What about a Christian Memorial Day?

•May 25, 2007 • 2 Comments

As I was thinking about Memorial Day yesterday in Church, a thought occurred to me. I don’t think that Christians rally around Memorial Day enough as so many people focus on solely the patriotic aspect. The Church seems to really celebrate 3 holidays: Christmas, Easter, and Mother’s Day. Now I’m not attempting to say we should honor our veterans less, by any means. I have several people in my family who were or are in the armed forces. However, what about those who have died in the battle for Christ??

Wikipedia defines Memorial Day as a holiday that “commemorates U.S. men and women who died in military service for their country. It began first to honor Union soldiers who died during the American Civil War. After World War I, it expanded to include those who died in any war or military action.” But too often, in the intellectual age that we now live in, an age where it is increasingly hard for many to walk by faith and believe in what they cannot see, we have forgotten the very backdrop against we are born: we are born into a spiritual world at war. What is so sad is that modern “Christianity” has often completely dismissed the battle and even the Devil, himself.

While the book of Revelation makes no doubt about the fact that Satan has already lost and the Lord’s victory is not in doubt, the battle is still raging- a fight over each and every one of our souls. And don’t forget, as Christians, we are called to fight in that epic battle every day of our lives. Read Ephesians 6:10-20 about the armor of Christ; I don’t think it’s just a metaphor or something else. God is telling us to prepare to fight. As verse 12 says, “For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.” Jesus Himself said we are to storm the gates of Hades and the gates will not stand against the onslaught of the Church (Matthew 16:18).

So on a day built to honor those who have fallen in battle defending our country and securing our freedom, I think it is even more necessary to remember those who have died defending our God and the spiritual freedom that it has brought us. Perhaps one of the best known Christian martyrs, Jim Elliot, once said, “That man is no fool to give what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose – martyr for Christ.” No, make no mistake, I’m not trying to tell you to go and get yourself killed for Christ. But we all, and I’m also speaking to myself here, need to go where the Lord is calling us, regardless of the consequences. And we need to honor and remember the lessons of the great martyrs who have gone before us to pave the way and further God’s kingdom. Jim Elliot was not killed because he was stupid or happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. He knowingly went to a dangerous tribe in South America because he knew that they deserved to hear the Gospel. Read the following:

After their wedding, Elliot continued his work among the Quichua Indians and formulated plans to reach the Aucas.

In the Autumn of 1955, missionary pilot Nate Saint spotted an Auca village. During the ensuing months, Elliot and several fellow missionaries dropped gifts from a plane, attempting to befriend the hostile tribe.

In January of 1956, Elliot and four companions landed on a beach of the Curaray River in eastern Ecuador. They had several friendly contacts with the fierce tribe that had previously killed several Shell Oil company employees.

Two days later, on January 8, 1956, all five men were speared and hacked to death by warriors from the Auca tribe. Life magazine featured a ten-page article on their mission and death.
“They learned about the Aucas as they and their wives were ministering to the Quichua-speaking and Jivaro Indians. The Aucas had killed all strangers for centuries.
“Other Indians fear them but the missionaries were determined to reach them. Said Elliot: ‘Our orders are: the Gospel to every creature.”

Elliot wanted God’s will. It ended in his death, but it was a death whose seed still brings forth fruit for the Gospel’s sake.

Many Aucas eventually came to accept Christ as Savior when Elisabeth Elliot bravely returned to share Christ with those who killed her husband (intouch.org).

Just a few thoughts to think of on your Memorial Day…. God bless!

What does it mean to be a Bride of Christ?

•May 24, 2007 • 4 Comments

Jesus gave us many sacraments and symbols in the New Testament to give us a glimpse of what our relationship with the Father, Son, and Spirit should look like. Most people just think of baptism and the Lord’s Supper, but we can’t forget marriage. As I am getting married in a little over a week, I’ve been thinking about this a lot lately. While I don’t fare too well on this test below, I’m grateful because my pending marriage is already teaching more about what it means to be a bride of Christ (even though I am a man).

So what does a bride do in your typical wedding in the US, approaching her wedding?

Show everyone her ring. This may seem like an obvious one, but have you ever noticed that even when a ring may not be that impressive from someone else’s perspective, the person to whom it was given thinks it is flawless. It is a symbol of their union, a mark of their pending marriage, and they want everyone to see it.

Count down the days. Even I am guilty of this. Time seems to be getting slower the closer I get. But I literally have been counting down the days because I am so so eager of what this marriage will mean.

Talk about their groom. Generally after a bride will show off her ring, the conversation turns to the proposal, how lucky (blessed) they are, how amazing their soon-to-be-groom is, etc.

Plan, Plan, Plan. I have an amazing fiancé, but I’ve come to realize how much work she has put into this wedding. She will be the first one to say that it is worth it, but man, she has poured herself into making this dream wedding a reality.

So now let us look at my original question. What does it mean to be a Bride of Christ? Gotquestions.org states the following:

The imagery and symbolism of marriage is applied to Christ and the body of believers known as the church. These are those who have trusted in Jesus Christ as their personal savior and have received eternal life. In the New Testament, Christ, the bridegroom, has sacrificially and lovingly chosen the church to be His bride (Ephesians 5:25-27). Just as there was a betrothal period in biblical times during which the bride and groom were separated until the wedding, so is the bride of Christ separate from her bridegroom during the church age. Her responsibility during the betrothal period is to be faithful to Him (2 Corinthians 11:2; Ephesians 5:24). At the Second Coming of Christ, the church will be united with the Bridegroom, the official “wedding ceremony” will take place and, with it, the eternal union of Christ and his wife will be actualized (Revelation 19:7-9; 21:1-2).

So let me ask you the same questions I asked myself. Clearly, we are called to be the Bride of Christ. And talk about a love story: while we were yet sinners Jesus came and died to reunite us to Himself. Talk about a proposal! But why do we seem to get more excited about a marriage to another sinner than a marriage to our Holy God. Think about it.

Do we wear His engagement ring? Do we wear a mark on us that we proudly display to all who will look? Be it a physical cross or His mark in our words and deeds. Do people look at us and know that we are even engaged? Or do they just see someone who is flirting with the rest of the world? Brothers and sisters, we have truly become a whore to the world.

Do we count down the days? Do we really believe that to live is Christ, to die is gain? Are we that eagerly counting down to when we can hold our Savior’s pierced hands? Why not?

Do we share it? Do we tell others the proposal story of how Jesus captured our hearts? Do we lose our breath just thinking about it, getting swept up into his incredible adventure?

Do we plan, plan, plan? Are we willing to do ANY work? Or do we seem to be just so lazy about our walk with God that we assume He will do all the planning for our marriage? Think again what a normal bride does? Do we spend days, weeks, researching the perfect wedding for the perfect mate? Do we ask others because we recognize we don’t know everything? Do we litter our days with appointments with those others, time to think, time to plan, etc? Do we sacrifice our time and money for our wedding with Him? Or are we only willing to give out these precious commodities to another person?

So the question I ask you, the question I ask myself, is why not? Why not?

I don’t know everything, and believe it or not, neither do you.

•April 20, 2007 • 7 Comments

When I was a kid, I really thought I knew everything. When I was a teenager, it was worse. Not only was I always right, but everyone else (and it didn’t matter if it was everyone else) was wrong. Sound familiar?

I think we all have a little of that in us. But as I’ve gotten older, I have realized that there are often more than one right answer, or not always one right answer. Sometimes everyone can be a little right and a little wrong at the same time. It’s pretty narrow minded to think that I, and I alone, am wise enough to discern everything in a superior manner from mankind. And yet, that is basically how I would act. Man I was arrogant.

But as a business law professor I had in college told me, the point of his class was to “know enough to know you don’t know very much, but at least you will know you don’t know, so maybe you’ll ask someone who does and listen to him or her.” It is a bit of a tongue twister, but pretty profound actually when it comes to the truths in life.

And yet, while I had realized this, in general, I really became convinced last night that I was falling back into my old trap with religion. Yes, I believe that the Bible is the truth and infallible Word of God for numerous reason. And while God has revealed enough of Himself that you can know what you need to know to start your walk with Him in it, it’s not everything because God still speaks. Now, some of you may think that sounds like heresy. I would have just a few years ago. And we have to be very careful because while God is still speaking, He can’t contradict Himself. So the Word is our foundation. But we still need to listen to what God is telling us now and telling the people He is using in grand ways.

The way that I had this realization is by hearing what God is doing in Africa right now. Africa is basically an entire continent largely built on spirituality. Africans have an incredible awareness that everything is spiritual, even if they don’t believe in Christ. If you go out into the tribes, there are still witch doctors who can say a word and kill you. I’ve heard it from many people who have seen it first hand. We read the Old and New Testament and see God doing amazing miracles. And we also see the devil performing them (like Pharoah’s magicians). Why have we so convinced ourselves that just because we don’t see it first hand anymore, that stuff doesn’t happen anymore? It’s ridiculous if you think about it. Nowhere in the Bible does it say at the end, and now no more people will be raised from the dead, or limbs regrown, or demons cast out. Nowhere.

And yet, when I hear it, the first thing that comes in my mind is doubt. I’m skeptical. And while I tell myself that if I saw it first hand, then I wouldn’t be skeptical, I think that’s a lie too. When the Israelites were leaving Egypt, they had a cloud of fire to guide them at night and woke up to find bread (manna) on the ground each day… and they doubted God. Satan is just really good at making us question the awesomeness of God. Because if we really got it, if we really understood that there is a spiritual war going on, it would change us. Probably the greatest con the devil ever pulled is just convincing the world that he doesn’t exist .

In Algeria specifically, God is doing incredible things. They passed a policy last year to try to stop it. Officially, you can get 5 years in prison just for trying to “shake the faith” of a Muslim. Unofficially, a lot of the time, if people find out you are a Christian, you just get killed. And yet, there are incredible things happening there.

There have been documented cases where literally everyone in a village would have the same identical vision in their dreams. And God reaches them that way because that is how many need to see it with that Spiritual world they live in. They need to see the power of God to not be terrified by the power of a witch doctor or the threat of pending death by the dominant Muslim powers (it is the official religion of Algeria). And in one village the following morning after everyone had the same dream where Jesus came to them, one person finally had the guts to say what happened and that he had accepted Christ. And then everyone else chipped in the same happened. An entire village saved in one night by a dream.

What God is doing with those people is even more incredible. Since they are limited by what they can tell people, they are praying, for hours a day, what they call “the crazy Jesus prayer.” Literally, these people are seeing Jesus every night and talking to them and praying He comes to others in that region the same way. And it is happening. And that’s awesome.

The speaker I knew last night has a friend in Egypt doing mission work. She met a guy who was preaching the Gospel to people in his village by telling the story of Daniel in the Lion’s den. When she was brought up the Bible, the guy was like, “What’s that?” He had never seen a Bible, but He said that Jesus had come to him the previous night and told him a story to share.

I don’t know why I can’t commune with God that way. Maybe God knows we would probably freak out in our “civilized” western society to have such an interaction. I don’t need to know why God talks to me in different ways than he talks to others. But God is revealing Himself in magnificent ways around the world. And you see the fruits of their labors and you can’t deny it. Those people have something powerful to share and we need to listen.

I heard the analogy of a puzzle. We each know a little something God has given us by grace. But only by getting together can we really see and understand the whole picture of what He is doing.

As for me, I know I only see pieces of that picture right now. I want to see the whole thing….

And yet another school shooting…

•April 16, 2007 • 1 Comment

What a tragedy that I can even write such a title. And what a tragedy that when I heard the news, while I was horrified, I wasn’t even shocked. I guess deep down, I had been expecting yet another horrendous news story; sadly, it’s what we are used to.

We now live in a world where it would be easy to live in fear. We live in a world where the most optimistic are going to become more leery of trusting those around us. It is sad, but self preservation. We are no longer safe in schools, in churches, or in the workplace. All three have been targets of crazed people with guns. The latest title on CNN describes the latest attack a “massacre.” While CNN is in the business of overstatement, that pretty much sums it up.

What has happened to this world? This question is especially becoming paramount as we try to come to gripes with where we are and where we need to go as a society. When many of our grandparents were children, they lived in a society where everyone had guns. Read stories of the Old West. And yet, I am not aware of any such actions where the sanctity of a Church or a School or a place of work was so victimized. And yet now, when “gun control” and an “evolved” society now demands that guns be removed from such places, we have this. So how did we go as a society from one where everyone had a gun and hardly anyone used it to one where hardly anyone has a gun but many who do choose to use it… and use it in horrible and frightening ways?

It is a relevant question. It is a relevant question because what do we see on the news every day? What do we see in Israel… in Iraq? Everywhere, literally everywhere, we look, violence is on every headline.

There are many who will point to macro causes: violent video games, removing religion from school, the degrading of the institution of the family, a poor criminal justice system, increased platforms for hate with new technologies, etc. I’m positive that all of those are elements. And yet ultimately, even in a war, even in an army, it is made up of individuals who made a choice to be there. Ultimately, every vicious act is because someone choose to commit it. Someone chose their own wants over the needs of someone else, over society.

James 4:1-10 deals with interpersonal conflict which seems to be pretty relevant at the moment. Let’s see what it has to say.

What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that battle within you? You want something but don’t get it. You kill and covet, but you cannot have what you want. You quarrel and fight. You do not have, because you do not ask God. When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend what you get on your pleasures. You adulterous people, don’t you know that friendship with the world is hatred toward God? Anyone who chooses to be a friend of the world becomes an enemy of God.

In other words, the root of all quarrels comes down to the battle within in us. It comes down to something wrong in us, and we need to take the responsibility for it. As one of my pastors once said, “The issue is not the issue, and the problem is not the circumstances with any argument.” Ultimately, we argue to prove our point. To prove we are right. To win. James tells us that our flesh longs for lusts and other desires (be they legitimate or illegitimate pleasures), and that causes the conflicts.

As a people, we need to change radically because this isn’t even as bad as it can get. Mark my words, I hope and pray this is the worst school shooting incident. But unless there is a radical backlash that changes our society to say that there is no excuse for this kind of behavior and we will no longer tolerate it, in the next ten years, I wouldn’t be surprised to see an even more massive attack.

Sure, we should be appalled at the actions of those that we see on the news night after night. But if we keep looking at and blaming others for the problems of the world, then nothing is going to change. As a people, we need to stop looking at the news to see the bad in the world, we need to look internally to see the bad in us. Because it is the bad in us, it is the sinful flesh that that we indwell in, that ultimately starts all of this. The biggest fire starts with a single spark, and the biggest battle, the biggest fight, heck even 9-11, can all be traced back to one person who decided to give into the hate and decided to spread it with others. If we don’t question ourselves, if we don’t root out the cause of our own problems, and if we keep criticizing the specks in the eyes of others while ignoring the planks in our own, we won’t fundamentally change like it is needed.

I once read a quote that stated, “The farthest journey that a man can make is the journey within.” Be outraged at this school shooting. It is horrible, and I am not belittling that in any way. But if we don’t start looking in the mirror and demand change as well with what we see there, then we are sowing the seeds for the next one. Remember, you may not pull the trigger directly, but don’t you think the shooter must have been pushed to a brink before they snapped? It is a sobering thought but if someone else hadn’t rejected them, said an unkind word, etc, they might not have rejected mankind.

So look in the mirror. You may not like what you find.

To Tithe or not to Tithe… that is the question

•April 15, 2007 • 23 Comments

Well, things have been crazy for the past couple weeks and things will continue to be so for the next couple weeks. So I figured I might as well make this post count and what is a more sensitive subject in Church today than tithing. A lot of this is courtesy of a friend who I had the pleasure of hearing a presentation he made several weeks back.

If Jesus says something, do you think it matters? (It is a rhetorical question, and I hope you didn’t say no!) If Jesus says something a lot, do you think it really matters? For a little perspective on money in general, in the New Testament, there are 215 verses pertaining to faith, 218 verses pertaining to salvation, and 2,084 verses dealing with the stewardship of and accountability for money and finance. Sixteen of Jesus’ thirty-eight parables deal with money. (“Wealth Riches and Money” And tithing specifically is the second most talked about concept in the Bible after love. Let me repeat that, after love, the second most discussed thing is tithing. Of all the things that number two could have been, repentance, sin, forgiveness, marriage, etc, the Bible, the Inspired Word of God, choose to talk about tithing. Maybe we need to listen.

Now I might have a little more credence because I’m not a Church giving this message. In other words, many people in the pews on Sundays simply tune out any message that has to do with tithing. They simply write it off as a Church being greedy. That is why you don’t hear that message in Church. People don’t want to. Money makes them feel uncomfortable. It makes them feel guilty. It literally makes people leave the Church. And sadly, that often dictates that it isn’t preached about. Or if it is, the preacher will so water it down to try not to offend that it really isn’t scriptural. But, since I clearly have no vested interest in taking your money (there are no paypal links for you to donate to me in this post), let’s just examine what the Bible says. Clearly, that has more authority than my opinion anyway.

Old Testament:

“Be sure to set aside a tenth of all that your fields produce each year.” – Deuteronomy 14:22

” ‘A tithe of everything from the land, whether grain from the soil or fruit from the trees, belongs to the LORD; it is holy to the LORD…. The entire tithe of the herd and flock—every tenth animal that passes under the shepherd’s rod—will be holy to the LORD.” – Leviticus 27:30-32

New Testament:

Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you tithe mint and dill and cumin, and have neglected the weightier provisions of the law: justice and mercy and faithfulness; but these are the things you should have done without neglecting the others.

In the Old Testament, the tithe was an offering of the first and best of one’s income to the Lord as an expression of thanks and dedication. And in the New Testament, basic tithing was the bare minimum. And the Bible endorses going beyond the bare minimum.

6Remember this: Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows generously will also reap generously. 7Each man should give what he has decided in his heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. 8And God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work….11You will be made rich in every way so that you can be generous on every occasion, and through us your generosity will result in thanksgiving to God. 12This service that you perform is not only supplying the needs of God’s people but is also overflowing in many expressions of thanks to God. 13Because of the service by which you have proved yourselves, men will praise God for the obedience that accompanies your confession of the gospel of Christ, and for your generosity in sharing with them and with everyone else.” – 2 Corinthians 9:6-8, 11-13

Excess money is given to us so we can show where our treasure is by giving it away. And if you tithe, God will provide.

“10 Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in this,” says the LORD Almighty, “and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it.” – Malachi 3:10

In other words, if you think you can’t afford to tithe, test God. He’ll prove Himself. You can’t afford not too.

Just a few more verses:

“5Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, ‘Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.’” – Hebrews 13:5

10And here is my advice about what is best for you in this matter: Last year you were the first not only to give but also to have the desire to do so. 11Now finish the work, so that your eager willingness to do it may be matched by your completion of it, according to your means. 12For if the willingness is there, the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what he does not have. 13Our desire is not that others might be relieved while you are hard pressed, but that there might be equality. 14At the present time your plenty will supply what they need, so that in turn their plenty will supply what you need. Then there will be equality, 15as it is written: “He who gathered much did not have too much, and he who gathered little did not have too little.”[a]” – 2 Corinthians 8:10-15

“1As he looked up, Jesus saw the rich putting their gifts into the temple treasury. 2He also saw a poor widow put in two very small copper coins.[a] 3″I tell you the truth,” he said, “this poor widow has put in more than all the others. 4All these people gave their gifts out of their wealth; but she out of her poverty put in all she had to live on.” – Luke 21:1-4

“9 Honor the LORD with your wealth, with the first fruits of all your crops;” – Proverbs 3:9

Or if you are a numbers person, look at it this way. According to the Barna Group, “In 2004 only 7% gave 10% of their income or what we call the biblical tithe. The average donation to churches in 2004 was $895″ For a little perspective on that amount, look at what the average American does spend their money on.

Last year we spent $1,674 a year on fast food or food away from home. Recent figures also indicate we spend $165 per year on coffee and $10 billion a year in total on cokes and movies. The average annual expenditure for housing is over $12,000, for clothes and services $1,743, and transportation runs each of us about $7,011. Healthcare adds up to $1,959 for the average American. Entertainment costs $1,891; personal insurance and pensions are about $3,436.

Think about that. The Church is the Bride of Christ. And we are saying that our fun is more than twice as important as her needs. So why is giving so low? According to the Barna Group, these are the reasons.

Related studies by The Barna Group offer additional insights into why Americans do not give more money to churches. “There are five significant barriers to more generous giving,” according to the study’s director, George Barna. “Some people lack the motivation to give away their hard-earned money because the church has failed to provide a compelling vision for how the money will make a difference in the world. These are donors who can find other uses for their money and are not excited about simply handing money over to a church. The second group,” he continued, “are those who see their giving as leverage on the future. They withhold money from the church because they do not see a sufficient return on their investment. The third segment is comprised of people who do not realize the church needs their money to be effective. Their church has done an inadequate job of asking for money, so people remain oblivious to the church’s expectations and potential. The fourth group is composed of those who are ignorant of what the Bible teaches about our responsibility to apply God’s resources in ways that affect lives. The final category contains those who are just selfish. They figure they worked hard for their money and it’s theirs to use as they please. Their priorities revolve around their personal needs and desires.”

Sure, the New Testament doesn’t give a percent like the Old Testament. But if you think about the New Testament, it doesn’t do away with the Old Testament laws, rather, it generally adds on them. Rather than “Don’t murder,” it becomes “Don’t hate.” Rather than “Don’t commit adultery,” it becomes, “Don’t lust.” We don’t live under the law, praise God, but under Grace, we probably ought to give more, not because we have to, but because we want to. According to the International Journal of Not-For-Profit Law, “If the affluent contributed as much to nonprofits as the authors believe they can, charitable giving in the United States would increase by $100 billion a year – enough to solve many of the world’s most pressing problems.”

Think of what could be done with that money. According to the Borgen Project, “annual expenditures of $19 billion between now and 2015 could eliminate global starvation and malnutrition. Another $12 billion per year over that same period could educate every child on earth. And an additional $15 billion each year could provide universal access to clean water and sanitation.” And that is less than half of the $100 billion.

To close, read just a few examples of people who did decide to tithe, and how the Lord blessed them for it.

Choosing to Give the Rest to the Lord: My Journey of Faith

By Scott Lewis

Scott Lewis is president and CEO of Scott Machinery in Rancho Cordova, Calif. He delivered this testimony at the annual Generous Giving Conference in Atlanta, Ga., January 14-15, 1999.

In 1984, I met my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, and at that point my life did a complete 180, and I began to walk in the joy and the fullness of a relationship with God. I immediately got involved in whatever the church was doing. In other words, when I came to Christ, I hit the ground running and was immediately zealous for God.

In 1991, I was at a wedding with my wife, and on the way out of this wedding there was a man behind me talking about Russia, about a lot of people coming to know the Lord, and about something called the Jesus Film. I was interested, and so I asked him about it, and he said, “In a few weeks we are going down to Mexico to show the film out in the streets. Would you like to come along?” That sounded like fun to me, so I said, “Sure, I would like to come be a part of that.” What I saw in Mexico had a phenomenal impact on my life. Through the weekend, I met Paul Eshleman, the director of the Jesus Film Project, and Dave Hannah, the head of History’s Handful, and these gentlemen were sharing some things that had an impact on me.

I had never heard before that 80 percent of the world’s Christian wealth was in America and that 96 percent of what we put in the plate was spent on America while America only made up roughly 5 or 6 percent of the world’s population. I immediately was troubled when I heard that, knowing that the Scripture said, “From the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked” (Luke 12:48b).

We went out and showed the Jesus Film in Mexico on a dirt lot with a generator to run the projector. Over 400 people came and sat in the rain to watch this film in the Spanish language. When it was over, 186 of them filled out on a card to make a decision to follow Jesus Christ. Those were given to the local pastor to follow up on. I thought, “Wow, this is the most powerful evangelistic tool I have ever seen.”

While we were there, Paul Eshleman said, “In six weeks we are going into Albania, and we are going to show the premiere of the film.” I went home and I told my wife all about this Jesus Film and all these folks who came to know the Lord, and I asked her, “Do you want to go to Albania in six weeks?” She said OK. So, we literally got our globe down and sat in the middle of our living room floor and were spinning this thing trying to find where in the world Albania was. I had never even heard of the place. Six weeks later we landed in Albania, and what happened there has completely changed my life forever.

Now, I was always very committed to the Lord and to seeing people come to know him, but what I saw there I had no idea existed anywhere in the world. For example, one particular day we were sharing the gospel with students at a high school. Following our presentation, I went down to the front of the school and was waiting for the rest of the team to show. There was a large crowd of people, and all of a sudden this young girl grabbed my arm, looked me right in the eye and said, “Sir, please, you have got to listen to me.” I asked, “What is it?” She said, “Please, sir, don’t waste time talking to people who don’t want to know the God. All of my friends want to know the God, and so many people here want to know the God. Please don’t waste time talking to people who don’t want to know the God.” I thought, God has just spoken to me through this girl.

We got home, and I said to my wife, “This is it.” For years I had been frustrated in business. I had felt that business was a ball and chain around me because I really wanted to make my life count for God, yet seemingly so many hours of my day were spent doing the deal that it seemed to have no real impact for eternity. I said, “This is our out.” We’ve got to get rid of the business, and we’ve got to get back to Albania, because everybody there wants to know God.” So I set out to sell my business. But when the deal came down to the bottom of the ninth inning, it just unraveled. I said, “Fine, Lord, if you don’t want us to get anything out of it, we will just liquidate the assets and we’ll go.” Two weeks before the business was to shut down, I woke up very early one morning, and the Lord was clearly prompting me, “No, I don’t want you to go to Albania, and I don’t want you to get rid of the business. I want you to stay right here.” I didn’t understand.

History’s Handful

A couple of months later I was at a large conference with Campus Crusade for Christ. Dr. Bill Bright and Dave Hannah were there challenging people to become a part of this thing they called History’s Handful. They described it this way: Over the course of history a handful of individuals have had a significant impact. If you think back about specific countries (Germany and South Africa) or periods (the Reformation and the civil rights movement), a handful of individuals come to mind who, good or bad, have had a significant impact on the course of history. Bill Bright said, “We have figured it out; we have broken the world up into chunks of 1,006,000 people each, and the cost of translating this film into all the languages of the world and buying all the equipment and doing the deal is $1.2 billion. We want 1,200 people who will step up to the plate and give $1 million each to impact eternity.”

My wife and I were listening to this, and we thought, “Are they asking for $1 million?” The problem was that we felt like God was telling us we were supposed to be one of those. So, that evening I went to Bill Bright and said, “Sir, how do we do this? We don’t have $1 million in our wildest dreams.” He said, point blank, “How much did you give last year?” Nobody had ever come out and just asked me this. I said, “We gave $17,000.” I felt pretty good because that was 35 percent of our income; grading on the curve, I thought we were doing pretty well. He said, “Good, but why don’t you start the first year with a goal of, say, $50,000?” I said, “Excuse me?” He said, “Start with a goal of $50,000.” I said, “Alright.”

We started selling tools; some weeks we made overhead, and some weeks we didn’t. We got all the way to the end of the year, and we were a long way from fulfilling that goal of $50,000. I got a call one day from a guy in Jupiter, Fla. You can’t be any further away from California than Jupiter, Fla. This guy was looking for this machine. Long story short, 15 minutes before the phone call, I was looking at an auction flyer, and one of these machines that the guy wanted was coming up at a sale the next day, two hours from where I live. I made the buy on behalf of the customer, met a guy there looking for a machine twice as big, put a deal together on that one, and between those deals, the money came in. I called the guy back in Jupiter, Fla., and said, “How did you find out about us?” He said, “A dealer in Chicago told me to call Scott Machinery if you want one of these pipe benders; they handle them all the time.” Well, he meant the Scott Machinery in Helena, Ala. I had never even seen one of these units, let alone sold one. We were then very convinced that God had just done something incredible.

Choosing to Give the Rest to the Lord

The story is not over. We get the money in, and it is the end of the year, and we are saying to ourselves, “If we give all this money, we have just given away all the profit for the year. If we do that, how are we ever going to build this business to a point where it ever could give $1 million?” I started wrestling with this by using logic, but logic gets you in trouble because it doesn’t always make God-sense. I realized that Satan was trying to keep me from fulfilling the goal, so I told my secretary, “Quick, write the check before I change my mind.” She did, and she sent it off. The next day we were closed for inventory. It’s the last day of the year, and about midway through the day we finished. We finished early, and I said, “Y’all are already here, do you want to just go ahead and work the rest of the afternoon?” “Yeah, okay.” So, we turned the “open” sign around, unlocked the door, started answering the phone, and we did $65,000 that day in business, $27,000 of which was profit. This was almost exactly the amount that we sent the day before to fulfill the commitment. “Wow,” we said, “God is huge.”

When Bill Bright had challenged us to start with a goal of $50,000, he said, “Watch what God does to your business. I bet you the next year, you will be doubling that.” Well, hey, we are on a cloud—God can do anything—so we are going for $100,000 this year. So, again, we worked all year long, and some weeks we made overhead and some weeks we didn’t. We got down to the end of the year, and there were no miracle deals. My secretary went in the office and camped out for a whole day, and she came back with all the payables and receivables. She said, “We’ve given $57,000, we are $43,000 shy, and that is almost exactly what we have in the account.” I said, “We can’t drain the account. We’ve got to have cash flow to run a business, right? That is economics 101. Let me go home to think about it and pray about it. I went home and told my wife the situation, and no sooner had I stopped with the last word than she said, “I am a signer on the account, and if you don’t write the check, I will.” So, that was God’s confirmation. The next day we went back and drained the account, and we sent the money in. I am here to tell you that each year subsequently, God has given more and more, and now we are in the habit of draining the account at the end of each year and sending the money.

I have a wife and four children, and we lived on $49,000 last year. Three weeks ago, we did our year-end giving, and my goal for last year was $175,000. My secretary called me in and said, “You want to know the numbers? We did it with $345 left to spare.” I just praised the Lord, and I called my wife and said, “We did it.” She said, “But I’ve got a house payment due next week. I’ve got these bills to pay.” I said, “Don’t worry about the bills, keep your eyes on the Lord; remember he parted the Red Sea already for us.” Sure enough, the following Monday He brought in some big deals and put money back in the account. So, we just keep trusting each step of the way. We basically have chosen a modest standard of living—we are not living poverty Christianity, but we are definitely living below what we could—and we are just choosing to give the rest to the Lord.

I am a missionary. I am using the skills and talents that God gave me to do business for the purpose of making money to fund the fulfillment of the Great Commission. My wife and I have experienced the power of God working through our lives, because we are hanging it out so far on the edge that if he doesn’t do it, we are going to crash. I am telling you, my faith has been strengthened; I am experiencing more joy and more fulfillment than I ever have before. It is the most liberating experience to truly have God running your business, because when the big deal falls apart—big deal! It is his deal when it comes through, praise the Lord, and then we get to go shopping.

We get a pile of money, and we go shopping—not down at the local mall; we go shopping around the world to see where we can use this money to impact the kingdom of God. We have had a wonderful blessing, and I praise the Lord for it. By the end of last year, we had reached $734,000, toward our goal of $1 million. Depending on what God does this year, we are either going to hit it by the end of this year or probably midway through the next year. That is where we are tracking, and we are just thrilled.

Or the great evangelist, John Wesley:

Illustration: John Wesley

Take John Wesley for example. He was one of the great evangelists of the 18th Century, born in 1703. In 1731 he began to limit his expenses so that he would have more money to give to the poor. In the first year his income was 30 pounds and he found he could live on 28 and so gave away two. In the second year his income doubled but he held his expenses even, and so he had 32 pounds to give away (a comfortable year’s income). In the third year his income jumped to 90 pounds and gave away 62 pounds. In his long life Wesley’s income advanced to as high as 1,400 pounds in a year. But he rarely let his expenses rise above 30 pounds. He said that he seldom had more than 100 pounds in his possession at a time.

This so baffled the English Tax Commissioners that they investigated him in 1776 insisting that for a man of his income he must have silver dishes that he was not paying excise tax on. He wrote them, “I have two silver spoons at London and two at Bristol. This is all the plate I have at present, and I shall not buy any more while so many round me want bread.”

When he died in 1791 at the age of 87 the only money mentioned in his will was the coins to be found in his pockets and dresser. Most of the 30,000 pounds he had earned in his life had been given away. He wrote,

“I cannot help leaving my books behind me whenever God calls me hence; but in every other respect, my own hands will be my executors.”

In other words, I will put a control on my spending myself, and I will go beyond the tithe for the sake of Christ and his kingdom. (Quotes from Mission Frontiers, Sept./Oct., 1994, No. 9-10, pp. 23-24)

If you really want to love God, don’t you think it is quite literally time to put your money where your mouth is? If you don’t have a lot of money now, be like the woman in the Bible who gave what she could. Or like John Rockefeller who said, “I never would have been able to tithe the first million dollars I ever made if I had not tithed my first salary, which was $1.50 per week.”

As the Bible says, where you spend your money, there your heart will be also.

Would I be a Christian if I hadn’t been raised in a Christian home?

•March 29, 2007 • 2 Comments

As I was thinking about some of my friends that I see on an every day basis that aren’t believers, it made me wonder how my life would be different if I had been given their upbringing. There are some people I know, one in particular jumps to my mind, who are smart and thoughtful, but the call of the Gospel is so alien to them that they won’t give it a chance.

As soon as I started thinking that, it made me very grateful for the upbringing I was blessed with. Sure, it could have been better, everyone’s could have, but it is what it is, and at least I grew up constantly knowing the Lord. I may not have really deepened that relationship until I went to college, but the foundation was paved for rapid growth early on in life. Anyone who has ever built a house knows that the foundation takes the longest time. After that, it seems like the building can be thrown up overnight. So on a side note, if you were raised in a Christian home, tell your parents “Thank you.”

I am stubborn. Very stubborn. And that scares me because if I hadn’t grown up having a sense of the Lord’s presence in my family, it would have been very hard I would imagine for me to be convinced of the Truth. I don’t like admitting I am wrong, and talk about admitting you are wrong on something that scale.

Would it have happened in the Lord’s time and in the Lord’s way? Well, of course. John 6:44 states that, “No one can come to Me unless the Father who sent Me draws him.” But I would have lost a lot of time, a lot of my life, living a lie if didn’t know Him.

Clearly God has ordained the parents each of us have, and I will admit that I don’t understand everything. Clearly God wants all to be saved and none to perish (1 Timothy 2:4 and 2 Peter 3:9). But looking back, if I could see the old me and I was lost, I sure wish that my friends wouldn’t let me just skate through life without knowing the truth. I would wish that they would fervently evangelize and pray for me without giving up or getting discouraged. Frankly, I would wish that they were more willing and able to share the Gospel to me than, in real life, I probably do to my friends…. I guess evangelism really does get back to the Golden Rule; treat others the way you wish they would treat you in the same situation.

Just a few random and scattered thoughts. Think about it.

Time to Fight Back – Pray

•March 25, 2007 • 3 Comments

So, for those who stop by regularly, you are probably well aware of my soapbox with prayer. But I’m going to keep talking about it until people (including myself) seem to get it. God keeps revealing in more ways how vital prayer is to me and what do we say:

Boring, Tedious, Nothing Happens, Passive, Inconsequential, etc. Sound familiar?

Even if you may not say it, examine your own prayer life. Do you “say” it by the way that you pray, or maybe, lack there of? Heck, prayer is a soapbox for me… and my prayer life shows that even I just don’t get it… a lot.

Some may find my title of this post to be an oxymoron. I did that to stand out. I did that because it is true.

Read Ephesians 6:12:

For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.

What is prayer? It is SPIRITUAL! Brothers and sisters, there is a spiritual fight going on around us. And when we pray, really the one spiritual thing we can commit to that fight, we make a difference.

So often in the church, the glory goes to the missionaries that go around the world. They definitely should be commended. But if they didn’t have active and passionate prayer supporting them, they would probably fail. Nearly every decision made by the “heroes of the faith” in the Bible was preceded by prayer. The person who stays in the room with the door closed and falls on their face and prays… that person is a HERO and a WARRIOR.

If we really harness that. If we really believe to our core that prayer matters, that it is exciting, that it makes a difference… then, maybe then, His people will actually pray. The Bible says that with faith the size of a mustard seed that you could move a mountain. I believe Jesus literally meant that. I really do. So what do you think would happen if the entire CHURCH fervently prayed for the lost, fervently prayed for missions, fervently prayed for spiritual growth, fervently prayed….

I think the world could change.

I promise… to no longer promise…

•March 21, 2007 • Leave a Comment

As a kid, I used to love (and still do largely) any kind of movie with martial arts, especially anything involving sword fights. That’s why growing up, I loved movies like The Three Musketeers, Zorro, and one of my favorite movies (despite my disdain for Tom Cruise), The Last Samurai. In fact, I always used to wish I had grown up in a time when I could have fought in incredible fights like the Samurai.

As a result, I sometimes still read about the Samurai and things like that in my free time. Today I learned something new. For all the things that a Samurai did, there was one thing a samurai would never do: make a promise. As part of their honor, their word truly was their bond, and if they said it, they didn’t need to promise for someone to know that it would happen.

I started thinking about protecting our honor, our integrity, and the sanctity of God and the Church by the way of keeping our words and was reminded of Christ’s teaching on the matter.

Matthew 5:37 states, “Let your ‘Yes’ mean ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No’ mean ‘No.’ Anything more is from the evil one.” James 5:12 further states, “Above all, my brothers, do not swear—not by heaven or by earth or by anything else. Let your ‘Yes’ be yes, and your ‘No,’ no, or you will be condemned.”

Now growing up, I heard numerous sermons and messages on why you shouldn’t cuss or swear, which used those verses as foundations of their messages. And while I think that is a part of it, I think it’s a lot bigger than, “Don’t cuss.” If Jesus had said that today, I think He may have said something like, “If you say something, mean it.”

How much of our lives do we say we will do something that we never do? How often have you told someone you would pray for them, help them, call them, and not done so? We can, and have, come up with a wide array of excuses that seem to justify these lapses in keeping our word as okay, but is it really? If you were going on a date and your date stood you up and later said that something came up and wanted to try again, would you? Maybe once. But if they did it a second or third time, would you? I doubt it. Because they lose all credibility with you.

We live in a fallen word, and our credibility and integrity are a few of the things that we still can use to our advantage to set us apart (which is what sanctification even means), so we need to protect them. Proverbs 22:1 states, “A good name is more desirable than great riches; to be esteemed is better than silver or gold.”

So I’m going to try to make a vow. I will try to no longer promise because I will try to no longer have to. Because if I really want the Lord to use me in great ways in my life, I need people to believe the words coming out of my mouth when the Spirit says them.

Warning Warning: The Pot is Boiling

•March 13, 2007 • 3 Comments

I’m sure we’ve all heard the story about a frog being boiled alive in a pot before, but just in case, let me repeat it.

The legend says that if you place a frog in boiling water, it will jump out. However, if you put it in cold water and gradually turn up the heat, the frog will not attempt to jump out of the pot. The reason is that as the frog is cold blooded, it’s body adjusts to it’s surrounding environment and it will simply “allow” itself to boil to death.

The same thing happens to people with carbon monoxide and radiation levels. Even though we may not notice them increasing and accumulating, damage is still being done, and by the time we realize anything, it may be too late.

Well, friends, I’ve come to tell you something that the Lord has recently reminded me: the waters of this world are indeed boiling. And we too often seem to be none the wiser.

I’ve noticed it in my own life recently. Take bad language in movies. When I was a teenager and saw a movie with really bad language (Good Will Hunting), I couldn’t enjoy it and nearly walked out. It was literally painful to watch. I saw it again recently and enjoyed it so much that I bought it. I saw the movie, The Departed, and while the language bothered me, I didn’t think about walking out. I’m almost positive I would have 5 years ago. What happened?

It may be language for you or other sins in your lives, but I think that anyone honest to oneself would admit that we are either actively fighting or passively allowing this world to slowly but surely make us tolerate sin, in some form or fashion. Proverbs said it best, “Bad company corrupts good character.” These days, this world is some very bad company.

Every day, every moment, every choice that we make can be the first step that leads us down a slippery slope that we might never recover from or only do so as damaged goods.

Spurgeon writes the following:

“Beware of light thoughts of sin. At the time of conversion, the conscience is so tender that we are afraid of the slightest sin. Young converts have a holy timidity, a godly fear, lest they should offend God. But very soon the fine bloom on these firm ripe fruits is removed by the rough handling of the surrounding world. It is sadly true that even a Christian may grow so callous that the sin which once startled him does not alarm him in the least…. So we excuse sin; we throw a cloak over it; we call it by dainty names. Take heed lest you fall little by little. Sin, a little thing? Is it not a poison? It girded the Redeemer’s head with thorns and pierced His heart! If you could weigh the least sin in the scales of eternity, you would fly from it as from a serpent and abhor the least appearance of evil. Look on all sin as that which crucified the Savior.

The pot is boiling, and we are all on a slippery slope. So weigh your actions and very thoughts in the sands of eternity to not set yourself on a course for destruction. Even the best of us can be stripped bare, and no one is safe if we depart from Christ. No one. For one last cautionary tale, just remember the life of Charles Templeton. He had everything going for him.

Fueled by concern about the spiritual state of post-Depression youth, mass evangelism exploded onto the American scene in the 1940s. Thousands of young servicemen and civilians streamed to arenas to see the programs, which included preaching, music, and various acts.

One of the leaders in this movement was a young man from Canada, Charles Templeton, born in 1915. He was generally acknowledged to be the most versatile of the new young evangelists. Templeton soon rose to prominence, even surpassing another dynamic young preacher, Billy Graham. In 1946, he was listed among those best used of God by the National Association of Evangelicals.

And yet, he began to doubt the authority and truth of The Word in one small regard: the story of creation in Genesis.

In a conversation with Billy Graham concerning Templeton’s desire to attend Princeton Theological Seminary, Templeton stated:

‘But, Billy, it’s simply not possible any longer to believe, for instance, the biblical account of creation. The world wasn’t created over a period of days a few thousand years ago; it has evolved over millions of years. It’s not a matter of speculation; it’s demonstrable fact.’

Templeton warned Graham that it was ‘intellectual suicide’ to not question the Bible and to go on preaching God’s Word as authoritative.

Look where it lead him.

Templeton’s struggles affected others, too. As Templeton wrestled with the ‘demonstrable fact’ of evolution which made it impossible for him to believe ‘the biblical account of creation’,10 he sought out his close friend, Billy Graham. This caused Graham as well to grapple with tough questions that shook the very roots of the faith he professed and preached daily — namely, ‘was the Bible completely true?’11

With ‘science’ pulling Templeton one way and the Bible seemingly pulling him in an altogether different direction, he resigned from his position with the National Council of Churches and took over the Department of Evangelism of the Presbyterian Church USA. At the same time, he hosted a CBS TV series, called Look Up and Live.

Finally, however, the doubts about everything he stood for became too great and he decided to leave the ministry.

In his autobiography, Farewell to God, Charles Templeton lists his ‘reasons for rejecting the Christian faith’. Most of these relate to the origins issue and thus the accuracy of the book of beginnings — Genesis.

Charles Darwin started out in training to be an Anglican Minister. Get the point?

BE CAREFUL. The water is boiling. It’s time to get out and get to God while we still can.

It’s Time to Stop Wasting Our Time

•March 3, 2007 • 5 Comments

What are some of the lies I tell myself? “I’ll read my Bible right after I get this one thing done.” “I’ll do my quiet time later.” “I’ll have some great prayer time before bed tonight.” And what, of course, seems to inevitably happen? Something comes up. It always does. I heard the quote that “Life is what happens when you are making plans.” There is a lot of truth to that. If we spend our life waiting for the time to be right to do what we ought to be doing with our time in the first place, we will rarely, if ever, accomplish our true purpose in life: to know and follow hard after Christ.

In an organization that I am a part of, I see it first hand all the time. “I don’t have time to come to the prayer meeting 30 minutes before the normal meeting.” “I don’t have time to hang out with other members afterwards.” “I don’t have time to do anything other than show up, punch my ticket, and get out.” And to an extent, I feel hypocritical even saying this because for a lot of college, including times I’ve been an officer in the organization, I’ve said the same thing.

But I’ve come to the conclusion that all of us, including myself, look at the whole issue of time wrong. We try to justify our ability to spend time in prayer, go to Church read the Bible. We see if we can squeeze these into our busy days. What we need to do is justify why we don’t have time to spend with the Creator of the Universe. And tell me this, you (and I) can try to rationalize it all we want, but what, let me ask, could ever be more important that that?

Rather than finding time of our day to read our Bible, commune with others in the Church, etc, we need to make that our day. And work everything else around it.

Obviously, I think most of us would agree, but, I’ll admit, it is easier said than done. It takes a radical change in our thinking, our attitudes, and our lifestyles. But maybe that is exactly what it takes. A radical change.

Look at Matthew 18:9: “And if your eye causes you to sin, gouge it out and throw it away. It is better for you to enter life with one eye than to have two eyes and be thrown into the fire of hell.” Sounds pretty radical to me. Look at Luke 14:26, “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters—yes, even his own life—he cannot be my disciple.” Get the point. We are called to live out our very faith radically. In Revelation, Jesus says he would rather us be hot or cold: not lukewarm.

The people in the early Church, see Acts, met every day. And these were businessman, homemakers, the elderly, etc. But it was important; so they were there. Because God is what it is all about.

So let’s stop talking about what we’re going to do or should be doing. Let’s do it. It’s time to stop talking the talk if we’re not walking the walk. We won’t be perfect, we will mess up. But we need to start living the life we were called to lead and we need to start living it now. An ancient Chinese Proverb states that, “The journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step.” So does our commitment to life a life totally dedicated to Christ.

 
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