"Whether, then, you eat or drink or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God" (1 Corinthians 10:31)
The most well-known of the 107 questions and answers of the Westminster Catechism is surely:
"What is the chief end of man? Man's chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him forever."
This singular truth from God's Word was brought home to me again this week, believe it or not, by a movie from 1966 entitled "Alfie." A young Britisher named Alfie Elkins lives a totally self-seeking life, using everyone in his path as a means to his own selfish end. At the end of the movie, however, circumstances in his life cause him to realize that if you don't have peace of mind then you don't have anything at all. In the closing scene as the title character walks slowly into the twilight, the theme song is sung, a portion of which includes the words:
What's it all about, Alfie?
Is it just for the moment we live?
What's it all about, when you sort it out, Alfie?
Are we meant to take more than we give?
Clearly from God's perspective we are not meant to take instead of give. In fact, all that we do is intended to bring glory to God. This question and answer from the Westminster Catechism is not just for Presbyterian believers! It is to be the lifeblood of every follower of Jesus Christ. Nothing is more foundational to any human being than eating and drinking. Paul's point, then, is that seeking the glory of God is to be as foundational to our living as are eating and drinking. We should view every circumstance of life through the prism of God's glory. We should actively seek for ways in which to bring glory to God no matter what we are doing. Seeking God's glory is not a switch that we can turn on and off, beloved!
We may not ourselves be as self-seeking and self-serving as was Alfie Elkins, but the question we need to continually ask ourselves as we walk through this life is: "Will this glorify God?" A later line in the theme song for the movie states: "As sure as I believe there's a heaven above, Alfie." Well, there is a heaven above and the dictate of heaven is that we should live this life in full, relentless, and joyful pursuit of the glory of God. And that is what "it" is all about!
Ron
Friday, February 22, 2013
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Here's a 'PC' You Can Live With
"Therefore I, the prisoner of the Lord, implore you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling with which you have been called" (Ephesians 4:1)
Many of you may have already taken the time to check out the video clip posted on Face Book of Dr. Benjamin Carson speaking at the National Prayer Breakfast recently, both the president and vice-president not only in attendance but sitting with him on the dais. If you haven't seen it, by all means check it out. It is well worth the watch! During his address, Dr. Carson told the story about a young man who wanted to send to his mother a very special gift for a very special occasion. He purchased for her a pair of exotic and gifted birds that cost him $5,000 each and had them shipped to her. Not hearing anything from her about his extravagant gift, he finally called her and asked her how she liked the birds. Her response simply was: "They were good." Unable to believe his ears, the young man told her what the birds had cost him and how talented they were, both of them being able to speak. His mother's response is classic: "Then they should have said something!"
Back on December 20th I posted a Christmas blog that mentioned among other things the problem with trying to be "PC" or politically correct today. Now I don't know about you, beloved, but frankly I am fed up with the whole issue of political correctness, of having to tiptoe around people's feelings so much so that we as fellow human beings can't even discuss anything honestly anymore. So here and now I would like to propose to you that we take back the term "PC" and change its meaning to something that is much more positive and powerful. I want to urge you to begin to use the term "PC" frequently in your conversations with others. The only difference I want to see you make is that you introduce your own personal "PC" as a reference to your own practical Christianity. We have learned the hard way in these past months that society's form of "PC" has not worked, is not working, and will never work. All that it has done is to push people so far into corners of social acceptability that many are afraid to express any convictions about anything at all.
But did you notice what Paul told the believers in Ephesus about God's personal form of "PC"? He urged his readers to "walk in a manner worthy of the calling" by which the Spirit of God had called them to faith in Jesus Christ, a calling that was meant then and is meant today to totally transform the life of anyone it touches. Society today does not need political correctness, beloved. It desperately needs practical Christianity in front of its face every moment of every day. People around us need to see followers of Jesus Christ living out our faith in real-life, day to day situations and circumstances. Now that is a "PC" we can all live with! As far as Dr. Carson's story about the mother who unintentionally cooked and ate her son's costly gift to her is concerned, she was absolutely right. They should have said something! Do you want to stand before the Lord one day and have it said of our failure to exhibit our own personal and visible practical Christianity that we should have said something? Now is that time, beloved. Today is that day. Let's all agree as brothers and sisters in Christ that we will flood our world with God's version of "PC" and really show those around us who Jesus Christ is and what He can do for all who will turn to Him in repentance and faith.
Ron
Many of you may have already taken the time to check out the video clip posted on Face Book of Dr. Benjamin Carson speaking at the National Prayer Breakfast recently, both the president and vice-president not only in attendance but sitting with him on the dais. If you haven't seen it, by all means check it out. It is well worth the watch! During his address, Dr. Carson told the story about a young man who wanted to send to his mother a very special gift for a very special occasion. He purchased for her a pair of exotic and gifted birds that cost him $5,000 each and had them shipped to her. Not hearing anything from her about his extravagant gift, he finally called her and asked her how she liked the birds. Her response simply was: "They were good." Unable to believe his ears, the young man told her what the birds had cost him and how talented they were, both of them being able to speak. His mother's response is classic: "Then they should have said something!"
Back on December 20th I posted a Christmas blog that mentioned among other things the problem with trying to be "PC" or politically correct today. Now I don't know about you, beloved, but frankly I am fed up with the whole issue of political correctness, of having to tiptoe around people's feelings so much so that we as fellow human beings can't even discuss anything honestly anymore. So here and now I would like to propose to you that we take back the term "PC" and change its meaning to something that is much more positive and powerful. I want to urge you to begin to use the term "PC" frequently in your conversations with others. The only difference I want to see you make is that you introduce your own personal "PC" as a reference to your own practical Christianity. We have learned the hard way in these past months that society's form of "PC" has not worked, is not working, and will never work. All that it has done is to push people so far into corners of social acceptability that many are afraid to express any convictions about anything at all.
But did you notice what Paul told the believers in Ephesus about God's personal form of "PC"? He urged his readers to "walk in a manner worthy of the calling" by which the Spirit of God had called them to faith in Jesus Christ, a calling that was meant then and is meant today to totally transform the life of anyone it touches. Society today does not need political correctness, beloved. It desperately needs practical Christianity in front of its face every moment of every day. People around us need to see followers of Jesus Christ living out our faith in real-life, day to day situations and circumstances. Now that is a "PC" we can all live with! As far as Dr. Carson's story about the mother who unintentionally cooked and ate her son's costly gift to her is concerned, she was absolutely right. They should have said something! Do you want to stand before the Lord one day and have it said of our failure to exhibit our own personal and visible practical Christianity that we should have said something? Now is that time, beloved. Today is that day. Let's all agree as brothers and sisters in Christ that we will flood our world with God's version of "PC" and really show those around us who Jesus Christ is and what He can do for all who will turn to Him in repentance and faith.
Ron
Friday, January 25, 2013
Downloading the Ultimate 'App'
"Incline your ear and hear the words of the wise, and apply your mind to my knowledge" (Proverbs 22:17)
One thing you must understand about me and computer technology, beloved, is that I am always several jumps behind. For example, my latest cell phone is a slide-out keyboard texting phone and when did they come out? So it was a real shock for me when for Christmas my wife surprised me with my own iPad. Talk about a technological eye-opener! I cannot tell you how much this computer "old-timer" has enjoyed downloading different 'apps' and just generally playing with my new toy. Perhaps the greatest advance I have made with it thus far is to learn how to use it in the pulpit for my sermon notes. A couple of folks asked me early on if I had a new toy since they saw me keep touching the surface of something as I moved through each passage of Scripture. Needless to day, I am always on the lookout for new apps that I can check out and possibly download for my own use.
Did you know, however, that what we might rightly call "the ultimate app" does not require an iPad or a PC connection of any kind? In fact, it is every believer's responsibility to "download" this particular application into his or her own life! And just what is this spiritual app that we all need so much and to which we would do well to give heed? Note first in this particular proverb collected by King Solomon that the need is for us to "incline your ear and hear" wise words. And where do we find such wisdom? In the latter portion of the proverb God Himself through the writer commands us to "apply your mind to my knowledge." The Hebrew word here translated "apply" is shiyth, pronounced sheeth and meaning literally to "place" in the sense here of setting a thing in its proper place. The "thing" that is to be so set in place is the knowledge of God's Word and the precise "place" in which it is to be set is the believer's mind. Very simply, we are to set our minds solidly and continually upon the truths of God's Word and apply those truths to our living by scrupulous obedience!
And did you notice, beloved, that the responsibility for such application of godly wisdom is our own, yours and mind individually? To put it in "computer-ese," so to speak, the app is available to us but it must be our own choice, an act of our will, to "download" that truth and to make it a part of our lives. If we do not, then we and only we are to blame for the disastrous attitudes we will hold and for the catastrophic consequences we will endure as a result.
I hope to continue to enjoy my iPad, beloved, and even to download more apps as they become available. But more than that, my heart's desire is to make sure that God's "ultimate app" is up and running all the time in my life. Would you like to download it right now? You won't find it at the app store! It is no further away than your Bible and your personal yieldedness to the Spirit of God.
Ron
One thing you must understand about me and computer technology, beloved, is that I am always several jumps behind. For example, my latest cell phone is a slide-out keyboard texting phone and when did they come out? So it was a real shock for me when for Christmas my wife surprised me with my own iPad. Talk about a technological eye-opener! I cannot tell you how much this computer "old-timer" has enjoyed downloading different 'apps' and just generally playing with my new toy. Perhaps the greatest advance I have made with it thus far is to learn how to use it in the pulpit for my sermon notes. A couple of folks asked me early on if I had a new toy since they saw me keep touching the surface of something as I moved through each passage of Scripture. Needless to day, I am always on the lookout for new apps that I can check out and possibly download for my own use.
Did you know, however, that what we might rightly call "the ultimate app" does not require an iPad or a PC connection of any kind? In fact, it is every believer's responsibility to "download" this particular application into his or her own life! And just what is this spiritual app that we all need so much and to which we would do well to give heed? Note first in this particular proverb collected by King Solomon that the need is for us to "incline your ear and hear" wise words. And where do we find such wisdom? In the latter portion of the proverb God Himself through the writer commands us to "apply your mind to my knowledge." The Hebrew word here translated "apply" is shiyth, pronounced sheeth and meaning literally to "place" in the sense here of setting a thing in its proper place. The "thing" that is to be so set in place is the knowledge of God's Word and the precise "place" in which it is to be set is the believer's mind. Very simply, we are to set our minds solidly and continually upon the truths of God's Word and apply those truths to our living by scrupulous obedience!
And did you notice, beloved, that the responsibility for such application of godly wisdom is our own, yours and mind individually? To put it in "computer-ese," so to speak, the app is available to us but it must be our own choice, an act of our will, to "download" that truth and to make it a part of our lives. If we do not, then we and only we are to blame for the disastrous attitudes we will hold and for the catastrophic consequences we will endure as a result.
I hope to continue to enjoy my iPad, beloved, and even to download more apps as they become available. But more than that, my heart's desire is to make sure that God's "ultimate app" is up and running all the time in my life. Would you like to download it right now? You won't find it at the app store! It is no further away than your Bible and your personal yieldedness to the Spirit of God.
Ron
Friday, January 11, 2013
Whose Church Is It?
"I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church; and the gates of Hades will not overpower it...But speaking the truth in love, we are to grow up in all aspects into Him who is the head, even Christ, from whom the whole body, being fitted and held together by what every joint supplies, according to the proper working of each individual part, causes the growth of the body for the building up of itself in love" (Matthew 16:18; Ephesians 4:15-16)
I recently had occasion to reflect once again upon what has become a significant weakness within many local churches today, beloved, and that is the inability to answer the question posed above. Now, please note that I did not say that we not have an answer for it but rather that the answer we are voicing so very often is just flat out wrong! I cannot tell you how many times over the years I have heard people state emphatically that the particular church of which they are a part is their church. Either someone's great-grandfather cleared the land on which the church sat or someone else's uncle donated the money for the building materials of which the church was ultimately built. For whatever reason, no matter how sincerely and honestly felt, we have simply come to believe that this church is our church.
It is well past time for us as Christians to put this chicken to roost once and for all, beloved. I find two issues inherent in rightly answering this question which we must consider. The first has to do with whose church it really is. Did you note that Jesus informed Peter that, beyond any shadow of any doubt, the church with which He chose to be connected would be His church and no one else's? Very simply, Jesus made it clear that any church that is not His church has no right to associate itself with His name in any way. You see, the truth revealed in Scripture, beloved, is that the answer to the question before us is that this is Christ's church and not yours or mine. It doesn't matter whose family member donated the land or whose loved one stoked the wood-burning stove every week so that the building would be warm for worshipers. Those are acts of a servant, beloved, not acts of an owner.
The second issue that I find in these verses has to do with whose authority is supreme in the church. It is has been my experience that whenever people have insisted in times past that the church is theirs, what they mean is that they run it. Claims of church ownership in local congregations are almost always tied to an inner struggle for power. But did you note also in these verses what the Apostle Paul told the saints in Ephesus about who has the true authority in the church? He told them straight out that Jesus Christ is the church's "head" and that the rest of us are its body parts. And there is nothing more unwieldy or ineffective, beloved, than a "two-headed" church!
So whose church is it? It is Jesus' church and only Jesus' church. It is not mine and it is not yours. Never has been. Never will be. It is Jesus' church because He is the only one who paid the ultimate price to establish it and to call it His own. And who is the operating authority in the church? Paul said that Jesus is the "head" and Jesus Himself said that all authority in heaven and on earth had been given to Him by His Father (Matthew 28:18). Thus, we find undeniably taught in God's Word that this is Christ's church and that He is the only one authorized to run it. The rest of us are His servants who wait upon His pleasure and then joyfully do His bidding. Don't you think it's time that we started acting like servants?
Ron
I recently had occasion to reflect once again upon what has become a significant weakness within many local churches today, beloved, and that is the inability to answer the question posed above. Now, please note that I did not say that we not have an answer for it but rather that the answer we are voicing so very often is just flat out wrong! I cannot tell you how many times over the years I have heard people state emphatically that the particular church of which they are a part is their church. Either someone's great-grandfather cleared the land on which the church sat or someone else's uncle donated the money for the building materials of which the church was ultimately built. For whatever reason, no matter how sincerely and honestly felt, we have simply come to believe that this church is our church.
It is well past time for us as Christians to put this chicken to roost once and for all, beloved. I find two issues inherent in rightly answering this question which we must consider. The first has to do with whose church it really is. Did you note that Jesus informed Peter that, beyond any shadow of any doubt, the church with which He chose to be connected would be His church and no one else's? Very simply, Jesus made it clear that any church that is not His church has no right to associate itself with His name in any way. You see, the truth revealed in Scripture, beloved, is that the answer to the question before us is that this is Christ's church and not yours or mine. It doesn't matter whose family member donated the land or whose loved one stoked the wood-burning stove every week so that the building would be warm for worshipers. Those are acts of a servant, beloved, not acts of an owner.
The second issue that I find in these verses has to do with whose authority is supreme in the church. It is has been my experience that whenever people have insisted in times past that the church is theirs, what they mean is that they run it. Claims of church ownership in local congregations are almost always tied to an inner struggle for power. But did you note also in these verses what the Apostle Paul told the saints in Ephesus about who has the true authority in the church? He told them straight out that Jesus Christ is the church's "head" and that the rest of us are its body parts. And there is nothing more unwieldy or ineffective, beloved, than a "two-headed" church!
So whose church is it? It is Jesus' church and only Jesus' church. It is not mine and it is not yours. Never has been. Never will be. It is Jesus' church because He is the only one who paid the ultimate price to establish it and to call it His own. And who is the operating authority in the church? Paul said that Jesus is the "head" and Jesus Himself said that all authority in heaven and on earth had been given to Him by His Father (Matthew 28:18). Thus, we find undeniably taught in God's Word that this is Christ's church and that He is the only one authorized to run it. The rest of us are His servants who wait upon His pleasure and then joyfully do His bidding. Don't you think it's time that we started acting like servants?
Ron
Thursday, December 20, 2012
A Not So 'PC' Christmas
"For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; and the government will rest on His shoulders; and His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace" (Isaiah 9:6)
HAPPY HOLIDAYS! SEASON'S GREETINGS! HOLIDAY WISHES! You've heard it all before, beloved, and if anything it becomes more pronounced with each passing year. Those 'PC' blues! Trying our best not to offend or put anyone off because of their religious beliefs or lack thereof. As a result, Christmas has become a sterile, surface-only, secular celebration.
Would you like to really enjoy this year a not so 'PC' Christmas? Would you like to get back on track and genuinely celebrate CHRISTmas? If you would, then all you need to do is to reflect with me on the prophetic words of Isaiah spoken hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus of Nazareth. Note first here the manner of His coming. The promise that "a child will be born to us" emphasizes His incarnation and reminds us that God has given to us in Him the Son of Man. He laughs with us, cries with us, hurts with us, but most of all has died for us as He has taken our sins upon Himself.
But Isaiah also declared that "a son will be given to us." This promise emphasizes His divinity as surely as the word "born" emphasizes His humanity. Thus, the Son of God became the Son of Man by becoming "Immanuel" - God with us!
The prophet then went on to say that "the government shall rest upon His shoulders." Hear the word "government" and instantly an institution comes to mind. The Hebrew word here however actually means "a governing" and refers not to a national governmental structure but rather to His Lordship over the lives of men. Isaiah was promising to us that with His coming we would receive our own King of Kings. Every detail of our individual lives lies in His hands.
And what of the specific ministry of His coming? Isaiah told us that He would be called "Wonderful Counselor." He is the One to whom we can turn for direction for life's living. This Christmas child would have all the answers for all the questions that pluck at the strings of our hearts. He would be able to show us the direction in which our lives should go.
The prophet said also of Him that He will be "Mighty God." The Hebrew word here means "strong" in the sense of the One who gains the ultimate victory. So as the Wonderful Counselor He gives us the direction we are to go, as the Mighty God He gives us the power to go in that direction.
But Jesus is also to us the "Eternal Father." In that role He provides us with assurance about life's living. His kingdom within us is an unending one, so there is never a need for us to fear for our future. The Christmas child makes possible for us an eternal relationship with the Father.
Finally, He comes to us as "Prince of Peace." Because of Him we have first of all peace with God. And then we also are enabled to be at peace with ourselves. And when we are at peace with God and with ourselves, we should always be at peace with our circumstances no matter what they might be.
There you have it, beloved, the makings of a genuine not so 'PC' Christmas! It is after all the real Christmas message and it's about time we took it back from the Grinch that is stealing it from us. Merry CHRISTmas to each and every one of you!
Ron
HAPPY HOLIDAYS! SEASON'S GREETINGS! HOLIDAY WISHES! You've heard it all before, beloved, and if anything it becomes more pronounced with each passing year. Those 'PC' blues! Trying our best not to offend or put anyone off because of their religious beliefs or lack thereof. As a result, Christmas has become a sterile, surface-only, secular celebration.
Would you like to really enjoy this year a not so 'PC' Christmas? Would you like to get back on track and genuinely celebrate CHRISTmas? If you would, then all you need to do is to reflect with me on the prophetic words of Isaiah spoken hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus of Nazareth. Note first here the manner of His coming. The promise that "a child will be born to us" emphasizes His incarnation and reminds us that God has given to us in Him the Son of Man. He laughs with us, cries with us, hurts with us, but most of all has died for us as He has taken our sins upon Himself.
But Isaiah also declared that "a son will be given to us." This promise emphasizes His divinity as surely as the word "born" emphasizes His humanity. Thus, the Son of God became the Son of Man by becoming "Immanuel" - God with us!
The prophet then went on to say that "the government shall rest upon His shoulders." Hear the word "government" and instantly an institution comes to mind. The Hebrew word here however actually means "a governing" and refers not to a national governmental structure but rather to His Lordship over the lives of men. Isaiah was promising to us that with His coming we would receive our own King of Kings. Every detail of our individual lives lies in His hands.
And what of the specific ministry of His coming? Isaiah told us that He would be called "Wonderful Counselor." He is the One to whom we can turn for direction for life's living. This Christmas child would have all the answers for all the questions that pluck at the strings of our hearts. He would be able to show us the direction in which our lives should go.
The prophet said also of Him that He will be "Mighty God." The Hebrew word here means "strong" in the sense of the One who gains the ultimate victory. So as the Wonderful Counselor He gives us the direction we are to go, as the Mighty God He gives us the power to go in that direction.
But Jesus is also to us the "Eternal Father." In that role He provides us with assurance about life's living. His kingdom within us is an unending one, so there is never a need for us to fear for our future. The Christmas child makes possible for us an eternal relationship with the Father.
Finally, He comes to us as "Prince of Peace." Because of Him we have first of all peace with God. And then we also are enabled to be at peace with ourselves. And when we are at peace with God and with ourselves, we should always be at peace with our circumstances no matter what they might be.
There you have it, beloved, the makings of a genuine not so 'PC' Christmas! It is after all the real Christmas message and it's about time we took it back from the Grinch that is stealing it from us. Merry CHRISTmas to each and every one of you!
Ron
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