Don’t Panic!
This week’s devotions are based on the message: “I Love My Church” Week 1 (LISTEN HERE)
When do you panic?
As a dad when my girls were little, there was always a brief sense of panic when I lost eye contact with them at a store, fair, or other large gathering. I didn’t want any harm to come their way.
Panic can come in the midst of an emergency when you don’t know much information, not sure how to respond, or what the level of danger threat really is.
Panic can come when you are overcome by a fear such as claustrophobia or agoraphobia. When you feel closed in by space or overwhelmed by a crowd.
Panic can come when you have to do something for the first time that you are uncomfortable doing. Perhaps getting on an airplane. Perhaps giving a presentation at work before upper level management.
Panic sets in when the control of the circumstance is out of your control, or perceived to be out of your control.
What alleviates panic is the calming reality from someone who has experienced what you are fearing, gives guidance through a challenging situation or simply stands by your side to lean on when inside you feel in turmoil.
When I am filled with fear or close to panic, I want someone or something that I can come back to once again bring balance, perspective and direction to my life.
The gift of the Church is just that. Why? Because it is aligned to Christ as the cornerstone. Here’s what the Prophet Isaiah has to say about it:
Isaiah 28:16 See, I lay a stone in Zion, a tested stone, a precious cornerstone for a sure foundation; the one who relies on it will never be stricken with panic.
When we are aligned to Christ and relying on him, we will “never be stricken with panic.”
How come?
Here’s what I think about.
When faced with an emergency or large difficulty, I don’t have to panic because I know a) Christ has taken care of my biggest problem in life and b) I know his power and presence are always real and with me.
When faced with a fear that leads my heart to beat fast, I know the promises of Christ remind me that I do not have to fear.
Like yesterday’s discussion of the foundation of the Church, having Christ as the Cornerstone allows me to go through life with a deep peace, calm, and assurance. It’s in his Church that I am strengthened in this conviction and reminded of it.
Don’t panic…Christ is your cornerstone!
Apply: When do you sense panic in your life? What promises of Jesus would help to alleviate the panic when it comes?
Prayer: Lord Jesus, thank you for being the Cornerstone of the Church and giving every reason to have peace instead of panic. AMEN.
The Foundation Matters!
This week’s devotions are based on the message: “I Love My Church” Week 1 (LISTEN HERE)
The Foundation Matters
Periodically on Facebook, TV or other media sites you will see advertisements for companies that can fix your home’s foundation. Sometimes the soil on which your house was built shifts causing cracking or settling of the foundation. As a result the home is crooked at best, unstable at worst. Of course if you were building your home, you would want to make sure the foundation was built properly so there would be no problems in the future.
A solid foundation matters. A foundation that doesn’t move matters. A foundation that doesn’t fail matters.
Especially today.
Culture has come at the foundation of society with massive jack hammers. Especially anything that has a connection to Christianity seems to be the main things they want to break off or break away…issues of life…sanctity of marriage…gender…morality…and more.
It’s challenging to live on a foundation that moves or is crumbling. What will be the norm tomorrow? How am I supposed to show up today? Honestly if there is no foundation, we all become homeless as a culture, determining our own plot of ground on which to pitch our tent.
Perhaps some like that and do not want the perceived confines of a foundation, but one loses the stability of the foundation, the building built on the foundation and the safety, shelter, and stability that structure provides.
Which is why I love the Church!
The foundation of the Church is the Word of God. The Apostle Paul put it this way:
Ephesians 2:20 “… built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets,…”
This phrase captures all the Word of God, both Old Testament and New, all the individuals who wrote under the promise and reality of inspiration by the Holy Spirit.
Admittedly, culture doesn’t want to live on this foundation. In fact, they become antagonistic when even from a legal stand point it seems like they are being forced onto a foundation that is informed by the Word of God. Some people just want to remain homeless.
But God wants the best for us. Just like Austin, TX spends millions of dollars to provide housing for the homeless, God spent the blood of his Son to give us a home that we didn’t purchase, deserve, or build. Sadly, there are some who don’t want what the Lord has to offer.
Yet, the Foundation of the Word of God is what gives eternal safety, earthly guidance, and many blessings to the individuals who not only hear and read the Word of God, but put it into practice. It is a foundation that won’t shift when culture does. It is not a Foundation that will crack when pressured to do so. It is not a foundation that is going to crumble even when others try.
The Church, God’s people, is built on this foundation. Which is why I love the Church. I’m surrounded by people who find the same safety, security, and blessings as I do from the Word of God. I have people around me that stand firm in the midst of a changing culture. I have people who find safety in the truths and promises of God. I have people around me who find a similar purpose in living out life with our God-given gifts to the glory of God.
All because we have been built on a solid foundation.
And a foundation matters.
Apply: What blessings do you receive from being part of a church which is solidly fixed to the foundation of the Word of God?
Prayer: Lord, thank you for laying a solid, immovable, unchanging foundation for your people in your Word. Help me to always find the safety, security and blessing in it that your promise. AMEN.
Grandeur of God’s Church
This week’s devotions are based on the message: “I Love My Church” Week 1 (LISTEN HERE)
Years ago my brother and cousin and I toured through Europe. As we went through different cities, often the most prominent building in the city was the cathedral. Many of the cathedrals were built centuries ago by master craftsman over the span of 10 plus years. Intricate artwork was found in the masonry work, the flooring, the stained glass, the furnishings and really everywhere you looked there was a message that came to the person who stepped into the building. Individuals labored years at their craft to give their best to the building of the dwelling in which the Lord was worshiped.
Yet the sad things was very few people filled the beautiful buildings. What once was the center of the town’s activity and focus was now an empty shell of craftsmanship and beauty.
To be sure, a building doesn’t define the church or mark the boundaries of the church. But perhaps the building is reflective of the health of the Church in the world today.
The Apostle Paul wrote:
21 In him the whole building is joined together and rises to become a holy temple in the Lord. 22 And in him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by his Spirit.
The Church is the gathering of people connected by faith to the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Like a master craftsman, the Lord God orchestrated the building of his temple that would be a “dwelling in which God lives by his Spirit.”
I got to thinking, “When a person steps into the middle of a gathering of God’s people, no matter where that gathering is, does that gathering emanate the grandeur and glory of God like the cathedrals of Europe inspire awe and wonder to all who enter them?”
Perhaps not and we need to repent. Perhaps we should and we need the help of God’s Spirit.
God has brought us together in perfect connection to him and others, not to be an empty shell of his Church, but to be the vibrant living manifestation of his love and grace to the world. Like one who enters a cathedral and marvels at the pictures in stained glass, or the ornate wood carvings, or the vastness of the nave the Lord orchestrates the people of his church with different gifts, different abilities, different personalities to shine multiple facets of the glory of God into the world around us.
The cathedrals of Europe unfortunately are very empty of worshippers. One would hope the Church was active in the world around, even if it weren’t in the cathedrals. Statistics would say this too is waning. But that doesn’t mean we simply turn the cathedral of God over to the wrecking ball and let it be destroyed, rather just the opposite. It is the calling of the Church that God has given to be the “salt and light” in our communities; to declare the praise of God to the people around us, and exhibit the beauty of God’s grace all around us.
The world doesn’t need an empty shell of the church, it needs the Spirit of God to be alive and active in the Church to be the influence, the messenger, the servant of God to the people around us and the towns in which we live.
And each of us by God’s grace gets to be a facet of God’s glory, as a member of HIS Church, to the community around us.
Apply: What gets in the way of God’s people showing up in a community as a breathtaking “cathedral” for the Lord?
Prayer: Lord, forgive me for failing to exhibit your glory and grace to the people around me. Enable me by your Spirit to be the part of the Church you have called me to be, displaying your glory and grace at all times. AMEN.
What is the Church?
This week’s devotions are based on the message: “I Love My Church” Week 1 (LISTEN HERE)
This week we embark on a new series entitled, “I Love My Church!” Over the next few weeks, we will get a chance to delve into this gift that God has given to his people called the Church…both the universal body of believers in Jesus (called the Holy Christian Church) and the local community of believers to which you belong.
We love something we treasure and find valuable. We invest in it. We share it. We want others to experience and find the same value we have. So it is with the Church.
But what is the Church?
By simple definition the Church (with a capital “C”) is the summation of all those who by the Spirit of God have been brought to confess that Jesus is the Christ, the son of God and that by believing in him we have life in his name. This gathering is known fully by God because he can see into people’s hearts. It is sometimes for that reason called the “Invisible Church.” It is not a human invention or built on the back of human beings, it is of divine origin and built on and around Christ and his Word.
Ephesians 2:19 Consequently, you are no longer foreigners and strangers, but fellow citizens with God’s people and also members of his household, 20 built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, with Christ Jesus himself as the chief cornerstone. 21 In him the whole building is joined together and rises to become a holy temple in the Lord. 22 And in him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by his Spirit.
We confess this Church in the Third Article of the Apostles’ Creed:
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Christian church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.
To which Dr. Martin Luther wrote the following explanation:
What does this mean? I believe that I cannot by my own reason or strength believe in Jesus Christ, my Lord, or come to Him; but the Holy Spirit has called me by the Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts, sanctified and kept me in the true faith. In the same way He calls, gathers, enlightens, and sanctifies the whole Christian church on earth, and keeps it with Jesus Christ in the one true faith. In this Christian church He daily and richly forgives all my sins and the sins of all believers. On the Last Day He will raise me and all the dead, and give eternal life to me and all believers in Christ.
As individuals are connected by faith to Jesus through his Word it is a natural manifestation for those individuals to gather together in a place to continue to encourage one another, grow in the Word, serve with their gifts and share the love they themselves have been shown.
We call this “the church” (with a little “c”) or a Christian congregation. Sometimes this is also referred to as the “Visible Church” because we can visibly see who is part of this gathering.
To every Christian and Christian congregation then, God has a purpose: To be HIS Church!
Even as we receive the blessings of being part of his Church (forgiveness of sins and life everlasting), he also calls us to manifest and share those blessings with others.
The Apostle Peter put it this way:
1 Peter 2:9 But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light. 10 Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.
So we embark on this series to better appreciate the reality we are part of God’s Church by faith in Jesus and then to be HIS church to live every day of life engaged in his calling.
Apply: What do you love about being part of the “Holy Christian Church”? About being part of a Christian congregation?
Prayer: Lord God, thank you for founding your Church and by your grace including me in it. Help me in this upcoming series to revel in the blessing of being part of your church and by the power of your Spirit, fully engage in being your Church to the world around me. AMEN.
What is Your Response?
This week’s devotions are based on the message: “Overcoming Death” Week 5 of Signs (LISTEN HERE)
What is your response?
It’s a big deal when you can convince your skeptics and detractors that you are the real deal. This whole series, “Signs” has been based on the premise that the Apostle John wrote in John 20:30-31, “Jesus did many other miraculous signs in the presence of his disciples, which are not recorded in this book. But these are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name.”
The journey of miraculous signs that John takes us on is one that screams with clarity that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God. There is no doubt in this…even from his detractors.
After Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, the reaction was mixed:
John 11:45 Therefore many of the Jews who had come to visit Mary, and had seen what Jesus did, put their faith in him. 46 But some of them went to the Pharisees and told them what Jesus had done. 47 Then the chief priests and the Pharisees called a meeting of the Sanhedrin.
“What are we accomplishing?” they asked. “Here is this man performing many miraculous signs. 48 If we let him go on like this, everyone will believe in him, and then the Romans will come and take away both our place and our nation.”
The miraculous signs were real. How one reacted to them was the difference. Many of those that came to grieve with Mary and Martha saw Lazarus alive and believed in Jesus…exactly the purpose John outlines for the miraculous signs. Some however when and told the religious leaders what Jesus had done. They didn’t deny Jesus raised Lazarus. They didn’t discount that his work was miraculous. They didn’t even deny that they were convincing people to believe in him.
Their response? Kill Jesus. The religious leaders were more interested in holding on to the power they had and their fear of the Romans than acknowledging that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God as the miraculous signs clearly communicated.
The raising of Lazarus along with every other miracle leaves the skeptic without excuse. The miracles speak for themselves. The proverbial “nail in the coffin” was Jesus’ own resurrection a short time later. The evidence as witnessed by others left no doubt that Jesus was the Christ, the Son of God. The only question remained, “Will you allow the evidence to testify clearly or to pretend it never happened?”
The religious leaders couldn’t change the evidence. They tried at Jesus’ resurrection. They only could prevent more evidence from being submitted for evidence, so they wanted to get rid of Jesus.
Still today, many want to get rid of Jesus, not deal with him, acknowledge him, or admit he existed. Why? Perhaps there are varied reasons, but if I don’t get rid of him, I am left with no other option than to admit he is the Christ, the Son of God.
And if he is the Christ, the Son of God he has fully accomplished his mission from God:
16 “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17 For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.
All that remains is to get rid of the denial and allow the Spirit of God to work the conviction, based on the evidence, that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God and that only through him, you have eternal life.
I pray this is your response.
Apply: What evidence is most compelling? What do you still question?
Prayer: Lord, send your Spirit to lead me to fully trust that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God and that by believing I may have life in his name. AMEN.