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God Loves Within and Beyond Himself

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You ever notice how some people are in love with the idea of being married?  They are in love with the months of attention, the pampering, the dress, the flowers, the cake, the status, the approving looks of the parents, the envious glances of their friends, the fairy tale ending.  It might not be too out of bounds to ask if the groom is even an essential part of the day, or if they are just another accessory, like a corsage or the veil. God help the person who happens to be standing in their path as they direct themselves down the isle come hell or high water. This modern conundrum was depicted in the movie, Bride Wars, in which to best friends seek to sabotage each other’s weddings before one of them realizes that she is in love with the idea of getting married rather than the man to whom she was engaged. The modern divorce rate suggests that we are a people in love with the idea of getting married, but not doing as well in loving the person to whom we marry. 

 

The same phenomenon occurs in the church.

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The Essentials: Intro

[Audio Link at Bottom] 

Often a curiosity about other denominations: how are we all Christian?  Where are the lines between a Christian church and a cult or another religion?  With all of the denominations and other churches out there, how do we know which are faithful to the gospel of Christ?  Who are we and how do we fit in the Christian family?  Mormons, Methodists, Muslims and the MET. Calvinists, Catholics and Charismatics. Presbyterians and Pentecostals, Anglicans and Arminians.   Jehovah’s Witnesses, the spiritualist Church next door, the “God hates fags” church on the news, the Jesus people, the Christ-followers, the Emergents, the Baptists, the new reformed.  Are we some little sect unconnected to the mainstream? How do we deal with differences even within the church - differences of beliefs.  Where is the center and where is the edges?

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Evidential Assurance

Over the next couple of months we will be tackling an issue that is of great importance to the Christian’s life and walk with God: the doctrine of assurance.  How can you know that you are truly a child of God - that you truly are saved and have eternal life?  This is an important question and indeed one that every wise person must ask themselves, or else tremble before their imminent death.  We spoke last Friday, that not only was Jesus crucified so many years ago, but that we all are spiritually beside him on our own crosses, condemned as sinners before God needing salvation.  Do you know whether you are saved? How can you know?

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Were You There? (Good Friday)

We often approach the last hours of Jesus as if we hold him in our judgment.  We see ourselves as Pilot or Herod, as the crowd, even as his disciples.  What is it going to be?  Are we going to stand with Jesus or not?  Are we going to accept his claims or not.  Are we going to rule in his favor or not.  One preacher once said, the most important question anyone can ask themselves in this world is: “What do you think about Jesus?”

I am going to contend this morning that that is not the essential question that we ultimately need to be asking.  If we came to Jesus from a position of power, maybe that would be appropriate.  If we came as a part of the detached crowd, that question may ring true.  But the truth of the gospel is that we are not merely faces in the crowd, and how dare we sit in judgment over God?  No, if our position before God is seriously considered, it must be as those men in this story that we probably would be least likely to identify ourselves with: the criminals. 

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Buckle Up!

Some of us get very nervous when we speak about hearing God’s voice or sensing his leading in our lives because we’ve met people or heard of churches or movements in which people have done kooky things while claiming to be following the voice or divine guidance.

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God Speaks (Part 2)

Audio Link at the Bottom:

Last week we say that God speaks, and the fact that God speaks is what distinguishes him as the one and only true God.  He speaks, and His word is life – for man does not live on bread alone, but by every word the proceeds from the mouth of God.  We then started asking the question: how does God speak?  We saw that God has ultimately and most clearly spoken to us in His Son.  We don’t have a God sending us S.O.S codes from outer space, but a God who came near, showed up in our living rooms and said, “Here I am!”  Jesus is the Word of God come in the flesh, who made His dwelling among us and taught us the very words of life. When he preached the sermon in the mount, for example, people were amazed at his teachings for he spoke with an authority unlike any other teacher they had ever heard. If you’re not yet familiar with God or church or this whole thing I suggest that you start with Jesus – read His words and hear God. 

We then noted that a second way God speaks to us is through His word, the Bible.  We don’t hold up the Bible above Jesus, but Jesus showed his disciples how all of the Old Testament could be trusted for all it poke of came to fulfillment in himself, and also promised them that the Holy Spirit would lead them to remember all he had taught them so that they could record for future generations a faithful witness.  So later Peter, one of those disciples, explained – we didn’t follow made up tales, but we were eyewitnesses, but even more than that we had the prophetic word made sure which spoke to us and confirmed to us everything we were seeing and hearing, and you would do really well to pay attention to this.   So we have the ultimate revelation (Jesus), and the sure revelation (Bible) that point to, respect, affirm and celebrate one another. 

Today we are going to talk about a third way that God speaks to us and we are going to sit here for a while for this needs a bit more explanation and can be controversial.  God speak to us through His Spirit.

Through His Spirit

  • Conviction of Sin Toward Repentance

o      Unbelievers: 1 Cor 14:25: the Holy Spirit speaks to the heart of the unbeliever so that they are convicted of sin a come to know the gospel of Christ.  My experience the night I was saved.  I got it.

His father wanted him to become a man of learning and cared very little about his character. When he was 17 he went to Carthage to study. He studied rhetoric with eagerness and pleasure; but his motives were vanity and ambition, and to them he joined loose living. One of the results of his lifestyle was that he fathered a child at 19, but still refused to grow up, and carried on his life, trying to satisfy his intellectual curiousity by studying one system of philosophy after another.  The faith of his mother he found elementary and unsophisticated.  Saint Augustine's spiritual, moral and intellectual struggle went on; he was convinced of the truth of Christianity, but his will was weaker than the worldly temptations, and delayed his return to Christ for many months. "Soon, in a little while, I shall make up my mind, but not right now" he kept telling himself. In his half desires of conversion he was accustomed to beg of God the grace of chastity, but was at the same time in some measure afraid of being heard too soon. He realized that his problem was a moral one. The Divine truth for which he was seeking would never be his unless he first overcame his weakness. Soon after, Pontitian, an African, came to visit Saint Augustine and his friend Alipius; he told them about two men who had been suddenly turned to the service of God by reading about the life of Saint Anthony. His words had a powerful influence on the mind of Saint Augustine. He was ashamed his will has been so weak and said to Alipius: "What are we doing to let the unlearned seize Heaven by force, whilst we with all our knowledge remain behind, cowardly and heartless, wallowing in our sins? Because they have outstripped us and gone before, are we ashamed to follow them? Is it not more shameful not even to follow them?"  He rushed to the garden, greatly upset; tears filling his eyes, he threw himself on the grass under a fig tree and reproached himself bitterly crying out: "And Thou, O Lord, how long? How long? Is it to be tomorrow and tomorrow? Why not now? Why not this very hour put an end to shame?" As he spoke these words he heard a child's voice singing "Tolle lege! Tolle lege!" (Take up and read! Take up and read!). He could not remember any childhood game he played with any such words. He remembered that Saint Anthony was converted from the world by hearing a single verse. He took up Saint Paul's epistles and read the first chapter that met his eyes: "Let us walk honestly, as in the day; not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and envying. But put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, fulfil the lusts thereof." (Romans 13:13-14) When he told Alipius what he had experienced, Alipius took the book and read, he found the next words to be: "Him that is weak in the faith receive ye" and applied them to himself and joined his friend in his resolution.

o      Believers: Psalm 139:23-24: See if there is any offensive way in me.  Conviction versus Condemnation.  Understand ourselves. The heart is desperately wicked above all things – who can understand it?  So the Holy Spirit can search our hearts and tells us things about ourselves that we don’t even know.  Why am I grumpy – why did I react that way?  Why does it seems that there is a blockage between us God?

  • Confirmation of God’s Presence  Psalm 46:10.  Be still and know that I am God.  Just the sense of God’s presence.  Knowing that He is here.  When its quiet, and you’ve given you anxiety to Christ through prayer and you rest in his presence.  Stop striving and know that He is God.  This is echoed in Phillipians 4:5-7: The Lord is near don’t be anxious about anything but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to Him. And the peace of God which surpasses all understanding will guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus.
  • Assurance of Our Salvation: Romans 8:15-16.  The Spirit testifies with our Spirit that we are children of God and so that we cry out ABBA father.  I call this the subjective-objective test of assurance.  1 John (a book we will soon study) speaks to the objective tests of assurance.  This is the subjective – I know God is my Dad. Doubt experience.
  • Approving God’s Word and Revealed Will: Romans 12:2, 1 Corinthians 2:14.  The Spirit illumines God’s word to us, directing toward our lives, so that we are able to understand and apprehend the things of God, 
  • To receive clear direction in non-moral matters There are a lot of important areas in our lives that the Bible does not speak to.  Now don’t get me wrong there is a lot that the Bible does speak to.  The Bible gives us wisdom for life and teaches us what God has done for us and how to live and to please God.  Part of this idea behind the rooted series was to get a good grasp on the revealed will of God.  As I said earlier, Jesus is the ultimate revelation of God and the Bible is the only prophetic word made sure – more sure than any voice you may hear from heaven.  Yet the Bible doesn’t tell you things like what career you should pursue, where to go to university, whether and who you ought to marry.  This is the frustrating part of the Christian faith for some of us in churches that are really Bible-centered, because the hidden secret is that although the Bible is our only authoritative rule for faith and life, there are decisions that we make every day, month and year that fall into this gaping hole of divine guidance.  When I was a younger man, trying to figure out  what to do after university, I felt this frustration and sat down with my Bible – how did the early church know what to do or where to go next? 

§       1:15-26: Used wisdom, and through dice and trusted God.

§       8:1-4: Persecution

§       8:26-29: Angel told Philip

§       10:9-23: Vision, Circumstances (look in more detail next week)

§       13:1-3: In response to prayer (audible voice)

§       15:6-7, 12-22: Debate

§       16:6-10: Closed doors, forbidden enty and visions

§       19:21: Resolved in the spirit.

  • Words of knowledge: A few years ago we were going through the book of 1 Corinthians and came to 12:8: To one is given through the Spirit the utterance of wisdom, and to another the utterance of knowledge according to the same Spirit,word of knowledge:  We talked of the things on this list being special manifestations of the work of the Holy Spirit to meet ministry needs, differing from our gifts, talents or abilities.  Being able to know something that you wouldn’t come to know through natural means.  Matthew 16:15-17   He said to them, "But who do you say that I am?" Simon Peter replied, "You are the Christ, the Son of the living God." And Jesus answered him, "Blessed are you, Simon Bar-Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. Acts 5:1-3   But a man named Ananias, with his wife Sapphira, sold a piece of property, and with his wife's knowledge he kept back for himself some of the proceeds and brought only a part of it and laid it at the apostles' feet. But Peter said, "Ananias, why has Satan filled your heart to lie to the Holy Spirit and to keep back for yourself part of the proceeds of the land?

Through my own life, it was that experience of praying, of receiving words from the Lord in scripture, of confirming God’s direction through the opening and closing of doors.  

How Do We Hear God Speak?

1)    Posture of the Heart: We must listen – not with our ears for if god wanted to speak to us he surely could even if we weren’t tuned in (think Samuel), but with our heart – an openness to listen and obey.  Romans 12:1.

2)    Study to Show Yourself a Workman Approved So You’re Not Ashamed: 2 Timothy 2:15: rightly handling the word of truth.  Systematic and disciplined study of the Bible, so that you know what God has spoken through his son and through the word.  If this is the prophetic word made sure, you do well to pay attention to it, so that you don’t get really excited about hearing God’s voice presently through the spirit that you deceive yourself into thinking that any idea that pops into your head is from God.  You line it up – but you have to know the sure prophetic word, before you can trust that you can discern un-sure prophetic words.

3)    Pray, Listen and Watch

a.     One tool: Listening prayer.  We’ve done this on a number of occasions.  Must of you are still uncomfortable.  Pray specifically and ask God for a picture, a thought or a scripture. Our speaker at Getaway, talked about his uncomfortability with this and how he set up a chair and a cup of coffee and talked to Jesus.

b.     Some people listening prayer works great.  Jean said once that every time she practices listening prayer she gets something.  Blew my mind.  For me, I rarely get anything that I can distinguish from my thoughts. I was in a church that listening prayer was a big thing and I felt so dull.  But then I realized that I don’t need to stay in prayer to hear the voice of the Holy Spirit. For me, I pray and then I open my eyes.  And wait to see the answer or God speaking to me through other means – circumstances (internship/Prayer summit/Romania story)

c.     Don’t be scared off by the practice or the terminology.  It took me a long while in my Christian life after hearing of a lot of people’s experience, that the experience of Christians is generally the same, but because the use different terms they get all bent out of shape.  A Baptist who says, the lord moved in my heart to write you a check of to pray for you is in 99% of the cases saying the excat same thing as a charismatic who says, “The Holy Spirit told me to give you a check”.  The difference is that charismatics tend to seek such things asking God to speak to them, whild Baptists are sometimes caught by surprise.

4)    Confirm, confirm, confirm

a.     I John 4:1 tells us to test the Spirits for false prophets have gone out into the world.  Many take this to test the words the false prophets are saying, but if there is no longer any ongoing speaking by the wholly Spirits, why test anyone – they are all false!  Or 1 Thessalonians 5:19-21 which says “Do not quench the Spirit.  Do not despise prophecies, but test all things!

b.     Story of Gideon (Judges 6)

Listen!

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God Speaks (Part 1)

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As we continue along in this series: relent, I want to go back to the original passage that we started in, the passage recounting Jesus’ temptation in the wilderness.  Jesus fended the temptation of Satan that he, in his state of extreme hunger would turn stones into bread. “It is written,” Jesus reminded Satan, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.”  When we first looked at this passage, we applied it very practically – that the purpose of fasting and the practice of spiritual disciplines is not to focus on the fast or the spiritual disciplines, but to orient ourselves to feast on God.  So whether you’re observing lent, or a one or two day fast, or even a 30 hour famine, you actually are missing the point if you make it solely about what you are abstaining from. 

Today however, we are going to springboard off this passage in another way, that is, “How do we feast on God?” Because notice that Jesus says, man does not live on God alone, or even on God’s presence alone, but, specifically, “by every word that comes from the mouth of God.”  God’s words are life.  God’s words are what he feast on for they bring life.  As the psalmist says in Psalm 19:7-10:

The law of the LORD is perfect, reviving the soul;
The testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple;
The precepts of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart;
The commandment of the LORD is pure, enlightening the eyes;
The fear of the LORD is clean, enduring forever;
The rules of the LORD are true, and righteous altogether.
M
ore to be desired are they than gold, even much fine gold;
Sweeter also than honey and drippings of the honeycomb.

God’s words are life.  Reviving, making wise, rejoicing, enlightening, enduring: life!  Jesus has been nourished by the very words of God.  Which leads us to add this layer of understanding to our study: our fasting, praying and seeking is not feasting, unless we are listening, for God’s words are life.  In order for us to practice this, I’m going break it down very simply and unpack it for you.  We have three points or issues to cover today: 1) Our God Speaks, 2) How does He speak? 3) How do we Hear his voice?

Our God Speaks

In scripture, the fast that God speaks is one of the most distinguishing characteristics of his nature and personhood.

  • Genesis 1: God Speaks and creates everything.
  • Genesis: God speaks to Adam (daily walks), Eve, Cain (the wicked Son), Noah, Abraham, Lot (through an angel), Hagar, Abimelch (king of Gerar) in a dream, Abraham’s servant (clear guidance), Rebeccah (asking God why herr preganancy was so traumatic), Jacob, Joseph, the cup-bearer, the baker and Pharoah. Moving on to Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers God speaks to Moses, Aaron, and Miriam. Moses speaks to God as a friend and spends so much time in his presence that his face shines.  The stunning repetition of these three books, is “The Lord spoke to Moses, the Lord spoke to Aaron”.   Yet in numbers 11, as elders were appointed to aid Moses, the spirt cam upon them as well and they also prophesied, causing Moses to declare, “Would that all God’s people were prophets, that the Lord would put his Spirit on them!”  This prophecy was taken up and echoed by the Prophet Joel, who declared “And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, and your young men shall see visions. (Joel 2:28-29), which is in fact what the early church recognized to have happened in their days. Not too get too big a   head about God speaking to us, for in Numbers the Lord also speaks to the wicked prophet Balaam – both personally and through his donkey.  
  • In the time of judges – not the best spiritual time for everyone was doing what was right in there own eyes – God speaks to Joshua, Deborah, Gideon (some no-name dude, who couldn’t believe that God would really speak to him),  Manoah (Samson’s mom),  Hearing the voice of the Lord was considered the normal state of the people of God, at least collectively, so that in 1 Samuel 3:1, the exception to the rule is pointed out: Now the young man Samuel was ministering to the LORD under Eli. And the word of the LORD was rare in those days; there was no frequent vision.
  • God continues speaking, and his speaking is his distinguishing characteristc that sets him apart from the false gods.  He questions the people through Habakkuk:
    “What profit is an idol when its maker has shaped it, a metal image, a teacher of lies? For its maker trusts in his own creation when he makes speechless idols!   That’s just a cursory list through the Old Testament, and I didn’t really even get into the prophets – much less the New Testament which the Old Testament anticipated to be a prophetic age.  God speaks.  He has always spoken.  And his Word is life.

How Does God Speak?  We’ll look at three.

  • Through His Son:but in these last days he has spoken to us by his SonThe revelation of God in Jesus so surpasses any other revelation that God has given to man, just as the light from the sun overwhelms a tiny little flashlight.  Jesus communicated to us perfectly everything of the Father, so that to see Him was to see the Father, to hear him was to hear the Father, to obey Him was to obey the Father, to love Him was to love the Father and to hate him was to hate the Father.  John says it simply, “No one has seen Him at any time, but God the only son, he has explained him to us.”  What’s God like – exhibit A – Jesus and there is no exhibit B.  This is why there is salvation in no one else, because to reject the revelation of the Father – the Son – is to reject the Father himself.  You cannot go to God, somehow circumventing Jesus.  It’s like saying I will obey my mom, but disobey her word.  What?  God has spoken to us in Jesus.  Even when Jesus said strange and hard things, like “unless a person eat my flesh and drink my blood he cannot inherit the kingdom of God” and many people turned away, and they said, to where will we go – you have the words of life!” There is one perfect speaker, and he is Jesus, and his sheep know his voice and when he calls them they come to Him because they hear him.
  • Through His Word: have something more sure, the prophetic word,What do you trust: Bible or audible voice from God and your own eyewitness account?  Peter wouldn’t trust his eyes or his ears, but He trusted the Word.  Notice that we don’t elevate the Word over Jesus, but we trust Jesus, and Jesus trusted the Word – so much so that he said not one jot or title (the smallest specks of the Hebrew alphabet would pass away from the Word until the Kingdom comes in. “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, The Bible has been so attacked by liberals, and historical revisionists, and people with scissors, claiming contradictions, but it has stood the test of time for it is life.  The wisdom contained within will keep a young man pure by hiding it deep within his heart.  I love this book.  The more I study it the more I see how it fits together – it truly is one book even though it was written by over 40 human authrs from all walks of life, it has one author andd everything fits.  It fits in my life – the more I understand it the more I see it as being as practical in its instruction as the latest and most hyped up modern best-seller, yet it was written thousands of years ago by middle-eastern shepherds and fisherman.  It is the anchor which holds the various strands of Christianity together, yet speaks to each individual in power.  Only God could have written such a masterpiece.

Listen!

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Who Are You Talking To?

When I was in college, I read a little book that had profound impact on me.  It was called, “Your God is too Small.”  The  book describes many common “half-views” of God and the effect those skewed views can have on the way a Christian practically lives out his or her faith. Today, we are going to look at our conception of God and how our conception of God influences our practice of prayer. We may be able to tell by how we pray whether or not we are worshipping the God of the Bible. There are four perceptions of God that I want you to meet today.

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Where’s the Feast? - Feasting on God pt. 2

Today I want to ask the question “Where’s the feast?” largely because I imagine many Christians ask this on a daily basis. So, if you are asking this, please know - you’re not alone. Many Christians memorize John 10:10 “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they might have life and have it abundantly”. We just sang “many times I wonder at your gift of life”. But often, we aren’t full of wonder. The wonder we experience is wondering. Wondering where the abundant life is. Where is it? And why am I not experiencing it? Do I need to pray a certain prayer? Do I need to follow 9 steps? Do I need to read the right book, believe the right eschatology, share Jesus with ten of my friends? Then will God give me the abundant life?

Then will He help me feel joy and love and peace even when loneliness is killing me? Or when the pressure of meeting bills makes me feel like my life is a prison? Or will He take away the pain of failure: not meeting my parents expectations, giving into temptations, not measuring up to my brother or sister? Or will He finally give me joy when, after having it all, I still do not feel satisfied? Where’s the feast?

 

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RE:lent

As you may be able to tell from the graphic, we are stating our new sermon series coinciding with the season that is called “Lent”.  Some of you may already have realized that Lent had started when co-workers or friends showed up at work or at school last Wednesday with a mark of ash on their foreheads. 

So what is lent all about and why observe it? Is there any value in it?

According to an article written by Ted Olsen for the Magazine, Christian History

“Lent is one of the oldest observations on the Christian calendar. Like all Christian holy days and holidays, it has changed over the years, but its purpose has always been the same: self-examination and penitence, demonstrated by self-denial, in preparation for Easter.

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