16

Jump Start # 996

Jump Start # 996

Proverbs 30:18 “There are three things which are too wonderful for me, four which I do not understand.”

  The book of Proverbs contains lists. We love lists. There are lists for about everything. The best restaurants; the greatest Christmas songs; the 10 movies of all time; the 10 places you must visit before you die; the 10 greatest sport finishes, and on and on and on the lists go. Everywhere you look there are lists. Here in Proverbs there are a series of lists.

 

Earlier in Proverbs there was a list of seven things that God hates. Now in this chapter we find this series of lists: four things that will not say “enough” (15); four things which I do not understand (18); four things which the earth cannot bear (21); four small things that are exceedingly wise (24); and,  four things that are stately when they walk (29).

 

In each of these, the Proverb writer begins by saying there are three things, then he ups the number to four. This is done for emphasis and is common in Hebrew poetry. It is not that he just remembered another one to add to the list, this was intentional.

 

Our hymn, “Count your many blessings, name them one by one,” is a way of making a spiritual list. Priorities are based upon a mental list. We tend to get do first, what is most important. Parents work hard on getting their children to live by priorities instead of just what they feel like doing. The lazy college student often doesn’t feel like getting out of bed and heading to class, so he won’t. Often, he would rather play video games than crack open his book. He is not just setting himself up for an uphill struggle in that class, he is learning to only do what he feels like. Later on, there will be many things that he does not feel like doing, and if he hasn’t changed, he won’t do them. Priorities. Lists. What is most important.

 

We see the same things when it comes to worship. There are some who can never make it on time. I understand, especially with a family, and traffic and weather, that there are times a person is going run behind. Some always do. It doesn’t matter what the weather, traffic or anything else. They are always, always late. Their lateness disrupts class, throws the teacher off, and they miss things that are important. What’s the issue there? Get to bed earlier on Saturday night? Don’t drink caffeine after a certain hour? Set the alarm clock? No. It’s a matter of what is important to them. Lists. Getting down to the church house before things start isn’t high on the list. In fact, for some, it doesn’t even make the list.

 

Have you made a list of what is important to you spiritually? That would be a great thing to do. Better yet, after you make your list, share your list with your mate. See if his or her list is the same as yours. Without knowing it, we push ourselves according to our lists. The athlete will drive and drive himself, even when he hurts, because practice and being in shape is high on his list. Others will practice and practice a song, going over the same song, dozens and dozens of time, because they want to sing it the best they can. Why do they do that? It’s high on their list. Without even having a written list, we live by a list. That list is what we feel is important. Each day, we think about that list. We get up early when our bodies want to stay in bed, because of our list. We stay up late, when we are ready to go to bed, because of that list. Everyone has one, most just don’t realize it.

 

Here are some things to consider, since we are talking about lists. These are spiritual items that go near the top of our lists:

 

1. Getting to Heaven. What’s the point of anything else, if we miss this? This ought to be number one all the time. This will shape our choices, defines our attitudes, and build our character. Gotta get to Heaven. If living godly is part of that, then guess what? We’ll live godly. If worship is part of that, then we’ll worship. Once this moves off of the number one spot, everything else in our life becomes readjusted.

 

2. Pleasing God now. Putting this high on the list will help you keep getting to Heaven number one. Pleasing God. You think about that after you have a verbal meltdown with someone. You think, “I shouldn’t have said all that.” You have returned to your list. You remembered that pleasing God was important. You’ll apologize to God first, and then the person you destroyed verbally. Please God.

 

3. Making a difference for others. This ought to be high on our lists. So many folks can use you. Christianity is not a white collar, think-tank type of religion. It is a roll up your sleeves, blue collar, get your hands dirty type of faith. It’s helping people like Jesus did—all types. The lepers, the Samaritans, the Zaccheus’ of this world. This isn’t a big thing nor is it something that others will know about. It’s being there for a friend. It’s helping a neighbor. It’s lending your Saturday to help someone move. It’s babysitting in a pitch for a mom who needs to take another child to the doctor. It’s handing someone some money. It’s staying late at work to get a project done. It’s going above the call of duty. It’s a phone call across state lines to a friend who is concerned about his teenager. It’s a friend who shows up with a housewarming gift. It’s seeing someone from church coming to sit with you in the hospital waiting room. It’s going to the mailbox and finding a sweet note that touches your heart. It’s Christmas cookies taken to a neighbor. Making a difference is walking where Jesus walked. It’s putting self on hold. It’s walking away from the ball game because someone could use a hand. When this is high on our list, we look for opportunities. We are on the search for people we can do things for. Sure it’s tiring. Sure there are days you want to be on the receiving end. But you keep doing it. Why? It’s on your list. It’s important. It’s important to you. When it’s not on our list, all we think about is ourselves. We don’t see others. We walk right by them. We don’t hear the announcements in church. We don’t see the needs at work. All we see is self. It’s not some are just too busy, nor that they have a small family, nor that they are in school. Not at all. The problem is that helping others has never made their list. Without being on the list, they won’t move.

 

Priorities. Lists. What’s important to you. That’s what we are talking about. These three, Getting to Heaven, Pleasing God, and Making a difference to others—will shape and mold our lives. These three are the big difference.

 

What is important to you? Give it some thought. Do some adjusting. Get your order in order.

 

Roger

 

13

Jump Start # 995

Jump Start # 995

2 Corinthians 9:15 “Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift!”

  This is the season for gifts. Many are busy purchasing gifts that we hope will bring joy and happiness to another person. Sometimes we wonder if the gift will even be remembered a year later. Some people are easy to buy for. Others are hard.

Our passage today reminds us of the best gift of all, Salvation. The Ephesians were told that grace is a gift of God. Let us never forget that God does not owe us salvation. He doesn’t have to forgive us. Also, let us never forget that gifts come with condition, responsibilities and they ought to generate a true thankfulness from our hearts. Without God’s gift, Heaven would not be possible. Without God’s gift we would all be lost. God took us, not when we were the poster children of obedience, but just the opposite. While we were yet sinners, the Romans were told, Christ died for us. One of the greatest verses in all the Bible, “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son…” God gave.

Two thoughts I want to share:

First, God gave the best that He had. He didn’t send an angel for us. He didn’t send another person for us, He sent His son, the Best of Heaven. God didn’t go cheap for us. The blood of Jesus is precious. The gift of Christ was costly—He died upon the cross. No one should ever feel that they have been cheated or overlooked by God. Christ died for all. The gift is available for all. That is the only gift ever that has been for all people of all time. I watched a college football game a few days ago. During halftime, two young people were chosen to throw as many footballs as they could into a target. The winner got a check for $100,000 to be used for their college. That was an amazing gift. It went to only one person. I have put four kids through college. I didn’t get $100,000 for that. I wonder how many watching that game could not go to college because of the expense. That gift was limited. God’s is not like that. The man who walked the streets of London 200 years ago, the person that ate the loaves and fish that Jesus multiplied, the college professor in America, the African that was taken aboard a slave ship in the 1700’s and brought to another country would have never met each other. They lived in different time periods and their world was very different. Their language, dress, and needs were different. However, God’s gift was for each of them. God’s gift is as new in the days of Jesus as it is for you and I today. It is never out dated, nor out of place. God gave you the best. God gave you Christ.

The second thought from this is that the best gift we can give is not found in a store. The gift of time, friendship, love and caring. The gift of listening. The gift of compassion. The gift of touch. Our consumerism often compels us to sink deep into debt this time of year because we have to get the “right” gift. The best gift is you. Consider taking a moment and writing down a heartfelt thank you to someone who has made a difference in your life. Maybe you have never said that to your parents. Maybe there was a friend in the past who stuck with you or a mentor that made a difference in your life. There may have been an friend who helped you when you were down spiritually. They stuck with you and believed in you. They poured time into you. It helped. Look where you are today. Many of us would not be where we are if it wasn’t for that person. Tell them thank you. Take the time to have lunch with someone who is special to you. The gift of you is one of the greatest gifts. Life is precious and short. Most of us have more than enough stuff. What we really need and want is love shared and friendship expressed. Consider visiting someone in the congregation. Spend some time with them. The days of “visiting” are nearly gone. A younger generation has never seen the value of it. Young folks making cookies and visiting older members is timeless. The love, laughter and joy is one of the best gifts received.

This time of year is busy. There is a lot going on. Carving out time for one another is well worth it. It is something that will long be remembered.

God gave His best. The best that we can give is our selves. There is a connection.

Live as if you have one foot already in Heaven!

Roger

 

12

Jump Start # 994

Jump Start # 994

Jude 22-23 And have mercy on some, who are doubting; save others, snatching them out of the fire; and on some have mercy with fear, hating even the garment polluted by the flesh.”

 

Jude is a very graphic writer. He doesn’t use flowery words or nice poetic rhythm in his short book. He’s in your face, blunt, plain, and obvious. Our verse today is one illustration of that. Jude is telling his audience how they should treat others. These folks were not in the same place spiritually. Some were doubting. Some were nearly gone. Some were polluted with sin.

The natural reaction would be to avoid them. We are good at that. When the discussion gets to a place that we do not like, we avoid further talk but switching subjects or walking away. When there is someone that we particularly do not like, we avoid them. We ignore them, do not invite them, and walk past them. We avoid controversy. Some things are messy and we simply do not like messes. Jude was telling his readers to be different. Avoidance was not the theme here. Mercy and snatching are the words here. That  implies contact and being involved.

Mercy on those doubting. Mercy is a common word that people said to Jesus. The two blind men, the ten lepers, the father of the demon possessed boy—all appealed for mercy from Jesus. Relief. Help. Mercy implies forgiveness. It was a common thought that sins brought about pain and suffering. Instead of asking for sight, the blind men asked for mercy. Get forgiveness and the consequence, in their case, blindness, would go away. Give us mercy, they asked Jesus.

 

Jude is now telling brethren, ‘have mercy on those who doubt.’ Not direction I would have anticipated. Mercy carries the idea of patience. Don’t be short with those who doubt. Don’t walk away from them so quickly. Help them. Show them. Teach them. Have mercy on them.

 

Jude then says, ‘save others, snatching them out of the fire.’ I have a good friend who is a fire fighter. Josh is amazing. When he is in the zone talking about fire safety or what he does, he is passionate and driven. He instructs others who are learning to be fire fighters. Snatching others out of the fire—what a powerful expression. Jude is not talking about camp fires, arson, houses burning or anything like that. The fire he has in mind is the fires of Hell. Save them. Snatch them out. This is done by reminding them, teaching them, guiding them.

 

The work of saving from the fire is tough work. The heat of the fire, the danger of death, the closeness of losing one makes this work intense and urgent. Many do not realize that they are so close to the fire. Many do not recognize that their souls are nearly gone. They have ignored God and built a life based upon the pleasures of now and the fires of destruction will overcome them unless they are saved. Snatched. I’ve never stuck my hand in fire to pull something out, but that’s the image. Something is in that fire that shouldn’t be there. Something is worth saving. Here, it’s souls.

 

While there is breath in the body, there is always hope. Don’t give up on anyone. Don’t stop trying. When one door is shut, look for another. When one approach didn’t work, find another. Snatch them. Reach into that fire with the hope of Christ. There is a better life. There is a life that ends in Heaven rather than the fire. There is a life that is filled with joy and hope. Fire destroys. Fire ruins. Fire hurts.

 

These graphic words don’t fit too well in our “everyone is ok” society. Recognizing someone is in the fire, means that you recognize someone is wrong. It means you want them to be where you are. It means you want them to change. Reach into that fire. It’s hot. Grab them. Pull them out. This tells me that there comes a point when plain talking, to the point is necessary. This snatching out of the fire business is tough. It’s serious.

 

To snatch someone out, they must want to leave the fire. They have been burned. They have been injured. Their life is a mess. Maybe the wheels came off the marriage. Divorce is now taking place. They have ignored God. They have lived selfishly and now their mate wants out. Fire surrounds this soul. What a mess he’s gotten into. Everything is nearly gone. Now he wants help. Snatch him. Save him.

 

Maybe it’s someone who has been caught by the law. Prison awaits him. Scared and sorry he feels the flames around him. He doesn’t want to give up. Snatch him.

 

Maybe it’s someone who has ignored the addictive nature of sin. Pornography, drugs, alcohol have been every day events. His soul has been rotting within him. He has changed. He hates the way he is. He wants out. Snatch him.

 

The snatchers must have their eyes open. They must be ready and be there. Some folks ignore all warnings and drift and drift away from God until they are engulfed in flames. They realize now that they are in trouble. Everything is burning up. Everything is falling apart. Their wonderful world has turned out to be not so wonderful. They want out. They want help. Snatch them. Save them. Understand, some are in a real mess by this point. The trouble is deep. The solutions involve more than simply “come to church.” What they need is more than a verse. They need contact, influence, answers and someone pulling them back. This is hard work. This is intense. This is not for those who are bothered by messy lives. This consumes huge amounts of time. The result is a soul that is spared. A soul that is saved.

 

Not everyone is the same. Not everyone is safe. Not everyone is fireproof. There are those that you meet even today who are standing in the flames of destruction. Many do not even recognize it. Some want to remain in the flames. But a few really want out. Snatch them. Save them. Help them.

 

Can you do that?

 

Roger

 

11

Jump Start # 993

Jump Start # 993

1 Corinthians 5:1 “It is actually reported that there is immorality among you, and immorality of such a kind as does not exist even among the Gentiles, that someone has his father’s wife.”

  These words from the apostle Paul could not have been more shocking to the Corinthian church. Paul now knew. Everyone knew. The sexual sins that some of these very Corinthians had left when they first believed in Christ had returned. It wasn’t the pagan Corinthians this time, it was the believers that had these problems.

This section of Corinthians has been on my mind lately. I know of more than a half dozen marriages that are messy, troubled, and on the verge of falling apart. Some already have. Many of these involve believers. It seems that there is a disconnect taking place between what we are saying and believing on Sunday and what we are doing the rest of the week. The bridge between our faith and our behavior has been torn down. What is taking place in our homes often dishonors God and ignores what we claim we believe. When these things come to me my first reaction is to preach harder on these things. More classes. More teaching. There is a definite place for that and often that solves some of the problems, but in the end, there is a responsibility that each believer must have. Each person must decide how they are going to live. Are they going to toss out what they believe and turn their back on the eternal, for their own feelings and the pleasures of the moment?

 

What happened in Corinth reminded me of some truths that I want to share with you.

 

1. It’s not the churches fault if members do not live godly. Now, if the church tolerates wrong, as Corinth was doing, that needs to be addressed. If the church ignores teaching on morality, marriage, purity, then that needs to be addressed. Like the home, often godly churches and godly parents are blamed for the ungodly choices of the members and kids.

 

2. Even with the best teaching, believers must take it upon themselves to live and walk in the Lord. Corinth had Paul! Corinth had Apollos! Fervent preachers who were mighty in the Scriptures. An Apostle! Yet, there was still someone there who lived immorally. What we do at home reflects what we really believe. Flirting with the world, not dealing with problems, letting lust conquer us, sticking our heads in the sand, and mostly, allowing our spiritual lives to die sets us up for all kinds of moral and marital problems.

 

For a moment let’s consider the problem detailed in our verse—someone had his father’s wife. Commentators try to determine if this was his step-mother or his actual mother. Doesn’t matter. It was wrong. It was so over the top that even the pagans wouldn’t accept this. Now, the man doing this was a Christian. What is going on inside his head? Had he never heard about Joseph and his boss’ wife? Joseph remained pure. Had he never heard of Proverbs 7 and the naïve young man who was caught by the adulteress? Our faith must be more than facts and intellect. Our faith does little good if it does not change us, move us and affect our behavior. Believing in God but disobeying Him in such a blatant fashion shows that this guy’s spiritual life was dismal and weak. Strong faith does not prevail in this story. Strong faith is missing. What is he thinking as he leaves worship? What is he thinking when he gets back home? I expect he wasn’t thinking. I expect that was a major part of the problem. He left his faith hanging in the coat room where the church met. He didn’t see what happens on Sunday affects his Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. He’s not the only one. Others have done the same and still do the same. Some see no connection to what happens on Sunday and their business dealings. At work they can be dishonest, misleading and worldly. They do not think about inviting Christ into their place of business. Others toss out all they know about spiritual values when it comes to buying and selling things. Dishonest in selling cars, houses or things on Ebay.

 

I wonder where this guy’s father was. Was he dead? The text states “his father’s wife.” What did dad say about this? And the woman? She obviously has no moral compass about her. The whole thing fits a TV show but not among people who claim to believe.

 

What could have made a difference here? It’s easy to be a back seat driver and after the facts reveal everything that was wrong and what a person missed. Oh, to have that foresight before the trouble begins. But here’s a few thoughts:

 

  • More spirituality throughout the week. Meaningful prayers at home. Serious discussions about the Bible and discipleship around the family table.

 

  • Less Corinthian influence and more Christ influence. Everyone knows the setting in Corinth was a sewer. People can climb out of that. People can become clean, inside and out. People can change. It takes effort. It takes diligence. It takes a steady and regular commitment to Christ. Who was this guy hanging around with? What did he fill his mind with? Was he living with one foot in the world and one foot in Christ? Cut the worldly TV shows. Don’t go to every movie that folks claim is a “must see.” Purity in heart doesn’t work if purity is not in the home and the mind. Did this guy have other affairs? Was this a pattern? He believed enough to be baptized but not enough to leave the world.

 

  • Taking what we believe seriously. What did Jesus say about looking upon a woman with lust? Did he not remember that, believe that, or even care about that? Taking the relationship of marriage seriously helps. Taking what Jesus said about God’s wrath seriously helps. Being serous about our faith helps.

 

  • Being careful and alert is necessary. Peter warned about the lion Satan. He’s looking. He’s on the prowl. He’s waiting. The serious disciple is careful of words, influences, actions, and being trapped. It’s the weak, the careless and the indifferent that are caught. Satan knows. Do we?

It’s time we owned our faith. It’s time we took charge of what is happening to us. Stop the blame game. Quit pointing fingers to our parents, to your church, to what happened five years ago, and being the constant victim. Do you believe? Act that way. Do you want to go to Heaven? Act that way. No excuses! Doesn’t matter who has done what to you. Doesn’t matter how hard it is for you. Doesn’t matter how you feel, or your rights or anything like that. Do you believe? Act that way!

Your faith—show it. Shine it. Live it. Share it. Protect it. Die with it.

 

Roger

 

10

Jump Start # 992

 

Jump Start # 992

Ezekiel 24:15-17 “And the word of the Lord came to me saying, ‘Son of man, behold, I am about to take from you the desire of your eyes with a blow; but you shall not mourn and you shall not weep, and your tears shall not come. Groan silently; make no mourning for the dead. Bind on your turban and put your shoes on your feet, and do not cover your mustache and d not eat the bread of men.”

 

Our verse today is one of the many tough things that God required of Ezekiel. The Lord was using the prophet as an illustration of what He felt that the nation was doing to Him. Judah was going away into captivity. Their lack of faith and commitment to God had taken them over the edge. Their heart was cold and closed. So in a series of graphic illustrations, Ezekiel lived out what God was experiencing. In the fourth chapter, God had Ezekiel cook his food over animal dung. Disgusting! That was the point.

 

Our verse today is one of the hardest ones for me to grasp. God was going to take the life of Ezekiel’s wife. She was going to die. God was going to strike her suddenly “with a blow.” The desire of his eyes was being removed. As if that is hard enough, especially knowing this in advance, God then told Ezekiel that he was not to mourn publically for her. No tears. No mourning garments. No mourning diet. Act as if everything is normal. Judah was going away, the desire of God’s eyes, and it was because God was going to strike her. God was not going to mourn. Ezekiel was experiencing what God did.

 

There are two simple lessons I want to share with you.

 

First, we too easily and quickly dismiss things by saying, “I couldn’t do that.” Yes, you could. If God said to do so, you could. Hard? Yes. Requiring all that you have? Yes. Impossible? No. God doesn’t tell us not to mourn. This is all theory for us. But there are some hard things He requires. It is those things that we easily ignore with the excuse, “I can’t do that.” For instance, forgiveness. The hurts that some have received are deep and grave. Some do not even try to work through them as God wants and more, some do not even consider forgiving the wrongful person. I could never do that? Yes, you could. You just don’t want to. If God told Ezekiel that his wife was to die and he would not mourn publically, not even shed a tear, you don’t think you could forgive? For others, it’s remaining faithful to God and continuing to worship during trying times. Someone in the family dies, and the entire family uses that as a reason not to go to worship, for weeks. For weeks they say, “we just couldn’t go to worship.” Ezekiel could not shed a tear for his departed wife and you can’t go to worship?

 

We sell ourselves short much too quickly. I couldn’t do that. Maybe you ought to try. Maybe you would be amazed what you could do. Maybe your continuation with God would help others and be an example for others. Maybe your faith is there and you just don’t want to try something that is hard. The easy way isn’t always the best way. For instance, it’s easy to get fired from a job. Just don’t show up to work, ever. Eventually, you will be released. It’s hard to stay with it and get a promotion. It’s easy to flunk out of college. Simply don’t go to classes or take any tests. You’ll fail. It’s hard to make the dean’s list. It’s easy to get cut from the team. It’s easy to fail in marriage. It’s easy to be a lousy parent. Those things are easy. It’s hard to excel. It’s hard to walk in righteousness and stay with it, even when the days are dark and the journey seems so long. It’s hard, but you can do it, because God said so. God never told Ezekiel to fly to the moon. That is impossible. What He says may be hard, yes, impossible, never.

 

Can you be obedient to God? Yes. Is it hard? Yes. You can be pure to God. You can be faithful to God. Don’t give up or throw in the towel because something is hard. Saying, “I can’t do that,” doesn’t fly when we have an Ezekiel who was told not to mourn when his wife died.

 

Secondly, we often fail to grasp how God feels about things. God is hurt by our sin. God loves us. He wants the best for us. Ezekiel was a living illustration of what God was experiencing. Our attention can be upon us and how we feel and what we need and what it does to us that we eliminate God from the situation. This comes to play in many settings. God has holy requirements about marriage. Those who remove God from the picture, will marry anyone they want, even of the same sex. Not what God says. Worship is another setting that we see this. When God is removed, then worship becomes what do we like and what do we want. Years ago, a guy came to the door stating that he was going to start a new church in the neighborhood. He was asking neighbors what they would like in a church. I wasn’t home, but my wonderful wife told him, ‘How about one that follows the Bible and does what God says.” That answer threw him. He hadn’t considered that. How sad! How mistaken! Worship isn’t about us. It’s about honoring God.

 

How does God feel about things? That would be a great question to ask. How does God feel about you getting a divorce? How does God feel about you sleeping in on Sunday? How does God feel about you trying to grab all the attention? How does God feel? Ezekiel knew. He was allowed to experience what God felt. That changed him and opened his eyes.

 

These powerful verses in Ezekiel remind us and teach us lessons that will help us.

We are one day closer to Heaven.

Roger