Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Monday, December 31, 2012
Sermon 30 Dec. 2012
The Gift of Christmas That
Keeps on Giving
Galatians 5:1 ~ 30 Dec.
2012
Let me start
by reading Galatians 5:1 NKJV - Stand fast
therefore in the liberty by which Christ has made us free, and do not be
entangled again with a yoke of bondage … Let’s pray
This verse at first may not sound very
Christmassy, but this time of the year people are always asking: What did you get for Christmas? When I am in my best pastoral mode my answer
is; I got closer to the Lord and the freedom He brings.
Looking under this spiritual Christmas tree of
life we can see the gift of Christ’s liberating grace wrapped with loving care.
We see that God has wrapped Himself in the baby
Jesus; and the gift of freedom that frees us from the yoke of bondage!
That about captures this 1st Christmas message in
a nutshell
Paul’s theme has always been Christ’s gift of grace
and the freedoms it brings.
Let’s focus on the 4 freedom gifts the 1st
Christmas brought
1st of all we need to think back to our
study in Gal. 4:4–5 recalling that God
sent forth His son … to redeem those who were under the law”
No one will ever understand the full impact of Christian freedoms unless they are aware of the entrapment of humanity.
In our humanity we are trapped by our sinful nature
that leads us to an eternal life apart from God.
Did I hear and Amen? I know this is heavy, but we
are talking about God’s gift of Spiritual Freedom here!
Today all are born in bondage to sin and only by the
gift of grace can one be set free.
Church, until one receives God’s crucified Son as Lord and Savior by faith they can never be released from their sins; because no one is good enough on their own; it takes God’s gift of grace!
2ndly the 1st Christmas
brought us the gift of Reconciliation
with God.
There is no greater bondage than that of being
shut up in oneself and shut off from God’s love! The world needs to wake up … Guns don’t
kill, but those estranged from God do
3rdly the 1st Christmas
brought us the gift of new vision.
When Jesus preached His opening sermon at
Nazareth, He took for His text Isaiah 61:1–2!
You all may know that, but did you know that Jesus
inserts into his message a verse from the Servant Song of Isaiah 42:7, “to open
blind eyes.”
Look at John 9:39 there Jesus says to the man born
blind: “For judgment I have come into this world, that those who do not see may
see, and that those who see may be made blind.”
Christ has blesses us with a new vision; we who were blind now have a new vision
for 2013 and beyond.
We see that all human beings are spiritual
creatures, with physical bodies, and in Christ there is unlimited potential for
spiritual growth.
But to grow spiritually one must use their new
vision; the old is washed away.
As the children of promise we are to reach-out to
the unredeemed: The spiritually blind cannot see that their greatest need is
redemption.
The world is depraved and drowning in immoral darkness;
there is light that can only be seen with new vision.
Now that we have focused on the freedoms of release,
reconciliation, and our new vision let’s look at the final gift of
that 1st Christmas: God placed beneath our spiritual Christmas tree;
the gift of belonging.
Recalling the words of
Gal. 4:7:“You are no longer a servant but a son, and if a son, then an heir
of God through Christ”
On that 1st Christmas God placed the gift of belonging.
We are walking in a new life of belonging; Like
the song says: Now I belong to Jesus, Jesus belongs to me, not for
the years of time alone, but for eternity.
Beloved, if I know anything it is the pain of not
belonging.
There is no greater pain that not belonging,
praying to belong. Looking in all the
wrong places in a million strange faces and knowing you don’t belong.
It was only when I asked Jesus Christ to be my
Lord and Savior did I find my family. Prayer: Today Lord, I want to pray for those who have not gone to the spiritual
Christmas tree and opened your gifts of redemption, reconciliation, new vision,
and belonging.
Friday, December 14, 2012
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Rising Above Our
Limitations
My Message for Sunday Dec. 02, 2012 Galatians 4:12-14
It is not the starting point but how you finish the
race or as they say back home it is not the size of the dog in the fight, but
the size of the fight in the dog!
But
as an old gospel preacher once said; the gospel must be seen in the person who
seeks to communicate it.
Here we see Paul’s willingness to reveal his humanity and his physical condition and illness must have been serious.
Matt.
23:23 Holman Christian Standard Bible) Woe to
you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! You pay a tenth of mint, dill, and
cumin, yet you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice,
mercy, and faith. These things should have been done without neglecting the
others.
Jesus
makes it clear that the central concern of religion is not self-indulgent, but
loving service for others.
Rising Above Our Limitations
But
she still wanted to do a great thing with her life, so when she heard in those
days that you could free an African slave for $40, she made a quilt and tried
to sell it for $40. Nobody would buy it. So she turned to making bookmarks, and
she raised $1,000 a year for each of the twenty-seven years remaining in her
life. She gave every penny of that to projects in this world that go to
building up rather than tearing down.
What
about the quilt? One day a bishop from India was traveling through Illinois and
she gave it to him. He took that quilt with him on his speaking tour around the
country, and he told the story of Lizzie Johnson. Then he asked people if they
would place an offering for missions in the quilt. He raised $100,000 for
missions. You talk about how God creates miracles through modest efforts! One
day after Lizzie Johnson had died, her sister, Alice Johnson, heard that a man
named Takuo Matsumoto was coming to Champaign, Illinois, to speak. He was one
of the most prominent Japanese Christians after the Second World War. He had
been principal of the Methodist Girls’ School in Hiroshima during the bombing.
In John Hersey’s book about tragedy, he is mentioned prominently as one of the
heroes of those days.
Alice
Johnson remembered that her sister had given money to support the education of
a young boy in Japan named Takuo Matsumoto, and she wondered if this was the
same person. She resolved to go to Champaign to hear him speak, but she got
sick that day and had to stay home. That night someone told Mr. Matsumoto about
her, and he said, “You mean that she is Lizzie Johnson’s sister? All that I am
I owe to Lizzie Johnson.” That night he went to see Alice Johnson, and he went
from there to the cemetery to put flowers on the grave of a woman who could not
leave her bed, who was weak and helpless, but who stitched up her love in
bookmarks and quilts and said, “Thank you, God,” by loving others. Limitations
do not have to limit; if we don’t let them.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Rest In The Lord
Zip-lineing up-side-down does not make you go any faster, but it sure does make the ride a lot more fun. Resting in the Lord does not make life go any more faster but it does make the trip a lot more fun. The Lord makes life sweeter as we lean on Him. May your ride be one filled with His Peace, Love, and Joy... as you zip line through life...
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