Posts Tagged ‘What’s the Word?’

Are You Walking in Freedom?

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

When Jonah needed a second chance, God gave it to him.  Jonah ran away from God’s call to go to Nineveh.  Eventually, after a detour in the belly of a great fish, the word of the Lord came to Jonah “a second time.”  God gave Jonah another chance to obey and get it right commanding him, “Go to the great city of Nineveh and proclaim to it the message I give you” (Jonah 3:2).

The word “Go” literally means “arise and go” or “get up and go.”  It implies an imperative need to quickly obey.  God is telling Jonah, “Don’t delay.  Get up and do it now.  Don’t wait another minute.”

Have you ever heard a command from God that you intended to obey, but you waited?  Perhaps you delayed a little bit and reasoned you would get around to it later.  So you waited and waited and waited.  In the end you never obeyed God.  If Jonah had waited too long, he might have eventually backed out again.  He might have let the urgency to obey slowly fade away.

How many times have you let this happen in your life?  God spoke to you clearly about an issue and you didn’t follow through.  You were going to obey, but you waited.  Perhaps God spoke to you in church on Sunday morning, or listening to Christian radio, talking to a friend, or reading your Bible.  Wherever it was, God convicted you and laid something on your heart.  You were committed to following through and obeying God.  You told yourself that you were going to end an unhealthy, ungodly relationship.  You told yourself and God that you were going to share your faith with a friend.  Maybe you promised God that you going to begin to tithe, or give some money to meet a need.  Maybe you told yourself you were finally going to forgive someone who had hurt you, or find some help to overcome your addiction.

There are numerous things that God might have laid on our heart.  You knew it was him.  Your heart was beating.  Your mind was clear.  You knew what you need to do.  You just just needed to “get up and go,” but instead you waited.  You stared making excuses, and putting it off.  Maybe you rationalized that it wasn’t that big of a deal.  And so you never followed through.  You know what God calls that -  disobedience.

Perhaps, God is calling you to “Get up and go” today.  Go and obey. Do it.  Walk in obedience to God.  Don’t put it off anymore.  If it is within your power and ability, don’t the let the sun go down another day without obeying the Lord.

I remember several years ago when I was in seminary, I felt I had been dishonest on an assignment I had turned in for one of my classes.  It wasn’t a real big thing, but it was a compromise in my integrity.  I made a bunch of excuses in my head, but I knew when I turned it in that I had not fully been honest.  I went home for Christmas break, but guess what I couldn’t quit thinking about it?  It was really hard for me to fully enjoy my self. I kept trying to blow it off, but I couldn’t.  I knew what I had to do.  When I got back to campus, I had to “get up and go” to my professor and make it right. He was very gracious and understanding.  Even though in his mind, my indiscretion was fairly minute, he was glad I came to clear my conscience.  I left his office that day feeling as though a load of bricks was off of my shoulder.  I was free.  I was right with God.

Is it time for you to get up and go?  God gives second chances, but we must respond in obedience.  So just do it.  Now.  Don’t wait any more.  Get up and go obey.  And that’s the word.

Could You Use a Second Chance?

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Could you use a second chance? There is nothing quite like a second chance. Maybe you will hear God offering you a second chance today, just like he gave one to Jonah. If you have been reading along over the last few weeks, God told Jonah to go to Nineveh and call them to repentance. Jonah said no and ran in the opposite direction from God. The people of Nineveh were cruel and violent. Jonah didn’t want them to have a second chance. He wanted to see God judge the people of Nineveh and give them what they deserved. So Jonah disobeyed God and hopped a ship in the opposite direction. God chased Jonah down with a storm until the sailors threw him overboard. Jonah sank to the bottom of the ocean thinking the end was near. As he was drowning, Jonah cried out to God for help. Finally, Jonah found grace and salvation in the belly of a great fish. The belly of the fish is somewhat compared to a womb and a tomb. It is a place where Jonah dies to himself, and is reborn to God. Eventually the fish spits Jonah back out on dry land.

Once Jonah is back on dry land, we are confronted with the words of Jonah 3: “Then the Word of the Lord came to Jonah a second time” (Jonah 3:1). Did you see that? The word of the Lord came to Jonah “A SECOND TIME!” God’s word came to Jonah again. God gave Jonah another chance to obey. The guy who ran away from God was given a second chance. The guy who didn’t deserve to ever hear from God again, heard from God again. There are a lot of people who will never give you a second chance. They will never forgive you and will hold a grudge against you forever. Aren’t you glad that God is not like that? Some of you may think he is, but He is not. I know that God has come to me over and over giving me more and more chances when I have messed up.

Maybe you need God to come to you again and give you a second chance. Maybe you are a Christian and you have gotten off center. Perhaps you have been headed in the wrong direction and are filled with guilt and regret. Some of you have never surrendered your life to Christ, but He has spoken to your heart in the past. You have said no time and time again through the years. Guess what? God is coming to you again. The word of the Lord is coming to you again. God will give you another chance to say “Yes.” God will give you another chance to obey if you have disobeyed. He will not quit on you. He will not give up.

I look back in my life and realize how God kept coming to me at different stages in my life. In high school, there were moments God was speaking to me and yet I wasn’t ready to give my life to him. My senior year in high school, my brother died in a car accident. The Lord truly revealed himself to me, but I wasn’t ready to really say yes to Him. During my freshman year in college, God got my attention several times, but I still resisted him. Finally during my sophomore year at UGA, the word of God came to me again. Jesus reached out to me once more and I said yes. Oh, I praise God that I got a second chance. I am so grateful he didn’t quit on me and give up on me.

Do you need a second chance, a third chance, or more? Our God is the God of “another chance.” Jonah knows from experience, and so do I. You can be forgiven. You can have a fresh start with God. You can have a second chance by God’s grace. And that’s the Word.

Salvation From the Lord

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

The prophet Jonah found himself in a whale of a lot of trouble (get it?).  He ran from God, but found it was useless.  God chased him down.  From the depths of the ocean, he cried to God.  Jonah then found himself in the belly of a large fish.  He wasn’t out of the woods yet, but he knew that he was safe. He knew that God had rescued him.  While in the belly of the great fish, Jonah made this confession: “Those who cling to worthless idols forfeit the grace that could be theirs.  But I with a song of thanksgiving will sacrifice to you.  What I have vowed I will make good.  Salvation comes from the Lord” (Jonah 2:8,9).

Jonah is no longer running from God at this point.  He is running to God now.  Perhaps he remembers how the sailors on board the ship had been calling out to their idols and false gods who could not help them. So he declares that those who cling to worthless idols forfeit the grace that could be theirs.  The word grace speaks of God’s mercy and pursuing love.  It is the undeserved favor of God.  When we turn our backs on God and chase idols, we are unable to receive the grace of God.  If you cling to the things of this world, and do what you want to do instead of what God wants, then you forfeit God’s grace.  God will not be active in that manner that he could be and should be.

Jonah declared that “with a song of thanksgiving, I will sacrifice to you (God).”  These are words of worship.  At the bottom of the ocean, Jonah felt he was in a living hell, but God delivered him.  Jonah’s mouth was now filled with thanks, and God turned this rebel into a true worshipper.  God responds to us with grace, so that we will respond to him with praise.

It is all about Him. He loves you and shows you grace, but in the end He wants you to become a worshipper of Him.  He is worthy of your praise.  He is a God who answers prayer.  He is a God who brings life from death.  He is a God who can lift us up when we are down.  He is a God who gives us what we don’t deserve (grace) instead of what we do deserve (judgment).  He is a God worthy of our praise.

We should not only praise Him with our words, but we should also worship Him with our obedience.  Jonah also said, “What I have vowed, I will make good.”  Jonah knew what he had to do.  He had to obey God and finally go to Nineveh.  He couldn’t just give lip service to God, and then not obey Him.  He had to make good to God what He had vowed.  He had to follow through and obey the Lord.  What is it that God has laid on your heart?  Maybe the Lord has laid it on your heart to be more generous and start tithing.  Maybe He is calling you take a step of faith, end an unhealthy relationship, reach out to a friend, etc. What is it that God is calling you to do?  Could it be that now is the time to make it good?

Finally, the last declaration of Jonah in the belly of the whale is this: “Salvation comes from the Lord.”  These are the words of a man who would have been lost forever if God had not stepped in to help.  He was helpless to save himself.  He was drowning, dying, and unable to do a thing but cry to God for mercy.  God heard his cry and saved Him.  Salvation comes from the Lord. Jonah couldn’t save himself and neither can you.  We are helpless to save ourselves.  Will you trust Christ and Christ alone to save you?  Salvation is from the Lord alone.  And that’s the Word.

Who You Gonna Call?

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

Who you gonna call?  If you were alive in the 80’s, you probably think of one response to that question.  Who you gonna call?  Ghostbusters!  That may be a fun response to the question, but I am not sure the Ghostbusters can offer a lot of help to a man or woman in real need.  Over the last few weeks, we have looked at the story of Jonah.  Jonah was a man on the run from God, boarding a ship headed in the wrong direction.  During a great storm, Jonah realized that God was chasing him.  In his desperation, he had the sailors throw him overboard into the depths of the ocean.  Jonah literally felt he was in hell, lost at the bottom of the ocean.  He must have cried out to God all the way down as he was sinking before the Lord sent a great fish to swallow him.

The Bible records: “From inside the fish Jonah prayed to the Lord his God.  He said, ‘In my distress I called to the Lord, and he answered me.  From the depths of the grave I called for help and you listened to my cry’” (Jonah 2:1,2).  Who you gonna call?  According to Jonah, there is only one person to call upon – the Lord.  One of the themes of the book of Jonah is that God answers the cries of our distress, and he is truly faithful to those who call upon Him.  This is a focal point of the book of Jonah.  The captain urged Jonah to “get up and call on your God” (Jonah 1:6).  The sailors “cried (called) to the Lord” (Jonah 1:14).  Later on in Nineveh, the king called the people to “urgently call upon God” (Jonah 3:8).

So, who you gonna call?  This word for call means to “call out, cry out, or cry for help.”  It is not a word used to talk about casual conversation.  It is not a nice little bed time prayer, and it is not the kind of prayer where you just give your shopping list to God.  This kind of prayer is a cry out to God because one sees how deeply he or she needs God’s help and intervention in his or her life.

When the storm hit the ship, the sailors were afraid and they each “cried out to his own god” (Jonah 1:5).  That was the only thing they knew to do.  They cried out to their idols and false gods, who could offer no help at all.  That was all they knew to do though.  They looked to idols for some sense of hope, some sense of comfort.  We too look to our idols in times of trouble.  The idols we serve however are not false gods per say.   Our idols are the things we run to for comfort other than God when we are fearful.  Some run to alcohol to comfort them, some to food, some to the shops.  Others seek to control and manipulate.

After their gods provided no relief, the sailors threw the cargo overboard and tried to row back to shore.  They could not overcome the sea, however, because it was so wild.  They did their best, but their best wasn’t enough.  What do you do when your best is not enough?  What do you do when you have lost hope?  What do you do when you feel like you are dying on the inside?  You call out.  You cry out to the Lord.  The sailors called out to the Lord.  In his distress, Jonah called to the Lord – and the Lord answered him.

Are you in need?  Are you in over your head?  Call upon the Lord.  Cry out to the Lord, and he will answer you.  And that’s the Word.

You Can Run

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

You can run, but you can’t hide. That might be one of the themes of the book of Jonah. Jonah tried to run away from God, but God wouldn’t let him go. The Lord had a mission for Jonah to go Nineveh and preach. Jonah, however, boarded a ship going in the opposite direction.

The scripture says, “Then the Lord sent a great wind on the sea and such a violent storm arose that the ship threatened to break up” (Jonah 1:4). It was a divine storm that God sent to get Jonah’s attention. After Jonah asked the sailors to throw him overboard into the sea (because he knew he was the problem), he felt he had hit them bottom when “…the Lord provided a great fish to swallow Jonah” (Jonah 1:17).

Can you see God’s activity? He was in hot pursuit of Jonah. The Lord was reaching out to Jonah wanting to get his attention. Do you know that God will send a storm into your life if he needs to get your attention? Do you know that the Lord will let you hit the bottom if that is what it takes to get your attention? Jonah literally found himself at the bottom of the ocean. Jonah had to hit the bottom of the ocean, before he would look up again and call on the name of His God. Jonah was running, but God was chasing after him.

Perhaps Jonah thought God was just after him to punish him. When Jonah realized that he was the one who put all of the sailors on board the ship in danger, he asked them to throw him overboard. He had given up hope and thought he deserved only death and judgment. The main reason that Jonah did not want to go to Nineveh was that he did not feel they deserved an opportunity to discover God’s mercy and forgiveness. Now, Jonah himself feels that he doesn’t deserve a second chance either. He believed that God could never forgive him for running away. Jonah didn’t think grace was a possibility.

Maybe some of you have felt that way. Or maybe you feel that way now. Maybe you have run so far and so hard for so long that you feel you are drowning in a sea of guilt and regret.

God didn’t send the storm so that Jonah would sink. God didn’t allow Jonah to hit bottom so he could drown. God sent the storm so Jonah would turn around. God was trying to get Jonah’s attention.

The writer of Hebrews wrote, “… the Lord disciplines those he loves, and he punishes everyone he accepts as a son” (Hebrews 12:6) and “God disciplines us for our good, that we may share in his holiness” (Hebrews 12:10).

These verses tell us that God allows some storms into our lives as an act of love. God must allow some discipline to get our attention. That is what God was doing with Jonah. And there are most likely times in our lives where God has had to do the same as well. I am not saying that every “storm” and trying circumstance is always God’s discipline, but some are. When things are out of control, sometimes the best thing to do is to check your heart and attitude. Ask the Lord, “Is this discipline? Are you seeking to get my attention?”

If so, know that it is because God absolutely loves you. He is not chasing you to “get you” – at least not to harm you. He chases you to get your attention, so ultimately he can get your heart. So you can run from God, but you can’t hide. And that’s the Word.

Wake Up

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

You can’t outrun the long arm of the Lord. That’s what the prophet Jonah discovered. God had called Jonah to go to Nineveh to preach and call the Ninevites to repentance. Instead of obeying God and heading east to Nineveh, Jonah ran away from the Lord and boarded a ship west to Tarshish, the exact opposite direction.

Jonah truly thought he could run away from God and get away with it. Instead, “the Lord sent a great wind on the sea, and such a violent storm arose that the ship threatened to break up. All the sailors were afraid and each cried out to his own god. And they threw the cargo into the sea to lighten the ship” (Jonah 1:4,5).

We see that Jonah’s rebellion to God was actually putting others in harms way. Where was Jonah? What do you think Jonah was doing as these sailors were crying for their lives up on deck in the storm?

“But Jonah had gone below deck, where he lay down and fell into a deep sleep. The captain went to him and said, ‘How can you sleep? Get up and call on your God. Maybe he will take notice of us, and we will not perish” (Jonah 1:5,6).

Jonah’s disobedience was the real problem. He was the cause for all of this trouble the sailors found themselves in, but he was completely oblivious – asleep. There are times that we can be so full of denial as well, that we just don’t see it. We can’t see how our actions are hurting those around us.

The captain said to him, “How can you sleep?” It was as if he was calling Jonah to wake up and realize what was going on. Jonah was numb to the consequences of his actions. He was blind to the truth of his circumstances. He was the very problem and yet he was asleep while everyone else was suffering.

There is another irony of this story. The sailors on this boat were terrified, which tells you that it must have been a pretty rough storm. They all began to call on their gods, false gods who could offer no help at all. They were on deck calling out in vain to some false gods that don’t exist. Jonah, a true prophet of the living God, is not only the cause of the problem, but he is also asleep during the danger instead of calling out to his God like the pagan sailors.

The captain tells him, “Wake up and call on your God. Maybe he will take notice and we will not perish.” The captain became a prophet to the prophet. God was calling to Jonah through the captain: “How can you sleep? As a servant of the living God, how can you sleep on the job while there are men on deck calling out in vain to gods that cannot help?”

Jonah should have been awake to the reality of what was going on. Jonah should have been up and calling on his God, the true God. And yet Jonah was asleep. I think some of us may need to hear God calling out to us through the voice of the captain as well. How can you sleep? How can we sleep?

Have we fallen asleep in our faith, oblivious to the needs of those around us. Everywhere, there are people who are perishing, looking to false gods, chasing false dreams, and bowing down to the idols of this world. Without Christ, they are drowning in a sea of hopelessness.

I think apathy is one of the greatest problems of many Christians today. We think that we are fine with God, so we lose any sense of urgency. Our passion for God runs lows, and our compassion for others is minimal. We drift away from God, and end up spiritually asleep while the storms of life are raging about us.

Perhaps we need to hear the voice of the Holy Spirit calling to us, “Wake up. Call on your God.” Do not let your ears grow deaf. Do not let your heart get hard. Do not sleep in the light, while others perish in the dark. Wake up. And that’s the Word.

Jonah, Part 2

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

God said, “Go.” Jonah said, “No.” That’s what we said last week. The word of the Lord came to Jonah and told him, “Get up and go to the great city of Nineveh and preach against it” (Jonah 1:1,2). Instead of going to Nineveh, Jonah ran away from the Lord and went in the opposite direction towards Tarshish. Jonah was a man on the run. Have you ever run from God? Are you running from God now? I must warn you. There are consequences for disobedience to God. God is loving and gracious, but when we run from Him in the opposite direction, it will not go well for us in the end. Let’s look at what happened with Jonah.

Jonah went down to Joppa and found a ship to board for Tarshish. The text says, “After paying the fare, he went aboard…” Jonah paid a price to board the ship, and he paid the price for his disobedience to God. There is always a price for our sin. The enemy doesn’t advertise that part when he tempts you to take one more drink, or to take that first step towards an affair, or to buy that luxury item you really can’t afford. No, his sales pitch never shares the fall out from disobedience to God and His Word. He never shows you how hard the recovery process can be for an addict. He never shows you what it looks like to find yourself separated from your children because of an affair. He never shows you what bankruptcy looks like.

Disobedience has a price. God certainly wants your best. Scripture assures us of that. The Lord is out to save you, not to get you. He is a loving father, but there are consequences when we do life our own way instead of his way. In the first chapter, we see God call Jonah to “Get up and go.” Later on, we see the captain of the ship urge Jonah to “Get up and call on your God” (v. 6). God is trying to call Jonah up. Jonah doesn’t go up though. He continually heads down.

Throughout the first chapter of Jonah, we keep seeing Jonah headed down. It is a visible picture of the effect disobedience has on our lives. First we see Jonah go down to Joppa (v. 3). Then he went down into the ship (v. 3). The Jonah went below deck, where he lay down and fell into a deep sleep (1:5). Eventually, the crew of the ship took Jonah and threw him down into water (1:15). Finally, Jonah cried out to God from the depths of the grave (Jonah 2:2).

God called Jonah east to Nineveh, but Jonah went west. God called Jonah up, and yet Jonah kept heading down. He eventually got so low that he found himself hopeless at the bottom of the ocean. He felt as if he were in the depths of the grave. The idea is that he felt completely separated from God, and he was sinking in his sin. That is what rebellion to God will do for you.

Jonah’s disobedience not only affected him, but also everyone else on the ship. God sent a storm that threatened the ship because of Jonah’s disobedience. The storm threatened everyone on the ship. They were all threatened because of Jonah’s sin. You never sin in isolation. Don’t kid yourself. You private rebellion will almost always end up affecting those you love the most. Just ask the man who is trapped in pornography and lost the trust of his wife. Just ask the husband who has discovered his wife’s unfaithfulness. Just ask the family who is dealing with an addictive member. Life has too many lessons of how someone’s sin not only took that person to the bottom, but also drug down the ones he loved the most. So don’t run from God. Run to Him. And that’s the Word.

After All These Years

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

After all these years, I still find myself humbled and amazed at the birth of our Savior Jesus Christ. Why would God allow His Son to have such a humble and obscure birth in a stable? Don’t you think that the God of the universe could have made sure that there was a vacancy in the Bethlehem Holiday Inn on that night so many years ago? Instead, Jesus’ first welcome into the world was, “Sorry, there is no room in the inn.”

I just can’t believe that God the Father was caught off guard. If God went to all the trouble to have this young mother carry His Son in her womb, then surely he could have had enough foresight to make a hotel reservation in advance. Perhaps God had his reasons for the birth of His Son in a stable. I think there are some real lessons to be found in the birth of Christ.

In his birth, Jesus embraced poverty. While he could have been born in the finest of hotels or hospitals, he chose to be an outcast. He was not given a luxurious palace, instead his mother laid his head down in a manger. Jesus became poor for a reason – so that we could become rich. The Apostle Paul said, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich” (2 Corinthians 7:8-9). Jesus Christ stepped out of the riches of heaven and humbled himself to become a man. And as a man, he didn’t become a king, but he embraced human poverty to the fullest extent. In his poverty, Jesus was embracing the poverty of our human condition. He became poor, however, so that we might receive the riches of God’s mercy and grace. The person who comes to know and receive Jesus Christ is truly rich indeed.

In his birth, Jesus not only embraced poverty, but also humility. God allowed his son to be born in the most humble of circumstances. God found a stable full of animals to welcome and receive his Son into the world. God did announce the birth of his Son to some humble shepherds in a field, and some visiting Magi dropped in later. By and large however, the birth of Jesus was a rather quiet event. There was no great fanfare for the Son of God that night. God took that humble beginning though and did something that would change the world. God says he uses the humble things of the world to shame the wise (1 Corinthians 1:27). Jesus is attracted to humble things, humble places, and humble hearts. God says he rejects the proud, but gives grace to the humble. Do you know that Jesus is still born in stables? He looks for humble hearts that will acknowledge their need of forgiveness and receive Him. Is your life like a manger – a humble place for Jesus to rest His head?

Jesus’ birth also revealed how some people will treat Him. There will always be those who simply declare that they have no room for Jesus. They will reject Him and have no room in their lives for this King. Some will simply shut the door on His presence in their lives.

What about you? You may have gone to church for years, but your heart has had a “no vacancy” sign over it? Have you shut the door on Jesus and declared that you have no room for Him? Or maybe now you hear him knocking, calling you to open the door. Remember these words from that great Christmas hymn: “Joy to the World, the Lord has come. Let earth receive her king. Let every heart prepare him room…” Make room. Make room, and open your heart to Jesus. And that’s the Word.

Are You Getting Ready?

Saturday, December 6th, 2008

Are you getting ready? What is still left to do on your list to prepare for Christmas? Is it just me, or does December seem to be incredibly busy? As soon as Thanksgiving is over, we are launched full throttle into the Christmas season. There is shopping to do and presents to buy. There are parties and celebrations, Christmas cards to get out, baking to get done, and more.

I want to ask my question again though. Are you really ready for Christmas? I am not really thinking about the presents, cooking, etc. I am talking about your heart. One famous Christmas carol goes like this: “Joy to the world, the Lord has come. Let earth receive her king. Let every heart prepare him room…” This carol encourages us to make room in our hearts for Jesus the king. During the month of December, many churches celebrate what is known as Advent. Advent means “coming” or “arrival. This season right before Christmas is meant to be a time of preparation for the coming of Jesus Christ. It seems, however, that we spend a lot of time preparing for everything but Jesus. I am a pastor, and even I have a hard time keeping my focus with all of the other distractions of the season.

It seems like Jesus has always had a hard time finding room at Christmas. Remember that very first Christmas when Mary and Joseph came to Bethlehem for the census. Scripture records, “While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born, and she gave birth to her firstborn and wrapped him in a manger, because there was no room for him in the inn” (Luke 2:6,7). On the very first Christmas, nobody had room for Jesus. Everybody was busy, distracted and blind to what God was doing in Bethlehem. God was coming to earth in the form of a human, but so many were unprepared to receive him.

Over recent years, some politically correct groups have tried to totally drop Jesus out of Christmas. Some stores have instructed their employees to say, “Seasons Greeting” or “Happy Holidays” instead of Merry Christmas. There is a fight in some cities to put a nativity scene on any piece of public property. For most of us, however, it will not be the atheists and politically correct that strip Christ from our Christmas celebrations.

Our problem will often be the busyness of the season. I love Santa Claus, presents, parties, watching Christmas specials and all the other trappings that go with the holidays. You would think it would be easy to remember that all of this is nothing more than the sideshow, and that Jesus is the main attraction. And yet is seems that the birth of Jesus has become the sideshow, and all of the rest has become the main attraction. What if our kids walked away from Christmas with a message bigger than “be good for goodness sake” because Santa is checking his list twice? I want my kids to remember each Christmas to fall in love with a God who would send His own Son into the world to give his life. I want them to learn to be like the wise men and seek after Jesus with all of their heart. I want to remember these things for myself as well.

So here it is – Christmas season once again. It has been a hard year for many folks. The new year holds a lot of unknowns. Many of us need encouragement and hope. Go over to your Nativity scene and remember exactly what Christmas is all about. God drew near to us, to you. He is Emmanuel – God with us. Remember that no gift under the tree will ever compare to the gift of Christ. Take time to get ready. Make room in your heart for Him. If you miss Jesus, then you have really missed Christmas. And that’s the Word.

Thanksgiving 2008

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

As I write this article, it is Thanksgiving Day 2008. It is hard for me to believe the holiday season is upon us. A new year is right around the corner, and the future is somewhat unclear. These are tough times for a lot of people. I have never sensed so much fear and insecurity about the future.

I thought a lot about people like you today? How are you? Are you one of the many who has watched your income shrivel up? Are you facing a foreclosure? Have you been laid off from your job? Are you nearing retirement only to see your 401 K suffering a TKO (boxing term for a technical knock out)?

I must admit that I have faced fears of my own as I think about the future. Here I am – a man of faith, a so called spiritual leader – but these times have tested my faith as well. I have found myself worrying about the future at times. Then I catch myself worrying, and think – Why?? Why do I worry so much God?

I have come to a realization through it all. I have trusted God for several years now. I have seen God provide for all of my needs in great ways. For some reason though, I have let the unsettled nature of our economy bother me. Something in me has felt so vulnerable watching our country struggle so badly. I have realized that it is because I have put more of my trust and security in the Almighty Dollar than I would like to admit. As Wall Street has shaken, and the banks have shaken, and the real estate market has shaken, and the automobile industry has shaken, I have let myself be shaken. And I imagine that I am not alone. I am sure there are many more of you out there who feel the same. There are a lot of “What ifs?” out there.

So today on Thanksgiving, I am seeking to remember to be thankful. And I really am. God has been so good and kind. I have much to be thankful for. I am seeking to do much more than be thankful though. I am seeking to be faith-filled also. I am trying to remember God’s promises as I face the future, as I help to lead others in facing the future.

So as we come towards the end of 2008 with all of its uncertainty, there is a scripture I want to share with you this Thanksgiving. In the book of Hebrews, the writer speaks of the things that can be shaken – the kingdoms of this world, the things of this world. Then there is a word for Christians – Since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe, for our God is a consuming fire. (Hebrews 12:28).

The scripture reminds us that everything in this world can be shaken. The kingdoms of this world can be shaken. We, however, have been given a kingdom that cannot be shaken – the kingdom of God. As Christians, we serve a God who can never be dethroned. He is never surprised. He is never worried about the future. Our God is bigger than the economy, bigger than the Almighty Dollar. He is a God who provided manna from heaven for the Israelites. He is a God who fed 5000 with 5 loaves and 2 fish. He is a God who shall show Himself faithful to all of who seek Him.

We are receiving a kingdom that can never be shaken. So be thankful. Worship! Praise Him. Have peace. Have faith. Do not let yourself be shaken. I am truly thankful to be a part of God’s unshakable kingdom. And that’s the Word.