Tuesday, 2 December 2008

A Christian Approach to Charity


Anyone who has read the Bible should know that God is very serious about our responsibility to care for people around us. This sermon takes a brief look at the way God has instructed His people to care for the poor, lonely, sick and oppressed in the Old and New Testaments. We also take a brief look at how the Church has carried out these commands through history, and what our opportunities and obligations are today. If you really want to honour God and experience intimacy with Him you must get to know His heart for the hurting and downtrodden.

Good source for ethical coffee

I just got onto an Aussie company called Jasper Coffee which supplies ethically sourced coffees from around the world. I found them through World Vision, as they partner in one of their projects with them.

http://www.jaspercoffee.com/

Look for the symbols which indicate products come from fair trade sources, and there are also icons which display other info, such as organic produce. If you would like to support the project with World Vision, buy the Ethiopian Yirgacheffe (World Vision) brand of coffee.

For me it's a great reassurance to be sure that the people who are growing the coffee I enjoy are being fairly payed and their communities are benefitting from their labour.

Saturday, 29 November 2008

Thinking Critically about Culture

I love watching the kids play in the backyard together. They can use whatever is available and have all sorts of fun with it. We receive catalogues stuffed full of great toys and products for kids, and all of that stuff is fine, but they don’t need any of it to have a childhood full of fun, learning and growth.
However as soon as they are old enough to visit friends and observe what they have, they begin to form expectations of what they should have as well. I remember hearing one of my kids say “We don’t have as much toys as ______”, but the truth is that we have heaps of toys! (Why, in MY day we….!)

It reminds me as a parent of the importance of teaching our children about values, priorities and the importance of thinking critically about our culture. What our culture says is important and normal does not mean that it is right for us as people who live God’s way.

Our culture says that Christmas is a time for splurging on ourselves and those close to us. Lots of presents, lots of food and drink, lots of fun. The message of Christmas though is rooted in the love of God for those who were far away. It is the celebration of the One who gave up everything in order to give us everything. How should those simple facts change the way Christians celebrate Christmas?

Tuesday, 25 November 2008

Mike's Really Useful Gift Catalogue

Every year our family includes giving gifts to people in need around the world as part of our celebration of a God who has given us everything, even Himself. As well as choosing a particular project to support with our extended family, we use the Smiles catalogue from World Vision, the [Arguably] The World's Most Useful Gifts Catalogue from TEAR fund as well as the Great Gifts Catalogue from Churches of Christ Overseas Aid.

This year I've set up an online store with TEAR and sent links out to our contacts to see if I can recruit a few others to the cause!

If you'd like to check it out as a way of celebrating the real meaning of Christmas please do so!



Mike's Online TEAR store

Wednesday, 19 November 2008

What is Ethical Consumerism?

Here's a great vid from the donttradelives website called "What's behind the label?". There's a bunch more available from the website for viewing and download.








Aussie action against exploitation

Here's a simple way to make a difference if you are an Aussie who is concerned about justice and the plight of the exploited.

The "Don't Trade Lives" website by World Vision has great info and suggestions - including participating in a petition to ask the Australian chocolate industry to insure that the cocoa they use in producing chocolate has come from sources which do not exploit farmers or workers. Read the info available on the site to find out why this is such an important issue.

The 40 Martyrs of Sebaste

After celebrating a baptism together, it is appropriate that we challenge ourselves about the priority and the cost of following Jesus. The story of the 40 Martyrs of Sebaste is an account of 40 Roman soldiers who defied their emperor in allegiance to their true Lord, paying for it with their lives. They remind us that we live for a Heavenly King, and the honours and rewards we strive for are eternal, not temporary.

Tuesday, 11 November 2008

A Christian Response to Suicide

A Christian Response to Suicide

9/11/08

What causes people to commit suicide?

There are of course many reasons that people take the drastic step of choosing to end their own lives. People choose suicide when they are in the midst of extreme mental and emotional anguish. Very commonly a half-hearted attempt at suicide is made as a cry for help, where someone cannot see a way out of the pain they are feeling and so signal their need for help and the extent of their anguish with a sign that they despair of their life. A determined suicide attempt is made when the person considers themselves beyond help of any kind. They consider that the pain and the cost of living far outweighs the pain and cost of dying.

What causes such anguish of heart and mind? Some of the common causes include:

  • Mental illness affecting the physical operation of the brain
  • The effect of certain drugs including alcohol
  • Stress and anxiety – feeling unable to resolve a significant problem
  • Shame – fear of being discovered or exposed, or shame at having been exposed
  • Lack of self worth – believing that you are worthless and a burden to others
  • Loneliness or alienation – no-one would miss me, no-one likes me
  • Hopelessness – being trapped in a situation with no apparent way out
  • Guilt – being unable to forgive yourself for what you have done to others.

When the pain of carrying these things becomes more than a person can bear, and when they believe that there is no relief, the awful decision to end their own life can be the result.

How do people respond to suicide?

Some common responses include:

  • A struggle to make sense of the suicide
  • Anger
  • Guilt over failed responsibilities, real or imagined
  • Isolation caused by a sense of self-imposed shame
  • Aloneness when others keep their distance
  • Blame towards those perceived to have contributed to the suicide
  • Awkwardness when others don't know how to respond
  • Having to face the traumatic & sometimes unexpected nature of the death
  • Difficulty accepting that the death was by suicide
  • Fear that powerful grief reactions may not be normal
  • Remorse over lost opportunity [1]

Physical reactions after a suicide

Along with the intense emotions can come a variety of physical or behavioural reactions to news of a loved one's suicide. These perfectly normal reactions may include:

  • Crying
  • Screaming
  • Angry outbursts
  • Physical collapse
  • Emotions in the weeks after a suicide

More severe reactions may include:

  • Nightmares
  • Flashbacks
  • Social withdrawal
  • Avoidance of people who remind you of your loved one
  • Repeated visual images of your loved one
  • Sleep problems
  • Concentration difficulties
  • Lack of motivation
  • Loss of interest in daily activities or hobbies
  • Family conflicts
  • Denial of emotional pain

What does the Bible say about suicide?

The Bible contains stories which feature people taking their own lives, but in each of these stories it does not comment on whether the actions were right or wrong, or what the consequences were in terms of their eternal destiny.

However the Bible speaks very strongly about the issues which surround suicide. Here is a very quick summary of what the Bible teaches:

Suicide is a Sin Against God

To take your own life is to reject the Lordship of Jesus over your life. God alone is the Author of life, and we are not to take it away from others or ourselves. God has a purpose for every life, and to end your life is to reject the purpose that God has for you.

We read in Romans 14:23 that everything that does not come from faith is sin. This means that in whatever we do, that if we know or suspect that God is not pleased with it but do it anyway, we are sinning against Him.

Of course, when people contemplate suicide they generally know that it is wrong, it’s just that it seems to be the only way out of their predicament – the only way to relieve their pain.

We are Saved by Faith not Works

Many people are troubled over the question of how suicide affects a person’s eternal destiny. We must remember that suicide is sin, and that the penalty for sin is eternal separation from God in Hell. We must also remember that the only way to avoid this punishment is to receive the forgiveness that God freely offers to anyone who believes in Jesus. Jesus said in John 5:24:

I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life.” [2]

He also said in John 10:27-28:

27 “My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. 28 I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can snatch them out of my hand.”[3]

Genuine Christians still struggle with sin (Rom 7&8). We struggle to trust God at times, and we struggle to submit to Him. Of course, suicide is a very extreme failure to trust God and submit to Him, and it is something for which people will give an account for (Heb 4:13), but the Bible never says that it is something which takes away the free gift of grace that God has given us in Jesus.

We don’t know how many times someone has chosen to trust God despite their anguish, before finally falling prey to their struggle. We don’t know how many ways they have served and honoured God in their lives, but God does. He will reward every believer according to what we have done not just in our final moments, but in our whole lives. In the same way we should not define someone by how they died, but by how they lived.

Jesus is Our Only Hope

The only way to overcome the issues that drive people to such despair is by placing our trust in Jesus as our Saviour and Lord. Romans 8:37-39 says:

35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? 36 As it is written:

“For your sake we face death all day long;

we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.” c

37 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, d neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord[4]

Also in 1 Timothy 4:9-10 we read:

9 This is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance 10 (and for this we labor and strive), that we have put our hope in the living God, who is the Savior of all men, and especially of those who believe[5]

No matter what the cause of someone’s mental and emotional anguish is, Jesus is the answer. He is the answer to guilt, shame, low self-worth, loneliness, drug addiction and even physical factors influencing suicide. There is no-one that He doesn’t love and can’t help. If you want to know more about how Jesus is the answer for your particular problem I will be happy to work that through with you.

When I say Jesus is our only hope I’m not saying that no-one else is involved. God has created community for support. He has gifted humanity with the ability to study and discover causes and cures for all sorts of ailments. He gifts some individuals with empathy and insight, others with skill in medicine, others with ability to encourage and so on. What I am saying though is that a relationship with Jesus is essential to real healing. Only Jesus can make us new on the inside. Only Jesus will one day give us new bodies as well so that we will be finally whole.

How can we help people who are suicidal?

As we have already established, Jesus is our only hope. How can we help people who are suicidal? We can point people to Jesus, and we can be Jesus for people. Of course, we can’t save people like Jesus can, but we can love them like He does. We can accept them like He does. We can encourage, and support and include and pray, because these are all things that Jesus does for people. As we do these things, Jesus is able to achieve His work through us, and just maybe others might come to put their faith in Him as we have.

But how do we know who is suicidal? We could talk about things to look for, although it is often only clear in hindsight. The Bible never tells us to wait until people are at that point though before we start showing love and concern. The Bible tells us to look out for those who are struggling, whether they are in prison or sick or poor or abandoned or alone (see Matt 25:31-46). Jesus showed us how to come alongside those who were guilty, ashamed or feeling worthless. Are there people around you who are experiencing mental and emotional anguish? What can you do to show the love of Jesus to them?

As well as loving all those around us we need to be a shining beacon of hope to the whole community. We need to be broadcasting the message that things are never hopeless: Jesus is the answer. Our reactions to hard times, the things that we talk about, the lives we lead must all point to Jesus. We must make it clear that He is our joy, our source of hope and life.

How can we help people impacted by suicide?

3 years ago I shared these practical steps to helping those struggling with grief, and they apply to grief over suicide as well:

  1. Discern your own emotional and spiritual condition. Take your own time to grieve if you need to, without being selfish and ignoring the needs of others. You may need to talk to someone close to you before you are ready to minister to others, especially if you are struggling with your own feelings of guilt, anger etc.. Be prayerful, asking the Holy Spirit to make you sensitive to His leading.
  2. Listen. Remember that people generally don’t need distracting or diverting. Don’t try get them thinking about, talking about or doing other things. Don’t fob them off with platitudes. Don’t try insulate them from the pain. Let them talk! Let them share their feelings, memories, fears and so on. Let them tell you what they need from you.
  3. Mourn with those who mourn (Romans 12:15). Crying or just being with someone in sadness is actually very comforting. It builds strength into relationships and lays a foundation for future ministry. It gives people permission to be sad, and not to rush through their grief. Survivors of suicide often feel shame, remorse, anger, fear and so on. Having someone around can not only be comforting but also reassuring.
  4. Help in practical ways. To people who are grieving, normal tasks can be very unappealing or too difficult. They can be overwhelmed by things that would normally pose no problem. Help out by cooking, cleaning, transporting, organising and so on. Ask what needs doing, and volunteer to do it. Don’t take on things that aren’t needed or wanted, just be sensitive as to what the needs are.
  5. Share the hope that you have. This can only be done with great sensitivity to the needs of the person. This is not usually an opportunity for you to make someone feel better, but rather an opportunity for them to wrestle with what they believe by asking questions of someone whose faith seems to hold fast in the trials of life. Sometimes all that can be offered is the reality of a God who cares and wants to comfort. Sometimes it may be reassurance that suicide cannot take away salvation.


[1] Excerpted from: Healing After a Suicide: the Legacy of Suicide: Caring for the Bereaved, by B.

Turley, Lifeline Australia, 1999

[2]The Holy Bible : New International Version. 1996, c1984 (Jn 5:24). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.

[3]The Holy Bible : New International Version. 1996, c1984 (Jn 10:27). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.

c Psalm 44:22

d Or nor heavenly rulers

[4]The Holy Bible : New International Version. 1996, c1984 (Ro 8:35). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.

[5]The Holy Bible : New International Version. 1996, c1984 (1 Ti 4:9). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.

Thursday, 6 November 2008

Harvest Thanksgiving

We cancelled our service in Narembeen last Sunday so we could go to Hyden and join in a Harvest Thanksgiving Service held at Wave Rock. The service was lead by Fr Ian Maybe from the Anglican Church. We don't come from a liturgical tradition, so it's always a bit different to participate in a liturgical service. The depth of meaning in the liturgy was fantastic, and unless your brain just cruises on autopilot, I think you can't help but be inspired in worship as you read, hear and speak such wonderful truths.

After the service we enjoyed a BBQ lunch together and some even ventured out for a game of cricket. Altogether it was a great time for Christians from different traditions and towns to come together to thank God for the many different ways that He showers His blessings on us.

Some of our church members travelled together in our Community Bus, which was a great time of fun and fellowship. A big thankyou to Vera who shouted us all to an icecream each on the way home!
Me, Garry (main organiser of the day) and Fr Ian
(Wave rock is behind the trees!)

Sunday, 26 October 2008

Knowing Gods Will pt 4 - Being Led by the Spirit

In the final part of our study on knowing God’s will, we look at what it means to be led by the Spirit. What does the Bible say about it, and how can we learn to do it? To conclude, we list 5 simple steps to knowing the Will of God, based on our understanding of the biblical concepts covered over the 4 sessions.



Being Led by the Spirit

Key Scriptures:

  • Acts 11:1-18
  • Acts 13:1-3
  • Acts 16:6-10
  • Acts 20:22-24
  • 1 Corinthians 2:1-16
  • Romans 8:5-8
  • Galatians 5:16-26


Principles:

  • The Spirit reveals Jesus to us – who He is, what He has done, what He commands.
  • These truths can only be understood by the Spirit and can only be expressed by the Spirit
  • Therefore to be led by the Spirit is to understand and express the truth of Jesus
  • These mysteries have been revealed already, they are not waiting to be revealed
  • To be led by the Spirit is to have our minds fixed on what the Spirit desires
  • To be led by the Spirit is to reject the desires, thoughts and actions of our sinful nature
  • To be led by the Spirit will produce the fruit of righteousness


Summary:

Being led by the Spirit is not an occasional, ecstatic, earth-shattering type of event. It is the very normal condition of believing in Jesus, sharing Jesus with others and obeying Jesus. We could not do any of these things without the quiet inner work of the Holy Spirit.

Sometimes people look for a particular experience of the Spirit, and think that without it their Christian life is lacking. Those experiences are great, but they are not what the Bible describes as the normal ministry of the Spirit. They are not what the Bible tells us to pursue when it tells us to be led by the Spirit. The Holy Spirit always works to put our attention on Jesus and to cause us to live with Jesus as our Saviour and Lord.


Putting the Pieces Together

1) God has a Will of Decree and a Will of Command

a) All things happen by God’s Will of Decree, and we cannot understand the complexities of that. All we can do is pray and trust.

b) God has revealed to us His Will of Command – how He wants us to live. This is the Will of God for our lives.

2) God’s Will is Presented in Jesus

3) God’s Will is Preserved in the Bible

4) God’s Will is Practiced in the Church

5) God’s Will is Discerned and Delivered by the Holy Spirit

What about prophecy, dreams & visions, casting lots or that sense of confirming peace that people talk about?

All of these things happen at times and it’s great when they do, but they are not the way God has told us to seek His will. I find it a bit frustrating when people chase after the things that God sometimes uses and neglect the things that He always uses, the things that He has told us to do.’’

So, practically speaking, how can we Know God’s Will?

1) Check the attitude of our hearts – is Jesus Lord?

  • Have I obeyed the things I have already been told?
  • Am I willing to obey whatever God tells me next?
  • Do I really want to glorify Christ in my life, or do I just want Him to bless me?

2) Regularly Read, Study and Meditate upon Scripture

  • Giving God the opportunity to transform you by renewing your mind

3) Be committed to the Church

  • Relationships which offer mutual support, teaching and accountability
  • Serving according to your calling

4) Pay attention to Circumstances

  • God is always at work. What can we discern about what He has been doing around us as part of His unfolding plan?

5) Pray Constantly

  • Keep the conversation going

Wednesday, 22 October 2008

Ethical Shopping

I just dropped down to the local supermarket to grab a few things with Carolyn, and while we were there we noticed how much effort it takes to find out where some products actually come from. On top of that, how can we be confident that companies that we support with our purchase are ethically responsible?

A bit of searching on the 'net when I got back has turned up this little beauty: "The Guide to Ethical Supermarket Shopping" - an Australian publication which is a simple pocket-sized guide to products with icons showing their ethical status and whether or not the company is Australian owned.

It describes the system that has been used to determine the status of each company, and features more detailed information on some larger companies with explanations for their ranking. It would be nice to have a way of signalling Aussie produce as well as company ownership, but I think this guide is a ripper!

To check it out, visit http://www.ethical.org.au/. You can download the guide or order the booklet.

Being aware and responsible in our shopping is one thing we can all do to make a significant difference! If you are a Christian, you will recognise that "your" money is actually God's, and you are to steward it wisely & ethically. Maybe this guide can help us do that.

The Horror of Modern Slavery

I was just invited to join a cause on facebook called "Stop Human Trafficking", and had no hesitation in joining.

One of the speakers at this year's Global Leadership Summit (which was faaantastic by the way and well worth getting to if you have the chance - very encouraging and challenging!) was Gary Haugen from International Justice Mission.

The issue of the exploitation & abuse of vulnerable people - very often children - is something that is obviously close to the heart of God, and something He expects His children to do something about - anyone read Matthew 25 lately? (or Isaiah 58...)

Here's a link to IJM's website: http://www.ijm.org/

Also there's a "Rockumentary" called "Call + Response" which is worth a look


The main thing is though, don't just take a look.... don't even take a look and feel heartbroken.... take a look, feel heartbroken and then do something!

pray, donate, volunteer, spread awareness, join campaigns to promote the issue and provoke governments... there's so many options, so let's do something

Monday, 20 October 2008

Sermon - Knowing God's Will pt 3 - Growing Together in Holiness

Knowing and living in the will of God is not an individual pursuit. We are called to be vitally involved in a community of people who are growing together in holiness. Throughout history Christians have gathered in cathedrals, chapels, halls, homes, cafés, beaches, sheds, outdoors & many other places in order to pursue holiness together: to pray, meditate on Scripture, serve and praise God together. From Colossians 1:15 – 2:7 we explore 7 principles for how we can build a community that grows in holiness together.

Tuesday, 14 October 2008

Sermon - Knowing God's Will pt 2 - God Speaks through the Bible

Knowing God’s Will for your life starts with learning to listen to God speaking to us through the Bible. The Bible contains the truths that we all need to guide our conscious and sub-conscious decision making about how we will live. Romans 12 tells us that as our minds are renewed by God’s truth we are transformed in who we are so that we can live in and enjoy God’s will for us. However just reading the Bible is not enough, we need to have a conversation with Jesus in an attitude of complete submission if the Bible is going to have the powerful effect on us that it was designed to have.

Sermon Audio & Video plus Scripture references are available on the website, or just watch below! (It's worth starting then pausing the video for a few minutes to let it get a head-start on downloading!)

Tuesday, 7 October 2008

Sermon - Knowing God's Will pt 1 - the 2 Wills of God




As we begin to look at how we can know and do the will of God, we need to first find out what the Bible means when it talks about God's Will. We discuss what John Piper calls God's Will of Decree and God's Will of Command, to explore the very different senses in which the will of God is talked about in the Bible. The interplay between the sovereignty of God and the free will of humanity is something that we can only grasp imperfectly, yet having an understanding of the two wills of God helps us to recognise this tension and guides our response.

The Manuscript:
Knowing God’s Will Pt 1
What is God’s Will?

Introduction
We make hundreds of decisions every day. We decide whether to get up or sleep a little longer. We decide what to wear, what to eat for breakfast and we keep rolling through the day. Some decisions are not even made consciously – we don’t usually decide to be grumpy or happy. If you are a creature of habit you might not even consciously decide what you will wear or what you will eat – you just do what you do.

But then there are some decisions which require a lot of thought and sometimes cause a lot of stress. These are the big decisions like: “Should I ask this lady to marry me?”, “How can I ask her so she will say ‘Yes’?”, “What should I study?”, “Where should we live?”, “What sort of work should I do?”, ‘What church should we join?”, “How much should we borrow?”, “What crop should I put in this year?”, “What should I do about the frost-damaged crop?”

How do we make sure that our decisions – big and small, conscious or unconscious – are in line with what God wants for us? How do we know and do God’s will?

We talked recently about the Christian life as being all about following Jesus instead of turning aside because of our own ungodly desires or because of the pressures that this World and the ruler of this world brings to bear on us. But how do we know clearly what it is that Jesus wants us to do and where He wants us to go? We’re going to spend a few weeks looking at this important subject – knowing and doing the will of God.

We’re going to start off today by defining what it is that we are talking about when we talk about the will of God. One of the biggest problems that many Christians have in knowing and doing the will of God is that we have a fuzzy understanding of what the term actually means. So what does the Bible mean when it talks about God’s will?

You need to understand that when the Bible talks about God’s will it is generally talking about one of the two different types of God’s will. If you don’t recognise these 2 different types then you are going to get very confused as you try and get a clear understanding of what the Bible is saying, because it will always be contradicting itself. Bible scholars use a variety of terms to describe these two different aspects of God’s will. I’m going to borrow the terms used by John Piper, which I think are really helpful for us.

1. God’s Will of Decree
God’s Will of Decree is simply this: everything that happens, happens because God has willed it. God’s will of decree cannot be stopped or compromised, it will come to pass.

If you are like most people, that sentence is one of the worst things you have ever heard. We all have different wounds that this life has inflicted upon us, and we tend to hold other people, Satan or the notion of a fallen world responsible for our pain. It’s not easy to hear that God decrees everything that comes to pass. In my case it means that my little brother died a slow and cruel death because God chose it to be so. What sort of God is that? It’s this sort of thinking that turns people away from God.

So let’s see if this is really what the Bible says…

Ephesians 1:11
“In him we were also chosen, having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will”

Romans 8:28-39
28 And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. 29 For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers. 30 And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified.
31 What, then, shall we say in response to this? If God is for us, who can be against us? 32 He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? 33 Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. 34 Who is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us. 35 Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? 36 As it is written:
“For your sake we face death all day long;
we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.”
37 No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. 38 For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, 39 neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

So if God works out all things in conformity with His will, does this mean that God wills sin to occur? Surely evil must be included in “all things”?

1 Peter 3:17
17 It is better, if it is God’s will, to suffer for doing good than for doing evil.
1 Peter 4:19

19 So then, those who suffer according to God’s will should commit themselves to their faithful Creator and continue to do good.

Peter knows that it may well be in God’s plan for you to suffer for doing the right thing! Could it really be God’s will for the innocent to suffer?

Let’s turn to Acts 2:22-24
22 “Men of Israel, listen to this: Jesus of Nazareth was a man accredited by God to you by miracles, wonders and signs, which God did among you through him, as you yourselves know. 23 This man was handed over to you by God’s set purpose and foreknowledge; and you, with the help of wicked men, put him to death by nailing him to the cross. 24 But God raised him from the dead, freeing him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him.

Now let’s go back to Garden of Gethsemane in the hours before this event takes place.

Matthew 26:38-39
38 Then he said to them, “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with me.”
39 Going a little farther, he fell with his face to the ground and prayed, “My Father, if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me. Yet not as I will, but as you will.”


God could have chosen to shelter Christ’s back from the cruel barbs of the whips. He could have blunted the thorns of Jesus’ mock crown. Even if Jesus had to die God the Father could have made it easier on Him. But He didn’t.

We look around our world today and see children conscripted into armies and forced to commit atrocities against their own families. We see drug dealers and pimps profiting from their trade in human misery. We see terrible accidents and terrible crimes. How could the Bible say that God is sovereign over all this? Yet it does, time and time and time again. We are going to address this paradox between God’s Will of Decree and His character of love and purity a little bit later. Before we are ready to do that we need to understand the second type of will that the Bible talks about in relation to God.

God’s Will of Command
God’s Will of Command is simply what God wants people to do. It’s what He has commanded us to do. The Bible is full of these commands. For example, God does not want anyone to perish but instead He commands all people everywhere to repent (Acts 17:30). But guess what? Some people don’t!

Another example…
1 Thessalonians 4:3-7
3 It is God’s will that you should be sanctified: that you should avoid sexual immorality; 4 that each of you should learn to control his own body in a way that is holy and honorable, 5 not in passionate lust like the heathen, who do not know God; 6 and that in this matter no one should wrong his brother or take advantage of him. The Lord will punish men for all such sins, as we have already told you and warned you. 7 For God did not call us to be impure, but to live a holy life. 8 Therefore, he who rejects this instruction does not reject man but God, who gives you his Holy Spirit.

So here’s the paradox: God is sovereign over everything, yet He commands things which don’t always happen. He forbids things that He brings about. It makes no sense! Yet the Bible teaches both God’s Will of Decree and God’s Will of Command.

Now I am someone who doesn’t like these sorts of inconsistencies, and so I look for ways of getting to the bottom of them so everything is nicely worked out and makes sense. I have some ideas on how this all fits together, but the Bible doesn’t actually try to explain that and so today neither will I.

What the Bible says is quite simple: don’t try figure out God’s Will of Decree. Don’t consult spirits or stars or any of that sort of thing to try work out what is going to happen. Leave that to God. Your task is to humble yourself so that you can trust Him. Sometimes it makes no sense to us whatsoever, and sometimes by His grace God reveals to us part of His plan and shows us why things have happened the way they have. We just need to trust.

The second thing we need to do is obey. God has made His Will of Command clear to us, we need to submit our will to His. We need to obey. As the old hymn says “Trust and obey, for there’s no other way to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey”.

Close: Purpose Driven Life reading (p 94).

(note: I played a short clip from a sermon by John Piper as he explained why we need these 2 wills of God, and how knowing them sustains us through the tough stuff of life. Click here to read the full sermon. The section we looked at is titled "The Preciousness of these Truths".)

Tuesday, 30 September 2008

Sermon - Lost and Found pt 2: We Were Made for Jesus

Jesus did not rank people from good to bad, desirable to undesirable or by any other measure. For Jesus people are either lost or found. We have all been made in the image of God - we all bear the markings of our Maker. We have all been made for Him, and we have been made to be fulfilled by Him.

Jesus' encounter with the Samaritan woman in John 4 reminds us of how Jesus sees not only this lady but you, me and all those around us. How does Jesus' view of us change how we see ourselves and how we relate to Him? How will His view of others affect how we see them and how we treat them?

The bottom line is that we were all made for Jesus - no exceptions.

Monday, 15 September 2008

Viewing Hardship as Discipline

Viewing Hardship as Discipline

Hebrews 12:1-13

14/09/08



Introduction

Have you ever wondered where hardship in your life is coming from?

Those times when you’re going through real difficulties and you wonder if this is God doing this to you or whether it’s a demonic attack or whether it’s just part of living in a fallen world.

How should we understand these hardships, and what should we do about them?

Read: Hebrews 12:1-13

1. Treat Hardship as Discipline from God

v.7: literally “For discipline endure…”

When tough times come, as they will, endure them as discipline from God.

Sometimes we lose the value of hardship because we never answer the question of why we are experiencing it. Because we don’t know why we are experiencing it we often fail to learn from it. The fact is that we very often do not understand the reasons behind our hardships, but we are told to treat them as though they are discipline from God. Why should we do that?

Because unlike hardship, which can be random, discipline has a purpose. There is something we must learn, something we must change, something we must stop or something we must do as a result of discipline.

The Hebrew Christians are being told “Don’t treat your sufferings as pointless and become discouraged by them, treat them as something that has a purpose, a purpose which is good”.

2. Remember that Discipline has a Purpose

Let’s think about this – if God really is all-powerful, and He is our Father, then He would not allow us to go through suffering unless there were a point to it. God does not delight in our misery! So what purpose would God have in causing or allowing us to suffer hardships?

Haven’t you asked that question sometimes? Haven’t you been asked that question sometimes?

The answer is found by remembering four essential truths

a) God Hates Evil

Sometimes when people think of God the Father they think of a cruel Judge who punishes people for their frailties and shortcomings, an angry God who is not easily appeased. We fail to recognise that God’s hatred of sin is so intense because His love of goodness is so complete. Anyone who loves goodness must hate evil. The more I see of evil in this world the more I hate it, and I am not all seeing and I’m not perfectly good. I still am drawn toward evil myself. I can’t imagine how hard it is for God to tolerate the existence of evil in His creation, and it’s just because He is giving people time to repent and be forgiven that Has not destroyed this corrupted world long ago.

b) We are in God’s Family

Can you imagine such a God being content for His children to be complacent about evil in their lives? Not only that, but He has given us the responsibility of being His representatives to the world? Dare we claim to represent this God when we allow sin to remain a part of our lives? Of course God will deal with sin wherever it occurs in His family.

c) God loves us

This is not just because of His own hatred of sin, it is because of His love for us that He desires us to be free from the corruption of sin in our lives. He wants us to experience the blessing that comes from right living, and He knows that temporary hardships are worthwhile in order to help us move onto the path of righteousness.

Each of these three truths address the reality of sin in our lives that is dealt with through suffering. However not all hardship that we go through is a result of our sin or is even intended to deal with our sin. Some discipline is for the purpose of training us for future maturity and future ministry.

Sometimes we ask the question “What have I done to deserve this?”. There are times when God needs to speak to us about that. There are times however when the issue is not what you have done to deserve it, but what you can become after you endure it.

d) God has a plan for us

As we talked about a couple of weeks ago, God has a race marked out for us to run. But we are entangled by sin and cannot run it effectively. We must throw off the sins that entangle us, and God uses discipline to help us to do that. Not only that, but we know that this race involves us doing good works which God has prepared in advance for us to do. Discipline gives us the strength and wisdom to do those tasks. It’s the training that strengthens our feeble arms and week knees, in order for us to not only be healed ourselves, but to enable us to run the race that God has marked out for us.

According to Hebrews 5 Jesus Himself was prepared for His future ministry through suffering. In Genesis we read the story of Joseph who was betrayed and abused by his own family, but listen to what Joseph said to them many years later after going through all sorts of tough times: You intended to harm me, but God intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many lives.[1]

Don’t ever despair in tough times, recognise that God has a good purpose to accomplish, and that He will achieve it as you allow Him to work through those hardships.

3. Look Forward to the Fruit of Discipline

v.11 – No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it.[2]

Read: Romans 5:1-5

Conclusion – The Story of Manasseh (2 Chronicles 33)

Regardless of the cause of your suffering, God will bring about a good result in your life, just like He did for Manasseh, if you will turn to Him and allow Him to achieve His good purpose through it.



[1]The Holy Bible : New International Version. 1996, c1984 (Ge 50:20). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.

[2]The Holy Bible : New International Version. 1996, c1984 (Heb 12:11). Grand Rapids: Zondervan.

Thursday, 11 September 2008

Video - The Journey East

Here's a bit of a video log of our trip to Wodonga to help celebrate Nanna Mae's 90th birthday.



click here to download or play in your own media player

Monday, 1 September 2008

Sermon - The Future of the Church in the Eastern Wheatbelt



The Future of the Church in the Eastern Wheatbelt
Combined Churches Service
August 2008

Introduction
Do you ever think about the future of your own congregation? Where is it headed? What will it be like in 10 years time? How do you feel when you think about that? Excited? Anxious? Hopeful? Depressed?

What about when you look back over the last 10 years (for those who have been here long enough)? When you think about what you have seen happen in your congregation over that time to bring you to the point that you are today, how do you feel? What about when you take a longer look back to the last 15, 20, 30 years?

What has God been doing in the churches of the Eastern Wheatbelt, and what is He going to do into the future? Is there any way of really knowing?

Well today you don’t want to hear me speculating on the subject of the future of the Eastern Wheatbelt Church. What we all need to hear is what God wants to say to us about what He is doing and wants to do in us and through us as we follow Him. We are going to listen to Him by reading His word together and asking Him to show us how to put it into practice in our lives and in our churches.

John 5:17,19
Jesus said to them, “My Father is always at his work to this very day, and I, too, am working.”

19 Jesus gave them this answer: “I tell you the truth, the Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing, because whatever the Father does the Son also does.

God is Always At Work!
Just as Jesus did nothing on His own, but only did what the Father was doing, so we need to learn to see what God is doing, and join in!

Hebrews 12:1-3

v. 1a “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses…
We need to recognise that we do not run this race in isolation from one another. So often our focus narrows to just ourselves and our own congregations, and we forget our place in the wider kingdom of God. In this letter to early Jewish Christians, they are being reminded that they are not alone, they are part of a wonderful heritage. They belong to a tradition of people who have put their faith in God and followed Him (chapter 11).

You and I are also part of that tradition. As well as these ancient men and women of faith we can add to our list the people who have been examples to us throughout the last 2000 years. We can add the people who may no longer be a part of our congregations, people who have made a difference to us. We can be thankful to be a part of this tradition.

The picture of being surrounded by a large cloud of witnesses is this: simply that these people have run their race. We can be thankful, we can be inspired by them, but now it is our turn to run! We don’t sit around and say, “Gee, I wish so-and-so were still here and running their race here”. It’s our turn, this is our time!

Verse 1 finishes with these words:

and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.

The future of the Church of the Eastern Wheatbelt lies with Christians of the Eastern Wheatbelt who run the race that God has marked out for them. Not people who want to sit around and watch other people run the race. Not people who want to be served, people who want to serve. Not people who just want to be loved, people who want to love. Not people who want to get their own way, people who want to submit to others out of reverence for Christ. Not people who want to remain as they are, people who want to follow Jesus where He leads.

If we are going to do this we will discover that following Jesus requires perseverance. It will not happen easily, it will require hard work of us. The middle part of verse 1 describes what this work will entail:

let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles

We cannot follow Jesus and harbour sin in our lives at the same time. It is one or the other. That is not to say that we don’t sin, but it is to say that we don’t allow sin to remain in our lives. We confess it, experience God’s forgiveness and healing, and then we live differently. That’s true for us as individuals and it’s true for us as groups. Sometimes sin infiltrates groups. Behaviours are tolerated that should not be tolerated. Attitudes and patterns of speech become normal, that should never be normal for followers of Jesus. Sometimes we need to decide as congregations to throw off some things. Don’t pretend they aren’t there, they need to be exposed, healed and left behind.

Dealing with your own sin can be very difficult. Dealing with sin in a group is much more difficult. Yet it must be done if our congregations are going to be able to follow Jesus.

So that’s what we are to do with sin, but what about the “everything that hinders”? Are there things about us that are hindering the work of God in this region?

This phrase reminds me of Jesus’ teaching about the 4 soils. One soil was described as full of thorns. Jesus said this stands for people who are “choked by life’s worries, riches and pleasures, and do not mature” (Luke 8:14).

All of us are surrounded by distractions and disasters, the question is how much they are able to divert us from following Jesus and doing what He calls us to do.

Another thing that looms as a danger for us are our differences. My own congregation is very different from the other congregations in the Shire of Narembeen. We worship on different days, we have different styles of worship, different traditions, different types of people, different convictions on certain subjects. Those differences can keep us separate, and because we are separate we become estranged and we lose sight of the larger picture of the Kingdom of God.

It’s OK to be different. It’s OK to be separate in aspects of what we do. But we are one Church. We are to love one another. We are to serve one another and serve together.

Read: 1 Corinthians 12:12-27
This letter is addressed to the Church of God in Corinth. It’s God’s Church, not Paul’s or Apollos’ or anyone else’s. There is no Church of Mike in Narembeen or Church of Neil in Bruce Rock. There is only the Church of God. And it’s not the Church in Corinth that meets at Fred’s place, or the Church of South Corinth, or the Corinth Church of Christ. The Christians at Corinth all together form one body, and each has a part to play.

In fact this principle can be zoomed in and out. The Christians in each congregation are one body, each with a special part to play. The Christians in each town form one body, each with a special part to play. The Christians in each region form one body, each with a special part to play. The Christians in each county form one body, each with a special part to play, and the Christians in the whole world form one body, each with a special part to play.

How does that play out? Well, within a local congregation each individual has a unique role according to God’s calling. Within a town or region each congregation has a unique role according to God’s calling, and it keeps growing from there.

You have a part to play, your congregation has a part to play in enabling us as a body to run the race that has been marked out for us.

I wonder how you feel as you hear that? I wonder how many people are feeling like they are already putting in a huge effort just keeping their church going – that it’s a struggle to even get together to worship God and to receive teaching and to share in what some of us call “the sacraments”.

I wonder how many of us have felt let down or abused by others in the church, and have little desire to come together as a body.

I wonder how many have had strong disagreements which have caused them to isolate themselves from others in the body.


2 Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. 3 Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart.

If you are weary today and have lost heart – or are in danger of losing heart – what can you do? You might wish that your circumstances would change and things would be suddenly easier, but God never promises that. He does promise to help us endure and to make us fruitful, so long as we fix our eyes on Jesus and follow Him.

Jesus knows what it is like to be tired. He knows what it is like to feel betrayed. He knows what it is like to feel alone. He knows what it is like to be treated unfairly. He knows what it is like to be rejected. He knows what it is like to be misunderstood. He knows what it is like to be criticised. He knows what it is like to suffer extreme stress. He knows what it is like to suffer excruciating physical pain.

Yet Jesus persevered, and He achieved a great victory as a result. He has given us His Spirit to help us endure also.

Never give up. Realise that Jesus understands and that He will help if you allow Him to.

Conclusion
What is the future of the Church of the Eastern Wheatbelt?

• We have heard that God is always at work, and our role is to join Him in that work.
• We have heard that Jesus has marked out a path for us to run.
• We have heard that we run as one body of believers, and we all have different parts to play.
• We have heard that there are things that we will have to throw of if we are to do that.
• We have heard that we can persevere in running this race by fixing our eyes on Jesus.

You might say “Well those are great principles and nice theories, but what should we actually do about this? We still don’t know what to do, and we still don’t know what God is doing.”

You’re right! This sermon is pointless if it finishes here. Yet I do not have the answers to these questions!

We need to start a conversation with God and each other to hear what God is doing, and to find out what we must do.

Let me explain:
Let’s say there was a group of Christian men who attended a men’s conference at the start of this year, which gave them a chance to meet other Christian men in their area. Out of this comes an idea to start a weekly Bible study. So a group starts, and the result is that Christians from a number of different traditions come together to be encouraged and to grow, and to think together and work together to build God’s Kingdom in that area. Sound good? It’s happening in Hyden!

Let’s say someone else believed God wanted them to go to farms that had not received rain and to pray for rain. What if they shared that with other Christians and they ended up with prayer meetings around campfires on farms as people come together to pray? Sound good? It’s happening in Mukinbudin!

Let’s say that someone believed that God wanted them to pray for a husband’s work colleague and to invite her to church, and the result was that this lady is now a member of the church and is bringing more family members along. Sound good? It happened in Kondinin!

These stories are happening all over the place, and I’m sure that I’ve only heard the tiniest proportion of them. God is at work, and He longs for each of us to join Him in that work.

So here’s what I want us to do today. As we break for lunch in a few moments we’ll enjoy catching up with old friends and making new ones, which is great. But let’s not do that in the same way that everyone else does. Let’s do it as members of a body that wants to run the race together. Let’s ask each other about what God is doing in our lives, our congregations and our regions, but let’s not get into any sort of competition to see who’s number 1! We’re all at different stages. Some of us are in the middle of tough stuff at the moment and need to be encouraged to hear stories from others who might be feeling more excited and encouraged. It’s OK to say “I’m not sure what God is doing at the moment” - have you ever read the Psalms!

Here’s some questions that I reckon we can ask one another today:
• What do you see God doing at the moment?
• What can I pray for God to do for you?
• What are some other ways that we can come together?

For example, one person might say “I’m concerned about a lack of Christian peers for my children, they seem to be doing the same sorts of things as their mates and they don’t seem interested in God”. That’s a common struggle isn’t it? Yet there are churches who have good programmes and good core groups of youth. There are great camps and other events that can have a huge impact on young people. We can help each other!

Let’s not be spectators here, let’s all get active and run this race together!