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Good Friday

Good Friday is the day that many people understand to be the day that Christ was crucified and died for people of a sinful fallen world, people like you and me, people who have gone before us and for all who will come after us.

For the believers, Good Friday can be seen as a bad day along the way to a life of eternally great days.  Good Friday cannot really be understood for its goodness unless you keep it in context of the part of the journey of life it represents.  Our week consists of seven days – what happens on Thursday alone cannot by itself define your week because your Fridays will always come; and your Fridays can bring good from the things that happen on the Thursdays before.  We cannot have a week unless we have Sunday through Saturday.

So perhaps we ought to think of and view Good Friday in that way.  We cannot have eternal life unless we had a Good Friday.  By itself, there was nothing good about Jesus being crucified and dying on a cross like any criminal in His time.  But thank God that He created us in His image.  When He breathed into us the breadth of Life, He made us living souls who could enjoy life eternal just as He is.  We are not an event that lives and dies and is forgotten; we are part of God’s dream to have someone who will choose to live, die, and live again with Him forever in eternity.

For me, what makes Good Friday good is not just what happened on that day; crucifixion is really a bad way to die.  But Good Friday is good because God was smart enough to make a way for each of us to have eternal life, a way that the devil cannot steal away from us.  He made a way for each of us to be winners, and He made a loser of the devil.

God revealed the secret to eternal life right before satan on a day like Good Friday but satan is too focused on himself to see it.  On Good Friday, God placed into our hearts the secret to living with Him in eternity.  He placed into our hearts the secret to salvation.  And because He placed this right into our hearts, satan can’t find it there because he looks at all the other stuff he has and all the other stuff he tries to entice us to want, hoping he will find our secret.  But he cannot look into and take from our hearts what God placed there on a day like Good Friday.   You see, if you are a believer, Jesus lives now in your heart, and satan doesn’t want to be anywhere around the Lord.

Enjoy your day today, for on a day like this God made a way for you to Live a Delivered Life.  And that indeed makes it a Good Friday.  Live A Delivered Life.  Love you. 

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Walls That Must Fall

Scripture tells us that long ago when the Israelites were about to cross the Jordan River and enter the promised land, they had to first defeat the people who lived in the city of Jericho.  After 40 years of hardship in the desert, after over 400 years in slavery in Egypt, I imagine the people wondered if anything would ever come easy for them.  Life had been tough for them, and it seemed that it was about to get a bit tougher.  Or was it?  

Jericho was positioned along the river and fortified by walls to give it a strong defense against an enemy.  In Joshua 6:1-2 we read, “Now Jericho was securely shut up because of the children of Israel; none went out, and none came in.  And the Lord said to Joshua:  See, I have given Jericho into your hand, its king, and the mighty men of valor.”

Each of us need to have some of the qualities that made Joshua the man God choose to lead His people after the death of Moses.  Joshua had walked with Moses and had been his servant most all his life.  He had witnessed firsthand many of the miracles God had worked on behalf of the people.  But there are several things about Joshua that made him the right person to lead the people to conquer the Promised Land.  Everywhere Joshua would go, walls would fall around his enemies.  Joshua had no failures in his life.  So why is this so?  Well, for every external enemy he saw, Joshua conquered within himself an internal wall that would have kept him from the successes God had planned for him and the Israelites.

First, Joshua had the character to see what God saw.  For every problem he had seen and faced, Joshua saw things the way God saw things.  There was never a problem or circumstance that was too big for God to handle.  When people saw the Egyptians as oppressors, Joshua saw them as a path to God’s deliverance.  Joshua did not focus on what seemed like the problem, he focused on the surety of the Problem Solver.  Joshua wasn’t afraid of what he saw or what he faced; he was afraid of what he might miss if he didn’t focus on the strong hand of God.  Joshua broke down the walls of fear and hopelessness within himself that would have kept him from seeing the never forsaken presence and favor of God.

If you have something that has beset you for a time and you cannot break down its walls, perhaps it is because you are looking more at your circumstance than at you and your God.  If you cannot find something within in you and about you that you must overcome, you will make it difficult to overcome the things that go against you.  God’s favor and power comes to us more directly and more easily when we come to Him with our needs to overcome our own selves.

Joshua also had the character to believe what was going to be right and never what could go wrong.  I guess I should say Joshua was a positive-minded person who saw the world God created and promised to His people for all its good.  Joshua saw the Red Sea as the death of the Egyptians who pursued the Israelites while the Israelites saw it as a wall they could not overcome.  They saw it as a place where things were about to go wrong for them.  They were just as-good-as-dead, so they complained and made just as-good-as-dead decisions.  Joshua, on the other hand, saw the Red Sea as a pathway to their new life, so he made new life decisions.  He was thinking about his new home when the Israelites were thinking about going back to their old lives of bondage to save themselves from death.

We must learn to see life with God more than circumstances without Him.  To do this we must learn to break down our walls of negative thinking and as-good-as-dead living.  It doesn’t matter what we face, it doesn’t matter what we have done, it doesn’t matter what others say or believe about us; those walls will fall in us when we learn to believe God when He says He will never leave us nor forsake us.  We may not always see the way God will do things, but we must break down the walls inside us that say we cannot stand and wait on God.  If you want to overcome the mess that is round about you, learn to overcome the wall of a mess within you that keeps you from God’s favor and power.

Finally, Joshua also had the character of strong courage.  But this is not the courage to fight and defeat the enemy before him.  This is the courage to fight and defeat the enemy within oneself.  What is this enemy you ask?  The one who would make you think that you can handle some of your problems on your own.  Joshua was challenged by God Himself to be strong and courageous so he could observe and do according to all that God commanded him to do.  Joshua found this easy to do.  But today you and I find it hard to do what God wants us to do because we have become the type of people who want to bring justice to everyone who has ever done a single thing wrong towards us.

Favor does not come more easily to us because of what we say or do.  Favor comes more for the way we live.  If you want to walk in the favor and power of God, you must do is to learn to shut your mouth and learn to walk the way God would walk.  God can do His own talking.  But if we are going to be instruments of His voice, we must learn to overcome the walls of our own lips and desires.  God can do more in your life when you live in such a way that God speaks more for you than you do for yourself.  When you are your own protector, when you are your own judge, when you are your own avenger, when you use God to do these things for you, then you are living your way rather than His way.  Joshua lived in a way that the acts of God were manifested through him and the nature of God was glorified by him.

So, what about you and me?  Do we have the character to break down the walls in our lives that keep us from seeing things as God sees them?  Do we have the character to break down the walls in our lives?  Do we have the character to see life with Him and what will go right for us more than what could go wrong for us?  Do we have the character to break down the walls in our lives that keep us from living strong and courageously fighting the enemy that is within us before we take on the enemy that is before us? 

Seven days Joshua led the Israelites to walk around the city of Jericho before the walls of the city fell and the people there were conquered.  If you have the character to walk around your life even one time, you will find walls to break down, walls surrounding what keeps you from living a conquered life.  Then the favor of God will find a place to rest on you.  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Where Do You Live?

A Roman Centurion came to Jesus, pleading with Him, saying, “Lord, my servant is lying at home paralyzed, dreadfully tormented.”  And Jesus responded, “I will come and heal him.”  The centurion answered this by saying, “Lord, I am not worthy that you should come under my roof.  But only speak a word and my servant will be healed.” You can find this account Matthew chapter 8.

We must be careful about where we live.  We give more thought to that in a carnal sense than we do in a spiritual sense, but it shouldn’t be that way.  Having a relationship with the Lord isn’t like having a Facebook friend who is helping you find a home to buy.  When we say we know Him or that He knows us, it is expected that our hearts would become His home.  What would it be like if Jesus lived with you, but He could not always come home to you?  Scripture encourages us to be mindful of where we live.  We ought to keep our hearts as a place He would gladly call His home.  Scripture encourages us in this way in the book of Jude when in verse 21 it says, “Keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life”.  What does it mean to keep in the Love of God?

There are several amazing things about the incident Jesus had with the centurion that can help us see just what it means to live in the Love of God.  First, since a centurion was a key leader in the Roman Army, he was a gentile.  But here is what is amazing about that: Jesus can be found wherever faith can be found.  The centurion, though he didn’t know or see the Lord the way the Jews did, knew that there was something special and divine about Jesus.  The centurion was usually served by others, but he showed himself to be a man who, without knowing Him directly, served the Lord.   When you learn to live in faith, you will learn to live in the Love of God.  Living in faith simply means that, whether you have much or whether you have little, you live under the knowledge that Someone greater than you is provider of all things.  If you want to live in the Love of God, learn to live in faith towards God.

If that is amazing and surprising to you, consider this.  The centurion was a gentile who had a natural sense of caring for someone that he didn’t need to care for at all.  His servant was certainly not a Roman, yet he loved him as a person which is why he sought Jesus’ help.  The centurion had an address in Rome, but he abided in the Love of God because he knew that he was blessed when he lived in Love.  We can find it easy to love those like us.  We can find it easy to love those who don’t need much from us, but it is amazing that the love of God makes it easy for us to be love to all those who we come into contact with.  If you want to live in the Love of God, love God and love people with the love which God loves you.

There it still more amazing stuff here.  Clearly, the centurion was highly regarded by the Jewish community, and he was a generous and very successful citizen of Rome.  But he was still a gentile.  Even with all his status and position, his humility was even greater.  The centurion had the sense to know that no amount of pride is greater than a small dose of humility; no amount of status is greater than the small status of a humble person; no amount of authority is greater than the position of being in humble authority to care for others.  The centurion showed us how to live in humble submission to the Love of God.  If you want to learn to live in the Love of God you must learn to live in humble sufficiency with the things that you have, wanting nothing more save for the needs of those you know and love.  The Love of God is powerful, and it is made even more so when it is handled by someone who is humbly powerful and still concerned for the welfare of others.  

The Love of God can do what authority cannot do: it can move things with just a word.  The Love of God can heal what medicine cannot heal: it can mend broken hearts.  The Love of God can restore what a law cannot restore: it can forgive the unforgivable.  The Love of God can find what all your searching cannot find: it can reveal your whereabouts.  The Love of God can cover what you have never been able to cover: it can put a lid on the most impossible things.  The Love of God can bring life to what has died right before you: it can help you live though the loss of the thing most precious to you.

If you want to live in the Love of God, you must learn to do what this centurion did.  Go out of your way to live as a lessor being, but live for something and Someone greater than you.  You may not be worthy on you own to entertain Jesus in your home.  But when you live in the Love of God, you make your heart Christ’s home.  And when you do this, you can always invite anyone over because in His home there is a place for us all.  Are you living in His Love with your love?  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Stop Telling God What To Do

My message today is on Prodigal Living – Trying to Tell God What To Do.  This is the third message in this series on the Prodigal Life.  My scripture reference is again taken from Luke 15: 11-32.  Today’s message will focus on helping us recognize when we try to tell God what to do.

Starting with Luke 15:30, scripture tells us, “But as soon as this son of yours came, who has devoured your livelihood with harlots, you killed the fatted calf for him!”  These are the words of the older son speaking to his father about celebrating the return of the younger son—his brother.  The older brother was angry, and here he is letting his father know as much.  Remember, prodigal living is a way of living and here the older son is saying, “Father your way is not the right way.”  He had it all wrong.  In fact, the older brother’s way was not the right way.  Let’s see why.

Many of us can find good reasons to agree with the older brother.  The younger brother squandered away his father’s livelihood.  That much is true; there are facts to support that.  But where this brother goes prodigal is the belief that his father should have done something different than what he did by celebrating.  He is judging his brother’s action and his father’s response against his own standard of right and wrong.  He is judging his father’s response for what he thinks it should be.  Judging is when we decide what should happen without an objective standard against which to base our belief; instead, we use our feelings.  But just the same, the father is free to use his own feelings and or his own standards for how he responds to the younger brother.  

Sadly, I must admit I have been guilty of this type living myself.  It’s an easy thing for us to do, and it’s a difficult thing for us to see.  We become offended when someone may appear to be let off the hook for something they do to us or to someone else.  We become angry when it appears someone escapes consequences for some behaviors that to us are offensive and warrant discipline, punishment, or some type of corrective action.  We become bitter because we believe everyone should pay a price for the things they do wrong, even when those wrongs may not directly impact us personally.

In many ways we have become a society of sideline judges, people who are angry, easily offended, and bitter, who try to police the wrong behaviors of others by whatever means we can.  Social media has emboldened this type of thinking, pushing us to demand consequences for people around issues that we have no real knowledge of the facts or circumstances.  Jesus warned us long ago against this type of social behavior when He said to a crowd that challenged Him about the law regarding adultery, “He who is without sin among you, throw the first stone at her.”  Their judging nature foreshadowed our Facebook-like culture in which we feel compelled to comment on the comments of people we don’t know about issues we don’t know.  

Jesus was saying don’t put yourself higher than the faults and failures you find or see in others.   We are not made better or stronger by highlighting the faults of others.  Tearing down others to their lowest only makes us look lower.  Elevating ourselves above the faults of others only reveals different faults in us.  In all this, we essentially are telling God what to do and how He should do things.  When this is the way we live, we are saying we want our ways to be His ways.  

If this resonates with you, there are three things you can do to make certain you do not come to live the prodigal life of telling God what to do.  First, learn to be merciful toward others; one day you will certainly need mercy yourself.  Learn to be forgiving towards others—not condoning but forgiving; one day you will need the forgiveness of someone else.  And learn to give and live with grace; one day you will need God’s grace and perhaps the grace of someone else.   

It was right that the father celebrated the return of his younger son.  His son was dead, but then alive; he was lost, but now he was found.  When we stop trying to tell God what He should do, we could learn to see that God does everything with Love, with Grace, with Mercy and with Forgiveness.  We might get more of our prayers answered, we might hear more of God’s voice, and we might learn more of His ways.

Yes, I know you have probably heard someone say there is a consequence for everything we do.  If people are not held accountable, if there is no punishment or corrective actions for the things they do, then they are likely to repeat those things.  Or worse, we may hold that no one should get away with doing something wrong when another person—perhaps someone less privileged—pays a price for doing the same thing.  But that type thinking sounds like it is something that could come from a bitter, unmerciful, unforgiving, and judging person.

There is a great example of this type of prodigal thought in the book of Jonah.  You probably know the story of Jonah and how he was swallowed up by a great fish.  This happened because Jonah refused to obey God’s command to go to the city of Nineveh to warn the people there of their sinful lifestyle.  Jonah judged that God would not likely punish the people for their behaviors, but rather He would give them grace and mercy.  Jonah thought that the people should be made to suffer consequences for their sinful ways.  He was unmerciful, unforgiving, bitter, and judging.  So instead of going to Nineveh, he went in the opposite direction.  Jonah was trying to tell God what to do.  The facts are that the people of Nineveh came to their senses.  They stepped out of their sinful lifestyle and returned to be a Certain people in the heart of God.  And God relented and refrained from bringing the disaster He had said He would bring upon the people.  Why did He do this?  Because the people were dead, but through their change of heart they became alive again; they were lost, but then they were found.  God was loving, and He showed mercy and grace toward the people.

Please don’t misunderstand what I am saying.  We must learn to be careful that we don’t live by the default that everyone will have to pay something for the wrongs they do, especially when those people wrong us. Instead, try to live obediently before the Lord in all that you are and be very careful to keep yourself from being the instrument that brings judgement to anyone because you could easily get that judgment wrong.  I think it is a good idea to leave judging to the Lord.  It is easier for me to work on listening to Him and to focus on living before others in a way that shows how the Word of God has worked to transform me.  Perhaps it would be better for us all that we didn’t propose to do God’s work, and that instead we try to show others that His work has been performed in our lives.

Let’s not be like Jonah.  God knows how to be God better than we can tell Him to be.  Let’s not be like that older son who became angry because his brother was given love and grace and mercy.  The scripture says that the father told his oldest son that he was always with his father and that all that he had was his son’s.  Do you know what that means?  Even though the younger son had squandered away his father’s wealth, the dad was still saying to the older son, I still have enough for your needs and that is always yours because you are always with me.  Listen, God has enough love to love you as if you are the only person to be loved; He has enough mercy to show toward you that you will never need more mercy from Him; He has enough grace that your cup of grace will always overflow; and He has enough forgiveness to take you from hell to heaven.  All of this is yours when you stop telling Him how to be your God and you start learning how to be a better child of His. Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Come to Your Senses

My message today is on Prodigal Living – Coming to Your Senses Again.  This is the second message in this series on the Prodigal Life.  My scripture reference is Luke 15:11-32.  Today’s message will focus on getting and keeping our lives on the right path.

Starting with Luke 15:16-21, scripture tells us: “And he would gladly have filled his stomach with the pods that the pigs ate, and no one gave him anything.  But when he came to himself, he said, ‘How many of my father’s hired servants have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger!’”  So here is the situation.  The youngest son had squandered away his inheritance on wasteful prodigal living.  When he had nothing remaining from what he had, he found work feeding the pigs of one of the people of the land to which he had traveled.  And he was so hungry that he wanted to eat the pigs’ food.  Where does he go from here?

How is it that this young man found himself in such a dire condition of need?  Well, the short answer is sin.  I don’t mean the act of sin, though that happened.  I mean giving in to the thinking, desires, and leading of a sinful nature, the nature that is present in each of us.  The young man left a sound way of thinking and living with his father and followed the appeal of an indulging, self-gratifying way of thinking and living on his own.  He left good sense and followed nonsense.  With this, he found himself working in a pigpen, feeding the pigs, and he found himself hungry enough to want to eat the pigs’ food.  How is that for good thinking?

Now, some of you are probably saying that not all challenging things we experience are the fault of our poor thinking.  And that is true.  But the scripture is not talking about the exceptions here.  It is talking to us about those who trade sensible thinking for nonsense.  Our lives will follow hard after our thinking.  God did not create either of us to live, work and play with the pigs.  To even say we are better than that is to give more value to pigs than they deserve.  We leave what makes sense because we choose to follow what makes no sense.  We can only get back to our right minds when we recognize that we are in the wrong mind and place.  A pigpen is meant for the pigs, and pig food is meant for the pigs.  You are a child of God.  You have a place in the heart and home of the Lord.  He doesn’t ask you to share that with the swine.

This young man did two things that showed us he had come to his right mind.  First, he realized the gravity of his predicament; things were bad, and they were heading to a worse place for him.  Jesus tells the faithful believer that in His Father’s house there are many mansions, and that He goes to the Father to prepare a place for us.  This young man came to realize he could not find a mansion in the place the pigs lived.  He needed to return to a home meant for a son.  Often, we are unable to break free of the senseless way we live because we keep trying to make good sense of poor thinking.  We should be turning away from the thinking that changed the course of our lives.  The thinking that gets us into the grips of prodigal living will keep us there.  That thinking cannot be used to free us.

The young man also decided to get back to the place where he went off track.  Sometimes this can be a difficult thing for us.  Prodigal and sinful living often comes with consequences that cannot be easily changed.  If you have wasted all you had, you cannot get that back again.  What you had is gone; what you have now is what you have now.  But we can always return to the point of thinking that got us to where we are, stepping out from there again with sound thinking.  This is what the son did when he said, “I will arise and go to my father and say to him, ‘Father I have sinned against heaven and before you and I am no longer worthy to be called your son.’”  As I look back on my own life, I realize that often I could not change my circumstances because I was unwilling to go back and change my thinking.  I realize that God is a wonderful and great God capable of anything.  But because I often refused to change my thinking about my situation, I made it more difficult for Him to step in and to change my life.  If things are not changing for you perhaps it could be that you are not willing to change your thinking about you and your relationship with the Lord.

This young man could not go back and change what had happened to him.  And his blessing was to come to his senses and to see clearly once again what he should do to change his course.  We often thank the Lord for blessings of life that we receive of Him.  And this is rightly so.  We are to always enter His courts with thanksgiving.  But we often miss something as valuable and life-changing to us as the blessing we receive.  That is the blessing of the blessing.  This young man did not miss laying hold of the blessing of his blessing.  The blessing changes your immediate circumstance, but the blessing of the blessing changes your future circumstances.  Prodigal living tries to take something from us and leave us with no hope of a future that is without the mark of a past.  But the blessing of the blessing is the way the Lord changes your past by helping you come to live a future that is beyond amazing.  Don’t miss the power of what I’m saying here.  When you come back to your senses with the Lord, He helps you learn how to live in the full favor of the blessing of your blessings.

Still, some of you may be saying, “But you don’t know what I’ve done.  You don’t know how bad I’ve been.  You don’t know how unforgiving the people are that I’ve hurt.  I can’t possibly change the things I’ve done by changing my thinking.”   I say to that you are partially correct.  You may not be able to change anything on your own, but with God’s help much can be changed.  Prodigal living is carnal living.  Carnal living makes you pay a lot more for what it gives you; and what is gives you has no real value in relation to the value of what you use to buy it.  You may not be able change the carnal circumstances you face, but you can change the Spiritual truth on which your circumstances stand.  So, to come to your senses you must be ready to lose the mind that is leading so that you can gain the mind of the Spirit of God.  He will teach you to live in the Spirit and to take your best shot at hitting the target that will change your life forever.  And even when you know your aim is just off and is sure to miss the bullseye, the Spirit asks you to trust Him and release your shot anyway.  You see, when you trust Him enough to shoot at something you know you are likely to miss on your own, He steps in.   And after you have done what He asks and let go of your best shot, and He moves the target into the line of fire of your best shot.  Instead of you hitting the target based solely on your aim, He moves the target into the path of your shot.  Only a great and mighty God can do this!

When we come to our senses, we come to a place of dependence on and guidance of the Spirit of God.  We stop relying on our carnal mind and senses to guide how we live, and we start living more under the leading of God’s Spirit.   Prodigal living says to us to life is short so we must enjoy it while we can.  And that is true; life is short.  Wasteful living will lead you to waste away your life in just a short while.  Prodigal living takes us off track from where we should be.  But hope is always with us when we are willing to come to our senses and let God lead us to where we are unwilling to go.  God wants to do this for us because it is in those places we are unwilling to go and to stay that we can live the abundant life God has promised to us.  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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A Certain Person

My message today is about being a Certain Person.  My scripture reference is Luke 15: 11-32.  Today’s message will be the first of what will be three messages from this passage of scripture that we typically know as the prodigal son or lost son or the prodigal father.

In Luke 15:11, Jesus says, “Then He said:  A certain man had two sons”.  Right away we should see something special about this man and this father.  Jesus referred to him as “a certain man”.  To be “certain” is to be particular, different, or better in some way from things around you that might appear the same.  To be certain is to demonstrate qualities of a higher standard than the norm.  Any one of us can be any old person, but the challenge for us is to want to be special—to be Certain—in the way this father was.  If you don’t think you have it in you to become greater than you are today, don’t worry.  Jesus has it in Him to do with you what you cannot do with yourself.  All that you need is to have the desire and the will to allow Him to work into you the things you need to work out of you the things that keep you from being a Certain Person.  Let me say that a different way.  Some troubling behaviors won’t leave us until we work into us the things that will chase our troubles away.  If you want to stop being unforgiving, you need to have forgiveness worked into you so it can send unforgiveness running out the door of your life.  If you want to be a Certain Person, you need some certain work done in your life.  This is the life of a Certain Person.

What can this mean about being a father or a mother?  Well, I believe they ought to be Certain Persons.  A real father is a particular person, chosen for a particular reason, and who lives in a particular way that is distinctive from every other father.   Our Heavenly Father is that example to believers.  Certain Persons create things that are distinctive and good.  As we will see again later in this scripture series, Certain Persons are amazingly different people who bring about amazingly different things in the lives of the people around them.  Certain Persons make the people around them certain.  You see, the value of your life is the value of Jesus’ life.  He bought you with His life so in many ways your life is as valuable as His life is.  So, what about you?  Are you a Certain Person looking to bring certain favors into the lives of others, or are you one of the others who is looking for a Certain Person to bring favor into your life?  If you want to change the lives of the people around you, develop certain things about you that are sure to change certain things about others.

Now remember there were two sons.  Luke 15:12-13 says, “And the younger of them said to his father, ‘Father, give me the portion of goods that falls to me.’  So he divided to them his livelihood.”  What have we here between the father and this younger son?  Well, a Certain Person will live in such a way that he provides for his children; this father obviously did that.  But more than provision, a Certain Person will live in such a way to raise children who will themselves demonstrate Certain Person qualities.  The younger son’s request for his inheritance was the indication of the character of a worldly man.  But the father was a Certain Person who did things in a certain way so the younger son would eventually come to demonstrate better qualities.  

What specifically did the father do?  The father obliged his son and gave him the portion of his livelihood that would in time fall to the son.  Some of us would be quick to note that perhaps the father should not have given the son anything since he knew it would be wasted.  The word prodigal means wasteful.  To be sure, I believe the father recognized the son’s wasteful, self-centered, uncaring, entitlement and worldly nature.  But the father didn’t just give the son his treasures—things that could be wasted.  Giving his son what he wanted opened the door for the father to give him something he needed but didn’t see that he needed.  In addition to treasures, the father gave him something that could not be wasted.  The father gave his son something that would later help him want to live differently.  Those of us who see carnally would think that it cost the father his hard-earned worth.  But his worth did not and could not change his son.  No, the father worked into his actions love, selflessness, generosity, honor, humility, a sense of value and the love of God.  These would all be things the son would later need to root out of himself the things that were holding him back.

Sure, we ought to give others material help when we believe it will help them.  But when we are Certain People, we will give or withhold in ways that sow the seeds of the life changing qualities. Certain People do certain things in certain ways to produce certain results in the lives of those we want to become Certain People.

The younger son wanted what he thought was going to be rightfully his; he wanted his future, and he wanted it today.  Sometimes we live like this younger son.  We want to reach out into our tomorrows and waste away what we find today.  That only makes our tomorrows harder than they would have been.  But the father gave to his son something that is present today to make his tomorrow better.  He gave his son something that could never be consumed entirety.  He gave him something would be producing and reproducing.  He gave him freedom—freeing qualities that would help him find and live freely in his today and in his future.  He gave his son honor when dishonor was present; he gave his son selflessness when selfishness dominated; he gave his son forgiveness before the son knew forgiveness would be needed.

So, what about us?  Do we try to teach or our children (or others in our power) by withholding from them the things we have worked hard to attain?  Do we want them to learn to make it on their own?  Do we believe this is best for them?  Do we believe it is bad to give them all that they want from us?  Listen, it is not a bad thing to be prudent about what we give or to withhold from our kids (or others).  But it is more important that we learn not to withhold the things others need to break themselves free.  Our natural natures will offer the help of not helping.  But a Certain Person will use the request for help to sow the seeds of the character of a Certain Person.  A Certain Person will gladly help in one way so that he can help in the most important way: sowing the seeds of freedom into the lives of others so that they can learn to depend on something greater than themselves to make it in a world that tells them they can only make it by depending on themselves.

I am sure we all have some prodigal living in us.  I know that I do.  But each time we stumble across some of that prodigal nature, we should look more deeply within ourselves to see if we find the Certain Person quality that will root that prodigal nature right out of our lives.  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Take One More Step

There was a man that used a camel to transport his straw. He would load as much straw as he could on the camel to get the most out of the animal.  One day, when he loaded the last piece of straw onto the camel’s back, the camel collapsed. His back had broken, and the man was unable to move any more straw.

This may just be a story, but it feels very real to many of us today. It seems we are stuck in a season of difficult times with one thing after another pilling up on our backs.  Last year we dealt with COVID, and we are still dealing with it this year. Then last week people all over had to live through some of the most extreme weather conditions we have ever seen.  Many of us, with everything else that goes on in life, may have believed we were at the point of our last straw, that we just cannot take another step.  

We must remember, we are not camels and we do not have a master or an owner. Instead, we have a God who loves us and will never allow the burdens we go through to break the backs of our wills to carry on with Him.  I know some of you might say, “But you don’t know what I’m going through”.  That is true; I do not know. But I know this: Jesus taught us that with Him we can always take another step.

In Matthew 26:39, we read the example of Jesus near the end of His strength. In this passage, Jesus says to God, “O My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; nevertheless not as I will but as You will”.  The cup He speaks of is the last straw that would challenge Him the most.  It is the night of His betrayal, the night before His crucifixion.  But Jesus knew that though what He faced was difficult, there was more and better to come.  He needed only to be willing to take just one more step with God.  Jesus did not want to get out of something; He wanted to go through something.  

We often time think problems come upon that make our lives hard, and I do not deny that to be true.  But could it be also that sometimes we come to our problems because we are unwilling to see that God is trying to remove some of the heaviness of our wills and replace it with the straw of His will?  Life and difficulties teach us to want to get out of the things that challenge us the most.  But the Lord wants us to know that life is not what is happening to us now. Life is what lies ahead, beyond these temporary roadblocks. We must understand that no matter our situation, it is in our darkest hour that makes the coming light shine brightest.  From our coldest nights come our warmest days.  From our most difficult losses come our most precious gains. Through  our most difficult sickness we find healing for our souls.  From the greatest disappointments in our relationships come our greatest joys with those same relationships.  From our greatest falls come our highest achievements.  And from our greatest challenges we can find the desire to have the lives God desires for us.  

The devil wants you to stake your claim to life based on how you keep from taking on that last straw.  Do not believe or live this way.  Jesus wants us to know that an abundant life is one where we depend not just on the work He did to save us, but more so on the work He does to carry us through the burdens we carry daily.  He is always willing to take just one more step for us; let’s be willing to take one more step on His shoulders.  You are never at your last straw when you are on His shoulders.  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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All Things Are Possible

Do you know someone who always seems to find a way to see what is not possible with what they are facing? We all have some of this tendency in us.  We look at what is before us and then at what we want.  Then we decide that the difference between what is and what we want is not possible for us to have.  We don’t allow room for the possible because we see how impossible things are.  Moses did this when God called him to go back to Egypt to deliver the Israelites.  Moses had all kinds of reasons he didn’t see how he could be successful – even with God’s help.  He finally asked God to choose someone else, saying he was not an eloquent speaker.  Moses did not believe anything could change that, not even an encounter with God.  God was patient and responded to Moses by saying, “Who made man’s mouth?  Was it not I the Lord?”

In many ways today we are like Moses.  Sometimes we may say we believe God, but we have a hard time believing what can be or what is different with us.  We don’t see any change in who we are, not before or even after we come to know the Lord.  We continue to live knowing that God is real but unknowingly denying the power of that knowledge to work in our lives.  One of the first things that must change in us when we come to faith in God is to believe that He can and will and probably already has changed us in some significant ways that we may not see right away.  We see this in scripture in Genesis 18:14 when the Lord says to Abraham “Why did Sarah laugh, saying shall I surely bear a child, since I am old? Is anything too hard for the Lord.”  The Lord had just told Abraham and Sarah, who were in their late 80s, that they would have a child the next year.  Sarah couldn’t believe it because she believed what was impossible for her age.  Abraham may not have believed this could be true given his age, but he believed that age to God and to man were not the same things.  Abraham was able to believe by faith.  Sarah simply believed, as she always had, in what her previous experience told her was true. 

Consider this.  Noah did what was impossible for his time; he built an Ark.  Moses did what was impossible to do; he drew water from a rock in the desert.  Elizabeth, like Sarah, did what was impossible and conceived in her old age.  Mary did what was impossible and conceived while she was a virgin.  David did what was impossible and slew Goliath the giant when no one else could do it.  I could go on, but you should see my point.  In each of these cases, and in countless more, man believed what was impossible, but God made the improbable possible for them.  The only difference between these people and us today is in the change we allow to happen within us when we come to know God.  If we do not permit faith to change our belief system, we will likely go through life knowing God but not feeling any different inside than we did when we didn’t know Him at all.

Let’s not be like Moses and say with our actions, “Lord I don’t feel any different now than I did before I met you.”  The first miracle of your life in the Lord should be to stop believing the impossible and to learn to believe the improbable, because with God nothing is impossible—absolutely nothing, including what troubles you most.  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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Wade in the Water

Harriett Tubman is known for leading escaped slaves North to freedom.  In a way Ms. Tubman was the “Moses of the slaves.”   She was the Conductor of the Underground Railroad, a network of stops and operators that led many slaves to freedom.  One of the songs of the Underground Railroad was the traditional black American Spiritual “Wade in the Water”.  The words of this song are:

Wade in the water,
Wade in the water, children.
Wade in the water,
God’s gonna trouble the water.

We can imagine slave lives were lives of great tribulation and oppression.  So how then is Ms. Tubman and this song a message of faith?  Well, she used the foundation of faith and spiritual strength to help slaves who had already endured great trials to stay strong in faith and hope.  Scripture speaks to trials and how we should live with them in this way.  Romans 5:3 says, “And not only that, but we glory in tribulations, knowing that tribulation produces perseverance, and perseverance produces character, and character produces hope”.  Now this reference–and not only that–is a reference to our faith.  Real faith will be tried over and over again until we are perfected in faith.  But faith alone is not sufficient to help us live abundant lives while here on earth.

Imagine that slaves woke up every day as slaves. They worked every day as slaves, and then they went to bed slaves. They may have spent their entire lives in chains as slaves.  Faith alone wasn’t going to help them live abundantly as slaves; they needed more.  And like them, we need more today.  “Wade In The Water” was Tubman’s way of inspiring slaves to always be ready and willing in faith, to know the part they had to play, and to never give up doing their part as they waited on the Lord to do His part.  Your faith must make you willing to wade deeper into the waters of your unknown, knowing that God will carry you through.  When God troubles the water, it is His way to provide for your freedom, your healing, your relationships, and even your salvation.  You cannot play it safe with faith. Faith must take you into the deep waters of your needs, beyond your ability to satisfy yourself on your own.

Tribulations are simply trying experiences. They will test us to see if we have the presence of the Spirit of perseverance.  Perseverance is the ability to endure without being overcome.  It is the ability to draw strength from a source other than yourself when you are emptied of all that you are.  Perseverance produces character.  Character is the presence and refinement of the moral, emotional, and mental traits that keep us true in our reflection of the image of God.  Character produces hope.  Hope is the confident expectation that something positive can and will happen for us as we wait faithfully for God to trouble the waters surrounding the things that give us trouble.  And even if that hope is delayed, we are not overcome but strengthened through our hope as we endure.

So then, no matter what you are facing today–no matter your circumstances–stand strong in faith where you are. Let your perseverance and character and hope be perfected enough so that you will wade into the waters while you await God’s presence and His promise to never leave nor forsake you.  When God brings trouble to the things that trouble you, He brings healing, He brings freedom, and He brings relief.  So go on! Wade into the waters of your tribulations and demonstrate the strength of your spiritual perseverance, character and hope as you faithfully wait for God to trouble your troubles.  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.

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A Transforming Life

Hi, my message for today is learning we have a special characteristic to transform our lives.

Recently I was up early in the morning.  I walked outside to get our newspaper.  I hurried as it was a cold morning, and I don’t like cold at all.  So I was quick and purposeful as I stepped outside and into an environment that I don’t like.  Then it came to me. God doesn’t want me or you to walk into any situation and to simply allow the effects of that situation to change us.  He made us to be life-changers so that we rule the circumstances of life that would want to rule us.  Now, we often speak of how the challenges of life, how difficult circumstances, and how the way we react and respond to tough things can all be used to make us better.  This is true, and this is all well and good.  But this is not enough for God.  He asks a little more of us.

This little experience with the cold weather helped me to see how selfish I might have been in some situations when I simply endured. I had it within me to make things better!  You see, I have a problem: I don’t like doing things I don’t like to do.  But now I see that often God has more. God desires better for us than what we desire for ourselves, especially when our desires are for what we do not want to do.  He wants us to realize what we can and should be doing is to make life better for others just because we are here and living today.  The scripture speaks to this special characteristic of who we are in the Matthew 5:13. It says, “You are the salt of the earth; but if the salt loses if flavor, how will it be salty again?”  Just like sunshine, rain, light, good, and love, salt is one of those things that has no purpose for itself; it is only here to make things better for you and me.  Everywhere we look, we can see the effect and impact left behind on people and in the earth by these things.  They are not limited by the circumstances they encounter; they bring change to their circumstances.  Every time the sun shines it leaves a bit of its warmth behind.  Every time it rains it leaves a bit of its life-giving nutrients behind.  And wherever love abounds, the Lord is there in all His glory.  And salt helps to bring out the best in things.  

So, it came to me that perhaps God would much rather that we impact our circumstances with our good rather than to simply work through our circumstances until we can get on to something else.  Being salt is part of the good needed to make things better for others.  Salt is a preservative for things of value we want to preserve; it is a healing remedy when there is a sickness about us; it helps to release the full flavor of something we love.  Salt is used to change the circumstances of many things that would otherwise die without it.  Salt is made better and shows its best when it is used right where it is to change the things it touches.  If salt is not used, it will be of no real value and it will die.

So, you are the salt of the earth; you are the thing that can be poured into the lives of others to make them better.  You can soften a hard life, you can heal a wounded spirit, you can lift a fallen soul, and you can bring joy to the most unloved person.  Being salt will teach you how to focus on others more than yourself; it will teach you how to treat others in a healthy way; it will teach you how to give even when you don’t believe you have much to give.  As much as we say, “Look at what the Lord has brought me through,” being salt will help us learn to say with gladness, “Look at the good I can do right here where the Lord brought me to be.”  Live a Delivered Life.  Love you.