and defeat is often very small.

—- Steven Lawson in “Men Who Win”

 

My Response:  A “good” that may be in the way of God’s best for me is… …

 

Thought to Apply:  If you begin by denying yourself nothing, the world later is apt to do your denying for you.
—- B. F. Forbes (writer)

Adapted from: “Men Who Win” (NavPress, 1992)

 

 

Just Say No – Goose Truth

Geese in FlightQ.  What if there are things I should walk away from, but I’ve been unable to resist?

A.  I mustn’t believe the lie that says I can’t change or take control.  Because God’s Spirit is in me, God’s strength is in me.

But sometimes I feel so helpless.  In late autumn, my family likes to travel to southern Illinois around Horseshoe Lake where the geese are flying.  Each time, I’m reminded of how foolish it is to believe that God would make Christians helpless to resist the destructive forces of sin.

When you travel down Highway 3, which slices right across the flyway of thousands of migrating waterfowl, you see the grain fields the conservation people have planted for the geese.  The birds gather in this reserve by the hundreds of thousands, blanketing the ground until sunset.  Then at dusk an amazing change occurs.  Like huge puffs of smoke, the birds rise from the ground by the thousands and cross the highway.

Why?  You’d think it would be far easier to fly by day.

One side of the highway is all game reserve.  The other side of the road is private farmland where hunters gather by the score.  The old-timers say the reason the birds wait till sunset to cross is that they’ve learned the hunters’ time limit is over at sundown.

Wow, if a goose with a pea brain, driven by instinct, has the ability to change behaviors that would lead to its own destruction, how can we with the mind of Christ and controlled by the Spirit of God claim that we can’t?

          Bryan Chapell is president of Covenant Theological Seminary in St. Louis Missouri

Adapted from: “The Promises of Grace”  (Baker, 2001)

 

 

Just Say No – Margin of Victory

Racing ShoesKey Bible Verse:  “Let us strip off every weight that slows us down, especially the sin that so easily hinders our progress.” Hebrews 12:1

Bonus Reading  Hebrews 12: 1-4

Runner Gil Dodds was once preparing for a race.  After a series of stretching exercises, Dodds ran several warmup laps around the track.  Just before the race began, he quickly changed into some other track shoes.

One of the onlookers asked why he was changing shoes.  Dodds tossed to the inquirer one of his warmup shoes.  Then one of his racing shoes.

The man was still puzzled.  There was no detectable difference in the two shoes.  Both looked the same.  Both seemed to weigh the same.

Then Dodds explained.  There was indeed a difference.  The warmup shoes were slightly heavier than his racing shoes.  Though only a small difference, saving even that much weight for the race could spell the difference between victory and defeat.

The same is true in our spiritual lives.

No encumbrance, large or small, can be tolerated in our life.  Not if we’re to win. The above Scripture for today says, “strip off every weight that slows us down.”

Not some, but every.  So every impediment must go.  Anything that would hold us back must be relinquished.

—- Steven Lawson in Men Who Win

 

My Response: A “little” weight that I should seriously think about shedding is…

 …

Thought to Apply: There are many activities I must cut out simply because I desire to excel in my pursuit after God and holiness. – Wendell Price (speaker)

Adapted from: Men Who Win (NavPress, 1992)

 

 

Just Say No – Too Good to Turn Down?

Prisoner of WarKey Bible Verses: Peter took him aside.  Jesus said to Peter very sternly, “Get away from me, Satan!” Matthew 16: 23.

Bonus Reading:  Matthew 16: 21-28

In 1968, John McCain, now a U.S. Senator, was a naval aviator who’d been shot down over Hanoi.  Already held captive for more than a year, he was still recovering from the broken leg and arm he’d sustained during his capture.  He was suffering from dysentery and heat rash.

That’s when the prison commandant made him an incredible offer.  “You can go home right now,” the commandant said.

Can you imagine McCain’s emotions?

But what he didn’t know was that his father had just been named commander of all forces in the Pacific.  The Vietnamese wanted to release John as a propaganda ploy, using his special treatment as a way to demoralize the other prisoners.  But there was a code of honor for the men in the prison camps:  First in, first to leave.

Five men had been there longer than McCain.  And so he thought about it, prayed about it, and finally said, “No. I’m not going home until they do.”  By saying no to the early release, he said yes to four more years of beatings, torture, and hardship.

Saying no to second-best isn’t easy.  But it’ll strengthen your character and your relationships. I t can even make you more like God’s Son.

– John Trent in “Christian Parenting Today”

 

My Response:  I’m stronger because I’ve said no to…

 

Thought to Apply:  To deny self is to become a nonconformist.  The Bible tells us not to conform to this world— physically, intellectually or spiritually.  – Billy Graham

Adapted from: Christian Parenting Today (1-2/00)

 

 

Port-a-potty rolling down road captures essence of 2020

Wild winds wreaked havoc in Albuquerque, New Mexico during a recent storm.

Trees were pulled up from the roots, power went out for thousands — and a port-a-potty was seen blowing down the road.

Wait. What?

A viewer caught the spectacle on camera.

The port-a-potty was seen blowing down the street on September 8.

At this time, there is no word on where the port-a-potty came from.

No injuries were reported, but there’s no word on what kind of mess it made when it finally came to a stop.

Watch the video to see it for yourself.

 

 

Central Church

Here’s what the different coronavirus tests look like

FYI – What are the different types of coronavirus tests?

There are three broad categories of coronavirus tests in the U.S. Two diagnose whether you have an active infection, and a third indicates if you previously had the virus.

Here’s how they work:

1.    GENETIC TESTS:

Most tests look for bits of the virus’ genetic material, and require a nasal swab that is taken by a health professional and then sent to a lab. This is considered the most accurate way to diagnose an infection, but it’s not perfect: The swab has to get a good enough sample so any virus can be detected.

These tests usually take hours to process at the lab so you likely won’t get results back for at least a day, though a handful of rapid tests take about 15 minutes on site. Other genetic tests use saliva, instead of a swab.

2.  ANTIGEN TESTS:

A newer type of test looks for proteins found on the surface of the coronavirus, rather than the virus itself. These antigen tests are just hitting the market, and experts hope they’ll help expand testing and speed up results.

Antigen tests aren’t as accurate as genetic tests, but are cheaper, faster and require less specialized laboratory equipment. They still require a nasal swab by a health professional.

A recently approved test from Abbott Laboratories takes 15 minutes and can be performed at schools, offices and other locations.

3.  ANTIBODY TESTS:

Antibody tests look for proteins that the body makes to fight off infections in a patient’s blood sample. Antibodies are a sign that a person previously had COVID-19.

Scientists don’t yet know if antibodies protect people from another infection, or how long that protection might last. So antibody tests are mostly useful for researchers measuring what portion of the population was infected.

 

Just Say No – No Seconds?

No moreKey Bible Verses: You who lounge in luxury, eating the meat of tender lambs and choice calves.  Suddenly, all your revelry will end.  Amos 6: 1-7

After graduating from college, I was awarded a scholarship for graduate study at Clark University.  It carried a stipend that allowed for lunch and dinner six days a week.  Feeling the need for a breakfast as well, I used the little money I had to buy each week a box of shredded wheat, a can of condensed milk, and a pound of brown sugar.  For two semesters I had the same breakfast daily.

I confess it was some years before I could enjoy shredded wheat again, but the discipline dictated by my lack of funds was good for me.  I appreciated my education more.  And later I certainly valued the more varied breakfasts I could afford.

Yet if we can afford to eat lots of rich foods, should we do so?  Long before the medical profession urged moderation and balance in our diets, the Bible condemned gluttony.  Slowly we are learning that a proper diet contributes to our wellbeing, but overindulgence can give us serious health problems.

—- Hudson Armerding in The Heart of Godly Leadership

 

My Response: I’ll purposely limit myself in the area of…. …

 

Thought to Apply: Self-control may be defined as the ability to carry a credit card and not abuse it.
—- Anonymous

          Adapted from: The Heart of Godly Leadership (Crossway, 1992)

 

 

Christian Persecution – 2020 World Watch List

Around the world, more than 260 million Christians live in places where they experience high levels of persecution, just for following Jesus. That’s 1 in 8 believers, worldwide.

The numbers are astonishing. But behind each number and statistic, there is a human story. The 2020 World Watch List is about these stories behind the numbers.

Each year, the World Watch List provides an unparalleled glimpse into the 50 places around the world where it costs the most to be a Christian.

Consider the words of 1 Corinthians 12:26: “If one part [of the Body of Christ] suffers, every part suffers with it.”

  • Please pray for all of the persecuted Christians around the world. In  Jesus, we really are one Church, one Family.

Pakistani Christian Man Gets Death Penalty for Blasphemy

pervaiz

On Tuesday, a Christian man in Pakistan was sentenced to death on charges of committing blasphemy.  Asif Pervaiz, 37, is a father of four and has been imprisoned since Oct. 10, 2013, after his supervisor accused him of sending him texts demeaning the Quran and the Muslim prophet Muhammad.

“The evidence on record was clearly not enough to sentence Asif Pervaiz to death,” Saif-ul Malook told Christian Solidarity Worldwide (CSW). Malook is Pervaiz’s lawyer and also represented Asia Bibi in her highly publicized blasphemy case.

Asif Pervaiz has been sentenced under 295-A, 295-B, and 295-C of the Pakistan Penal code, which makes blasphemy a crime punishable by death. The court ordered him to be fined 50,000 rupees (about $300) and to serve three years in prison for “misusing” his phone. After that term is complete, says the order, “he shall be hanged by his neck till his death.” Malook said the Christian father is planning to appeal his sentence.

“From my experience in the Asia Bibi case, judges in appeal courts hesitate to hear and decide blasphemy cases,” said Malook. “Cases involving murder are usually decided within three years, but blasphemy charges can take up to over seven years, just like the couple, Shagufta and Shafqat, who have been charged with blasphemy and whose case file has been roaming from one bench to another for hearing.”

Asif Pervaiz Gets Death Sentence Because of Text Messages

Before his imprisonment, Pervaiz worked at a garment manufacturing company owned by a Muslim man named Saeed Ahmed Khokhar. AsiaNews reports that Pervaiz claims he quit his job because Khokhar was pressuring him to convert to Islam. According to Al Jazeera, Pervaiz said that Khokhar tried again to get him to convert even after he had left his job. When he still refused, the employer told authorities that Pervaiz had sent him blasphemous texts. Pervaiz denies ever sending such texts and said that his SIM card was stolen before they were sent. He believes Khokhar was retaliating against him for refusing to become a Muslim.

Khokhar’s lawyer, Ghulam Mustafa Chaudhry, maintains his client never tried to convert Pervaiz and argues that there are plenty of other Christians at the factory who have not complained about the owner targeting them.

Pervaiz reportedly hid from authorities when he heard there was a blasphemy charge against him. Police responded by arresting his brothers-in-law and his mother and by beating his friend, Waseem Anwar, to find out Pervaiz’s location.

President and Executive Director of Human Friends Organization, Sajid Christopher Paul, spoke to Aid to the Church in Need and described the toll that Pervaiz’s long imprisonment has taken on his family. Said Paul, “He’s been in prison for seven years and they haven’t been able to spend time with him. His youngest twins were born when he was arrested and he hasn’t held them in his lap or his arms.”

Paul also explained that the lower courts in Pakistan are more likely to bow to pressure from extremists because they do not have the same ability to protect themselves that the higher courts do. He said, “The Supreme Court can make daring decisions like the acquittal of Asia Bibi because they have high-level security.”

The acquittal of Asia Bibi, a Christian woman who spent eight years in prison because of a blasphemy accusation, was indeed a daring decision. When Bibi was first acquitted in 2018, over 1,000 Islamic extremists protested, blocking roads and burning tires in the capital city of Islamabad and forcing several schools to close. Although Bibi was finally able to make it out of Pakistan with her life intact, her ordeal was lengthy and extensive. Even now, other Pakistani Christians are suffering in similar ways.

The couple Malook mentioned, Shagufta Kausar and Shafqat Emmanuel, were also accused of sending texts blaspheming the prophet Muhammad. The result was they were imprisoned for six years before the Lahore High Court recently sentenced them to death. The couple has appealed this decision, but their appeal has been delayed.

Mervyn Thomas, CSW’s founder and president, commented on Pervaiz’s sentencing, saying:

We are very concerned by the trial court’s decision to sentence Mr. Pervaiz to death. Pakistan’s harsh blasphemy laws have proven to be a source of suffering for many, and are regularly abused. Mr. Pervaiz now has to endure further, indefinite imprisonment, given the nature of blasphemy charges and the social interests surrounding it. We urge the authorities to allow Mr. Pervaiz to appeal his case for reconsideration and ensure that all evidence is carefully considered.

  • Please remember in prayer Asif Pervaiz and all of the other faithful Christians and their families being persecuted because of their faith in Christ.

 

 

The State of Our Theology in 2020 Is Pretty Concerning

2020 state of theologyIn its biennialState of Theology” survey, Ligonier Ministries uncovered rampant confusion about basic Christian beliefs and a continued need for clear biblical teaching.

The 2020 State of Theology survey, commissioned through Lifeway Research, was completed in early March, just before the pandemic caused widespread shutdowns. Three thousand U.S. adults, including 630 professing evangelicals, responded to 35 statements about faith-based and ethical issues.

While many findings raise alarms for church leaders, they also point to the ongoing importance of ministry among Americans. 

2020 State of Theology Reveals Causes for Concern

Survey responses about Jesus’ identity, biblical truth, and salvation are especially noteworthy.

  • More than half (52 percent) of American adults and 30 percent of evangelicals “strongly” or “somewhat” agree that Jesus was a great teacher but not God.
  • Almost half (48 percent) of survey respondents and 15 percent of evangelicals say the Bible isn’t literally true.
  • More than half (54 percent) of U.S. adults and 23 percent of evangelicals say religious belief is a matter of personal opinion, not objective truth.
  • Fifty-six percent of all respondents and 84 percent of evangelicals say righteousness comes not through works but through faith in Jesus.
  • Sixty-three percent of all respondents and 42 percent of evangelicals agree with the statement “God accepts the worship of all religions, including Christianity, Judaism, and Islam.”
  • Regarding social issues, 88 percent of evangelical Christians label abortion a sin, 21 percent say gender identity is a matter of choice, 17 percent say modern science disproves the Bible, and 11 percent say the Bible’s condemnation of homosexuality no longer applies.

In response to the statement “Learning about theology is for pastors and scholars only,” only 15 percent of U.S. adults and 10 percent of evangelicals agree. That, say researchers, offers hope that Americans are open to learning about matters of faith. “Particularly with the fears and concerns occasioned by COVID-19,” they write, “people may now be giving more thought to ultimate matters of eternal significance.”

A Call to Action 

Results from the 2020 survey underscore the need for solid, Bible-based ministry, say Ligonier representatives. Specifically, they point to the importance of teaching Christology, the doctrine of Jesus’ identity.

“This survey shows that people inside the church need clear Bible teaching just as much as those outside the church,” says Chris Larson, president and CEO of Ligonier Ministries. “With biblical illiteracy and doctrinal error on the rise, we remain committed to contending for the faith once delivered to the saints.”

Dr. Stephen Nichols, Ligonier’s chief academic officer, says the results “shed light” on many longtime concerns of Christian churches. “As the culture around us increasingly abandons its moral compass, professing evangelicals are sadly drifting away from God’s absolute standard in Scripture,” he says. “The church does not have the luxury of idly standing by. This is a time for Christians to study Scripture diligently, engage confidently with people in our culture, and witness fearlessly to the identity and saving work of Jesus Christ in the gospel.”

Just Say No – Say No to Second Best

Just Say NoKey Bible Verses:  Then the Devil said to him, “If you are the Son of God, change this stone into a loaf of bread.”  But Jesus told him, “No!”  – Luke 4: 3-4

 

Bonus Reading:  Luke 4: 1-13

As I was walking across campus one afternoon, Dr. Howard Hendricks walked up alongside me.  “Hi John,” he said.  “How are your classes going?”

I told him the truth. I was struggling to keep up and scared I might not make it through my first year.

“Can I give you a suggestion?” he said.

“Absolutely,” I answered and waited for some study secret.

“John,” he said, “You need to learn to say no to at least one thing a day.  Even if it’s just a second piece of pie, or some mindless television show, if you learn to say no to the things that don’t matter, you’ll find the time to say yes to the things that do.”

Try it.  

  • Say no when tempted to gossip about your boss at the water cooler and watch your personal integrity grow.
  •  Say no to that extra late movie and notice how much happier and focused you are the next day.  
  •  Say no when that voice in your head says, “I know my daughter has a soccer game today, but my friend just called with a free tee time at that great course . …” or “I know I promised my wife I’d get that chore done, but there’s a web site I really wanted to check out,” and see your family grow closer.

—- John Trent in Christian Parenting Today

My Response:

Today I’m saying No to…. …

 

Thought to Apply:

What it lies in our power to do, it lies in our power not to do.   – Aristotle (Greek philosopher)

Adapted from: Christian Parenting Today (1-2/00).

 

 

Central Church – Online Worship Service – Sunday, September 13, 2020

On this Sunday (the 15th Sunday after Pentecost), when the coronavirus prevents many of us from gathering in Central Church’s Sanctuary to worship in body, let us join together in spirit for with our online worship experience!

 

 

To begin, simply click on the photo below to join with the folks who have already made their way into our digital Sanctuary:

Central Church

 

 

 

Just Say No – What Tipped the Odds

JockeyKey Bible Verse:  “All athletes practice strict self-control. They do it to win a prize that will fade away, but we do it for an eternal prize”.  – 1 Corinthians 9:25

Bonus Reading:  1 Corinthians 9: 24-27

Laffit Pincay was the winning jockey at the Belmont Stakes in 1984.  I once overheard a group of men discussing his abilities.  One said, “Don’t ever bet your money against that fellow.”

It seems that Pincay was sitting next to him in the first-class section of an airplane once when a fine dinner was served.  He said, “The only thing he even touched on his plate was a sack of peanuts.  He opened the cellophane wrapper, took out a single peanut and set it on his tray. Then he took his knife, cut the peanut in two and ate one-half of it.”

Even a nongambler like me had no trouble understanding why you shouldn’t wager against a disciplined guy like that.  Pincay knows he must exercise self-discipline to keep his weight down yet be strong enough to manage and control a 1,500-pound thoroughbred in a racing situation.

Apparently, his efforts at self-discipline are still paying off.  I noticed in the sports section of a newspaper that Pincay recently won a million-dollar race at the Santa Anita Handicap.

—- Paul Faulkner in Making Things Right When Thing Go Wrong

 

Prayer:  Dear God, please empower me to resist all that would dilute my commitment to You and Your will for me.

          Adapted from: Making Things Right When Thing Go Wrong (Howard, 1996).

 

The Touch That Transforms – Lessons from Feet Washing

Foot WashingWashing the feet of guests upon their arrival was a menial task, normally performed by a household servant.  Apparently at this pre-arranged location for celebrating the Passover meal, there was no servant.  And no one else volunteered.  So later, during the meal, Jesus deliberately assumed this role to demonstrate humility and selfless service—the kind he would soon exemplify on the cross.

God’s Word:  John 13: 1-5, 12-17

Jesus Washes His Disciples’ Feet

13 It was just before the Passover Festival.  Jesus knew that the hour had come for him to leave this world and go to the Father.  Having loved his own who were in the world, he loved them to the end.

The evening meal was in progress, and the devil had already prompted Judas, the son of Simon Iscariot, to betray Jesus.  Jesus knew that the Father had put all things under his power, and that he had come from God and was returning to God; so he got up from the meal, took off his outer clothing, and wrapped a towel around his waist.  After that, he poured water into a basin and began to wash his disciples’ feet, drying them with the towel that was wrapped around him.

12 When he had finished washing their feet, he put on his clothes and returned to his place. “Do you understand what I have done for you?” he asked them.  13 “You call me ‘Teacher’ and ‘Lord,’ and rightly so, for that is what I am.  14 Now that I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet.  15 I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you.  16 Very truly I tell you, no servant is greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sent him. 1 7 Now that you know these things, you will be blessed if you do them.

 

Interact with God’s Word: 

  1. Twice (vv. 1 & 3) John mentioned that Jesus was aware that he was about to leave his disciples.  Why do you think he did this?
  2. Why did a stripped-down-for-work Jesus (v. 4) clash with his “Teacher” or “Master” status (v. 12)?
  3. Jesus asked (v. 12) if his disciples “got” the thrust of his acted-out illustration.  Do you think they did?  What was he trying to teach them?
  4. If the rabbi—God in the flesh—was willing to perform the most menial service for his disciples (v. 14), how should we relate to each other?
  5. Was Jesus just trying to get his disciples to be nice to each other?  How would moving into the world with a selfless, serving attitude extend his mission after his departure?
  6. Is a sympathetic feel for those who are hurting an adequate response (v. 17)?   How could you step onto this path of blessing?

 

Spend Time in Prayer

Ask God to make you not only willing to serve others in any way that would glorify him, but deliberately purposeful in finding a way to do so.

 

 

 

A Prayer for the Anniversary of 9/11

9-11 MemorialO God, our hope and refuge,
in our distress we come quickly to you.
Shock and horror of that tragic day have subsided,
replaced now with an emptiness,
a longing for an innocence lost.

We come remembering those who lost their lives
in New York, Washington D.C., and Pennsylvania.

We are mindful of the sacrifice of public servants
who demonstrated the greatest love of all
by laying down their lives for friends.
We commit their souls to your eternal care
and celebrate their gifts to a fallen humanity.

We come remembering
and we come in hope,
not in ourselves, but in you.

As foundations we once thought secure have been shaken,
we are reminded of the illusion of security.

In commemorating this tragedy,
we give you thanks for your presence
in our time of need
and we seek to worship you in Spirit and in truth,
our guide and our guardian. Amen.

Central Church on WBVP Sunday!

Although Central Church has resumed its in-person worship services at 11 am on Sundays, some people may not yet be able to attend due to COVID-19 concerns.

 

 

For anyone who does not feel comfortable with attending an in-person worship service, tune in at 10:30 A.M. on Sunday, September 13, to hear a recorded version of this week’s message from Central Church by Pastor Jan!

Here’s where to tune in:

 

Be sure to tune in this Sunday at 10:30!

 

The Touch That Transforms – Soft-Drink Sell

Key Bible Verse:  “If you give even a cup of cold water to one of the least of these … you will surely be rewarded.”  Matthew 10:42

Child DrinkingBonus Reading:  Matthew 25: 31-46

While working alone one Saturday I stepped outside for a break.  I heard children playing beneath a tractor-trailer.  One saw me, yelled, “There’s the man,” and started running.

“Wait,” I called. “Would you like something cold to drink?” Four or five little kids followed me into the plant where I opened the soft drink machine and gave one to each.

On Monday afternoon I heard a commotion in the lobby. Walking down the hallway, I heard one youngster ask the receptionist, “Where’s the big man with the beard?”  Turning the corner, I saw 16 kids waiting for the man with the key to the drink machine.

By the end of the week, 35 unkempt, undisciplined, and often-hungry children, whose addicted parents left them to fend for themselves, were coming to my office every afternoon after school.  I worked at my drafting table, surrounded by kids on the floor busily coloring or doing other crafts I’d brought.

Thus began the journey that would change my world.  Ten years after I first reached out to the Cleveland Arms kids, I sold my share of the business to my partner and started Metro Inner City Sunday School.  When the kids got older, we started youth groups and teen programs.

—Terry Lane in Today’s Christian

 

My Response: Someone in my neighborhood I could reach out to with a kind act is ____.

Adapted from an article in Today’s Christian.

 

 

Prayer for the Week:  Please make my life count, Lord, by helping to transform the lives of those who are hurting.

 

 

The Touch That Transforms – Salvaging a Bad Move

Boy with BasketballWho Said It … Terry Lane

Terry Lane operates the Jacksonville, Florida-based Metro Kids Konnection, which feeds over 145 children—physically and spiritually.

Terry and his wife, Kathy, have gone from enjoying a six-figure annual income to subsisting on $12,000 a year.  But, Terry reports, “Nothing can replace the joy of having a little child crawl into my lap with a hug for ‘Pastor Terry,’ or for a young man who’s been rescued from a probable drug-dealing life shake my hand and say, ‘Thanks, P.T.'”

What He Said … Salvaging a Bad Move

My cabinet-making business with its 40-man staff had outgrown its building.  So we built a new plant in Jacksonville.  But every night the alarm sounded, revealing broken windows, bullet holes, and stolen equipment.

“What possessed you to build a plant next to the Cleveland Arms?” a policeman asked me.  He informed me that this subsidized housing complex, occupied by drug dealers, prostitutes, and felons, sold the most crack cocaine in Jacksonville.

As I stood on the loading dock one afternoon, glaring into the complex, a crystal-clear thought came to me: If you’ll love those who despitefully use you, I’ll take care of it.

Stunned at God’s gentle command, I sensed him add, Look past the drug dealers; look at the children.  I prayed for days about how to connect with the complex, then bought about $200-worth of basketballs, wrote “Jesus loves you” and “Mr. Lane loves you” on them, and threw them over the fence. […continued tomorrow in “Soft-Drink Sell”]

Adapted from an article in Today’s Christian.

 

 

Prayer for the Week:  Please make my life count, Lord, by helping to transform the lives of those who are hurting.

 

 

The Touch That Transforms – Going for Broke

Key Bible Verse:  “I know all the things you do … You have little strength, yet you obeyed my word and did not deny me.”  Revelation 3:8

Couple Working in Homeless ShelterBonus Reading:  Revelation 3: 7-13

Our Willow Creek Community Church has partnered with several churches in Waveland, Mississippi, a Gulf Coast town hit hard by Hurricane Katrina.  Rick Long, pastor of Orange Beach, Alabama’s, small but dynamic Christian Life Church, realized God had opened a door for his Church to walk through in the wake of the hurricane damage.

They started organizing an incredible relief effort.  They even used the money they’d been collecting for a new building.  Needless to say, they quickly burned through all of it.

As Rick said, “Our little church [was] way in over its head.”  At one point they were feeding 6,000 people a day and providing all their supplies and clothes.  But this little Church’s relief effort is now being called one of the best the National Health Department has ever seen.

That’s the kind of Church Jesus was speaking to in the above Key Bible Verse.

The key to our effectiveness is to realize how little our strength is and stay dependent upon the one who has the strength—the holy and true one, the one who holds the keys.  You don’t have to be big, impressive, or well-known to be effective.  You just have to follow his voice.

—Mike Breaux in Preaching Today

 

My Response: A vision for service that could excite my church would be …

 

Thought to Apply: True heroism is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost.  —Arthur Ashe (tennis pro)

Adapted from an article in Preaching Today

 

Prayer for the Week:  Please make my life count, Lord, by helping to transform the lives of those who are hurting.

 

 

The Touch That Transforms – Riches-to-Rags Story

Key Bible Verse:  “Everyone who has given up … property, for my sake, will receive a hundred times as much in return”.  Matthew 19:29

Bonus Reading:   Matthew 19: 27-30Couple Working in Homeless Shelter

In the 1980s, Kevin Bradley was engrossed in the fast-paced, big-money world of a Baltimore stockbroker.  He and his wife Marilyn led a comfortable life.  But God was drawing him away from the rich to the homeless.

He’d seen them weekdays as he walked to the office, and began to occasionally take the people he met to breakfast,  “I got really interested,” he says, “in who they were and how they got to where they were.”

After much prayer, Kevin quit his job in 1991 to start the non-profit Outreach Foundation, dedicated to helping the homeless become independent citizens.  The foundation meets emergency needs and offers the Wings Life Skills Training Program that Kevin developed—teaching men and women how to channel their God-given talents and desires into productive careers.

At first, the Bradleys lived off their savings, but that became tough since they were raising less than $10,000 a year.  “At times we had less food in our pantry than some of the people we were helping” recalls Kevin. Eventually, their perseverance paid off.

Today, with many financial backers, the Outreach Foundation continues to grow, and the Wings program is being used nationwide.

—Randy Bishop in Christian Reader

My Response: A person I could listen to and care about is ____.

 

Thought to Apply: Life becomes harder for us when we live for others, but it also becomes richer and happier. —Albert Schweitzer (French medical missionary & musician)

Adapted from an article in Christian Reader

 

Prayer for the Week:  Please make my life count, Lord, by helping to transform the lives of those who are hurting.

 

 

The Touch That Transforms – “Audacious Act”

Key Bible Verse:  Now he loved them to the very end… . he began to wash the disciples’ feet.  John 13:1,5

Bonus Reading:  John 13: 1-5, 12-17Foot Washing

In Portland, Oregon, the homeless gather under the Burnside Bridge.  For more than three years, carloads of Christians from Bridgetown Ministries have shown up on Friday nights to serve these needy men and women.

In addition to providing hot meals, shaves, and haircuts, some of the volunteers wash the homeless people’s feet.  Tom Krattenmaker, a writer for USA Today, was stunned by the display, calling it “one of the most audacious acts of compassion and humility I’ve witnessed.”

These outcasts of society had their bare feet immersed in warm water, scrubbed, dried, powdered, and placed in clean socks.  One man reported with a smile, “I can’t find the words to describe how good that felt.”

“Washing someone’s feet is an act best performed while kneeling,'” Krattenmaker commented.  “Given the washer’s position, and the unpleasant appearance and odor of a homeless person’s feet, it’s hard to imagine an act more humbling.”

In preparation for their outreach, the leader of Bridgetown Ministries said, “When you go out there tonight, I want you to look for Jesus.  You might see him in the eyes of a drunk person, a homeless person … we’re just out there to love on people.”

—John Beukema in PreachingToday.com

 

My Response: How might I “look for Jesus” in my community?

 

Thought to Apply: Christianity demands a level of caring that transcends human inclinations.        —Erwin Lutzer (pastor)

Adapted from an article on PreachingToday.com

 

Prayer for the Week:  Please make my life count, Lord, by helping to transform the lives of those who are hurting.

 

 

Central Church – Online Worship Service – Sunday, September 6, 2020

On this Sunday (the 14th Sunday after Pentecost), when the coronavirus prevents many of us from gathering in Central Church’s Sanctuary to worship in body, let us join together in spirit for with our online worship experience!

 

 

To begin, simply click on the photo below to join with the folks who have already made their way into our digital Sanctuary:

Central Church

 

 

 

Central Church on WBVP Sunday!

Although Central Church has resumed its in-person worship services at 11 am on Sundays, some people may not yet be able to attend due to COVID-19 concerns.

 

 

For anyone who does not feel comfortable with attending an in-person worship service, tune in at 10:30 A.M. on Sunday, September 6, to hear a recorded version of this week’s message from Central Church by Pastor Jan!

Here’s where to tune in:

 

Be sure to tune in this Sunday at 10:30!