Friday, April 30, 2010
Ephesians 6 - Philippians 3
Paul asks for prayers, as we should do, that whenever we open our mouths, words may be given to us so that we may fearlessly make known the mystery of the gospel. It is all about God and not about us. If we follow the Lord's commands in the words of Paul in Philippians 3:13 "Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead" we will be richly blessed. "Our citizenship is in heaven" Philippians 3:20. We belong to Him and he wants us to be with Him forever. Praise our Lord!
Armando Perdomo
May 1
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Ephesians 2-5
The privilege of being one of God’s people comes with responsibility. God has created one new and holy community that He calls to honor Him in all things. The essence of Paul’s writing address day to day living -24/7 worship of God. I don’t know about you, but I tend to struggle when life is mundane, methodical and normal. Paul says, “we will no longer be like children, forever changing our minds about what we believe” (3:14 NLT). On this day or that Houston is a ‘daddy’s boy’. But on other days it’s Mom he wants. You and I belong to Jesus every moment of every day and forever. In our faith we are to be like children, but in our living for God and following His example we are to be grown-ups.
And because we belong to God, we belong to one another. God acted in pure unselfishness and love in giving us His Son. We should also act unselfishly in our love for all others. Paul refers to this as a great mystery, “it is an illustration of the way Christ and the church are one” (5:32 NLT). It is not within our grasp to treat others less than the love shown to us by God through Christ.
The simplicity of Ephesians strikes me as I strive today to “live a life worthy” of my calling. May God bless you as you do the same.
Nathan Tillotson
April 30
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Galatians 4 - Ephesians 1
Why is this sooooo significant for me today? Well, Ephesians chapter one has been my “go to” passage for a long time. I’m an adopted kid that is proud to be twice adopted; once by fantastic earthly parents and once by the living God. When I was younger I stumbled across this scripture from Paul and it helped me see that being “adopted” is not strange or different or weird. Well, maybe it is---but at least WE’RE ALL strange and different and weird together...and loved and saved and filled by GOD! Hallelujah! Just for that---I might just pay the $10 for grins!
Jim Bales
April 29
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
II Corinthians 13 - Galatians 3
I am so intrigued by kids in this mixed-up state because of the potential for discovery of self, and more importantly the discovery of self’s deep need for God’s mercy. Teenagers are so prematurely thirsty for an education on life so that they can make decisions about what they believe, who they are, and their place in the world. Sometimes it’s scary [I know there are parents out there saying AMEN right now] that they have all this cerebral freedom to determine their own path, but such little experience with which to choose wisely for themselves. This internal ambiguity results in a spiritual struggle for most teens as they attempt to establish a personal faith in God. It is a classic picture of self vs. the Spirit. Sometimes it doesn’t even make it to the self-stage…the battle stays in that dreaded teenager dungeon of conformity to the crowd. Then it becomes pleasing men vs. gratifying the Spirit.
Unfortunately, it’s not quite as fascinating nor accepted when we continue to have the same “men vs. Spirit” struggle as adults [though it is the reality of our sinful condition]. I love the light that Galatians sheds on this eternal issue… “For do I now persuade men, or God? For if I still pleased men, I would not be a bondservant of Christ.” It doesn’t get any simpler than that. Ya better choose. Pleasing men AND being a servant of God is not an option. Sometimes it works out that serving God is pleasing to men but Paul makes it clear that if you want to serve God you’re going to have to be o.k. with stepping on some toes.
Paul continues to tear down my misconceptions about needing to please man and indulge self, “For I through the law died to the law that I might live to God. I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. I do not set aside the grace of God; for if righteousness comes through the law, then Christ died in vain.”
Paul pleads with us to give the law up. He tells us that when we believe we can just abide by the laws we are practicing self-righteousness and to embrace the full power of Christ’s death on the cross we must believe that our justification comes from HIM alone. I want to crumble onto the floor as I read that Christ died in vain if we believe righteousness comes from the law.
We are all probably pretty quick to say, “Of course we know that we are saved only by Christ’s death on the cross.” But do we live that way? Do we live like we are walking in the grace of God or do we live like we can earn it if we try harder or we’re just better. God so desires full access to us. Paul reminds me today that the goal is not ultimate goodness. The goal is not to sin the least or have the cleanest record but to daily renounce living for self and living to please men. God is glorified when we say in all our sinfulness, “It is no longer I who lives, but Christ who lives in me.”
Jenna Trapasso
April 28
Monday, April 26, 2010
II Corinthians 9-12
This past week was the first time in many years that spring breaks aligned for Union and Cabarrus counties. It afforded us the opportunity to take our 11th and 12th grade mission trip over the Easter break – and what an awesome time it was! When we left Charlotte it was chilly, drab and grey. However, when we returned at the end of our trip an explosion of green had taken over the city. Spring had sprung, God’s beauty abounded. Looking down from the plane as we approached home was a breathtaking experience. What was once drab and grey in just a few short days had been transformed into something warm, beautiful and vibrant.
In 2 Corinthians 9-12 Paul is talking to the church about their support (financially) for the work of God. He is also talking to them about their character (who they are in Paul’s absence). I love the metaphor that Paul uses in 2 Corinthians 9:6-7. It is apropos for the season we are in and my life. It reads:
(2 Cor 9:6-7 NIV) Remember this: Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows generously will also reap generously. {7} Each man should give what he has decided in his heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.
Paul uses this concept also in Galatians when he says in chapter 6 and verse 7 “A man reaps what he sows.”
When you look at the lawns of Charlotte, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know who has taken time to and money to aerate, seed, and fertilize their yard in the fall. It shows up in the spring time – right?
Well, not always, what if you didn’t have the time or the money to fertilize in the fall, as was my case last year. Your yard should look drab, grey and be full of a lot of weeds – right?
Mine should, but it doesn’t! Why, because while I was out of town on an earlier mission trip to Haiti someone CHEERFULLY showed up and applied weed and feed to my lawn!
I did not have the money, but someone else did. I didn’t have the time, but someone else CHEERULLY gave it. While I wasn’t looking someone gave (the very definition of character)! When we serve others, they reap what they did not sow! Isn’t that the grace I receive everyday from Christ? His grace given on the cross affords me reapings, that I did not sow!
Brad Childers
April 27
Sunday, April 25, 2010
II Corinthians 5-8
OK… Confession time: I don’t like II Corinthians. I hope you don’t think that’s blasphemy, but after reading the New Testament up to this point you can’t help but notice the difference. Paul is so defensive and harsh in this second letter to a church with tons of problems. (See I Corinthians!) In his first letter he handled one question after another and was pretty good about covering a broad range of topics with an even hand. But what happened in this letter? Paul sounds tense, nervous and upset – to quote an old TV commercial. He is constantly defending himself and trying to prove that he really does care and he really hasn’t cheated anybody. Consider these clips from chapter 5:
“What we are is plain to God, and I hope it is also plain to your conscience…”
“We are not trying to commend ourselves to you again…”
“If we are out of our mind, it is for the sake of God…”
The confusing fact is that we know that the guy behind these defensive rants has gone through Hades for the gospel. We watched him suffer and stand strong in Acts and heard him explain the story of redemption beautifully in Romans. He’s a hero! He’s Paul, the Apostle! So maybe part of the purpose of this letter is to let us see the human part of Paul. He gets his feelings hurt. He defends his character. He fights to be heard.
And here’s another strange fact: In the middle of all this he writes some of my favorite verses:
We live by faith, not by sight.
We fix our eyes not on what is not seen, for what is seen is temporary.
As long as we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord.
If anyone is in Christ he is a new creation.
So what is driving these impassioned pleas and this beautiful prose? The answer is one more strange-but-true fact: Its about fund-raising! Paul is trying to get this church to step up and support the ministry of the gospel. In some ways the whole letter leads up to chapter 8 where he challenges them with the example of the Macedonian church. That group so believed in the Gospel of Christ that they gave generously though they were in poverty. Paul knows that it takes money to fund missionaries and keep spreading the word. For that reason he pulls out all the stops to get the members of this presumably wealthy church in this prosperous port town to dig deep. He even uses some semi-Communist language to get the job done: “Our desire is not that others might be relieved while you are hard pressed, but that there might be equality.” Hard not to hear some socialist overtones in that! But Paul’s not thinking politically. He’s thinking missionally. It’s all about spreading the Good News. It’s all about showing love in Christ. For him, our giving is nothing less than a “proof of our love” for the Lord.
“You’ve got it and you know it! Now give it to advance the Kingdom!” That’s his message to Corinth in a nutshell.
I can’t help but wonder if he wouldn’t write the same message to us.
Jeff Walling
April 26
Saturday, April 24, 2010
I Corinthians 16 - II Corinthians 4
- Purity and sanctification- I Thess. 4
- To suffer for doing good in Jesus name- 1 Peter
- To love one another- I John
In 2 Corinthians, when I read through chapter 4, I am so encouraged by Paul's words that though we are outwardly wasting away (our bodies are wearing out, suffering injury and hardships), we are being renewed in our spirits on the inside through God's Holy Spirit. Maybe I need to pray that God will allow me to suffer for His Name and lead me through those hard times? Peter thought himself unworthy to die like Jesus did and so he was crucified upside down. Maybe I need to ask for the strength to be pure and live a holy life before the holy God who gives me life? Maybe I need to focus on loving others and let God take care of the rest and trust in Him by asking for help in faith without doubting him... Sounds like the verse in Matthew- Seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you.
Jack Exum
April 25
Friday, April 23, 2010
I Corinthians 13-15
We Americans use the word love to describe almost anything we enjoy. I love hand-tossed Supreme pizzas. I love NCIS. I love Jamocha Almond Fudge ice cream. And I just love that outfit on you.
But Paul stops in the middle of his multi-chapter rebuke of the Corinthian church to paint an amazing picture of what true love looks like. The Corinthians were exhibiting anything but love – they were selfish, proud, impatient, elitists who focused their attention on themselves – not on others. Paul puts forth an image of a follower of Jesus that is much, much different than how they were behaving.
Love is patient – always used in reference to people, not circumstances, and even used to describe how God treats man. It describes someone who is wronged, who has the power to avenge, but chooses not to. Love never says “I’ve had enough”. Given up on anyone lately?
Love is kind – much of our Christian heritage shows we are good, but not necessarily kind. When’s the last time you not only gave something away or served someone, but did it slowly, intentionally, with a genuine interest in the individual you were helping? It’s hard to be kind when we practice “drive-by philanthropy”.
Love does not envy – this isn’t just a feeling that I wish I had what you do, but I wish you didn’t have it, either. I begrudge you your blessings, because I think I deserve them just as much (well, more, actually) than you do.
Love does not boast – the word describes one who struts around with their chest puffed out. While I might not blow my own horn loudly and frequently, do I talk about how humble and loving and serving I am, and hope someone rushes to agree?
Love is not arrogant - am I inflated with my own sense of self-importance? Napoleon once said, "I am not a man like other men. The laws of morality do not apply to me." I may not go that far, but do I look down on others around me? Do I just know I’m better than they are – and I try to hide my smirk while I mull it over?
Love is not rude – the same Greek word is used for both grace and charm, and this is its opposite. Am I graceful – or graceless? Am I blunt and brutal in my criticisms, or do I show others courtesy and tact?
Love does not insist on its own way – since this doesn’t apply to any of us (certainly not me), we’ll just skip it and move on (a-hem!).
Love is not irritable – provoked, easily angered, exasperated, flies off the handle, has a temper – sounds a bit like Peter, doesn’t it? Anybody else you know?
Love keeps no record of wrongs – an accounting term for making an entry in a ledger that will not be forgotten (“this is going on your permanent record”), it refers to storing up a memory so you throw it in someone’s elses face in the future. Do you have a bucket of these just waiting for the right time to bazooka a loved one?
Love does not rejoice at wrongdoing but rejoices with the truth – even when I don’t care much for the truth? When it hurts, or makes me look bad, or puts a spotlight on my sins and struggles?
Love bears all things – this is the word for “to put a roof over”. It’s not that I grudgingly carry around this heavy burden of all the injustices I’ve suffered, but rather hide them, never again to see the light of day.
Love believes all things – believing the best about people is tough, especially when you know them well (your family, for instance). Can I stop second-guessing their motives?
Love hopes all things – sees the possibilities instead of the faults in someone. Doesn’t crush or dash their aspirations, but speaks words of encouragement. Am I “realist”, placing undue barriers and restrictions on someone based on what I think they can accomplish?
Love endures all things – not just passive resignation, but triumphant conquering. Not with a too-loud murmur, but with a song of praise.
So, how well are you loving?
Trying to recognize I am well-loved more often, so I can love well more often, your brother,
Lee Thrasher
April 24
Thursday, April 22, 2010
I Corinthians 10-12
I have come to accept that pain cannot stop me from hearing God’s voice or from being His instrument. I accept that part of His merciful provision for me is to use pain to prepare me for different, deeper pain. I have accepted the reality that the stronger parts of my body must compensate for those that do not function well.
As I read Paul’s words in I Corinthians 12, my heart mourns that I am often slow to apply these lessons of acceptance to my brothers and sisters in the body of Christ. My impulse to care for, forgive, and protect the weak should far exceed my levels of frustration and judgment.
When I am tempted to speak ill of another part of Christ’s body, I pray that I will remember that He has called us to put on our armor because we are at war. And because, when we speak about the parts of Christ’s body, our Enemy is listening. He does not want our church to be a hospital for the spiritually wounded and dying.
It is my prayer that our fellowship would be one in which the hurting can heal and be nurtured. Let us begin by guarding the gate of our speech.
Kathleen Tatro
April 23
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
I Corinthians 7-9
Julie Hallman
April 22
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
I Corinthians 2-6
God is all, "So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow." I Corinthians 3:7 and he wants us to be like Him. "for God's temple is sacred and you are that temple" I Corinthians 3:17
God is powerful, by His Spirit, we become like Him, "when we are cursed we bless, when we are persecuted, we endure it; when we are slandered, we answer kindly. Up to this moment we have become the scum of the earth, the refuse of the world. I am not writing this to shame you, but to warn you, as my dear children" I Corinthians 4:13. By this Spirit of humility we can understand the way our Lord Jesus Christ is pleased. "God oppose the proud and gives grace to the humble" James 5:6
God has given us His Spirit to be led by what is pleasant to Him. In the letter to the Corinthians, God is clear in warning us against arrogance, sexual immorality and anything that opposes the Spirit of the Lord, since our body is called to be the temple of the Holy Spirit. "Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? I Corinthians 6:19
Praise God for giving us the Spirit of power in Christ Jesus!
Armando Perdomo
April 21
Monday, April 19, 2010
Romans 15 - I Corinthians 1
This is a huge prayer. In the previous verses and those following Paul instructs and encourages us to to do some amazing things. He says those who are stronger should “bear with the failings of the weak,” we should, “accept one another, “ we should be of, “one heart and mouth” so that God is glorified. As I’m reading this I’m thinking, “Yes, yes! This is awesome Paul! We can do this.” But then reality sets in.
Yeah, you caught me. What reality am I living in? God’s or mine? God’s or the church’s? Aren’t they one in the same?
Over and over Paul emphasizes that this is the work of God. He even says that all he has talked about and done is part of a great mystery kept for “long ages past” (16:25). Over and over Paul points to Jesus Christ who accomplished all those awesome things in which the people of God should participate, practice and pursue. Reality is God’s reality. The world as it is supposed to be is a place where our strength, endurance, acceptance, longings, motives of the heart, encouragement, generosity and hope all flow from God the Father to His people where we then overflow out into a hurting and dying world.
And so this is our prayer today: May the God of hope fill us with all joy and peace as we trust in Him, so that we may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. In Jesus name, amen.
Nathan Tillotson
April 20
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Romans 11-14
Maybe I’ll just say summarize the whole thing by saying this (with the help of Eugene Peterson’s The Message), “Take your everyday, ordinary life—and place it before God as an offering. Love from the center of who you are; don’t fake it. Run for dear life from evil; hold on for dear life to good. Don’t quit in hard times. Pray all the harder. Bless your enemies; no cursing under your breath. Don’t let evil get the best of you; get the best of evil by doing good.”
Jim Bales
April 19
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Romans 8-10
Forty days. Moses went up on the mountain for forty days, Elijah was in the desert for forty days, and Jesus spent forty arduous days in the wilderness fasting and being tested. I’m no Moses or Elijah…and I’m definitely not Jesus but this year as the period of 40 days that lead up to Easter approached, I felt convicted about renouncing something for Lent. I grew up attending Catholic Church so I’m a veteran Lenter. When I was 9 I gave up riding my bike…I’ve given up chocolate, ice cream, every non-water beverage. I tried coffee once and failed. Actually, the vice I surrendered this year is one I attempted to relinquish a few years ago and I’m ashamed to say Lent only lasted two days.
This year, though, God has blessed me with my most meaningful 40 day stint. Here are the terms and conditions: I’ve given up radio/Ipod /cd’s -- any music in the car for the duration of Lent. The only solace in the whole effort is my self-given permission to listen to music when I have passengers -- of course only for the benefit of my company. The first days were detox. I would get in the car and inadvertently begin rotating the volume knob clockwise, only noticing what I was doing after prolonged silence and a realization that no sound was coming out. Sometimes I would turn the key in the ignition, put the car in drive, and then go for the power button on the radio. I’d start singing with Billy Joel and then throw my hand over my mouth like an eight year old who accidentally just said a swear and then I’d immediately press the button again…but this time shamefully.
I knew the Spirit had laid it on my heart to give up a little noise in my life. Quickly, I began to comprehend that my brief abandonment of consumerism was giving birth to a deeper hunger for the Lord. In the silence I discovered a desire to confess…I can’t imagine that any human desires this without prompting from the Spirit. Every morning on the way to work I would confess my inequities. Sins would pour from my heart and into God’s able hands. There is an intimacy that exists between creator and created when personal piety is relinquished.
In the name of my new found appreciation for confession…let me acknowledge that I half-expected to run out of sin to bring to God [which I think might be sinful]…but it was this sanctimonious idea combined with a substantial amount of solitude that became the perfect recipe for discovery.
This is what I learned about SIN. Sin is not just an individual act of disobedience and when we view it that way we feed this illusion that we can just avoid sin and be “good people.” We have so many preconceived notions about sin. When we hear the word we think of particular things that “bad people” do. Sin has been manipulated and used against us by believers and non-believers.
Sin is none of those things. Sin is the state we are in. It is human nature. It is our desire to rebel – or to just do it ourselves. It is the pursuit of self and our cheap, unfulfilling culture. It is living out of rhythm with our maker.
Romans 8 says it more powerfully than I ever could. I wanted to copy and paste the whole chapter from The Message but I refrained…here is the meat:
“In his Son, Jesus, God personally took on the human condition, entered the disordered mess of struggling humanity in order to set it right once and for all. The law code, weakened as it always was by fractured human nature, could never have done that.
The law always ended up being used as a Band-Aid on sin instead of a deep healing of it. And now what the law code asked for but we couldn't deliver is accomplished as we, instead of redoubling our own efforts, simply embrace what the Spirit is doing in us.”
These days I don’t even think about music when I’m driving. I just think. I pray. I confess. I’m healed. I’m thankful. I rediscovered God’s mercy and my desperate need for it. I’m happy.
Jenna Trapasso
April 18
Friday, April 16, 2010
Romans 4-7
–a person who advocated or supported the abolition of slavery…
When I was in school, I loved when I had just finished my last exam. There are not many feelings in life that can rival having all those burdens lifted and knowing, for at least a few days, you are free.
Freedom is something we all long for. One of my favorite movies is Mel Gibson’s Braveheart. I love William Wallace’s speech about FREEDOM. The question is what are we trying to get freedom from. The answer lies in, what are we a slave to!
Zach Hunter is a modern day abolitionist. When Zach began his program he was only 12. His goal is to rid the globe of modern day slavery. Thus far, Zach has raised millions and has built schools for children who would have been slaves. Zach is now 17.
Romans 6:20-23 says, “When you were slaves to sin, you were free from the control of righteousness. {21} What benefit did you reap at that time from the things you are now ashamed of? Those things result in death! {22} But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves to God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life. {23} For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Folks we are free from SIN! With Christ living in us sin has no control over us. The payment has been paid. Are you living today with the FREEDOM of your burden being lifted and eternity with God is yours?
Brad Childers
April 17
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Romans 1-3
You’ve seen him on “Survivor” and “The Great Race”… now, read his book!
That’s what it feels like when you turn the page from Acts to Romans. We’ve watched Paul go from a religious terrorist to a persecuted missionary and the travelogue of his missionary trips read like scenes from “Castaway”. But then, after all the excitement of shipwrecks and midnight escapes; of facing screaming crowds and miraculous releases from prison, we turn to the next book in the New Testament and get… theology?
Don’t let this scare you!
In fact, Paul would be saying: Hurray! You finally got to the good stuff! For him, his story was always secondary to the truth for which he was willing to die. And now he lays that truth out in style.
Romans, the first non-narrative book in the New Testament, is as close as we get to a “Christianity for Dummies”. In many ways it’s a non-gospel gospel. You see, many of the folks who would read this letter have never read any of the gospels we all just finished reading two weeks ago. These Roman Christians didn’t have Matthew or Mark to learn from yet so their first taste of a written presentation of Christ’s message was this pamphlet sent by Paul from Corinth. In it he lays out the big picture of the meaning of Jesus’ death and resurrection and the life-changing power of our faith in that act. It is the single most complete theological survey of Christian doctrine in the Bible.
Now doesn’t that excite you? OK: Now the good news… there’s a Reader’s Digest version. It’s the first three chapters and it goes something like this: Mankind has fallen down and we can’t get up.
Paul starts by making it clear that neither the Jew’s law-keeping nor the Gentile’s smarts will solve the problem. The only hope is a “righteousness from God.” Note the direction. It’s important: “a righteousness from God.” The whole book is written to underline that we receive hope, grace and forgiveness through God’s work, not ours. By faith is Paul’s mantra and he makes sure we know that this is faith in Christ… not our goodness, nor the law, nor even the church. Because of the gift of grace through faith in Christ we are free from the law of sin and death.
The rest of Romans will get challenging. (God bless the blogger with Romans 10 & 11!) But remember the core message – Our righteousness is from God. It’s the greatest gift one could ever receive.
And that’s the TRUTH!
Jeff Walling
April 16
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Acts 27-28
He knew Jesus personally and intimately. Jesus was not just a part of his life...He was his life! I pray that God will make us all like Jesus and to be filled with His love so we can share it with others!
Jack Exum
April 15
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Acts 25-26
Paul gives the fourth of six defenses of his faith journey in these chapters. He’s been held in prison for two years after last sharing the incredible story of God at work in his life with Felix, Festus’ predecessor. When King Herod Agrippa II, comes to town, Festus hopes he can hand off this hot political case to somebody else.
This Agrippa is the great-grandson of Herod the Great, who was in power when Jesus was born (you’ll recall he had all the boys two years and under killed in hopes of eliminating the Messiah as a threat to his throne). His great-uncle, Herod Antipas, was in power during Jesus’ ministry, stole his brother’s wife, and has John the Baptist beheaded. Agrippa I (his Dad) kills James and imprisons Peter. He then accepts the praises of the crowd shouting that he has “the voice of a god”, and an angel promptly kills him and his body is eaten by worms and dogs. According to historians, Agrippa II had an incestuous relationship with his half-sister, Bernice. So this Agrippa has a long family track record of being gentle, righteous, understanding, men of great integrity who are sympathetic to Jesus and his followers – NOT. And you thought sharing the gospel with your grumpy co-worker was hard!
In the course of Paul recounting his story, he says that Jesus commissioned him to be “a minister and a witness not only to the things which you have seen, but also to the things in which I will appear to you; rescuing you from the Jewish people and from the Gentiles, to whom I am sending you, to open their eyes so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the dominion of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and an inheritance among those who have been sanctified by faith in Me.’ (Acts 26:16-18, NASB)
What an amazing privilege it is to be God’s partner in his redemptive work! Paul still recalls Jesus’ charge to him as many as 26 years later after first hearing those words on the road to Damascus with incredible clarity. Of course, if Jesus appeared to me on I-85, I’d probably remember it pretty well, too.
Paul had no doubt what God called him to do. Elsewhere (1 Cor 9:16-17) Paul said he was entrusted with a stewardship to preach the gospel, and woe be to him if he didn’t preach.
Paul declared to Agrippa he was “not disobedient to the heavenly vision”, and that is evident even as he tries to convert the king. How often do I ignore the promptings of the Holy Spirit, skip over parts of His Word I’d rather not deal with, shut out the voice of God so I don’t have to do what is hard, inconvenient, even costly?
What vision has God given of who you are to become in Him, and what He has charged you to do? What call on your life is so clear to you that woe be to you if you don’t pursue it wholeheartedly and passionately?
What, though you may not like it, has God called you to NEXT?
Lee Thrasher
April 14
Monday, April 12, 2010
Acts 22-24
No, the waiting that troubles me is the type in which I do not know what is going to happen next. If I am honest with myself, I would have to admit that I never really know what will happen next, but it is in times of waiting that I am acutely aware of my inability to predict the future. This kind of waiting can be faith-stretching and scary.
That is why I am stunned and humbled when Scripture reveals a situation like Paul’s. In Acts 24 we learn that, in the face of false accusations and pending inquiries, Paul had to wait – for two years! How did he spend his “waiting time”? Did he bring a good book or catch up on some knitting? No, Paul did what he always did. He spent his time telling folks about the good news of Jesus Christ. For two years, while Felix was hoping for a bribe, Paul spoke time and again about faith in Christ.
Paul’s example challenges me to remember that God’s timing is not my timing. Perhaps, while I am waiting on Him, there is someone who needs to hear about the grace and hope that can be found in Jesus.
Kathleen Tatro
April 13
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Acts 20-21
Julie Hallman
April 12
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Acts 17-19
Armando Perdomo
April 11
Friday, April 9, 2010
Acts 14-16
Or is it?
Mark Moore said, “The Holy Spirit does what it wants, when it wants, how it wants, where it wants and it doesn’t need your permission.” So when did beatings become divine?
I’m afraid. If I listen to the Spirit, if I really put my best effort into following God is this what happens?
I’m sorry. This text raises more questions for me than answers. I hope it does for you. I hope it puts in you the kind of hope I see in some men who put their earthly lives on the line day in-day out. I hope you see that the Gospel we live for is worth dying for. I hope you see that what we physically see is not what awaits us. This kingdom of God is really worth whatever it takes.
I want to do better. I want to live like Paul (though not getting a beating would be awesome!).
God, help me trust You again for the first time. Let me love you regardless of what may come my way or what cost I might pay. You have paid the ultimate price and whatever it takes to tell Your story to the lost and dying is worth it. Lord, help me today. In Jesus name, amen.
Nathan Tillotson
April 10
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Acts 11-13
Chapter 12-This chapter is bookend-ed by deaths. At the beginning, James (the brother of John) is killed by King Herod. I think it’s the first account of one of the 12 apostles being martyred. Then, at the end of the chapter, King Herod is struck dead by an angel. I think the lesson is clear---don’t mess with the 12 apostles!!! Or is it--don’t think yourself greater than GOD?!?! Either way---Herod messed up big time! Of course, this chapter also has the cool story of Peter’s daring jail break with yet another angel. Isn’t Rhoda a great name for a girl who gets all excited and forgets to let Peter in off the street?
Chapter 13-Barnabas and Saul (whose name changes in this chapter to Paul) set out on their mission trip. I can’t imagine teaching the gospel, getting rave reviews & saving lots of people, and then getting kicked out of town by the leaders. Crazy! Sounds like the leaders aren’t very in touch with the people, but that’s a political discussion we won’t have here!!!!
Jim Bales
April 9
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Acts 9-10
I’ve been reading Acts 9 and 10 over and over and marveling at God’s wisdom and willingness to interrupt stale lives. He imposed blindness on hard-hearted, religious Saul to eventually reveal a humble and devoted servant of Jesus Christ. And He gave Peter just enough vision to expose his haughty, prejudiced heart.
Saul’s encounter with the Lord convicted my 18 year old heart the first time I read it. God’s sovereignty in choosing such an undeserving, unexpected man to fearlessly make known His gospel made me want to trade my indifferent religion for a passionate relationship with the Lord.
Somehow Peter’s vision of four-footed animals never made it into the reading I was doing as I pondered the nature of God and a commitment to living for Him. Maybe the gracious lady that I was studying the bible with decided to omit it from my reading list on account of verse 13, “Get up Peter, kill and eat,” or maybe it was the many confusing references to the Simons…one called Peter and one who’s a tanner and lives by the sea. Sounds like a children’s book: Simon the Tanner Who Lives by the Sea.
Acts 10 doesn’t get the publicity that Acts 9 does, but then God’s not about popularity and ease…He’s about humility and heart. I’m sure there are commentaries written by very wise and intelligent people that dissect the number of times Peter saw the vision and the reasoning behind the clean and unclean animal analogy but it is Peter’s obedience to the Spirit that I think is note-worthy.
The scripture says, “While Peter was still thinking about the vision, the Spirit said to him, "Simon, three men are looking for you…do not hesitate to go with them.” Peter was still thinking…but he didn’t let that stop him. He didn’t say, “Sorry Lord but I can’t go because I’m not exactly sure what to think about that sheet full of four-footed animals and birds I just saw.” He was just obedient.
I’m ALWAYS still thinking. I love contemplating the importance of things…but I am reminded today that God knows the importance of things and He knows when I need to know and when I just need to be obedient. I love what happened when Peter went with the three men. He spoke truth through the Spirit. He began by saying, “…I now realize how true it is that God does not show favoritism but accepts men from every nation who fear him and do what is right.”
Peter was finally living it. He had walked with Jesus and he heard Him preach about acceptance and love. He already knew in his head that God’s grace was for everyone; but the time had finally come for Peter to “Go and make disciples of all the nations.”
I hope Jesus was sitting with the Father exchanging high fives as they watched their mission unfold.
Jenna Trapasso
April 8
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Acts 6-8
Don’t you love a good story? Every night my son Charles wants me to tell him a story. Did you know that the Bible is a story? It is actually referred to as being a metanarrative. A metanarrative is defined as any story told to justify another story.
What we read in Acts 6-8 is a great example of a metanarrative. We are introduced to amazing characters of faith like Stephen, Philip and Saul (aka, Paul). Aren’t their stories great. Stephen full of the spirit tells God’s story from the beginning all the way to the death of Jesus which gets him martyred. Philip obeys the prompting of the Spirit shares the Gospel beginning with prophecy in Isaiah and baptizes the Eunich. And don’t forget we meet Saul the killer of Christians, whose name is changed to Paul and he preaches the gospel to the Gentiles and the world. The best part of these stories is that they are true!
Did you know that you are as much a part of God’s story as Stephen, Philip, and Paul? You have the choice to allow your story, your life, to be as much of a testimony to God’s story as Stephen, Philip, and Paul. Your story want be exactly like theirs. In fact, it will be as different as each of their stories is different. However, it will be just as powerful! How are you living your life? Who is the author of your story? Is it you, or is it God? Be the best _______________ (fill in the blank with your name) you can be. Allow God to use your life to justify His story. After all, all of history really is HIS STORY! The choice is yours to be a part of the story!
Brad Childers
April 7
Monday, April 5, 2010
Acts 3-5
It's almost sad: The first gospel sermon has just been preached. Thousands have found eternal life. The church has begun its rapid spread through the city. And then the money problems start. Its funny how much power money has over us:
A lame man is in the presence of people who can actually deal with his problems. The news of the miracle of Pentecost must surely have been swirling around near the temple. But what does he ask Peter and John for: Money. When Peter said, “Silver and gold have I none…”, he must have turned up his nose like a pan-handler in the supermarket parking lot. Was he thinking “Sure you don’t have any money. You expect me to believe that?”
It’s only by grace that Peter doesn’t just pass this fellow by. But instead, Peter drops everyone’s jaws as he helps this man drop his crutches. His healing not only gets Peter and John arrested but it shows that the money this guy was begging for is what really counts. In many ways he’s just like us. This poor short-sighted beggar gets not what he asked for but what he really needed: Healing. Isn’t that us? We ask God for blessings and health and possessions when what he really wants to give us is healing from our past and hope for our present.
But this guy isn’t the only one following the money: Ananias and Sapphira disprove the notion that the first Christians were all perfect. Didn’t you used to think so? If we could just restore the church to its original ideal state – like it was right after Pentecost we’d have reached our goal. Unfortunately, the church then, like the church today, had issues with money. The first major problem and the first terrible loss came because of money.
It’s a strange contrast that today’s reading shows us two people who were following the money: A poor beggar who got more than he could have imagined and rich couple who lost all that really mattered. Surely there’s a lesson there for you and me today. Take your pick.
If you just follow the money, you might miss the even greater blessing that God has for you NEXT.
Jeff Walling
April 6
Sunday, April 4, 2010
John 21 - Acts 2
- Peter- Crucified upside down- He said he was not worthy to be crucified as His Lord was.
- Andrew- severely scourged & tied by ropes on x-shaped cross where he hung 2 days to expire
- James- beheaded with sword
- Thomas- lanced by
idolatrous priests & burned up in an oven
- Paul- beheaded in Rome
People will not die purposefully for a lie, but rather, for truth.
What a Savior we serve! I am indebted to Him always- it is a privileged to be His bondservant.
Jack Exum
April 5
Saturday, April 3, 2010
John 20
You can sense the fear in John as he and Peter run to the tomb. They are out in the open, exposed, vulnerable to any soldier who might see them. After all, they expect to be arrested at any moment. They were hiding in a locked room, afraid to even open the door.
You can sense their confusion. Is Mary delusional? Is her mind playing tricks on her? Where in the world is Jesus’ body? Did the Jewish leaders take it so they could put it on public display in the city, confirming that Jesus was just a man? Has the last three years been a lie? What made me think He might be the Messiah, the Promised One?
But then, you can sense the slight glimmer of hope as they approach the tomb. Maybe He really isn’t dead after all. Look, the stone has been rolled away. Could He really be the Son of God? Maybe I really did hear that voice on the Mount of Transfiguration after all.
And then, you peek in and stare the truth in the face. There’s no denying it - the body really is gone! The burial cloths are still here! I can’t explain it, I don’t know how it happened, but now I know – I’ve seen it with my own eyes – He’s Alive!
We wrestle with those same emotions as we find our way to the empty tomb. Won’t people think I’m a fool if I believe a man was raised from the dead? How can I know this is true? But maybe, just maybe, there is something more to life than I’ve been willing to admit. Dare I hope that God could really love me? After all, He knows me, and there’s not much that’s lovable about me. But on the remotest, slimmest, slightest chance He does, can I keep on ignoring Him? I just have to peek!
And then you stare the truth in the face. There’s no denying it - God does indeed love me! His Son really did die for me! He’s Alive – and therefore I, too, am Alive!
BTW, here’s a link to my most favorite Easter song - maybe it will become yours.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIndrry40Ks
Lee Thrasher
April 4
Friday, April 2, 2010
John 19
“I wish I had…”
“I almost…”
I know that I have uttered these words. Have you? Often I have tasted regret when I did not heed the gentle whispering of the Holy Spirit. I could sense His leading and yet I failed to act. My journey with Christ teaches me to listen carefully and act promptly as the Spirit leads.
As I read Pilate’s story in John 19, I am overwhelmed by the tragedy that unfolds as Pilate almost does the right thing. We are told that he was convinced of Christ’s innocence. He attempted to distract and placate the crowds, but he was not bold enough to defend his own conviction. If only he had not succumbed to the pressure of power and politics. If only he had stood his ground…
I wonder what pressures cry out in your life? I am convicted by those that hold too much sway in mine. I pray that they will not be able to drown out the voice of the
Spirit. May He grant us courage as we follow where He leads.
Kathleen Tatro
April 3
Thursday, April 1, 2010
John 18
Julie Hallman
April 2