Saturday, August 29, 2009

Swine Flu Symptom Check - IMPORTANT


If you wake up looking like this - get help!

What Ministry is Becoming



Enjoy this video. It is everything youth ministry (all ministry - when the emphasis is on the star-quality of the minister and not on the glory of God) is becoming that it should not be. Check it out.

(Note: this is a parody and there are some things in it that are wholly inappropriate. But I believe it clearly reveals where much of ministry is headed today, and so I put this up)

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Significant Servants, August 23, 2009


Have you ever looked at a “stereogram?” That is one of those psychedelic 3-D pictures that you have to stare at blankly to find another picture hidden in the background. For a long time I was sure that it was just a cruel joke someone was playing on unsuspecting schnooks like me. I stared and stared, but no picture appeared. Then, one day, it happened. I was staring at the silly picture and suddenly I saw a guy on a surfboard riding a wave. I was part of the club. I could see stereograms. Actually, they nauseate me and give me a headache, but I can see them now. To see a stereogram, you have to look past the details to find the pattern behind the picture.


In this study, we are trying to see a genuine pattern in the way God does his great works here on earth. We will be examining the significant servants of God throughout the Bible and asking ourselves what we must do to become like them; to serve our God in power and accomplish significant work in his name. If we can find a pattern in the great works of God and translate it to our lives today, we can hope to see the power of the Living God at work in us and in our world, much as they did.


Finding these patterns is a dangerous business. It is easy to miss the pattern God has put there or to read our own ideas and desires into the text and call that the pattern. We do not get to do that. God is in charge and we do not get to mold him into what we want him to be. We must look for how the real and living God works. We must examine the “ways of God.”


That term, the “ways of God” describes certain patterns in the way God deals with human beings. God’s always acts in line with his glorious character. He is always holy, always righteous, always merciful, always sovereign. That is who he is. Because God is unchanging and always acts in line with his perfect character, there are patterns in the way that he works. Our job is to carefully and prayerfully examine the scriptures, especially those great works of God revealed there, to discover the “ways of God.”

I believe that such a pattern exists. For several years, I read through the Bible every year, using the One Year Bible. Then, on October 1, 2000, I began a series at my church in Cedar Rapids called, “Through the Bible – Hopefully before Jesus Returns.” Every Sunday night we worked our way book by book through the Old Testament. That’s as far as I got. In August of 2005, the last Sunday before I moved to Sioux City, I finished the Old Testament. In the midst of that trek, I began to see a pattern emerging in the activity of God. It is that pattern that I want to share in this study.


A Common Mistake


As we attempt to define and apply this pattern, there is a common mistake that we must avoid. People have often looked at one or two acts of God and extrapolated a pattern from this inadequate evidence. When God wanted to defeat Jericho, he gave Joshua a battle plan – walk around once a day for six days, then seven times on the seventh day. That was the method that God used. It was not meant as a pattern of victory. When I pastored in Virginia, I would drive into Lynchburg to visit hospitals. On the way, there was a little church up on a hill. One of my deacons told me a story about that church. Their pastor had found another piece of property he thought they should move to, so he gathered everyone together and instituted the “Jericho” plan. They walked around the property once a day for six days, then seven times on the seventh day, claiming the land in the name of Jesus Christ. They did not get the land. Why? They tried to use a method of God as a pattern of God’s blessing.


Henry Blackaby has rightly pointed out that God never did the same thing the same way twice. He always acts according to his character, but he never repeats his methods. There was only one burning bush. Moses was only told to strike a rock once to make water flow. In fact, the next time, God told him to speak to the rock and Moses struck it anyway. (He must have been Baptist. I can just hear him telling people, “That’s the way we’ve always done it!)


We often think that the power of God is in the method God used, so we try to replicate successful programs and strategies, thinking that in doing that we can also replicate the release of God’s power. It usually does not work. My beloved Southern Baptist Convention is, I am convinced, the undisputed world champions of method-replication. One of our flagship churches, First Baptist Church of Daytona, Florida, developed an evangelism program that worked very well for them. They called it FAITH. It was a Sunday School based outreach program using their own evangelism presentation. It worked very well for them. Then, our convention got a hold of it and for a couple of years, they pressured all of us to use the program. “If it worked in Daytona, it will work for you.” Thousands of churches tried to repeat the success that the Daytona church had. Generally, it fell pretty flat. I have no doubt that it was a great program for Daytona. But we keep thinking that replicating programs and methods will replicate the power of God. It just doesn’t seem to work that way.

Moses never went around giving motivational speeches on “How to Find Your Burning Bush.” Joshua did not copyright and mass-produce a curriculum called “The Walk-Around Strategy” for military victory. They realized that God’s methods were not meant to be universalized and mimicked. They were individual works of God. We have identified sixteen individual works of God. In those works you will see almost no repetition of methods. Fire from heaven? Once. A flood? Only one time. A virgin-born child? Never repeated. Our God has infinite creativity and does not need to repeat his methods. When we try to enforce methodological conformity, we actually hinder and do not promote the work of God.


I have heard more than one church act as if all they have to do is switch from hymns to a praise band and contemporary music and they will magically begin growing. It have heard others say, with just as much conviction, that all we have to do is go back to the hymns, the way we worshipped in the fifties, and all will be well. Some lionize the methods and strategies of days gone by and see success only through the eyes of nostalgia. Others feel like all we have to do is throw off the bondage of the past and adopt new methods and strategies and we will reach a new generation. Both of these ideas miss the truth. It is not the method, not the program, not the strategy that makes the difference. It is the power of God that we need. We can imitate successful churches, we can mimic successful programs, we can adopt successful strategies; none of these will make the ultimate difference. What we need is the presence and power of the God of Heaven displayed among us. That cannot be replicated in a curriculum.


But, make no mistake. I believe there is a pattern in the way God works. God always works on the basis of his character. He does not repeat methods, but there is a biblical pattern in the way he works among mankind. We can look past the methods and discern the stereogram behind the methods. We can see certain things that God did and certain things that he required of human beings so that certain results could happen in the live of God’s servants.


It is not some magical process with easy, simple steps. There is no mantra you can chant, no simple genuflections that will bring the activity of God. But there is a process we can follow. God’s great works followed a distinct pattern. If we will follow the pattern, we can expect to see the powerful working of God in our lives. We can become Significant Servants in the cause of Christ.


Identifying the Pattern


How do we identify the repeatable pattern and distinguish it from the simple methods? We must define what constitutes a pattern in the ways of God. If God did something once, that is certainly not a pattern. If he did something two or three times, that might be an indicator that a pattern exists, but it is not enough to establish a pattern. A pattern should be determined on incontrovertible evidence. In every one of the great acts of God the pattern should be either stated or at least implied clearly. It must be a consistent, repeated pattern that is in evidence in every (or almost every) great work of God.


A Bad Example


Let’s look at how not to do this. In Exodus 14:13-14, God is about to do one of his greatest works. As Israel stands on the banks of the Red Sea with certain death in front of them in the form of Pharaoh’s army, Moses gives them a message from God. “And Moses said to the people, ‘Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.’ Israel had to do nothing but watch God work. They were commanded by God to stand still and watch God work. I have heard that preached as a pattern in the ways of God. Pray, then stand still and see God go to work.


This “pattern” is buttressed in 2 Chronicles 20, a story about Judah’s King Jehoshaphat coming under attack. A prophet delivered this message from God in verse 15, a message that echoes Moses words in Exodus 14. Do not be afraid and do not be dismayed at this great horde, for the battle is not yours but God’s.” He expands on this in verse 17. You will not need to fight in this battle. Stand firm, hold your position, and see the salvation of the Lord on your behalf, O Judah and Jerusalem.’ Do not be afraid and do not be dismayed. Tomorrow go out against them, and the Lord will be with you. Voila, there it is! A clear pattern, right? We should always stand back, do nothing and wait for God to work.


But, there is a problem. Yes, in two situations God clearly tells his people to sit back, do nothing and watch God work. But there is more to it than that. There are times when God may want to show his power to us and tell us to sit back and watch him work. I experienced that one time. A lady in my Cedar Rapids church called me about a situation in her family, asking me to help her resolve it. But as we prayed and talked together, we both became convinced that God was burdening our hearts that we should “stand still” and watch him work. He did. The next day she called me, excited. We had done nothing but pray and God had brought a clear resolution to the situation. Sometimes, God seems to work that way.


But this is not a pattern in the ways of God. There are other times when God does not tell his people to stand still and watch, but gives them an interesting act of obedience to perform. We have talked much of Joshua and the walls of Jericho. God gave the people an act of obedience to perform and when they did that he worked in power. Gideon was told to pare his army down to 300 men and then take pitchers, trumpets and lanterns to attack the enemy. Hardly “War College” strategy, is it? But they did what God said and God displayed his power. There have been times when I have sense God calling me to do something that made little sense, but when I did what he said, the blessing came.


And sometimes, God just made the people go to war with the promise of his power. In fact, most of the time that is exactly what happened. In the first battle, God told Joshua to walk around Jericho. But in every other battle the people actually had to pick up swords and spears and go out and fight in the name of Yahweh. God empowered them to victory in the battle. When Sennacherib’s army came against Hezekiah, he encouraged the people of God with these words found in 2 Chronicles 32:8, “With him is an arm of flesh, but with us is the Lord our God, to help us and to fight our battles.” And the people took confidence from the words of Hezekiah king of Judah.” This time, there was no sitting back and watching God work. And there was no act of token obedience. This time they had to fight the battle – bloody, violent warfare.


Is there a pattern in all these examples? Yes, I believe that there is. But it is not the ones that we often draw. We cannot tell people that they should always stand still and watch God work. That’s not the way God does it all the time. Sometimes, an act of token obedience might be required. Often, we will have to go out to battle in the name of Jesus and face down the enemies of God in that way. But whatever the method, we can depend on God to provide the victory. There is only one common theme in all these passages; one clear pattern in the ways of God. Obedience. God’s people had to do what God said. When they obeyed him, God revealed his mighty power. The key to any pattern in the ways of God is obedience.


So, what we are looking for is a clear, consistent, uncontroverted pattern in the ay God works. In every one of the sixteen great acts of God, you should see this pattern either spelled out or clearly implied. If God did something several times, it’s a method which he may or may not use. If God consistently acts a certain way, it becomes a pattern.


We are going to look at, in this study, what I believe are five steps in the pattern of power; five clearly defined aspects of the way that God displays his power through human beings. I will give you an overview of this pattern, then we will look at each aspect individually. My goal continues to be that every one of us will learn how we can become Significant Servants, experiencing the power of God as we do his work.


The Pattern


The important thing to remember is that pattern for divine power begins and ends with God. There is something required of us if we want to see God at work in our lives, but the process does not start with us. It is God’s power, God’s purposes and God’s plan that are primary in all the great acts of God. While we study what we must do it is important that we also remember that ultimately, it all depends on him.


The First Step


The first step in the process is the revelation of the purpose of God. Since Creation, there are certain purposes that God has been working out in this world. He works in all things to glorify himself. He displays his power in this world to redeem a people for himself and transform them to be like Jesus Christ. He is always at work to accomplish his eternal purposes.


When God appeared to Noah, he revealed his purpose. “I am going to judge the world.” To Abram, God said that he wanted to make him the father of many nations, bless him greatly and bless the world through him. He told Moses that he was ready to deliver the people from their bondage in Egypt. In each of these situations, God revealed his purpose to the man he was going to use to carry out that purpose.


There are certain purposes which seem to govern all of what God does on this earth. There are other times when the purpose is more specific. But God is always at work to accomplish his sovereign purposes on this earth. Amos 3:7 makes an interesting statement. “For the Lord God does nothing without revealing his secret to his servants the prophets.” God reveals himself to his people as he prepares to do his work.


We will examine the purposes of God here on earth and learn how we can bring ourselves in line with them. We must bring our lives onto God’s agenda; to work in line with the eternal purposes of God. God does not release his power so that we can accomplish our own desires or ambitions. He displays his power through his servants for his own purposes.


The Second Step


In each of the stories mentioned above, there was a second part to what God revealed. First, he revealed his own purpose. Then, he revealed his plan for the man he intended to use. His purpose was to flood the earth. The plan was for Noah to build a boat. God’s purpose was to rescue Israel. God’s plan was for Moses to go to Egypt to face Pharaoh. God reveals his plan and then shows us what our part in that plan is.


I have been told often that a good leader today needs creativity and the ability to innovate. That sounds great, but it is not a concept I find in scripture. There is not a single story I can find where God appears to anyone and says, “Here’s what I want to do. Do you have any good ideas how I can make it happen?” He did not ask Noah how big the boat should be. He did not consult Joshua for his ideas about a war strategy. God revealed both the purpose and the method.


That is going to be hard for many of us to accept. We want God to bless our ideas. God seems to want us to obey him. He had infinite creativity and the ability to come up with brilliant plans to accomplish his work. We need to read scripture to find God’s ways. We cannot improve on the way God wants things done no matter how modern we think our ideas are. And we cannot improve on the work of the Holy Spirit within us guiding us to the plans God has for us. Our job is not primarily to figure things out, but to seek God and do what he says.


The Third Step


It is here that the problem develops for a lot of believers. In the third step, the servant must decide whether he will serve. We must respond to God’s purposes and plans. God revealed his plan to Abraham, telling him to go to Mt. Moriah and sacrifice his beloved son Isaac. Genesis 22:3 says that early the next morning, Abraham set out on the trip. Moses argued with God for a while, but then packed up and headed to Egypt. Gideon took the army out to face the Midianites. They obeyed God. That is the key response any human being must have if we want to see the glory and power of God.


Americans have developed a widespread but false religion. Church-going folks all over this land believe that they can live and they please, ignore God’s will and ways, embrace the ways of sin and still expect God to bless them when they have a need. Look at how the prophets define a false prophet. A false prophet was someone who offered people peace with God and blessing from him without requiring repentance and obedience. Any prophet who told people that they could continue in their sin and still expect the blessing of God was condemned as a lying prophet.


The same principle is true today. Do not expect to see the power of God at work in your life if you do not submit yourself to him. As a matter of fact, there is only one kind of person who can expect the power of God – a dead person. Romans 6:4, which I quote every time I baptize someone, makes it clear. “We were buried with Christ by baptism into death, then raised to walk a new life in him.” It is only when we die with Christ that we can expect a new life in his power. In Romans 12:1, Paul told us to present our bodies as living sacrifices. Jesus told us to take up our crosses to follow him. Both of those figures imply death.


It is only when I die to my life, to my own will, my own ambitions, my own plans and dreams that I can hope to experience the power of God. He does not work to make us successful in the lives we want to have. He works to use us in the life he has prepared for us. If you want the life of God you must die to self. Its just that simple.


The Fourth Step


This is the step that has sometimes tripped me up. When I submit to God, I expect everything to work out immediately. But Abraham had to wait 25 years for the promise of God to come true. Moses herded sheep for forty years until God showed up. Joseph was told he would be a ruler, but went through 13 years of betrayal and imprisonment before God elevated him to the place he had prepared for him.


After we yield to God’s purposes and plans for us, there is often a time of testing. During this time, circumstances will often conspire to call the word of God into question and make it seem like what he said must not be coming true. This is where the second key quality of the Significant Servant is revealed. The first key quality is obedience. The second is perseverance. The servant of God must do what he says. Then, he must continue doing it when it gets hard, when it seems like God’s word has failed, when everyone around him thinks he has lost his mind. He must persevere in the will of God, disregarding circumstances until God brings the harvest, until God fulfills his word.


The Fifth Step


When God reveals his purposes and his plans for us, when we do what God says and keep doing it when it gets hard, that is when the power of God will be revealed in us. We become Significant Servants by yielding our lives completely to Christ, dying to self and living to God, whatever comes.


That is the pattern that I see in scriptures. We will examine each of these in detail in coming chapters. These are not easy steps. In essence, they require everything we are and have. But if we wish to be significant servants in the kingdom of God, this is the irreducible minimum. We cannot see the power of God until we die to self. We cannot walk in sin and God’s power at the same time. My hope and prayer is that you will decide to present your body to God as a living sacrifice; the only acceptable act of worship any of us can really give. Then, you will stop conforming to this world and experience God’s transformational power. You can become a significant servant for the glory of God.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

WOW! Words of Wisdom from "Between the Times"

If you only have time to read one blog (after you finish mine, of course) that blog almost certainly should be "Between the Times." I read something by Bruce Ashford on that blog today that was classic. He was talking about Christian Bookstores (I use the term loosely). Talking about Augustine, he said,

Another reason might be that the local bookstores don’t even have an Augustine section (True, Barnes & Noble and Borders carry books by Augustine, but Christian bookstores rarely do. The Christian stores are up to their necks in sales of Precious Moments figurines, tester tubes of anointing oil, boxes of Test-a-mints, and tee-shirts with inscriptions like “I’m Cross-Eyed.”)

Wow! Christian bookstores sell more Christian junk than they do serious books. Probably says something abou the tastes of modern Christians, right?

Significant Servants, August 16, 2009

(This is a new sermon series I am beginning. I am hoping to manuscript this and put the messages up here on a weekly basis. We'll see how it goes.)


Some Significant Servants


God made us for his glory, but we chose sin instead of submission. As humanity spread out across the earth, idolatry and wickedness abounded. Finally, God had enough. He decided to send a flood on the earth to judge the widespread sin. But he was not through with humanity, he was only starting over. So, God appeared to one lonely man, one righteous man among all the men of earth. God revealed his plans to Noah, and then assigned a job for him to do. It was no easy job. “I want you to build a boat.” And this was one big boat – 450 feet long, 75 feet wide and 45 feet high. That is one and a half football fields long (we Americans always measure things in football-field units). And remember, there was no Home Depot available to him for materials. Every board had to be cut down and shaped by hand. It was a long and difficult job.


We can only imagine what others thought of Noah as he built. According to scripture, it did not rain and yet Noah was predicting a flood that would cover the earth and destroy all things. But Noah was not distracted, nor was he discouraged. He did not give up. He kept on doing the job God gave him day after day. When the time was right, God sent the animals to Noah and the floods to the earth.


What did Noah do? Exactly what God told him to do. What did Noah accomplish? By being obedient and faithfully obeying God, Noah preserved the entire human race to give humanity a new beginning, a fresh start.


Abraham


Abraham was a man of means, and evidently a good man, but at age 75 he had done little that would make him an important historical figure. He did not even have children to carry on his name. He would have lived and died without ever making a difference in this world if it had not been for a fateful day when God appeared to him. God told him to leave home, leave family and go to the new land which God would show him.


That is when God told him the kicker. God was not only sending him to a new home, but he was going to make Abraham the father of many nations. He was going to pour out his rich blessings on this elderly, childless man in ways Abraham could not imagine. And, God said, Abraham and his seed were going to be a blessing to the entire world. God was going to use an obscure nomad to bless the entire world.


What did Abraham have to do? Obey. He had to leave home and go where God told him to go. When God asked him, he had to be willing to give up the one thing he loved most in the world, his son Isaac. Abraham did what God said, and God made him into one of the most important figures in world history and blessed him as the father of many nations. The blessing that Abraham received has been passed on, for from him was born the Messiah, the one anointed by God to die for our sins and bring us to God. If you are a believer today, you live in the blessing of Abraham. What did the desert dweller of Ur accomplish? He blessed the entire world.


Moses


Moses was one of the tragic failures of history. Born to a Hebrew slave and adopted by the daughter of the Pharaoh of Egypt, he was in a unique position to help his people. It seems likely that his mother, hired by Pharaoh’s daughter as Moses’ nurse, must have told him exactly who he was. Moses knew God had put him in a place of influence to use him in a powerful way. And he blew it; blew it bad. Enamored of his own abilities, depending on his own wisdom and abilities, he struck down an Egyptian and had to flee for his life. He spent the next 40 years herding sheep in Egypt, ruminating about what might have been, on how much he could have accomplished, if he hadn’t blown it so bad.


Then, one day, God showed up; in a bush, a bush that was blazing with fire but not being consumed. And he revealed to Moses what he was planning to do. It was time to rescue Israel, to bring them out of their bondage and into the Promised Land. I am sure Moses was thrilled to hear that the time had come for Israel to be delivered. He was not thrilled when God told him his part in the plan. Moses was argued with God, offering five different excuses why God had chosen the wrong man. But God revealed his name to Moses – “I Am that I Am” the Great I Am, the self-existent God of the universe with all power, all glory and all ability. And Moses trusted him. He trusted and obeyed. There is no such thing as genuine trust that does not lead to obedience. He left his home in the desert and headed down to Egypt to face the Pharaoh.


When he got there, everything went wrong and within a day he was the enemy of Pharaoh and anathema to all the Hebrews. But he did not stop. He kept going to Pharaoh and demanding that he let the people of God go free – one lonely man trying to tell the most powerful man in the world what to do.


But you know the rest of the story. That one lonely man had the power of God working on his behalf. Ten Plagues, culminating in the Death Angel ravaging Egypt, convinced Pharaoh to release the Hebrews. Then, when their backs were to the sea and Pharaoh’s army was descending on them, when certain death awaited them, God did something spectacular; a miracle perhaps only topped by raising Jesus from the dead. He parted the Red Sea, brought Israel through on dry ground and wiped out the enemy completely.


What did Moses do? He did exactly what God told him to do. What happened? God did amazing miracles, demonstrating his power not only to his people, but to the whole world.


Joshua


Joshua stood at the edge of the raging Jordan, and instructed the people of God how they were going to cross the flooding river. Four men were to take the ark, which represented the Presence of God, and were to walk into the Jordan – a suicidal act. But no one died that day. They did exactly as God said; they stepped down into the river and God made his own invisible dam, piling the water as it flowed from the north.


Not many days later, Joshua stood again outside Jericho, wondering how on earth they were going to defeat that walled city. The Angel of the Lord appeared to him with a battle plan. Joshua was to lead the people of God around Jericho once a day for six day, then seven times on the seventh day – not a plan most military institutes would recommend. But that is just what Joshua did. And, when they finished their thirteenth trip around Jericho, the walls came a-tumbling down and God’s people were victorious.


Joshua was a slave, an insignificant, worthless nobody. But when God called him, he responded. He did what God told him to do and God used him in to display his awesome power.


Others


Samuel listened when God called and was used to lead the people of Israel back to God. David went boldly where God sent him, even to face Goliath. Solomon built the temple exactly as God told him and the glory of the Lord filled the temple. Elijah and Elisha put themselves in God’s hands. They went where God sent them, did as God commanded and said what God told them to say. On Mt. Carmel, the fire of God fell! Hezekiah led the people in revival. Zerubbabel, Ezra and Nehemiah led Israel back from captivity and rebuilt a nation. All of them did what God said and saw God work.


And then, nothing! For 400 years God was silent until the day that Jesus was born. He lived in perfect obedience every moment of his life, right up until the moment he submitted himself to the Father’s eternal plan and he gave his life on the cross. Death could not hold him and he rose again, victorious over death and hell.


The Disciples


After forty days with his disciples, he was carried up into heaven and God went to work again. Jesus had gathered around himself a pitiful band of malcontents, misfits and outcasts – not a genius among them. And they were uniform in their cowardice. When Jesus needed them most, they all ran away and hid.


But, as pathetic as they were, they did the one thing that really matters, they gave themselves to Jesus. Jesus was their life. And one day, everything changed for the 12 disciples and the other followers of Christ. Gathered together in an Upper Room, God sent the Holy Spirit and baptized every one of them. They became the leaders of a spiritual shock-and-awe offensive from heaven that turned the world upside down in 30 years. This obscure Jewish sect became a worldwide movement in one generation.


They were not talented men. They were average; perhaps, a little below average. But they gave themselves to Jesus and Jesus demonstrated himself through them.


Two Facts


I would like to make two statements of fact. I think they are obvious to any who would wish to look at the evidence. First of all, the Bible is filled with stories of God acting in power through average and ordinary folks, displaying his power through them. God did big things in the Bible. He performed mighty acts of power. He used insignificant, average people to do extraordinary things. People like you and me ended up doing things that no one could imagine.

Here’s my second statement of fact. We do not see much of that kind of power today. Oh, there are big name televangelists who have these big stadium shows, but I continue to believe that most of that is about as real as Penn and Teller or Criss Angel. Magician’s tricks. We have impressive church CEO’s who build megachurches by the force of their personality and organizational skill, but this can hardly be compared to the amazing acts of God in biblical days. We often substitute human effort, organization, strategy and promotion, even manipulation, instead of the mighty work of God.


In this new study, we are going to examine a crucial question. Why? Why is it that we do not see the power of God in these days as they did in the days of scripture? Think about the most amazing act of God you have ever seen. How did it compare to the amazing works recorded in scripture? If we are honest, I think most of us will admit that there is a huge gap between what we see and what the people of biblical days saw.


Three Explanations for the Absence of Power


I see three options to explain this.


First, some would suggest that the stories of the Bible are just fictional accounts, meant to communicate spiritual truth, but not meant to be taken as literal or historical accounts. We know that Jack Sprat and his wife worked together, using their special talents, to get the job done. But no one tries to do historical or archaeological research on the story. Its just a nursery rhyme. There are some who treat Bible stories that way. We can learn lessons from the stories of the Bible, but we should not real life to mimic that in these fictional accounts.


That is a solution I do not accept. I believe the stories of the Bible are true from beginning to end. I believe God created the world by the word of his mouth. I believe Noah road out the flood on an ark he built. I believe the Red Sea parted, the Jordan stopped, Jericho’s walls crumbled and the fire fell from heaven on Elijah’s offering. I believe Jesus walked on water, fed 5000, healed the sick and raised the dead. So, by faith as well as by the reason of the evidence I have, I believe that the Bible stories are accounts of real events that happened to real people who served a real God.


There is a second option, one I was taught in seminary. Many believe that the age of the miraculous, the time when God did things like he did them in the biblical days is over. Sometimes, they say the end came with the destruction of the temple in AD 70 and the elimination of the Jewish nation. Others claim the end came when the canon of scripture was completed and the miraculous was no longer necessary. It is not right, they say, to expect that God would do the same miracles now that he did then.


I think there is some wisdom in what these folks (called cessationists) say. I believe there was a special release of God’s power on a grand scale at certain times. The bulk of scripture covers a 2000 year period (Abraham to the time of Christ). During that 2000 years, most of the spectacular miracles of the Bible took place in three relatively short time frames. The greatest of the miracles took place during the Exodus and the Conquest of Canaan, a period that lasted well less than 100 years. Then, when Israel departed from YHWH to worship idols, God sent prophets like Elijah and Elisha to warn them, and did many miracles through those two men. Finally, most of the New Testament takes place during a relatively short period of time – about 35 years from the ministry of Christ through the end of Paul’s ministry. Even if you go back to Christ’s birth and forward to the Revelation at the end of the first century, we are only talking about 100 years.


In other times, God did miracles, just not with the frequency or dramatic intensity of those three times. But, God still acted in power. The people of God saw the power of God on a regular basis. And there is no scripture that tells us that we should expect the powerful activity of God to end. Should we not expect some kind of verse in 2 Timothy saying, “Thou shalt expect that miracles will end as soon as each apostle dieth. When the last apostle dieth, the flow of God’s power shutteth off.” If the constant display of the power of God seen from Genesis to Revelation was going to end, shouldn’t we have been given some sort of clear warning?


There is one other option. In just about every miracle God did in the Bible, he involved a human being. There was something the human being had to do before the miracle took place. Obviously, the power is God’s. The will is God’s. But he has chosen to include us and our obedient responses in the work he does. Noah had to build the boat. Abraham had to leave home and go where God said. Later, he put his own son on the altar as God commanded. Moses had to go to Egypt. God revealed himself then made a demand of obedience to the person he was working with. The power of God was only released when the man of God did what God said.

Is it possible that there is something required of us that we are not doing? Is it possible that if we wish to see the power of God as they did in Bible days that we must respond in obedience as they did in Bible days – putting their lives at risk to do what God told them to do. Is there a pattern we can see in the way God works, a pattern we could emulate today so that the power of God might be released in us?


I believe that there is. I believe that as we examine the great works of God in both the Old Testament and the New Testament, we will see a clear pattern emerge. Its not a simple pattern or an easy one. We will not see “Five Easy Steps to Miraculous Power.” But I do believe there is a pattern in the activity of God that we can discern and follow. If we do as they did, perhaps we can expect to begin to see the same God who worked in them at work in us!


Great Works of God


What are these great works of God from which we will derive our pattern? I would mention fifteen of them, though we could probably add more. The first great work of God was done through Noah and The Flood. We will then examine Abraham and the founding of the miraculous nation of Israel and follow that with Joseph and the rescue of Israel. The next great works were the grand works of the Exodus, followed by the Conquest of Canaan. During the period of the Judges, God acted powerfully through Gideon to save Israel from the Midianites. Later, Samuel heard God and led Israel in a great revival. We will examine David and the founding of Israel’s Messianic line, and Solomon’s building of the Temple on which the Glory of God fell. Many years later, Hezekiah led Judah in a revival that staved off God’s judgment for many years. After the judgment fell, God still worked. He worked powerfully through Daniel and his three friends, and then used Ezra, Nehemiah and others to bring Israel back to the land. In the New Testament era, we can look at Pentecost and the establishment of the church and how the church obeyed the Great Commission.


I believe that as we examine these, we will see a definite pattern develop.


Three Essential Elements


In each of these stories you will see three essential elements. We will actually spell out more than three, but these are the essential and fundamental elements of the activity of God in scripture.


First, we will see God reveal his purpose. Every work of God is initiated in the heart of God. He did not appear to Noah to ask Noah for his ideas about how to handle things. God was working out his sovereign purpose and revealed that to Noah. God is the one who initiates things. God only blesses what he initiates.


Second, we will see God demand a response of obedience from those whom he includes in his work. What would have happened if Moses did not go to Egypt? I don’t know. I imagine God would have found someone else. But the fact is, God did not appear magically to Pharaoh. He called on Moses to represent him. Every great work of God requires an act of obedience by some human being. I do not know why God has chosen to work this way, but it is clear that he has.


Finally, when God reveals his purpose and someone responds in complete obedience, God responds in mighty power. Divine initiation followed by human obedience brings the release of God’s sovereign power.


My Thesis


Many Christians today have accepted the idea that it is okay to live insignificant Christian lives. They can go to church, sit in the pews and go about enjoying life in this world without worrying about Kingdom work. It is a lie. God never intended for Christians to squander their lives in worldly pursuits. We are meant to serve God in significant ways.


My hope is that everyone who reads this will pray this prayer. “Lord, help me to examine your scriptures and see how I can become a Significant Servant to you.”

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Blogging about Something Important: The New York Yankees


Blogging about the SBC can get old. But blogging about the New York Yankees NEVER gets old. So, I've set up a new blog, for all you Yankee fans out there. We will devote ourselves to talking about the greatest single sports team in all of history, the New York Yankees, and their march to their 27th World Series Championship in 2009.

You are welcome to come and comment, though comments by Red Sox fans (even intelligent ones - if there is such a thing) may be deleted or ridiculed mercilessly by the blog administrator!

NAMB? Whatever.
Baptist Identity? Who Cares?

The New York Yankees - theres something we can rejoice about!

Go Ahead, Make Fun Now!

Go ahead! Have your fun! I already get teased for having four blogs. Now, I have five. This one is close to my heart!

On this blog, we will discuss the greatest team in sports history, the New York Yankees, on their way to a 27th World Championship in 2009.

You are welcome to comment, but I reserve the right to delete hateful Red Sox' comments - or, frankly, any comment by a Red Sox Fan, whether hateful or now.

http://iowayankees.blogspot.com