Tag: Jesus

  • HOMOSEXUALITY – One Christian’s Response


    Christian Message

    By WARD PIMLEY

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    PERHAPS NO SIN PATTERN divides the Christian community today more than does the sin of homosexuality, both gay and lesbian.

    Most of us know someone who struggles with same-sex attraction, and many of us recoil when confronted with flagrant displays of gay or lesbian conduct.

    Why is that? Is it because the sin pattern is so odious to us that we separate from it reflexively, or could it be that all of us have, even to a tiny degree, an inkling that we, too, could be tempted?

    If we take the position – as does this column – that all sin patterns are tempting to mankind, whether it is cheating on a spouse or income taxes, telling fibs large or small, selfishly ignoring the pleas of the helpless around us, or even eating more sweets and carbs than our diet and doctor recommend, then we can readily see how someone’s homosexual lifestyle is more threatening to our self-esteem than any other sin pattern our neighbor can exhibit.

    Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor homosexuals, nor sodomites, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners will inherit the kingdom of God. — 1 Corinthians 6:9-10 (NKJV)

    Homosexuality threatens our very self-image of being either masculine (male) or feminine (female). Our neighbor cheating on his/her spouse or their income taxes would not necessarily be visible to us, nor would it likely challenge our self-image.

    *****

    HOMOSEXUALITY, HOWEVER, places a mirror before us that causes us to reflect on whether, even if in the tiniest, briefest moment, we, too, could be similarly tempted.

    We might think: Are we any less masculine (or feminine) if even for that quick fleeting moment we sense a recognition of the temptation that lures our neighbor to pursue that sin pattern wholeheartedly?

    What other sin pattern has that same impact on us?

    Is that any different from the thought — again, fleeting and quickly dismissed — of taking an income tax deduction to which we’re not entitled or to grabbing extra pens and notepads from our employer when no one is around to observe?

    Yet all of us would admit, even without pride, that we’re tempted to grab something that’s not ours, even if it’s just tooling down the highway above the speed limit. 

    The Bible is very clear that we are not to hold ourselves out to be better or more holy than someone else and not to judge their sin more harshly than we judge our own.

    — ROMANS 2:1b

    We disdain all forms of weakness, and we take pride in our ability to deny self. After all, that’s not only the moral position but also is part of what we consider being mature.

    Who does not feel a bit healthier just by declining a second portion of pie and ice cream or a bit more noble when avoiding the opportunity to rifle through the office supplies?

    Aren’t we more likely to point the accusing finger at those among us who, in our opinion, are less noble than we are because they succumbed to the temptation of grabbing that second desert, the fistful of roller pens, or the unsupported tax deduction?

    *****

    EVEN MORE SO, what is our instinctive response to those among us who give in to the temptation they feel, more so than we do, of same-sex attraction? Consider also, that once that sin is indulged in, it can overtake us and demand a lifestyle change to comport with our new community of like-minded sinners.

    Personally, I am not aware of a fellowship community of tax cheats, adulterers, gamblers, drunks, and spouse abusers, but we all are aware of fellowship communities that attract those dealing with same-sex attraction.

    There’s another difficulty with the sin of same-sex attraction. It can’t be hidden as well as other sins, most of which are done in the darkness and away from prying eyes. Homosexuality, on the other hand, is flagrant, in-your-face, ever present, and — with the new “pride” movement — aggressively persistent.

    We all know sins that have grabbed a hold of us so strongly, and are so pernicious, that we think little of committing them, even while we know that God holds all sin as sin, from murder and armed robbery to telling “half-truths” to speeding on the open highway to eating another chocolate-chip cookie when the hostess isn’t looking.

    Yes, you say, but capital murder is a worse crime than petit theft, but we’re not talking about crime – which is a violation of a human standard. We’re talking about sin, which is a violation of God’s standard. To His holy eyes, sin is sin.

    To earn our spot in Heaven, we must be perfect as God is perfect. We aren’t, so we depend on Jesus’ cleansing blood. Since we’re all flawed and fall short of God’s glory, we ought not be the church scolds, pointing “naughty fingers” at others.

    The Bible is very clear that we are not to hold ourselves out to be better or more holy than someone else and not to judge their sin more harshly than we judge our own.

    “For in passing judgment on another you condemn yourself, because you, the judge, practice the very same things.” – Romans 2:1b ESV

    The Bible also clearly states that we will be held accountable by the Creator not only for our actions but also for our words and even our thoughts. Jesus, in His Sermon on the Mount, told us it is not enough to avoid committing adultery, just thinking about it condemns us in God’s holy eyes.

    *****

    THE GLORY OF the cross is that Jesus left the comforts of Heaven and endured that excruciating punishment for us so that we would not have to suffer the punishment for our own sin.

    The fact that all of us sin and fall short of God’s glory, that all of us are weak and sinful, that all of us war against God’s standards for our lives does not give any of us the self-proclaimed right to judge harshly someone else’s failures or lapses into persistent sin.

    We are called to turn our lives over to God, and He has promised, in turn, to transform us into new creatures, washed in His blood. While we continue to sin, we increasingly become, as the Holy Spirit works through us and in us, more Christ-like. 

    We sin less often. We avoid sin patterns and a lifestyle based around the sin that grips us. We grieve more when we fail.

    One person’s failure around homosexuality is as grievous to God as is another person’s lapses around his/her employer’s office supplies. In other words, to God, our neighbor giving in to same-sex attraction is an abomination against nature, but we, who commit other sins, stand just as condemned before a perfect God.

    *****

    THE BIBLE TELLS US we are to love our neighbor but not their sin, just as we naturally love our selves but, when redeemed, not our sin. 

    Can we acknowledge, then, the basic personhood of our failed neighbor, pray for his/her redemption, and avoid being stumbling blocks to their spiritual recovery?

    We are called to speak the truth in love to our neighbor, just as our born-again neighbors are called to speak the truth to us. Lovingly calling out someone for their sin pattern covers a multitude of our own offenses and can bring a wandering believer back into the fold. 

    It also can lead to conviction for those who are struggling with sin but who are not yet believers in God’s grace and mercy.

    None of that is possible for us if we are too busy condemning the wayward neighbor while excusing our own sin.


    PRAYER

    ALMIGHTY GOD, Father of all creation, we confess our sinful hearts and weak wills. You have told us our spirit is willing, but our flesh is weak, and that, unless we abide in You and You in us, we can do nothing worthwhile on our own.

    We ask you humbly to forgive our sin and our judgment against our neighbor’s sin. Help us, we ask, to love our failed neighbor and teach them, when given the opportunity, God’s truth and to do so with grace and love.

    Strengthen us, we pray, in our own walk with the Lord that we will be Your ambassadors, as salt and light, in word and in deed, as our Savior has commissioned us. 

    We lift our petition and our gratitude in Jesus’ beautiful name.

    AMEN

  • ALWAYS BE READY: Lessons From 1 Peter 3


    CHRISTIAN MESSAGE

    By WARD PIMLEY

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    LET’S CREATE a little story together. Everyone loves a good story — right? — and God gives us the ability to craft our own.

    Part 1 of 4. “Sharing Our Faith”

    S0, LET’S ASSUME you’re talking with a good friend, maybe sharing coffee and some catching up, when your friend turns serious and asks you a sensitive question.

    “Say, if you don’t mind my asking, there’s something different about you. I mean, you’ve always been friendly and joke around a lot, but there’s a peace about you I didn’t see before. Is there something going on I should know about?”

    We pick up here: What do you do? Your friend has just teed up a nice compliment and wants to know how come you’re so relaxed, at peace with yourself, content – even while you’re facing some of the same battles you were before – lingering issues with your mother, a tense relationship at work, your oldest child struggling at school, your lawn turning into a weed factory. 

    Well, our text source gives us an answer, one we as believers and followers of Christ should look for and even ask God for: an opportunity to share our faith. 

    In our text source, God is telling us through the apostle Peter to dedicate our lives to the Lord and be ready, at all times, to tell others “what God has done for us,” especially, he says, when we’re asked.

    In other words, we should be living out the Gospel to earn the right to share the Gospel when given the opportunity.

    That means our lives and our words should be in synch; they should back each other up. We don’t want to preach to others the love and forgiveness that Christ offers us when our own lives don’t reflect that same commitment. 

    Also, we don’t want our words of sarcasm, nit-picking, and complaint to prevent an opportunity to testify to God’s goodness. 

    Peter was writing to a population being persecuted for following Jesus, so their witness placed their physical safety in question.

    We, fortunately, do not now face that same persecution, even while we might well face our own personal life battles. 

    Even so, our attitude, as we experience life and as people watch us, either gives a favorable witness for the Lord or detracts from it.

    WE ALL SUFFER in some way. No one gets through life without some sorrow. 

    There’s another verse in 1 Peter 3 I want to draw to your attention: 

    Once again, Jesus gives us the perfect model for how to face our life journey. 

    Who hasn’t said, at some point, “Was it fair for us that Adam’s sin has caused us to be born with sinful hearts,” even though the Bible clearly states that if we were in the place of Adam and Eve, we would have acted the same way. 

    In fact, we do. We willingly create our own diversion from God.

    But let’s ask ourselves whether the redemption part of God’s story is unfair.

    “Was it fair to Jesus that God had to send Him to leave the throne of Heaven, be born of a woman and placed in an animals’ feeding trough, live a sinless life, be harassed by religious and civic leaders, and then be sacrificed on the cross for our sins, not His own?”

    God righted the scales, as it were, giving us Jesus to succeed where our forebear Adam failed. So, fairness has nothing to do with it. 

    Life isn’t fair. We know that. Some of us suffer more than do others; some of us suffer more earlier in our lives; others suffer more later in life.

    Some of our suffering results from our own doing, our own (youthful) stupidity. Some of our suffering lingers; some of it is temporary. We may suffer more than once. 

    Pastor Rick Warren said we’re either going into trials, are in trials now, or are just emerging from trials, such that trials and tribulations are a common part of our lives. 

    They are the norm in life, not the exception. 

    That is why it is so important for us as Christ followers to live bathed in Christ’s grace. 

    That’s the kind of witness we should exhibit so that we might earn the right to share the gospel with someone. When that opportunity comes, we need to be ready to pounce.

    Part 3 of 4. “Sharing Techniques”

    HOW DO WE do it? How do we share the Gospel when God presents us with the opportunity? (What holds us back?)

    What are the magic words we can use to share our personal life journey, from sinner to saint, brought about solely through the blood and grace of Jesus Christ?

    Do you have a testimony? Do you have a before Christ to go with your after Christ experience? I sure do. 

    Unless you were led by your parents to turn your life over to God before you entered the first grade, you have a before that wasn’t very pleasant. Jesus has remade you. 

    If you did turn your life over to God before first grade, then your testimony is one of praise, yet you might have some “Jonah moments” you could share.

    If you’ve lived a pristine life, and believe you have nothing dramatic to share, then your testimony is to praise God Almighty! You could share how He kept you from falling away.

    My sense, though, is that in this case you would not have the conversation we noted at the beginning, where a friend notices a profound change in your life.

    Yes, God is not done with you yet, and He will not be until you enter Glory with Him, but He has been growing you and molding you from the mess your life was in when you turned it over to Him.

    Part 4 of 4. “Explaining Prayer”

    LET’S RETURN TO our story and take a lesson from our text source, that we should be ready to give a testimony whenever someone gives us the opportunity. 

    Our friend points out how different we are: more relaxed, more confident, more joyful. What do we say? What do you say? 

    This is the opportunity we should be praying for, and it should not fill us with dread. Instead, we ought to be able to relate something very simple, something like this:

    [Doctrinally, we *receive* Him, not ask Him, but *receive* is a passive tense verb; it does not require an action on our part; while *ask* does.] 

    [God is the acting agent who lifted the burden from my shoulders and filled my heart with a peace and joy I had not known before.]

    Or, you could say,

    You can see that in each of our examples we made it clear that any further discussion of this topic will be at the instigation and will of the other party.

    Not us.

    We are not going to push our faith onto someone, just as God does not push Himself onto us. He lets us come to the decision on our own.

    The second point to emphasize in this verse is that our discussion of faith issues with our friend must be done with love and gentleness; our text source says *courtesy and respect*. Other translations say *meekness and fear*, *gentleness and reverence*, and *courteously and respectfully*.

    Regardless of the exact words your translation uses, we are to share the truth with love and grace – not highhanded, not judgmental, not condemning – just loving acceptance of our friend’s question.

    Let’s close where we started, repeating our text source, but this time with a different translation, the Berean Standard Bible:

    FINAL WORDS

    HAVING THE OPPORTUNITY to share your faith – and praying that God will give you those opportunities – should be a way of life for each of us.

    Living out the Gospel is not enough. Being a good person is not enough. Smiling often is not enough. Neither is saying “please” and “thank you,” although those are desirable traits.

    We need to back up our actions, our lives, with words of affirmation; otherwise, we are stealing God’s glory and claiming it for our own.

    Here’s how God says it:

    Instead of the word “preach,” we can easily substitute the word “share.” So, how will someone believe without hearing, and how will someone hear without someone sharing?

    That person who shares could be you.

    That someone that God has placed in your life could be waiting for you to share your testimony, your defense (or apologia) for the hope and joy you feel in your heart.

    Just remember, when you do, share the Word with love and gentleness.


    PRAYER

    OUR HEAVENLY FATHER, our Abba, our Daddy – We are so grateful for the blessings you shower on us. We want to share our faith with others, as they express an interest in listening, so please help us prepare to share a brief testimony about our lives, to tell others what God has done for us. Then, mighty Lord and Savior, please give us the opportunity to share what God has done for us. Once we’ve prepared, give us the opening. In Jesus’ name. AMEN

  • MILITARY FORCE: Christ’s Church Seeks God’s Wisdom


    CHRISTIAN MESSAGE

    By WARD PIMLEY

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    This blog has been devoted to Christian meditations, but this is a first step in broadening its reach to topical issues.

    These discussions will be based on biblical principles as our Christian faith should inform our positions and viewpoints.

    So, here goes …


    COMPETING VIEWS

    EVERYONE IN THE WORLD knows of the recent “dust-up” between Israel and Iran and between Israel and Iran’s proxies — Houthis, Hamas, and Hezbollah — the three Hs. 

    The question is, from a Christian perspective, what should be the position of the United States? Should we as a country become involved in a military contribution on the side of Israel, and if so, to what extent?

    Let’s examine two possibilities: First, that Jesus preached non-violence, leading us to avoid unnecessary use of armed force. This view would emphasize using the bully pulpit, combining the pulpit’s teaching side with its preaching side. 

    This view would exhaust all “soft” policy, which is “statecraft” or negotiation, before engaging in “hard” policy, which calls on military force as a last resort.

    “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him.” – James‬ ‭1‬:‭5‬ ‭ESV‬‬
    “For the Lord gives wisdom; From His mouth come knowledge and understanding.” – Proverbs 2:6 NKJV

    The chief alternative considers the biblical response to evil. In the Old Testament, the Jews were to wipe out the natives in the Promised Land because God’s patience with them and their evil had worn out. He was imposing judgment on them.

    In Revelation, we see Jesus will wipe away all evil with just the spoken word – His Word, not ours – as He rides on a white horse from Heaven to take His throne in Jerusalem to reign over the land in the Millennium.

    The account of three battles in Revelation – Gog and Magog, Armageddon, and the final, unnamed battle, will spill tons of blood as God eradicates evil from the world.

    God’s wrath is righteous anger, while ours often is self-centered and harmful to community.

    So, how would we settle this discussion? Engage militarily or speak our truth into the storm?

    SPEAKING BOLDLY

    BOTH VIEWPOINTS have merit, but one point this column would make is that whichever course the church takes, it should speak boldly and without compromise. 

    How then can the church speak conflicting viewpoints boldly and without compromise?

    All such questions can be answered via the same formula: walk with the Lord, seek His counsel, read His Word, pray to Him, and seek His face. As we draw closer to Him, He will draw closer to us and reveal His answer.

    Let us as the church never chart any course without first seeking the Lord’s face and asking for His counsel. We should not ask Him to bless whatever it is we decide.

    This column questions how many in the church universal are seeking His face, turning to Him for His answer rather than asking Him to bless their answer.

    The view of this column is that the U.S. should make strong statements in support of Israel and its right to exist and that Israel is to own the land given to it by God. That includes Gaza, the Golan Heights, and Lebanon. 

    This column also believes the U.S. should bless Israel and support Israel through military might and that the bombing of Iran’s nuclear reactor sites was proper and in line with God’s declaration of support for the Jewish people.

    SEEKING HIS FACE

    MORE IMPORTANTLY than making a one-time decision is the process by which we continually seek God’s answers to our questions. 

    Let us as the church never chart any course ourselves without first seeking the Lord’s face and then asking Him to bless whatever it is we decide.

    This column is clear that the U.S. took the right course in bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities and then seeking a peace settlement, but at no time does this column end the process of seeking God’s face.

    We should always be humble, come together in prayer, learn from one another, and follow God’s lead as we understand it.

    We might well find that as we do so, God will reveal more of His commandment to us such that we will mold our response in some way, much like sanding a block of wood makes the block more aesthetic, easier to handle, and more useful.


    PRAYER

    ALMIGHTY GOD, PRINCE OF PEACE,

    You are both the Lion and the Lamb, 

    the conquering warrior and the humble sacrifice.

    Lead us into making the right decisions in all matters of public policy, that we as a church may represent You in truth and honor, according to Your desires, not according to our own.

    Lord, we bless You and thank You, we praise You and we worship You.

    In Jesus’ name we lift this prayer.

    AMEN

  • 1 PETER 1 – A Message of Hope for a Discouraged People


    CHRISTIAN MESSAGE

    By WARD PIMLEY

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    • Do you ever think about the promises God has made to us about an eternal kingdom in Heaven? 
    • Do you ever wonder what it takes to qualify, to pass the *entry* test, to get into Heaven? 
    • Do you ever worry that your salvation is not secure, that when you prayed the Sinner’s Prayer, God wasn’t listening, or if He was, you could *backslide* and lose His favor? 
    • If your answer to any of those questions is “yes,” or even if you’re not sure what your answer is, then today’s message is for you. 
    • Fasten your pew belts, church. We’re about to take a ride into the most important promise God makes in the Bible – our salvation and its security. 

    Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In God’s great mercy, He has caused us to be born again into a living hope, because Jesus Christ rose from the dead. – 1 Peter 1:3 NCV


    • How about asking Sarah what it was like to have a baby at the age of 90? 
    • Or maybe ask Isaac what he was thinking when Father Abraham tied him to the offering pile, just before he heard the sacrificial lamb’s bleating? 
    • Maybe you want to peer into David’s heart when he realized Bathsheba was pregnant and he had her husband killed in war? 
    • Would you like a trip to the Lion’s Den with Daniel or being dumped into a vat of boiling oil with John, or face your own execution, like Paul and James, the half-brother of Jesus, or John’s brother James, the first apostle martyred. Or Peter and Andrew, also martyred. 
    • Maybe, like me, you long to talk with those who come to us from the future, who saw the completion of things we saw started, or who saw the development of new technologies that made our current knowledge seem so primitive. 

    WE’LL SEE GOD FACE-TO-FACE!

    MY RESIDENCE 

    2 Corinthian 5:17 says, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old is past; behold the new has come.” 

    • God planned long ago to choose you by making you his holy people, which is the Spirit’s work. God wanted you to obey him and to be made clean by the blood of the death of Jesus Christ. Grace and peace be yours more and more.  – 1 Peter 1:2 NCV
    • There are many rooms in my Father’s house. I would not tell you this, unless it were true. I am going there to prepare a place for each of you. After I have done this, I will come back and take you with me. Then we will be together.  – John 14:2-3 CEV 
    • Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption. – Ephesians 4:30 NASB 
    • He has also put His seal on us and given us the Spirit in our hearts as a down payment. – 2 Corinthians 1:22 CSB 
    • And this is the testimony: God has given us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. – 1 John 5:11-12 NIV 

    MORE TO THE STORY

     CLOSING WORDS

  • FINDING SPIRITUAL STRENGTH: Lessons Drawn From 1 Peter 1


    Christian Message

    By WARD PIMLEY

    Pastor, Journalist, Author


    1 Peter 1 is a message of hope.

    God used the life witness of the Apostle Peter, and his words in this letter, to provide encouragement to First Century Christians, who were facing torture, beatings, ostracism, and even death for practicing their faith.

    God is using the same words to encourage believers in the Twenty-First Century to keep us faithful as we journey through our own burdens.

    We do not need to be defeated by our cares, pains, worries, disappointments, or discouragement.


    God

    FIRST POINT: Heaven Awaits

    “Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In God’s great mercy, He has caused us to be born again into a living hope, because Jesus Christ rose from the dead. – 1 Peter 1:3 NCV

    LESSON: We also face trials and tribulations, but “better days” await us; if not here, then in Heaven.

    “In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while, if need be, you have been grieved by various trials … yet believing, you rejoice with joy inexpressible and full of glory.” – 1 Peter 1:8 BSB

    LESSON: We rejoice through our troubles. For a short time, if necessary, we may suffer grief, but God is with us, giving us hope. The Bible says our trials, as we go through them successfully, make us stronger in our faith.

    THIRD POINT: Our Time

    “Though you have not seen Him, you love Him; and though you do not see Him now, you believe in Him … now that you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your souls.” – 1 Peter 1:8a-9 BSB

    The Son of Man

    – The Son of God

    – The Messiah

    – Our Redeemer

    – Our Savior.

    LESSON: The Lord has made His presence known through His creation; that creation not only includes the universe, but all life, including us! We are His creation.

    FOURTH POINT: Always Relevant

    “Since you have purified your souls in obeying the truth through the Spirit in sincere love of the brethren, love one another fervently with a pure heart, having been born again, not of corruptible seed but incorruptible, through the word of God which lives and abides forever, because ‘All flesh is as grass, And all the glory of man as the flower of the grass. The grass withers, And its flower falls away, But the word of the Lord endures forever.’ Now this is the word which by the gospel was preached to you.” – 1 Peter 1:22-25 NKJV

    FIFTH POINT: Holy Trinity

    “Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ: To those chosen, living as exiles dispersed abroad … according to the foreknowledge of God the Father, through the sanctifying work of the Spirit, to be obedient and to be sprinkled with the blood of Jesus Christ. May grace and peace be multiplied to you.” – 1 Peter 1:1-2 CSB

    1. Foreknowledge of God the Father,
    2. Sanctifying work of the [Holy] Spirit,
    3. Sprinkled with the blood of Jesus Christ.

    Together, the Three-in-One God:

    1. Knows us
    2. Grows us
    3. Forgives us
    4. Prepares us — for eternity with Him.

    LESSON: We are a chosen people, and those of us who have come to believe God is who He says He is, and that His promises are solid, are promised eternal life. You can bet your life on that – your eternal life.

    God used this letter of the Apostle Peter to give encouragement to First Century believers, who faced torture and death.

    God uses those same words to encourage Twenty First Century believers through our life trials.

    Our study of 1 Peter 1 shows us that:

    • God promises us better days ahead (Heaven)
    • We should keep our focus not on ourselves but on our Lord
    • We are blessed to believe Him even though we have not seen Him
    • We can rest confidently in God’s promises
    • Why? Because His Word is eternal, universal, and relevant to the time … and will remain eternal, universal, and relevant right up until the day Jesus returns.

    Believe it … and be blessed.


  • GOD’S WILL — Embracing a Relationship With God

    ~God Speaks~

    ~Man’s Stubborness~

    ~FLICKERING LIGHTS~

    ~PRAYER~

  • FAITH IN SMALL THINGS: God Is Working for Us

    CHRISTIAN MESSAGE By WARD PIMLEY



    GOD IS ALWAYS WORKING, yet from our limited and temporal perspectives, we often miss seeing what He is  doing, unless we are actively looking for it, unless we want to find it.

    How often we find it much easier to see what God is doing in our lives when we look backward, instead of forward, to see how He has managed to combine events and bring people into our lives that have changed us in some way. 

    However, when we look in front of us, we often miss what God is doing now, or how He is preparing us now, for what lies ahead. 

    There’s that famous example of someone walking along the shoreline who sees two sets of footprints — one set beside the other — and then sees only one set of footprints, and asks, “Lord, where were You when I needed You?” — and the Lord replies, “See where there’s only one set of footprints? Those were Mine. That’s when I was carrying You.”

    In my own life, I can see, looking backward, how God has intervened when I’ve humbled myself and asked Him for help and He has carried me for a term.

    Of course, He won’t always carry us because, without our struggles, there’s no growth, so He’ll gently let us down from His strong shoulders to resume walking beside us. He doesn’t abandon us; He just shifts position.

    IN OUR BIBLICAL TEXT, Jesus had just healed a man who had been lame for 38 years. This was the Sabbath, and Jesus and His followers were on their way to worship. 

    The Lord saw the man resting beside a pool with others who were blind or deaf or lame, and Jesus had told the man to stand up, pick up his pallet, and walk. As the man obeyed, he was healed.

    While the man obeyed Jesus, carrying one’s pallet on the Sabbath — plus healing a lame man on the Sabbath — were both forbidden by the Jewish leaders. 

    When the leaders questioned Jesus about His healing on the Sabbath and directing the man to pick up his pallet on the Sabbath, Jesus replied that He and His Father were always working, even on the Sabbath!

    That added another problem with the Jewish leaders — for Jesus was equating Himself with God — which, we know, He was and is.

    Jesus used that example to teach the eternal presence of God in our lives, that the Sabbath is holy but it was made for man, not the other way around, that He was and is God, and that there is dignity and worth in working. 

    It is worth noting, again, that the man who was lame was not healed until he obeyed Jesus’ command to stand up; then, he could pick up his pallet and walk.

    ~ETERNAL PERSPECTIVE~

    THIS PASSAGE IS LOADED with meaning. Besides the ones we just mentioned, there were at least two more important lessons. 

    One is that God has an eternal perspective while our viewpoint is very limited. At most, we see what’s happening to us and around us right now, and as we’ve noted, often we miss it, but God sees today’s events as part of the eternal landscape. It takes faith on our part to recognize that God is working even now when we cannot understand what He is doing or why He is doing it.

    Besides the eternal perspective, the other meaning from our passage is that God calls on us to help in His work. In the passage we cited, Jesus did not just heal the man; He asked if the man wanted to be healed. Was he even interested in hearing from God and doing what God asked him to do.

    We were to find out. Jesus told him to pick up his pallet and walk. It was in the doing that the lame man was made whole.

    ~WISP OF SMOKE~

    WHEN WE ASK GOD for guidance, we want ASAP, yet God works through eternity. Our days are numbered; His are unlimited. He  exists from eternity past to eternity future, while our lives are a wisp of smoke.

    That’s why He calls us to faith – to believe those things that we cannot see and to trust that He is working out His eternal and universal plan in our lives even at this very moment.

    When we look behind us, we are more likely to see the progress, the change, the work that He has done. 

    When we look ahead, we often see a blank slate. God sees what He will do … but we have to wait, in faith, that He will act; in fact, to see that He is acting. We will see it in time, if not right away.

    In the Old Testament, God is speaking through the prophet Zechariah to tell His people these three truths: “You will succeed, not by military might or by your own strength, but by my spirit”; “For who has despised the day of small things?”; and “This shall come to pass, if you will diligently obey the voice of the Lord your God.” (Zech. 4:6 GNT; Zech. 4:10 NKJV; Zech. 6:15 ESV)

    The Bible tells us not to despise “the day of small things,” of limited progress (at least, to our eyes), because the days pile on, one after another, one month after another, one year after another, one decade after another, and then that compilation of “small things” over time becomes something grand. 

    Just as a little faith will move mountains, so faith in the “small things” can lead to greatness. God is always working, even when we don’t see it. He is with us, and He is faithful.

    ~FINAL WORDS~

    MY QUESTION TO YOU, faithful church, is this: Do you have faith that God is present in your lives, that He sustains you when you are discouraged or face defeat, that He carries you when you need a lift and accompanies you when you just need a friend. 

    Do you listen for His voice. Do you hear Him reassuring you, or is your own voice drowning out His voice.

    Are you even walking with Him in faith? Do you not know that all of the benefits that God promises are available to everyone, but only those who humble themselves before the throne, who receive His Spirit into their hearts, will ever know the peace and joy that He willingly offers.

    Today, if you have not turned your life over to the Lord, or even if you’re not sure you have, or you’re ‘pretty sure’ you might have at one time but have since walked away, I invite you to change that now. Don’t let this moment pass without calling on God’s grace. 

  • JESUS IS CALLING: ARE YOU LISTENING?

    God has given us the gift of “free will,” which means we can accept Him or reject Him – our choice. That’s how much He loves us. He will not force Himself on us. Those of us who are listening to the Lord’s voice benefit from His peace and grace — and the promise of eternal life. Our burden is for those who are not yet listening.


    CHRISTIAN MESSAGE By WARD PIMLEY


     JESUS IS CALLING. He came to earth “to save the lost.” (Luke 10:10 CSB) So, who are the “lost?” All of us.

    Here’s some proof from the Word of God:

    HEAR HIS VOICE


    PRAYER

  • OVERCOMING ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE: One Man’s Journey of Faith



    WHEN I BECAME A CHRISTIAN, a believer in Jesus Christ as my Savior and Lord, He began to change me, to transform me into the man He designed me to be, not the man I had become. 

    While I wanted His saving grace, I also chaffed at the changes He sought because, at the time, I still “enjoyed” my sins. That’s where most of the world is, and I was in the beginning stage of being rescued from the mire. 

    The biggest obstacle to placing confidence in my Creator and would-be Savior was a dependence on alcohol to blunt the pain of my broken life. He wanted me to stop, and I wanted me to continue. He started putting on some pressure; I resisted. 

    I had used the blunting power of alcohol to keep depressing emotions from overtaking me; He wanted to free me from that. You’d think it was a no-brainer. In a sense, it was because I certainly was not using my brain.

    I was stubborn and resisting His call on my life. 

    WE DANCED THIS WAY for three years, with Him ratcheting up the pressure, and me resisting and then bending, until finally I broke and said, “I’m ready to do this Your way.”

    It has now been 14 years since I received eternal life through the Holy Spirit and  nearly 11 years since I’ve tasted alcohol. Show me a chilled Martini with three olives in it, lined up on a tooth pick, and I am still, even today, tempted to join in; but, fortunately for me, He who is in me is stronger than he (Satan) who is in the world, and I resist.

    I still resist, but, frankly, from time to time, I still wonder. Maybe I could have just one drink, I think, but then I remember what it’s numbing power does to me, and I’m even more determined to resist the pull.

    As a result, I remain sober and faithful to my Liberator, the One who saved my life from its brokenness and my soul from eternal torment.

    IF YOU WANT that life-changing transformation for yourself, you can have it, today, right now, by earnestly confessing your need for the Savior. God wants to hear from you. 

    He gave us this guarantee in 2 Chronicles 7:14 (NKJV):

    “If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves, and pray and seek My face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and heal their land.”

    His promises are good for everyone, no matter who you are or where you’ve been or what you’ve done. He longs to hear from you, and He wants to forgive you and welcome you into His family. 

    In Romans 8:14 (NIV), He tells us:

    “For those who are being led by the Spirit of God are the children of God.”

    THAT MEANS, while He loves everyone, those who love Him back, who trust Him for their salvation, receive a special blessing: They become His sons and daughters, His children.

    Pray with me a prayer like this (or use similar words): 

    IF YOU PRAYED that prayer with sincerity, then welcome into the Kingdom of God! You now will be held securely by the hands of our Savior, Jesus Christ, and no one can take you from His grip. 

    Grow in your faith. Read your Bible daily. Pray constantly. Tell someone what God has done for you. 

    ~PRAYER~

  • SHARE THE GOSPEL: It’s the Good News!




    ~HONOR CHRIST~

    PRAYER