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Jump Start # 2021

Jump Start # 2021

Romans 8:29 “For those whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His Son, so that He would be the firstborn among many brethren.”

 

The past several Jump Starts have been looking at challenges facing today’s church. Leaderships need to give serious thought as to where their flock is and where the Lord wants them to be. Sometimes that look presents a picture that we do not want to see. Things can look pretty good at 32,000 feet in the air. However, when we are up and close, we see that things look differently. Busy people, as we are today, demands a busy eldership that sees where we are and what is grabbing our attention. I was in a paint store a while back, looking at shades of green paint. Goodness! I never knew there were so many shades of green. It got me dizzy. Too many choices. The shades of error can be just like green paint. So many, shades. Some hardly even look like error, but they are.

 

In our final chapter in this series, challenges facing today’s church, we want to look at conforming ourselves to be like Jesus. In this fast paced, modern word, where there is an app for just about anything, being like Jesus seems so far and distant from our world. We are rarely idle. We are rarely without some form of electronic media running near us. Kids no longer look out the car window as they go down the road. They are looking at the video screen in front of them. That’s not wrong, it’s just the world we live in.

 

Being like Jesus, that’s what God wants. That’s what the Gospel shapes us into. That’s what we ought to want, but it can seem like an impossibility. Jesus was always where He was supposed to be. We are not. He was always thinking the best, we don’t. We was always pure, sometimes we are not. We fight feelings of prejudice. We struggle with indifference and apathy. We are so busy with life that we barely have time for church services. If we could have a drive-thru for church, some would like that. That’s our world!

 

The challenge facing today’s church is not filling up the pews. It’s not meeting budgets, paying off the building, or adding on. It’s not finding more leaders. The great challenge is getting Christians to live like Jesus. Getting us to think spiritually, not once in a while, but all the time. What a difference that would make. To think spiritually, before we make a decision, what a difference that would make. To think spiritually while on a date. To think spiritually before the question is popped or the answer “yes,” is given. To think spiritually when applying for a college. To think spiritually when accepting a job offer. To think spiritually while choosing what movie to watch. What a difference thinking spiritually would be. I think we’d complain less, if we could think spiritually. I think we’d not be so bothered if we could think spiritually. Set your mind on things above is what we find in Scriptures. It’s that “setting” part that gets us. We may put our minds on spiritual things for a moment, while sitting in church on Sunday, but our minds don’t stay there. It’s not set. Our minds move. They move to worry and fear. We get stressed and tired on the inside. We can be so distracted and so bothered about so many things. Off in the distance, we hear the Lord calling our names, just like Martha. “Roger, Roger, you are worried and bothered about so many things.” Get that mind set on spiritual things! That’s the key.

 

How many times does a person get into some spiritual mess and his first statement is, “I guess I wasn’t thinking.” Obviously! The dangers we put our souls in, often times could be lessened if we thought spiritually. Our concerns about church attendance would not exist if people thought spiritually. Modesty wouldn’t be a problem among God’s people if we thought spiritually.

 

We can preach and preach about modesty, friends, finances, attitudes, habits and on and on we preach, but until we start thinking spiritually, someone has to tell us what’s right and what’s wrong. The mature, Hebrews says, have trained their senses to discern good and evil.

 

Two thoughts immediately pop out of that expression.

 

First, senses are trained. We potty train children and house train pets. On their own, our senses are untrained. We are likely to say anything and do anything. No limitations. No borders. No restrictions. Untrained, we’ll make a mess. Untrained, we’ll probably make the wrong choices. Untrained, are we are not pleasing the Lord.

 

Who trains us? How do we get trained? The text implies that the mature have trained themselves. They did this with the word of God. It is the word of God that tells us what is right and what is wrong. It’s the word of God that warns us and motivates us. Trained by the Scriptures. Shaped by the word of God. Trained senses realize that some things should not be said. Trained senses recognizes some things should not be looked at.

 

Second, senses are trained to discern good and evil. Not everything is spelled out in the Bible. Some things have to be discerned or figured out. There is more than just the obvious. What about influences? What about consequences? Some people do not recognize the difference between good and evil. This is why some will say, “I don’t see anything wrong with this.” They don’t. They can’t. Their senses aren’t trained. They can’t recognize good and evil. Everything looks the same. The criteria comes down to how does it make you feel. If it is something that I want to do, then it must be good. If I don’t want to do it, then it must be evil. I become the standard. I determine good and evil, right and wrong.

 

So, the great challenge facing today’s church is not just teaching the Bible, but it’s getting folks to think spiritually. It’s getting people to train their senses. It’s getting them to discern good and evil. “Just tell me what to do,” isn’t the way to go. Think for yourself. Look within the word of God. Think. Think spiritually.

 

Imagine the number of prayers that would be racing Heavenward if more and more were thinking spiritually each day. Imagine the change in attitudes if more and more were thinking spiritually. Imagine the people who would be apologizing because they were now thinking spiritually. Imagine how shepherds in the church would have it so much easier if more and more thought spiritually.

 

That’s a real challenge. Getting more and more people to live like Jesus. And, just how is this accomplished? Preaching and teaching. That’s always been the answer. Keep showing more and more people the word of God. Keep the image of Jesus before our hearts. Don’t settle for just getting by. Don’t be content with filled church buildings. Conformed to Jesus is the challenge.

 

I hope this series has given you some things to think about and talk about. Hopefully it helps us to see what our great mission and work is before us. The challenges are great, but greater is He who is in us than He who is in the world.

 

Roger

 

13

Jump Start # 793

 

Jump Start # 793

Romans 8:29 “For whom He foreknew, He also predestined to become conformed to the image of His son, that He might be the first-born among many brethren”

God has a plan for you. His plan is not so much that you go to this school or that school. It is not so much that you work with numbers or that you work with your hands. It is not so much that you live in the mid-west or that you live overseas. God’s plans for you are much larger than that. God has a plan for your heart and your destiny. You can fulfill God’s plan while being a student or a stay-at-home-mom or retired or single or married. God expects and wants you to live the life that He has planned. It is the best life that you can possibly live.

We have been doing a series for several days about what God expects. We now have come to the last of this series. What we have seen is that God expects us to be strong, faithful, obedient, worshipping, influencing and manifesting a heart of quality and character. All of these lessons can be found in our verse today. The sum total of what God expects of you, the bottom line, as they say, is for you to be like Jesus. That is a grand task. Jesus was the greatest. No one cared as much as Jesus did. No one forgave as much as Jesus did. No one was more obedient, faithful, prayerful, honest, holy and perfect as Jesus was. There is no topping Jesus. God wants us to be conformed to the image of Jesus.

Other passages teach this as well:

  • 1 Pet 1: 15 “But like the Holy One who called you, be holy yourselves in all your behavior”
  • Eph 5:1 “Therefore, be imitators of God, as beloved children”
  • Phil 2:5 “Have this attitude in yourselves which was also in Christ Jesus”
  • 1 Pet 2:21 “For you have been called for this purpose, since Christ also suffered for you, leaving you an example for you to follow in His steps
  • Eph 4:32 “And be kind to one another, tender-hearted, forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has forgiven you.”

Be like Jesus. So simple, yet so hard to do. When we have said something cruel, our hearts remind us, “Is that what Jesus would have said?” When we are tired and want to quit, we think, “Is that what Jesus did?”

There is no greater call than to simply be like Jesus. This is what God expects of each of us. God wants you to be like Jesus. When dealing with others, be like Jesus. When upset, be like Jesus. When tempted, be like Jesus. We wonder how many arguments, how many church fights, how many broken homes would have been different if everyone acted like Jesus. Jesus prayed. Jesus was a person of God’s book. Jesus was honest. Jesus cared. Being like Jesus kills selfishness. Being like Jesus invites, accepts and helps. Being like Jesus—nothing greater could be said of you.

Being like Jesus is not stuffy, stale nor a killjoy. Being like Jesus enjoys life. Being like Jesus brings life, hope and freshness to a world that has lost value, purpose and joy. Being like Jesus changes conversations. Being like Jesus is noticed by others. Being like Jesus will find people coming to you for help. Being like Jesus gives you confidence. Being like Jesus answers many things in your mind and heart. Being like Jesus is the task that every eldership has as they try to shepherd God’s people. Being like Jesus is the conclusion of every sermon that preachers preach. At the end of our journey, if it can be said that we were like Jesus, we have done well.

God expects this. It is not easy. Some days we act and think more like Satan’s child than God’s child. We recognize those moments. We put the brakes on what we are doing, thinking and saying and remind ourselves, “Be like Jesus.” We apologize. We learn. We jump back into life with more zest and earnestness to be like Jesus.

If this is the grandest of all things, being like Jesus, then spending time with the Gospels ought to be one of our greatest endeavors in study and life. Learn from Me, is what Jesus said in Matthew. Learn compassion. Learn faithfulness. Learn prayerfulness. Learn honesty. Learn to stand upon God’s word. Learn obedience. Learn joy.

Just like Jesus…that thought must ever be present. When surfing the internet, “just like Jesus.” When driving, “Just like Jesus.” When in a heated business meeting, “Just like Jesus.” That thought..that ideal…that concept…that is what God wants. That is what God expects. No one among us would dare say, “I have it. I’m there.” That proclamation alone would show that he did not have humility like Jesus. No, we are not there. No, we don’t have it yet. I’ve found through the years that it is not only a process, but it is a layered process. Some parts we do well. Some not so well. Some parts we understand. Some we don’t. It is a journey. It is a walk. It is a walk with the Savior.

God wants you to be conformed to the image of Jesus. What do you need to work on first? Language? Attitude? Worship? Compassion? Forgiving? Purity? There are many layers. Be like Jesus covers all of them. In all areas, be like Jesus.

Paul told the Corinthians, “we all, with unveiled face beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image…” (2 Cor 3:18).

Just like Jesus…it is more than things you do, it is becoming. Be holy is what Peter said. Be…Be like Jesus. Inside and out. Sunday and Saturday. At home and on vacation. In buying and in selling. When I’m young and when I’m old.

 

Be like Jesus! That’s it.

 

(This series of seven lessons is being put together in a booklet entitled, “God’s Expectations.” If you would like one (or more) drop me an email: Rogshouse@aol.com).

Roger