Thursday, December 27, 2007

A GOOD QUESTION

A lot of Americans will be taking down lights and a tree in a few days. Ironically, many of them don’t know why they put them up: the number of people in the USA who don't actually know Jesus Christ is alarming.

Though as many as 90% of Americans claim to believe in God, statistically-significant studies indicate that somewhere around 150 million Americans say they don't have a "personal relationship with God through His Son Jesus Christ." They may believe in God, but they don't know Him, don't follow Him, serve Him or worship Him. From what we can tell, their so-called faith hasn't made one bit of difference in their lives.

Information like that can be overwhelming if you ponder it in its full statistical enormity: 150 million people! I prefer to break it down into more manageable hunks, smaller pieces I can wrap my brain around – or, more importantly, my heart. When I do that, with God's help, I can remember that part of the good news about the Good News is that I don't have to share It with everyone. The 150 million unsaved people are not all my own personal responsibility, or yours either.

But some of them are.

Who do you know that you could share Jesus with? Is there a friend, a co-worker, a neighbor, or a family member you could talk with about what Jesus means to you? Is there anyone at all you could invite to your church, or to a Bible study? Surely there's someone you know and care about whose soul you could pray for and whom you could take with you to church.

Surely, there's someone. Some one. One life at a time: that's all you need be concerned about.

At the close of his book, "The Unchurched Next Door," Thom Rainer relates this true story shared by Emily about her new friend Celeste. Emily says, “I knew Celeste was different. In fact, I knew she had that peace that I didn't have. We had known each other for just three weeks when Celeste started telling me about her faith. She invited me to church. No, she came by my house and picked me up. Two months later, I accepted Christ.

"You need to understand that I went from totally unchurched, no church background, no knowledge of church to becoming a Christian in just a matter of weeks."

Celeste wasn't focusing on 150 million people. She was concerned about one person she knew who didn't know Christ: her co-worker Emily. Celeste was just one person, and she made an eternal difference in the life of one other person, Emily.

Emily concluded her story this way: "What I'm still trying to figure out, with the millions of Christians in American, is how come it took forty-three years for someone to share about Christ with me. Where are all the other Christians?"

That’s a good question, Emily. A good question.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

The Big News of the Day

It was Jesus’ birthday, but the big news of the day was the big new tax Rome was imposing on everyone. It had the whole empire in a tizzy. If there had been newspapers back then, the headlines in The Jerusalem Times might have read something like “New Nationwide Plan: Higher Roman Fees” or “Great Caesar A Great Seizer!”

As if Rome was the only place where anything newsworthy ever happened: emperor this, senate that; Caesar this, Brutus that.

What about Jerusalem? What about Herod and the Sanhedrin?

For that matter, what about Bethlehem? Everyone seemed to have forgotten about Bethlehem – until the new tax law was enacted, that is; and suddenly everyone was looking for a place to stay there.

Hundreds of years earlier, the prophet Micah, inspired by the Holy Spirit, had come to understand the importance of this quaint village called Bethlehem. God showed him that this little “house of bread,” as its name means, was more than just a backwater burg basking in the glorious memories of the days of yore, that golden age when folks still recalled that David – yes, King David, THE King – had been born and raised right there in her streets. Micah knew that one day the biggest news of any day would happen right there in good old Bethlehem. Micah knew because God had told him so.

And Micah had shared the big news. He put it in writing even – almost like a headline! – in a book God told him write. “But you, Bethlehem in Ephratah,” Micah had written on God’s behalf, “though you are so small among the towns of Judah, yet from you will come the One Who will be the Ruler of My people. His origin is from ancient days, even from eternity.”

But now folks seemed to have dismissed this ancient prophecy. For time out of mind, they seem to have neglected reading God’s Word, and so the promise was forgotten. Taxes were on everyone’s mind.

All Roman citizens were under orders – from Caesar himself! – to pack up the whole family and go back to their home towns and get counted. All for what? All for Caesar and his coffers. Time to cough up a bit more for the Romans. It was good for business, to be sure, especially for the people who ran the inns and fed the animals. But it was awfully distracting.

So it was that nobody seemed to notice that, in an out-of-the-way spot with a manger for a crib and a few shepherds as midnight guests, a couple who weren’t even received in their own home town had just welcomed The Child destined to be their Savior.

Times haven’t changed much, apparently. Jesus’ birthday, it seems, is still all about the money. The biggest, Good-est News ever to hit heaven’s headline, and most folks aren’t talking about anything except how much money it’s costing them.

How about you?

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Have a Mary Christmas!!

MARY CHRISTMAS!

No, that’s not a spelling error. I know that we usually spell that word “m-e-r-r-y.” However, I wrote it as I meant it. I hope you have a “Mary” Christmas. M-a-r-y.

In Luke 10:38-42, the story is told of Jesus’ visit to the home of Mary and Martha. During the Lord’s time there, Martha was totally preoccupied with the preparations for His visit, which she apparently intended to turn into an elaborate banquet. Her full name might have been Martha Stewart!

All joking aside, a lot of us tend to be like Martha, especially during the Christmas season! We get so caught up in the preparations, the cooking, the wrapping, the things to do, that we totally miss the Lord’s own presence.

Indeed, even many Christians have more of a “Martha Christmas” than a “Mary Christmas.” Jesus is right there to be loved and worshipped, and we’re too busy with the trappings and the trimmings to even notice Him!

While Martha was busy with the food and the party, Mary, by contrast, spent her time seated at Jesus’ feet, listening to what He had to say. So enamored was she with her Lord that she was perfectly content to let the hustle and bustle pass her by. She even neglected some of her domestic duties! We know this, because Martha kept getting after her to come help with the cooking.

We might debate which of these women was doing right by her Lord. After all, hadn’t Jesus come there for a meal? Wasn’t it appropriate that proper attention should be devoted to its preparation?

If Jesus Himself had not told us what He wanted, we might still be debating whether Mary or Martha made the better choice that day. However, here’s what actually happened.

Frustrated with her sister’s apparent lack of concern about the meal, Martha protested to Jesus. She actually made so bold as to ask Him to tell Mary to go help in the kitchen! Jesus rebuked her, and said, "Martha, Martha, you are worried and upset about many things, but only one thing is needed. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her."

That’s pretty clear: Mary made the better choice. Occasionally, and certainly at this time of year, we too have to choose between spending time with Jesus and doing something for Jesus. And when that happens, He Himself has instructed us plainly which is the better choice: spending time with Him.

I believe that is what Jesus is calling His Christmas merry-makers to do: just to be with Him, basking in the light of His incarnate glory, feasting on the beauty of His grace, resting in the heat of His holiness.

Let Jesus show you how to have a truly merry Christmas! On Christmas morning, before you open those gifts, before you eat that meal, spend some time with Jesus and have a Mary Christmas! That’s the only way to have a Merry Christmas!

Thursday, December 06, 2007

The Truth About Living: Soli Deo Gloria

Today we conclude our six-week consideration of “The Five Solas,” five biblical truths about the nature and purpose of salvation. The final and perhaps most foundational of these five basic truths is Soli Deo Gloria, which in Latin means, “only for the glory of God.” This biblical doctrine teaches us that the purpose of salvation is centered in the glory of God. Indeed, this truth indicates that the sole reason for human existence is to reflect God’s glory back to Him and to the created world around us.

As with the rest of “The Five Solas,” Soli Deo Gloria rests firmly on the unanimous testimony of God’s Word. For example, 1 Corinthian 10:31 says, “So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” 1 Peter 4:11 tells us why we should serve God, namely, "so that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ. To Him belong glory and dominion forever and ever.” And Romans 11:36 reminds us that “from Him and through Him and back to Him are all things. To Him be glory forever and ever! Amen.”

These verses remind us that God is sovereign over every aspect of the believer's life. The Christian understands that all of life (“whatever you do”) is to be lived exclusively and entirely for the glory of God (“do all to the glory of God”), because every aspect of life is under the Lordship of Jesus Christ. There is no division between the so-called sacred and secular: all activities, from the seemingly mundane to the obviously momentous, are to be consecrated to God’s service and glory.

The Westminster Shorter Catechism was a document written in the 1640’s to teach Christians the most basic doctrines of the Christian faith. It is comprised of 107 questions and answers, along with hundreds of scriptural texts. The first question in the catechism asks, "What is the chief end of man?” To phrase this question in modern terms, we might ask, “Why do human beings exist?” The answer is this: “Man's chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him forever." In other words, the primary reason you and I are alive is to spend eternity giving God the glory He deserves and enjoying His presence.

If you are a Christian, God created you and saved you so that you could display His glory. This means that your life has an eternal meaning and purpose that magnificently transcends the temporal and visible realm. You are alive to glorify God and enjoy Him forever!

And how do you do that? John Piper, author and preaching Pastor at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, states it most succinctly: “God is most glorified in you when you are most satisfied in Him.” As a Christian, whether you are eating or working, playing or worshiping – indeed, in everything! – make it your aim to be fully satisfied in the presence of God, Who is with you and in you. Then your life will be lived as God meant it to be lived: Soli Deo Gloria!