Saturday, December 10, 2016

The Ransomed of the Lord will Return


I always loved the television show, All in the Family.  There was Archie Bunker who played out the ultra-conservative, often bigoted, frequently cynical working man of multiple malaprops from middle class America.  Then there was Edith—or Dingbat—as Archie affectionately referred to her.  And of course there was the overly emotional, young and attractive daughter, Gloria; who happened to marry an ultra-liberal man by the name of Michael.  If you watched the show enough, you knew him as Meathead, another term of endearment coined by Archie.

The show was a success because it played out the social, racial, moral, and political themes of the day as never before.  We could all identify with the story or the characters or even the controversy while we laughed for half an hour.
Star Trek did the same thing for us except in outer space—the final frontier.  We saw superpowers in a constant state of cold war, prejudice, the first interracial kiss on television, two men who were half white and half black trying to kill each other because one was white on his right side and the other on his left side.  The social and political themes that hit close to home could be played out with abandon—nothing seemed off limits—and they could do it because the story took place light years away.

How would you like to have your family’s story played out for millions of people you didn’t even know?  In television that’s called a hit.  In real life, it is called God’s Chosen People.  We benefit from their story.  We can look at their success and failure, victories and defeats, struggles, trials, temptations as well as blessings and benefits of knowing the one true God.

God gave his people commands, laws, and prophets to tell them they had better get their act together.  Sometimes they did and sometimes they didn’t and there was a positive consequence for obedience and another consequence for rebellion and apostasy.

Isaiah prophesied at a time when neither kingdom of the post Solomon era had their act together.  In fact God through his prophets had been very direct in telling his people what would happen if they stayed their rebellious course.

Look, their brave men cry aloud in the streets;
    the envoys of peace weep bitterly.
 The highways are deserted,
    no travelers are on the roads.
The treaty is broken,
    its witnesses are despised,
    no one is respected.
 The land dries up and wastes away,
    Lebanon is ashamed and withers;
Sharon is like the Arabah,
    and Bashan and Carmel drop their leaves.

Two chapters later, Isaiah tells of the same roads and wastelands and desolation made fruitful again.

The desert and the parched land will be glad;
    the wilderness will rejoice and blossom.
Like the crocus, it will burst into bloom;
    it will rejoice greatly and shout for joy.
The glory of Lebanon will be given to it,
    the splendor of Carmel and Sharon;
they will see the glory of the Lord,
    the splendor of our God.

God’s Chosen People would be taken into exile in Babylon, at least those who were fit for some service or hadn’t already fled. They would be servants and slaves in another country but God would bring them and what belonged in the temple home one day.

Since sin entered the world, there has been death and blindness and illness and other factors that degrade our fullness; yet Isaiah speaks of a time of healing.

Then will the eyes of the blind be opened
    and the ears of the deaf unstopped.
Then will the lame leap like a deer,
    and the mute tongue shout for joy.
Water will gush forth in the wilderness
    and streams in the desert.

Much of this prophecy was fulfilled in the first advent of Jesus.  We know this from the witness of the gospels and from the reply that Jesus sent to John the Baptist when John was in prison and asking, “Are you the one or should we expect another?”

Jesus replied, “Go back and report to John what you hear and see:  The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is proclaimed to the poor.”

The story of God’s people meanders through sin and apostasy and repentance and renewal and relapse, but God is faithful to redeem his chosen ones.  He is faithful.
In what today we call Mary’s song, she attests to his faithfulness.

He has helped his servant Israel,
    remembering to be merciful
 to Abraham and his descendants forever,
    just as he promised our ancestors.

Today,  we who have been granted right standing with God are privileged to enjoy the story of God’s Chosen People.  It is through these people that we have received our Savior.  It is through them that we can see our own human frailty.  It is through them that we know that there is more prophecy to be fulfilled.

It is through these people that we know how far we have fallen and how far God has come and will go to rescue us.

Through these chosen people we see God’s faithfulness is steadfast even when his own people were at their worst.

The ransomed of the Lord did return to Zion.  Isaiah’s prophecy was fulfilled in the history of his chosen people when they returned and rebuilt.

It was fulfilled again when Jesus walked the earth proclaiming good news, healing, and performing miracles.

It will be complete when Jesus comes again and there is no more death or pain or suffering among his people.  And yes, we are now included among those people.  At this time both God’s Chosen People and those who know God by the shed blood of Jesus will all belong to God because of his mercy.

But even in the tidings of great joy that we sing of as Christmas approaches, we know that not all will have eyes to see and ears to hear.  Some will harden their hearts.  Some will not respond to invitation after invitation.  Some would choose separation from God over truth and life everlasting.

Christ was born into this world so that he could die as the one and only sacrifice that would take away our sins now and forever.  His sacrifice was for all human kind.  His atonement was for the entire creation.  Reconciliation of all things is the gift that he brought to us.

We have been ransomed by God himself.  We can truly celebrate Christmas.

A babe in a manger and a star in the east have meaning to us.  Shepherds keeping watch over their flocks by night brings a smile to our faces every time we hear the story.

Fear not are words that we come to expect when angels make an appearance.

A virgin birth makes perfect sense to us.

We celebrate Advent and Christmas because we know the story of God’s people.  We know that regardless of what we do or do not do, God is always faithful.  God’s love for us and his faithfulness are forever.

He has saved us and because of that we celebrate days such as Christmas and Easter and the first day of the week and for those who continue to grow in grace, every day is a celebration.

But the world, even our small part in western Oklahoma, does not know the story.  They might know that the kid in the cradles is baby Jesus when they see a nativity scene, but they don’t know the story of why he is so important to us.

And that brings us to Christmas presents.  I am asking that everyone who receives this message gives someone that you know but who does not seem to know God very well a Christmas present.

You might be thinking, “I wish he had told me this before Black Friday so I could have found something on sale.”  Don’t worry, this gift won’t cost you anything.

For all of those people that we have been reaching out to telling them that God loves them, add the story of Christmas to that relationship.  Find one of these people that you have been reaching out to and give them the Christmas present of the Christmas story.

Let them know why the real Christmas story is special to you, to us.

We are people who relate to stories.  Today many of those stories come in the form of movies and television shows, but they also come in person-to-person encounters.

Find someone with whom you have already connected and give them the true Christmas story.  I am calling on everyone to do this, children as well as adults.  Share the Christmas story with someone who probably doesn’t know the whole story.

Instead of just posting, Jesus is the reason for the season; let’s give people the story that goes with that reason and with this season.

Instead of just saying, Let’s keep Christ in Christmas; let’s tell people about the Christ—this divine Message from God—being born into this world as a person and how we know God’s incredible love and faithfulness through him.

While we are at it, let’s explain some of our Christmas songs to people.  People can sing Frosty the Snowman in their sleep but do they know why that little town of Bethlehem is important to the Christmas story.  Why did it have to be the City of David?

Do they understand what we are saying when we sing, Joy to the world, the Lord has come?  Do they know that babe in the manger was King of Kings at birth?

We have been making more and more connections over the years.  It is time to strengthen those connections with those who are not enjoying the blessings of God’s favor in this modern time.  What better time than this Advent and this Christmas season to share the Christmas story.

God’s Chosen People returned from Babylon and rebuilt their city and their temple.  God restored them.  We have been ransomed and redeemed by the blood of Jesus.  We know abundant life in the here and now and eternal life that promises things that eye has not seen and ear has not heard but that the Lord God has in store for us.

But some have not received what God gives so freely.  Our denomination is often labeled the Whosoever Will bunch.  So this Christmas season, pick out a Whosever from the people with whom you have been connecting, and give them the gift of the true Christmas story.

Share the true story of Christmas with someone who needs it more than you can know.  ‘Tis the season.

Amen.



Friday, December 2, 2016

Standing as a Banner


Oh say does that Start Spangled Banner yet wave, o’er the land o’er the land of the free and the home of the brave?

If you are an American from my generation that last part of the first verse likely gives you chills.  It is beyond special.  The national anthem is personal.  It communicates hope not just for one but for many.  The last part of the verse asks the current generation:  Did you keep hope and liberty alive in your time?

Is our flag—that Star Spangled Banner—still flying?

On 23 February 1945—a date that doesn’t ring a bell with most Americans—Joseph Rosenthall of the Associated Press took a picture that is forever etched in the memory of Marines of the last 70 plus years.  It is a simple picture of an American flag being raised atop Mount Suribachi on the Island of Iwo Jima. 

It was actually the second flag raised on Suribachi that day.  Gunnery Sergeant Louis Lowery of Leatherneck Magazine captured the image of the first flag, but the first flag was too small to be seen by many fighting on the lower parts of the island. 

But when the second, larger flag went up, so did the countenance of every Marine on the island.  Realize that this was not isolated battle.  It came near the end of an island hopping campaign that included places with names known to only a few Americans before that time.  They were places like Guadalcanal, Bougainville, Kwajalein, Guam, and Tinian and these battles spilled more American blood than had been shed since the Civil War. 

When the Marines arrived at Tarawa just about 73 years ago, the Japanese commander had claimed that it would take one million men over one thousand years to take the island.  By the time that the battle for Iwo Jima came around, Marines knew the names of more men that they had buried than the names of those fighting beside them on those February days. 

There was no post-traumatic stress treatment.  What followed the trauma of battle was getting back on the ship and heading to the next battle.  The reward for surviving the current battle was to be sent to the next.

But when the American Flag—the second and larger flag—was hoisted, hope became new and fresh and real once again for those Marines.  That battle was not yet over, but hope was restored, and that hope reached far beyond the blackened sands of that small Pacific Island.

What do 70-year-old battles on the other side of the world have to do with Advent and Christmas? 

Hope and expectation, that’s what. 

In a simple moment, that hoisted banner brought hope to those fighting for inches of ground that had been soaked in the blood of their fellow Marines.  It was a signal of salvation amidst the carnage of combat compressed onto a few square miles of island in the Pacific Ocean.

It said, all is not lost.  Hang in there.  Stay in the fight.  Press on towards the goal.  Your present struggles will pale into contrast to the victory ahead.

We do not experience anything near the intensity of battle that those men knew seven decades ago.  Our lives are full of busyness and stress.  One event leads into the next.  There is always a tragedy on television and if not one can be contrived in a crunch.  There is seldom bloodshed in our current daily struggles,  but sometimes hope still seems to get lost in the shuffle.

We say that this is the day that the Lord has made and we really do try to rejoice in it, but sometimes we just seem overcome by events.  The world seems to swallow us up.  We can no longer see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Advent causes us to look forward in anticipation.  We look to a time when the lion and lamb will graze together.  We contemplate a time when you won’t have to worry about your children being bitten by a snake. 

Injustice will become an antiquated term having no further use in this era.  Righteousness will be the currency of the world in the age to come.

But we live in this very messy, complicated, violent, and sometimes cruel world and hope is sometimes elusive.  We need a beacon.  We need a banner.  We need a signal of the better—much better—age to come.

We know that we are saved from sin and death.  Sometimes we just need to know that we are saved from our daily lives.  We need something to focus on to give us hope in the here and now.

John the Baptist declared to the people who sought him at the Jordan River, “Prepare the way for the coming of the Lord.”  In those days, people would fix roads and repair bridges and remove any obstacles that would cause a king or emperor to detour should he announce his visit to them in advance.

John was talking about the preparation of the hearts of God’s people.  The Messiah was coming to save them and would tell them that the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.

We who live in this age partake of the season of Advent to prepare for the coming—in our case we prepare for the second coming—of the King.  We know that he will come again.  We know but we need something to signal us that Christ is coming for us.

This special celebration that God fulfilled his promises in the first Advent of the Lord is our affirmation that he will also deliver on the second. 

And so in anticipation of his second coming, we celebrate his first.  We celebrate Christmas and the story that we know of a star in the east, no room at the inn, and a babe in a manger.

We celebrate angels with messages of good news and great joy.

We celebrate kings from afar bringing gifts fit for a king and appropriate for his arrival into the very world that would crucify him.

We celebrate in singing Joy to the World, the Lord has come!

Isaiah wrote to a people given over to oppressors because of years of apostasy.  They had been warned.  They ignored the warnings and judgment was upon them; yet even in judgment, there was hope.

Even as the Babylonians and Assyrians and Egyptians had the upper hand over God’s Chosen People; the prophet spoke of hope in a time to come.

There was a time when the captives returned to their Promised Land. There was a time when the temple was rebuilt.  We know these things as history.  We know much of Isaiah’s prophecy as well as other prophets of this time have been fulfilled already, but some is yet to come.

A shoot will come from the stump of Jesse was fulfilled once in the birth of Jesus into the world in the Davidic line, but all foretold has not yet come to pass.  Jesus must come again for that.

A land without predator animals seems hard to envision.  The big fish eats the little fish and the bear catches the big fish and eats it.  That’s the natural order that we know.  But there will be a new order that will follow a millennial reign and heaven and earth made new and things that eye has not seen and ear has not heard that the Lord, God has in store for us.

But in the here and now we need a banner, a flag raising, something to give us hope.  Christmas can be that banner.

There should be anticipation and hope and peace and joy in this advent season that leads up to the celebration of the birth of our Savior.

The Hebrew people came home from exile in foreign lands.  One day we will all be home with our God and our Lord in a city that needs neither sun nor moon for light.  We will know a time where peace and justice and love are the order of the day.

But for today, we are still mired in the conflicts and struggles of the world.  Celebrating the resurrection gives us hope and joy.  So too celebrating Christmas can give us a glimpse into what the Lord has in store for us.

Let this time of year be a banner of hope, peace, love, and joy for us and to those whom we encounter.  We are to be banners to those around us.  Jesus called us the light of the world.  He called us the salt of the earth.

While we who have been saved and know salvation need banners and signals; those who are lost need them all the more.

Two millennia ago John the Baptist proclaimed to all that would hear his voice, “Repent for the Kingdom of God is near.”

Jesus brought that kingdom and we may know it now even in this world and in this life, though by knowing his kingdom, we become strangers in the here and now. 

But Jesus will come again and we will live in his kingdom and there will be no strangers.

He will come again.  Know this to be true.

See Christmas as a banner of hope, joy, peace, and love of that time to come.

Live a life worthy of the repentance we have made and the salvation that we know for one day Jesus himself will stand as that banner and we will be summoned into his wonderful presence.


 Amen.

Friday, November 25, 2016

A little self-inventory and preparation for the Money Message

Sometimes talking about money is tough stuff even for Christians.  Here are some quick self-inventory questions followed by the scriptures referenced in The Money Message.

Some questions about money, relationships, and giving:

Who is master in my life when it comes to money:  Me or Money?
Do I feel enslaved because of debt?
Do I trust God over my own understanding when it comes to money?
Should I have more money than I need to meet my needs?  Should I have enough to bless others?
What is my attitude towards giving?
Am I blessed by the tithe?

Supporting Scriptures for The Money Message:



The Money Message

Over the past several years I have talked to many people who say that they have attended churches where all they talk about is money, mainly how much they need. 

I have heard people use the term tithe in a variety of ways that didn’t exactly fit the definition.

I have seen people who had money for a big screen television from the rental place, the top of the line cell phone, and no money to pay the water bill.

I have never had cause to help anyone with money who was a tither.

As an elder and as a pastor, I have counseled men and women for close to a decade now about many things, but I have never come across anyone who sought my counsel who had a money problem.  Think about that.  I am going to discuss money from a godly perspective and I have never counseled anyone with a money problem.

That said, let’s get started.  A godly person, a good person, a wise individual stores up an inheritance for his children’s children.  Holy cow!  He’s already lost me.  I can’t even pay all my bills and have something left over for my own savings account.

Let’s stop right there.  Why are you reading this? 

Perhaps there is something to be learned, a new approach, a wiser way to deal with money.  If it’s somewhere in that ballpark and not just to see how many new terms that Tom invents this week, then wouldn’t it be nice to have an objective—a goal?

What exactly are we aiming at?  The godly use of money might be one answer.  It is sort of general and a lot of people can’t put actions or anything tangible with that big, broad target.  But here is something tangible.  Provide an inheritance to your children’s children.

How much?  There is a lot of maneuver room here.  Part of that inheritance will be a saving knowledge of life in Jesus Christ.  Part of it will be money, or not!  So many are in the or not arena at the moment.

If you want to make improvement, you have to set tangible goals.  Something else is required.  It is something that you don’t get in the direct language of a proverb but you find in one of the Parables of Jesus. 

Again, it will be like a man going on a journey, who called his servants and entrusted his wealth to them.  To one he gave five bags of gold, to another two bags, and to another one bag, each according to his ability. Then he went on his journey.  The man who had received five bags of gold went at once and put his money to work and gained five bags more.  So also, the one with two bags of gold gained two more.  But the man who had received one bag went off, dug a hole in the ground and hid his master’s money.

There is much more to this parable, but this part defines what we need.  What did the servants do when their master left?  The first two put their money to work.  In the money-person equation, the person was the master.  The money was the servant.  The money was put to work.

Do you remember Al Haig?  He had a distinguish military career, was chief of staff for presidents Nixon and Ford and was Secretary of State in the Reagan administration, but what is he best know for?

His statement after Reagan had been shot.  “I am in control here.”  Haig knew that the vice president was next in the success of command for the presidency but since the president didn’t say he was passing control to the VP, Haig presumed to be in command.

It is something to bring a smile to most students of American government and history.  Yes, Alexander Haig might have had a big ego, but he also had the exact attitude that we must have in a relationship with money.

I am in charge.  There is no discussion.  There is no leeway.  I am in charge!

If you have a relationship with money, you must be the master.  Dave Ramsey put it another way.  You tell every dollar where to go.

The typical response is, “But I don’t have enough money to tell it where to go.  It’s all gobbled up in bills and rent and car payments.”

So who is the master in the equation when you buy more house than you can afford?  That mortgage is going to be the master.

Who is in charge if you buy more car than you can afford? 

Who is in charge if you spend more with the “Buy with One Click” button on Amazon than you budgeted?

To tell your money where to go, you must also be the master of your decisions.  We are told to seek God’s kingdom and his righteousness first.  If we do that, then immediate gratification seldom takes hold of our decision process.

We still have free will.  We still make the choice but if we are seeking God’s kingdom and his righteousness and his wisdom and his thoughts, then we might just be on top of this money thing.  We can be the master of our money.
We might live by different priorities.

I said early that I have never counseled anyone with money problems.  That was only half the information.  I have counseled many with relationship problems and with prioritizing problems that involved money.  Money was not the problem in these situations.

The problem was rooted in the fact that in their relationship with money, money or the love of money or immediate gratification with money had turned people’s life upside down.

I have $75 in cash because of a job I did for the guy down the street.  The water bill is $65 but it is not due until the end of the week.  So I can afford to eat out tonight, pick up a couple packs of smokes, get some beef jerky, chips, and bean dip from the convenience store to watch the game tonight. 

When it is time to pay the bill, I only have $35 left.  I have a money problem.  No!  I have a relationship problem or a priority problem, but money is not the problem.

To be able to tell your money where to go, you have to know what you want to accomplish.  If you want God to bless your goals, they should be objectives consistent with his will.  We must be wise.

In your relationships with money, you must be in charge.  In your relationship with God, he is in charge.  If you can connect those 2 dots, then you are ready to put your money to work.

What gets in the way so much of the time?  Debt.  In America, debt has become a part of life.  The proverb tells us that the rich rule over the poor.  We see that in most societies.  Democratically based governments try to spread the ruling authority over a broader base, but the rich have much more influence than the poor.  That’s not the main point here and does not have to govern you.

The borrower is slave to the lender.  Ouch!  Double ouch!  Debt robs you of being master in the you-money equation.  Debt—and we should take this at the personal level—steals your authority.  I don’t know that we can make direct application of this proverb to businesses and nations, but surely the principle governs.  So long as there is debt, there sovereignty is lessened.

The Bible does not prohibit borrowing and lending but does have strong counsel for both borrowing and lending, but the strongest is that the borrower is slave to the lender.

Have you noticed—I am sure you have if you have followed my discussions on this matter over the past few years—that the verse about bringing up a child in the way he should go immediately precedes this?

Often, when we think of debt, we fixate on our personal situation, but what are we teaching our kids about money?  What are we teaching them about debt?

If you have significant personal debt, what are you teaching your children?  The only debt that we should have is the debt to love one another.

Speaking of love, how can we serve the one true God who is love and loves us so much if we have another master?  If we love money so much that we go into debt for it, how can we say Jesus is our Lord and Master?

Jesus said that you can’t do it.  You cannot serve two masters. You will love one and hate the other.

People say that they don’t love money but need the stuff.  It takes money to buy the stuff or debt which is indenturing yourself to another so as to use their money.

Let’s back up to the proverb.  A wise—a godly person—leaves an inheritance for their children’s children.  How can you do this if everything goes to supporting your immediate needs?

The answer is that you can’t.  But I can barely afford everything that I own or rent or have to pay for.  Wisdom says, then maybe you have too much that you have to pay for.

The world tells you that you don’t have nearly enough.   You need a bigger car.  You need a bigger house with a pool.  You need a boat or a golf cart or a bigger television.  Your kids need all the new video games and how can you live without the I-Phone 9 or the Galaxy 28Z?

Remember the counsel of Romans 12.  Don’t be conformed to the image or the patterns of the world any more.  The world got its hooks into us but we must stop and turn around.

Many of us say that we will do this, but when it comes to our money we make an exception.  Maybe we should have a smaller house or less expensive car or we didn’t really need that 4K television.  When all the bills are paid, there should be something—a fair amount left.

That’s for our children’s children, right?  Maybe part of it, but mostly it is to bless others.  Consider God’s blessing of Abraham.  Abraham was blessed so that he could be a blessing.  In fact, the entire world would be blessed through him.  We know that blessing as Jesus Christ but we forget the concept of being blessed so that we can be a blessing to others.

So is this where the tithe comes out of?   Does the tithe come out of the left overs? No, the tithe is completely different.  Tithe means tenth or a tenth part that is set apart for the Lord.  It comes first.  In seeking God and his kingdom and his righteousness, we must remember that God only finds first place acceptable.  He is jealous like that.

We see the tithe mentioned notably 3 times in the books of the law and in an encounter between Abraham and  Melchizedek in Genesis 14.    Generally, the tithe was paid in animals and crops, but in Abraham’s case, it was with the spoils of war.  Plunder or booty was the standard pay of fighting men until only a few centuries ago.  The tithe is a tenth of whatever income we receive.

Now that’s after taxes, right?  Does God ever take second place?

But that’s Old Testament stuff?  Only those under the law were required to give 10%, right?  Actually, if you lived under the law, you gave something just over 25% if you add up all the other offerings that went with feasts and special occasions.

But we live in the church age and are not under the law are we?  Didn’t Jesus fulfill the law?  Aren’t we free to live without fearing punishment because of the law to include the tithe?

Do we have to give 10% to God?  No!

What does God consider an acceptable offering from us?  Hold on, it’s 100%.  We are to be a living sacrifice giving everything that we are and everything that we have to God.
Where am I going to live if I give my house to God?  Most likely you will live in the house that you gave to God, along with the body and mind and everything else that you gave to God.

Let’s get back to just money.  Do I have to give God a tenth of my income or not?  No, but why would you not want to considering God’s promise?  God said, “Put me to test!”

Hold on!  I know better than to put God to the test.  This is the one exception and God is very bold about it.  God is double dog daring us to try to out-give him.  God is telling us that he has so much blessing for us if we will just trust him.  We don’t’ see the word trust in this pericope but it is very much about trust.

Will I give God a tenth of what I have before I do anything else with my money?  Do I trust him enough—this God who created everything and even gave his own Son as an atoning sacrifice to take away my sin and make me right with God again—do I trust him enough to give him a tenth of my income?

For those of us who have done this, we can say that God makes 90% go farther than 100%.  We enjoy the blessings of the tithe.  In being a living sacrifice, we acknowledge that it’s all God’s anyway, but we totally let go of a tenth.

Some folks say that I give part of my tithe to World Vision or the Children’s Home or the Family Care Center.  That’s not accurate.  The tithe today is ten percent given to the church body where you worship without further individual designation.  This is how we trust God with the tithe in this century.

I hope that you also give to World Vision, and the Family Care Center, or to the shoe project or to the special fund raiser for fire victims, but those are offerings given beyond the tithe.  The food that we bring in most weeks that the children bring forward to be blessed are offerings beyond the tithe. 

You might want to get your skin lotion out before this next part, because it’s going to be a might prickly for many Americans.  Sometimes, we think that we know what God wants us to do with the tithe and so we just do that with the money that we would have given as the tithe.

Maybe we are helping someone who needs help.  Maybe we think that God wants us to pay off our mortgage sooner.  Maybe we feel strongly about supporting a missionary somewhere.  When we do those things, and call it a tithe we are only fooling ourselves.

I call it a trick tithe.  Understand, we can’t trick God.  We are only fooling ourselves that we are trusting God when we are trusting our own understanding.

Read Malachi.  God’s people had once again strayed away from God’s ways, especially in the tithe.  Instead of bringing God the best lamb, the owner would just cut out the scrawny, defective animals and say, “That’s good enough.”

Malachi challenged God’s people by asking, “Do you think you could get away with that with your governor?”

But why did God put this on my heart if he didn’t want me to take money out of my tithe to give to this person or cause or whatever seems to be tugging at me?  Why?

Have you considered that God wants to fulfill his promise of blessing to you so that you can bless others and do those things that are tugging at your heart?  Have you trusted him to bless you to be a blessing?  Have you trusted him with the first 10% of what you have received?

So if you take money away from your tithe to do other things, will God strike you down?  No.  He has given his own Son for you.  He loves you.  He will not hurt you.

Will he bless me as if I had tithed?  Don’t bank on it.  The tithe is graduate level trust.  It is a simple, two-part equation.  I tithe and the Lord blesses me.

So should I tithe as a mandatory tax I must pay to God?  No!  I say it again:  No!

The Lord loves a cheerful giver.  If you are going to tithe, then do so with joy in your heart and thoroughly enjoy the blessings that God will pour out on you.

If you tithe, joyful or not, God will fulfill his promise.  It’s a thing with God that he does what he said he would do.  He is like that.

But why not enjoy it?

The muscles in my neck tighten and my pulse increases when I hear other pastors and elders and church leaders say that we need to bring in enough to keep the lights on.  We have forgotten the other blessing of the tithe.

God’s storehouse will be full.  In today’s world, that means that the church bodies will do most of the things that somehow people have come to look to the government to accomplish.  When God’s storehouse is full, government programs of all sorts will be irrelevant. 

But God’s storehouse is not full.  I will say that we here in this body are closer than many, but it is not filled to overflowing.  I don’t see who gives what but I know that for a small body of believers, we have a very generous spirit.

Many individuals are blessed because they tithe, but the storehouse is not full.

This giving everything that we are and we have as a living sacrifice to God is tough stuff, but totally letting go of 10% seems to be even tougher, until you have made a lifetime habit of it.
It seems too hard for some, especially when we see people living the all about me life, raking in the dough, and living high on the hog.  That’s enough mixed money metaphors for one sentence.

The proverb says that the wealth of the wicked is stored up for the righteous.  To which many of us say, “Can we cash in on that now?”

God’s people are told not to be fixated on earthly accumulation.  If you want to start a money market account, open it in heaven.  The interest rates are out of this world.

Whatever we have in this world is consumable.  What we have in the next is everlasting.

Let’s revisit the parable of the talents again.  The first 2 servants took their master’s money and put it to work.  We got that part.  They were the master in that equation, but we should note that they put that money to work immediately.
They understood that money was a perishable commodity, especially if it is just buried in the ground.  It is meant to be put to work.

Had the 3rd servant just put the money into a certificate of deposit, it would have at least earned a little interest.  But the first 2 servants put the money to work right away.  They were not only the master in their relationship with money, they were a wise master.

They had surely done similar things with whatever their master had entrusted to them before.  Remember, that the master gave to them in accordance with their abilities.  They had surely taken what they had—it may have been very little—and put it to work before.

How much or little we have has no bearing on our relationship with money.  We must be the master.  We must be wise.  We must take the initiative.

Money is neither good nor bad.  It is to be our servant.  Debt makes us the slave.  The tithe is the litmus test of trusting God.  Will we trust him enough to let go of that first 10%?
God wants to bless us because he loves us.  He wants to pour out even more blessing when we trust him with our money.

God wants us to bless others out of the abundance that he provides.

God wants us to have more than enough so that we can not only be a blessing to our children, but to their children, and to those whom his Spirit calls us to bless.

There is more counsel on money in the Bible but we will wrap up here and I am going to shift to the first person.

Money will not be my God but I am thankful when my God blesses me with money.

I have been blessed in my tithe, cannot think of a situation where I would give up this most precious statement of my trust in the Lord, and because of this unqualified trust, I have been blessed to bless others beyond my tithe.

I will not serve two masters.  I serve the Lord, seek his kingdom first, and enjoy the fact that he blesses me with so many things that the godless world chases after with futility.

If I have to choose between going without and going in debt, then I will go without; though as the Lord directs my steps I have never found myself without everything that I needed.
I enjoy things of this world that it takes money to buy as part of the abundant life that God has provided.  He has not called me to be poor.  In giving my entire life to him, he has made me rich.  In terms of money, sometimes that means that I have enough money to eat the old people’s buffet at Sizzlin and sometimes it means that I can go on a cruise.  Sometimes it means eating beans and cornbread, but I make some really good cornbread.

I don’t have gobs of money in the bank, but I have more than enough to meet my needs and still have some to bless others.  If I am blessed with gobs of money, I will put it to work at once.

As far as money goes, I have lived according to the rules of the world and I have lived God’s way.  I have known debt and struggled with the tithe and purchased many things based on selfish impulse and not wisdom.  There was no peace in my finances and that robbed me of peace in my life.

Know this:  God’s instructions on money are very straightforward.  His promises are true.

Things are so much better living God’s way, and that includes my relationship with money.

I think that God wants us to have:
·     Some money in our pockets.
·     Some money in the bank.
·     Some money set aside to bless our children’s children.
·     Some money to put to work and produce a good return.
·     Some money to bless others when led by his Spirit.

God wants us to be the master in our relationship with money.

God wants to bless us when we truly trust him with our money.

God wants the only debt that we have to be the one that we can never repay in full.  That we love him for his unbelievable mercy by loving others every day of our lives.

Amen.


Supporting Scriptures pertaining to money and giving.




Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Racing Through Romans


Romans is sometimes called the gospel according to Paul.  It is a letter that presumes little from its target audience.  Paul knew some of the people to whom he wrote but he had not yet been to Rome.  He hoped to stop there on a missionary journey to Spain.  We know that he did make it to Rome but not quite in the manner he had thought when he penned this epistle.

This page that links to messages on each chapter of Paul’s letter to the Roman believers is titled Racing Through Romans.  That is because any chapter in this letter could easily support 3, 4, or a dozen stand-alone messages.  To press on towards the goal as Paul wrote elsewhere, the single message per chapter model was adhered to throughout.

Start your engines and get ready to begin your race!



Romans is unique in that it is full of both theology and very direction instruction on discipleship.  You will be blessed to read this letter authored by Paul.  You will be blessed greatly to study it and put its precepts into practice.

Thanks be to God!

Today we give thanks to God almighty, maker of heaven and earth, author of life and love, and the one who has claimed us as his own for all eternity.


We give thanks for our every breath, every beat of our hearts, and every minute of every day, for the very day is a holy thing as it is set apart in our lives as the time to bring God glory.

The sun rises and sets at his pleasure.  The wind proclaims his might and fury and its absence breathes his peace.

The newborn babe reveals the potential that he granted to all of us.  The tired and weary soul witnesses to his ceaseless mercy that gives worldly status no rank.

His invitation to receive his grace belies the justice and judgment that we deserve.
Merciful and loving God, we give you thanks!

Thanks be to God!


Amen.