03

Jump Start # 3569

Jump Start # 3569

Psalms 121:1-2 “I will lift up my eyes to the mountains; from whence shall my help come? My help comes from the Lord, who made the Heaven and the earth.”

Our passage for today is one that has comforted so many through the years. I think of the soldier years ago, on the battlefront, bullets whizzing by, the blast of bombs thundering through the sky, scared and seeing the signs of death all around him, he calls upon the Lord to help him. I think of the young mother who sits beside her small child who lays in a hospital bed, with tubes and IVs and medical staff in and out and she wonders if her child will make it. She calls upon the Lord for help. I think of the weary preacher who feels that he is no longer needed. He senses a movement to push him out and he is scared and not sure what to do. He calls upon the Lord for help.

Some thoughts for us:

First, no one truly sees your situation and circumstances as well as the Lord does. Sometimes even our perspective doesn’t show the total picture. God knows. We tend to slant things our direction and make things favorable towards us. God knows. And, when no one else fully understands, or worse, cares, God does. When no one else can help, God can. When people give up and declare that nothing more can be done, God knows better. My help comes from the Lord. What a blessing to know someone is there.

Second, the help that the Lord gives may not be exactly what I wanted or even anticipated, but since it is from the Lord, it will always be right. I want God to remove troubles. God may want me to walk through them to learn some great character lessons. I want God to put distance between me and the people that causes me stress. God may want me to be in those circles to let my light shine. I want sunshine and God may realize that I need rain. I want things easy and God may know that I need the difficult. I want everyone to like me and God may realize that isn’t best for me.

God helps but we may not recognize it because we are looking in the wrong direction. We’ve made up our minds how God ought to do things. And, when God sends a Titus, as in 2 Cor 7 rather than removing the troubles in Paul’s life, we may look right past him. We may wonder why God doesn’t answer our prayers. We may think God doesn’t hear or worse, God doesn’t care. God helps.

Third, what God is really after is the salvation of our souls and our devotion and trust in Him. Getting us back on our feet is fine, but that’s little good if one doesn’t keep looking to Heaven. The Psalmist looked to Heaven when he needed help. How about when he didn’t need help? How about when things were going well in his life? God doesn’t want us to use Him just because there are no other options. God doesn’t want us crying to Him for help and then forgetting all about Him afterwards. What about worship? Will I worship before, during and after the troubles? What about trusting God? Faith and obedience are the two sides of the same coin. Don’t talk about faith and trust, if one is going to ignore what God says.

Romans 8:28 is a wonderfully misused passage. There the apostle states that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose. This is not Heaven’s one-a-day vitamin for everyone. There are two qualifiers in this verse. First, the working for good. Whose good? My good? God’s good? Going to the pig pen wasn’t good for the prodigal, but it was, because it broke his spirit and brought him home. A night in jail, a trip to the hospital, sleeping on the couch, a visit by the shepherds may all be viewed as bad things. But they may be the very things that brings about “good.” The good is the salvation of souls and the walking with the Lord.

Far too many see the “good” in Romans 8 as personal things. Good would be no surgery. Good would be no cancer. Good would be a raise. Good would be an extra week of vacation. And, what would those things bring? More selfishness? God’s good is a close fellowship with His creation.

The second qualifier in the Romans 8 passage is that it is intended for those who “love God and are called according to His purpose.” That’s not everyone. Not everyone loves God. Not everyone has answered the call of God. Using Romans 8 to anyone and everyone can be misleading and misusing Scripture.

Help from Heaven. It can come in many forms. It may come through the Sunday sermon. It may come from the conversation with another Christian. It may come as you quietly read God’s word. It may come in the form of a brother or sister in the congregation.

Help from Heaven. Looking to Heaven, knowing God is there and God is good, makes all the difference.

Roger

02

Jump Start # 3568

Jump Start # 3568

Matthew 13:33 “He spoke another parable to them, saying, ‘ The kingdom of Heaven is like leaven, which a woman took and hid in three pecks of flour until it was all leavened.”

Many of our readers know that I have a passion about restoration history. I’m like an old hound dog always on the search more books that I do not have about the early days of the church in this country. I have stood behind the very pulpit that Racoon John Smith preached from. Boy, I wanted to take that pulpit. I have given lectures at the famed Cane Ridge meeting house, where Barton W. Stone preached. I have dozens and dozens of books that were published in the 1800s. Some of those old books are getting close to being two hundred years old. And, while that seems old to us, there are people named in those books that someone knew, who later someone knew. Just a couple of generations later there is a direct connection.

For instance, my sweet dad passed away three years ago. I remember him telling me that when he was a boy, he met someone that had been in the Civil War. One generation, my dad, was a link between then and now. My sweet dad always had a fascination about the Civil War. He had a massive collection of books about the Civil War. As kids, our vacations often were going to Civil War battlefields. My dad’s great grandfather fought in the Civil War. The Civil War ended 159 years ago. That seems like a long time ago. Yet, I have a letter written from a family member during the Civil War. Hanging on an office wall at home is an original Indiana regiment poster from 1863 listing names and battles that unit was involved in.

The New Testament covers about 100 years. It is short in time. It is conceivable that 150 years after the N.T. was completed there were people whose parents met the apostles or possibly had even seen Jesus. There were multitudes and multitudes impacted by Jesus. The feeding of the 5,000 men, likely included a total of 10,000 to 20,000 people. More than five hundred saw the resurrected Jesus. Luke tells us that there were so many “thousands of people gathered together that they were stepping on one another” (12:1). So many people that saw Jesus. Those stories would have been passed down from generation to generation.

In our passage today, that tiny bit of leaven is worked into the bowl with flour and is baked and becomes a loaf of homemade bread. The leaven is tiny. It doesn’t take much. It does it’s work slowly. You’re not going to see a YouTube video of leaven working it’s way through flour. But you mix it up, leave it and come back after a while and it is ready to bake.

Jesus uses this common illustration to describe the growth process of the kingdom. It started small. It looked insignificant. But, in time, it influenced the world and changed the lives of thousands eternally.

And, the kingdom grows the same today. A person here. A person there. Step by step and in time, more and more and more and more. That leaven works through the hearts of people and changes them.

Some lessons for us:

First, don’t be discouraged by slow growth. Sometimes the rapid growth doesn’t last. With new people comes the responsibility of teaching them, helping them get grounded and finding a place for them in the fellowship. Just keep inviting. Just keep teaching. Just keep working that leaven into the world. When the Gospel intersects with good and honest hearts growth will take place.

Second, you and I have a story to tell. It’s not our story, it’s His story. We have different backgrounds, histories and baggage, yet we all come to Christ the same way. We believe that Gospel message. It changes our hearts. We know that the message is true. God has been good to us. God has been patient with us.

Third, the Gospel dropped into a world that was a wreck morally. And, our world is a wreck morally. We must remember that the light shines the brightest not in a well lit room, but in the darkest of places. As our world turns away from God, that Gospel message looks brighter and brighter each day.

One doesn’t need an armful of tracts, sit through a quarter of classes about premillennialism, denominationalism, Calvinism and all the other isms to tell people about Jesus. “What if they ask me something I don’t know?” Be honest and tell them you don’t know. Then go do your homework and find the answer. “What if they say, ‘No’?” Be kind and continue to be their friend. “What if they get aggressive and say unkind things?” Proverbs tells us not to answer a fool. So, don’t.

We ought to know the story of Jesus as if we had been in the audience listening to the Lord ourselves. A little leaven. Not a lot of leaven. Not all the leaven. But just a little bit and given time, it will work wonders. The Gospel is the same way.

Roger

01

Jump Start # 3567

Jump Start # 3567

Psalms 37:25 “I have been young and now I am old, yet I have not seen the righteous forsaken or his descendants begging bread.”

“What’s next?” That’s a common question asked as one heads into a new chapter of their life. A high schooler graduates and at the graduation party, he is asked, “What’s next?” Implying, are you going to college, getting a job, or what? At a retirement party, it’s asked, “What’s next?” No more getting up and fighting traffic to get to the office to work. Are you going to do some traveling? Are you picking up a little side job? What’s next?

What’s the next chapter of your life look like? Have you thought about that? This thought came to my mind as I watched the memorial service for Bob Owen. I sure liked that man. He was one of my teachers in college and a good friend. Always an encouragement and he especially befriended one of my sons.

At the age of 70, Bob Owen and a handful of other, “old” preachers traveled to Africa to help teach God’s word. This wasn’t a one and done deal. Owen made the trip to Africa nearly twenty-five times. He and others helped turn things around and left an amazing solid legacy there. All this was done in the autumn and winter of his life. At a time when many are looking for the recliner for a full day of TV, he traveled to places many wouldn’t go, ever.

And, that got me thinking about the next chapter in life. So often, we are so busy with the here and now that we don’t think about what life will be like with children, or as empty nesters, or as retirees. If God allows this old world to continue on, we will all have another chapter to our stories. Have you thought about that? What’s life going to look like when your spouse is on the other side of life? The next chapter.

Here are some thoughts:

First, unlike a book, we can’t read ahead and know what the next chapter will be like. I’ve sometimes jumped ahead in a book to read the final chapters and then worked back through the book. Life doesn’t allow you to do that. You can’t look into the crystal ball and know what that will be like.

You can look around at others in the church or your family who are a chapter ahead of you and see how they are doing. But each person’s circumstances are unique, so your story won’t be exactly the same.

Second, like most of the world, we can just wait until the next page is turned in our life and see what that brings, or we can takes some steps to prepare ourselves. There are some practical and physical things one can do such as getting important papers in order, leaving instructions for what you want done, having a will and getting your finances shaped up. But there are many more spiritual things you can do. With kids grown and raised, retired from a job, think what you can do for the kingdom. Can you travel and help a small congregation? Can you finance a preacher overseas? Can you go overseas with the intention of connecting and helping brethren? Can you be more available to your home congregation? You can do a deep dive into some heavy books of the Bible. You can encourage young disciples by having them in your home. Thinking ahead, making plans, getting things lined up for the next chapter in life can make that transition easier and it can make yourself more useful to the Lord.

Third, the next chapter in your life may open doors to volunteer and serve at places in the community. Before you are in that chapter, what interests you? Do some research and get to know some of the people who run those places. Make your face known. And, when the time comes, you might find a smooth and convenient way to offer your help. There are so many places that would love to have volunteers.

I’ve heard people say, “I gave forty years to the company, now, it’s my time to do what I want.” Not only does that sound extremely selfish, Biblically, is it ever our time? The next chapter in your life could be the most rewarding and beneficial chapter ever. You may find yourself doing things that you never dreamed of.

What does the next chapter of your life look like? Have you given that any thought? Maybe you should. The choices you are making today may shape what that chapter will look like. Don’t look at it just though what you want to do, but keep the kingdom in your vision.

The next chapter…it may be the best one yet!

Roger

30

Jump Start # 3566

Jump Start # 3566

Jonah 2:10 “Then the Lord commanded the fish, and it vomited Jonah up onto the dry land.”

Jonah and the whale, as it is commonly pictured, makes for great VBS material and kids Bible class lessons. But this isn’t a story for kids. Stuck in the midst of the prophets crying for repentance for a wayward nation, we find this four chapter book that is more about the prophet than it is his message or his audience.

Our verse today is intriguing to us. By itself, it shows the commanding nature of our God. But placed along side other passages, and we find, as the hymn says so well, “This is my Father’s world.” God commanded and the fish obeyed. The fish was more obedient than Jonah was.

  • Mark 4:39 finds the Lord and the disciples in a fierce storm on the sea. Awakened by the frightened disciples, Jesus rebuked the wind and said to the sea, “Be still. And the wind died down and it became perfectly calm.”
  • In Mark 5:8 Jesus is confronted with a man possessed with multiple demons. Jesus said, “Come out of the man, you unclean spirit.” A few verses later, “the unclean spirits entered the swine” (13).
  • In John 11:43 “Jesus cried out with a loud voice, ‘Lazarus, come forth.’ The man who had died came forth, bound hand and foot with wrappings…”

Are you seeing a thread running through these passages? A fish. The wind and the sea. Demons. The dead. God can talk to those we cannot. God can control what we cannot. God can command and they obey Him.

Here are some lessons for us:

First, while we live in God’s world, we are limited in what we can do. The weather doesn’t pay attention to us. Plan an outdoor wedding, and I always tell young couples, have plan B in mind, just in case. This is truly God’s world and all that is in it are subject to Him.

Second, the world is a tool of God to be used to fulfill His will. God is not limited. God is not bound by the things that control us. In Jonah, God caused a storm that kept growing in intensity. Once Jonah was pitched overboard, the storm immediately stopped. God caused a bright light to shine on Saul in Acts 9. God caused the sun to stand still in Joshua 10.

All of these things remind us that God is larger than nature. God is all powerful and God is in control.

Third, we must wonder if nature is more obedient to the Lord than we are? God commanded the fish to spit Jonah out. What if the fish disobeyed? What if the fish decided that Jonah was going to be his lunch. I tend to think that fish, storms, demons and even the dead do not have free will. God commands and they obey. Lazarus likely enjoyed being on the other side of life. Being in Abraham’s bosom, paradise, away from diseases and trouble, he was in true comfort. But the Lord brought him back. He had to fight temptation once again. One more time, he’d have to die. Given the choice, I’d expect Lazarus would rather stay where he was. But he wasn’t given that choice. The Lord called, and Lazarus obeyed.

Are storms and trees and mountains and birds more obedient to God than I am? Do I fight the commands of God? Do I find myself looking for a reason and an excuse not to do what God says? Made in the image of God, am I less obedient than the fish that swallowed Jonah?

These things ought to remind us that God is gracious to us. God causes His sun to shine upon us. God blesses us every day with a new day. Thankful. Respectful. Blessed. Obedient. That ought to be our nature and our character.

God commanded a fish…and that fish obeyed Him.

Roger

29

Jump Start # 3565

Jump Start # 3565

James 1:3 “knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance.”

God provides lessons for us every day if we have open eyes to see them. In a recent lesson about Developing Deep Roots, I used the illustration of tree rings. We’ve all seen a log or tree cut down and maybe as kids even counted the rings to see how old the tree was. The rings are not the same width. Some are very narrow and others are very wide. And, right there is a great spiritual principle for us. That tree was always growing. In wet seasons, it grew a lot. In droughts, it grew, but not nearly as much. The rings were narrow. However, the tree grew.

And, before us is a lesson we need to take to heart. We must always be growing closer to the Lord. There are seasons when that is easy. Life is going well. Great preaching. Good fellowship. Lots of opportunities. Our spiritual rings ought to show a lot of growth. Yet, in the dry seasons of life, when there has been a lot of heartache and hardships, still our spiritual ring gives evidence of growth. We have grown when it was hard to grow.

Our verse today magnifies that idea. In testing, your faith still produces. It produces endurance. Your faith continues to grow, even when it is hard to grow. There has been a family crisis and tragedy, yet you have grown spiritually. Things down at the church house have not been pleasant, yet you grew. Fellowship has been strained and nearly broken, and still you grew. The preacher is fired. Elders resign. People leave. Things have been said that should never have been said. Through that you have still grown spiritually.

I’ve known people who buried a spouse on a Friday and on Sunday they were sitting in the church house worshipping God. Growing through trials and troubles.

Some lessons for us:

First, our growth is dependent upon us. Some have simply stopped growing. Some have a stunted growth. They got through the basics, but decades later, they don’t know nor act much beyond the basics. Preachers need to continue to grow. Shepherds need to continue to grow. All of this begins with the attitude and spirit of learning. I have learned so much from younger preachers in recent years. I am amazed at their insights into the Scriptures. Now, I could use my age and years of experience and try to intimidate them, but why would I do that? They are helping me grow and I’m thankful for that.

Why have some stopped growing? They just did. Busy lifestyles. Dysfunctional churches. Poor leadership. Lots of ways we could pin this on others, but the truth is, through all of those things, some have continued to grow. The dry seasons, wet seasons, fires, diseases, that ole’ tree kept growing and growing. And, so must we.

Second, some will use a difficult season for a reason to stop growing. I just can’t right now, because mama died. And, they hang their hat on that nail for years and years. Some of the greatest lessons come from challenges, trials and even troubles. We see things in the darkness that we never see in the sunlight. If we only grow when things are going well, then large sections of our lives will have no growth. We would have learned nothing through adversity. The trials that come upon us will have no positive impact. Endurance will not be part of our character simply because we refused to see lessons and grow during difficult times.

Our culture doesn’t do well with hard times. We need pills to deal with anxiety and animals to give us support. Sometimes those things are necessary, but only sometimes. A good ole’ dose of hardship, hard times and trials and troubles can really help our character more than any animal or medicine can provide. The ole’ tree grows through storms, droughts, fires and hard times. And, so much our faith.

Third, those dark valleys of the shadow of death can certainly frighten us. But knowing that the Lord is with us and that we are passing through, and not staying there ought to provide hope and strength. The story of David in 1 Samuel 30:6 is a powerful reminder about spiritual growth. David had been chased around the countryside by Saul. His life was constantly in danger. He and his men finally make it home only to find their homes burned and their families kidnapped. David’s men were so distraught that they considered stoning David. In this passage, we learn, “David strengthened himself in the Lord.”

There are times when you need to do that. Don’t count on Saul helping you. He’ll try to discourage you. Don’t count on those around you to help you. They have rocks in their hands, ready to throw at you. But David strengthened himself. There may be times when brethren let you down. The shepherds don’t call. The preacher doesn’t come and see you. Deeper and deeper you get discouraged. You can let yourself fall to the bottom, or you can strengthen yourself. You pray. You get to worship. You open that Bible. You know what the Lord has promised. You pull yourself up and you get going again. And, oh, the lessons you will learn. You can be a stronger and better person because of that. You can, if you allow yourself. Or, you can become bitter towards every one and use that experience to hurt people.

Tree rings—the sign of growth. What do your spiritual rings show? Are you always growing?

Roger