Sunday, November 30, 2014

“What Can Stop Us” – Joshua 17:12-18


11/30/14  Christ Fellowship

“What Can Stop Us” – Joshua 17:12-18

Happy anniversary Christ Fellowship!  We have made it to our 2 year anniversary.  Honeymoon’s over now, right?  We’re gonna start making some rules around here!  No, no.  We’re not.  We don’t have any rules around here and we like it that way.  The closest thing we have to a rule is our credo or mission statement that we will do whatever it takes to lead people to have a life-changing relationship with Jesus Christ.

And in the 2 years that we have been here I believe we have been faithful to that.  We have been tested and tried but I believe we have been obedient to what God has asked us to do.  We certainly aren’t perfect but we have certainly matured as a church in the past year.  We have been tested in ways that many older churches have yet to.  When I tell people outside this church about how Satan has attacked in so many ways, internally, externally, physically, financially, morally and more, they tell me that their church has never had to really go through some of those things.

We see Crossway Church doing so well in the building we used to be in in Runaway Bay and we know that they are where they are supposed to be.  And we know that we are where we are supposed to be and it’s just exciting to see God at work in Wise County.  We have seen lives changed, marriages restored, families healed, people healed and forgiven and I tell people all the time that it is just fun to be a member here because of all the ways God is using and is going to use this church.

I am more optimistic about this church than I ever have been.  I sense a closeness among the members and a passion for the community that is exciting and I can’t wait to see how God is going to use and bless this bunch of Jesus-followers.  I have a vision of our church being the catalyst for revival in Wise County.  I can look forward to a time when this church will have sister churches that we have started all over the world and every year a group from this church will go on a mission trip to one of those churches or to start a new one. 

I honestly don’t have a vision of this church becoming another mega-church with a building program and having to add additional rooms and other buildings on this property but my vision does include growing the Kingdom of God in Lake Bridgeport, Wise County, all over Texas and the world just like the Great Commission tells us at the end of Matthew.  And there is no reason all of that can’t happen.  And there is only one reason why it won’t.  That reason is sin.

Sin is the only reason we can’t or won’t do amazing things for the Kingdom.  If we are obedient, God will do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, according to Ephesians 3:20.  Because, as that verse tells us, it is His power that is at work within us that will accomplish those things.  We don’t have the power within ourselves to do all that but can and will do it through us if we abide in Him; if we are obedient to Him.  But our sin as individuals and as a church will hinder the work of God and will stop us from reaching our potential.

I know it’s true because we see it in God’s Word.  Grab your Bible.  There should be one right in front of you if you didn’t bring one.  And turn to the Old Testament book of Joshua.  It is between Deuteronomy and Judges and it is full of boring old history.  There are lots of lists and impossible to pronounce names and it can get pretty dry at times…until you see the reason that God placed those things there and then it becomes the living Word that is powerful and sharp as a two-edged sword and will not come back void and inspired by the same Holy Spirit that lives in us as Christians today.

Joshua chapter 17, verses 12-18.  Joshua has been a book that I have gone to so many times over the past year.  It tells of the Hebrew people’s start in the new land that God had provided for them and we can relate as a church so much to what happened to them.  God took them out of the wilderness and in chapter 3, verse 5, Joshua tells the people to “Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the LORD will do amazing things among you."  Some of you remember me preaching about that.  And we saw it happen to us as well.  God has done amazing things among us.

 

In chapter 4 the whole nation of 3-4 million people crossed the flooded Jordan River on dry ground and went into the Promised Land.  And when they were all across they went and got 12 stones out of the river bed and stacked them up as a remembrance of what God did for them.  We did the same with 12 pebbles out of the parking lot of the old church building when The Rock started leasing it from us, for the same reason; so that we can tell people about how God provided a miracle for us to put us where we are supposed to be.

We have fought with the enemies, we have seen the fall of our Jericho and we have seen God protect and provide for us, His people, in this new land of Lake Bridgeport.  Today I want to look at chapter 17 where we see that it is time for Joshua to divide up the land among all the tribes or families and so, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, Joshua does so.  There are still some people living in the land and they have built cities and farms but God has given all of that to the Hebrew people.  All they have to do is spread out and go get it.

So, let’s read about that in Joshua 17:12-18.

“Yet the Manassites were not able to occupy these towns, for the Canaanites were determined to live in that region. 13 However, when the Israelites grew stronger, they subjected the Canaanites to forced labor but did not drive them out completely. 14 The people of Joseph said to Joshua, “Why have you given us only one allotment and one portion for an inheritance? We are a numerous people, and the Lord has blessed us abundantly.” 15 “If you are so numerous,” Joshua answered, “and if the hill country of Ephraim is too small for you, go up into the forest and clear land for yourselves there in the land of the Perizzites and Rephaites.” 16 The people of Joseph replied, “The hill country is not enough for us, and all the Canaanites who live in the plain have chariots fitted with iron, both those in Beth Shan and its settlements and those in the Valley of Jezreel.” 17 But Joshua said to the tribes of Joseph—to Ephraim and Manasseh—“You are numerous and very powerful. You will have not only one allotment 18 but the forested hill country as well. Clear it, and its farthest limits will be yours; though the Canaanites have chariots fitted with iron and though they are strong, you can drive them out.”

I remember when I was in elementary school there was a game that some of the kids played on the playground at recess.  It usually started with a couple of boys who would lock arms and start walking around the playground chanting, “Nothing can stop us” over and over again.  Pretty soon a few more boys would join in and they would just walk over anybody in their way.  They would trample the kids as they played their other games or sat reading or whatever and they were right.  Nothing could stop them.  Some kids would try to break through the chain but they usually couldn’t and the group of boys would just keep marching, trampling and chanting, “Nothing can stop us.  Nothing can stop us.”

 

But there was one thing that could stop them and eventually it always did.  Do you know what it was?  A teacher.  Finally some teacher would have enough or somebody would get hurt and then the teacher would walk out there and holler at them to stop and they would all scatter. 

 

It’s sort of like that for us as a church.  When we lock arms together and let God guide us there is nothing that can stop us from doing amazing things through the power of God.  We are a force to be reckoned with, stamping out unrighteousness; trampling on the forces of evil and marching in step with the Spirit.  It’s a beautiful thing but there is something that can stop us.  There is one thing that will keep us from being who we are supposed to be and doing what we are supposed to do as a church and as individuals.  And that thing is sin. 

 

We see here in Joshua three things that threatened to stop the children of Israel from being what God wanted them to be.  There is the problem of possession, the problem of pride and the problem of priorities.

 

Look at verses 12 and 13 again.  We see the problem of possession.  When I talk about possession I am not talking about possessions or stuff although I will be talking about that some in the next couple of weeks.  I mean they failed to possess what God had given them.  They failed to inhabit the land that God had declared was theirs because the Canaanites were living there.

 

God had told them to completely dispossess the Canaanites from the land.  Drive them out.  Kill them.  Get rid of them.  They have no claim to that land.  But not only did they not dispossess them they even made them slaves thinking that was good enough.  But what always happens?  The enemy would get stronger and stronger and pretty soon they would take over again.

 

Do you know what God wanted for them?  It is the same thing He wants for Christ Fellowship. He wanted them to have complete victory.  He didn’t bring them to the Promised Land so they could huddle in fear or be overtaken by the enemy.  1 Corinthians 15:57 says, “But thanks be to God! He gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.Douglas MacArthur said, “In war, there is no substitute for victory.”

 

And we are in a battle.  We are in a battle for Lake Bridgeport.  Our battle is not against flesh and blood.  It is a battle against Satan for the souls of this community.  And we will lose that battle if we do not possess what God has given us.  Like the Manassites, we too often fail to win the battle because we have not completely driven out the sin that is in our lives.  We play around with it.  We leave a little bit here and there and we think we have pretty good control over it but we always leave a foothold for it.

 

We are not here to coddle our fleshly nature; our old man; the sinful nature that we have.  We don’t coddle it.  We crucify it.  We drive it out completely.  You know that sin that you struggle with over and over again?  You know that thing you do or don’t do that you have to repent of 12 times a day and it pains you to do it but you still do it?  You know what I’m talking about.  Think about how that starts in your life.  What brings it to mind?  Is it a place?  A song?  A person or a habit? 

 

Those things may or may not be bad in and of themselves but if it is a foothold for that sin in your life then drive it out.  Get rid of it.  Like the Manassites, we sometimes think we don’t have to do away with it completely.  We can handle it.  We will keep this little bit over here and we can control it but it always gets stronger and eventually we are not in possession of what God has given us anymore.

 

Not only are we not able to battle for the souls of our community but we have also lost the other things that God has given us to possess.  Do you know that God promises to give us wisdom?  He says we can have the Fruit of the Spirit; love, joy, peace, patience, etc.  But we either think it is too hard or we think we can control it and either way we start to say, “Oh I have no peace, no joy.  I just don’t have patience.  I can’t do it.”  And Satan just giggles his nasty head off thinking how foolish we are not to possess what we already own; the things God Himself has given us.

 

So, we see here and in our own lives the problem of possession.  But we also see in verse 14 the problem of pride.  “The people of Joseph said to Joshua, “Why have you given us only one allotment and one portion for an inheritance? We are a numerous people, and the Lord has blessed us abundantly.”

 

These same people who are unable to drive out the Canaanites, these same people who were unable to possess the lot that God had already given them, were now asking for more. They hadn’t even possessed what they had, but they were saying, “Hey, we’re kind of a big deal around here.  God thinks pretty highly of us.  So, why don’t we get more than what we have?”  The thing about the Manassites is that the portion that they were given was actually as big or bigger than most of the other tribes.  If your Bible has maps in the back there is probably one that shows that their territory was huge but evidently it wasn’t big enough to hold their big heads.

 

1 Peter 5:5 says, “God opposes the proud but shows favor to the humble.”  Do you want to know what will stop this church dead in its tracks quicker than anything?  It is the attitude of pride that says, “Look what we have done!”  It’s especially difficult for pastors to see the church grow and prosper and it’s one reason it is not my vision for this church to be a mega-church.  I’ll be honest with you.  I have seen it too many times.  The Lord blesses a church and pretty soon the pastor’s thumbs go under his arms and his head tilts back as he surveys the big building with all the cars in the parking lot and some part of him says, “Hmmm…I must be doing something right.  I must be getting pretty good at this.

I bet God wants to throw up.  And that is why He says in 2 Chronicles 7:14, “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 I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”  He is not telling Lake Bridgeport to humble themselves.  He is telling His people.  He says, “Hey Christ Fellowship, humble yourself.  Hey Pastor Todd, I am especially talking to you.  This has never had anything to do with you and it never will.  All you have to do is be obedient and I will build my church.  I will provide the people.  I will provide the program, the budget, the plan and when I do, the gates of Hell will not prevail against it and there will be no stopping this church.”

 

But we are a prideful people.  We have a problem with possession, with pride and with our priorities.  Look again at verse 17 and the condescension that just drips off the tongue of Joshua here. “But Joshua said to the tribes of Joseph—to Ephraim and Manasseh—“You are numerous and very powerful. You will have not only one allotment but the forested hill country as well. Clear it, and its farthest limits will be yours; though the Canaanites have chariots fitted with iron and though they are strong, you can drive them out.”

 

He is telling them that if they want more territory then they already have it.  All they have to do is get to work and clear some of the trees out of the way and there will be plenty of land for them.

 

A group of friends went deer hunting and paired off in twos for the day. That night one of the hunters returned alone, staggering under an eight-point buck.  "Where's Harry?" he was asked.  "Harry had a stroke of some kind. He's a couple of miles back up the trail."  "You left Harry laying there, and carried the deer back?"  "Well," said the hunter, "I figured no one was going to steal Harry."

 

We can easily have a problem with our priorities just like that hunter and that will absolutely stop us from being and doing and going as God wants us to.  We say we want to win souls in Lake Bridgeport .  We say we want to make a difference.  We say we want to lead people to have a life-changing relationship with Jesus Christ.  And I believe we really do but the proof is not in the pudding. It is in the priority.

 

You say, “Oh, I wish I understood the Bible better.  Hey, look.  Gunsmoke is coming on!”

“Oh, I hope those people down the street find somebody to bring them to church.”

“I hope the church meets its budget this year and as soon as I start making some good money, I’m gonna help.”

“You know, somebody ought to start … (fill in the blank).”

 

How bad do you want it?  How bad do you want to be obedient?  How bad do you want to see God’s blessings?  Do you know I wish I was skinny?  I do.  I really do wish it.  But do you know how bad I wish I was skinny?  This bad.  (Hands on belly)  I evidently don’t want it bad enough.  I try to watch what I eat.  I even ate some vegetables…some time ago.  But I have proved that I don’t want it bad enough.  I have not made it a priority.

 

If we are going to be all that God wants for us as a church and as individuals then we have to make it a priority.  And if we don’t, do you know what the consequences are?  The consequences of me being fat are very serious.  The consequences of us not making a priority of being obedient are eternal!  And not just for us.  We as Christians have our eternities set.  We may miss out on blessings if we don’t do what we are supposed to do but for the person across the street and right behind us the consequences of our apathy will be eternal.

 

I’ve told you before what the atheist magician Penn Jillette said about proselytizing.  He is an atheist but he said if that is really how you believe that Jesus is the Son of God and died for our sins then how bad do you have to hate a person not to tell them about it?  He is so right.  Even an atheist knows you have to have your priorities in order to make a difference in this nasty old world.

 

So, how bad do you want to make a difference?  How bad do you want to be holy and different?  How bad do want Christ Fellowship to be a force to be reckoned with?  Do you want it bad enough to drive out the sin in your life?  Do you want it bad enough to let go of the monster of pride?  Do you want it bad enough to make it a priority in your life?

If we do that, nothing will be able to stop us. 

 

Invitation

 

 

 

Thanks to Adrian Rogers for part of the outline.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

“The Sinful Woman was Thankful” – Luke 7:36-50


Are you thankful to be here this morning? How many of you are daring to go to the stores the day after Thanksgiving and get some Black Friday sales?  Here are some headlines from years past:

I find it hard to believe that somebody was enjoying turkey and dressing and visiting with loving family members on Thursday afternoon and evening and then after watching some football and telling each other how blessed they were and how thankful they were, then they just decided, “Hey, let’s go get in a gang fight.” Or, “Let’s go steal some kid’s bag in front of Bed, Bath & Beyond”.

I find it hard to believe that somebody said, “Man, I’m full. God has blessed me so much. I have so much for which to be thankful. Now, who wants to go with me to the mall where we can kill somebody over a tv?” “Hey honey, I’m gonna go punch a guy in the face at Target when he cuts in line. Wanna come?”

I have to admit, though, that I almost fell into some of that trap. I didn’t go to the mall or anything but I saw on the news that somebody was having a sale on TV’s for like $97 for a pretty nice set. I have an old dinosaur for a TV and thought that might be alright. So, I went online and checked it out. I didn’t see the $97 one but I saw one marked down from $400 to $200 and thought that wasn’t too bad. Oh, but look. This one was $700 and now it’s only $350. Pretty soon I saw one for $750 that had been way marked down and started justifying it in my mind and then I realized what was happening and had to just turn off the computer and walk away. I realized I was falling into the thought process of spending just a little more and a little more and justifying it the whole time.

But when we realize just how blessed we really are and how little some other people have and what God has blessed us with it should start to make us thankful for what we have and thankful to the One who provides it. And that's just being thankful for "stuff".  Now it's good to be thankful for "stuff".  We definitely should be.  But the real life-changer comes when we are really thankful for the other, more important things God has blessed us with.  It's important that we are thankful for the stuff, thankful for the health, thankful for our family, our friends, our freedom and as my nephew prayed Thursday, "Thank you for the sky and the whole world."  Those are all good and important things that we take for granted all too often.

But if you want to see somebody whose life is changed by their thankfulness, you look at somebody who realizes and doesn't take for granted what they have been saved from and what they have been saved to and the price that was paid for that salvation.  That is a person who is unimpressed by $97 TV's.  That's a person who doesn't get into "insane battles over phones".  That is a person who trusts in the Lord with all their heart and does not lean on their own understanding as it says in Proverbs.

That's a person who knows that this battle is not against flesh and blood as in Ephesians.  That's a person who knows the Lord requires you to act justly, love mercy and walk humbly with your God per Micah.  That's a person who cries out to God, "Create in me a pure heart, oh, God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me" like David did in Psalms; a person who can forget the former things and not dwell on the past as it says in Isaiah.

A person who knows what they have been saved from and to is a person that is described in Luke chapter 7 where we see a sinful woman come to Jesus and her thankfulness to Jesus literally can't be stopped.  It can't be ignored.  She can't help but be thankful and she doesn't care who sees or hears because she has entered into a life-changing relationship with Jesus Christ.

Turn to Luke 7:36-50 and I want to introduce you to a woman with no name and a Pharisee with no future.

36 When one of the Pharisees invited Jesus to have dinner with him, he went to the Pharisee’s house and reclined at the table. 37 A woman in that town who lived a sinful life learned that Jesus was eating at the Pharisee’s house, so she came there with an alabaster jar of perfume. 38 As she stood behind him at his feet weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears. Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed them and poured perfume on them.39 When the Pharisee who had invited him saw this, he said to himself, “If this man were a prophet, he would know who is touching him and what kind of woman she is—that she is a sinner.”40 Jesus answered him, “Simon, I have something to tell you.”“Tell me, teacher,” he said.41 “Two people owed money to a certain moneylender. One owed him five hundred denarii and the other fifty. 42 Neither of them had the money to pay him back, so he forgave the debts of both. Now which of them will love him more?”43 Simon replied, “I suppose the one who had the bigger debt forgiven.” “You have judged correctly,” Jesus said.44 Then he turned toward the woman and said to Simon, “Do you see this woman? I came into your house. You did not give me any water for my feet, but she wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. 45 You did not give me a kiss, but this woman, from the time I entered, has not stopped kissing my feet. 46 You did not put oil on my head, but she has poured perfume on my feet. 47 Therefore, I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven—as her great love has shown. But whoever has been forgiven little loves little.”48 Then Jesus said to her, “Your sins are forgiven.”49 The other guests began to say among themselves, “Who is this who even forgives sins?”50 Jesus said to the woman, “Your faith has saved you; go in peace.”

What we have here is an easy comparison between two people.  It's easy to see who the bad guy is and who the good person is.  And it's also easy to compare ourselves to the 2 characters and we all see ourselves in the place of the woman, don't we?  We all think that Pharisee was so rude and unthankful to Jesus and we just can't imagine being like that and we are so glad we are like we are.

C.S. Lewis satirically wrote in the book, The Screwtape Letters, about a senior demon, Screwtape writing to his nephew Wormwood, a Junior Tempter.  Screwtape is encouraging the younger Wormwood to do everything possible to secure the damnation of a British man known only as the Patient.  And while the younger and less mature Wormwood keeps trying to tempt the Patient into extravagant and deplorable sins, the older, wiser Screwtape advises him that if the man won't give in to the temptations, then just let him be proud of his resistance to them.  One sin is as good as another, says Screwtape.  One sin is as good as another.

So, there are several things to be learned from this fascinating passage.  It's fascinating on one hand because it gives us a glimpse of life as it was lived in the days of Jesus.  This was evidently a common happening.  One important person would invite another important person over to eat and it was just a fact that some of the town folk would come over and just watch.  I guess it's what you do if you don't have cable.

The Bible, as so often happens, does not tell us all the details.  We don't know the woman's name or why she was considered to be so sinful.  But, as always, the Bible tells us just enough.  It tells us what we really need to know.  And if it makes you feel better about yourself to assume that she was a harlot then so be it.  And maybe she was but it doesn't matter.  One sin is as good as another, right?

It doesn't matter because all that is in the past.  She has evidently heard Jesus speak.  Maybe she had a conversation with Him or maybe she heard Him preach on a hillside somewhere.  We don't know but we do know that her interaction with Jesus has changed her life and when she heard that he was going to be at the Pharisee's house then she knew she had to see Him and honor Him.  And in so doing she not only honored Jesus but became a teaching opportunity to Simon the Pharisee and the others around him and to us as well.

 

You have to picture the scene.  Jesus and the others would have been laying on very short couches or pillows with their legs out behind them.  And just the act of a woman walking in and being so close to Jesus was enough to raise eyebrows.  Women were not invited to these things especially a "sinful" woman like this.  And then she starts bawling and calling attention to herself but if that weren't enough women did not let down their hair in public at all.  It was very inappropriate per the standards of the day.  And then as if she wasn't already obvious enough, she perfumed the whole room with this expensive perfume.

I'm sure the Pharisee was thinking all kinds of self-righteous thoughts and we have a snippet of his thoughts recorded here since Jesus knew what he was thinking.  While all of this was happening, the Pharisee was thinking ill of Jesus and so Jesus tells a story that we see plainly represents the Pharisee and the woman.  And for us it plainly represents everybody else as the ones who owed the small debt and we see ourselves as the ones who owed the big debt because we know we love Jesus more than most other people, right?

Then Jesus goes on to tell the Pharisee how the woman has done for him what the Pharisee should have as basic hospitality.  Jesus told him that the woman had given him a kiss, in fact, the phrase means has given many, many kisses.  A kiss was just a sign of respect and welcome but the Pharisee had not done that.

He says that the woman has given Him water for His feet whereas the Pharisee had neglected that too.  Water was used to simply clean the dust off the visitor's feet and was usually done by a servant.

And the oil was used to freshen a visitor and make them feel comfortable but of course the Pharisee had nothing for Jesus but the woman did even better and used expensive perfume.

Don't you just hate an inconsiderate host?  It's just wrong for somebody to invite you to their place and then not make you feel welcome when you are there.  What makes it worse is when they act like they are doing you such a huge favor and showing you great honor just by being there.  Don't you just hate that?  Makes me sick.

I have to wonder what Jesus thinks about the welcome He gets in our lives.  Oh, I know we all think we are the sinful woman who is so thankful for what Jesus has done but how many times do we act more like the Pharisee?  We talk a good game.  We say we love God and we say He is Lord but do we show it?  Did you notice that the woman never says a word in this passage?  She didn't have to.  Her feelings are obvious.

Have you shown the minimum amount of hospitality to Jesus being in your life?  Have you showed him the respect and welcome of a kiss by not taking His name in vain or tolerating it by someone else?

Have you shown Him you are His servant ready to wash feet or use your own feet to spread the Gospel?  Isaiah 52:7 says, "How beautiful on the mountains are the feet of those who bring good news, who proclaim peace, who bring good tidings, who proclaim salvation, who say to Zion, "Your God reigns!"

Have you made him feel comfortable as the Anointed King of your life by giving Him every aspect of your life?  Have you given Him your fears, your dreams, your kids and grandkids?  Have you turned over your finances, your job, your house and all your "stuff"?  Later on in Luke Jesus says, "How hard it is for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of God!"

I find it hard to believe that someone who is truly cognizant of what they have been saved from and what they have been saved to would have an ongoing problem with their temper.  I find it hard to believe that someone who is truly thankful for their forgiveness of sin would have an ongoing problem with lust or even pornography.  How can you truly be thankful for what God has done in your life and not support His body and His bride, the church?

Matthew 7:21 says, ""Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven."  Only those who do my will...It doesn't say those who talk about it.  Not those who teach Sunday School or even preach sermons.  Not those who quote enough scripture.  Not those who cite their spiritual credentials.

There is a time for planning and discussing and teaching others and that is necessary and good but at some point you have to quit talking about being thankful and start showing it.  When you realize what you are saved from and what you are saved to and the price that was paid for that salvation you WILL tell others about your relationship with Jesus.  You WILL submit your whole life to Him.  You WILL spend time in prayer and Bible study.  Your life will be changed.

And like the sinful woman it won't be able to be stopped or ignored and you won't care who sees or hears.  This story isn't about somebody who sinned a lot and somebody else who didn't sin as much.  It's about the person who acknowledges what it took to forgive that sin and what that means for their eternity.  And it shows in their thankful life.

Getting to Heaven is not about sinning a little versus sinning a lot.  We know that while some sins have different consequences, one sin is as good as another when it comes to keeping you out of Heaven.  God’s standard for entering the pearly gates is perfection.  Since Jesus was the only perfect person to ever live, we get to go to Heaven based on His righteousness and His perfection and the Bible says that all we have to do is believe in Him and God sees us as He sees Jesus.

The Bible makes plain that there is a real Heaven and a real Hell.  Choose you this day whom you will serve.  As for me and this house, we will serve the Lord.

4 Baptized plus two others joined today! What a powerful day! Thank you Lord!

11/23/14

Monday, November 17, 2014

“David Was Thankful” – I Chron. 16:1-6

When you go to visit a new doctor, the first thing he usually asks is, “So…what brings you in today?” I want to ask the same question. What brings you to church today? Why are you here this morning? The ultimate reason why we come to church is to worship God. If you can’t say that is the main reason you are here, then maybe you need to reassess your motives. I’m reminded of the oldDennis the Menace cartoon where Dennis and his parents are leaving church and the pastor is at the back door shaking hands. Dennis gets up to him and says, “Thanks pastor. Not a bad show for a nickel.”
But there are any number of reasons why we come here to worship. It may be because you just love God and want to please him. Maybe you are broken-hearted today and know that with a close walk with the Lord, joy comes in the morning. Maybe you need wisdom and have come for the prayer and closeness that comes with worship. Maybe you have a lot for which to be thankful and you want to worship while telling the Lord how grateful you are for his protection and provision; his mercy and grace; his power and love, forgiveness, or just His presence!
That’s a great reason to worship. When we see who we really are in the light of Who He really is then you can’t help but be thankful and you can’t help but want to worship Him. You can’t help but be thankful for God’s healing presence in your life and in the life of this church.
Do you feel God’s presence here? I do. I don’t feel Him physically. I have never audibly heard His voice. I have never seen Him here with my eyes or like some people who have seen Him in a painting, an oil spot or a grilled cheese sandwich. But I feel the presence of God here in a real way. Especially when others are here as it says that when two or more are gathered in My name, I am there also, but even on a Tuesday morning by myself I feel a holiness about this place; a feeling that this place is special and set apart.
And when you know and feel that God is present, that should make you very thankful and that thankfulness should impact your worship. It did for David in the Old Testament. In I Chronicles chapter 16 David is thankful and rejoicing in the fact that God is with him and the nation of Israel in a real way. And it all revolved around the Ark of the Covenant.
Now, as 21st century believers it is hard for us to appreciate the significance of the Ark. I mean it’s just a box with a few trinkets in it, right? That “box” was significant enough to have wars fought over it. It was significant enough that many lives were lost because of it, some of those lives were lost because the person only touched the Ark. It contained the stone tablets of the 10 Commandments, Aaron’s rod that had budded and a jar of manna; all significant reminders of how God had provided and protected the nation of Israel.Let’s look at I Chronicles 16:1-6 on page 297 of the Bible in the pew in front of you and see that David was thankful and because he was thankful, it impacted his worship.
16They brought the ark of God and set it inside the tent that David had pitched for it, and they presented burnt offerings and fellowship offerings before God. 2 After David had finished sacrificing the burnt offerings and fellowship offerings, he blessed the people in the name of the Lord. 3 Then he gave a loaf of bread, a cake of dates and a cake of raisins to each Israelite man and woman.4 He appointed some of the Levites to minister before the ark of the Lord, to extol,[a] thank, and praise the Lord, the God of Israel: 5 Asaph was the chief, and next to him in rank were Zechariah, then Jaaziel,[b] Shemiramoth, Jehiel, Mattithiah, Eliab, Benaiah, Obed-Edom and Jeiel. They were to play the lyres and harps, Asaph was to sound the cymbals, 6 and Benaiah and Jahaziel the priests were to blow the trumpets regularly before the ark of the covenant of God.
I’m sure some of those guys have their feelings hurt now because of how I pronounced their names but that is not the important part of the passage. The important things to see here are that David’s thankfulness to God for His presence is reflected in David’s worship. That Ark is representative of God’s presence in a somewhat similar way that this building is representative of His presence. We know that God does not restrict Himself to living only in this structure. God is everywhere. He lives in us. His Spirit guides us. We have a relationship with His Son and for that we are thankful.
Similarly, David and the other Israelites knew that God didn’t restrict Himself to living in that Ark but in a very real way, it symbolized God Himself including the character of God to protect and provide, to show mercy and justice and to bring peace. And so David rejoiced to have the Ark back where it is supposed to be. In the previous chapter it says that he danced with all his might in front of the Ark. I doubt it was Saturday Night Fever-style dancing. He was just excited to worship and it manifested itself physically.
I have a question I want you to answer. What is it about worship that excites you? Is it just something you do out of habit or is there some aspect of your worship of God that still excites you? David was so excited that it manifested itself physically in the previous chapter but in our passage today there are 3 ways that David’s thankfulness impacted his worship.
  1. It impacted his offerings.
  2. It impacted his prayer.
  3. It impacted his music.
And it should do the same for us today. It says that David sacrificed burnt offerings and fellowship offerings to God. The burnt offering signified their total devotion to God. With these they were saying that all they have belongs to God and He can do with it as He chooses. They were completely dedicated to God and they proved it through their burnt offerings. Does that sound like you? Is your whole life totally dedicated to God? Have you told Him that? This is the same kind of sacrifice referred to in Romans 12:1 where it says, “Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship.”

Let’s take time to do that right now. Let’s bow our heads and close our eyes and just tell God that we are offering ourselves and everything we have as a burnt offering to Him to use as He sees fit. What part of your life are you not letting God have? He knows. You know it. Stop being stiff-necked and give it to Him in faith and with thankfulness.

Now the fellowship offering was a little bit different. It was a voluntary act of sacrifice that was shared with the others in the temple at the time of worship. They didn’t burn it up. From what I understand they basically cooked it and ate it right there with everybody sharing in the sacrifice. Well, things are different nowadays…but not completely. We’re not going to have a barbeque but I am going to ask you to do something that some might consider to be a sacrifice and that is I want you to get up and share with one person a reason that you have to be thankful for them. Tell just one person but make sure everybody gets told something. Don’t make it up. If nothing else be thankful that they are here. Go for it.

Next we see in verse 4 that David assigns some of the priests to pray for specific things in regard to their thanksgiving. Not only did David’s thankfulness impact his offering but it also impacted his prayer. It says that they made petition, they gave thanks and they praised the Lord in their prayer. So, what’s the difference in all those? To petition is obviously to make a request of God; to ask Him for something. Hebrews 4:16 says, Let us then approach the throne of grace with confidence, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help us in our time of need.”

It also says that they gave thanks to God. Several times in David’s beautiful prayer in this same chapter he gives thanks to God. In verse 8 he says, Give thanks to the LORD, call on his name; make known among the nations what he has done. Inverse 34 he says, “Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever.”

And then it also says they praised God the God of Israel. The difference in this and giving thanks to God is that in giving thanks to God they were thanking Him for what He had done. Here they are thanking Him for Who He is and how He works. Let’s do all of that right now. Let’s ask God to meet our needs but also thank Him for what He has done and for Who He is. Jesus said my house will be a house of prayer. How appropriate it is for us in our thanksgiving to praise Him in prayer as a church.

So we have seen that David’s thankfulness impacted his worship through his offerings and his prayer. Lastly we see that his thankfulness impacted his worship through music. In verses 5 and 6 we see guys with impossible to pronounce names playing all kinds of instruments. You might say they had a “blended service”. They had lyres, harps, cymbals and trumpets. I can’t imagine what that sounded like but there is no doubt it was a joyful noise.

There is something about music that brings back memories like nothing else. You can hear a song on the radio and think immediately of somebody you haven’t thought of in years. Music is powerful and it expresses our feelings like plain words just can’t. (Do you realize that we only have one more worship service in this building? One more Sunday morning. To First Baptist Church of Runaway Bay) I know the last few weeks have been tough on some of us. Satan has been working overtime to distract us and get us off course and I don’t want our last memories of this place to be anything but happy and thankful.

Since we don’t have any lyres or harps or trumpets let’s do something for just a few minutes that we often do at Lake Bridgeport (again, this was in FBCRB). Let’s sing a couple of our favorite hymns. Let’s sing some songs of thanks and praise.

Today’s worship service has been a little different. I know I broke all the rules. You are not supposed to get up and have fun during worship. You’re supposed to pray only at certain times and only sing before and after the sermon. But if we are guilty of anything it is of being thankful in our worship in a biblical way. That’s how my friend David did it so I’m pretty sure it will work for us.

If you don’t have that relationship with God through His Son Jesus that I talked about earlier, you can do that today. Romans 3:23 says that we have all sinned. Sin is anything that displeases God and we have all done something that displeases God. Then in Romans 6:23 it says that the wages of that sin is death. What we deserve for displeasing God is eternal death in Hell separated from God and everybody else. And that is the bad news.

The Good News, though, is found in verses like John 3:16. You probably know that verse. It says, For God so loved the world that He gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.” It says that all you have to do is believe in Jesus and that belief is a life-long walk in faith, learning about Him and becoming more like Him. You don’t have to clean up your act or your life before coming to Him. You don’t have to understand everything. All you have to understand is that Good News. Jesus loves you and died for you. For that we can all be very, very thankful.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

“Joseph Was Thankful” – Genesis 50:15-21


A little boy was asked by his father to say grace at the table.  While the rest of the family waited, the little boy eyed every dish of food his mother had prepared.  After the examination, he bowed his head and honestly prayed, “Lord, I don’t like the looks of it, but I thank you for it and I’ll eat it anyway.  Amen.”

Have you ever felt like that?  You know you should be thankful but it’s not really what you want and yet you make the choice to be thankful anyway.  That little boy was being pretty mature.  His mother may not have appreciated it but I believe God did.  Thankfulness is a sign of maturity.  Babies are not thankful to their mothers for changing their diapers and giving them food and a warm bed.  But nobody expects that from a baby.  But as we mature, expectations change.

Because of the holiday Thanksgiving, November is a natural month to talk about being thankful.  And so for the next 3 Sundays, I would like to look at 3 different biblical characters that were thankful.  Now, some of you may hear that and think that a whole 3-sermon series is not really necessary since we are all thankful.  I mean, we talked about it just this morning.  Everybody is thankful to some degree or another, right?

And maybe that’s true but at the same time, I believe it is time well spent to see what true thankfulness looks like and how it manifests itself in our lives.  Webster defines it as “grateful and appreciative”.  That’s it.  But I am afraid that there is more to it than that, at least from God’s perspective.  Maybe it is just the depth of your gratitude that is the difference.

If you came to me and said, “Pastor, here are the keys to that new yellow Corvette ZR1 convertible you have always wanted. I hope you like the leather seats and engine upgrade. We just wanted to show you how much we love and appreciate you.” And if I grabbed the keys and walked off toward the car and said, “Thanks” over my shoulder, how would you feel?  I mean, I met the qualification for being thankful at least according to Webster.  But you would tell everybody about what an ungrateful and unappreciative pastor you have!

At Christmas time people can be so sensitive.  Have you ever opened a present and not shown quite enough gratitude? “I’ll just take it back if you don’t like it.  Don’t worry about it.  I picked it out just for you knowing how much you like sweaters with pictures of squids on them but I’ll take it back and stand in line for 2 hours and just bring you the money so you can go waste it on something stupid.  Don’t worry about me.”  Good grief.

At the same time, nobody wants you to drum up or manufacture or fake your gratitude, especially God.  He wants you to feel and show true thankfulness and we do that by wrapping our brains around what all He has given and the price that He paid.  That changes everything about our attitude of gratitude when we realize that.  But over the next 3 weeks, I want us to see what thankfulness looks like when it truly manifests itself in our lives.

Let’s do that today by looking at an interesting and unique character from the Old Testament in Genesis chapter 50, verses 15-21.  Joseph may not be the person in the Bible that most people think about when they think of characters who are grateful and appreciative.  Joseph may be the person you think about when you think of people who have gotten a raw deal from God.

You know the story of Joseph.  As a young man he was sold into slavery by his brothers.  He spent years and years in jail for crimes he didn’t commit.  He had everything taken away from him on more than one occasion.  He was forgotten, abandoned, lied about and yet while we know that all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, there is no record in the Bible of Joseph ever doing anything worse than being a little arrogant as a youngster.  And yet, Joseph was thankful.  Let’s see it in Genesis 50:15-21.

15 When Joseph’s brothers saw that their father was dead, they said, “What if Joseph holds a grudge against us and pays us back for all the wrongs we did to him?” 16 So they sent word to Joseph, saying, “Your father left these instructions before he died: 17 ‘This is what you are to say to Joseph: I ask you to forgive your brothers the sins and the wrongs they committed in treating you so badly.’ Now please forgive the sins of the servants of the God of your father.” When their message came to him, Joseph wept.18 His brothers then came and threw themselves down before him. “We are your slaves,” they said.19 But Joseph said to them, “Don’t be afraid. Am I in the place of God? 20 You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives. 21 So then, don’t be afraid. I will provide for you and your children.” And he reassured them and spoke kindly to them.



I got a little creative this week and added a bulletin insert on which you can take notes and follow along.  I hope it helps.  I can’t say I will continue to do it every week but we will see.  And we all know that a good sermon has 3 points and a poem and this one has 6 points and no poem so hopefully it will be twice as good and not twice as long, huh?



I want you to look at verse 20 once again.  That is a sentence that can only be said by a mature person who is thankful.  He is not saying it didn’t happen or that it didn’t hurt.  He is not saying that there was a misunderstanding nor is he saying it was his fault.  He is not pretending to accept part of the blame to make them feel better.  Joseph says it like it is.  “You wanted to harm me…”



So, now he has stated the facts.  The next thing that comes out of his mouth is the important stuff.  Whatever he says next will show how he feels and what is about to happen to his family.  He has all the right to finish that phrase with a death sentence or a hanging or at least a punch in the face and we would know that Joseph had not forgiven nor was he thankful for how it turned out.



Instead we see that Joseph was a forgiving person, which is in itself a sign of thankfulness, but he also sees the big picture and that makes Joseph very thankful.  “But God intended it for good…”



If I were to ask you this morning if you are a thankful person, I am quite sure that almost everybody would say yes.  And as we discussed earlier, depth of thankfulness becomes an issue.  But for some others, timing is the issue.  I was thankful yesterday because such and such happened but not so much today.  I will be thankful tomorrow when it rains but today I wouldn’t say I’m as thankful. 



Looking at the life of Joseph in Genesis 50, we can see that thankfulness has nothing to do with timing.  In fact, in this passage, we see that Joseph has his brothers right where he wants them if he wanted to get revenge.  He remembers what happened.  They remember what happened.  Nobody has forgotten.  It is interesting what they tell Joseph.  I don’t believe for a minute that their father left them instructions telling them to tell Joseph to forgive them.  That was just the brothers feeling guilty and trying to save their necks.

And I believe that Joseph sees this too and that is why he wept in verse 17.  You see, for Joseph, thankfulness is not dependent on the past.  For Joseph, the past was a harsh memory.  Nothing could completely erase those years of imprisonment.  Nothing could change the fact that his brothers had hated him so bad they wanted to kill him.  But Joseph was thankful even in spite of his past and he proved it by not holding the events of the past over their heads.



Joseph was thankful for what God had done and it did not depend on his own difficulties in the past. 



Also, I want you to see that Joseph’s thankfulness is not changed by the present.  In the present situation, Joseph has some options and I can see some pretty unpleasant alternatives for his brothers if Joseph had not been mindful of what God had done.  At this point, Joseph is in the driver’s seat.  He has all the power and the resources to make the lives of his brothers worse than his ever was.

If you had asked Joseph 2 weeks ago if he was thankful, I’m sure he would have honestly said yes but now the proof comes out.  Now in the present, Joseph might have said, “Well, I was thankful but now I’m ready for revenge.  It’s my time now boys!  Bow down before me now and I’ll chop off your heads!”  But we see that Joseph’s thankfulness is not changed by the present.  His thankfulness supersedes his right and ability to be mad and vengeful.



His thankfulness is not dependent on the past nor changed by the present but it is mindful of the future.  He tells his brothers to not be afraid.  “I will provide for you and your children.”  Joseph understands that God has been at work his whole life.  It was not in the way that Joseph had expected and he certainly would not have chosen this path but it is obvious that God has allowed all of the heartache, loneliness and pain so that he would someday be able to provide for his family and so Joseph now does his part to show his thankfulness to God by being mindful of the future of his family.



Now I want us to see how thankfulness manifests itself in our lives.  You can talk about it.  You can say you are thankful.  You can encourage others to be thankful.  You can write long, fascinating books on why and how to be thankful but until it shows up in your life, until it bears bold and bountiful fruit, you are just wasting your breath.



In the life of Joseph, we see 3 ways that thankfulness manifests itself.  The first way is not mentioned with words here in this passage.  Joseph doesn’t say it out loud.  He doesn’t have to.  It is obvious to the brothers and it is obvious to us that Joseph has forgiven his brothers. When we are truly thankful, it will manifest itself in forgiveness.



I wish I had time to do this subject justice but suffice to say that forgiveness, true forgiveness is difficult.  It doesn’t come easy, we all know that.  It is not our default setting.  But it will show up when we see the big picture.  When we see that God has allowed everything in our lives to happen to make us into who we are supposed to be then we can start to truly forgive people.  Repeat.  He allowed Joseph to be sold, made a slave, slandered, forgotten, and abused to bring him to this point in his life where he can save the lives of his family.  And in doing so, God, not Joseph, gets the glory.



That’s how God works in our lives.  It is probably not going to be how we would have done it but His ways are higher than our ways and in the end, we see it was for our benefit.  That makes you thankful and that will manifest itself in forgiveness.



We also see that in the life of Joseph, thankfulness manifests itself verbally.  Joseph could have stopped with the first part of verse 20 and just said, “You intended to harm me!”  But he continued with, ”…but God intended it for good…”.  He voiced his appreciation for what had happened in his life.



We are very thankful for the veterans in our country and we are grateful all year around.  But today is one of the days when we actually voice our appreciation for what they have done.  If you never tell someone you love them or appreciate them, it’s hard to believe that you really do.  If you never tell your wife that you love her but you feel it in your heart, is that enough?  Probably not.



It’s the same way with God.  When you are thankful for what He has done, it will manifest itself verbally.  And lastly, thankfulness will manifest itself in our lives when all of this comes together and our thankfulness is not diminished by timing, it has been shown in our lives as forgiveness and we verbally express it.  But ultimately, it will manifest itself toward God.



Like Joseph, most of us have had difficulties in this life.  Job said, “Man born of woman is of few days and full of trouble.”  But, also like Joseph, we have a lot to be thankful for.  God knows the trouble you have seen.  Over and over again through Genesis it says this sentence: And God was with Joseph.  God was with him in the well.  He was with him in slavery, in prison, when it was lonely and when it was painful.



God allowed all of that to happen to make him into the man he was supposed to be but to the very end it says God was with him.  And while Joseph was unique in lots of ways, this isn’t one of them.  God promises to be with us in everything we go through; the good times and the bad.  And like Joseph, that should make us thankful to Him.