Archive for the ‘Truth’ Category

Trusting God entirely

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

I was reading Luke 12 vs 22-34 and it began to stir something in my heart. That’s Christian talk for it got me thinking and the thinking was influenced by God. Here’s the paragraph from the New King James Version:

 

22 Then He said to His disciples, “Therefore I say to you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat; nor about the body, what you will put on. 23 Life is more than food, and the body is more than clothing. 24 Consider the ravens, for they neither sow nor reap, which have neither storehouse nor barn; and God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than the birds? 25 And which of you by worrying can add one cubit to his stature? 26 If you then are not able to do the least, why are you anxious for the rest? 27 Consider the lilies, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; and yet I say to you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. 28 If then God so clothes the grass, which today is in the field and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, how much more will He clothe you, O you of little faith? 29 “And do not seek what you should eat or what you should drink, nor have an anxious mind. 30 For all these things the nations of the world seek after, and your Father knows that you need these things. 31 But seek the kingdom of God, and all these things shall be added to you. 32 “Do not fear, little flock, for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. 33 Sell what you have and give alms; provide yourselves money bags which do not grow old, a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches nor moth destroys. 34 For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

 

It’s a pretty well known scripture for those that have been in the Church for a while and yet I don’t think it’s been seen for all it is. Most preachers would use this to teach not to worry and to trust God, which is great, but I think there’s more to this passage.

 

Jesus isn’t just talking about not worrying and trusting him for the little things in our lives, I think Jesus is challenging us to go even further than that.

 

Verse 33: Sell what you have and give alms; provide yourselves money bags which do not grow old, a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches nor moth destroys.

 

Sell what I have? How will I live? I need to work, to save, to build up great wealth, to have a house, a car and a yapping dog behind my electrified fence. I personally feel this is a challenge to give as much as I can, not just a percentage, but everything to those in need.

 

I’ve been debating the purpose of life with myself and bounced some of my ideas off my atheist friend. When asked what his drive was in life, he said he wanted to better humanity. Has that worked so far? Recently I watched a documentary on some men from the Sudan, who had never even used electricity, move to New York and begin to live in the US. The light switch alone was fascinating to them. After a few years they spoke to them again and the wonders of our better world had only made their lives worse. They were now working most of the time, they had piles of bills to pay and they were juggling the intense schedule the modern world creates. If that’s the purpose of your life, it’s not looking so good.

 

I would argue life is not worth living if it’s in a Godless world. That world would have no purpose. If my purpose is to serve God, to be his hands in the world, to love and help others – not just Christians, then how do I do that? Clearly this verse tells me stocking up wealth is futile. Perhaps the challenge is to live in that danger zone. The zone any reasonable accountant would never get anywhere near, living from day to day. Relying on God alone to provide and not stocking up. Imagine that. Imagine never being held down by possessions. Imagine giving away the majority of your pay check the moment it arrives because there’s no need to stock up. God will provide.

 

Is this thought so out there? We talk about it, but we’re too scared to drop our safety net we’ve built up and rely solely on God. I feel challenged by this. I believe it takes a real connection with God to know when the right time is to give and when the right time is to build up in the expectation of giving. It’s gotten me excited to get out there and earn some money so that I can put it into practice. But perhaps I can give God other things to work with while I’m a student. What about my time? What about my skills? The possibilities are endless. If I stop worrying about doing well according to the worlds check list and start helping God with his, my life has a purpose. My life is now worth living.

 

Churches – Blah

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Churches. Blah. The mere mention of the word brings bad thoughts to millions of people around the world. Those places that take all your money and buy the head pastors fancy BMWs, the place full off hypocrites? Let’s talk about them.

 

I’ve been to many churches in my short life, either attending them regularly or visiting them, and regardless of their motto or their amazing ideas (Grace message anyone? Jesus’ entire life was to give us grace. This is no revelation. It should be the foundation of everything we talk about) they all have at least one major flaw, people.

 

Churches are run like businesses, and they’re proud of it

 

This isn’t a business you prune, this is God’s house. Wake up. You’re spending money on fancy lights, cameras, computers, banners, flyers, and websites when people are starving. Spend the money on feeding the poor, building homes, and blessing people who are struggling.

 

Now before you get defensive and say we have to reach people, think about this. If the church was the place it should be. Where people are being healed, where you could walk in and feel the presence of God and praise God in whatever way you wanted, where people weren’t judging each other and everybody was filled with pure joy, don’t you think people would talk? You wouldn’t need one shred of advertising. People would do it for you. They’d run home and Facebook their friends, tweet their followers and phone their grandparents. People would come. I guarantee it. Before you know it, the government would be on your side because you’re helping them by just doing what God told you to do. Love people, and help those in need.

 

Now, here’s where things get a little confusing. Having those fancy things can actually be a blessing. Do you have an amazing worship team, that are actually amazing musicians but they use their talents to praise God? If you have the money, why not make a CD? Now you can sell it and have more money to spend on helping people. Not on buying more fancy things, or going to some conference.

 

Don’t waste money on ridiculously fancy cameras to supersize your pastor’s funny face so people in the back can see him sweat. Use the cameras to create videos that get people thinking and talking about God, and again you can sell them to make money to give more to people in need. The more the church gives, the more it will grow. This is biblical stuff people, not just nice ideas.

 

Churches need to stop wasting money on fancy equipment they don’t use properly and start using it on helping people. Why not give this week’s offering to the Red Cross to help Japan? Oooo, no! There’s a budget in place, this is a business. Rubbish. This is God’s church. Give and God will provide.

 

Stop judging people

 

There are some crazy church people running around telling gay people God hates them. What absolute nonsense. God hates SIN, NOT the people sinning. If gay people should be accepted anywhere it should be in the church. Don’t judge their sin. It’s between them and God. God wants to love people, that love will open people’s eyes and they won’t want to sin. Picketing and hating people will never solve anything. Welcome them into the church. Witches, crazy people, beggars, murderers, they should all be welcome in the church. Let them see God’s love, let them feel it, and let them choose it for themselves.

 

Poor church, rich pastor

Now for something that kills many people. Rich pastors, the ones that are living in luxury when people suffer. Now having a rich pastor isn’t actually a bad thing. People in the church should be rich, because they have God’s blessing over their lives. But, if the church isn’t doing what they’re supposed to be doing, if they aren’t giving with reckless abandonment and reaching the needy and helping people build strong relationships with God, then we have a problem. And when people notice, I don’t think the church is doing its job.

 

If the church could just do these things, the things it’s supposed to do, the things close to God’s heart: loving his people, blessing his people, reaching out to his people. The things we get in the way of. It would be radical. We could change the world.

 

A side note of caution

 

Just because we do these things, it doesn’t mean God can’t use us. God can use anything for his glory, and he does. If he didn’t, we wouldn’t have one growing church. Isn’t that the beauty of God? Despite our flawed understanding of him, he blesses what we do regardless, because he loves us.

 

Disagree? Have something to add? That’s what the comments are for. I love how Rob Bell put it, “God has spoken and the rest is commentary.” I may be right, I may be wrong, I may be both. We’re all in this journey learning more about our amazing creator, and teaching each other. I want to hear your thoughts. Go.

 

Solo Sex – What Does the Bible Say?

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

TemptationEditors note: I found this article when visiting a great site www.youthspecialties.com and thought that it was extremely relevant to the youth. I have many friends who have struggled with this and this article details why it should be kept away from and uses the bible to show things to keep away from that will help. I hope this article gives hope in Christ that this sin can be removed from your life.

It is written to youth leaders but is easy for anybody to understand and use.

Solo Sex

What Does the Bible Say?

During a recent seminar on sex and marriage, one of the speakers shared how he dealt with, and justified, masturbation. When he couldn’t listen any longer, one attendee spoke up, “I thought as Christians we are supposed to be like Jesus.”

“That’s right,” the speaker answered.

“Well, I don’t think Jesus did that,” he replied.

After several awkward moments, the speaker quietly said, “Well, we are supposed to try to be like Jesus, but we can’t be perfect.”

While all of us are trying hard to give our students “real world solutions,” we must be careful that we don’t minimize the relevancy of Scripture and the power of God. In his recent article on masturbation [Nov/Dec 2001], Dale Kaufman said, “We must help teens navigate the stormy waters of their sexuality.” The question we must answer is how do we “help them navigate?” Are we lowering the standard because we think, “They are going to do it anyway, so just let them?” This article seems to be attempting to do just that.

The Bible says that man’s ways seem right to him, but in the end lead to death. As leaders, we must offer students a way to lead a balanced Christian life in an unbalanced world. Promoting a freedom to masturbate does nothing to accomplish this.

Harmful Effects

Let’s face it; we live in an oversexed world. Compared to when most of us were teens, there’s a massive overdrive from all mediums to stimulate young people sexually.

In our advice to “guide them,” should we tell our young people to “get as close as you can to the cliff, but just don’t think about it?” What if we actually tried looking at what the Bible says to do with wrong thoughts? 2 Cor. 10:5 tells us to “cast down thoughts and imaginations that exalt themselves above God and take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ.”

What of the helpful effects of masturbation by relieving sexual tension? Research shows that just the opposite is true.

Dr. Winnifred Cutler, a leading authority in the biology of human reproduction notes that in a sexual union two individuals bond together. “This occurs not just physically, but hormonally.” Other types of sexual activity, either with multiple partners or individual masturbation, are incapable of producing this type of cyclical harmony.i

A sexual addiction counselor, Dr. Douglass Weiss, agrees. In a presentation he describes how sex and the brain interact.

In the center of the brain is the medial preoptic nucleus (MPN). In your brain, when you have a sexual release, your brain experiences a release of chemicals called endorphins and encephalins. This is the highest rush in the human body. It is the same area cocaine affects; this is why cocaine is so addicting.

Because you get the highest reward for this behavior, you want to do it again. Now, here’s where it’s unique. When you get the reward, whatever you’re looking at—it doesn’t have to be real—whatever you’re looking at [at sexual release] you are bonding to whatever that [object] is. So, if you have a sexual fantasy, you’ll start bonding to a fantasy world. I know guys like this in their 30′s or 40′s because of what they did to their MPN when they were 12 or 13 years old.

God designed it so that you would bond with one person. [To men:] In a very short period of time, no matter what your wife looks like, you bond to her. She becomes your desire. And when you think about intimacy and sexuality, you think about her. If you [masturbate] and you reward yourself for going to fantasy world, then the fantasy is going to be what you desire. You’re going to see women as objects, not people. That’s not God’s design. God wants you to see someone as His child. As a person.ii

“Your brain doesn’t know the difference,” Dr. Weiss continues, “between this [object] being appropriate or inappropriate. It just knows it got the rewards. Now, if it gets good stuff [chemical rewards] attached to bad things, what will it want to do? Bad things. [Protect] your brain. This is a holy place. If you start [masturbating] and you go over into fantasy or pornography, you are going to damage your life. It affects your own sexuality.”

Encouraging teens to do this actually helps to insure their bondage to sexual issues!

What Does the Bible Have to Say?

Just because the Bible doesn’t use the word “masturbation,” that doesn’t mean it has nothing to say about the subject. Scripture clarifies the path that sin travels in each of us. “Each one is tempted when, by his own evil desire, he is dragged away and enticed. Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin.” (Jam. 1:14)

In Jesus’ teaching on adultery (Matt. 5:27), Dr. Jack Hayford points out that “your (predominate) hand” (as well as “your eye”) which “causes you to sin” is taught by Jesus in the context of “looking at a woman with lust” and, therefore, would include the sin of masturbation. He doesn’t insist that this is the only point Jesus was making, but says there is no question that the implications are present.iii

God put inside each human a “passion button” designed to give you a very passionate way of expressing your love to your spouse. The only person ever meant to touch that passion button is your spouse.

One of the most disturbing things about Kaufman’s article is the debasing of our sexuality by reducing it to a mere biological function. Sexuality is far more than that. Our sexuality was designed by God with a purpose. The “one flesh” experience in Scripture is continually written of in the context of a sacrament and is called a “mystery” (Eph. 5:1-4). Self-stimulation is the antithesis of the design and “mystery” of the sacramental one-flesh union.

“Marriage is to be held in honor among all, and the marriage bed is to be undefiled; for fornicators and adulterers God will judge.” (Heb. 13:4) The Greek word translated “fornicators” or “fornication” is “Pornea”, and would have been understood at the time as “any sexual behavior, thought or deed, outside of the sacramental act between a husband and wife.” Self- stimulation leading to an orgasm certainly defiles the marriage bed.

The article argues that one can actually masturbate without lusting. Although the notion seems preposterous to a person who has common sense, it appears that there are those who’ve managed to convince themselves of this. It was also suggested that as long as people “set their mind on the things above” they can masturbate freely and glorify God. Could this mean that we can do any sin we want to with our body as long as we meditate on God while we are doing it? Certainly not!

James 1:13-16 tells us that sin is the result of a process that starts in our minds. Thank God that there’s a way out of all sin! (1 Cor. 10:13) Paul teaches our teens to “flee the evil desires of youth.” (2 Ti. 2:22) Anything that draws someone towards immorality should send us running. The goal in the Christian life isn’t to see how much temptation we can take without actually sinning. “A wise person sees trouble coming and avoids it.” (Pr. 14:8) When young people feel the temptation to masturbate they need to run to God.

“Don’t think of ways to indulge your evil desires,” (Rom. 13:14) Instead, let’s discover the power that God has given every believer “to say ‘no’ to ungodliness and worldly passions?” (Titus 2:12)

Self-Control

Some may wonder why we go through puberty between the ages of 11 and 13, but don’t marry until our 20s.

Pastor Ted Haggard says, “God gives us the opportunity to learn self-discipline, so our marriages can be strong and healthy—trustworthy in the marriage relationship.”

If young people can’t control sexual impulses before marriage, why would they be able to control themselves after they’re married? There’s nothing about a wedding that automatically grants self-control.

In his article, Mr. Kaufman speaks of young boys as “powerless” to deal with the sexual pressures. If we have the power to say “no” to a particular behavior we are in fact exercising “self-control.” There’s nothing morally wrong with the struggle to be pure, and we must never abandon that struggle.

Scripture is full of admonitions to be people of self-control; it’s even one of the fruits of the spirit (Gal 5:22-23). God expects us to use the power he has given us with the Holy Spirit to control our bodies and our minds.

How to Help a Teen Deal with It

The young people must know they have a leader who can teach them how to live godly lives, not merely try to relieve them of guilt. They might feel “powerless,” but we need to show them that God has given them power over sin.

The first key is to build a foundation of purity by teaching the purpose for the passion button as an expression of love to their future spouses. Give them a love for purity that isn’t just a bunch of rules but a virtue to be cherished.

We must also teach them that self-discipline is like a muscle, if they work it out now they’ll be able to utilize it for the rest of their life.

Jeanne Mayo, veteran youth pastor of 32-year, believes that one of the most destructive lies concerning masturbation is what she terms “The Ladder Mentality.” Young men and women sincerely desiring to walk in freedom often picture holiness as a very tall ladder. Each time the person “makes it” through another day overcoming in this area, they see themselves “making it another step up the ladder.” But should they stumble, they often feel that they have “fallen all the way to the bottom of the ladder.” Thus the journey to mental purity becomes so discouraging and hopeless that they give up. Great freedom comes when young adults realize that one “mess up” doesn’t cancel out all of their efforts up to that point. The primary mental focus here needs to be direction, not perfection.

In the fight for mental purity, young people must realize that their most powerful sexual organ will always be their brain. That is why the Scripture tells us to “be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” (Rom. 12:2) You can give them Scriptures referenced in this article to memorize along with Job 31:1, Ps. 101:3 and Pr. 5. By meditating on Scripture they will be loaded with ammo to help them win the war with temptation.

I know of many young people who have done these things and now live in total freedom from masturbation. They’re preparing to have a fantastic intimacy one day with their spouse. As leaders, we must let the principles in Scripture be the standard that we use to teach our young people.

This generation needs leaders of a high standard who teach them that it’s possible to live this way and who will show them how. Let’s be those leaders.

. . . . .

i Glenn T. Stanton, Why Marriage Matters (Colorado Springs: Pinon Press, 1997), p. 46.

ii Douglass Weiss, Ph.D., Good Enough To Wait (Fort Worth: Discovery Press Video).

iii ”Solo Sex: Release or Rejection?” Cassette tape by Jack Hayford – Tape #2181 (To order call 800.776.8180)

Also see:
Every Man’s Battle: Winning the War on Sexual Temptation One Victory at a Time By Stephen Arterburn, Fred Stoeker with Mike Yorkey WaterBrook Press – 9/00

Friends

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

friendsI love my friends, no I adore my friends. Sometimes they annoy you and argue with you. They tempt you, hurt you and sometimes they just make you downright miserable. They make you wonder, make you feel insecure, and smash your emotions into pieces. But with everything they do wrong they do so much right.

Friends make you laugh. They pick you up when you’re down. They support your crazy ideas and tell you when you’ve gone too far. They try not to judge and secretly sob while you make mistakes they just can’t help you get out of. They watch you be weird and then join right in. They cry with you, scream with you, and run with you.

The beauty of friends is that each one is different. Each one supports and needs in different ways. Some are always there and some pop into your life in unexpected places. Most importantly every friend has a purpose, a purpose in your life. God decides what that is, we play what’s been dealt.

Little Old Lady

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Little Old LadyThere was a little old lady who, every morning, stepped onto her front porch, raised her arms to the sky and shouted: ‘PRAISE THE LORD, His Love and Mercy endures forever!’

One day an atheist moved into the house next door. He became irritated at the little old lady. Every morning he’d step onto his front porch after her and yell: ‘THERE IS NO LORD!’

Time passed with the two of them carrying on this way every day.
One morning, in the middle of winter, the little old lady stepped onto her front porch and shouted: ‘PRAISE THE LORD! Please Lord, I have no food and I am starving, provide for me, oh Lord! The next morning she stepped out onto her porch and there were two huge bags of groceries sitting there.
‘PRAISE THE LORD!’ she cried out. ‘HE HAS PROVIDED GROCERIES FOR ME!’

The atheist neighbour jumped out of the hedges and shouted: ‘THERE IS NO LORD; I BOUGHT THOSE GROCERIES!’

The little old lady threw her arms into the air and shouted: ‘PRAISE THE LORD! HE HAS PROVIDED ME WITH GROCERIES AND MADE THE DEVIL PAY FOR THEM!’