Thursday, May 19, 2016

How to Become a Follower of Jesus (05-19-16 pt IV)

To be an authentic follower of the way of Jesus, a person must understand four basic spiritual realities. He or she must be willing to acknowledge his or her individual, personal need for God’s grace and affirm to God this need. Let’s review the fourth of these realities.

4. We must individually receive Christ as our personal Savior. That is the single most important decision about the purpose and character of your life. Are you going to live on the side of life or the side of death, on the side of good or the side of evil? Can you recognize that you are estranged from God, living your life in a fundamentally self-centered manner, acknowledge that you are powerless to save yourself, and recognize that Jesus is your only hope? If so, then you must take the final step, accept Him as your personal Savior and commit to live your life as a follower of Jesus.

“For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.” (Romans 10:13) “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16) God says, “Behold, I stand at the door and knock: if anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and will have fellowship him and he with me.” (Revelation 3:20) Jesus said, “Come unto me, all who labor with heavy burdens and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart and you will find rest and spiritual peace. (Matthew 11:28-29)


These are some of the most wonderful promises recorded in God’s word. Once you have surrendered your heart to Jesus Christ—centered your life on following the way of Jesus—you will find spiritual newness and life deep inside.

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

How to Become a Follower of Jesus (05-18-16 pt III)

To be an authentic follower of the way of Jesus, a person must understand four basic spiritual realities. He or she must be willing to acknowledge his or her individual, personal need for God’s grace and affirm to God this need. Let’s review the third of these realities.

3. The only solution is to trust in Jesus. He is the one who has overcome the power of evil and death. He is our only righteousness. He alone can save us. “Christ died for our sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God.” (1 Peter 3:18) “Jesus said, I am the way, the truth and the life. No man comes to the Father, except by me.” (John 14:6) “I am found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through faith in Christ, the righteousness which is of God.” (Philippians 3:7-9)


Jesus lived a perfect life for you. He fulfilled the law, and when you accept Him as your Savior, you receive His perfect righteousness. The Bible says that if you confess your sinful reality to Jesus, He is faithful and just to cleanse you of all unrighteousness. (1 John 1:9) You need only to accept the gift of God’s grace through Christ by making a decision to center your life on Jesus.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

How to Become a Follower of Jesus (05-17-16 pt II)

To be an authentic follower of the way of Jesus, a person must understand four basic spiritual realities. He or she must be willing to acknowledge his or her individual, personal need for God’s grace and affirm to God this need. Let’s review the second of those realities.

2. This is a fundamental spiritual problem. We cannot save ourselves. We have no means to pay the price. Human beings cannot, on their own, solve the foundational problem of evil. It is a spiritual problem for which only God has the solution. “I know that nothing good lives in men, that is, in my sinful nature. For I have the desire to do what is good, but I cannot carry it out.” (Romans 7:18, NIV) “We know that the law is spiritual, but I am unspiritual, sold as a slave to sin.” (Verse 12) “All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned everyone to his own way; and the Lord God hath laid on him the iniquity of us all.” (Isaiah 53:6, KJV)

Can a leopard change its spots? Can we save ourselves? No, of course not. If we could, someone would have done so by this point in human history; we’ve been at it for thousands of years. We must be honest with ourselves and realize that we are lost, condemned to death for breaking the fundamental spiritual law of the universe, and that we are powerless to save ourselves.


“It is by God’s grace that you have been saved through faith, not of yourselves. It is the gift of God, not by human activity. So no one can boast, for we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to live good lives.” (Ephesians 2:8-10)

Monday, May 16, 2016

How to Become a Follower of Jesus (05-16-16 pt I)

To be an authentic follower of the way of Jesus, a person must understand four basic spiritual realities. He or she must be willing to acknowledge his or her individual, personal need for God’s grace and affirm to God this need. Let’s review those realities.

1. Every human being has a personal stake in the problem of evil. We all fail to live up to our own moral standards. This is what the Bible calls “sin” and, as a result, we are cut off from the divine, condemned to live in a world dominated by death. It is easier to see the problem of evil in the world at large, especially among our enemies or oppressors, than it is to see it in ourselves, but that does not mean it is not there.

No human being can honestly say he or she is above the problem of evil. “We all once conducted ourselves in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind, and were by nature children of wrath, just as the others.” (Ephesians 2:3, NKJV) All human beings, including the most devout religious people, are sinners, susceptible to the reality of evil in their own lives.


“There is none righteous, no, not one; there is none who understands; there is none who seeks after God. They have all turned aside; they have together become unprofitable; there is none who does good, no, not one. Therefore by the deeds of the law no flesh will be justified in His sight, for by the law is the knowledge of sin. But now the righteousness of God apart from the law is revealed, being witnessed by the Scriptures, even the righteousness of God, through faith in Jesus Christ, to all and on all who believe. For there is no difference; for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, being justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.” (Romans 3:10-12, 20-24) To put it another way, we are lawbreakers. We have broken God’s moral law and are worthy of be destroyed. Even one violation is worthy of destruction. We are utterly lost, condemned to die a sinner’s death. That is the problem with sin.  Continued.....

Friday, May 13, 2016

How God Feels About Humanity 05-13-16 pt III

A pastor jokingly told his people involved in playing ball during a Summer of Service in their city not to worry if they lost because “there is no condemnation for those in Christ.” He said that to encourage the young people involved in volunteering and recreation. But he also said that because it is theologically correct! Jesus was saying the same thing in John, chapters 3, 5 and 12, as Paul has written in Romans 8:3. That, on the cross, Christ “condemned sin in sinful man.” Remember, “condemned” is the same word as judged in the original language. That is why Romans 8:1 reads, “Now therefore, there is now no condemnation [krisis] for those who are in Christ Jesus.” This means even when we lose, even when we fall short of the glory of God, we win! Because in the end, God wins! Just like He did on the cross.

So whatever else the Bible has to say about judgment in the end time, it has to be consistent with what the Gospel and the Cross reveal about judgment. Why? Because the Bible writers use the words for judgment and condemnation [and the forms of them] interchangeably for all three places judgment is described in Scripture, including the end time.

This is where Jesus goes next in John 5. “Moreover, the Father judges no one, but has entrusted all judgment to the Son, that all may honor the Son just as they honor the Father. He who does not honor the Son does not honor the Father, who sent him. I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life.” (John 5:22-24)

Isn’t that a powerful statement? Whoever comes near to hear and believe has eternal life. Present tense. Then, Jesus adds these staggering words. “They will not be condemned.” This is another form of the word judged, krisis in Greek. You have crossed over from death to life. Point number one: People far from God are precious to God. Point number two: People near to God are precious to God too. Why? Because they’ve already passed over from death to everlasting life! They are in Christ, “the Son.” They have eternal life now.

“I tell you the truth [Jesus says], a time is coming and has now come when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and those who hear will live. For as the Father has life in himself, so he has granted the Son to have life in himself. And he has given him authority to judge because he is the Son of Man. Do not be amazed at this, for a time is coming when all who are in their graves will hear his voice and come out—those who have done good will rise to live, and those who have done evil will rise to be condemned.” (Verses 25-29)

We don’t have time to go into all the details about the end time that Jesus is referring to here. The important thing that Jesus is saying is point number three: the risk is worth the reward. Believing that people far and near to God are precious to God is a risk because going out of our way to love them confuses the church and messes up our lives in a good way. But so do babies and people keep having them right? Why? Because the risk is worth the reward! And it’s the same way with Jesus.

Because what Jesus has in store for those that love Him isn’t some cheap parting gift on “The Price Is Right” if you don’t win the Showcase Showdown. No! Because the showdown has already been won! What God has in store for those in the end time is even more of the same, love, joy and peace. Yes, patience will still be required. Especially of the saints, as Revelation reveals. But kindness, gentleness, self-control—all the fruit of the Spirit and spiritual gifts you have now—will be multiplied and made richer in the end time. And after that, we will get even more. That’s the actual context of that text about heaven: “No eye has seen nor ear heard the things which God has prepared for those who love Him.” (1 Corinthians 2:9)

That is true of heaven and it is also true of everything we experience with Jesus before then. Even during the end time judgment, which John 12:48 describes this way: “There is a judge for the one who rejects me and does not accept my words; that very word which I spoke will condemn him at the last day.” There is an end time judgment for those who reject Jesus. But one for those who don’t reject Jesus is not necessary because they have already passed from death to life! All the end time judgment does for them is validate in heaven the decisions they have already made on earth, as Jesus guaranteed in Matthew 18:18. This is interesting: One way to define the Hebrew word “cleansed” in Daniel 8. It can simply mean “to validate.”


But for those who don’t reject Jesus, the prizes are awarded now. And last forever. And I think that’s what Jesus is telling us through the words of John today. Number one: People far from God are precious to God. This is why He goes out of his way to draw them close. Number two: People close to God are precious to God too. This is why He goes out of his way to keep them close and not in crisis. Number three: Believing both of these affirmations is a risk because it confuses the church and messes with your life and your spouse and your church and your children and everything else in a good way. But the risk is so worth the reward. This is a joyful meaningful life worth living with Jesus now and throughout all eternity. This is what Jesus was talking about. This is what he offered that paralytic. And this is what He is offering to you again today.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

How God Feels About Humanity 05-12-16 pt II

P.R.S.—Pray. Read. Share. This is how you become Christian and this is how you stay Christian. Anyone telling you anything else is selling you something false. And this, it seems to me, is how Jesus lived His life every day. That’s why Jesus told Nicodemus in John 3:18-21 that when the Gospel is preached and lived and people far from God come a little closer and find they can believe in something—they are not condemned. This is just another English word for judged in Greek. When they come close and believe, they are no longer judged. By God, at least. They are no longer condemned. Same thing in Romans 8:1 and John 5:22-24 and 29. Which we will get to, but before we do, let’s look at verses 19-21 to see the second place judgment occurs in the Bible.

John 5:19-21 says, “Jesus gave them this answer: ‘I tell you the truth, the Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing, because whatever the Father does the Son also does. For the Father loves the Son and shows him all he does. Yes, to your amazement he will show him even greater things than these. For just as the Father raises the dead and gives them life, even so the Son gives life to whom he is pleased to give it.”


So the first location of judgment is in or through the church. The second place the Bible says judgment occurred was at the cross. John 3:16 and 18 says, “For God so loved the world that He gave ... [And He gave where? At the cross.] So, whoever believes in him is not condemned, is not judged [krisis in Greek], because he has believed.” Pointing to the cross, Jesus adds these words in John 12:31-32: “Now is the time for judgment on this world [krino in Greek; a form of the same word in John 5] now the prince of this world will be driven out. But I, when I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to myself.” So what’s the point? The point is God loves the people far from God, going out of His way to bring them closer. And, point number two, He loves the people close to God too, going out of His way to keep them close. How? By reminding them that they are His. If you are a follower of Christ, you do not have to live your life in crisis, constantly wondering if you have done enough to be saved. Because Christianity is not about what you do, but who you know!

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

How God Feels About Humanity pt I (05-11-16)

One of the major reasons that people are skeptical about religion, put off by Christianity, is the judgment that God reportedly places on certain things. Judgment seems to get in the way of the love of God. How does God really feel about human beings? How do divine judgment and compassion relate?

There are three places judgment occurs in the Bible. They are (1) in or through the church, (2) at the cross, and (3) during the end time. Some Christians only ever focus on the end time. Some Christians only ever focus on the cross. And some people only ever focus on the church, specifically those inside it who see it as a fortress instead of an agency through which the Gospel is lived and preached. In this story (John 5:16-29) Jesus refers to them all. Open your Bible to John chapter 5, verses 16-30. This occurs right after He healed a guy who had been paralyzed for 38 years. That’s the context.

Let’s start with the concept that judgment occurs in and through the church. “Because Jesus was doing these things [healing people on the Sabbath], the Jewish leaders persecuted him.” (Verse 16) Jesus was Jewish. That was His religion while He lived on Earth. The pious did not understand why Jesus went out of His way to heal someone far from God on Sabbath. But neither the lack of clarity within the church nor the man’s distance from God prevented Jesus from healing the man. Jesus responded to the criticism, “Sorry, but I must keep pursuing my mission.” Look at verse 17: “My Father is always at his work to this very day, and I, too, am working.”

We don’t realize how controversial these words were because we don’t know how rejected and lonely and far from God this guy was. People back then thought people who were paralyzed were paying for their sins; that they were far from God because they deserved to be. But that’s not how God looks at it. If it were, none of us would get near God either because Romans 3 says none of us deserve it. But when God sees people, especially broken, hurting, rejected people obviously far from God and the church, He keeps reaching. Knowing when He does so it will be controversial. Knowing it will not be understood by everyone in church. At least not right away. But Jesus heals him anyway.

This leads to major point number one: People far from God are precious to God.
If we really love mankind and want to follow the way of Jesus, we will never stop scheming and praying and planning to reach out to people far from God, especially the broken, hurting and rejected. Why? Because people far from God are precious to God. And what He wants is for them to come a little closer so we can love them. And you know you’re doing both right when how you do it messes with your church and the devoutly religious people.

Verse 18 says, “For this reason the Jewish leaders tried all the harder to kill him; not only was he breaking the Sabbath, but he was even calling God his own Father, making himself equal with God.” Now, if you were to ask a random person on the street what they think of the church, any church, what do you think they would say? Do you think they would say it is a safe place that loves God and the people far from God? Do you think they would say it is a place where the Bible is studied and the presence of God is experienced? Do you think they would say it is a place where alcoholics and prostitutes and liars sit side by side with doctors and lawyers and teachers worshiping the same King of the Universe? Or do you think they would say church is a place of judgment?

I’m not answering the question, I’m just raising it. Because it seems to me, if we are honest with ourselves, that it is too often the case in many places. And if it makes you feel any better, it has been that way for quite a while. Listen to what Paul wrote to the church in Corinth: “In the following directives I have no praise for you, for your meetings do more harm than good.” (1 Corinthians 11:17, NIV) Ouch! Who knew? Sometimes, the way we do church can do more harm than good. Why? Because whatever they were doing, it was not making it easier for people far from God to come a little closer. That paralytic guy in Christ’s day had been ignored by the church for 38 years! Who does the church ignore today? If we really believe that people far from God are precious to God, that reality should confront the church. If we are really followers of Jesus, it should haunt us at night. It should be what wakes us in the morning. It should break our hearts. Because according
to Jesus, it’s breaking God’s heart. Although not everyone who claims to be a Christian feels the same way, there are many followers of Jesus who’s hearts are breaking for the lost, the suffering, the dying and oppressed.

God is always at work, praying and planning and scheming for ways to bring those far from God a little closer. Those who are followers of Jesus do the same. Yes, churches can be places of judgment where feelings are hurt and motivations are misunderstood and people far from God come no closer. Churches can also be places where truth is spoken in love, where trust grows, where the suffering and oppressed are supported, and people far from God come closer and closer.

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

How God Communicates, Summary (05-10-16)

So the various methods of God’s communications and revelations in the end must all be filtered through His finest and best, His son Jesus. What Jesus reveals about God is the truest and clearest picture of who God really is and what God is really like because Jesus alone is God’s son, one with his heart. Creation itself is inadequate, as we’ve seen. People are insufficient, too. We’ve all seen the distortions and destructive effects of people claiming to be speaking for or acting on behalf of God. Scriptures have been misused and misinterpreted to terribly destructive ends. So Jesus becomes extremely significant in both understanding God and hearing God speak.

Creation reveals a powerful God, creative, valuing diversity and interdependence. People reveal a persistent God, diverse, unselfish and caring. Scripture reveals a passionate God who loves people enough to interact, to intervene, to respond, to act on behalf of. God loves diversity enough to call hugely different people to write the stories, the good and the bad, the pretty and the ugly. And Jesus brings it all together. He brings the best into focus, showing what God truly values and wants for global life – self-sacrificing love, compassion and active service to others, a willingness to give all for the sake of the other, a self-confidence that springs from a clear self-identity that empowers a radical unselfishness.

One of the early Christian hymns recorded in the New Testament described the true nature of God as revealed by Jesus. Here’s what it said:
“Your attitude should be the same as that of Christ Jesus: Who, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but emptied himself, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness. And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death—even death on a cross!” (Philippians 2:5-8)


Jesus shows that the very nature of God is one of self-emptying and self-sacrificing and humble giving for the good of others. Jesus didn’t give up something to become like us. His act was in complete harmony with His nature – He was acting in perfect alignment with what it means to be God. God gives at all costs, period. That’s why Jesus is the best and most complete communication and revelation of God. Thank God for those stories that still live today.

Monday, May 9, 2016

God Communicates Through Scripture (05-09-16)

If Jesus is the best there is from God, if He was sent to communicate the truth about God, how is the rest of the world who wasn’t there at the time going to get in on it? How are the acts of God on behalf of the human family before and after Jesus’ time going to be known and understood and vicariously experienced? How are the stories about God through many different revelations going to be heard? How are the billions of people not immediately privy to God’s communications through the prophets and ultimately Jesus (people who weren’t there at the time) going to be in on God’s revelations? The transmission of stories for millennia was by mouth. People told the stories to each other and from one generation to another. I remember growing up on stories about my dad. He told them to me and my brother every night at bed time. I loved hearing about his escapades as a kid, the good and the bad, his successes and his punishments. I learned some valuable lessons about life through those stories. And when I became a father to three children, I told those same stories to them. They learned about their grandpa and the same life lessons.

Eventually, the stories about God and God’s dealings with people were written down. The effectiveness of transmission could be a bit more controlled that way. And more generations could benefit from the life lessons. One of the authors of the New Testament, the great theologian and missionary Paul, described the value this way:

“These things happened to them [the people God dealt with in the Old Testament times] as examples for us. They were written down to warn us who live at the end of the age. If you think you are standing strong, be careful not to fall. The temptations in your life are no different from what others experience. And God is faithful. He will not allow the temptation to be more than you can stand. When you are tempted, he will show you a way out so that you can endure.” (1 Corinthians 10:11-13)

The value of written Scripture is to provide us lessons about life – as we see how God dealt with people in times past, we learn how God can deal with us in our own human dilemmas and journeys. Written stories that tell about human successes and failures and how God relates to them empower us with courage and tenacity in our faith. Stories provide us with emotional connecting points and in that way offer life transformation in our contemporary setting. Reading about how God’s story intersects with humanity’s story helps to give significant perspective on our individual lives and has the potential to build our personal faith in God.

Paul wrote extensively in order to help people remember the truths he taught them while he was living among them. Since he traveled so much, he wrote letters constantly and sent them to the various groups of believers he nurtured. He encouraged, reminded, rebuked, taught, consoled, reprimanded, loved on, and warned with his letters and written stories. He was prolific. And he often referenced the written Old Testament Scriptures of his day that many of his people read and were familiar with.

Writing to a young man who had studied under him and had become a fellow spiritual leader to some of the believers, Paul reminded Timothy of the value of scripture: “You have been taught the holy Scriptures from childhood, and they have given you the wisdom to receive the salvation that comes by trusting in Christ Jesus. All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right. God uses it to prepare and equip his people to do every good work.” (2 Timothy 3:15-17)

God has chosen to communicate Himself through the written word, the stories of His interactions with people through the ages, in hopes that people would find comfort and encouragement in trusting Him and his leading. God wants to be known. He desires to be understood. And so He communicates.

But this form of communication isn’t without its pitfalls, either. Generations removed from the actual recorded events have to interpret what they read. They have to learn who recorded the stories, what that author’s intent was, who the author was writing to, what the setting surrounding the writing was, what language the author originally wrote in. And then we have to also recognize that the original author’s manuscripts no longer exist and were copied and then copied and copied again and again by transcribers and scribes as best as possible, but with the potential of the scribes either inserting their own personal bias into the process or simply making copy errors (as the tedious process was all done by hand).

So every written story simply has its inherent limitations. But the stories still have their transforming power. Is it possible that God uses even the most tentative of processes, often fraught with potential weaknesses, to still communicate the truth about Himself? One of the closest followers of Jesus, Peter, seems to think so. Reminding the readers that he was an original eye witness to Jesus’ life, he described the whole revelation process this way: “Because of that experience [seeing Jesus and hearing God’s voice on several occasions], we have even greater confidence in the message proclaimed by the prophets. You must pay close attention to what they wrote, for their words are like a lamp shining in a dark place, until the Day dawns, and Christ the Morning Star shines in your hearts. Above all, you must realize that no prophecy in Scripture ever came from the prophet’s own understanding, or from human initiative. No, those prophets were moved by the Holy Spirit, and they spoke from God.” (2 Peter 1:19-21)

Peter suggested that, in spite of the very human instruments that God used to communicate the stories about life and God’s interaction with people, God’s Spirit infused the process. What does that mean? It means that God is still in the stories. Reading the stories shines the light of Jesus’ life into our hearts. Transformation happens. Trust grows. Faith develops. And God is experienced.

There’s another very subtle danger with the written words of Scripture. Jesus confronted it head on with the religious leaders of his day. They were big on Scripture, memorizing entire books and passages and reciting them in front of people to show off their spiritual veracity. But is it possible to know Scripture backwards and forwards and still miss the point? Here’s how Jesus put it: “You search the Scriptures because you think they give you eternal life. But the Scriptures point to me! Yet you refuse to come to me to receive this life.” (John 5:39-40)

What was Jesus getting at? The whole point of Scripture (the written stories of God’s interactions with people) is not to provide religious information to satisfy the cravings of spiritual junkies. It’s not to be a tool to show how religious and knowledgeable someone is. It’s not a weapon to hit someone with to coerce them into behaving a certain way. Scripture is for the purpose of experiencing Jesus’ life, of knowing Jesus and the God Jesus came to reveal. The stories about Jesus and about God are primarily transformational not informational. They are tools from a God who longs to be known, to be trusted, to be embraced and experienced.


We can never completely understand and know the Divine. God is bigger and greater than we can imagine. God is cloaked in infinite mystery. We can only be in awe of that Mystery and Unknowing. But because God has chosen to reveal himself in some ways, we can also be in awe of what we do encounter and see about God. In the end, is there anything more awe-inspiring than pure Love?

Friday, May 6, 2016

God Communicates Through Jesus (05-06-16)

You would think that after the way humans mess up the whole communication process because of their inherent selfishness and obsession with self-preservation God would give up on that approach. But there is something to be said for the effectiveness of the human touch, especially when it’s done right. After all, getting communication from extraterrestrial beings or ants might not have the same connection possibilities! We relate much better to people like us or to those who can speak our language or who know what it’s like to be us, to live where we live, to experience what we experience. We might be in awe of aliens coming in the name of God to communicate God, we might be fascinated by ants suddenly speaking to us about God in words we understand, but it’s highly likely that the immediate curiosity would wear off in time.

The Jews even had God appear visibly in a cloud, in a pillar of fire, thundering His voice to be heard. They saw God intervene miraculously to divide the Red Sea providing a way of escape from the pursuing Egyptians. God showered them with food and water to keep them alive in the desert. God even caused the sun to stand still so their armies had more daylight to battle their enemies. Talk about powerful visible manifestations of God! But even those revelations wore off, the impact wore thin and they eventually turned a deaf ear. There must be a better way.

So God decides to pull out all the stops. Here’s the way one author wrote about it: “Long ago God spoke many times and in many ways to our ancestors through the prophets. And now in these final days, he has spoken to us through his Son.” (Hebrews 1:1-2) The author is describing an ascending level of communication significance and importance. God begins in the early days by communicating through special messengers called the prophets. Their role was to continue giving messages from God to the people in order to keep them following God’s plan and God’s leading. As it turned out, the people often turned a deaf ear to the prophets’ appeals.

So then God decided to send His own son as His primary spokesperson. If anyone knew God well enough to communicate Him to people, it would be God’s son. Here’s the way the above author continued: “The Son radiates God’s own glory and expresses the very character of God.” (Hebrews 1:3) Who better to communicate God and what God is really like than the one who knows God best, His own son, the one closest to the heart of God? So into the scene of human history comes God Himself through his son. And how did this work? Here’s the way the author John described it: “In the beginning the Word already existed. The Word was with God, and the Word was God. He existed in the beginning with God. God created everything through him, and nothing was created except through him. The Word gave life to everything that was created, and his life brought light to everyone. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness can never extinguish it.” (John 1:1-3)

You see described here a fascinating process. The one called “the Word” is with God and in fact has the very character of God. The Word is the agent of creation and of life. In other words, when the Word is around, life happens, life is full and abundant. And with the coming of the Word, darkness is dispelled. Darkness is often a symbol of ignorance or misunderstanding or lack of clarity. So the Word is portrayed as giving clearer meaning and understanding to life and to God.

Who is this Word that gives life and light to people, that dispels ignorance and lack of clarity about God? John continued: “So the Word became human and made his home among us. He was full of unfailing love and faithfulness. And we have seen his glory, the glory of the Father’s one and only Son … For the law was given through Moses, but God’s unfailing love and faithfulness came through Jesus Christ. No one has ever seen God. But the unique One, who is himself God, is near to the Father’s heart. He has revealed God to us.” (John 1:14, 17-18)

Jesus was God’s son and came as the ultimate revelation of God. Who better to communicate the truth about God than the one closest to God, the one described above as nearest to God’s heart. And what about God did Jesus come to communicate and reveal? God’s “unfailing love and faithfulness.”

How did it happen? “The Word became human and made his home among us.” What a concept! God’s ultimate self-revelation came about by becoming human and, as one author put it, “moving into the neighborhood.” (John 1:14, Message) God knew that the only true way to become known was to become one of us, to live like us, to look like us, to talk like us, to feel what we feel, to experience what we experience, to truly enter into the human world in every way. And in rubbing shoulders with humanity, He would be able to describe God in understandable ways. People would be able to relate to Him and therefore to the God He came to reveal. “God with us,” Immanuel, is one of the Hebrew names of God given to Jesus.

Jesus lived out His life with that purpose in mind. So that before He died, He said to one of his disciples who had asked to see God, “Have I been with you all this time, Philip, and yet you still don’t know who I am? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father!” (John 14:9)

And what did Jesus’ life say about God? Jesus’ life centered around going to great lengths to love and embrace people, especially the marginalized and disenfranchised, the ones considered by others as living under the curse of God or rejected by God. Jesus touched them, accepted them, and restored their dignity by associating with them and eating with them. He went out of His way to include everyone in His life and to communicate that they belonged to God, too. It was a radical and revolutionary mission. It was God’s ultimate attempt to reveal himself to humanity in the clearest way possible.


And then, in an act of complete unselfishness and self-sacrifice, in the final demonstration of complete love, Jesus gave up His life on the cross. He was executed for His radical life of inclusion and refusal to compromise love even when it butted heads with the establishment and institutions of his day. What more could a person do to prove their love than to say, “I will lay down my life for you no matter what! If embracing you and lifting you up leads to my death, so be it! I want you to know beyond a shadow of a doubt that I’m committed to you at all costs! You are worth it all!”

Thursday, May 5, 2016

God Communicates Through People (05-05-16)

Have you ever been around a person for a while and then left their presence saying to yourself or to someone else, “Now that’s a godly person. It feels good being around them!” Or have you had an emergency of some kind and someone unexpectedly showed up and helped you and you said, “You’re an angel! God must have sent you!” Or perhaps you’ve had a “toxic” encounter with someone who claims to be a follower of God and you’ve gone away saying, “If that’s the way God is, forget it!”

It’s interesting how we at times conclude that God in some way has used people to connect with us or be helpful to us. In fact, that is a primary paradigm suggested in the Christian Scriptures. Here’s one of them: “Don’t forget to show hospitality to strangers, for some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it!” (Hebrews 13:2) There could be several implications in this perspective. One, the “strangers” being served and helped are to be viewed as God’s messengers. We are to see others as God in the flesh, which highlights the significance of compassion and service to people in general.

Each person has infinite significance and importance. Two, God sends angelic messengers clothed in human form to give us opportunity to show compassion and unselfish service, a kind of human laboratory to grow our love in practical and tangible ways.

Jesus echoed this paradigm and raises the stakes even higher: “Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father, inherit the Kingdom prepared for you from the creation of the world. For I was hungry, and you fed me. I was thirsty, and you gave me a drink. I was a stranger, and you invited me into your home. I was naked, and you gave me clothing. I was sick, and you cared for me. I was in prison, and you visited me.’

“Then these righteous ones will reply, ‘Lord, when did we ever see you hungry and feed you? Or thirsty and give you something to drink? Or a stranger and show you hospitality? Or naked and give you clothing? When did we ever see you sick or in prison and visit you?’

“And the King will say, ‘I tell you the truth, when you did it to one of the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were doing it to me!’” (Matthew 25:34-40)

Jesus is saying in no uncertain terms that caring for those in need is the same as caring for Him, that He shows up in the form of hurting, broken humanity as an opportunity for people to live out compassion and service. God does indeed use people to communicate Himself.

The story is told of one of the feared persecutors of the early followers of Jesus, Saul. (Acts 9:1-9) He was on his way to arrest a group when suddenly a bright light, brighter than the noonday sun, struck him and knocked him off his horse, blinding him. He heard a voice which said, “Saul, why are you persecuting me?” He had no idea who the voice was until it identified itself as belonging to Jesus. Saul immediately saw the point: his persecuting of these people was in fact a persecuting of Jesus Himself. He was instructed to go into the closest city and wait there for someone to come help him.

In the meantime, God spoke to one of the sincere believers, a man named Ananias, telling him to go the house where Saul was staying and pray for him that he might be healed of his blindness. So he went, found Saul, and said, “Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, who appeared to you on the road, has sent me so that you might regain your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit.” And instantly, Saul regained his sight. He later became one of the most passionate and successful missionaries of the early Christian church.

Apparently, God has been in the habit of using people to communicate Himself to others. When God wants something done, He often uses people to do it, people who in the name of God and under the direction of God accomplish things for God. Moses, the great Jewish leader, under God’s direction frees the Jews from slavery in Egypt and leads them to the land of freedom and opportunity. Mother Teresa responds to a call from God to give herself unselfishly to the broken and dying humanity on the streets of Calcutta so that when they die they can die knowing someone loves them.

But God also took a huge risk when he chose to use people to communicate Himself to others. Think of all the horrible, destructive things people have done in the name of God through the centuries – the Crusades which slaughtered millions of Muslims, the Inquisition which persecuted millions of nonbelievers, or believers who didn’t believe exactly the way they were commanded to, the Holocaust which exterminated millions of Jews, and the murdering of thousands today by terrorists of all kinds who do it in the name of God. Think of the judgmental attitude and ostracism and marginalization and abuse church people have perpetrated against those who believe or act or choose differently than they do. The list is endless.

Obviously, God being able to communicate clearly through broken people has its limitations. One author picked up on the reality of incongruity when he wrote, “If someone says, ‘I love God,’ but hates a brother or sister, that person is a liar; for if we don’t love people we can see, how can we love God, whom we cannot see? And he has given us this command: Those who love God must also love their brothers and sisters.” (1 John 4:20-21)


There is too often a major disconnect between what people say and what they end up doing. That is the inherent limitation God faces in using people to communicate Himself to others. Either their views are simply distorted and their behavior reflects that distortion, or they don’t live in alignment with what they do believe. And even though God ends up on the short end of the stick, He continues trying to use people to reveal himself. Given these current conditions of broken humanity and misguided revelations of God, there must be more effective ways for God to reveal Himself to people. How else has He chosen to communicate?

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

God Communicates Through Creation (05-04-16)

As the lyrics speak of the composer’s heart, as the penned words reveal the author’s mind, as the painting points to the artist’s soul, so creation communicates the Creator’s design. The Creator speaks through what he creates.

Here’s how one poet puts it: “The heavens proclaim the glory of God. The skies display his craftsmanship. Day after day they continue to speak; night after night they make him known. They speak without a sound or word; their voice is never heard. Yet their message has gone throughout the earth, and their words to all the world.” (Psalm 19:1-4; all Scriptures in this presentation are NLT unless otherwise noted)

There’s a continual communication going on from God through his created life (day and night). And though you can’t hear an audible voice, there is a revealed message from God that circles the globe. Wherever there’s creation, there’s communication from God.

One mystic has admonished, “Contemplate what lies before you. It is God’s way of making himself present.” (Huggett, p. 119) What happens when you contemplate creation? What do you “hear” from God? What does God “say” through his created works? The poet describes the heavens proclaiming the “glory of God,” displaying God’s craftsmanship. The word for “glory” literally means “character.” What about God’s character is revealed in nature? What qualities of God are seen when we look around and pay attention to, as the mystic said, what lies before us? Perhaps several things might come to mind.

One, God is a creative being, a craftsman, as the poet put it. And what does that necessarily imply? God thrives on the process of dreaming and putting into place what he dreams. Watch the poet or artist or sculptor at work. They are passionate about revealing their view of life through their works. The creative process involves the use of the whole being: body, mind, heart, and soul. So all of God (whatever God is, whatever God’s being is) is involved in providing a unique window to the world through His art. It’s a way of expressing what’s in the heart.
Artists value not only the end result but also the process of producing it.

Two, God values diversity. You can’t help but see this side of God by looking even with a cursory glance at nature. There’s such infinite variety in complexity, color, essence, size, shape, ability, function. For example, some experts estimate that among birds alone there are as many as 9,703 different species! (See www.earthlife.net/birds/ intro.html.) Diversity!

Three, God values interdependence. Our ecosystem is comprised of biosystems where living organisms interact with and influence each other in mutually beneficial ways. One of the paradigms of physics is that forces (interactions between objects) always occur in pairs – an action always involves a reaction. Single, isolated forces never happen. The universe is composed of constant simultaneous interactions. And since nothing happens in isolation, every action has an impact on the whole.

Nature definitely has a cooperative side. The scientific terms “symbiosis” and “mutualism” both refer to numerous instances in which organisms live together and help one another out. The organisms can be of vastly differing species, such as an anemone and a hermit crab, or reef-building corals and algae. Many of these arrangements are truly astonishing; like the flashlight fish, which lures luminescent bacteria into chambers inside its body and then uses the cultures to light its way through the dark ocean and signal other fish about sex and danger. (Fausto-Sterling)

The poet John Donne, applying this to human life with the famous phrase “no man is an island”, put it this way:
“All mankind is of one author, and is one volume; when one man dies, one chapter is not torn out of the book, but translated into a better language; and every chapter must be so translated...As therefore the bell that rings to a sermon, calls not upon the preacher only, but upon the congregation to come: so this bell calls us all: but how much more me, who am brought so near the door by this sickness. … No man is an island, entire of itself... any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.” (Donne, Devotions)

God designed creation in such a way that interdependence is an operative principle. But what about competition, the often fierce struggle for dominance, the “survival of the fittest” concept? What about those brutal examples of violence that occur in nature? If nature speaks for God, how does that reflect on God’s glory? What does that say about God?

It’s interesting that in the Jewish Scriptures (for example, the prophet-poet Isaiah’s writings) the future world of God is described as a place where the following will be commonplace:

“The wolf and the lamb will live together; the leopard will lie down with the baby goat.

The calf and the yearling will be safe with the lion, and a little child will lead them all.

The cow will graze near the bear.

The cub and the calf will lie down together.

The lion will eat hay like a cow.

The baby will play safely near the hole of a cobra. Yes, a little child will put its hand in a nest of deadly snakes without harm.
Nothing will hurt or destroy in all my holy mountain.” (Isaiah 11:6-9)

That’s quite a picture of peace and harmony! Obviously not here yet. But perhaps it provides a glimpse into the way God originally intended the world to be and what God wants for the ultimate future. That is the view of some of the major world religions like Islam, Judaism, and Christianity. God created the world as a place of natural beauty where all created things live and exist together in peaceful harmony and unity – interconnected, interdependent, cooperative, collaborative, and mutually supportive – where cooperation rather than competition is the primary principle of life existence and survival.

The context of the above poem describes how instead of that natural harmony there exist aggressive human rivalry and injustice and exploitation of people. The results are extreme poverty, slavery and bondage, which creates a culture of the “haves” and the “have not’s,” the rich and the poor, the free and the enslaved. That relational paradigm certainly has impacted the natural world. Human greed and selfishness, violence, power and control have too often created an environment of abuse and fear and lack of freedom and waste.

Leonardo de Caprio’s documentary The 11th Hour, dealing with today’s environmental crisis, suggests that human greed and selfishness are what continue to perpetuate our exploitation of the planet. We are slaves to our own needs and desires and lusts and so continue our thoughtless ravaging of the world. Very profoundly and poignantly, the documentary brings home our reality: if we are going to survive, we have to change our behavior from competition and aggression to cooperation and admiration.


In other words, we in essence must return to God’s original plan for global life, where all life lives in harmony from mutual respect, value, support and interdependence. That would reflect accurately on God and what God values and how God has created life. But given these current conditions of creation, is it possible to use only nature as an adequate revelation of God? Or has God chosen to use other means to communicate Himself to His creation?

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

How God Communicates (05-03-16)

A man and his wife were having some problems at home and were giving each other the silent treatment. Suddenly, the man realized that the next day he would need his wife to wake him up at 5 a.m. for an early morning business flight. Not wanting to be the first to break the silence (and lose), he wrote on a piece of paper, “Please wake me at 5 a.m.” He left it where he knew she would find it. The next morning, the man woke up only to discover it was 9:00 a.m. and he had missed his flight. Furious, he was about to go and see why his wife hadn’t awakened him when he noticed a piece of paper by the bed. The paper said, “It is 5 a.m. Wake up!”

Oh, the pain of poor communication! Communication experts define effective communication as taking place only when the receiver accurately understands the intended message of the sender and vice versa. Often we just flood people with information and never stop to see if we’re being understood or not. Which helps to explain why so little effective communication actually takes place between people.


One of the fundamental truths about God is that God communicates. God is not silent, withdrawn, aloof or distant. God desires to be known. Which means that God chooses to communicate with people for that to take place. The question is, how does God communicate? What are the ways God chooses to be revealed? How does God interact with people? We will outline a few and notice the dynamics of each divine process in the upcoming blogs. 

Friday, April 29, 2016

Why Choose to Forgive (04-29-16 Part V)

Paul and Barbara Sanders, in their book Choosing Forgiveness, suggest several reasons why forgiveness is so important to healthy living. (see blog 04-25-16 part I, blog 04-26-16 part II, blog 04-27-16, blog 04-27-16 part IV)

The movie The Interpreter, starring Nicole Kidman as a United Nations interpreter (Silvia Broome), is a powerful story about the human struggle between forgiveness and revenge when you’ve been hurt and wronged.

The story begins when Silvia overhears an assassination threat against a foreign president scheduled to speak at the UN. Instead of just a threat against a well-known dignitary, however, the threat is against a dignitary accused of genocide. Even more than just a tragedy Silvia has heard about on the news, the deaths that surround President Zuwani’s name are her countrymen, her neighbors, and her family. This is not only professional, it’s personal.

In struggling with her anger and grief, she tells the secret service agent assigned to protect her (who himself struggles with anger over the loss of his spouse in a tragic car accident) about an African ceremony in her native country.

“Everyone who loses somebody wants revenge on someone, on God if they can’t find anyone else. But in Africa, in Matobo, the Ku believe that the only way to end grief is to save a life. If someone is murdered, a year of mourning ends with a ritual that we call the Drowning Man Trial. There’s an all-night party beside a river. At dawn, the killer is put in a boat. He’s taken out on the water and he’s dropped. He’s bound so that he can’t swim.

The family of the dead then has to make a choice. They can let him drown or they can swim out and save him. The Ku believe that if the family lets the killer drown, they’ll have justice but spend the rest of their lives in mourning. But if they save him, if they admit that life isn’t always just ... that very act can take away their sorrow.”

How do you react to that ritual? Would it be helpful if you had been hurt or wronged? What does it suggest about the dynamics of dealing with loss and hurt?

Sylvia Broome suddenly finds herself confronted with the most important choice of her life - what to do about the man responsible for so many deaths in her life. Should she let him be assassinated by simply not saying anything about what she’s heard? Should she feel jubilation at the thought of this man’s just death? Should she seek revenge in some other way or simply refuse to deal with it and try to keep on living with the hurt and pain of her past? It’s clear that she’s locked into her pain which has turned to resentment and bitterness for life. She’s faced with the choice in her own Drowning Man Ritual. Is it possible that forgiveness is one of the keys that would unlock the prison door of her grief from the hurts she didn’t deserve?


Jesus said, “And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.” Not an easy prayer or process! But ultimately the most effective tool for personal and relational liberation.

Thursday, April 28, 2016

Why Choose to Forgive (04-28-16 Part IV)

Paul and Barbara Sanders, in their book Choosing Forgiveness, suggest several reasons why forgiveness is so important to healthy living. (see blog 04-25-16 part I for first reason, blog 04-26-16 part II, blog 04-27-16 for third reason)

4. Forgiveness doesn’t mean the hurt was right! Jesus isn’t talking about cheap forgiveness. It’s not cheap with God. God paid an infinite price to offer forgiveness to us, showing that he refuses to minimize our debt. The king, in Jesus’ story, swallowed a multi-million dollar debt. His willingness to forgive the debt meant that he took the loss. Not cheap!

Forgiveness is never cheap. It always looks at the hurt and the one who did the hurt directly and honestly. And it calls sin for what it is. “What you did to me was wrong! Unacceptable! And you owe a debt to me! And I have the right to demand payment!” Only realists can be forgivers.

That’s why forgiveness is so difficult and so few do it. As the Sanders put it, forgiveness faces the pain and the struggle of humanity. We wrestle with the hurt and with our own weaknesses. We stop making excuses for ourselves or for others. We face our own needs and responsibilities as well as others’. We acknowledge and feel and embrace the pain caused to us and call it for what it is. We don’t deny it or sweep it under the rug or pretend it never happened or simply pass it off. Impossible and ineffective! We face it squarely and are willing to hold the debtors responsible.


But then, as we did with our own sins and short-comings and failures, we do with theirs – we take them to God and let them be cancelled by God’s compassion and love. We let them go. We let go of our demand for our right to debt payment from the ones who hurt us by giving them to God’s compassion and love. This is forgiveness at its most expensive and effective level. Because by doing this, we liberate ourselves from our own prison of anger, resentment, hate, and bitterness.