Sunday, March 31, 2013

these are written...so that you may BELIEVE!



Easter sunrise over Guelph Lake, 2013

John 20...Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the entrance. 2So she came running to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one Jesus loved, and said, “They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we don’t know where they have put him!”
3So Peter and the other disciple started for the tomb. 4Both were running, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached the tomb first. 5He bent over and looked in at the strips of linen lying there but did not go in. 6Then Simon Peter came along behind him and went straight into the tomb. He saw the strips of linen lying there, 7as well as the cloth that had been wrapped around Jesus’ head. The cloth was still lying in its place, separate from the linen. 8Finally the other disciple, who had reached the tomb first, also went inside. He saw and believed. 9(They still did not understand from Scripture that Jesus had to rise from the dead.)10Then the disciples went back to where they were staying.

The purpose of John's gospel was for us to believe.  Early on Sunday morning there was great anticipation and great concern.  Where was Jesus' body...wouldn't the grave robbers take him with his linen cloths?  We have John reliving the morning with us...letting us know by the way that he could beat Peter on any given day in a running match!  He was also the disciple whom Jesus loved.  He had such a deep love for Jesus and he couldn't enter in until Peter went into the tomb first.  All we get at first is just Peter's initial observations; however John lets us know right in that moment he believed.
So, from there Jesus reveals Himself to Mary, then to his disciples and then to Thomas so that he might believe.  Jesus tells us that we are blessed for not being able to see physically and yet still believe.  Then John reminds us it is all about the fact that by believing in Jesus we will have LIFE!
The resurrection calls us to believe!
Romans 10:9If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.10For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you profess your faith and are saved.

1 John 5:12Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life.

13I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God so that you may know that you have eternal life.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Learning To See On A Whole New Level




Learning to see is a lifelong journey and has little to do with eye exams or whether or vision is 20/20. 

Some things we see more clearly later in life.  Remember when you were a teenager and you thought that your parents knew nothing and then you turned 25 and realized they knew everything!

What are some things you see more clearly now than when you first became a believer in Jesus?

Some blind people have the ability to see far better than those who have sight and that is the point of John 9.   The message of this story is more than just about mud, spit and a miracle.  It truly is about seeing; however it is learning to see on different levels.  There is so much more going on here that what meets the eye and the writer of the gospel, John, wanted us to see that the ultimate healing needed in our lives is not a physical one, but a spiritual one.  We all suffer from spiritual blindness until we put our faith in Jesus.

Back to our survey -

Inviting someone to church - 99% see this as very important, but only 49% feel confident they will be welcomed. 
When I see someone I don’t recognize, I do my best to make them feel Included.  91% say its important and only 46% say they are doing it.
The responses to these questions were eye-opening for us as leaders.  In many ways both of these questions are raising the point as to whether people who come to Grace are being noticed and if they are, how are they being received.
I want us to look at a story that teaches us all about how we see people.
The main character in John 9 is a man born blind.

Who did the disciples see? V1-5

The disciples saw the blind man as a problem to be explained.  It was assumed in that day that if you had a sickness or disease, it was ultimately the result of a personal sin or generational sin.
They wanted a reason to satisfy their own understanding.  They saw his condition and they were students looking for answers.  They were looking for answers to alleviate their concerns because they believed in their hearts that bad things don’t happen to good people. 
However, they only needed to be reminded of the story of Job and this kind of thinking doesn’t hold water.
Jesus’ response to the disciples was  for them to realize that here is a man in need of the light of the world.  He saw a man whose need would reveal the glory and the power of God.

A work of God on display! V6,7

We have the authority in Jesus’ Name to pray for healing, for peace, for reconciliation, for strength, for joy, for endurance!  John 14:12.
One teenager came up to me after the first service and shared how God had impressed on her heart that she need to pray over her friend for her healing.  I love that kind of faith!

Who did his neighbours see?  V8-12

They saw a new man… changed so completely that they hardly recognized him for who he was.  He had to protest their disbelief. 
The community learned just to expect people to stay the way they are…once blind, always blind.  It was simple.
It also confirms the power of our stories.  It is the value of a testimony and why we need to continue to share what Jesus is doing in us and through us!   God did it!  We need to tell those stories for the glory of God!
You can pile up graduate degrees; you can quote all the right authorities; you can hold up a wet finger in the wind; you can follow the trends  and quote statistics; but you still have to sit up and take notice when someone says, “This is what I have experienced, and this I know.”    Thomas R. McKibben

Who did the religious leaders see?  V13-34

They saw a problem that they wanted to go away.  It was an inconvenient truth, the blind man was trouble, upsetting the norm, the traditions.  They just wanted to see the status quo!
WHY?
To do any work on the ‘Sabbath’ was to break religious law and in their minds that included healing.  So the religious leaders get all hot and bothered because it doesn’t fit into their understanding of God.  So, they work hard at trying to invalidate his story and also go after his parents to see if he was really blind.  They want him to admit that this Jesus is a felon because he broke the law.
So, they look to discredit him by seeking out his parents.  The parents are pretty straightforward in their response.v20,21   Then they say, ask him, he’s a grown man, he can speak for himself.  They aren’t looking to start a fight or controversy.

Here is a story of a man who has been blind from the time of his birth.  As soon as he is healed by Jesus, (albeit in a most unusual way) he goes under severe questioning by the religious leaders.  They are so intensely offended because
1       He healed on the Sabbath.  They couldn’t fit it into their own grid of understanding how God works.  God would never go against His own rules…right?

I’ll never forget being disciplined in Bible school for playing tennis on Sunday afternoons.  My school was pretty stringent on following the rules and the crazy thing was God gave us the opportunity to lead a few people to the LORD through those Sunday afternoon tennis matches!

2    
            They knew He was gaining fame and notoriety and he was stealing their sheep (pulling followers away from them).
They wanted to charge Jesus with a crime.  They wanted to silence him and/ or discredit him.
The blind man was a walking advertisement of the power and authenticity of Jesus.  It proved that He had the power and authority to heal
They don’t like his initial answer because He gives all the credit and glory to Jesus.
Sometimes we just choose to see what we want to see.
Here is the cool, amazing thing.  The former blind man operates under the gift of wisdom in his response to them. 

 v25He replied, “Whether he is a sinner or not, I don’t know. One thing I do know. I was blind but now I see!”
26Then they asked him, “What did he do to you? How did he open your eyes?”
27He answered, “I have told you already and you did not listen. Why do you want to hear it again? Do you want to become his disciples too?”
28Then they hurled insults at him and said, “You are this fellow’s disciple! We are disciples of Moses! 29We know that God spoke to Moses, but as for this fellow, we don’t even know where he comes from.”
30The man answered, “Now that is remarkable! You don’t know where he comes from, yet he opened my eyes. 31We know that God does not listen to sinners. He listens to the godly person who does his will. 32Nobody has ever heard of opening the eyes of a man born blind. 33If this man were not from God, he could do nothing.”
34To this they replied, “You were steeped in sin at birth; how dare you lecture us!” And they threw him out.

So, here is the reality.  We were all steeped in sin at birth, but they were blinded by their own sense of self-righteousness

We have to move from the achieving system to the receiving system!
A former beggar, who had spent a brief time with Jesus, outwitted a whole panel of professional debaters.  That’s the Spirit’s gift of the word of wisdom!  Robert  Morris
We often can learn so much from a new believer or a non-Christian for that matter.  I’ll never forget listening to a new Christian pray for the faith of his family members.  He would pray that they are not believers YET…To him it was just a matter of time before they did!

Who  did Jesus see? v35-41

He saw a man kicked out of church as we would know it!
He sought out a man who was courageous.
Jesus saw a man who truly was seeking
He saw a man who had faith
There were two kinds of blindness and Jesus saw one as more worse than the other…

Physical blindness – no problem
Spiritual blindness when recognized… no problem
Claiming to see without Jesus – a major problem!

Jesus saw his progression of faith!

He see a blind man go from a place where he stated a simple statement to his neighbours …the man named Jesus did it to the belief that he may be a prophet, to a belief that “the man must be from God” to a place where he says Yes, I believe in the Son of Man and worships Him.

The Takeaway

What  do we need to see?

·         We need to see outside the box 






Sometimes faith is muddy and messy.  It doesn’t happen exactly as we think it should but that shouldn’t stop us from believing that God works in mysterious and amazing, wonderful ways.  We look at something and say, “well that can’t be God” because where in Scripture can you point to something like that? 

I believe we sometimes use Scripture “proof texting” to believe what we can wrap our minds around.

However, they were looking at their Scripture…and their  traditions and a healing with spit, mud, washing your eyes in a pool, where is that in the OT and on the holy Sabbath day

Who do we need to see?

·         We need to see ourselves as people who were once blind

The blind according to Jesus are those who know that there is no light in them.  They are wandering, stumbling in their own sin.  They are lost and in need of a guide. They are in spiritual darkness.  They need a Saviour, Jesus.  Don’t forget where you came from.
The religious leaders were steeped in their own pride, in their own sense of what God required of them.  It was their own pursuit of religion that had made them fall miserably short.  They weren’t ready to humble themselves

·         We need to see  PEOPLE!  …through the eyes of Jesus

Jesus didn’t see problems, He didn’t see projects, He didn’t see numbers.
As a pastor, I had to confess and repent that I would look at the attendance records every Sunday after church in my previous ministry.  I looked at them with a sense of self-worth as to how well I was doing and for that reason it was wrong.
I used to be addicted to numbers and now Jesus has shown me to see people, see their stories.

When someone comes in what do we see?  Do we see the excluded, the marginalized, the one who is difficult to love?
Is this person being loved?
Is this person being cared for?
Be Inclusive!  How?

Jesus took the two most demeaning things that the blind man would have experienced....sitting in the dirt and most like being spat upon and he turned them around to create the most amazing miracle in this man's life!

Take the time to notice where others are at.  How do we do that?
1.       Seek to understand people’s needs and listen as to how the Spirit is leading you to pray
2.       Seek to understand people’s background. 
3.       Seek to understand people’s religious hang ups….what do they believe about Jesus?
4.       Seek to determine their spiritual need.  Is God calling you to ask for a response?

There was a single mom who shared her story with me.  It was a man here at church who saw her need and just showed up later in the week with two brand new bicycles for her children.  She didn’t ask for bikes, but the Holy Spirit impressed it on his heart to act.  She now tells me how God has blessed her so much, she wants to be a blessing to others.  She shared how she now is sponsoring children for our soccer camp.
So, not matter where you are at or what is going on in your life, see people as Jesus saw them.  Ask the Holy Spirit to reveal things to you.  He may show you things and tell you simply to pray or He may tell you to buy bikes!  So, listen, discern and obey His voice.

Affirm one another’s equal importance in Christ. 

Romans 15:7: “Accept one another, then, just as Christ accepted you” James 2:1: “Don’t show favoritism”

Show concern for others.   1 Corinthians 12:25: “Have equal concern for each other”;1 Peter 5:5: “Clothe yourselves with humility toward one another” 

Monday, March 18, 2013

The Place of Prayer in Preparation!


One of our lowest areas that we scored on our "love survey"  was “I pray before attending church asking God to help me find opportunities to love others.”


and survey says…only 27% do.  So I want to challenge ourselves on the priority of  prayer in this area and in our everyday lives because I don't believe it is just limited to praying as it relates to Sunday mornings.  It really is about the priority of prayer in our everyday lives.

Why don't we pray?

I believe it has lost its power in our lives.  Prayer changes people, perspective, but most importantly, it changes US!

It is empowering in a vision for a time and place where love abounds.



           THE BEGINNING Start from a place of being blessed instead of a place of fruitfulness.  
      Genesis 1:28
Look at the pattern in Genesis 1:28  God blessed them and said to them, “Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it.” The blessing comes first.

Does God want us to be fruitful and effective –yes! Does He expect us to take great steps of faith – yes!  Does God bless people because they are fruitful.  No.  In this passage, the affirmation of their worth is not dependent on their performance.  The realization of their blessing is the fuel for them to  pursue their mission - subdue the earth. 


God motivates us by not withholding His love, but by giving us His love.

Alan Wright states in "Free Yourself To Be Yourself,"

The mainline message of Christianity is something like this:  Love the LORD, do good, give generously, live right and the LORD will really bless you.
However the biblical formula is:  God loves you and has blessed you THEREFORE love the LORD, do good, give generously, live right, and serve God.

In Matthew 25  God blessed his servants with talents.  Did they have talents in varying degrees – Yes and so they started with being blessed and they took that blessing and 2 chose to be fruitful while one chose to sit and bury what he had been given.
As we learn the small lessons, God will give us greater opportunities to bless others.

Colossians 2:6 

Think about what you received at salvation?  Did we do anything to earn that?  NO
We live on a receiving system not a performance based system. 
You may think when you come here on Sunday morning that you have nothing to give.  However that is a lie of a performance based culture.
The result of not performing well is a feeling of shame.
Sometimes we are waiting because we don’t feel good enough; we don’t feel equipped enough to do it
We are trying to feel like we are ready.
Know that you have been given everything in Christ.
We want be mobilized until we know everything that He has done for us and in us.
Let me contrast the way a shame-based family thinks and the kind of self-talk that is destructive vs the kind of family statement we want here on Sunday mornings and prayer talk.

typical family belief statements
(circle the ones that were or are true of you)

Performance OVER person.  “How well you do determines who you are.”
Human doing vs. Human being.  “My worth depends upon my ability to do well.”
Not allowed to make mistakes.  “Stay within the lines, don’t stumble; don’t let others do better than you.”
Perfectionism.  “If I blow it, people will not accept me, appreciate me or love me.”
Cannot do it well enough. “You always do that wrong; you never get it just right; you could have done a better job.”
Success sabotaging.  “Things will never work out for me; someone else could probably do a better job than me.”
Must always do better.  “Never give full credit because they will stop trying.”
Overachieving. “Have I done enough?  What haven’t I won at?”
Conditional support  “If you do thing right, I will support you;  if you perform well enough, then and only then will really be proud of you.”
Self-worth contingent on others. “I am okay only if you approve me… what do you think of me?”
Un-discussed issues, secrets.  “We’re supposed to be a happy family and we don’t talk about things like that.  It’s in the past so there is no need to talk about it.”
Fear of Discovery.  “If people really knew me, they would not want to be with me or they would think less of me.”
Here is the antidote.  Remind yourself of how God sees you and the pattern that He wants for our family at Grace.
Commit the statement and verses to memory that are the opposite of the learned system on which you grew up.
loving family belief statementS
Person OVER performance
Philippians 3:12
Human Being before Human Doing  Colossians 2:6,7
Mistakes ALLOWED
Colossians 3:13
A place of authenticity
Philippians 3:17
We can do it WELL
Philippians 1:6
A place that empowers  success  Philippians 4:13
We are better because of HIM    Galatians 5:1
A place where you are equipped to serve Hebrews 13:20,21
A place of unconditional SUPPORT-  Romans 8:31
A place where your self -worth is as God defines it - Psalm 8:5
Issues can be discussed HERE
James 5:16
A place of acceptance
Galatians 3:28 


Credit to “Free Yourself Be Yourself” by Alan Wright on the “typical family belief statements”.

Because of JESUS


We had a member of our worship team who was no longer able to commit to practicing so she had to “quit the band” due to her studies.  She was filled with so much shame because of that decision that she didn’t come back to church for 3 weeks.  It was a lie from the enemy that told her she couldn’t come back to church.  The great news was that when she did return a month later, she was received in love and grace and that is the way it should be!  We don’t come first to “do,” we come to be who God has called us to be.
I want us to really grasp how to begin preparation in prayer so look with me at a case study of a church.
1 Corinthians 1:4-10  Now, remember this was a church that had some serious flaws going on.  There was favoritism, partiality, spiritual pride, lawsuits among believers, sexual sin, idolatry, issues with public worship services, chaos and this is how Paul, writing under the influence of the Holy Spirit addresses them!
This was the diagnosis of the church in Corinth and look how Paul under the influence of the Holy Spirit addresses them.

You can pray this as a prayer over your life too!

1 Corinthians 1:4 I always thank my God for you because of his grace given you in Christ Jesus. 5For in him you have been enriched in every way—with all kinds of speech and with all knowledge— 6God thus confirming our testimony about Christ among you. 7Therefore you do not lack any spiritual gift as you eagerly wait for our Lord Jesus Christ to be revealed. 8He will also keep you firm to the end, so that you will be blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ. 9God is faithful, who has called you into fellowship with his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.

      THE MIDDLE  

·         The place “in between”  Psalm 46:10; Acts 13:2,3
Most often when you prepare a message to speak on, you begin with prayer, research and study, but there is also a time for those prayers to marinate, a time to listen, a time to envision and ask God for a picture, a person to place on your heart and mind.  It could be a verse that God is giving you specifically for a person.  It could be a specific word of encouragement.  Do you believe God can do that?  I do, I believe that He loves answering prayers of faith like that so that we can have a very meaningful encounter.
In Acts, it was as they prayed that God revealed to them who they were to choose for the mission going forward for the church.

·         The place of  “forgiveness”   Matthew 6:14; Colossians 3:13; Ephesians 4:2,3

Ephesians 4:2,3 “Be completely humble and gentle; be patient with one another in love”;
Colossians 3:13: “Forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another”;
Grievances – when you have been offended
Jesus taught us about forgiveness… He said forgive 70x7.  However, there is a pattern here.  There is a balance between discipling with a bad trend vs always bringing something up that isn’t reoccurring but happened in the past.  Reminding a person of their past failure is not part of what this family is about.
So, we choose not to avoid those relationships that need reconciliation.
It is difficult and that is why we need more teaching on it.
·         What does unforgiveness do to people?   Ephesians 4:30 – it grieves the Holy Spirit, creates real physical pain
·         What does forgiveness do for us?  It brings healing. Ephesians 4:32

                 THE END of prayer … not as an end in itself, but where prayer should lead us to!

LOOK AT YOUR FUTURE

·         The place of “action” 

Jesus in Gethsemane prayed a prayer  of action – Luke 22:41,42  take this cup of suffering….not my will, but yours be done.  Surrender
2 Timothy 1:7; For God did not give us a spirit of timidity, but a spirit of power, love and a sound mind – It is not franctic. 
Proverbs 18:21 – The power of life and death in in the tongue!  Speak life into your prayers!

And back to the case study on that church in Corinth...look at Paul's prayer of action at the end of the letter -

Be on guard. Stand firm in the faith.  Be courageous.  Be strong.  And do everything with love.  1 Corinthians 16:13,14

Seize the day.
I will take the opportunity
I will follow through on what You have asked of me to do.   Say it out loud.

The goal of this command  is love, which comes from a pure heart and a good conscience and a sincere faith. 1 Timothy 1:5

There was someone who came to me last Sunday and shared with me about a time when I was trying to engage them in conversation and they felt that they had sinned by not responding in a loving way.
Now there was nothing in my heart that felt he had acted improperly to me.  However, they were exercised in their own heart to pursue me.  It didn’t affect me, but now their conscience is clear.

The Takeaway
What are 2 or 3 things  that you can ask God right now?
How God have I been blessed?
Listening for from God –  God, are you bringing someone to my heart?  Is this relationship in need of reconciliation…someone that I need to get right with?
Are there broken relationship that need my initiative?  Are there  forgiveness issues?


Redeeming St. Patrick's Day!



Today is St. Patrick’s Day and I found it really interesting studying his life and how he prepared for ministry.

Let’s begin by looking at a man who prepared in ministry and was referred to as a “man of the Book”!

In the two surviving documents from Patrick’s own hand – his Confession and the Letter Against the Soldiers of Coroticus – Patrick knew the Bible thoroughly, used it faithfully, and trusted it implicitly for every area of life - over 100 quotations, references, allusions, or parallels to passages of the Word of God!

Today is St. Patrick’s Day and for the most part this day is associated with everything green and a party mentality. The Chicago River turns an incredible color of green today thanks to a dye that was used to detect leaks into the river in ’61.  They turn the river green in honor of this day.  However, if we are to truly do justice to this day, it would be right to learn more about the life of the man himself who is thought of as dying on this day.



At the age of 16, Patrick was taken prisoner by a group of Irish raiders who were attacking his family's estate. They transported him to Ireland where he spent six years in captivity. (There is some dispute over where this captivity took place. During this time, he worked as a shepherd, outdoors and away from people. Lonely and afraid, he turned to God for solace, becoming a devout Christian.

It was during that time of captivity and preparation that he had a dream of seeing the Irish people to come to faith in Christ. 

St. Patrick had a VISION

After more than six years as a prisoner, Patrick escaped. According to his writing, a voice—which he believed to be God's—spoke to him in a dream, telling him it was time to leave Ireland.

After escaping to Britain, Patrick reported that he experienced a second revelation—an angel in a dream tells him to return to Ireland as a missionary. Soon after, Patrick began religious training, a course of study that lasted more than 15 years. After his ordination as a priest, he was sent to Ireland with a dual mission: to minister to Christians already living in Ireland and to see others come to Christ.


St. Patrick had a MISSION

Familiar with the Irish language and culture, Patrick chose to incorporate traditional ritual into his lessons of Christianity instead of attempting to eradicate native Irish beliefs. For instance, he used bonfires to celebrate Easter since the Irish were used to honoring their gods with fire. He also superimposed a sun, a powerful Irish symbol, onto the Christian cross to create what is now called a Celtic cross and the most memorable being that he used the three leafed clover as an illustration of the Christian holy trinity.  His mission was to move the Irish from a nature-based pagan religion ( a worship of nature) to a worship of the true God.


Christ beside me, Christ before me, Christ behind me, Christ within me, Christ beneath me, Christ above me.  St. Patrick!