Showing posts with label certain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label certain. Show all posts

Monday, 1 October 2018

Confidence

So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded. You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. Hebrews 10:35,36 NIV

In our youth, we feel that we can take on the world, and nothing will be able to get in our way. But as we get older, we start to realise that our confidence ebbs as we find out that there are some things, no make that many things we just can’t do anymore. It’s a stark truth and reality, and something we can’t change.

This verse gives me some comfort because the rich reward is not limited only to those who have boundless confidence. For me, the key word is not ‘confidence’, but to ‘persevere’ doing the will of God. Then, and only then it becomes certain, that we will receive God’s promise.

However, there is a serious note of caution. I started out to say that our confidence can ebb, and that is true as life affects us, but we are warned ‘do not throw away your confidence’. As with many things in the Christian life, we have choices, and here we have a choice to make too. If our God given free will allows us to throw our confidence away, thus losing the promise, we must also have that same free will to retain our confidence! With the strength given by God, we have the certainty of receiving the promise of God. What could be better than to be in the will of God, and in His favour?

Tuesday, 25 September 2018

Trying

You will know the old adage, your friend encounters a problem which he can’t get the better of and he says, “I’m trying!” and your reply is “You’re very trying”. Not so funny is it, especially when you are the one having to ‘try’? That just about sums this blog up for me.

Any kind of gathering of people who want to stay relevant, like cafes, restaurants, clubs, and yes even churches, will end up trying new things to keep their patronage. Especially so when they are against the wall and struggling financially, and numerically. Let’s face it, these two problems go together. For my part, I am focussing on the small, struggling churches, and there are many.

Since our faith hinges on the Word of God as left to us in the Bible, I was looking for some guidance. Was there any place where something similar happened? Were all the New Testament early churches thriving? I don’t think so. In fact we know that Paul had some real problems as he counselled them to stay on track. So what was his message? What was the secret for a successful church, both then and now?

Timothy was a young fledgling pastor and teacher, who was under the protective wing of his mentor, the Apostle Paul, and who better for advice? If it had happened in a church, Paul knew about it and how to fix it. His only advice is clear, and to the point. In a nutshell it’s preach Timothy, preach the Word! Nothing more or less. Nothing different or new. Nothing geared to be attractive that would ‘bring them in’. No, just preach the Word!

Now where did we start? Oh yes, by trying. I suppose like others I feel obliged to ‘try’ the new programs that the local church comes up with to make it more relevant in today’s society. I know they come from a full heart, but I sometimes find them ‘very trying’ in that other sense. Could it be the easy way out? You see, preaching done well is no small feat, and any church is blessed to have a preaching and teaching pastor. I am happy to say that my own small church has such a pastor, and I would say he deserves a better response. The numbers don’t seem to put him off, because I believe he knows where the importance of church lies. Not in a new program, or a quiz, or a ‘feel good’ time of singing. These are all good in their place, but no substitute for the only message that Paul suggested to Timothy.

I will go along and try the new things for a while, but if I find them trying my Spirit?... Answers on a postcard please.

In the presence of God and of Christ Jesus, who will judge the living and the dead, and in view of his appearing and his kingdom, I give you this charge: preach the word; be prepared in season and out of season; correct, rebuke and encourage – with great patience and careful instruction. For the time will come when people will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather round them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear. They will turn their ears away from the truth and turn aside to myths. But you, keep your head in all situations, endure hardship, do the work of an evangelist, discharge all the duties of your ministry. 2 Timothy 4:1-5 NIV

Wednesday, 1 August 2018

Happysad

My daughter coined the word ‘happysad’ recently which fits in so many ways and places. You will know that as a Christian, I spend a lot of time at church and in the company of other Christians, although I have to say, not exclusively. I enjoy the company of all sorts of people, whether believers or not! So, where does this word ‘happysad’ come in?

The kind of church service I enjoy best involves and includes: reverence without gimmicks, a group of friendly people from all parts of society who make the stranger welcome, hearty congregational singing that lifts the roof, the sound of people whispering an ‘amen’ or even speaking it out loud, a tear wiped away when an eternal truth makes someone emotional by word or song, a tear wiped, a clear Gospel message which leaves the listener challenged to the point of making a life changing decision to follow Jesus more closely, the right hand of fellowship and the occasional hug. I was at such a church service today.

The occasion was made better in the fact that it was not my usual church or group of believers, but the sense of fellowship was acute and unmistakably a good, clear, Christian, Gospel witness. An hour well spent. I left encouraged in my faith, and challenged to be a better person while I live and enjoy the little time I have left on this earth. This kind of church service doesn’t happen every week, or in every church.

Oh, didn’t I say? I was at a celebration of a life well lived, a lady who is literally a saint in the courts of heaven. Her eternal destiny was, and is, known, confirmed, and secure. A church where pastors can speak freely without compromise, hesitation or choosing their words carefully in case they offend someone. They presented the Gospel of the saving Power of the Lord Jesus Christ and they were respected for their candour without exception.

Yes, I was at a funeral. My only question is this: Why should I attend a funeral service, to hear the Gospel where it is not taken as an offence to the listeners? And as for that word ‘happysad’? Does it make more sense now?

Friday, 22 June 2018

A Certainty

...and be sure your sin will find you out. Numbers 32:23 ESV

Benjamin Franklin, said, “in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes” but let me add another certainty according to the Bible, and that is a source we can trust. Cast your mind back to your Sunday School days, and I am guessing one of the verses used a lot would be this one. Stories aimed at the younger mind would be told to emphasise the fact that we can’t hide from God and whatever sin we committed, that very sin would be our undoing. It was true then, and it stays true today.

We can bring it up to date, and right into our day and age. How about replacing the word ‘sin’ with your own failing? So the verse becomes, “..be sure your (???) will find you out.” All we have to do now is be truthful enough to add the sin that so easily trips us up (Hebrews 12:1) and prepare ourselves for the consequences.

The sins that trip us up aren’t always the big ones. With good living and good judgement we can usually avoid major sins, but what about the little foxes that ‘ruin everything’ (Solomon 2:15)? Pride that becomes an obsession? Opinion that turns into arrogance? Trust that becomes suspicion? A balanced lifestyle that changes into being a single sided, critical one? An all round knowledge that morphs into a know-it-all attitude? The list could go on, and you could add some of your own thoughts too.

The certainty of our sin finding us out, is surely followed by the certainty that others will see, and be affected by some of these little ‘foxes’ more than we know. But we can rise above this as we were taught all those years ago and deal with those ‘little sins’ before they grow into the off-putting big sins, by placing them on the altar and letting God deal with them, and in turn, with us. I fear there are more ‘little sins’ than we can ever know, and no one is exempt. That’s the certainty of the little sin catching every one of us out, and you can be sure it will!