Entries from January 2006 ↓

Let’s Conquer the Land 1: For the Sake of the Call

Read Numbers 13.1-20

Introductory Comments
We begin a new, important series today. It’s a time that I’ve been looking forward to for a while. And I want to begin by sharing my thoughts and wishes as we continue our journey over the next month …

  • I want the best for you!
  • I want the best for this Valley!
  • I want God to be honored in our life together!

This series will be straight talk about our upcoming decision as we talking about where we’re headed and the implications of our decisions. The decision we’ll make on 2/7 is a big decision. On that night, we will decide how we’re going to move forward and how best to make disciples for Jesus Christ in our communities.

Now, let me insert here that I have pretty much stricken the word "merge" (or "merger") from my vocabulary (regarding this situation). Businesses merge. But the church is not a business; it’s a living body. Bodies unite, they become one (or not).

Wrong questions, at this point, are questions like, What can we do to survive? When we ask that kind of question, our focus becomes how we can bring people in for the purpose of paying the bills and keeping the doors open (rather than making disciples of Jesus Christ).

Right questions, on the other hand, include, Are we going to be missional? How are we going to reach people in our Valley and form disciples of Jesus Christ?

Fact is, whether we unite or not on 2/7, the process (beyond the vote) will be much the same — gaining a clear sense of mission and intentionally mobilizing to make disciples of Jesus Christ in this Valley! We may do that as three separate churches, or as one new church, but the process will be much the same, either way. So 2/7 is not the end but the beginning!

And either way, it will involve changing many of our methods. I love the quote I read this week …

"… here below to live is to change, and to be perfect is to have changed often." (John Henry, Cardinal Newman)

Well, let’s look at the story we find ourselves in, in Numbers 13-14.

After the Exodus …
The Exodus (the deliverance of God’s people) was not an end, it was a beginning. Once they were delivered, God gave them a mission: "Send men to explore the land of Canaan, the land I am giving to
Israel. Send one leader from each of the twelve ancestral tribes."

We, too, have experienced an "exodus" if we know Jesus! And Jesus has also sent us on mission!

The Call …
The Call is simply to follow Jesus!

  • "Come, follow me."
  • "You didn’t choose me. I chose you. I appointed you to go and produce fruit that will last …" (John 15.16)
  • "I … came here not to be served but to serve others, and to give my life as a ransom for many." (Mark 10.45)
  • "As the Father has sent me, I am sending you." (John 20.21)

FOR THE SAKE OF THE CALL …

>> Follow Jesus with reckless abandon!
There’s really no other way to follow Jesus than to follow him with reckless abandon! People who follow Jesus with reckless abandon aim to know Jesus, live like Jesus, and be like Jesus.

>> Be a representative of Jesus in the world!
"But when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, you will receive power and will tell people about me everywhere—in Jerusalem, throughout Judea, in Samaria, and to the ends of the earth." (Acts 1.8)

We are called to be witnesses of Jesus, Christ’s representatives in the world. Christ’s representatives in the world aim to love people, invest in people’s lives, invite others to join them on their spiritual journey, and are part of a community with other people who are also trying to live with reckless abandon.

>> Join the Revolution!
Jesus came and told his disciples, “I have been given complete authority in heaven and on earth. Therefore, go and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Teach these new disciples to obey all the commands I have given you. And be sure of this: I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” (Matthew 28.18-20)

Jesus said, "All those who want to be my disciples must come and follow me, because my servants must be where I am. And if they follow me, the Father will honor them" (John 12.26).

Abandon it all for the sake of the call!
Steven Curits Chapman sang a song called, “For the Sake of the Call,” which includes the words …

We will abandon it all for the sake of the call. No other reason at all but the sake of the call. Wholly devoted to live and to die for the sake of the call.

Are you willing to "abandon it all for the sake of the call"? What are you willing to give up? What are you willing to die for?

"Hope is born when you are willing to die for the right reasons." (James Harnish)

I bought a new CD yesterday, a Casting Crowns recording. On my way to church this morning I was listening to one song over and over (a song I’d not heard before), because it really speaks to where we are today. Listen to these words …

"If you ask me to go preach to a lost world that Jesus saves. Well, I’ll go but I cannot go alone, ’cause I know I’m nothing on my own."

I love that. It’s reckless abandon, but it’s reckless abandon that’s absolutely dependent on God’s presence. That’s what we need here, isn’t it? People who are recklessly abandoned, people who are willing to go anywhere and do anything, but people who won’t go alone, not without the presence of God’s Spirit in their lives!

What is God saying to you?
What is God saying to you through this message? What is God laying on your heart about the journey we’re on?

What steps is God leading you to take?
What will you do with this message? What will you do with what God is saying to you today? What is the next faithful step for you to take? What step will you take this week?

Hold on to Hope!

Happy New Year!

As we begin a new year, I want to take a look at a wonderful passage of Scripture.

There were two major, polar events that took place in the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible): Exodus from Egypt (1200 BC) and Exile into Babylon (587 BC). Today, we’re going to look at a passage of Scripture written during the Exile into Babylon from Lamentations. (Incidentally, we’ll be focusing on events following the Exodus during the next few weeks.)

Lamentations is a collection of five poems written by Jeremiah, the "weeping prophet."You may recall our discussion of "psalms of lament" from last summer’s series on the Psalms. Basically, Psalms of Lament are poetic complaints laid honestly before God.

But right in the middle of Lamentations is this incredible word of hope. Let’s look at it today. It’s found in Lamentations 3.21-33.

>> REMEMBER GOD’S FAITHFULNESS! (3.21-24)
Remember what God has done throughout history. Of course, the best way to do this is simply by reading and immersing ourselves in Scripture. By seeing how God has been faithful to his people for thousands of years, we will develop the faith to believe that God will also be faithful to us.

Remember what God has done for others. This is one of the reasons we sometimes share testimonies about what God is doing in your lives. When I hear what God is doing in your life, it strengthens my faith because I know that if God can do something in your life, he can do it in my life, too.

And remember what God has done for you! Think back over the course of your life and recount the times God has come through for you. This is especially important when your going through difficult times!

So, take a moment right now to remember …

  • How has God been faithful to you?
  • How has God been faithful to someone you know?

>> SEEK GOD WITH ALL YOUR HEART! (3.25-27)
Are you seeking God with all your heart about something in your personal life? And what about the big decision facing our church? Are you seeking God with your whole heart?

I love Jesus’ words: "Keep on asking, and you will be given what you ask for. Keep on looking, and you will find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened. For everyone who asks, receives. Everyone who seeks, finds. And the door is opened to everyone who knocks." (Matthew 7.7-8)

>> HUMBLE YOURSELF BEFORE GOD! (3.28-30)
There aren’t too many character qualities that are more important than humility! Take a moment to read these great words about humility in the Psalms.

>> TRUST GOD! (3.31-33)
How much do you trust God? At what level are you trusting God right now? If God, your Father, asks you to jump (blindly) into his arms, how easily would it be for you to jump?

The more we remember what God has done for us in the past, and the more we encounter God in the present, the greater our level of trust in God will be!

As we begin a new year, I can only imagine and dream about what God has in store for us this year, if only we will remember God’s faithfulness, humble ourselves before him and seek him with our whole hearts, and place our complete trust in him.

I’d like for you to think and pray about these questions …

  • What is God calling you to be in 2006?
  • What is God calling you to do in 2006?
  • What is God calling us as a faith community to be/do in 2006?

My prayer for you at the outset of 2006 is Paul’s prayer in Ephesians 3.14-21.

Glory be to God! By God’s mighty power at work within you, may God accomplish infinitely more than you would ever dare to imagine, dream, ask or hope! May God be given glory in your life, in our church, and in Christ Jesus forever and ever! Amen.