Archive for the ‘Perspective’ Category

More than Just a Man

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Several years ago I was on a red eye flight from LA to St. Louis and the man next to me struck up a conversation.  He told me about an article he had just read about Jesus Christ that was based on a survey asking people who they thought Jesus was.  After listening to his synopsis, I asked him: “Well, who do you think Jesus was?” “It doesn’t really matter what I think,” he answered.

Not content with his answer, I pressed a little bit more.  Finally he said, “Jesus was a man just like you and me.  He had great ideas and he was noble enough to die for his cause.  And if people want to make him out to be a god just because of that, then I guess the heavens are full of a lot of gods.  It’s not like he even claimed to be God anyway!”

Did Jesus really not claim to be God?  What if he did?  Would it change people’s minds?  Join us this Sunday, June 21, as we take a look at Jesus’ own words and see that he claimed to be more than just a man – he claimed to be God. 

The Cost of Being King

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

“For unto us a child is born…and the government shall be on his shoulders.”   Isaiah 9:6Over $1.5 billion dollars!  That is the total amount of money spent in this last election by candidates seeking to become President of the United States.   Almost a third of that alone was spent on media marketing campaigns to present just the right image and promote just the right agenda so as to gain the people’s favor and vote.   Who says there is not a cost to being king (or in this case, President)?

Contrast that with God’s “marketing campaign” in presenting the King of kings to the people of the world.   He would be born out of wedlock, to a poor couple, in a small, insignificant village, in a borrowed stall fit mostly for animals.  Isaiah gives an interesting resume for this King: “He  had no form or majesty that we should look at him, and no beauty that we should desire him.  He was despised and rejected by men…as one from whom men hide their faces, he was despised, and we esteemed him not.” (Isaiah 53:2-3)  Not exactly the best ad campaign.  He would come not as an honored sovereign, but as a humble servant, and the very people He came to rescue and rule would in time reject Him.  

Yet, Jesus was not running a popularity contest to get elected.  He voluntarily took an office for which no one else was qualified and which nobody understanding the true cost would necessarily seek.   Jesus was born to suffer and die in order to save sinners like you and me.  He came as a Savior King, but not one who saves by laying out economic, education and military policies, but one who would literally lay down His life for His people.  The cost of being King for Jesus was greater than any campaign war-chest, it was death on a cross. 

But it was in paying that price, that Jesus established the victory of God’s kingdom over all the world, and in His resurrection from the dead, the government of all things was laid upon His shoulders.   Indeed He is the King of kings and His name is called, “Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father and Prince of Peace.” (Isaiah 9:6).  That is the paradox of the gospel.  Christ crucified, a stumbling block and foolishness to the world, but to those whom God gives eyes to see and hearts to believe, He is the power of God and the wisdom of God.  (1 Cor. 1:23-24)

This Christmas, let us be reminded that no matter how grand or costly the presentation and promises are, our hope and strength are not found in earthly rulers, but in the King of kings, born in a manger, who paid the ultimate cost of death so that we might have eternal life.  “To him was given dominion and glory and a kingdom, that all peoples, nations, and languages should serve him; his dominion is an everlasting dominion which shall not pass away, and his kingdom one that shall not be destroyed.”  (Daniel 7:14).   O let us adore Him, Christ the Lord!

Thoughts on the Virginia Tech killings

Wednesday, April 18th, 2007

It seems all to common in our day to awake to tragic news such as happened at Virginia Tech yesterday where over 30 students were gunned down in their dorms and classrooms.   It breaks my heart to think of those students, classmates, parents, faculty, and families who are suffering pain and loss beyond what they ever thought they would.  We who know and cherish the value of human life created in God’s image, also understand the reality of evil and sin, and the spiritual battle waged against that life from the beginning of creation.  Nevertheless, it does not soften or lessen the painful consequences of that battle waged in our midst, and at times in such tragic proportions.   What is our response at times like these?

After 9-11, I remember John Piper writing about ways we as Christians should minister to the hurting and suffering.  His words, and the words of Scripture, spoke to me and are certainly applicable in a time like this, so I reprint them from Desiring God Ministries blog here in summary form, and include a link to the full article which contains scripture references.   Let us be praying for the family and friends of those killed at VT, for the healing, both physical and spiritual, of those wounded or hurt by this tragedy, and for our own lives to be lived in full awareness of the temporal nature of this world and the eternal life promised and secured in the gospel of Jesus.  

 21 Ways to Minister to Those Who Are Suffering  by John Piper  (taken from Desiring God website: www.desiringgod.org 

(Bible verses to accompany each item on this list are available in the full article.) 

1. Pray. Ask God for his help for you and for those you want to minister to. Ask him for wisdom and compassion and strength and a word fitly chosen. Ask that those who are suffering would look to God as their help and hope and healing and strength. Ask that he would make your mouth a fountain of life. 

2. Feel and express empathy with those most hurt by this great evil and loss; weep with those who weep. 

3. Feel and express compassion because of the tragic circumstances of so many loved ones and friends who have lost more than they could ever estimate. 

4. Take time and touch, if you can, and give tender care to the wounded in body and soul. 

5. Hold out the promise that God will sustain and help those who cast themselves on him for mercy and trust in his grace. He will strengthen you for the impossible days ahead in spite of all darkness. 

6. Affirm that Jesus Christ tasted hostility from men and knew what it was to be unjustly tortured and abandoned, and to endure overwhelming loss, and then be killed, so that he is now a sympathetic mediator for us with God. 

7. Declare that this murder was a great evil, and that God’s wrath is greatly kindled by the wanton destruction of human life created in his image. 

8. Acknowledge that God has permitted a great outbreak of sin against his revealed will, and that we do not know all the reasons why he would permit such a thing now, when it was in his power to stop it. 

9. Express the truth that Satan is a massive reality in the universe that conspires with our own sin and flesh and the world to hurt people and to move people to hurt others, but stress that Satan is within and under the control of God. 

10. Express that these terrorists rebelled against the revealed will of God and did not love God or trust him or find in God their refuge and strength and treasure, but scorned his ways and his Person. 

11. Since rebellion against God was at the root of this act of murder, let us all fear such rebellion in our own hearts, and turn from it, and embrace the grace of God in Christ, and renounce the very impulses that caused this tragedy. 

12. Point the living to the momentous issues of sin and repentance in our own hearts and the urgent need to get right with God through his merciful provision of forgiveness in Christ, so that a worse fate than death will not overtake us. 

13. Remember that even those who trust in Christ may be cut down like these thousands who were in New York and Washington, (or these 33 were in Blacksburg, VA)  but that does not mean they have been abandoned by God or not loved by God even in those agonizing hours of suffering. God’s love conquers even through calamity. 

14. Mingle heart-wrenching weeping with unbreakable confidence in the goodness and sovereignty of God who rules over and through the sin and the plans of rebellious people. 

15. Trust God for his ability to do the humanly impossible, and bring you through this nightmare and, in some inscrutable way, bring good out of it. 

16. Explain, when the time is right, and they have the wherewithal to think clearly that one of the mysteries of God’s greatness is that he ordains that some things come to pass which he forbids and disapproves of. 

17. Express your personal cherishing of the sovereignty of God as the ground of all your hope as you face the human impossibilities of life. The very fulfillment of the New Covenant promises of our salvation and preservation hang on God’s sovereignty over rebellious human wills. 

18. Count God your only lasting treasure, because he is the only sure and stable thing in the universe. 

19. Remind everyone that to live is Christ and to die is gain. 

20. Pray that God would incline their hearts to his word, open their eyes to his wonders, unite their hearts to fear him, and satisfy them with his love.

21. At the right time sound the trumpet that all this good news is meant by God to free us for radical, sacrificial service for the salvation of men and the glory of Christ. Help them see that one message of all this misery is to show us that life is short and fragile and followed by eternity, and small, man-centered ambitions are tragic.