Thursday, September 30, 2021

9-30-2021

 Good Morning All!

2 Corinthians 13:11; “Finally, brothers, rejoice. Aim for restoration, comfort one another, agree with one another, live in peace; and the God of love and peace will be with you.”

    I am fascinated by people who restore old cars, trucks, tractors, or anything like that.  They can spend years removing the rust and the years of neglect that the vehicle had as it was sitting in someone’s trees.  Or you watch those people who take old houses and restore them to their original beauty.  The time and the effort and the cost of these restorations can be phenomenal.

     It takes a lot of patience to restore something to its original shape, luster, and quality.  The love and care displayed by the one doing the restoration is apparent.  Even if it takes a lifetime to accomplish; the labor of love is obvious.

    This is what God is doing to us.  He is restoring us back to being ‘human”; back to what we were designed to be before sin corrupted us.  When God created man, He created us to live in his presence with thanksgiving and praise; we were to take care of creation and we were to take care of each other.  That pretty much sums up what it means to be human. 

     God began to restore mankind immediately after man’s fall into sin.  This process began with the promise of a Savior.  The chosen people of God believed in the promise of a Savior and their redemption.  Then Jesus came and began the new testament or covenant.  Here we cling, not to the promise of a Savior, but to the promise of God that our sins are forgiven because of that Savior.  The restoration of mankind and all creation will be complete when Christ returns.  But until that day comes; Jesus gave the task of continuing the message of salvation and repentance to the church.

    Just as Christ was reconciling the world to himself; he calls upon his church to do this ministry of reconciliation.  Paul tells us in this verse to live the life which God created us to live and then sent Jesus to restore us to live.  First and foremost, we are to rejoice.  Our eternal destiny is set, decided by the blood of Jesus on the cross given to us as a gift from our loving Father in heaven.  We are to aim for restoration.  This is a lifelong process.  God has restored us and gives to us the task of restoring our relationships with others and of witnessing to others our restored relationship with God.  This isn’t done in a day or for a day; it takes a lifetime of love to continue this process.

    Through it all, God’s spirit resides in us and with us.  He is there to strengthen us, to encourage us, to remind us of what Jesus said, to guide us, to gather us, and to enlighten us.  It is through God’s Spirit that we are able to do this lifelong restoration project.  It is through his peace that we are able to have peace with others.  So, until Jesus returns or until our task here on earth is completed; we are to aim for restoration, and we live with and in God’s love and peace.         

Gracious Father, we give you thanks for the gift of redemption through Jesus.  Guard us and guide us as we go about the restoring which you have called us to do.  Move us by your Spirit to comfort each other and to live in peace.  All this we ask in Jesus’ precious name, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Wednesday, September 29, 2021

9-29-2021

 Good Morning All!

     Isaiah 55:1; “Come, everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and he who has no money, come, buy and eat!  Come, buy wine and milk without money and without price”.

     Oh, to be invited to a party!  We all love parties.  We love the atmosphere, we love the conversations, we love the people, and we especially love the food.  We usually enjoy the food the most because we didn’t, buy it, cook it, or have anything to do with it but eat it.

     Despite what we may think, Americans did not invent the party.  Parties go back as far as mankind does.  Our parties and festivities pale in comparison.  Often parties would last days at a time with the host even providing sleeping quarters and a change of clothes for the guests.  Wedding parties could last up to a week.  So, when the Bible makes references to parties or celebrations, the original reader had a greater understanding than we may.

    This verse is the start of a chapter where we hear of God’s great mercy.  Here we hear how he is restoring Israel to its place of honor.  In the previous chapter we read of the covenant of peace; here we see the fruits of that peace.  God invites us to come; come to the celebration.  This wondrous celebration will be a daily occurrence when we live in the Lord’s Presence.  If we are thirsty, we will come to the waters; even if we have no money, we can buy food and drink and not just any food and drink but the really good stuff.  We won’t have to pay because it will already be bought.     

    This verse can actually be read God inviting us to hear His Word of redemption; the forgiveness of sins which frees us from the terror of the devil.  He compares us to those who thirst for the word who seek to hear the truth that they are thirsting after it.  They are longing for a little good news and God gives them a lot of good news.  The hearing of this good news is free, and we are to come and savor it, we are to luxuriate in it.  The good news of your salvation is the greatest celebration that you can ever have, and you receive it freely.

      Just like the finest wines and meats are very expensive so was the cost of your salvation.  Yet someone else paid for it and someone else gave it to you so you can enjoy it, so you can have the benefit of it.  So, we see that our salvation and the news of our salvation and the hearing of the news of our salvation are like a party that lasts forever. 

      We no longer need to worry about struggles and the trials of this world.  These are dealt with by our Lord.  These trials can never defeat us.  God stands triumphant over any and all things that the world and the devil can throw at us.  We have reason to celebrate and to enjoy the wonderful news of our salvation of our hope.  God invites us to enjoy and to celebrate this wonderful joyous event.  Come and drink buy with no money the finest wines and milk.  Savor the honey and the meats.  Taste and see that the Lord is good.

Dear Father, You feed us with the finest foods and drinks.  You bless us with your Spirit but above all we have the gift of salvation from your gracious hand.  For this we give you our praise and thanksgiving.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret      

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

9-28-2021

 Good Morning All!

     John 14:3; “And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also.”

    “I shall return.”  As many of you know this was the phrase uttered by Gen. MacArthur as he was leaving the Philippines.  The Japanese Imperial Army was conquering the islands and the general had to evacuate or be captured.  As he left, he made this now famous statement.  His opponents saw it as false bravado; his supporters saw it as an attempt to bolster the morale of the troops and native Philippines.

     Many of the people left behind did find some comfort in his statement.  Even through the darkest days of the occupation by the Japanese, it gave them hope.  The people left behind kept hope because they believed that the general would keep his promise so they struggled and battled as best they could.  They believed that eventually he would return and bring with him the necessary army to drive out the Japanese.  These islanders faced many hardships while he was gone but eventually they were liberated.  The general returned to the islands.

    Jesus made the promise to us to return.  He told his disciples that as he was going to prepare a place for them.  He went back to His heavenly Father to prepare a place, to prepare the way for us.  Then he told them that he would come again and take them with him.  This promise is what we cling to and what we wait for.  We wait for the return of Jesus.  It is what we cling to even in the darkest hours; it is the hope that we hold onto.

    We look forward to Christ’s return; it is what we hope for.  Until he returns, we wait in a world which is still full of pain, still full of sorrow.  The world is still infected by sin and as a result we still have some dark times ahead.  We may face health troubles, or job troubles or relationship troubles or a myriad of other events.  Yet we know that the time will soon come when Jesus returns and rescues us from this tyranny.  He will return to destroy all the evil which the devil does.  When Jesus returns, he will restore creation back to its perfect “very good” form.

    When Jesus returns as king, the creation will be restored.  The rift between heaven and earth will be fixed.  The King of Kings and Lord of Lords will once again walk in the cool of the morning with man.  This is his promise; I will come again and take you to myself.  We will be liberated from the tyranny of the devil forever.  In those days and at that time we will see Jesus face to face and celebrate with him and with all those who have gone before us in faith.  We will enjoy true peace and true joy.  We will celebrate the joyous feast forever when Jesus returns.  Jesus promised to return and to take you to him.  This is a promise we can rely on.

Dear Father, you sent Jesus to pay for our sins and He promised to return to bring us to him.  Give to us the certainty of this hope, whatever befalls us keep us strong and certain of your grace.  Come Lord, Jesus, come.  In the precious name of Jesus we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret          

Monday, September 27, 2021

9-27-2021

           Good Morning All!

     Revelation 21:3; “And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband.” 

    We all like it when the story ends the way it should.  The nice guy marries the nice girl.  The bad guys are punished.  The guy who must overcome insurmountable odds wins in the end.  The cowboy kisses his horse and rides off into the sunset.  There is something about these stories which have a sense of completion for us.  Even if you watch a movie or read a novel and early on you can see on the story is going to end, we keep watching or reading because we want to see the story end the way it should.  We want the story to end the way it should.  We don’t like lose ends; we don’t want any unfinished business.  It should end with no loose ends but in a neat and tidy finish.  We get that also with the Bible.

    The last two or three chapters of Revelation fix what gets broken in the first two or three chapters in Genesis.  We can really see this if we think of heaven, not as a place, but as an existence.  Heaven is living in the visual, physical presence of God.  Adam and Eve lived in heaven when they lived in the Garden of Eden.  They would walk with God in the cool of the morning and be in complete and total communion with him.  However, sin ripped that in two and heaven and earth were separated.  Creation, which was perfect, now became chaotic and frustrated by man’s sin. 

     Yet with Jesus’ death and resurrection, the change begins.  The sinful realm and reign is still here but so is God’s reign of grace.  We are saved from our sins but not yet perfected.  We are getting closer with each passing moment but until this happens; God is giving those who do not believe time to repent, and he is giving us time to reach out to them so that the Spirit will be seen by them through us.  So, we wait for Jesus to return.  We wait and watch eagerly for that time.

     Because when that time comes, all will be perfected.  When Jesus returns, heaven will again be on earth.  All of creation will be restored.  The chaos and the frustration will be gone.  We will once again be able to walk with God in the cool of the morning.  We too, will be perfected.  Just as the world went out of control when man sinned, so it will return to control when Jesus returns.  Just as man destroyed our existence with God with our sin, God restores our existence with God and makes us whole with Him once again.

     This is the ending we look forward to, the restoration of creation, the return to the life in an Eden like existence.  We will live perfectly in the presence of God in complete joy and peace, with all the other believers.  Heaven and earth are united again in perfect union.   

 Gracious Father, we wait with eager anticipation for the completion of this age.  Give to us the courage and faith to sustain us until Jesus does return.  Keep us in your hands and guard and protect us by your mighty arm.  Bring peace and comfort to those who do not know it.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Sunday, September 26, 2021

9-26-2021

           Good Morning All!

     Luke 21: 3-4; “And he said, “Truly, I tell you, this poor widow has put in more than all of them.  For they all contributed out of their abundance, but she out of her poverty put in all she had to live on”

    This is a portion of the story that is often called “The Widow’s Mite”.  Jesus, along with his disciples and a few other onlookers, are watching as people are putting their offerings into the treasury.  The rich are putting in a lot of money and this poor widow puts in a couple of copper coins. 

    For us today, we might ask the question; who gave more?  What if Bill Gates or Warren Buffet or T. Denny Sanford donates $5 million dollars to a cause and then what if a widow lady who only has social security to live on and she gives $800?   Who gave more?  Obviously the $5 million is numerically greater than $800 but who gave a larger share of what they had? 

   We often struggle with lessons like this one.  By any measure, the people of the United States are wealthier than most of the rest of the world can even dream.  So how do we balance this?  Do we give to God only out of our abundance?  Do we ever give like the widow, who put it all in?  Now before you think this is another plea for a lot of money, this lesson goes far deeper than a few more shekels in the collection plate; this lesson is about our faith.

    The rich in the Bible story (probably Pharisees and Sadducees) gave a lot of money.  They did it with a lot of show, but they kept a lot back.  They gave but they always had a reserve because they lacked the trust, they lacked the faith to go totally in with God.  It is when you don’t totally place your faith in God that you get in trouble.

    Adam and Eve lost that faith and they looked for a better way.  They held back on the trust that God was able to provide entirely for them.  They held back and decided that they could do a better job directing their lives than God could.  They wanted an alternate plan; they wanted to keep their options open.  They figured that they could do better.

    We often do as well.  We hold back on trusting God fully.  We will give him a portion of our life, a portion of our faith but we hold back some; we keep some in reserve.  Yet this is what causes us the most pain.  We hold back; we look away from the only true source of our hope and salvation.  We keep some in reserve only to make our life worse.

    God calls us to complete faith; he wants us to go all in; to trust fully in Him.  God calls upon us to completely lay down our sinful lives and to live as his redeemed children.  He wants us to keep nothing back; nothing of the sins we hold to so tightly especially the sin of thinking our way is better.  Trust God to deliver you.  Give yourself fully to him and have faith in His promises.

Dear Father, too often we refuse to give our complete self to you.  We hold back out of fear and out of foolish sinful pride.  Strengthen us through your grace and give us the faith to trust you completely.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret 

Saturday, September 25, 2021

9-25-2021

 Good Morning All!

     Ephesians 3:20; “Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us”  

    When you were younger, did you use to imagine about the world?  Did you ask or get asked, “If you could be anything in the world; what would you be?”  How about, “If you could go anywhere; where would you go?”  Most of us had some wonderful dreams and wishes.  Some were fanciful; some were heroic.  So where did you want to go or what did you want to be?  Was it some exotic faraway place?  Did you want to be an astronaut or a famous doctor?  Did you dream of your successful business?  What did you dream?

    In the Bible, many people dreamed to.  Isaac and Rebekah dreamed of a child, so did Hannah and Elizabeth.  Samuel dreamed of a godly king.  Ruth dreamed of a husband.  Many people dreamed of something that they longed for.  They hoped for something; they held the desire in their heart.  Yet these had one more element; they prayed for God’s help and answer.

     Maybe praying to be an astronaut might have been a stretch (but then maybe not); yet we do not often pray for God’s help.  We may think we are unworthy; we may think that what we pray for is not important to God.  Maybe we doubt that God can or wants to answer our prayers.  Whatever the reason, we often miss out on one of God’s greatest blessings.  Yet when we pray in a faithful fashion, God promises to hear and to answer our prayers.  We hear that over and over in the Bible; Matthew, Luke, John are just a few that repeatedly tells us to ask or to call upon his name.  So, do we?

    Look at our verse, far more than we ask or think.  God wants to bless you far more than you can ever imagine.  He wants you to call upon his name and trust that he will answer.  He wants you to be happy, he wants you to be content; yet we continue to falter, and we continue to miss out on his grace.  Too often we look too short and fall even shorter.  Yet God continues to invite you to call upon his name and to ask of him.

    The promise of answered prayers; the promise to work in us and through us.  God’s love for us exceeds anything we can ever imagine or dream.  Yet we limit ourselves because we limit our faith.  We have God’s promise to answer our prayers beyond anything we could ever dream or imagine, and we turn away from it.  Trust God, have faith in his promise to you.  Receive his blessings for your life.
 Dear Father, your mercies are new every day.  Forgive us when we fail to call upon your name.  Forgive us when we fail to trust in you fully.  Give us the faith to trust you.  Give us the holy desire to seek your blessings.  Keep us close to you send your spirit of comfort to those who are in the most need of your comfort.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret      

 

Friday, September 24, 2021

9-24-2021

 Good Morning All!

     John 2:5; “(Jesus’) mother said to the servants, “Do whatever he tells you.”  

    In front of a small rural church, the minister used to list the sermon titles for the next two weeks.  He had them listed like this:

                                                  Jan. 20th- Jesus walks on the water

                                                  Jan. 27th- Searching for Jesus

 

    I don’t think this is exactly the message he meant to convey but he did.  Many people are, or at least claim to be, searching for Jesus.  They claim to be looking and listening for Jesus.  They profess to pray to him and to believe in him and yet, do they?

    Many people search for Jesus but are really searching for a way or method to obtain the things of this world which they want.  They are like teenagers with Dad’s credit card.  All you have to do is swipe it in the machine and just like that you get what you want.  It couldn’t be easier.  They have no idea as to the cost or to the process of how this works.  They simply demand and get.

    There is the story of two friends who rarely attended church.  One of them got a very aggressive form of cancer.  So, these two friends sat down each day and read the Bible.  Yet when the one who got cancer died; the second friend decided that there was no God because he didn’t heal his friend.  This man had a vision of God, and it was that God was to do what the man demanded.  He was searching for a God who would cover his expenses and fulfill his demands.

    Our verse is from the story of the wedding at Cana.  Jesus’ mother tells him that the host is out of wine and that he should fix it.  Even here, Mary is trying to use Jesus for mundane and selfish purposes, but she believes that Jesus can do something, so she tells the servants to do whatever Jesus tells them to do.  The servants comply and fill water jugs with water and then draw from those jugs wine for the feast.  The servants, who did what Jesus asked, knew what had happened.  Most of the others had no clue; they only knew they got more wine.

     We should be like those servants; do whatever Jesus tells us.  It isn’t that hard.  Jesus tells us to repent and to believe.  We are to believe in his promise and assurance that our sins are forgiven and that we will share in eternal life with him.  That is pretty much it.  He encourages us to take advantage of the blessings which he bestows on us: prayer, Communion, the gathering with fellow believers to name a few.  Yet he calls upon us to repent and to believe.  Do whatever he asks of you.  Trust in his words of hope and promise.  He will never forsake you.  Do whatever he asks of you; live your life in his hope and comfort.  Then all that you seek will be given to you.

Dear Father, too often we do not do as you ask; we go our own way and fall and fail.  Forgive us our sins and cleanse us and bring us back to you.  Guard us from all evil and give your holy comfort to those in need of your care.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret    

Thursday, September 23, 2021

9-23-2021

 Good Morning All!

     Haggai 2:5; “My Spirit remains in your midst. Fear not.”

    Have you ever seen any of the children’s book series “Where’s Waldo?”  It is a series of books where the main character Waldo dresses in red and white stripes.  He is hiding in a picture, and you must find him.  It is not as easy as it sounds.  The artist uses combination of colors and hues to give the illusion of Waldo when it isn’t really him.  You can spend hours on a book trying to find Waldo in the different areas of the picture.

    Looking for something has been part of the human experience for a long time.  The Greek cynic Diogenes carried a lantern and searched for an honest man.  Peter, Paul, and Mary asked the musical question, “Where have all the flowers Gone?”  Whether it was the truth, true love or just a good cheeseburger; people have searched for something that they couldn’t find.

    There are many times in our lives when we feel like we can’t find God.  We look around and see troubles in the world, in our nation even in our lives and we feel like we are looking for Waldo.  We see violence throughout the world.  We see hatred.  We see part of the world with more money, food, and power than it could ever need or use while another part lives on pennies a day with little food and no way to control their own destiny.  We look at our nation and see a people divided on virtually every issue that exists.  We look at our own lives and see pain and problems.  We see job troubles, relationships, even our own inner peace.

    One of our biggest problems is the same as when we look for Waldo, we are easily misled, and we end up looking in all the wrong places.  We look to drugs and alcohol; we look to crackpot self-help gurus; we look to our own strength and wisdom.  All these lead us down the wrong path; toward the path of destruction.  We tend to look to anything besides God. 

     The wondrous thing is that even though we look away from God; he never looks away from us.  He remains in our midst; offering us the peace and the hope to survive this world.  He is always there to lead through the difficult times; never abandoning us but always there to offer us comfort and hope.

     He does this through the creation which he has made.  He does this through the Church which he formed.  He does this through you and me whom he has redeemed.   God is always in our midst, so we never have to fear.  We are never alone, even when facing our darkest fears; God is there to comfort us.  He is in our midst, and we have nothing to fear.

Dear Father, you graciously live in our midst and protect us from all the devil’s ways.  Keep us safe and cause us to see that our comfort is in you alone. Guide those who are in special need of your peace.  Lead them to your loving arms.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret    

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

9-22-2021

 Good Morning All!

     Psalm 40:2; “He drew me up from the pit of destruction, out of the miry bog, and set my feet upon a rock, making my steps secure.”

    I was watching a movie the other night.  It was a war movie in which one scene was shot during a rain-soaked period of time.  Everything was wet and slippery.  The mud was everywhere, and walking was tough, and driving was even more difficult.  The enemy was about to attack so as they tried to move all the equipment.  Of course, as the enemy is coming, one of the jeeps gets stuck and it takes a heroic effort to save the day.  

    It seems that rescuing the hero at the last minute is a common theme in many movies.  Sometimes the villain dies while the hero gets saved.  The scene is frequent, and the result is often the same.  This seems to occur because in many ways; we recognize that we need to be rescued in our own lives.

    Man has long known that he was in desperate shape.  We see this from his earliest fears.  We recognize it by our earliest refusal to care about others.  Our only thought was to self-survival and no thought to others, hence Cain and Abel.  This is part of the reason why we tend to show hatred to others; it is the fear that we need to be rescued and that there isn’t enough help to go around.  It is this need to be rescued that causes us to build walls around ourselves to protect ourselves and to feel a little bit secure.  We separate ourselves from others in an attempt to feel safe and secure in a slippery pit.

    Martin Luther King once commented, “People often hate each other because they fear each other, they fear each other because they don’t each other, they don’t know each other because they cannot communicate, they cannot communicate because they are separated.” This seems to be an accurate description of our human existence.  We fear so we hate.

    There is no way for us to solve this crisis.  On our own, we can only fail.  We soon see that relying on our own skills, our own power, on our own self sense of right and wrong; we soon fall into the pit of destruction.  That slippery slope just leads down, pulling us in to the quagmire of total despair.  Our hope is lost, the light is gone, and we sink slowly out of sight.

    Yet God, in his mercy, pulls us from the miry bogs.  He brings us from the pit of complete despair.  God pulls us out through the blood of Jesus.  He sets our feet upon a rock.  So, we can face the world with confidence and hope.  There is nothing that the world can throw at us that God cannot or will not pull us through.  The trials of this life are just that, trials.  Through them we can see God’s hand protecting us and giving to us the blessed certainty of life eternal.

Dear Father, you pull us from the pit and give to us the certainty of hope.  Within you is our salvation.  Keep us safe within your arms and guard us with your tender mercy.  Keep us aware that all things work for good for those whom you love according to your purposes.  Bless us with your peace.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret  

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

9-21-2021

 Good Morning All!

   Matthew 27: 4-5; “(Judas) saying, “I have sinned by betraying innocent blood.” They said, “What is that to us? See to it yourself.” And throwing down the pieces of silver into the temple, he departed, and he went and hanged himself.”

    Have you ever felt sorry for doing something?  Did it help or did you feel just as bad?  We often realize that we have done something wrong and then we feel bad.  We have a hard time getting over it and often we don’t.  We continue to feel guilty with little, if any, sense of relieve or respite.

     Which brings up a question, if feeling sorry for your sins doesn’t make you feel better; then what does?  Many will tell you that repentance means to feel sorry for your sins.  That is only a small part of the story.  This is also why, when we feel sorry for our sins, that we still feel empty of forgiveness and still burdened by sin.

    It is always interesting to me that Judas felt sorry for his sins.  After he betrayed Jesus and saw that Jesus was soon to die; Judas felt tremendous remorse.  He went to the Temple and threw the money back to the Scribes.  “I have betrayed innocent blood!!”  The regret and the remorse which he felt were incredible; yet he went out and hung himself.  He felt bad; he felt terrible; he felt the greatest sense of remorse and yet he received nothing from it. 

    So how does repentance work?  It is more than feeling sorry; it is the knowledge that God has forgiven our sins.  When we repent, we look to God for forgiveness and then we have faith in his promise to forgive.  You see, Judas real problem was he went to the wrong priest.  He should have gone to Jesus, our true high priest.  He should have gone to Jesus trusting in His promise to forgive our sins.  Remorse is only part of repentance, and it really doesn’t matter if you are sorry because you are afraid of punishment or sad because you feel guilty about your sin; the critical part is that you truly believe that your sins are forgiven.

    Our comfort doesn’t come from feeling sorry; our comfort comes from knowing that God has mercifully forgiven us of all our sins.  Because of the sacrifice of Jesus, our debt for our sins has been paid.  We don’t do anything to “re do” this, once was sufficient.  We only benefit from his gracious gift.  We receive this wondrous gift by faith alone; that desire to trust and to believe in God’s promise.  Our comfort doesn’t come because we feel bad.  Our comfort comes from what God has done: He forgives our sins that is our comfort.

Dear Father, to you alone belong the glory.  We come to you as a broken people; we are broken by sin and its guilt.  Yet through all our failures, you forgive us because of your love for us.  We pray for those in our community who have watched loved ones return to you.  Be with them and give them your comforting Spirit.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Monday, September 20, 2021

9-20-2021

 Good Morning All!

   Exodus 3:8; “and I have come down…to bring them to a good and broad land, a land flowing with milk and honey,” 

    So how much would this land sell for?  I have a son who works for an investment company.  He keeps me informed about the price of land in our area and in our state.  We have watched as some land in our area has been sold for numbers higher than many would have thought ever possible.  Some of the land has higher taxes now than the original purchase price.  Why does land, or a house, or a car sell for the price that it does?  What are the factors that play into the value of the item?  If the item is being auctioned, it really comes down to a very simple answer: two people want it.  If those two people have enough money, it can be very expensive indeed.

    Yet when you get done, there must be some level of intrinsic value of the item sold.  Land that is rich and highly productive or is easily developed and can be sold that way, cause the value of the land to be influenced.  So why was the land of Canaan called a land flowing with milk and honey?  If you look at the topography of the land it is not that great.  The rainfall isn’t ideal; they usually must trap rainwater in cistern like things to preserve water.  The land produced food and fiber, but the land of Egypt along the Nile was more productive or the land along the Tigris and the Euphrates in Babylon was more productive.  Why was this land so special?

    The real value of the land wasn’t in the land; it was in the company.  The land to which God is referring here is the land where God’s people live trusting in the gracious providence of God.  It is where the people of God live as contented children of their heavenly Father.  The land flowing with milk and honey is more about your relationship with God than the productivity of the land.  This applies to all of our life situations.

    God encourages us to be content and happy with his gifts.  He supplies with all that we have need of.  He even gives us more than we need; yet we often fail to see this.  Too often we see God’s blessings as our entitlements.  We see them as something which God owes to us.  This sinful nature view of God’s gift is what causes us to be restless, to be dissatisfied with God’s gifts for us. 

     God blesses us every day and in every way which we can imagine and many which we cannot.  The Creator-Redeemer provides, protects, sustains, and delivers to us and for us every day in every way.  All of which we are to only thank and praise, serve and obey him.  The Lord brings you into his family into a land flowing with milk and honey.  Let us feast and enjoy his bounty.

Gracious Father, your mercies overwhelm us in depth and volume.  You bring to us the things we need, especially our Savior who brings to us life.  Guard and protect us and give us that sense of contentment which we need.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret

Sunday, September 19, 2021

9-19-2021

 Good Morning All!

     Romans 12:21;” Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”

    As I watch some of the college football games, I am reminded of the old adage that the second guy to throw a punch is the one that gets the penalty.  It seems that when one player gets away with a late or cheap hit, the second player usually gets mad and retaliates and gets caught.  We see this occur all the time in sports, but we also see it in life.

    Whenever we deal with very difficult people, those people to whom ethics seem like a word for others to know and someone else to have; it becomes difficult to stay true to ourselves.  It is very tempting to use some of his own tactics back at him.  This is especially true when you know what his tactics are and what he is trying to do.  We can see the trap he is placing in front of us, and we can avoid it.  But what do we do when we don’t see the trap and then we fall into it?

    This is when our anger can get the best of us, and we become what we despise.  We can become wicked, deceitful, deceptive, petty, and underhanded.  This not only plays into the hands of those who hate us and look to discredit Christians.  It makes it harder to witness to our faith when we have engaged in this kind of deceit.  It can be especially destructive if it “works” one time, and we feel that we experience some worldly success.  This tempts us to believe that we can get away it again.  It can tempt us to think that we are “above” God’s law and will.  This temptation takes us back to the Garden where the devil tempted Eve with the promise to be “like God”.

    This type of action really serves the devil’s purpose.  It draws us away from God and ensnares us into the devil’s trap.  Whenever we engage in this type of activity, we will be overcome by evil; we cannot beat the devil at his own game.   

    Our only chance is to follow God’s direction.  This is one of those verses that give us some very practical advice as well as theological teaching.  We, as God’s redeemed children, are never able to battle the devil especially on his turf and on his terms.  We must always cling to God, His promises, and His justice.  We may never see what we feel will be “justice.”  Yet by our staying true to our faith, we are witnessing to God’s grace and truth.  When we repay evil with good, we confound the ones who commit the evil.  More importantly, we are speaking the words of God’s precise Gospel message.  We show love to those who hate us just as Christ did and instructs us to.

Dear Father in heaven, temptation is all around us.  We try to stand up to it and fail miserably.  Give us wisdom to rely on you and your strength and not our own.  Give us the strength to stand to our foes and that by your grace; we may show your glory to the world.  In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.

God’s Peace,

Pastor Bret