Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Praise The Lord
Do you want joy and peace in your life? Start praising the Lord. When we praise the Lord, we shift our focus from ourselves and onto the greatness of God. We may be in despair, or struggling with sin, or mired so deep into something that there seems no way out. But when we praise the Lord, praise restores our joy and faith. Joy is a natural by-product of a heart that is full of gratitude to God which is expressed in praise.
In November, instead of counting your sorrows, try counting your blessings. How has God met a need in your life? How has God surprised you each day? Lamentations 3.22-23 states, "Because of the Lord's great love we are not consumed, for his compassions never fail. They are new every morning, great is your faithfulness." Why not look for God's tender compassion in your life.
His hand is certainly upon you. God desires to show you His mercy. When you see it, praise Him for it. The Psalmist declared "From the rising of the sun to the place where it sets, the name of the LORD is to be praised." If you look for it, you will find plenty of things to praise God for all day long. As you praise God with all your heart you will begin to notice something. His joy and peace radiating in your heart and confidence in your mind towards what God can do in your life each day.
So, let's praise the Lord.
Why not keep a daily log. Write down what you see God do and praise Him for it each day.
At the end of the month you will be surprised at how active God is in your life.
If you decide to keep a log, let me know.
Blessings,
Pastor Pete
Monday, September 23, 2013
The Journey
What would it mean for you to "finish well?" When you accepted Christ you began a journey of faith. It's a rather long journey that can be arduous at times. It can also bring great moments of joy along the way too. A lot happens over a lifetime of following Jesus.
Think of a road trip in your dream car. It's fun to be inside, hearing the engine rev and feeling the torque while cornering. A car can travel a few hundred miles before it needs to be refueled, along with the oil checked and windshield washed. The short stops at gas stations are a necessity for the drive. For it you drive far enough with out refueling, eventually the car will stop and coast over to the side of the road. If you drive long enough, you will see people who need assistance. More than once I've offered help and have been helped when stranded.
Following Jesus is a lot like the road trip. Reading the Word and praying are necessary to keep us going, as is attending a worship service with others who are on the same road trip. Being willing to serve and help others is important too. If one neglects reading the Word and praying, yes they can drive for some distance, but eventually they will break down and be stranded on the side of the road. If one neglects times of worship with fellow travelers, they too will eventually be on the side of the road too. If one keeps to himself and doesn't help people along the way, they will miss out on making new friends as well as having the satisfaction of getting someone started again on their journey.
Fortunately, our Lord is a Master Mechanic and if we call upon Him, He is more than willing to get us up and running again. But He also gently reminds us that we need regular check ups and fuel if we are to go the distance. He's given us all we need: a Manufacturers Instruction Manual complete with troubleshooting and preventative maintenance chapters. He's given us help lines to call.
He's placed people around us who have had the same kinds of trouble and who are more than willing to come to our aid. There is a support group that meets weekly too. All so that we can finish the journey that we began when we accepted Jesus into our hearts.
My hope is to keep driving, enjoying the Master and helping others to either continue the journey or to begin one. At the end of life, when the journey is over, and I stand in my Savior's presence, I hope to hear, "Well done, My good and faithful servant." What is it that you hope to do along the way and hear at your journey's end?
Have a great trip.
Pastor Pete
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Jealous for God
Jealousy is never perceived as a positive character trait. Most of the time we think of it as resenting another person due to their success or opportunities. Some confuse jealousy with envy. They are not the same thing. Envy means to intensely desire something that another has, while jealousy resents that the other person has it.
There is another meaning for jealousy though. It also means to have an intense desire to keep something you already have. Whether its a job that you work hard to keep or the freedoms we enjoy as American citizens, both require a jealous mindset that drives our behavior to keep that which we have. In other words, we work hard to keep it because we do not want to lose it.
The Bible tells us in Duet. 4.24 "For the Lord your God is a consuming fire, a jealous God."
God doesn't resent our successes. In fact the opposite is true. He is our biggest encourager and fan. God wants us to succeed. God is jealous for us, in that, He made us for relationship and for a divine purpose. He desires that we enjoy these gifts and not lose them. God's heart breaks when we go our own way and rebel against Him, for He knows the path that leads to life as well as the path that leads to destruction. He wants us to enjoy life, experience success, fulfill His purpose for us, and to know the freedom from sin's consequence that comes through faith in Jesus.
Are we jealous for God? Do we desire Him above all things? Or do we put people and things above God? When we desire the world more than God, we create a distance between us and God that only confession and repentance can restore. The Psalmist said in Psalm 73.25 "And earth has nothing I desire besides you." Our greatest desire ought to be for the Living God, not earthly treasures.
Nothing should take precedence in our hearts over God. This is quite difficult to do since we allow our children and families, jobs and treasures, pleasures and selfish desires to take the place God deserves. God told the church in Revelation 2.4 "You have forsaken the love you had at first." God desires you to love Him with all your heart. How do we regain the passion we once had for God? Do you remember the excitement when you first found God? Do you still have the passion or has it become centered on something else? God shouts out "repent" and "come back to me."
My prayer is that we would be jealous for God, not allowing anything to interfere with our relationship with Him. Are you jealous for God? Do you protect your time of worship so nothing else takes precedence? Do you spend time in His Word and in prayer? If not, these are signs that you have forsaken your first love. Is it time for you to become jealous for God again?
Blessings,
Pastor Pete
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
In The Shadow
Matt and I took a rode trip this summer traveling to Portland to visit the Mackey's, Couer D' Alene to camp out and visit an old friend, Glacier National Park for a family get-together, Little Big Horn, Deadwood, SD, and Mount Rushmore. We made our way to the northwestern part of the state of Indiana, which is considered a subperb of Chicago. I left Matt there in the good hands of his grandparents and headed for home alone.
I expected the weather to be hot and humid. The first half of the trip was mostly hot. With the top off of the jeep, wet bandana's around our necks and plenty of cold drinks along the way, we somehow managed. The second half of the trip was mostly rain. When it should have been hot, the clouds covered the sun, casting giant shadows on the landscape below. While in the direct sun was hot, being in the shadow was what I wanted, for the clouds protected us from the sun.
When the Israelites were in the wilderness, God made His presence known to them in the form of a cloud by day and a pillar of fire by night. Sometimes I wish that God's presence was that vivid and His direction so clear, for if you stepped out of the shadow of the cloud, you knew you were going the wrong way.
The sun is almost always out in the Sinai desert. Winter months the temperature ranges from 46 to 68 degrees. Summer months the temperature is a warm 100 degrees. Year round, the nights get chilly. God made His presence known to Israel in a way that met their physical need. God appeared as a pillar of fire at night. When the nights were chilly, God kept them warm. When the days were hot and without shade, God provided them the comfort and protection of His shadow.
Even in the desert times of life, God makes Himself known in ways that take care of our needs.
When tempted to go on in our own strength and wisdom, God is still there, inviting us to come and find rest and comfort, peace and grace. The Psalmist used a different metaphor, but with the same idea. He said, "hide me in the shadow of your wings," and "I will take refuge in the shadow of your wings." Is there any other place that is more attractive and desirable? To be in the shadow means to be in His presence and under His care and protection.
May you come in from the weather and find refuge in the shadow of the Almighty God. May you always want to be in His shadow.
Blessings,
Pastor Pete
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Summer Showers
Summer is supposed to be about sunshine and swimming, baseball and hot dogs, vacations and ice cream. Instead, this morning I awoke to the sound of rain down pouring. The news said traffic was a mess and little league games rained out. Rain is not a curse but a blessing. I know you're thinking "but my plans got rained out."
Rain is God's way of watering the earth. It's a cycle of rain with water runoff into creeks and rivers that flow to the lakes and oceans, which evaporate to start the cycle all over again. Rain keeps the plants and flowers watered.
We need a spiritual rain cycle in our lives. God pouring His truth and grace upon us, which overflows from us to others, from person to person until it returns to God in the form of praise.
John Piper once said that "missions exist because worship doesn't." As we experience God's blessing, we are in turn to bless others.
The church today is over saturated. It has been blessed beyond measure. We hold onto the blessing as if it is a commodity in short supply. God's economy is far different from ours. For the more we give away, the more we receive. The only way a sponge fully saturated with water can receive more water is by wringing it dry, then it is ready to receive more. Believers are blessed in order to be a blessing.
This past week the Exodus ministry closed its doors. It's director said that "Christians had lost the culture war." Here's the problem: The church was never called to wage a culture war. We are, however, in a spiritual war and our culture is a by-product. As citizens of our country, we have the right to voice our values and vote the way we think is right. But politics cannot change a human heart nor transform a life for eternity. But God can and does. God chooses to use us in His cycle of reaching people.
Have you been blessed by God? Has God touched your life? Has God transformed you? If so,
then wring God's blessings out of your life and into someone else. Let the showers of God's blessings flow from your life to another. Do not be afraid to declare what God has done for you, for when we declare this, we are fulfilling God's plan and opening the eyes of those who know us to the reality of a God who blesses. One by one, person by person, we bring people to Christ.
As each receives a blessing, they in turn go out to bless another.
May you be a blessing to someone today.
Pastor Pete
Saturday, June 1, 2013
The Door
This past week the 86th annual National Spelling Bee was held. The winner was Arvind Mahankali,
a 13 year old from the state of New York. Twice in previous years he lost to words derived from the German language. Twice this year he overcame German derived words to become the champion of this year's spelling bee. The last word was "knaidel." I'm sure that most of us in Occidental would not know that it is a word used for a small mass of leavened dough. OK, maybe the Blanz's know. The participants study hard in order to know all the variations of words from multiple languages that somehow blend together into words on the spelling list.
Leavened dough is used daily, sometimes multiple times each day to make our bread. In the Bible, leaven became associated with sin. Just a little bit of leaven affects the whole batch of dough. So it is with our lives that just a little bit of sin affects our entire life. To rid the dough of leaven is impossible. Once infected, it does it job. The evidence that sin has infected the human race is all around us. From fragmented lives and broken relationships to greed that often results in war and killing. Sin is all around us.
In the time of Noah, God said that he was grieved that He had made mankind, for every inkling of their heart and mind was intent on evil. God did judge the human race then and wiped all but one family off the face of the earth. Noah found favor in God's sight. God promised to never destroy the earth by flood again. Jesus said that in the end times it would be like as in the days of Noah. It seems that every inkling of man's heart is full of sin again. It is in the last days that God will judge man again for his sin.
The question then is how to survive God's judgment. Noah survived because he found favor with God. The Bible says that he was a righteous man. He did that which was right before God and his fellow man. The only way to please God is through faith in God. So we can conclude that faith plus doing that which is right is the key to surviving God's judgment. Noah expressed his faith by doing what God said to do. So he built an ark according to the specifications God gave. He installed one door on the side to enter in. When God said load up, he did so, along with all the animals that God brought to the ark. After everyone was in, God closed the door. Only those who went through the door were saved.
For us today, Jesus is the door. Jesus said "I am the way, the truth and the life. No one can come to the Father except through me." We enter the door through faith in God's provision for sin expressed by the sacrifice of His son on the cross. As with Noah, there is only one door. As with Noah, there is only one way to find God's favor, and that is through faith expressed in our actions.
So many today say they believe in God and are Christians, but that is the extent of their profession.
But if a person does not ever act upon that "faith" is it really faith? Genuine faith in God will change hearts and transform minds and result in life transformation. God brings about change from the inside out. It is when we live out our faith that we discover the wonderful purpose and will of God for our lives and find God's favor.
Jesus, the bread from heaven, offers Himself to us, that we may take, eat and live.
May we who profess Christ with our mouths also profess it in how we live our lives.
May we bring the bread of heaven to the hungry hearts of a lost world.
Blessings,
Pastor Pete
Thursday, May 2, 2013
What Is On The Heart of God?
Have you ever wondered what is on the heart of God?
Would it be a deep love for us, as a mother has for her children? Such love would do anything and sacrifice everything. It is a love so deep that even when we blow it we know that we are still loved by God.
Would God's heart be filled with pride over our faith and accomplishments? Pride like when a parent hangs their child's artwork on the fridge or is quick to show the latest pictures. When Satan approached God, God asked, "Have you seen my servant Job?"
Can you sense the pride in who Job is? I wonder, does God point us out to the angels and ask with pride, "Have you seen...
isn't he or she great?
Would God's heart be filled with joy as He considers who we are and who we are becoming? It was for the joy set before Him that Jesus endured the cross. We are His joy. Nothing gives God joy more than when we walk and talk with Him and trust Him fully.
Would God's heart be full of confidence as we encounter tough times? Confident we will stand. Confident we will make it through. Confident that our faith will grow stronger. A confidence that cheers and encourages us onward as we walk the narrow way.
Would God's heart be please with how we live out our faith? For it is impossible to please God with out faith. Too often we live by what we see and what makes sense to us when God wants us to walk by faith, trusting Him with our all.
I wonder, what is on the heart of God when He considers you and me? For all the things that could be on the heart of God, I am awed by the fact that God loves me enough to call me His child.
Blessings,
Pastor Pete
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