Monday, October 30, 2023

Sing to God

 

[The following is a manuscript of my devotional message delivered on Sunday morning, the 29th of October, 2023, at Pilgrim Reformed Church.  This is a fifth Sunday service where we sang our favorite hymns.  A recording should be available on our YouTube streaming channel: 

https://www.youtube.com/@pilgrimreformedchurch1992/streams.]



Please listen and follow along to the instructions the Apostle Paul gave the Colossians, and us, as written in the 3rd chapter, verses 12 through 17, of his letter to that church family, and I’ll be reading from the New Living Translation of our Holy Bible…
12 Since God chose you to be the holy people He loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. 13 Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. 14 Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. 15 And let the peace that comes from Christ rule in your hearts. For as members of one body you are called to live in peace. And always be thankful.

16 Let the message about Christ, in all its richness, fill your lives. Teach and counsel each other with all the wisdom He gives. Sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs to God with thankful hearts. 17 And whatever you do or say, do it as a representative of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks through Him to God the Father.
--Colossians 3:12-17 (NLT)

Jesus is the Christ, the Messiah, sent by God to redeem us of our sin and offer salvation to the world through the shedding of His own blood.  We carry His name into the world when we call ourselves “Christian”.  If we truly are followers of Christ Jesus, we will honor that name.

As God’s chosen, we should clothe ourselves in tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience.  This is what separates us from the world.  Looking at all that is going on around the globe, we see very little mercy being extended, scant kindness, hardly any gentleness, and no humility or patience whatsoever.

As representatives of our Lord Jesus, we must do better than this, just as Jesus Himself did better than the world.  We should give one another a break, making allowances for each other’s faults, because we all have faults.  We should forgive others, just as we have been forgiven.  Let love be our impetus, our motivation, the deciding factor in anything and everything we do.  And let the peace that only Jesus can give settle into our hearts and guide our lives.

So right now this morning, let us sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs to God with thankful hearts.  For God is good all the time.  And all the time, God is good.  In the blessed name of Christ Jesus our Lord.  Amen.

Let us pray…  Father God, thank You for choosing us to follow Your Christ, Your Son Jesus.  Thank You for sending us out as His representatives.  Please help us be more merciful, kind, humble, gentle, and patient, so that we can show the world Your love.  May we always sing Your praises, glorifying You in all we do.  This we pray in the blessed name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord and our Savior.  Amen.


Sunday, October 22, 2023

Be Resistant

 

[The following is a manuscript of my message delivered on Sunday morning, the 22nd of October, 2023, at Pilgrim Reformed Church.  A recording should be available on our YouTube streaming channel: 

https://www.youtube.com/@pilgrimreformedchurch1992/streams.]



Family, we have two more general apostolic letters to examine.  Now, I’m not including all the letters Paul wrote, nor the letter to the Hebrews that may or may not have also been authored by Paul.  We’ve looked at the two letters written by Peter and the three by John, and that leaves those by James and Jude in our New Testament.

Now James and Jude were both half-brothers of Jesus – same mother, different Father – so they knew Him quite well, even as a child.  James writes primarily about the practical aspects of Christian conduct.  He provides concrete, ethical instructions on how faith works in everyday life, with less focus on theology and more on practicality.  Jude was more concerned with defending the apostolic faith against false teachings that were springing up and beginning to spread through the early church.

Since we can always use more help in how to act and cope in our day-to-day travels through this life, we’ll begin with James’ letter.  Please listen and follow along to the first 15 verses of the 1st chapter of the letter written by James to the early church, and I’ll be reading from the Contemporary English Version of our Holy Bible this morning…
1 From James, a servant of God and of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Greetings to the twelve tribes scattered all over the world.

2 My friends, be glad, even if you have a lot of trouble. 3 You know you learn to endure by having your faith tested. 4 But you must learn to endure everything, so you will be completely mature and not lacking in anything.

5  If any of you need wisdom, you should ask God, and it will be given to you. God is generous and won't correct you for asking. 6 But when you ask for something, you must have faith and not doubt. Anyone who doubts is like an ocean wave tossed around in a storm. 7-8 If you are that kind of person, you can't make up your mind, and you surely can't be trusted. So don't expect the Lord to give you anything at all.

9 Any of God's people who are poor should be glad He thinks so highly of them. 10  But any who are rich should be glad when God makes them humble. Rich people will disappear like wild flowers 11 scorched by the burning heat of the sun. The flowers lose their blossoms, and their beauty is destroyed. This is how the rich will disappear, as they go about their business.

12  God will bless you, if you don't give up when your faith is being tested. He will reward you with a glorious life, just as He rewards everyone who loves Him.

13  Don't blame God when you are tempted! God cannot be tempted by evil, and He doesn't use evil to tempt others. 14 We are tempted by our own desires that drag us off and trap us. 15 Our desires make us sin, and when sin is finished with us, it leaves us dead.
--James 1:1-15 (CEV)

Let us pray…  Heavenly Father, we are blessed to have these letters written by Your Son’s apostles to study and learn from.  They provide us with tips and instructions on how we should live and act as followers of Christ Jesus.  And they warn us of what to avoid.  Thank You, Father, for making sure we would have these letters available even today.  Sadly, though, Father, we don’t always spend as much time in our bibles as we should, reading these letters and all about Jesus.  We get too caught up in the demands of the world on our lives.  Please help us see the wealth of good information contained in the Apostolic letters.  And please help us heed their warnings and instructions.

Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better understand the message You have for us this day.  Please protect us from those who serve Satan and carry out his evil deeds.  And Father, please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, worship, and service, and healthy and safe in the days ahead.  This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord.   Amen.


During a Monday night football game between the Chicago Bears and the New York Giants, one of the announcers observed that Walter Payton, the Bears' running back, had accumulated over nine miles in career rushing yardage.  The other announcer remarked, "Yeah, and that's with somebody knocking him down every 4.6 yards!"  Walter Payton, the most successful running back of his day, knew that everyone - even the very best among us – everyone gets knocked down from time to time.  The key to success is to get up and run again just as hard.

There’s an old saying that goes something like this:  It's not how many times you get knocked down in life that matters.  It's how many times you get back up again that makes all the difference in the end.

None of us quit trying to ride a bicycle when we fell off the first time, did we?  No, we got right back up and tried again.  Eventually, after a few scrapes and scratches and bruises, we got the hang of it – not to say that we still didn’t fall once in a while.  We kept trying until we succeeded riding a bike.  We resisted the urge to quit because we knew the reward that awaited us – the freedom only a bike can bring.  Sometimes we just have to be resistant in order to reach a goal, to reap a desired reward.


In our scripture reading this morning, James tells us to be resistant to the ways of the world.  We should resist feeling sorry for ourselves when we are faced with trials.  We must resist the devil's attempts to destroy our faith; resist the lure of wealth, for riches will disappear; resist temptations to do evil, for these do not come from God but from Satan.

If we are resistant and don’t give up when our faith is being tested, God will bless us and reward us with a glorious life.  And we know the most glorious life of all will begin after this one ends.

Resist and endure.  This is the message James brings: resist and endure.  Jesus gave His twelve disciples a warning before sending them out to spread the Gospel message throughout the region.  Hear the words Jesus spoke as recorded by the Apostle Matthew in verse 22 of the 10th chapter of his Gospel account…
22 “Everyone will hate you because of Me. But if you remain faithful until the end, you will be saved.”
--Matthew 10:22 (CEV)

Resist and endure, remain faithful until the end.  Since we have also been sent out by our Lord to share the Good News and make more disciples, we would do well to heed this warning too.  Because of our belief in Jesus as the Truth, the Christ, the Son of God, and the only way to salvation, the world will hate us.  It will try to keep us from carrying out our mission.  We must be resistant to what the world says to us and about us, and keep on serving our Lord, being faithful and enduring to the very end.  And the promised blessings will be ours.


The author of the letter to the Hebrews agrees with Jesus and His brother James.  Listen to what he wrote to those early Jewish converts to the Christian faith, in the 10th chapter of his letter, verses 32 through 37…
32 Don't forget all the hard times you went through when you first received the light. 33 Sometimes you were abused and mistreated in public, and at other times you shared in the sufferings of others. 34 You were kind to people in jail. And you gladly let your possessions be taken away, because you knew you had something better, something that would last forever.

35 Keep on being brave! It will bring you great rewards. 36 Learn to be patient, so you will please God and be given what He has promised. 37  As the Scriptures say, 
“God is coming soon!
It won't be very long."
--Hebrews 10:32-37 (CEV)

Resist, endure, and be brave.  Our author speaks of the hard times we may have gone through, of abuse and mistreatment we may have suffered, because of our faith.

Now all of this isn’t really a given, although Jesus assured us that in this life we will have trials.  We’ve all suffered through trials of one sort or another, but they haven’t necessarily been a result of our faith and belief, of our work for Jesus.  But there are people in this world – good Christian people – who are physically and emotionally suffering, even dying, because of their service to our Lord.

And family, persecution of the church is not only occurring but growing here in the United States.  We must resist the attempts to crush the church, and endure all that comes our way.  We must keep on being brave and patient, and our reward will be great.  For God is coming soon.  Jesus is coming again soon.  It won’t be very long.  And God will be with us, and we will be with God.

Resist, endure, and be brave.  In the blessed name of Christ Jesus our Lord, the Son of God, who showed us how to live.  Amen.


Let us pray…  Almighty God, thank You for the warnings in these letters in our bible of what is to come, of what we can expect to happen.  But thank You most of all for the words of encouragement that strengthen our resolve to carry on.  Too often, Father, we become weary from the beatings of this life.  Too many times we are shown all the wonderful things the world has to offer if we would just let go of our silly beliefs and enjoy ourselves to the fullest.  Forgive us those times, please Father, when our faith begins to weaken and we falter in our service.  Please help us understand the warnings You’ve provided.  Help us take strength from Your promises.  Keep reminding us that our only hope is in You.  And please help us to not be afraid to share our Lord Jesus with others, sharing Your love, so that they too may be saved by Your mercy and His sacrifice.  And Father, please shield us from Satan as he attacks our faith and tries to pull us away from You.  Help us be better servants, glorifying You in all we do so that the world can see You in us, through our deeds, in how we live.  And help us remain strong, faithful, and true to You in all things, no matter what the world throws at us or holds out before us.

Please hear us now, Father, as we pause for just a moment to speak to You through Your Spirit within us, promising to be more obedient to Your commands, and seeking Your help to do so…

Lord Jesus, You warned us that we will suffer in this life.  You warned us that the world will hate us, just as it hated You.  But Lord, You also reminded us of the great reward that awaits us if we remain faithful to the end.  Thank You, Lord, for paying for our salvation with Your own precious blood.  We pray, O Lord, that we will resist the world and endure whatever befalls us as we move forward in this life.  Please, Jesus, help us reach out to the non-believing world, sharing Your story, the Gospel message, with the lost.  Help us show them Your love, for this is the ultimate good.  Shield our minds and our hearts from the world’s lies and empty promises.  Guide us around all the devil’s traps and snares.  Help us see though his temptations.

And Jesus, please help us be faithful and true to You, putting all our trust in You, all our hope in You.  Please heal the hurts that separate and divide us one from another.  Help us keep our focus on the things of heaven and the needs of others rather than on anything this life might offer.  This we pray in Your blessed name, Christ Jesus our Lord and our Savior.  Amen.

Sunday, October 15, 2023

Imitate What Is Good

 

[The following is a manuscript of my message delivered on Sunday morning, the 15th of October, 2023, at Pilgrim Reformed Church.  A recording should be available on our YouTube streaming channel: 

https://www.youtube.com/@pilgrimreformedchurch1992/streams.]



Family, today we’re going to look at the Apostle John’s 3rd and final letter.  Now, the Apostolic letters were pretty much passed around from church to church in the Asia Minor region, especially those written by Paul, so that all believers might have the chance to read and learn from them.  While John’s 1st letter appears to be written to the church at large, the 2nd and 3rd seem to be addressed more to either specific church families or to certain individuals.

We mentioned last week that the 2nd letter was addressed to “the chosen lady”, which could have indeed been a specific woman, or a sister church to the one John was currently with in Ephesus.  This 3rd letter, though, is definitely addressed to an individual, and one to whom John is expressing his concern about another specific individual and his actions within the church.

The message John conveys is one we would do well to heed ourselves.  So please listen and follow along to John’s 3rd letter to all who might read it, and I’ll be reading from the New Living Translation of our Holy Bible this morning…
1 This letter is from John, the elder.

I am writing to Gaius, my dear friend, whom I love in the truth.

2 Dear friend, I hope all is well with you and that you are as healthy in body as you are strong in spirit. 3 Some of the traveling teachers recently returned and made me very happy by telling me about your faithfulness and that you are living according to the truth. 4 I could have no greater joy than to hear that my children are following the truth.

5 Dear friend, you are being faithful to God when you care for the traveling teachers who pass through, even though they are strangers to you. 6 They have told the church here of your loving friendship. Please continue providing for such teachers in a manner that pleases God. 7 For they are traveling for the Lord, and they accept nothing from people who are not believers. 8 So we ourselves should support them so that we can be their partners as they teach the truth.

9 I wrote to the church about this, but Diotrephes, who loves to be the leader, refuses to have anything to do with us. 10 When I come, I will report some of the things he is doing and the evil accusations he is making against us. Not only does he refuse to welcome the traveling teachers, he also tells others not to help them. And when they do help, he puts them out of the church.

11 Dear friend, don’t let this bad example influence you. Follow only what is good. Remember that those who do good prove that they are God’s children, and those who do evil prove that they do not know God.

12 Everyone speaks highly of Demetrius, as does the truth itself. We ourselves can say the same for him, and you know we speak the truth.

13 I have much more to say to you, but I don’t want to write it with pen and ink. 14 For I hope to see you soon, and then we will talk face to face.

15 Peace be with you.

Your friends here send you their greetings. Please give my personal greetings to each of our friends there.
--3 John 1 (NLT)

Let us pray…  Heavenly Father, You have blessed us so richly by making sure we would have the letters to read even today that were written by our Lord's Apostles.  Their insights and instructions enrich our lives.  Thank You, Father, for inspiring them.  And thank You for ensuring their words would be accessable to us in our age.  Sadly, though, Father, we don’t always spend as much time in Your word, reading these letters, as we should.  We get too wrapped up in the day-to-day workings of our lives.  Please help us see the wealth of good information contained in the Apostolic letters.  And please help us heed their warnings and instructions.

Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better understand the message You have for us this day.  Please protect us from those who serve Satan and carry out his evil deeds.  And Father, please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, worship, and service, and healthy and safe in the days ahead.  This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord.   Amen.


John Wesley, the father of the Methodist Church, once challenged us Christians to, “Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all people you can, as long as ever you can.”  That ought to be enough to keep us busy and out of trouble for a while.

Back in the 1970's, the Association of Life Underwriters of Washington, D.C, conducted a little survey where it was shown that for every dollar reaching the needy, the sick, the underprivileged child, and the aged adult, the cost of channeling it through the church is just eight cents, while the cost of channeling it through voluntary charitable organizations or the federal government is 27 cents and $3, respectively.

Let me repeat that...  For every dollar intended for the needy, the church can deliver that dollar for the cost of only 8 cents, whereas it costs 27 cents to go through a voluntary charitable organization and $3 for the government to handle the task.  Every one dollar that our government spends helping the poor, the sick, the underprivileged, the elderly, costs the American taxpayer three dollars!

Now granted, those figures are 50 years old now, but I bet the ratios are pretty close to the same today.  It looks to me like the church is the most efficient provider of services by far.  So let's follow John Wesley's encouragement and do all the good we can as a church family, working for Jesus.

One might ask how can the church do so much better at helping those in need, providing so much at so little a cost?  I think we can look at the time when Jesus fed over 5,000 people with nothing more than two small fishes and five small loaves of bread.  He did this miracle by putting it in God’s hands.  When we trust in God, when we put a seemingly impossible task in His hands, He can make a little go a long way.  When the church imitates Jesus in this manner, we can do a lot with a little.


After an opening introduction similar to what we read in the 2nd letter, John gets right to the point.  He is concerned about the treatment that some “traveling teachers” received in Gaius’ church.  Some versions of our Bible call these folks “brothers” or “brethren”.  In effect, they were disciples who went from church to church throughout the known world, sharing the Gospel message and teaching those church families more about Jesus.  These were people much like Paul, who not only planted churches but also visited some that other missionaries had started, like the church in Rome.

Well, some of these traveling teachers brought back a report of how that church was staying faithful and living according to the truth of the Gospel.  And apparently they made sure to note that Gaius himself had been especially welcoming and supportive of them while there.

Let me point out something here that comes up very briefly toward the end of the letter, where John mentions a man named Demetrius.  Demetrius was very likely one of these traveling teachers, perhaps the one who brought the report back to John.  John speaks highly of Demetrius, to let Gaius know how much his support was appreciated.

In this letter, John encourages Gaius and his church to continue being hospitable to these teachers, even though they might be complete strangers, for they are traveling and teaching for the Lord Jesus.  And for their efforts they receive only support from the churches that sent them and the churches that receive them, as Gaius did.

But there was one man there in Gaius’ church who rejected the teachers and refused to have anything to do with them.  Not only that, but he also told other believers not to help the teachers.  And if they decided not to listen to him and helped the travelers anyway, he kicked them out of the church!

Now John describes this Diotrephes as one who loves to be a leader.  We might call him a self-styled leader, someone who wants to be in charge of things.  John makes it clear that when he comes to visit, he will make everyone aware of what this man has been doing, including the evil accusations he has made against John and the brethren, all of which is in sharp contrast to the teachings and commands of Jesus.  In this letter, John is exercising his apostolic authority and rebuking Diotrephes, and he has every intention of doing so in public when he comes to visit.


Then John offers his friend, and us, some very good advice.  Don’t let this man’s bad behavior have any impact on how we live and act.  Don’t let his bad example influence us.  Follow only what is good.  Imitate what is good, not what is evil.

Now we today are in a great position to see what is good, for we have all the works and deeds of righteous men and women throughout the ages saved for us in our Bible.  And in all of that, we can easily see that Jesus is the best example to follow, the best to imitate.

Hear the words the Apostle Peter spoke to the household of the Roman centurion Cornelius as recorded by the Apostle Luke in chapter 10 verses 38 and 39 of his Book of the Acts of the Apostles…
38b "God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and with power. Then Jesus went around doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with Him.

39a “And we apostles are witnesses of all He did throughout Judea and in Jerusalem."
--Acts 10:38b-39a (NLT)

Jesus went around doing good, everywhere He went.  He healed all who were oppressed by the devil, those afflicted in body and in spirit.  He taught the truth of God’s word.  Then He gave His all, sacrificed Himself, just so we might be saved.  And His Apostles witnessed it all.

He could do all this because God was with Him.  He put everything in God’s hands.  That’s a great example to imitate – putting everything in God’s hands.


In his three letters, John fully endorses doing good.  He says that doing good shows we are children of God.  In this final letter, he reminds us that “those who do good prove that they are God’s children, and those who do evil prove that they do not know God”.  We are to do good and not follow the example of Diotrephes, who has proven that he does not know God.

Of course, we know that doing good brings many rewards, including personal satisfaction.  In the 5th chapter of his Gospel account, verses 28 and 39, John recorded Jesus saying…
28b “The time is coming when all the dead in their graves will hear the voice of God’s Son, 29 and they will rise again. Those who have done good will rise to experience eternal life, and those who have continued in evil will rise to experience judgment.”
--John 5:28b-29 (NLT)

In this life, we have choices.  Jesus is telling us the results we can expect from one of those choices: to do good in this life or to do evil.  The folks who have done good in their life will rise from the dead to everlasting life.  Those who continued in evil will also rise from the dead, but to judgment.

Now notice that Jesus didn’t say “those who have done evil”.  It’s a pretty safe bet that we’ve all done something bad in our lives, something with evil intent.  But we’ll only be judged for it if we keep on acting that way, if we continue doing bad things rather than repenting and trying to only do good.  If we truly are children of God, brothers and sisters of Jesus, we will turn from any evilness and do only good.  We will follow only what is good, just as Gaius did, with Jesus being our very best example.

So let us imitate what is good.  And God will be with us.  In the blessed name of Christ Jesus our Lord, the Son of God, who showed us how to live.  Amen.


Let us pray…  Almighty God, thank You for giving us so many examples of how to live in a manner that is pleasing to You.  And thank You for all the warnings for us to avoid bad behavior.  Too often, Father, we get confused as to what really is good and what is evil.  Too many times we hear what we think is good being called evil, and what we think is evil being called good.  Forgive us those times, please Father, when we begin to wonder what we should do.  Please help us better understand Your word and how it applies to our life.  Keep reminding us to spend more time with You and in Your word.  And please help us to not be afraid to share our Lord Jesus with others, sharing Your love, so that they too may be saved by Your mercy and grace.  And Father, please shield us from Satan as he attacks our faith and tries to pull us away from You.  Help us be better servants, glorifying You in all we do so that the world can see You in us, through our deeds, in how we live.  And help us remain strong, faithful, and true to You in all things, no matter what the world throws at us or holds out before us.

Please hear us now, Father, as we pause for just a moment to speak to You through Your Spirit within us, promising to be more obedient to Your commands, and seeking Your help to do so…

Lord Jesus, everything You did while in human form was done out of love.  Even when You would rebuke the religious leaders, it was out of love – Your love of Your Father God, and Your love for us that we not be led astray by the false teachings of the Pharisees and scribes.  Thank You, Lord, for Your words and deeds - for how You lived - this serves as the best example for us to follow.  We pray, dear Lord, that we do only good moving forward in this life.  Please, Jesus, help us reach out to the non-believing world, sharing Your story, the Gospel message, with the lost.  Help us show them Your love, for this is the ultimate good.  Shield our minds and our hearts from the world’s lies and empty promises.  Guide us around all the devil’s traps and snares.  Help us see though his temptations.

And Jesus, please help us be faithful and true to You, putting all our trust in You, all our hope in You.  Please heal the hurts that separate and divide us one from another.  Help us keep our focus on the things of heaven and the needs of others rather than on anything this life might offer.  This we pray in Your blessed name, Christ Jesus our Lord and our Savior.  Amen.

Sunday, October 08, 2023

A Reminder

 

[The following is a manuscript of my message delivered during Pastor Appreciation Month, on Sunday morning, the 8th of October, 2023, at Pilgrim Reformed Church.  A recording should be available on our YouTube streaming channel: 

https://www.youtube.com/@pilgrimreformedchurch1992/streams.]



Family, we finished the Apostle John’s 1st letter to the early church a few weeks ago, but I’d like to return to his letters this morning.  He wrote three that we know of, with the 2nd and 3rd being fairly short, so short that they became single-chapter books in our Holy Bible.  Since they are quite brief in length, we’ll cover the 2nd letter today and the 3rd next week.

All three were very probably written in roughly the same time period – around 90 AD - and from the same location – most likely Ephesus, which played a huge role in the rise and spread of the Christian church.  Now Ephesus in Paul’s time was a major port city on the Mediterranean Sea.  It was the second largest city in the Roman Empire and considered by many to be the most important Greek city and trading center in the Mediterranean region.  And it was a hotbed of early Christian evangelism.  Today, it’s well-preserved ruins lie in the Central Aegean region of Turkey, where it remains a Christian pilgrimage destination.

But back to the topic at hand, the main thrust of John’s 2nd letter deals with walking through this life as new creations, following Christ’s teachings and commands.  And it also serves as a great reminder of what we have been told before.  So please listen and follow along as I read John’s 2nd letter to the early church from The Living Bible version of our Holy Bible…
1 This letter is from John, the elder.

I am writing to the chosen lady and to her children, whom I love in the truth — as does everyone else who knows the truth — 2 because the truth lives in us and will be with us forever.

3 Grace, mercy, and peace, which come from God the Father and from Jesus Christ — the Son of the Father — will continue to be with us who live in truth and love.

4 How happy I was to meet some of your children and find them living according to the truth, just as the Father commanded.

5 I am writing to remind you, dear friends, that we should love one another. This is not a new commandment, but one we have had from the beginning. 6 Love means doing what God has commanded us, and He has commanded us to love one another, just as you heard from the beginning.

7 I say this because many deceivers have gone out into the world. They deny that Jesus Christ came in a real body. Such a person is a deceiver and an antichrist. 8 Watch out that you do not lose what you have worked so hard to achieve. Be diligent so that you receive your full reward. 9 Anyone who wanders away from this teaching has no relationship with God. But anyone who remains in the teaching of Christ has a relationship with both the Father and the Son.

10 If anyone comes to your meeting and does not teach the truth about Christ, don’t invite that person into your home or give any kind of encouragement. 11 Anyone who encourages such people becomes a partner in their evil work.

12 I have much more to say to you, but I don’t want to do it with paper and ink. For I hope to visit you soon and talk with you face to face. Then our joy will be complete.

13 Greetings from the children of your sister, chosen by God.
--2 John 1 (TLB)

Let us pray…  heavenly Father, You inspired some of Your Son’s followers to write about His life and all He did and said, and some to write letters to the young Christian church, offering encouragement and instructions on how they should live.  Thank You, Father, for allowing us to share in their insight and teachings.  Thank You for saving their words over the centuries in our Bibles.  Sadly, though, Father, there are many who will never read or hear these words.  And there are too many who refuse to believe what they have heard or read.  Please help the first group gain access to Your word, and have mercy on the second so that they may someday come to believe.  Please help us reach out to the non-believers.  Help us share Your word and Your love with them.  Please protect us from those who serve Satan and carry out his evil deeds.  And Father, please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, worship, and service, and healthy and safe in the days ahead.

Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better understand the message You have for us this day.  Please help us walk in the truth, obeying Your Son’s commands.  Keep reminding us of what we have been taught and told.  This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord.   Amen.


Pastor and author A. W. Tozer once lamented, “We have gotten accustomed to the blurred puffs of gray fog that pass for doctrine in churches and expect nothing better.  From some previously unimpeachable sources are now coming vague statements consisting of a milky admixture of Scripture, science, and human sentiment that is true to none of its ingredients because each one works to cancel the others out.  Little by little Christians these days are being brainwashed.  One evidence is that increasing numbers of them are becoming ashamed to be found unequivocally on the side of truth.  They say they believe, but their beliefs have been so diluted as to be impossible of clear definition.  Moral power has always accompanied definite beliefs.  Great saints have always been dogmatic.  We need a return to a gentle dogmatism that smiles while it stands stubborn and firm on the Word of God that lives and abides forever.”


Strong words there, and quite a condemnation of the present day church.  Tozer says that Christians today are being brainwashed, and I have to agree with that.  But not all of that is coming from the church itself, from the pulpit, as he somewhat implies.

Yes, for sure there are false teachers standing in pulpits around the world who are indeed misleading their flocks.  It’s not really a new phenomenon, although it certainly has been rapidly increasing the last few decades.  The Apostle Paul warned us about this.  Paul also said that the people themselves would not abide by sound doctrine but would hire these preachers who would say what the people wanted to hear, the things that made them feel good about themselves with no regard to actual theology.  Hear what Paul wrote in his 2nd letter to his young protégé Timothy, from chapter 4 verses 2 through 4…
2 Preach the word of God. Be prepared, whether the time is favorable or not. Patiently correct, rebuke, and encourage your people with good teaching.

3 For a time is coming when people will no longer listen to sound and wholesome teaching. They will follow their own desires and will look for teachers who will tell them whatever their itching ears want to hear. 4 They will reject the truth and chase after myths.
--2 Timothy 4:2-4 (NLT)

Paul and John are firmly in agreement in this warning.

So where does the brainwashing originate?  In the popular culture, the playground of the devil.  Today, people don’t want to hear the truth.  They want to justify their chosen lifestyle, whatever it might be that makes them feel good.  Right and wrong no longer has meaning.  There is no hell, so why fear it.  God – if one even exists - loves everybody, so we’re all going to heaven.

And sadly, some preachers are more than willing to go along with this way of thinking, as long as their congregations are large and the money is flowing.  Family, this might be Pastor Appreciation Month, but not all pastors are worthy of appreciation.  I pray that you will never hear anything but the unequivocal truth – the true word of God – coming from this pulpit.


So what did you think of John’s 2nd letter?  It’s quite different, isn’t it?  One might even call it a little strange, especially in its opening and closing verses.

Who is John writing to?  I said this is a letter to the early church but who is this “chosen lady”?  Who are her children?  And who is her sister?

Well, these are questions that have been asked for many, many years, and without complete resolution.  The “chosen lady” may refer to a specific individual, so her children would thus be her actual children.  Or the term may refer to a given church, or to the church at large, in which case her “children” would be the members of that church, or all Christians in total.

But phrases John uses in the letter make it more likely that he was addressing a specific church that was located at some distance from Ephesus, and thus to the members of that church.  Part of this is implied in the opening, where John introduces himself.  Why introduce yourself if the people already know you?  And then he states that he had met some of the children, the members.  Had he actually visited that church, one would think he would have met them all, or at least most of them.  Later on he even says he hopes to visit them soon, so he hasn’t done so yet.

Adding to the confusing nature of this epistle, we have the closing, where John speaks of the chosen lady’s sister and her children.  This would be simply be a “sister” church and its members, possibly the church in Ephesus.

So put it all together, and John is writing to a sister church some distance away, warning them of the missionary efforts of false teachers, deceivers and antichrists, and the danger of welcoming them into the congregation when they arrive.  But it is also a reminder of all that we believers have been told from the beginning.  John reminds us of our commandment to love.


Now I mentioned that all three of John’s letters were likely written at the same time and from the same general location.  So it shouldn’t seem all that unusual that he would repeat key parts of his messages, especially in this 2nd letter which serves as a reminder as well as a warning.  In the 2nd chapter of his 1st letter, verses 7, 18 through 19, and 24, John wrote these words…
7 Dear friends, I am not writing a new commandment for you; rather it is an old one you have had from the very beginning. This old commandment — to love one another — is the same message you heard before.

18 Dear children, the last hour is here. You have heard that the Antichrist is coming, and already many such antichrists have appeared. From this we know that the last hour has come. 19 These people left our churches, but they never really belonged with us; otherwise they would have stayed with us. When they left, it proved that they did not belong with us.

24 So you must remain faithful to what you have been taught from the beginning. If you do, you will remain in fellowship with the Son and with the Father.
--1 John 2:7, 18-19, 24 (NLT)

Those of us fortunate enough to read all three letters can see the repeated reminders of what we have been told before.  The importance of loving one another is drilled into our heads and into our hearts, along with the warning to beware those who would try to teach us other than the truth of our Lord.  We must remain faithful to what we have been taught so that we can stay in fellowship with our Lord Jesus and our Father God.


John speaks often of the truth in this letter.  He writes to this church that he loves in the truth, just as does everyone else who knows the truth.  The truth is the Gospel message: salvation through Jesus and only through Jesus.

All who believe and abide in this truth love each other, or we should since we are commanded to do so.  If we abide in the truth, it lives in us and will be with us forever.  And even better, the grace, mercy, and peace of God the Father and of Jesus His Son will also be ours.  But we must be wary, for there are many who deny the truth, who deny that God came to us as one of us.  There are many who will tell us not to worry about how we live for there really is no sin as long as we’re not hurting anyone else.

We must be careful not to be lulled into this false doctrine, not to pay heed to this message that makes a lie of the truth.  We have the truth implanted into our hearts the moment we believed and accepted Jesus as Lord.  And we have a reminder of the truth at our fingertips, in our Holy Bible.

Let us trust in the word, trust in the truth, trust in God.  In the blessed name of Christ Jesus our Lord, the one true Son of God who gave of Himself to reconcile us with the Father.  Amen.


Let us pray…  Almighty God, thank You for seeing to it that we are reminded time after time of Your truth.  It is critical that we understand we are to love others.  It is crucial that we know the truth that is the Gospel message, that You sent Jesus to wash away our sin by the outpouring of His own precious blood.  Thank You for providing the truth for us in our Holy Bible and for saving it throughout the ages.  Too many times, though, we just don’t take the time to read Your word and study it and take its meaning into our hearts.  Too often we lose sight of what we have been commanded to do and we fail to love as Jesus loved.  Forgive us those times, please Father, when we disappoint You.  Please help us set aside those worldly attractions that rob us of the time we could spend with You and Your word.  Help us better see how obeying You is to our ultimate benefit.  And please help us to not be afraid to share our Lord Jesus with others, sharing Your love, so that they too may be saved by Your mercy and grace.  And Father, please shield us from Satan as he attacks our faith and tries to pull us away from You.  Help us be better servants, glorifying You in all we do so that the world can see You in us, through our deeds, in how we live.  And help us remain strong, faithful, and true to You in all things, no matter what the world throws at us or holds out before us.

Please hear us now, Father, as we pause for just a moment to speak to You through Your Spirit within us, promising to be more obedient to Your commands, and seeking Your help to do so…

Lord Jesus, You came into this world to free us from our sin, to save us from ourselves.  You allowed Your body to be broken, Your blood to be spilled, just so that we could be forgiven and washed clean in God’s eyes.  And You taught us how to love, to love God and to love others.  Thank You, Lord, for Your words and deeds that stand as an example for us to follow.  We pray, dear Lord, that we can show as much love for others as You have for us.  Please, Jesus, help us reach out to the non-believing world, sharing Your story, the Gospel message, with the lost.  Help us show them Your love.  And help us endure any trials or persecution our efforts may bring.  Shield our minds and our hearts from the world’s lies and empty promises.  Guide us around all the devil’s traps and snares.  Help us see though his temptations.

And Jesus, please help us be faithful and true to You, putting all our trust in You, all our hope in You.  Please heal the hurts that separate and divide us one from another.  Help us keep our focus on the things of heaven and the needs of others rather than on anything this life might offer.  This we pray in Your blessed name, Christ Jesus our Lord and our Savior.  Amen.

Sunday, October 01, 2023

Sharing Christ Jesus

 

[The following is a manuscript of my message delivered on Sunday morning, World Communion Sunday, the 1st of October, 2023, at Pilgrim Reformed Church.  A recording should be available on our YouTube streaming channel: 

https://www.youtube.com/@pilgrimreformedchurch1992/streams.]



Family, as I mentioned, this is World Communion Sunday when Christians all over the world observe the sacrament of Holy Communion.  We will all be partaking of the sacred elements - the body of Jesus, broken for us; His blood, poured out for us - remembering the sacrifice He made for us.  And as we eat the bread and drink of the cup, we will be sharing Christ Jesus with one another.


The Apostle Paul wrote two letters to the church in Corinth.  Well… let me correct that…  Paul actually wrote three letters to that church family, but the first was lost, so what we call 1st Corinthians was really the second letter.  Now Paul knew they never received that first letter because of a letter they sent to him, describing issues and asking questions, some of which should have been answered.

The church was suffering through problems of immorality and divisions within the church family.  They had questions about the resurrection and about marriage and worship and even food.  In many ways, they were not all that different from the church today.  So Paul wrote another first letter to them, in which he addressed their concerns, giving practical advice on dealing with their spiritual and moral problems and questions.

Please listen and follow along to verses 13 through 24 of the 10th chapter of Paul’s 1st received Letter to the Corinthians, and I’ll be reading from the Easy-to-Read Version of our Holy Bible this morning…
13 The only temptations that you have are the same temptations that all people have. But you can trust God. He will not let you be tempted more than you can bear. But when you are tempted, God will also give you a way to escape that temptation. Then you will be able to endure it.

14 So, my dear friends, stay away from worshiping idols. 15 You are intelligent people. Judge for yourselves the truth of what I say now. 16 The cup of blessing that we give thanks for is a sharing in the blood sacrifice of Christ, isn’t it? And the bread that we break is a sharing in the body of Christ, isn’t it? 17 There is one loaf of bread, so we who are many are one body, because we all share in that one loaf.

18 And think about what the people of Israel do. When they eat the sacrifices, they are united by sharing what was offered on the altar. 19 So, am I saying that sacrifices to idols are the same as those Jewish sacrifices? No, because an idol is nothing, and the things offered to idols are worth nothing. 20 But I am saying that when food is sacrificed to idols, it is an offering to demons, not to God. And I don’t want you to share anything with demons. 21 You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and then go drink a cup that honors demons. You cannot share a meal at the Lord’s table and then go share a meal that honors demons. 22 Doing that would make the Lord jealous. Do you really want to do that? Do you think we are stronger than He is?

23 “All things are allowed,” you say. But not all things are good. “All things are allowed.” But some things don’t help anyone. 24 Try to do what is good for others, not just what is good for yourselves.
--1 Corinthians 10:13-24 (ERV)

Let us pray…  heavenly Father, You gave Your own Son up as a sacrifice that we might be forgiven of our sin.  Only a blood sacrifice can atone us, and Jesus shed His blood for us.  Thank You, Father, for loving us this much.  Sadly, though, Father, there are many who do not know of Your mercy and Your truth.  And there are too many who refuse to accept the truth even when they have been told it.  Forgive them, Father, for we still don’t always know what we’re doing.  Please help us reach out to the non-believers.  Help us share Your love with them.  And please protect us, Father, from those who serve Satan and carry out his evil deeds.  Remind us that You will help us resist the devil and endure to the end.  And Father, please keep us strong in our faith, of one mind and one purpose in our love, worship, and service, and healthy and safe in the days ahead.

Speak to us now, Father, that we might hear Your voice through Your Spirit within us and better understand the message You have for us this day.  Please help us see how some of our behavior does not please You.  Help us turn from our idols and worship only You.  This we pray in the precious name of Your Son, Christ Jesus our Lord.   Amen.


Author Dan Bernard once wrote, “Remember putting your face above a headless frame painted to represent a muscle man, a clown, or even a bathing beauty?  Many of us have had our pictures taken this way, and the photos are humorous because the head doesn't fit the body.  If we could picture Christ as the head of our local body of believers, would the world laugh at the misfit?  Or would they stand in awe of a human body so closely related to a divine head?”

They used to be quite common at attractions all over but you don’t see those cut-out figures much anymore.  The last ones I remember were from many years ago when we were visiting Erin in Vermont and we toured the Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream Factory.  They’d have these silly figures cut from plywood and painted and with a hole cut out for your face.  You’d stand behind the figure and stick your face in the hole and your friends and relatives would laugh and take pictures – great fun.

Mr. Bernard is imagining a cut-out figure of the church, with the head of Jesus showing through the hole.  Would the world laugh at this sight, he asks?  Would it look as funny and out of place as one of us with our face on the muscle man or bathing beauty figure?  Would people laugh at it?  Or would they stand in awe at how well that divine head seemed to fit that human body?

Today, family, the entire body of Jesus is joined together by Holy Communion.  How does the world see us?


Paul opened our scripture passage this morning talking about temptation, and I included it on purpose.  We may not often associate temptations with Paul and his works or his writings, but the reality is that the Apostle must have resisted many temptations in his walk with Jesus.  Think about all the times he was shipwrecked, beaten, imprisoned, spit at and cursed and chased out of town, or run out before the mob could get to him.  Don’t you think he was probably often tempted just to chuck it all, to quit this insanity, settle down, get a real job, and lead a normal life?

Paul knew full well, through his own experiences, that God will not let us be tempted more than we can bear.  And when we are tempted, our heavenly Father will help us resist, giving us a way to escape the temptation and turn away from it.  Then we can endure, just like he did.


And what are some of our temptations?  The Christians in Corinth had many, including the worshiping of idols and false gods.  In this regard, not much has changed.  We, too, have many temptations thrown at us today, and we, too, still struggle with worshiping idols.  Our idols may not be graven images, carved from wood or stone as objects of our worship.  But whatever we give our heart to, whatever we put ahead of God in our life, it is our idol, and it is a temptation held out before us by the devil, to take our heart away from God.

We cannot worship God and the devil both – it’s one or the other.  When we give in to these temptations, making sacrifices of our time and resources to our idols and taking spiritual, emotional nourishment from them, we are in effect worshiping the devil and not God.

Jesus, the Bread of Life, allowed His body to be broken, taking our sin upon Himself.  The Living Water allowed His blood to be shed for our atonement, that we might never thirst again.  This is the bread and the cup we share this morning.  We must not share a meal at our Lord’s table and then go share a meal that honors demons and the devil.  Trust solely in God, and He will help us resist these temptations, showing us the way to escape them.


A little later on, Paul gives us a bit more insight into the problem of trying to worship God while we still give of ourselves to our idols.  In his follow-up letter to the church in Corinth, from 2nd Corinthians chapter 6, in verse 14 through the first part of verse 16, Paul says…
14 You are not the same as those who don’t believe. So don’t join yourselves to them. Good and evil don’t belong together. Light and darkness cannot share the same room. 15 How can there be any unity between Christ and the devil? What does a believer have in common with an unbeliever? 16 God’s temple cannot have anything to do with idols, and we are the temple of the living God.
--2 Corinthians 6:14-16a (ERV)

When we accepted Jesus as our Lord and Master, we were made new.  We’re no longer the same as the world’s people, those who don’t believe.  So we shouldn’t act like them!  We’re not like them now, we don’t belong with them.  We can’t let their ways become our ways.  We need to influence them, not the other way around.

Now this doesn't mean we shouldn't try to reach out to sinners.  Jesus Himself did just that.  Listen to what the Apostle Matthew recorded for us in the 9th chapter of his Gospel account, verses 10 through 13…
10 Jesus ate dinner at Matthew’s house. Many tax collectors and others with bad reputations came and ate with Him and His followers. 11 The Pharisees saw that Jesus was eating with these people. They asked His followers, “Why does your Teacher eat with tax collectors and other sinners?”

12 Jesus heard them say this. So He said to them, “It is the sick people who need a doctor, not those who are healthy. 13 You need to go and learn what this Scripture means: ‘I don’t want animal sacrifices; I want you to show kindness to people.’ I did not come to invite good people. I came to invite sinners.”
--Matthew 9:10-13 (ERV)

Jesus associated with sinners – with worldly people – all the time.  But He did not let their habits and behavior rub off on Him.  Instead, He influenced them, greatly.

We, too, can reach out to the unbelievers, we just need to be careful not to let their ways become our ways.  It’s fine to go to a ball game or a race, just don’t let it become passion that takes you away from worshiping God and doing His work.  We need to remember that not all things are good, not all things help anyone.

Jesus didn’t tell us to go and associate with other Christians and tell each other about how Christ has saved us.  Although that is a good activity and it helps encourage us, it is not our primary job.  We are to go to the sick in spirit, those who need the great Healer, and show them mercy and kindness.  Let’s invite them to share this meal with us, to share Christ Jesus and His love, to share salvation.


In a few minutes, we will share the bread and the cup, and then we’ll sing a hymn, just like Jesus and His friends did so long ago.  By this Communion, we are all joined together with one another and with our Lord.  The Apostle Paul warns us not to come to this table until we are right with God.  So please take this time to silently confess any wrongs to our Father God and seek His forgiveness.  Remember what Jesus did for us, for you and for me.  He died just for you, just for me, so that we might live.

In the blessed name of Christ Jesus our Lord, the one true Son of God.  Amen.


Let us pray…  Almighty God, thank You for giving us chance after chance to do the right thing.  Thank You for helping us stand against the devil and resist the temptations he holds out before us.  Too many time, though, we slip and let our pastimes take a more prominent role in our lives.  Too often our hearts are given to things and purposes not serving You, or own little idols.  Forgive us those times, please Father, when we don’t put You first.  Please help us set aside our desires for worldly things.  Help us better see the ultimate benefit and joy that comes from serving You.  And please help us to not be afraid to share our Lord Jesus with others, sharing Your love, so that they too may be saved by Your mercy and grace.  And Father, please shield us from Satan as he attacks our faith and tries to pull us away from You.  Help us be better servants, glorifying You in all we do so that the world can see You in us, through our deeds, in how we live.  And help us remain strong, faithful, and true to You in all things, no matter what the world throws at us or holds out before us.

Please hear us now, Father, as we pause for just a moment to speak to You through Your Spirit within us, promising to be more obedient to Your commands, and seeking Your help to do so…

Lord Jesus, You allowed Your body to be broken, Your blood to be spilled, just so that we could be forgiven of our disobedience to God.  You gave everything for us.  Thank You, Lord, for Your sacrifice made just for us.  We pray, dear Lord, that we can show as much love for others as You have for us.  Please, Jesus, help us reach out to the non-believing world, sharing Your story with the lost.  Help us show them Your love.  And help us endure any persecution our efforts may bring.  Shield our minds and our hearts from the world’s lies and empty promises.  Guide us around all the devil’s traps and snares.  Help us see though his temptations.

And Jesus, please help us be faithful and true to You, putting all our trust in You, all our hope in You.  Please heal the hurts that separate and divide us one from another.  Help us keep our focus on the things of heaven and the needs of others rather than on anything this life might offer.  This we pray in Your blessed name, Christ Jesus our Lord and our Savior.  Amen.