Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Merry Christmas 2018: May you find Jesus.

Dear friends and family,

I pray that this Christmas you may find Jesus and be amazed, just like the shepherds did and were in Luke 2:16-20.

  • If you are poor in this world, may you find in Him a wealth that cannot be earned and that you cannot lose.
  • If you do not know Jesus at all, may you find Him for the first time, as the rest for your soul and the meaning for your life. May you also see Him in my life and the lives of other Christians as He works on us to make us more like Him.
  • If you are lonely, may you find Him as a friend who is always there. You are not alone! He says to those that know Him, "Behold I am with you even to the end of the age."
  • If you do know Jesus, but have not been spending time with Him, may you discover Him to be more interesting and satisfying than any distraction.
  • If you are sick and older or seeing your time on this earth coming to an end, may you find in Him hope for a better future because he the provides eternal life.
  • If you find great joy in your family this Christmas, may you find Him to be the better big Brother who welcomes you and your family to be part of a worldwide and eternal family.

Wherever you are in your journey of life, I pray that you will find Jesus and after the encounter, you will leave glorifying and praising God.

Friday, October 26, 2018

What can you give a Pastor's Kid?

Here is a quote from Barnabas Piper's book "The Pastor's Kid" (he is John Piper's son) about being a pastor's kid. I put this out there for my kids, but also because I was a PK as well so I experienced some of these same things. "Very few people in the church would vocalize their assumptions about the PK or even cognitively recognize that they hold them, but they are present. For example, some people assume all is well, that the PK has it all together. They’re usually wrong; remember, PKs are as human as everyone else. Others are intimidated by the PK: he must know more Bible verses, be wiser, and have a secure line to God’s office in heaven. Nope, not usually. And then there’s the family assumption: the PK has a pastor for a dad, and his mom leads the women’s, children’s, hospitality, shut-in, quilt-making, and baking ministries, so what could a normal old congregant offer him? False assumption. The normal congregant can offer something powerful to a PK, usually many things.

PKs want to be known, not just known of. We want to be in relationships that cut through the facades and fronts and unearth the insecurities and needs. We long for those friends and mentors who will willfully set aside all they think they know of us as PKs and get to know us as people. These friends will engage our passions, our interests, our fears, our confusions. Throughout my life since high school, I have had these friends. They are the ones who will call me out on a lie or grapple with sins alongside me or forgive when I sin against them. They pay no mind whatsoever to who my father is and instead look straight into my life and see me. They are the ones who have been there for my worst days and helped me come through them. They know me. PKs struggle, and if all we have are people around us who know of us, we bottle those struggles inside and the pressure builds. Being known is a release, a way to pour out our problems and be helped, supported, corrected, taught, and simply known."

Thursday, October 18, 2018

My Privilege

Here is a post that I wrote on Micah's CaringBridge page on this day 6 years ago.

My privilege

I count it the greatest privilege to have been blessed by the Lord to be Micah's Dad on this earth for the last 12 years. It was also my great privilege to walk with him through all of the illnesses through the years, especially the last 6 months. Finally, it was a tremendous privilege to be by his side when he went to be with Jesus.

I love my boy, and I love Jesus.

Here is what I wrote early this morning in my personal journal:

"Sitting at the bedside of my dying son at 3:48 in the morning. Weeping like crazy. Bertrand Russell once said that “no one can sit at the bedside of dying child and believe in God.” Well, I beg to differ. My faith is the thing that strengthens me. How else can I make it through? We cannot do anything else. This fire drains away everything else. Nothing else satisfies my soul. I would love to save my son. I would easily give my life for his, but God has not chosen that path for us. He has chosen a vale of tears, but He will walk through it with me."

Jesus walks with us, and now Micah is walking with Jesus.

Micah is now with Jesus. Here is one of my favorite memories of him.


Piano Playing

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Are you loved?

The last in my series of article on depression and suicide written for the Oakland Independent in July 2018.

In an article earlier this month, I told the story of my depression and near suicide in my young adult life. I stood at the top of a cliff in the Black Hills and nearly jumped, and I believe if not for one factor, I would have jumped. That one factor was that I knew my parents loved me and that it would hurt greatly if I jumped. Later in the year, as I was still very depressed and suicidal, my dad called me and said, "Mike if you need to, you can just drop everything and come home." In that moment, I realized that my Dad loved me not because of what I did or did not do, but simply because I was his son. I did not have to earn his love!


That fact that I knew someone loved me unconditionally was a huge factor in helping me decide not to commit suicide and in gave me a safe place to go to work through my depression. The feeling of being alone and unloved is one of the primary causes of depression. I frequently meet people who are almost completely alone in the world. They have lost connection with family, they have no friends, and often their primary or only contact with the outside world is an electronic screen. The breakdown of family and social structures along with the isolating influence of electronics has created a situation for many people where they feel no love from anyone. Perhaps you have felt this way. Maybe you have been in a situation where you think that if you left town or died, no one would care.

God wants you to know that is not true! Jesus said, "For God so loved the world that He gave His only son that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life" (John 3:16). Jesus came to save you and me not just other people. He came because He loves us and wants us to be with Him forever! Maybe you think you are not good enough for God to love, but it does not matter how good or bad you are, because He loves unconditionally. "God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us" (Romans 5:8). God does not love you after you do something for Him or after you start to love Him. Rather He declares His love for you right now, wherever you are. He took the action necessary to show His love. The creator of the universe, who is always everywhere, all the time, loves you. You do not need to feel alone and unloved if you really believe that Jesus died to bring you back into relationship with your maker. If you believe that Jesus lived, died, and rose again because of His love for you and surrender your life to Him, then you can know that He is with you and that you are not alone. 

For those of us that have already experienced God's love and know that He has provided us with a family and friends who really care about us, then we have love to give away. He pours His love into us (Romans 5:5), and then we should pour His love on to others. All around us there are hurting, lonely, depressed people that need to know that they are loved. I encourage you to take the time to walk across the street to that elderly neighbor's house who you have not seen out much. Pay attention to the people in rental properties who often move so much that they do not form lasting friendships. Help them move in, invite them over for dinner, or plan fun events with other Christians and then invite the new neighbors too. Go visit the sick in the hospital and care centers. Showing Christ's love is simply a matter of helpful hands and listening ears. If we show His love in these practical ways, then it reveals that we truly know Jesus and His love (Matthew 25:31-40). 

I can tell you from real life experience on both sides of this coin that being shown love and giving love is the best thing in this life and the next (1 Corinthians 13:13). Know that God loves you and then show others that God loves them.

Do you have hope?

This is the third article in my series on depression and suicide written for the Oakland Independent newspaper in July 2018

If you grew up going to a church that sang hymns, you probably know that many of the hymns end with a picture of heaven. "Amazing Grace" says, "When we've been there ten thousand years bright shining as the sun, we've no less days to sing God's praise than when we'd first begun." "How Great Thou Art" ends with "When Christ shall come, with shout of acclamation
And take me home, what joy shall fill my heart." When I minister at Oakland Heights, I always make sure to sing these last verses, because for most of the people in the service, heaven is becoming more and more real as their earthly life winds down, and those visions of heaven can bring hope and joy even when struggling with pain, grief, and loss of purpose on this earth.

Many people in the modern world do not have this hope. If you do not believe in God or are not sure if there is a God you cannot have this hope. If you think that maybe there is heaven after death, but that your place in heaven depends upon how good you are, then you can never be sure that you are good enough, so it is hard to have a sure hope.

Now when you are young, active, attractive, healthy, wealthy, in a great relationship, and things are going well, you probably are not worried about hope for the future because your present is fulfilling. But this present moment will not last. Trouble comes to us all. We get old and slow. Markets crash and people leave us or die. Pain, grief, loneliness or guilt sets in and can lead to full depression, and often when we are in the depths of despair there does not seem to be any hope for a better future. When things seem to have gone bad, we can begin to believe that it will never get better and give up on life.

Now the truth is that for most people in most circumstances, they can find help and still experience good things in this life. We can change our perspective, get some counseling, find good friends in church or other social organizations, ask forgiveness and restore relationships, start exercising, and do any number of things that bring us happiness again. On the other hand, if we have been hurt enough, even taking positive steps toward re-engaging the world may seem scary because what if we just lose everything again.

Here is where the Christian gospel helps me to have a new perspective that no circumstance can take away. 1 Peter 1:3-4 says, "He has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you." I have a living hope for a good eternal future, not because of my own works, but because of what Jesus did for me. By receiving the gift of salvation from Jesus, my sins are forgiven and His resurrection proves that I will be raised to be with Him in heaven.

This hope does not just help me when thinking about eternal life, but even in the middle of the day to day struggles, I can know that no matter what, I still have a good future, so I can endure hardships for this short life. The Apostle Paul when talking about enduring, declared that "he could do all things through Christ who strengthens him" (Philippians 4:13). This was possible because he believed that "to live is Christ, but to die is gain" (Philippians 1:21).

God gave him a hope that pulled him through incredible persecution, and He will give you hope too if you will come to Him and put your trust in Jesus. So if you are feeling hopeless today, I encourage to read about Jesus in the gospels and read the books of 1 Peter and Philippians. There you will learn about a hope that no circumstances on this earth can take away.

Tuesday, August 7, 2018

Why?

This is the second article in a series on suicide and depression that I wrote for the Oakland Independent in July 2018.

In last week's article, I described how a belief in God and His truths might help when we are depressed and even suicidal. This week I want to show you that God can provide a purpose for living that goes beyond yourself and your circumstances, so that no matter what is happening you can know that your life is meaningful.

So do you know why are you here and why are you living? Does it make a difference to you if your life has meaning? Many of the messages in our modern world proclaim that you should simply follow your heart and do what you want, and thus create your own meaning. Nike declares "Just Do It!" But what is it we should just do, and why? If we just do it, will that satisfy us? The problem with any meaning that we create for ourselves is that it does not last and does not satisfy. Jobs go away, sports careers end, all of our stuff breaks, people will fail us, and we all will die.

We need more than just a self-created meaning. Pastor Tim Keller in his book, Making Sense of God, says, "To have meaning in life is to have both an overall purpose for living and the assurance that you are making a difference by serving some good beyond yourself."

Pastor Rick Warren in his book, Purpose Driven Life, points us towards God's purpose for our lives, saying, "It’s not about you. The purpose of your life is far greater than your own personal fulfillment, your peace of mind, or even your happiness. It’s far greater than your family, your career, or even your wildest dreams and ambitions. If you want to know why you were placed on this planet, you must begin with God. You were born by his purpose and for his purpose."

Here are some of the Biblical passages that talk about God's purpose for our lives.
  • In Genesis 1, God tells Adam and Eve to fill to take care of the earth.
  • Many of the Psalms make it clear that our lives should be lived to give glory to God. Psalm 84:10 says that a day praising God is better than 1000 elsewhere.
  • In Ecclesiastes 12, the wise teacher, after trying all the pleasures of the earth, says, "that the end of the matter is to fear God and keep His commandments."
  • The Apostle Paul says, "For to me to live is Christ," and that he wanted nothing more than to "know Christ" (Philippians 1:21, 3:9-10)
  • Jesus invited people to follow him (Matthew 4:19), and then commands his disciples to invite others to become his followers (Matthew 28:19-20). He also states that the two greatest commandments from the Old Testament are to love God with all your heart, soul and mind, and to love your neighbor as yourself.
  • Finally, we come to know God through Jesus as our Lord and Savior, then our lives will continue into a perfect life with God throughout eternity (Rev. 21:1-4)
So if we believe the Bible we will find a purpose outside of ourselves that makes an eternal difference. We will live to glorify and love God, and learn to love others too. Even when painful circumstances come, we have the hope of heaven, so we can continue to love God and others in and through the hard times knowing that they will not last. 

Monday, August 6, 2018

Light in the Darkness

This is the first in a series of articles that I wrote about the issue of suicide and depression for our local paper, The Oakland Independent, in July 2018.

When I was in my early 20's, my life was falling apart. I was having a spiritual/emotional crisis of guilt and failure and I was in an unhealthy relationship with a young woman.  I felt like I was worthless or even harmful to God, to my family, to my girlfriend, and to everyone else, and that it would be better for everyone if I just took my life. I was depressed enough that one day I stood at the top of 100 ft cliff in the Black Hills and nearly jumped off, head first. Now just because I have had times of depression and a desire to commit suicide does not mean I can understand everyone's else motivations as they contemplate or try to commit suicide, but it does mean that I take someone seriously when I hear about their desire to stop living.

In our local community and around the nation, we have an epidemic of suicide, depression and various other mental illnesses that come along with and contribute to depression. Furthermore, opioid and other drug addictions are other signs that many people in our communities are struggling with many mental issues. In the next few articles, I want to address what, if anything, God says to us that might help us address our own personal demons or point some loved one in a healthier direction.

Now I will not be suggesting though, an easy solution or one size fits all for most people. For most people, it is not simply a "pray the sad away" or just "have more faith" solution. Often, there are multiple causes of long-term depression, so I recommend a multifaceted approach in dealing with their problems. In most cases, finding a good counselor, who helps you examine unhealthy thoughts and actions along with unresolved past issues, will be necessary. Also, for some people medication can be helpful to address chemical imbalances that impact their moods and energy levels.

What I am suggesting though is that often spiritual beliefs about meaning and our place in the world are part of the problem and should be addressed as part of the plan leading to a better life. Bad ideas lead to bad thoughts which have consequences both personally and socially. God has us told us about Himself, our world, and even ourselves, and when we begin to know and believe His perspective on reality, we can face the practical problems of day to day life with a new and better perspective.

In my life, I have gone through depression, great personal loss, and tough financial and relational circumstances, and the more I have learned and trusted what God says, the better I am able to walk through the dark valleys of life.  I have learned that no matter what, my life has a purpose, the circumstances cannot make me hopeless, and I am loved. In the next three articles, I will show you what God says about these topics. In the meantime, I encourage you to start reading the Bible on your own to get God's perspective on life.

Psalm 18:28 "For it is you who light my lamp; the Lord my God lightens my darkness."
Psalm 119:105 "Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path."

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

How to Find the Meaning of a Bible Passage

I frequently get questions from both Christians and non-Christians about how someone can know what the Bible says. One of the reasons for this is a lack of good training about how to find the meaning of a biblical text. Other reasons come from the cultural ideal that communication only means what the listener or reader wants it to mean, or that the meaning of a text changes as the culture changes. We hear things like "The Constitution is a living document," and also that the Bible has to change to match our current culture.

A final reason that people think that Bible passages do not have set meanings is that many Christians, and even Christian leaders frequently use bad interpretation methods or no interpretation methods at all! When we say things like, "this is what the passage means to me," we are buying into the current cultural idea of locating all meaning in ourselves rather than what the author intended to mean.

I believe that the passages of the Bible have an intended meaning and there are proper methods to help us discover those meanings. If we do not use the proper methods, we can and often do come to the wrong meaning and do not get what the original authors intended to say.

Therefore, I would like to present a training for how to find the meaning of a Bible passage from Pastor John Piper, a scholar who I trust. This training can help you as a Christian find the meaning of a passage. It can even help non-Christians understand how good biblical scholarship leads us to definite meanings and therefore that mature Christians should not simply making up ideas to fit their current agenda, because the biblical meaning does not change with culture.

If you have not ever read or taken any classes on this subject, I recommend you listen through this playlist.

Meaning of the Biblical Text

Saturday, March 31, 2018

Center of History



This time of year, we celebrate the death and resurrection of Jesus. His life has had more impact on the world than any other man, and in the western world, we actually divide history by the life of Jesus. Before Christ, we could not fully understand how God was going to redeem the world. After the cross and resurrection, we can see that God's plan was to redeem a people by saving us from our sin.

The cross was not God's back up plan. In fact, when God created the world, he knew how history would unfold and planned to send His son to be the redeemer. Jesus as a member of the Trinity planned from the very moment He created to come and take on human form and die for us. The cross, while done for us, is not primarily about us. At the cross, Jesus gives ultimate glory to the Father by displaying the love and goodness of God through sacrificing Himself for those who rejected Him. Therefore, we can rightly say that no matter the number of years went by before or continue after the cross, it will still be the center of history

Since the work done by Jesus on the cross and His resurrection is the center of the history of the world, it should be the center of our lives. Is it? Does the gospel dominate your life?

How often do you think about Jesus and His work for you? How often does the gospel influence your decisions at work or in the home? How often do you spend time with your Savior in the Word or in prayer? Can you say you are intentional daily? When tempted to cheat on your taxes (yes this time of year too!), are you walking close enough with the Holy Spirit to be want to do the righteous thing even though you could probably get away with a little fudge here and there? Is Jesus love on your lips when you get home after a long day and see your wife, husband, or kids? In decision, attitudes, and actions throughout our daily lives, we need Jesus to be the center.

Now I know that none of us are perfect yet, because Jesus would not have had to die for perfect people, but the more the gospel becomes the center of our lives, the more like Jesus we will become. During this Easter season, I want to encourage you to think about how to make Jesus the center not just of your history, but of your everyday.

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

God Made Them Male and Female.

Oakland Evangelical Free Church live stream

Sunday, March 18, 2018

Sermon Title: God Made Them Male and Female.

Sermon Text: Genesis 1:26-2:25

Worship Through Giving  www.easytithe.com/oaklandefc 


Sermon video link

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Gun Control, Mental Health, Chaos, and Oppression

So here we go again, just yesterday, a young man shot and killed a number of people in south Florida. I could be writing this post after the Columbine school shooting, the Sandy Hook school shooting, the Texas church shooting, the Las Vegas shooting, or any number of other shootings or human caused tragedies. One side immediate calls for gun control as the solution, while the other side talks about mental health issues. Each side probably has some valid points, and this post is not going to advocate for or against any specific policies. Rather, I want to try to point to some deeper truths that contribute to the chaos in our society that do not get mentioned, but that unless we as a people address these issues, the inevitable result will be chaos and/or enforced peace which will lead to loss of freedom and oppression.  

Now what I am going to say are not thoughts that are new to me at all. In fact, many of the American founding fathers were astute political philosophers and understood these truths, which they likely got from thinkers before them. Therefore, I am simple going to reiterate them here and try to show how these basic rules of life explain what is happening now. 

Ideas Have Consequences


I believe that in many of these cases what we are seeing is the natural consequences of bad ideas being lived out. I like the phrase, that I hear on the Breakpoint radio show, "Ideas had consequences and bad ideas have victims." What we believe about the world and ourselves impacts how we will live, and over the last couple of generations in America the basic understand that majority of people had about the world has changed and that is impacting how we behave. 

American founding father and second President, John Adams said, "Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." What most Americans still understand is that our society and system was set up to be by the people and for the people, with a focus on freedom for individuals. The founders believed that when power accumulated in anyone's hands it would lead to abuses, so they wanted a system that put a check on the power of the state. This would lead to the most liberty for the people in the society, but what Adams and other understood was that the only people that can remain free are those who are responsible (moral) enough to use their freedom for good things and not to abuse their freedom by hurting others. 

An Example


Gun rights and mass shooting are a perfect example of where freedom and the abuse of that freedom show the need for a moral people. The second amendment was clearly written not for hunting rights, but as a way to make sure deadly power was not just accumulated by government, which could then become tyrannical because no one had the power to resist. Citizen were given the right and responsibility to own very deadly weapons so that they did not have to rely on the government for regular protection and so that the government could be resisted, but with that right comes the need to be very responsible with that power. What we are seeing more and more is that people do not act responsibly with their freedom, which leads to great hurt for others.

How Do You Get Moral People?


Now the problem for any system, is how do you get people to act morally and responsibly? One way is through force, and frankly that is the typical way societies are and have been ordered throughout history. If situations get too chaotic and too many people act irresponsibly, the majority of people will give up their freedom for stability. Frankly, many people would rather be ruled by a bad king than live with total anarchy. At least with a bad king or totalitarian state you know who to please and what to avoid, but in a chaotic system you live in uncertainty all the time. If someone else lays out the rules and enforces the rules, you may not like them and you may not have any power, but at least you have a measure of safety within the structure of the rules.

Religion Provides Motivation


The western / American way to get people to act responsibly (morally / cooperatively) is to help them become the type of people that will naturally want to do the right thing on their own, which means they have an internal motivation rather than an external motivation. What though creates an internal motivation to be good? To become a good person, you have to system of belief that defines good behavior and that gives you a personal motivation for acting on those beliefs. Although not all the founders were strict practicing Christians, they understood that the Christian religion provided the kinds of beliefs and motivations that made people responsible enough to handle freedom. 

Christianity is unique in that it encourages personal faith and personal growth, but that growth is not just for the individual, but should be focused outward. Furthermore, because we believe in the value of every human and that we are called to love God and others, when we become better Christians we should become more responsible citizen who care for those around us more and more. Our primary motivation is love because God first loved us, but a secondary motivation is also that we understand that all of our actions have consequences and that everyone will be judged if not in this life than the next.

I am by no means claiming that all Americans and American leaders were or are Christians (even those who claim it), but until the last 30-50 years there was at least an implied societal agreement that the Christian ideals of morality were the ideals that should be the standard for everyone. When you thought of right and wrong, you likely were influenced by Christian ideas of right and wrong, whether you knew it or not. Because we had this consensus, most people at least tried to be better people and they generally knew what "better" meant. In striving to be better people we became better citizens and were able to have a free society. Often, when there was chaos or evil that happened in the world, the first impulse was not to look to the government for a solution, but to examine our own hearts or to call for those who caused the evil to become better. Government solutions were only needed when people refused to become better on their own.

Even large societal evils that have existed in our country like slavery and segregation were able to be challenged, because those who opposed them pointed to the Christian standard and showed how we were not living up to that standard.

No God, No Standards


Unfortunately, the change that has happened in our society over the last 30-50 years is that we no longer believe in the Christian standard because we no longer believe in the truth of the Christian story. Therefore, we no longer have a united standard of what is right and wrong. Now many might say, that most people still claim to be Christians, but that claim does not reflect what many actually believe about the world. In many recent studies, it has been proven that many people who claim Christianity cannot define basic Christian beliefs and do not regularly practice it. Furthermore, many of the same people have actual beliefs and practices that are opposed to the old, traditional Christian practice. In other words, many people are Christian in name only, and no longer even know what Christian morality is. 

Frankly, this is not surprising as the source for where people get their ideas, namely the universities, have long since gone away from Christianity and adopted a different set of beliefs about the world. Ever since the beginning of the Enlightment in the late 1600's thinkers have been proposing an understanding of reality without God, and since Charles Darwin in the late 1800's a purely natural understanding of the universe has become more and more dominant in the colleges and universities. This influenced politicians and creators in Hollywood who were trained in those schools so that gradually the vast majority of media we consume pushes a different understanding of the world. The last couple of generations have been trained by their schools and media to believe in a secular, godless understanding of the world.

The problem for our society is that secular understanding of the world does not provide a motivation to be good or even a common definition of what it means to be good. Christianity tells us that we were created for a purpose and that our actions have consequences even after this life. Secularism tells us that we both collectively as species and individually are a product of random chance and that this life for good or ill is all that we have. When it is done, there is nothing. So ultimately we come from nothing, we are nothing (other than how we define ourselves), and we are going to nothing. 

The Consequence of the Ideas


So now we are left in a situation where many people are taught that the only meaning and morality is one that they define and they do not know how to do that. This leaves us in a situation like the book of Judges in the Bible that says, "There was no King, and everyone did what was right in their own eyes." Life is already hard, and it is getting harder for more of us as there are fewer and fewer people who believe in a good standard outside of themselves to which they should strive.

If you grow up in a broken home where parents don't act lovingly, go to a school where you get bullied, have some physical problems, or are generally just depressed, then how are you going to define your life and what makes you important. Some people commit suicide just to escape the pain, believing that they are going to nothing and that the nothing is better than the pain. Others dull the pain and commit suicide slowly through addictions. Others find meaning in helping people have a better life now. But others like the Columbine killers, the Sandy Hook killer, the Texas church killer, the Las Vegas shooter, and now the Florida shooter get some sense of purpose by hurting others, and I understand their rationale. I mean if you come from nothing, your life means nothing, and you don't fear hell or judgment, then why not cause others pain if it brings you pleasure or if you feel you have been wronged. For them, why would they not follow their desires? They have been taught they they are animals just conditioned by their environment, so why not do what comes naturally to them?

If we continue to promote a godless, purely natural and secular view of reality we are not just going to get more shootings. We are going to get more of the regular painful events like broken families, sexual assualts, #metoo moments, political unrest, unethical businesses, drug addiction, etc., as other people do "what is right in their own eyes."

Until we recognize that secularism is a bad idea that has bad consequences, no gun control policy or mental health plan will save us from pain caused by bad behavior. Either we will continue to slide down toward more chaos or we will lose our freedoms to a more and more powerful government that will itself create injustices, because it will also be run by humans who will govern primarily for their own benefit. Chaotic ideas create a chaotic world. This poem by Steve Turner expresses this idea perfectly. 

Action Steps


Now I am not saying we should not strive for good laws that protect people, but if you do it without also addressing the underlying bad ideas that help create the problem then you are just trying to put a bandaid on cancer.

Ask yourself if you really know what the word good means? Do other people agree with your definition?  Do you believe there is any real meaning in the world? Is there a God who created the world for a purpose? If not, then what is the meaning of the world and how should people behave? Why should they believe you? In other words, how would you motive people to be good neighbors and citizen?  

Don't just complain about what the government should or should not do. Examine yourself. Examine reality. See if your ideas match reality. See if your ideas can even define what it means to be a better person. See if your ideas can convince others to become better people. Find out if you are becoming a better person. Seek God to find out if He can be found! See if God has already been seeking you (maybe He already came to earth!) If you know God then become the solution for your community. Become His hands and feet so that other people can experience His love. Perhaps through the His love working through you, other people will see why your ideas are true.

A Final Appeal


In all of our communities right now there are people deciding for themselves how to live or whether to continue to live. If your one of those people and you don't know if life has any meaning or if your life has any meaning. Please message me and let me tell you that you are loved. You are important. You are special. You are not an accident, because you were created for a purpose. Let's compare ideas about the world, because I am convinced that if you give Jesus a chance, he will prove himself real to you, and he can change your life and he is changing the world. If you know Jesus, then please show the world and tell those around you that he is the best idea.

Thursday, February 1, 2018

How should you handle suffering?

In my upcoming series on the book of Genesis, I am going to preach on how God made the world good (Genesis 1), but also why the world is broken (Genesis 3). You do not have to read the Bible though to know either of these facts, you simply have to observe the world around you. In it you will see the beauty of a sunset and on the news each night you will see war and heartbreak. 

Each one of us will experience both, but when we experience suffering, pain, grief, and injustice, what would God have us do?

First, the numerous laments in scripture from Job, to the Psalms of lament, to Jesus weeping with his friends make it clear that it is okay to acknowledge the brokenness and pain in the world and in our lives. Sometimes people hurt us, and we need to be honest about the pain and anger we feel. Other times, disaster or illness occur and we don't even have someone to blame, so we need to cry out to God and ask why. Finally, some times we know it was our own sin or foolishness that caused our pain, but shame, guilt and pain are still real. We need to be honest with ourselves and also find safe people who will help us express what we are really feeling. Furthermore, we need to become those safe people for others, who learn to listen and let others cry out to God without trying to teach them or condemn them, especially when they are in a place where their emotions are so raw that they would not be able to hear instruction.

Second, we need to regularly cultivate an eternal perspective on reality. If this world was the final reality then lots of pain would be meaningless and a lot of unjust actions would never be made right. A lot of the hopelessness in our world comes from the idea that right now is all there is, and sometimes our current reality sucks! Paul tells the Thessalonians that while we grieve fellow believers who have died, we do not grieve as those with no hope (1 Thessalonians 4:13), and the Corinthians that because Christ has been raised we have hope that outlasts this life (1 Corinthians 15:19-20). 

Finally, this perspective that this life is not all there is, also informs us that our lives are not just about our current happiness and avoiding pain. We belong to God and were made by Him for His purposes, and He calls us to live for the good of other people. In a good plan of God, when we learn to live for the good of other people, we take our eyes off of our problems and it actually helps alleviate our own suffering. God calls us to live sacrificially for other people and this often causes us to lose current benefits and sometimes even leads to direct suffering for us, but because we have a purpose beyond ourselves we can learn to endure pain and discomfort. The more we learn to live out of love for God and others, we even learn like Paul to have joy no matter the circumstances (Philippians 4:12).

If we have this perspective, then God will use suffering to create in us a faith that is more precious than gold (1 Peter 1:6-7).