Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Generous Sowing, Generous Reaping?

Trust and Obey

      Trust and Obey

           Trust and obey, for there's no other way
            to be happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey.

One of the Apostle Paul’s major projects was collecting a large donation to help poverty stricken believers in Jerusalem.  The major passage on this is 2 Corinthians 8-9.  Bible teacher Warren Wiersbe says, “These two chapters present giving as a Christian grace, a blessing, not as a legal obligation that burdens people.  If giving is difficult for a Christian, then there is something wrong with his heart!”  

Giving is difficult for me because I don’t know God well enough.  And what I do know I tend to forget.  Because I don’t know God very well I don’t trust him very much.  The more I know him the more I trust him.  The more I trust him the more I obey.  I don’t obey God so he’ll love me.  I obey him because He loves me.  I don’t trust God so he will accept me.  I trust him because he’s accepted me.   Knowing and trusting God makes it less difficult for me to give.

Have you learned to trust God?  What stories do you have of God’s faithfulness?  Here’s one of mine.

We lived in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada from 1990-1995.  Kathleen’s from Miami, FL and I’m from Marietta, GA so our first winter there on the shore of Lake Huron was rough.  Winters are MILD in the South.  No so in Canada.  It wasn’t the Yukon or Siberia but it sure felt like it!

I love being outside and have an adventurous spirit so I learned how to deal with the cold.  One afternoon  that first winter my son and I went to Sarnia Bay.  It was completely frozen over so naturally we wanted to explore the ice.  I knew nothing about ice so I didn’t trust it.  The ice was about four feet below a concrete retaining wall.  We climbed down and eased onto the ice expecting to fall through at any moment.  We had a death grip on the top of the wall as we cautiously inched our way along.  It felt like we were outside the 40th floor of a skyscraper.   We cringed and froze at every creak and crack.  Finally we’d had enough excitement for one day and made our way back.

We returned the next day to let the rest of the family see the frozen bay and brag about our exploit.
I couldn’t believe it!  Cars everywhere.  On the ice!  They were getting ready for a motorcycle race.  On the ice!  When I asked a guy about it he laughed and said, “Yeah that ice is a foot thick!”

I laughed at my undue caution, timidity and fear the previous day and strolled out onto the ice like I was walking down my driveway to get the mail.  No fear.  I knew it would support me.

In 2 Corinthians 9:8-11 Paul wrote, “God is able to make all grace abound to you, so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times, you may abound in every good work… you will be enriched in every way to be generous in every way…”  God’s grace, like the Sarnia Bay ice, is omnipotently able to support me.  The difficulty I have in trusting Him comes from my inadequate knowledge of his faithfulness.  When I remember God’s faithfulness I can trust and obey with a little less fear and trepidation.

-John Ottley
Click here to listen to the entire message messing with your money, giving of your time and yourself.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Is Everyone Going To Heaven?

Election: How do sinners escape their sin?


Ephesians 1:3-6

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, even as he chose us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and blameless before him. In love he predestined us for adoption as sons through Jesus Christ, according to the purpose of his will,to the praise of his glorious grace, with which he has blessed us in the Beloved. 

Is God glad you chose him? 
You may have heard the description of a corridor of time and God looking down it seeing sinners choose him, and therefore God choosing them on the basis of being chosen by sinners. I grew up my whole life believing that and hearing that, and I can tell you just from my own study, that it seems to me by what we read in Ephesians 1, that's hardly the picture the Bible paints.  

My wife and I were flying back from Chicago on a pedal-jumper airplane, you know, just everyone being crammed into a tube in the sky.  Just before take off, I leaned over and asked Tammy, "Is there a baby on the plane?!?" She said, "What do you mea....OHHH...", and from there the smell just intensified.  I have a very weak sensitivity for such things, and my gag reflex was so intense people around me thought my heart was stopping.  Meanwhile, I'm shooting my glance around between coughs and chokes trying to find the culprit letting them know that I am gaging in utter revulsion.  Folks, that's more like God's view down the corridor!  If you believe what the Bible says about God and his holiness, that he dwells in unapproachable light, that his eyes are too holy to look upon sin, that if you start with God's nature and see what he sees when he looks at sin, if you see what Christ sees when he looks into the cup of God's wrath and has to drink it down in it's fullness, it's REVULSION.  
Because of God's holy nature, not only is he utterly, perfectly, and infinitely, revolted by sin but because of his righteousness and justice he has no choice in the matter except to exact punishment.  

Can God do anything? No.  Can God make a rock so big even he can't pick it up?  No.  Can he let sin go unpunished?  No.  He is limited only by his own excellencies and they will not let him NOT be revolted by sin.

I would think it would cease to be an amazing grace if God were at our mercy to execute his own plan.  Grace will not be hijacked.

-Jim Umlauf

To listen and wrestle for yourself this challenging passage in scripture, click here