Recently I saw a post on Facebook in which a dad has his son do his own pledge before he goes to school. I came up with my own version, I'm Calling it the Mark 12:30 Pledge. I take credit for this, but any person or institution can use this, change it, take it, etc.
I decided to share it thinking that it could have some use in a Christian school, in a family, or etc.
THE MARK 12:30 PLEDGE
TODAY IS going to be a GREAT DAY!
I thank God for giving me this day;
For the opportunity to learn, grow and
become the Christian leader he intends for me to be.
God gave me a good heart:
I pledge to use it to love Him as well as others to the best of my ability.
God gave me a resilient soul:
I pledge to use it to follow Him,
and to see each challenge as an opportunity instead of an obstacle.
God gave me a capable mind:
I pledge to use it to learn HIS ways and work hard as a student and as a leader.
God gave me strength:
I pledge to use my strength to lift up the fallen, and glorify God in all that I do.
With these tools; and with the help of God,
Nothing is impossible.
So I will walk in faith through the open doors, and
NOT be discouraged when some doors close.
Instead, I will push on. I will persevere.
I will stand with integrity on the promises of God.
This is my pledge.
Copyright- Alan McCormick 3/21/2016.
A blog intended to strengthen and support your faith and walk with Jesus Christ.
Monday, March 21, 2016
Friday, January 29, 2016
Do you know the muffin man?
Scripture: Micah 6:8
He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.
DO YOU KNOW THE MUFFIN MAN?
This email was sent around the entirety of the Cortland Regional Medical Center (a local hospital)
I am very sad to report that our “muffin man” volunteer Ken Brong has unexpectedly passed away. I know many of you saw him just yesterday, it is truly a shock. I know that over the years he has touched many lives here at CRMC in his various volunteer capacities, I know that CRMC, the community and the Volunteer Department especially will not be the same without him. Do you know the muffin man? I did, and he was a great man.
Notes like this have circled various community service agencies in this last week.
I am lucky to also have known the muffin man. Ken was a great man- though you wouldn't initially know it by looking at him. He didn't drive a Mercedes, didn't live in a McMansion or wear designer clothes. He instead looked like a very normal grandfather figure. Yet agencies and people all over, even on multiple continents, grieve his passing.
He was a man that shook the earth. Not by the force of his hands, but instead in love and service. He was humble, kind and steadfast. He walked with integrity and lived a servants life. Yet his impact has been great.
Ken volunteered for a dozen local agencies. Everything from delivering muffins to raise money, giving tours at a local history museum, and dedicating his life towards Alzheimer rehabilitation and awareness. He hosted children from around the world in his home, taught kids to drive and was always a part of whatever was happening in service to others around our small city.
Why is this important to you?
If you are reading this, you probably never knew the muffin man. But you have an opportunity to a muffin man or woman. To receive the torch from people like Ken and to carry through our generation To live in love, and to support and spread love in a very real and special way.
As we are into the end of January, we are in a season of personal re-evaluation. A time when we dedicate ourselves to our goals, to becoming a new person. Will you look into the mirror with me, and take a look at the legacy that we will leave behind? What we will be remembered by, or, how we will make this world a better place than how we came into it. What can we do to get involved? Effect social change? Build disciples for Jesus Christ?
Its never to late to start to make the hands and feet of God move.
God Bless!
Alan McCormick
He has showed you, O man, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.
DO YOU KNOW THE MUFFIN MAN?
This email was sent around the entirety of the Cortland Regional Medical Center (a local hospital)
I am very sad to report that our “muffin man” volunteer Ken Brong has unexpectedly passed away. I know many of you saw him just yesterday, it is truly a shock. I know that over the years he has touched many lives here at CRMC in his various volunteer capacities, I know that CRMC, the community and the Volunteer Department especially will not be the same without him. Do you know the muffin man? I did, and he was a great man.
Notes like this have circled various community service agencies in this last week.
I am lucky to also have known the muffin man. Ken was a great man- though you wouldn't initially know it by looking at him. He didn't drive a Mercedes, didn't live in a McMansion or wear designer clothes. He instead looked like a very normal grandfather figure. Yet agencies and people all over, even on multiple continents, grieve his passing.
He was a man that shook the earth. Not by the force of his hands, but instead in love and service. He was humble, kind and steadfast. He walked with integrity and lived a servants life. Yet his impact has been great.
Ken volunteered for a dozen local agencies. Everything from delivering muffins to raise money, giving tours at a local history museum, and dedicating his life towards Alzheimer rehabilitation and awareness. He hosted children from around the world in his home, taught kids to drive and was always a part of whatever was happening in service to others around our small city.
Why is this important to you?
If you are reading this, you probably never knew the muffin man. But you have an opportunity to a muffin man or woman. To receive the torch from people like Ken and to carry through our generation To live in love, and to support and spread love in a very real and special way.
As we are into the end of January, we are in a season of personal re-evaluation. A time when we dedicate ourselves to our goals, to becoming a new person. Will you look into the mirror with me, and take a look at the legacy that we will leave behind? What we will be remembered by, or, how we will make this world a better place than how we came into it. What can we do to get involved? Effect social change? Build disciples for Jesus Christ?
Its never to late to start to make the hands and feet of God move.
God Bless!
Alan McCormick
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Rules, Rules, Rules
There are a lot of rules in our lives. From the time that we
wake up, to the time that we go to sleep, we are subject to thousands of
written and unwritten rules. The social rules; that say that we need to brush
our teeth and look presentable. Go to work on time, be pleasant, and
responsible. The legal rules; ones that say that we need to drive the speed
limit (whether we choose to follow that one or not), drive safely, and even to not
steal our morning coffee but pay for it.
Yet we know that these rules have been put into place for a
reason. If we drive dangerously, or on the wrong side of the road, we know that
we are likely to cause an accident. We brush our teeth because we know other
people expect us to if we want to engage in conversation. And it keeps up from
getting cavities. If we decide to line up and drag race through town after
church today, we may gain a reputation for being a fun church; but we would
also be putting ourselves and other people at risk.
In this morning’s scripture, Jesus is again being confronted
by the Pharisees. Always trying to knock Jesus down, this time they are trying
to discredit him by highlighting that some of his disciples aren’t following an
ancient ritual of hand washing before they eat. I believe that it’s important
to say that in this context, they are not saying “Hey Jesus, your guys aren’t
washing their grungy hands before they eat!”This is not the case. It’s not that
the hands of those disciples were particularly dirty. Rather, the people were offended that these disciples hadn’t
fulfilled a man-made tradition that was considered customary in the day. They
felt CROSSED that these disciples had the AUDACITY to break the rules! To go
against the grain. And though the Pharisees were in the midst of the SAVIOR OF
THE WORLD, they just could not get past it. They could not see what was going
on RIGHT IN FRONT OF THEM, because they were fixated on the rules, rather than
what is possible with God.
Jewish tradition has been one of many rules; since long
before Jesus. Hundreds of rules had been established at the time when Jesus
physically walked alongside of us. Around 613, set, mainline rules had been enacted for members of the
Jewish faith on everything from justice to eating food. These rules were set to
maintain and accomplish purity among the people. To set the people apart. And
so much of faith was determined by the rules you kept or didn’t keep. Utter
devotion to the code was demanded. In
fact, the Pharisees of Jesus’ time spent a great deal of time debating the
rules- and ascribing “weight” to them; based on the offenses. This is what it MEANT
to be Jewish- what it MEANT to be a person of God. How you attended to the
rules was to some regards the very essence of faith. But then God changed
everything. And we can begin to understand those changes, by looking at how
Jesus responds to their accusations.
As the Pharisees attempt to rip into Jesus on the rules,
Jesus responds with a call for inner purity. Real purity….. Not obedience to
rules, but for a heart that is truly right with God. That truly yearns to be with God.
The Jewish people had a good and thorough understanding of
God. I would argue that it was better than many people today. They understood
that God was pure, God was holy. Unblemished. Perfect. And they understood the
need for atonement. For reconciliation for sin. And so the goal of the laws was
to make themselves pure. Hoping that THIS would make them acceptable to God. This would pave the pathway to God and
eternal life. In fact Jesus isn’t saying that the rules are necessarily wrong
in their intentions. But they are misunderstood. Jesus is saying that God cares
less about the fact that we are making all of the right motions and following a
code, than he does that He has your heart.
God doesn’t care that you are perfect in the eyes of other Jewish people. Or
even today in the eyes of other Christians. The point is this: If we aren’t
giving God our heart- our all- its meaningless. THAT is where he makes us
right. That is where we gain our
inner purity.
In that moment, they didn’t know the mission of Christ. They
didn’t understand that the final sacrifice to put us right with God was on the
horizon. Jesus was about to fulfill the law. Jesus demonstrated it again and
again during his ministry. In Matthew 22: starting in verse 37 Jesus tells us:
“You must love the Lord your God with all your heart, all your soul, and with
all your mind. This is the first and greatest commandment. A Second is equally
important. Love your neighbor as yourself.”
He said that the most important law of all was a law of love. You want
to find purity in God? Then you must love Him. Then you love His people in the
same way. That is how you come into the
favor of God.
Jesus fulfilled the rules. It doesn’t mean that the rules
have no purpose. They are there to guide us. But God changed everything through
Jesus by demanding more- our hearts. Jesus took the rules to a new level.
Since I have made several analogies to driving, and the road
this morning, I implore you to think of the rules that God asks us to keep as
guardrails. God knows we are broken. That we are going to break the rules. They
we will sometimes swerve to the right or left. So he gives us the direction
that we follow in the Bible as a means of guiding us. Protecting us.
We know that on the other side of the guardrail, something
exists that is worse for us than staying on the road. The guardrail guides us
when we stray, when we get off course- whether intentionally or
unintentionally. It keeps us safe from what is on the other side. And so it is
so with the commandments. With the directions that we find in the Bible. The
important thing- is that we don’t lose
track of where we are going.
God cares that he has our hearts. We are his children, and he
loves us. Yet we fall away. We drive through the guardrails. We worship other
gods. We are idolatrous. Often our idolatry is not in the sense that we go to a
strange temple and offer sacrifices to Malek, but there are indeed other gods
in our lives that we worship! So Jesus calls the Pharisees of the past, as well
as his people of today, to examine our inner purity. Our hearts towards God. To
find out where we stand.
I would like to share some ideas on idolatry found within the
book Living Our Beliefs: The United Methodist Way, written by Bishop Kenneth
Carder. Carder describes some of the major things that are idolatrous, yet
widely accepted by Christians and society everywhere. He talks about the three
major “gods” of today. So let us examine and go through them to look behind the
curtain of our outward faith, and determine where our hearts are:
The first god is
Success. God bless America.
Yet isn’t the “American Dream” synonymous with success? Millions of people
focus on success to the detriment of everything else in their lives. As sad as
it is- our society values PEOPLE in terms of possessions, having, titles,
looks, degrees, or power. Yet this is not a theme of the Bible. Jesus
emphasizes living as servants. Of dawning meekness. Undoubtedly when you apply
the diligence and conservative principles taught to us by the Bible, you often
come to have greater wealth, this is not the issue. The issue is when you make
your success a bigger focus point in your life than God. Or your family. Or
your neighbor. Do you know someone who might be worshipping success?
The second god is
Consumerism. Our
market economy is completely based in consumerism. A god that contends that
everything from goods, to people, to institutions is marketable. Sellable.
Which reduces our relationships down to utilitarian function and cost-benefit
considerations. Relationships are based upon what one receives from them. How
is Consumerism a god, you might ask? Let
me throw a couple lines at you. I will start the sentence, and I want you to
finish. So go ahead and shout it out or sing it with me if you know it-
“Everything tastes better, with a dallop of …..” (Daisy)
“A 1. A 2. A 1234- Give me a break, give me a break, break me
off a piece of that ….” (Kit kat bar)
“I want my baby back. I want my baby back baby back. I want
my baby back baby back ribs” Chilis, …. “ (baby back ribs)
This next one is a game. Hungry hungry Hippos, Hungry Hungry
Hippos!
This one is coffee- “ The Best Part of Wakin’ Up- Is Folgers
in your cup!”
We could do this all day. Want to know the crazy part? There
are adults that were born after these
commercials came out. The Kit kat commercial was from 1995, Chilis from 1995,
Folgers from 1994. These commercials were from TWO DECADES AGO- yet we still
know them by heart. How do you know if consumerism is one of your gods? When
you remember jingles from two decades ago but can’t tell someone a line of the
bible. Something from the word of God. I am not trying to make you feel guilty-
If consumerism were a charge you could have locked me up and throw away the
key.
The third god is
Hedonism. I am sure
everyone knows what that is. Well Websters defines hedonism as the doctrine
that pleasure or happiness is the sole of chief good in life. Statements like,
“If it feels good, do it”. “If it feels right, it must be right” are examples
of hedonism. Is pleasure wrong? No. But living for pleasure is dangerous. Its
dangerous because ethics and morality become a matter of subjectivity. It
limits God to being a celestial “Dr. Phil”. I believe that it is a driving force of why so many marriages are failing. If it is not going well, people just throw it out in pursuit of something that will "make them happy", rather than working towards biblical happiness and then sharing it with their partner. And as bishop Carder says, church
becomes a “religious spa”. Being happy is not the problem, but the biblical
understanding of what happiness is- becomes lost. Happiness in the Weslyan
tradition is a by-product of our relationship with God. With feeling his
blessing, and with participating in our relationship with Him.
So in reflecting together today, I ask you- “Where is your
heart”? Has it been in a place of rules and duties that you have been
following? Does your faith, that maybe at one time felt strong and alive, feel
more like “going through the motions”?
Our God is a Holy God. A righteous God. A pure and
unblemished God. But he is a loving God! He desires our actions, yes, but more
than that- our hearts! He wants us to love him, and to daily follow Him alone!
So let us live in that understanding. Put aside all other Gods, and put our
intentions and focus back onto the one that is the giver of true life. Would
you pray with me?
Heavenly father,
We praise and thank you. For coming down into this world, and
making something new of faith. For taking our hearts of stone and replacing
them with hearts of flesh and love. We are yours alone, God, and today we
rededicate ourselves to your word and your way, chasing after you, as you have
been chasing after us. So use us, Lord. Guide us, and keep us in your everlasting
arms- this day and everyday. And its in our gratitude of the sacrifice of your
Son Jesus that we pray, Amen.
Monday, August 24, 2015
Spiritual Transformation: Part III- Sustenance
“Sustenance”
By Alan McCormick 8/14/2015
Well good morning again brothers and sisters! And thank you
for joining us on this 12th Sunday after Pentecost, that day so long
ago when God set his spirit upon the people and the church was born. We are in week three of a series on
spiritual transformation. A necessary component of our lives if we want to
truly experience God in new and exciting ways. What we need to do if we want to
break free from an anemic faith. To look for and discover what God calls for us
and wants for us to be. And to not only experience all that is found in God and
through Jesus Christ, but to sustain
it- to hold it close, and keep it; always.
In week one we talked about that “one big obstacle that we
need to overcome”. The demon or demons that each of us need to conquer to begin
to turn our lives in a direction that leads towards God. This was a lesson on
what we must do, to experience a transforming faith.
In week two we talked about taking steps into becoming what
God wants and has called us to be. We took a look at the scripture in Ephesians,
at spiritual gifts, and examined ourselves to ask: “Where do I want to be?”
“What kind of relationship to God can I aspire to?” We talked about taking
tangible steps to move towards God, and what that might look like in our
lives.
This brings us to part three- the final part- about
sustaining and keeping our promise and commitment towards our relationship with
God. For those of you who have been in the church circle a long time and know all
of the “church lingo”, you could call today “backsliding prevention”.
Let me start by saying that it is great to be a Christian. can I get an amen on that? I talk a good game
about being a Christian. I encourage everyone to become Christians. Why?
Because having faith in Jesus Christ changes lives. I have been a Social Worker
a long time now. I have witnessed transformations (small and large), but I can
say that I have NEVER witnessed transformation in my secular job like those
that I have witnessed when someone embraces Jesus Christ and starts living for
him. There is nothing like it!
But- and there is always a but- It is not easy to be a
Christian. And it’s getting harder and harder too. Being a Christian will right countless wrongs in your
life- and you WILL be blessed by it. But you will never hear me preaching a
prosperity gospel up here. If you accept Jesus, imitate him and live out his
gospel- your life will not suddenly become only rainbows and you will receive every
new truck you like at the dealership because you are now blessed by God. That’s
not how it works. Will your life improve? I’m sure of it. But like the
military, once you are in- you have a duty to do. It’s tough! Sometimes it
feels like the world is on your shoulders. And a lot of times- somebody’s world
IS on your shoulders. And then we Christians have a tendency to wear each other
down on top of it. Concerning ourselves with details and trivial nuances-
attacking each other over such little things- fighting a microscopic civil war-
when just outside our church doors is World War III. A battle for souls! A Battle for love.
So it’s easy to cave.
It’s easy to throw in the towel. It’s easy to back out; you stumble into a hard
rock on your journey of faith, stub your toe; then cry out “I’m NOT PLAYING
ANYMORE!” When you lose your job, your car breaks down, or even worse, you lose
a loved one. Someone dear to you- who was your rock. When life must go on but
it hurts just to get up in the morning. What do you do THEN? What will you do? And
the truth is- we can’t make it through these parts if we aren’t always and
continuously seeking God. Seeking his sustenance. Putting our weights and troubles
on Him, and trusting that he will
deliver.
We are talking this morning on a piece of scripture that
quotes Jesus on a remarkable statement. A statement that is profound, and was even
alarming to the people listening to him. This morning Jesus says, starting in
the book of John in Chapter six, beginning in verse 51:
“I
am the living bread that came down from heaven.
Anyone
who eats this bread will live forever; and this bread,
Which
I offer so that the world may live, is my flesh”
This is a PROFOUND thing to say. This is why it fired the
people up. Jesus links himself to the manna that the Israelites ate while in
the wilderness. The manna that needed to be sought after and collected every
day. Manna that sustained people during the hard times.
My best friend, Paul, has been delivering a sermon series
this month on this statement alone. It is loaded. A lot can be taken from it.
But where I am going with it is this: we
need to understand the manna. If we want to have a remarkable relationship
with God, and be “full grown” in faith, we must approach our faith as the
Israelites approached the manna:
The first thing that we need to know about the manna, is that
it was food given freely to the Israelites during the time that they were
awaiting the promised land. It sustained them, and was given out every day from
the heavens.
Second, it couldn’t be saved. If they tried to collect extra
manna and store it away, it would be rotted the very next day. Why is that
important? It made the people seek it, made them dependant on God.
Jesus is our manna. Our position with God and our
relationship with him is freely given to us. Yet like the Israelites we must go
out and get it every day. We must keep ourselves dependent on God. We cannot
get to proud to go to God in prayer. We must never think that we know enough of
the Bible to stop reading or studying it. We must seek sustenance. We must daily pray to
God, every day, and in every moment we can. We must live with gratitude towards
him. We need to always continue to step up our bible knowledge, and come to an
understanding of the fullness and completeness of Gods promises. We should seek
out solid Christian friendships, where we can support each other and be
transparent and open.
On the physical side of things we must not burn ourselves
out. Our scripture in Ephesians makes some clear points about how we should
live. Is that because God wants to restrict us? No! Instead it is because God
knows that when we don’t take care of ourselves, or that when we drink, we
start making poor judgment calls- and then before we know it we are back to our
old ways or buried in another sin.
I am no different from you… But if all the time we have spent
together boils down to one thing, I pray that it is that you have begun to seek
out and find opportunities and the degree of faith that God has in store for
you. You are never to young, to old. Or too far gone. You are only loved.
Would you pray with me?
Heavenly Father,
We praise and thank you for blessing us. Blessing us with
your word. Blessing us with your spirit. And for blessing us with the tools to
change our lives. To live different. To be different. To have relationships
with you and others like no other. Only you father give us these things. And
with gratitude we come to you with hearts ready to receive it. In you glorious
name we pray, Amen.
Monday, August 3, 2015
Unlocking Spiritual Transformation- Part II "Full Grown"
Scripture: Ephesians 4:1-16, Ps 51:1-12
Thank you for joining us this week, for part two of our series on spiritual transformation.
Thank you for joining us this week, for part two of our series on spiritual transformation.
Last week was an interesting week. If you missed it or just
plain ole’ forgot it, we discussed the story and trials of King David, and how
his issue with lust got him into a lot of trouble; and how the sin that David
committed quickly snowballed out of control, as sin often does.
We talked about how we all tend to have that “one thing” that
holds us back. That major thing we battle with, that keeps us from truly
growing spiritually and experiencing God and our faith in ways like never
before. We spoke about some practical steps
to overcoming this barrier; and about laying down our lives before God and
fully giving it all to Him.
Last week was about a major thing that we are to DO, if we
are to truly be changed and be used by Jesus.
There are things that MUST be
done if we want a Christian faith that is more than a smile and a handshake on
Sunday morning. We don’t necessarily always want to do it- I understand that.
But they MUST be done. What happens
if I put off staining the deck year after year? It ROTS! It becomes useless. Eventually
it gets to a point when it needs to be torn down and rebuilt. And like we
learned from David last week, isn’t getting torn down and rebuilt much harder;
and costlier? The same is true of our spiritual lives! We need to put in the
work to see the reward!
In taking a look at today’s scripture, we can see that today is about the
next step. It is about what we want TO BE, and even more; what we are called to
be. Today we are challenged by the Apostle Paul to “live a life worthy of our
calling”. In the scriptures this morning Paul speaks out to us about the truth
of Jesus in words shared by the Psalmist in Psalm 68 Verse 18:
When he ascended to the heights, he led a crowd of
captives, and gave gifts to his people
Christ Descended to the world. He lived, he toiled. Like you
and me he was tempted and suffered. But yet, when his work was done, he
ascended and he is bringing you and I with him- but now we are No longer captives of what has been
keeping us from God, from the heartbeat of true life, and the arms of Jesus.
I spent a great deal of time this week, in contemplation on
spiritual transformation, on the decline of church in America, and what it is
that I feel the Apostle Paul is getting at in this section of the letter. So I
would like to share with you a story. Use your imagination with me. You can
follow along, close your eyes if you want to- just don’t fall asleep.
There are two men. They are young men in their early
twenties, and they are neighbors, living across the hall from each other in an
apartment building. They have built a friendship, mostly over a common
interest. Both men want to become professional athletes. But both are living in
the apartment building because, so far, it hasn’t gone well. Although both have
been given gifts that could enable them to become great athletes, so far they
have fallen short. They are doing decent in life, but the full potential of
what could be has not been discovered.
One of the young men, Matt, we will call him, is an exercise
fanatic. Early in the morning he goes off to the gym. After work he goes to the
gym. He keeps up the neighbors up at night doing jumping jacks, pushups and pull-ups.
He exercises so much that he never has time to eat. So to save time he often
cooks ramen noodles, or something quick and easy. But regardless of how much
exercise he does, it never seems to make much of a difference. He is weak, and
he makes little or no gains.
John, on the other hand, dislikes exercises. He is often
bored with doing repetitive exercise alone, so no longer bothers. Instead, John
prefers to eat only healthy, nutritious food. Because of this, he feels that the
exercise isn’t necessary. So every day John heads out to find the best organic,
local ingredients and cooks the very best, healthy meals.
One day the two men meet in the hall, and discuss how they
have been struggling as Athletes.
“Come over for dinner tonight, and we will talk more”, John
says. So that night they get together over a healthy meal and give each other
pointers on how to become better athletes. And the conversation becomes so interesting
that John decides to join Matt on his nightly workout regime. The next day,
both men have their best days as athletes yet.
So what happened?
It’s obvious in these terms, is it not? When we are talking
about wellness, its clear to see that Matt needs to eat better food and John
needs to exercise. Its easy to see that in their friendship, they boosted each other
up by supporting each other as athletes. Most everyone can tell you that if you
want to be professional athlete, you need to have a good combination of healthy
diet and lots of exercise.
So how is this different from our Christian walk? How is this
different from our relationship with God? With becoming a mature Christian? If
you want TO BE something in Christ, you chase after God will all you have. You commit
to it. You partner with other Christians to build each other up. You use the
spiritual gifts that He has given you. If you want to use them well, you need
to train yourself.
We train ourselves by taking in spiritual food. Like
listening to sermons, reading your bible, meditation, learning about the
theology behind our faith. I could go on and on. Exercising your faith, in
contrast, is about employing your spiritual gifts, praying with people, chasing
after God in every area of your life.
If you don’t eat
enough spiritual food, your faith is anemic. You become weak. If you only
consume lots of spiritual food but never exercise it, you may become fat and
happy; but it never counts for anything. You can’t score if you’re not in the
game. You may be the best at something
that can be used by God, for the transformation of yourself and of the greater
world. But like these men you haven’t met your full potential. In teaming up,
like Matt and John, sharing our gifts, graces and knowledge, we become better equipped
and better trained.
Paul talked about much in this section of his letter to the
church in Ephesus. But this is the key. BE what God wants you to be, BE someone
different- through the gifts and graces that you have received. Live a life
worthy of the calling. Grow and mature as a Christian, seeking to someday
become “full grown”, and Christ calls you home.
This morning I want to challenge you to create a list of the “To Be’s”. A list of the
areas of your life that you wish to improve on, or be remembered by. These
items will symbolize both where you want your relationship with God to be, as
well as your legacy once God calls you home. Where do you want to be? What do
you want to be remembered by?
It might sound like this:
11.) To be someone with a strong prayer
life. Who feels a very real connection with
God while you pray.
22.) To be someone who walks with humility
and servant leadership.
33.) To be someone who holds close the
truth of Jesus Christ. Someone who stares down adversity and crisis situations
and lives in a comfort and hope, even when faced with the toughest situations
life has to through at them.
Get it out on paper. When its down on paper you are more
likely to do it. Then take a real honest look at your items, and figure out, What do I need to do to get
there? Who should I team up with? Take the next steps necessary to live like no
one else, so that you can experience God in a real and true way like no one
else.
Many, many times have I gotten into conversations with people
and they have said “Well you know, I used to go to church but I never got
anything out of it” or “It didn’t make a difference in my life”. My answer to these folks is usually two
questions- “What did you do to grow closer to God” and “Did you try to become
like Jesus with every ounce of your soul?” The answer is usually silence or an
unsure no. Somehow our society has bought into this idea that you just come to
church and God transforms your life like a spiritual genie. Or not. But the
truth is that although the transformation of life through Christ is a gift, yes; we
need to go through the effort of unwrapping it. Who would leave a million
dollar check in the mailbox but not go through the effort to get up, go out and
check it? Don’t let a priceless gift go to waste by inaction.
Unlocking Spiritual Transformation- Part 1
Scriptures: 2 Samuel 11:1-15, Psalm 14: 1-3
The last couple of weeks God has had a sense of humor with
me, because I feel that he has challenged me to speak about difficult subjects
within His churches. And with churches that don’t yet know me. I have been
blessed the last few weeks with the opportunity to come into new churches on
first impressions, all smiles, and then have to get up to the front and be like
“thanks for having me, its been great to meet you, praise God, (NOW LETS TALK ABOUT THE GREATEST SIN YOU
COMMITT THAT IS IN THE BIBLE) Little tough God… I will say that sometimes
as we follow the lectionary we get some tough subjects.
Today, as you may have noticed from our scriptures, is rated R. But God is good, and I just can’t praise
him enough for using me. I am just a normal person- no different than anyone
else here, really. Yet he keeps surprising me by letting me speak at churches- even though he knows how crazy I am.
But I sure am a lot less crazy today than I once was. And that has a lot to do with what we are
talking about today. Today is special
because we are talking about something that has the potential to change our
entire lives. We are talking about something that if we embrace it, it will
change our entire relationship with God and with other people. If you have been
on a plateau with God, this thing will take you to the next level. Mastering
this one thing can CHANGE EVERYTHING!
Lets get into it by getting into the word of God this
morning. Today we are focusing on the Good King David and the not-so-good
things that David got himself into. Has any of you ever gotten into something they
shouldn’t have and then had to suffer the consequences?
Now in this part of the story our king David, a man that was
once a lowly shepherd, with nothing, has been raised up. God brought David from a place where he had
nothing into being a KING. Into a place where he had ALL of the worldy things
he could possibly want, plus some. Yet what happened? Well the same thing that
happens to today’s celebrities, really. David wanted even more. David wanted what he couldn’t have. David got a little
proud. Showed a little apathy towards God. David thought- I am KING! And when
the king wants, the king gets! In the heat of the moment, David forgot who the
real king was.
So David is looking out over the kingdom, oh so proud of the
kingdom he has built. And he sees an attractive young woman. And so maybe the
first time he looked out, or maybe over many times of checking her out he says
to one of his advisors-
Who is THAT? And hes told- She is Bathsheeba. She is the
daughter of Eliam and the wife of Uriah of Hittite. Why is this important?
Perhaps it is important because Uriah is known to be a dedicated and honorable
soldier. What this should have told David is- don’t go there. These are
honorable people that serve you faithfully. But David is caught up in the
temptation. So he proceeds anyway. He takes the next steps. He has her brought
in, has affairs with her, then a few weeks later, she gets pregnant.
Does he turn from the sin, does he fess up? No! He calls for
Uriah to come home, then repeatedly tries to get him to go home with his wife
so that he can cover it up by passing off the kid to be Uriahs. And I have
heard people say that the bible is boring?!
Well unfortunately for David, Uriah, is so honorable as a soldier that he wont do it.
Anyone know a soldier? I come from a military family so I sure do. And one
thing I know is this- guys and gals CANNOT WAIT to get on home for some leave.
What is better? But Uriah is soooo committed, he wont even go home. He
literally says “Look, I can’t do that. My brothers are out there fighting. I
owe it to them. I don’t deserve it when I know that they are out there fighting
and dying. So he sleeps outside and wont even go home.
It only gets worse. Now King David is in a conundrum. Does he
make a good choice here?? No- he digs himself even deeper, escalates his sin
even more by sending Uriah back into battle with a sealed letter to his nephew
and general Joab that says to get Uriah killed in battle. So as they rush into
battle Uriah is on the front lines, then suddenly Joab pulls back the forces.
And Uriah, a innocent and honorable man, is killed. And several other good men
who are completely innocent, are killed as well.
Well that really spun out of control, didn’t it? Did you
follow it? This thing started with just looking at a woman through a window-
and people are DEAD. Then the child born out of this tragedy DIES. How does
this happen?
The truth lies in understanding how Sin works. The biggest
sins NEVER start out that way. It starts out small. It starts out usually in a
specific area of our lives that we struggle with. It sneaks in. We fall into a
little area of it and before we know it gets OUT OF CONTROL. Its becomes something we don’t intend it to. Its
like the alcoholic that says that is just going to have “one beer”. It doesn’t
work that way! You cant toe around in sin and expect your life not to be
affected by it. When we do that we are limiting what our lives can be, what our
lives can become. Sexual sins are some of the worst, but it could be anything.
Jealousy, anger, pride, alcoholism, you name it.
In working in social work for ten years now, I can tell you
definitively that I have watched people crash and burn from making the same
mistakes THOUSANDS of times. Over and over people can make the same mistakes
without even realizing it, or even worse, do realize it- yet keep doing it. We come to church for a
reason. We no longer need to do this. We no longer are people who need to
suffer from choices gone bad. We don’t need to get caught in the cycles.
EVERYONE has or has had that ONE THING that has been holding
them back from experiencing that incredible life and faith. That one thing that
kept them from a relationship with God like no other. What is yours? I bet you
already know. What causes you to sin? What traps you? What is holding you back
in your life and relationships? If you have already overcome it- PRAISE GOD. Be
a light to that victory and help another through it.
Even my son is a testament to this truth. Now I want to
preface this story with saying that I have amazing, wonderful children. I have
really been blessed with my kids. And I am so proud of each one of them. But
they are human and make mistakes, and I try to somewhat gently guide and
correct them when this happens. Recently, Ethan, my 8 year old, was entrusted
to take twenty dollars to add to his lunch account at school. Some days later,
he comes home with a bunch of stuff from the school store. I said “Ethan, where
did you get the stuff?” “The school store” he says. And without skipping a beat
he adds- mom gave me some money for the school store. Fair enough, I thought,
and I go about my business. A couple days later mom asks about the money I gave
Ethan to go to the school store. Wait a minute!. Well as it turns out, our sweet
little innocent child, got a little tempted while passing the school store. And
then lied, and then lied some more, and tried to cover it up. While making a
mistake mis-spending the money that he was entrusted to bring for lunch was bad
enough, some cover up lying compounded his problem. And what wouldn’t have been
a big deal had he come clean about it- turned into a much bigger deal. Needless
to say Ethan worked a very productive couple of days at a lemonade stand, just
to turn over his profits as restitution. And in the meantime heard lectures
from dad on honesty and integrity. An important lesson learned.
It starts early, doesn’t it? But it doesn’t have to be this way.
For that one thing that you struggle with, God teaches us through the bible
three simple steps in overcoming our problem and having victory with our sins.
I didn’t personally make them up- so you know that they are much more reliable.
They really work.
11.) First, Go to God in earnest prayer to
help you stay away from the people, places, and situations that may tempt you.
Of course this is to help you to break the cycle. The other piece to it is true
repentance. I have found that in my own struggles, when I have approached God
seriously with this from the bottom of my heart he has provided a way out that
I then chose to take or not. But he provides it.
22.) Memorize and meditate on portions of
scripture that combat your weakness. I can’t stress that enough. Nothing else
could possibly train you as well as this as when you identify your problem
coming on. Its like a pessimist becoming an optimist. If they have really been
practicing optimism, it is much easier to see the pessimism when it comes out.
33.) Find another strong believer that you
can share your struggles with. Those individuals who I mentioned earlier who
have overcome their greatest struggles- its time for those people to shine.
Seek out someone who has won your battle. Would you rather disarm a bomb with a
hairdresser or a skilled demolition squad leader?
These simple steps can help us to
begin to live life differently- in a way that will build up our relationship
with God, as well as improve life in general. If we choose to follow them, who
knows what God could have in store for us. We didn’t get into the outcome of
today’s story with David, but after some solid discipline and David’s heartfelt
repentance, God used David in amazing ways. After all, David was the ancestor
of Jesus. And there is no greater honor than that.
Sunday, March 1, 2015
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