Thursday, November 17, 2011

Six Ways Satan Is Stealing Christmas

After some recent debate and conviction on educating myself  about the Christmas holiday, i decided to go to several sources for the Truth. No doubt, any wide-eyed Christian can observe that the western Christmas holiday appears to be more secular than Christian, but there still lingers the message in a very appropriate way. Judging by the fact that Christianity is practically supposed to be unpopoular, according to Jesus and the Apostles themselves, I would probably think something is wrong if suddenly everybody in the world, or America for that matter, started celebrating the Birth of Jesus, and cut out all the other crap. It's still very fun to give and receive gifts, but what influences historically have there been on the celebration? Below is the "Position" page for Christmas from the John MacArthur Grace To You website (http://www.gty.org/). I think there are some things that he didn't include, such as the co-observance of Haunakah, and some other Hebrew/Jewish facts, but this is a very important read. Be convicted:

The majority of people in the world will miss the next Christmas. But how can that be? How can anyone miss Christmas, given the amount of advertising, publicity, and promotion the holiday receives each year? Because although many celebrate Christmas every year, most don't know what it's about. In spite of all the media promotion of Christmas, the majority of people will miss it because it has become so obscured.

For those of us who know and love the Lord Jesus Christ, Christmas is a time to focus on His birth. But even we can get caught up in the swirl of activity around Christmastime and can miss it in a practical sense. Satan has so cluttered the Christian concept of Christmas with such needless paraphernalia that its true meaning is easily lost.

A Brief History of Christmas
Most scholars doubt that December 25 th is the true date of Christ's birth. There is no biblical support for it, and some against it. That date was decided upon by the church in Rome in the fourth century. They had a specific reason for doing so.
Many of the earth's earliest inhabitants were sun worshipers because they depended on the sun's yearly course in the heavens. Most people held feasts at the time of the winter solstice (mid-December)--a time when the days were shortest. They built bonfires to give the sun god strength and bring him back to life again. When it became apparent that the days were growing longer, there was great rejoicing.
The fathers of the church in Rome decided to celebrate Christ's birth on the winter solstice. It was their attempt to Christianize the popular pagan celebrations. But they failed to make the people conform. Instead the heathen festivities continued, and we are left with a bizarre marriage of pagan and Christian elements that characterizes our modern celebration of Christmas.

The following examples will give you some idea of how much pagan customs make up what we know as Christmas.

To the Romans the month of December marked the Festival of Saturnalia (Dec. 17-24). One of their most common customs during that festival was giving gifts to one another. As far as we know that is where the idea of exchanging presents came from. The evergreen wreath also derives from the Saturnalia festival, during which homes were decorated with evergreen boughs. The Druids of England gathered sacred mistletoe for their ceremonies and decorated their homes with it. It is believed that the first Christmas tree was instituted by Boniface, an English missionary to Germany in the eighth century. He supposedly replaced sacrifices to the god Odin's sacred oak with a fir tree adorned in tribute to Christ. Certain accounts claim that Martin Luther introduced the Christmas tree lighted with candles.

"Santa Claus" is a contraction of St. Nicholas, a bishop in Asia Minor during the fourth century known for his extraordinary generosity. He was later associated with giving presents at the end of the year. St. Nicholas was adopted by the Netherlands as the patron saint of children. On St. Nicholas eve, the children would leave their shoes filled with hay for the saint's white horse.

No wonder so many people miss Christmas. The simplicity of the birth of Christ is drowned in a sea of traditions, many being pagan in origin. Even worse than that, when Christ was born in Bethlehem , most people of that day missed it. In the following gospel accounts, we will see six ways people missed Christmas, and learn how to avoid making the same mistake ourselves.

Ignorant Preoccupation
Luke 2:7 says, "[Mary] gave birth to her firstborn Son, and she wrapped Him in cloths, and laid Him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn." The first person who missed Christmas was the innkeeper. He was unable to take in Mary and Joseph because he had no room for them. Apparently he was indifferent to their plight--there is no indication from Scripture that he called for any help.

Notice that verse 7 says, "She gave birth to her first-born son." Mary herself gave birth to Jesus. By herself she wrapped Him in cloths. Joseph was there to help, but if he was anything like most young fathers, he would have been of little help. Middle-eastern people are hospitable, kind, and caring. They are not barbaric. They are not the kind of people who would leave a woman alone to have her baby. But in this case, they did. Where were the midwives? You'd think the innkeeper would have known someone who could have helped.

Luke tells us she laid Him in a manger, which is an animal feeding trough. The cloths she wrapped Jesus in were long strips of cloth. Whenever an infant was born, immediately the baby was cleaned. Then the baby's limbs and body would be wrapped in these swaddling cloths and then wrapped in an outer blanket. That was a duty normally carried out by a midwife. But Mary had to do it all herself. Commentator G. Campbell Morgan wrote, "Think of the pathos of it. 'She brought forth;' 'she wrapped Him in swaddling clothes.' It is very beautiful, but oh, the pity of it, the tragedy of it, the loneliness of it; that in that hour of all hours, when womanhood should be surrounded by the tenderest care, she was alone. The method of the writer is very distinct. She with her own hands wrapped the Baby around with those swaddling cloths, and laid Him in the manger. There was no one to do it for her. Again I say, the pity of it, and yet the glory of it to the heart of Mary" (The Gospel According to Luke [Old Tappan, N.J.: Revell, 1931], p. 36).

We don't know anything about the innkeeper because the Bible doesn't say anything about him. Some commentators speculate that Jesus was born in a stable some think He was born in a cave, and others believe he was born in an open courtyard at the inn. One thing we do know: whatever hospitality Mary and Joseph hoped to find, they found none--they were turned away.
Why did the innkeeper miss Christmas? I think the simple answer is preoccupation. He was busy. His inn was full because a census was being held in Bethlehem . The city was bulging with people whose ancestors came from there. Since Bethlehem was the city of David , all those who were in the line of David were there, including Joseph and Mary. The innkeeper wasn't necessarily hostile and unsympathetic; he was just busy.

Many people are like the innkeeper. The chambers of their souls are filled with needless things--with stuff that doesn't matter. As a result, they miss the Christ of God. Our society is filled with the unnecessary, the insignificant, and the meaningless. We spend a fortune to amass things so we can let our children fight over them when we die. And our time is eaten away by the demands our things place on us.

People miss Christ at Christmastime because He is crowded out by a world that dictates what they should think, do, and buy. Like the innkeeper, people today are preoccupied. The innkeeper didn't know anything about the baby Mary gave birth to, and neither do they. They don't know who Christ is and they don't know why He came. Instead, they're ignorantly preoccupied with the mundane and the meaningless. How sad it is that so many people live their lives in pursuit of such, only to wake up one day in eternity without God.

Jealous Fear
In Matthew 2 we meet another man who missed Christmas: "After Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the king, behold, magi from the east arrived in Jerusalem , saying, 'Where is He who has been born King of the Jews? For we saw His star in the east, and have come to worship Him.' And when Herod the king heard it, he was troubled, and all Jerusalem with him.... Then Herod secretly called the magi, and ascertained from them the time the star appeared. And he sent them to Bethlehem , and said, 'Go and make careful search for the Child; and when you have found Him, report to me, that I too may come and worship Him'" (vv. 1-3, 7-8). Herod was the king of the land. He feigned his desire to worship Jesus Christ, but he was fearful because One had been born who was called the King of the Jews. The Greek word translated "troubled" in verse three means "to be agitated" or "stirred up." It carries the idea of total panic. Herod panicked. Why? He was afraid of Jesus--afraid of another king. Let's see why.
Julius Caesar appointed Herod's father, Antipater, to be procurator, or governor, of Judea under the Roman occupation. Antipater then managed to have his son Herod appointed prefect of Galilee . In that office Herod was successful in quelling the Jewish guerrilla bands who continued to fight against their foreign rulers. After fleeing to Egypt when the Parthians invaded Palestine, Herod then went to Rome and in 40 B.C. was declared by Octavian and Antony (with the concurrence of the Roman senate) to be king of the Jews. He invaded Palestine the next year and, after several years of fighting, drove out the Parthians and established his kingdom.

Because he was not Jewish, but Idumean (an Edomite), Herod married Mariamne, heiress to the Jewish Hasmonean house, to make himself more acceptable to the Jews he now ruled. He was a clever and capable warrior, orator, and diplomat. But he also was cruel and merciless. He was incredibly jealous, suspicious, and afraid for his position and power. Fearing a potential threat, he had the high priest Aristobulus, his wife's brother, drowned--after which he provided a magnificent funeral where he pretended to weep. He then had Mariamne herself killed, and then her mother and two of his own sons. Five days before his death (about a year after Jesus was born) he had a third son executed. One of the greatest evidences of his bloodthirstiness and insane cruelty was having the most distinguished citizens of Jerusalem arrested and imprisoned shortly before his death. Because he knew no one would mourn his own death, he gave orders for those prisoners to be executed the moment he died. Thus he guaranteed that there would be mourning in Jerusalem .

That barbaric act was exceeded in cruelty only by his slaughter of "all the male children who were in Bethlehem and in all its environs, from two years old and under" (Matthew 2:16 ). By that action he hoped to kill any threat to his throne from the One the magi said had been born King of the Jews.

Why did Herod miss Christmas? Jealous fear. Lest you think there are no more Herods in this world, you need only read the daily newspaper. Man is depraved. There are Herods in every society. But there is a greater lesson for all humanity. Many people miss Christmas because of the same kind of fear Herod had. Herod was afraid that someone else would take his throne. Today people are fearful of giving up their own plans, priorities, values, and morals. They don't want to come to Christ because He will cramp their style--He will lay claim on their lives. That means they will have to alter the way they live. The media tells people to do their own thing, master their own fate, and chart their own destiny. The world is full of kings who will not kneel before Jesus Christ, so they miss Christmas just like Herod.
What about you? Have you said no to Jesus Christ because you are afraid of the claim He will lay on you? Do you want to be the lord and master of your life and the king of your little kingdom? That's tragic--His kingdom is so much more glorious!

Prideful Indifference
Once Herod learned from the wise men that a child would be born who would be King of the Jews, he gathered "together all the chief priests and scribes of the people, [and] began to inquire of them where the Christ was to be born. And they said to him, 'In Bethlehem of Judea, for so it has been written by the prophet, "And you, Bethlehem, land of Judah, are by no means least among the leaders of Judah; for out of you shall come forth a Ruler, who will shepherd My people Israel"'" (Matthew 2:4-6). Herod called in the experts.

The chief priests consisted of the high priest, the captain of the Temple police, and the best of the other priests--those who had great administrative, teaching, and leadership skills. For the most part the chief priests were Sadducees. The scribes were primarily Pharisees. They were the linguists and interpreters who understood the culture and history of the biblical data. Those two groups knew where the Messiah was to be born because they knew Micah had prophesied that " Bethlehem was to be His place of birth (5:2). One thing the Jewish nation had been looking for, and still does to this day, was the Messiah. They had been waiting for a deliverer throughout their history, especially while under Roman oppression. However, these priests and scribes were unwilling to travel the few miles to find out if this baby might be the Messiah.

Why did they miss Christmas? Indifference. They didn't care. They had all the facts, but they didn't need a Messiah. Why? Because they were self-righteous--they saw themselves as perfect keepers of the law. In their minds they were all God could ever ask of them. You could say they were filled with proud indifference because indifference is always a result of pride. There was no room for the Son of God in their system. When the grown child arrived on the scene, they hated and despised Him. So they plotted His murder and screamed for His blood.

Jesus pinpointed their indifference in a stinging rebuke from Matthew 9. "I happened that as He was reclining at [the] table in the house, behold many tax-gatherers and sinners came and joined Jesus and His disciples" (v. 10). Jesus sat down to this meal with people who needed His help: outcasts, tax collectors, traitors, and sinners. "When the Pharisees saw this, they said to His disciples, 'Why does your teacher eat with the tax-gatherers and sinners?' But when He heard this, He said, 'It is not those who are healthy who need a physician, but those who are ill. But go and learn what this means, "I desire compassion, and not sacrifice," for I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners'" (vv. 11-13). When the Pharisees held a feast, they invited self-righteous people. When Jesus held a feast, He welcomed those who knew they were sinners and were desperately aware of their need for a Savior.

Many people today miss Christmas because they don't realize they are sinners. Thus they ignore Christ. They don't show any interest in the Savior because they don't understand their need to be saved. They don't understand that the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23)--that sin plummets people into an eternal hell. Consequently they ignore the remedy because they don't even know they have the disease.

Religious Ritual
Luke 2 indicates another group of people who missed Christmas: "in the same region there were some shepherds staying out in the fields, and keeping watch over their flock by night. And an angel of the Lord suddenly stood before them" (vv. 8-9). The angel proclaimed the birth of Christ, and the shepherds went to Bethlehem to see Him. Verse 20 says, "The shepherds went back, glorifying and praising God for all that they had heard and seen, just as had been told them." Out of all the people in Jerusalem , God singled out shepherds to receive the great news about the birth of Christ.

Shepherds were a despised group of people. They couldn't maintain all the ceremonial washings and activities because they were busy tending to the sheep. Yet no on else from the city came to see the Christ child except these "unclean" shepherds. However, two special people did take note of Him when He was brought into the city. Luke 2:25-26 mentions Simeon--a man who "was righteous and devout, looking for the consolation of Israel ; and the Holy Spirit was upon him. And it had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had seen the Lord's Christ." Luke 2:36-38 tells us about Anna, a widow who saw the Messiah in the Temple , and who "continued to speak of Him to all those who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem " (v. 28).
However, the mass of people in Jerusalem missed Christmas. The birth of Christ took place only a few miles away. It was the fulfillment of all their dreams and hopes--the event that would change the destiny of the world--but they missed it. Why did they miss it? Religion. They were so busy with the rituals of their religion that they missed the reality of His birth. When Jesus asked His disciples, "Who do people say that the Son of Man is?" (Matthew 16:13), their answer was: "Some say John the Baptist; and others, Elijah; but still others, Jeremiah, or one of the prophets" (v. 14). All the speculations were wrong. Jesus didn't fit into the religious system of His day. And the people knew He didn't after He gave the Sermon on the Mount.

Religion will damn a soul faster than anything if it is anything less than true worship of the true God. A false religious system gives a person a place to hide--a place where he can mask his spirituality. People steeped in various cults talk about God, Christ, and Scripture, but they don't know Christ. They are lost in the midst of religion. So the people of Jerusalem missed Christmas while they were being religious.

Idolatry
The Romans also missed Christmas. Micah's prophecy that the Christ child would be born in Bethlehem was set in motion by a Gentile emperor. Luke 2:1-2 says, "It came about in those days that a decree went out from Caesar Augustus, that a census be taken of all the inhabited earth. This was the first census taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria ." The Roman soldiers registered the people and took the census.

Throughout the life of Christ we see the presence of the Romans. Before His death Christ appeared before Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea (John 18:28-40). He was executed by the Romans (Matthew 27:27-36). Roman guards lied about His resurrection, propagating a story to cover up the reality that He rose from the dead (Matthew 28:11-15). They all missed Christmas because of their idolatry: they worshiped their own gods. Christ didn't fit in with them. They worshiped a multitude of gods, and the pinnacle of their worship was emperor worship. So in the midst of their pagan idolatry they missed Christmas.

The world today is full of people who worship their own gods. They don't worship idols like they did at the time of Christ, but we still have idols and gods. Some people worship money. Some people worship sex. Others worship cars, boats, and houses. Some worship power and prestige. Those things are the pagan gods of today--the idols of the twenty-first century. And if that is what you're worshiping, you'll miss Christmas, too. You may receive some presents, eat a big dinner, and enjoy a beautifully decorated pine tree, but you'll miss Christmas.

Over-Familiarity
Perhaps the saddest of all, the people of Nazareth missed Christmas. Luke 2:39-40 says, "When they had performed everything according to the Law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee, to their own city of Nazareth . And the Child continued to grow and became strong, increasing in wisdom; and the grace of God was upon Him." When Jesus returned to Nazareth , He was unlike any other child in Nazareth . He accompanied His parents to Jerusalem to celebrate the Passover when He was twelve years old. He proceeded to confound the doctors of theology in the Temple (Luke 2:41-47). He spent thirty years of His life in Nazareth , yet the residents failed to recognize Him.

Luke 4 unveils the tragedy that took place when Jesus revealed His identity to the Nazarenes: "He came to Nazareth , where he had been brought up; and as was His custom, He entered the synagogue on the Sabbath, and stood up to read. And the book of the prophet Isaiah was handed to Him. And He opened the book, and found the place where it was written, 'The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He anointed Me to preach the gospel to the poor. He has sent Me to proclaim release to the captives, and recovery of sight to the blind, to set free those who are downtrodden, to proclaim the favorable year of the Lord.' And He closed the book, and gave it back to the attendant, and sat down; and the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed upon Him. And He began to say to them, 'Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.' And all were speaking well of Him, and wondering at the gracious words which were falling from His lips; and they were saying, 'Is this not Joseph's son?' . . . . And He said, 'Truly I say to you, no prophet is welcome in his home town'" (vv. 16-22, 24). The people of Nazareth missed Christmas because of over-familiarity. They knew Jesus as Joseph's son, and they didn't view that as anything special. After Jesus finished speaking in the synagogue, the people "rose up and cast Him out of the city, and led Him to the brow of the hill on which their city had been built, in order to throw Him down the cliff. But passing through their midst, He went His way" (vv. 29-30).

Over-familiarity is a deadly thing. I come across so many people who say they were raised in a Christian environment but are not Christians. Fear grips my heart when I hear that. Over-familiarity strangles conviction. When you've heard something so many times without doing anything about it, such familiarity can breed contempt. Mark 6:6 gives us Christ's own analysis of the people of Nazareth : "He wondered at their unbelief." Matthew 13:58 adds, "He did not do many miracles there because of their unbelief." Over-familiarity with Christmas truth can breed a stony heart. You had better respond while your heart is soft, or your heart will become hard and you won't have the opportunity to respond (Proverbs 29:1).

Conclusion
There are many ways to miss Christmas: ignorant preoccupation, ritual, idolatry, and over-familiarity. But behind all those reasons is unbelief. Many people simply refuse to believe in Jesus Christ. The apostle John said, "He was in the world, and the world was made through Him, and the world did not know Him. He came to His own, and those who were His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name" (John 1:10-12). If you've been missing the reality of Christmas in your life, know that if you receive the Lord Jesus Christ and believe in His name, Christmas will become real to you. It can happen today; and it's between you and God (2 Corinthians 6:1-2; Romans 10:8-11).

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Church of Oprah?

I am not shocked. The only real fact is that these people really need prayers. It has been my distinct privilege to really know that people cannot be educated into believing in Jesus; but that to know the Gospel in your heart is only available from God, not ourselves. So much scripture relating to that that comes to mind. Honestly, I am downright concerned for these people's souls. I remember the point in my evangelical life where I realized that I was more concerned with the salvation of others than teaching, correcting, and instructing others, and narcissistic just "being a good Christian." 


Just watch:




I would start by saying under any other circumstances that this would scare the living crap out of me: "but behold, I have overcome the world." There is such an incredible battle going on underneath the matter that makes up our physical world, read Ephesians 5-6 if you need more information to convince you of that. But I was once there too. So many things I have learned since giving my life to the Lord, not just in words, but in everyday life. Even things I argued to other Christians about - things like abortion, how to pray, denomination, works, faith, sacraments, creed, preaching, spiritual gifts, and so many others - have been reversed due to what God has shown me to be the Truth. Heck, even learning the meaning of Truth. Because of these corrections, I have learned to not give words, but to just give instead.

My heart breaks for the lost. Does yours? Are you more than just concerned? I'm at a point where I am literally a step from dropping everything and not just "reaching out," but dwelling among the "least of these." Perhaps it's my attachment to my possessions and lifestyle, but I truly believe right now that God has me where He wants me. No to say I walk in the spirit and are "holier than thou." God wants me humbled, bowed before Him, tuning my heart to His, and learning to be receptive of His grace, and shining his light on all the world. Are you?

Monday, October 24, 2011

On Harold Camping (the rapture guy)

I started this blog today to write about Harold Camping, and the engrossing approach I see many Christians (even those I have come to respect) take to his matters. First and foremost I do not want to rant, and I do not see myself as a modern day Paul, Peter, or John. But I do want to interject some criticism of the people so willing to slam this man and the effect it has on the rest of Christendom, our image as the body of Christ, and offer the better approach to said subject.

Timeline: Camping made predictions that the Rapture or other specific end times events would occur in 1988, 1994, most recently 21 May 2011, and just the other day 21 Oct 2011. He made statements that "God was done saving Christians." Those are the facts. Now leave them there.


There have been several reactions within the Christian community: e.g.: posting commentary related to Jesus' words in Matthew 24:36, "Now concerning that day and hour no one knows—neither the angels in heaven, nor the Son—except the Father only;" to people downright lighting the man on fire. Those who aren't Christians signed up via Facebook for "post rapture looting," and others downright lit the man on fire; others scoffed at the prophecy Camping made and the Bible altogether.

So let's get it straight: where in the Bible does it mention a "rapture." Nowhere. That would be like the Bible using the term "dinosaurs," it simply wasn't in the vernacular, but the concept of what Christendom has come to define as the "rapture" is evident in several parts of the New Testament:


Matthew 24:40, "Then two men will be in the field: one will be taken and one left."
I Thessalonians 4:16-17, "For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the archangel's voice, and with the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are still alive will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air; and so we will always be with the Lord.
"
In Revelation, the word "Church" is used several times until Chapter 4, then several terrible events occur on Earth." (eek!)

No doubt, a similar concept - the resurrection of the dead - is frequently explored in the Bible and very prominently in the New Testament: (see Matthew 16:27, 24:30-31, 25:31-32, 26:64, Mark 12:18-27, 13:26-27, Luke 17:26-35, John 5:21, 5:28-29, 1 Corinthians 4:5, 6:14, 15:12-32, Philippians 3:20-21, Colossians 3:4, 2 Peter 3:8-10,  Revelation 1:7), and probably a host of others that I am forgetting to include. Pretty interesting when you think of all the movies in the last 10-20 years where the "living dead" or "zombie" is portrayed, and is assumed to be largely fictional. Call me Harold Camping, but I believe the media and the entertainment industry will have made such a common reference and usage of the "resurrected" that when the Bible's end time prophecies are revealed masses of people will either be indifferent, or completely consumed with fear! Their dependence on others telling them how to feel will not even elicit a response in orientation to the Lord; not for most of them anyhow. This isn't the first time it's happened on a wide scale. If you recall, shortly after Jesus' death on the cross, "and tombs opened. The bodies of many godly men and women who had died were raised from the dead" (Matthew 27:52). Point is: The Bible is not to be taken lightly.

But back to Camping. Other Christians have created their own web domains used to respond to Camping. Take for instance
www.rapturefail.org who self describes:

"RaptureFail was set up to allow people around the world to catalogue the failure of Harold Camping’s Rapture prophecy for the 21st of May 2011.

We’re now doing it all over again for the new date set by Camping, 21st of October 2011. This time round we’re inviting you to download a flyer, add your name to it and take a photo of yourself holding it, add it to our Flickr page and then see yourself in the gallery!
As Christians who take the Bible seriously we believe that “prophecies” like these demean the church’s witness in the world. The purpose of this site is to demonstrate very clearly (and to mock gently) that this is a false prophecy and that Harold Camping is a false prophet."

Oh man... "Catologue the failure?" And they think Camping is "demeaning the Church's whitness in the world?" I agree with the simple fact the Christians need to be educated, to discern correctly, and to keep each other accountable. Does anyone else see the problem with this? Several Christians are still making statements like, "survived the rapture twice in one year." (first of all you don't "survive" the rapture, because the event brings you into real live). Digressing... I'll lay it out plain and simple: those who are not believers have their eyes fixed on Christians waiting for them to make a mistake. Camping made a mistake, and teaching your weaker-in-the-faith friends, or teaching nonbelieving friends that, for lack of better words, 'this is not what every Christian comes to understand,' is useful. But let it go! The world knows he did not pass the test, so let it go! By mentioning his failure over and over do you not see that you are not opening up the Gospel to the world? Instead, you are showing an example that it is fine to attack others, call them failures, present a message of rejection, and condemn them. What about forgiveness? Should you forgive Harold Camping? Yes. Why? "Forgive others as God has forgiven you." and "If you forgive those who sin against you, your heavenly Father will forgive you. But if you refuse to forgive others, your Father will not forgive your sins." It's a matter of the heart. If you recognize by now that you have the wrong approach to Camping, even in the slightest amount, you should seek forgiveness in your heart for Harold and pray for him. Why forgiveness? We forgive only when we feel we have been wronged. Even if you don't personally feel wronged, you still feel you association is misrepresented.

Do you see the division that is possible when you choose to publicly scorn someone like Harold Camping? Please don't do it any longer, and gently counsel those of your friends that do. It reminds me of the reactions to Osama Bin Laden's death. The masses were fired up. But many forgot that this man was not saved. On "180 The Film," the host asks people, "you have Hitler in your sights, clear shot, perfect day, do you take the shot?" I bet without even thinking of the consequences, many would say "yes."

Have I made the point clear? Christians are at an age in history where even in the "free world" we are under fire. We are seen a bigots, judgemental, fear mongering, haters. Some of it I will stand by, strong. But what I will refuse to do is walk in a spirit that is no different from that of the world. I will not add doctrine, scripture, and "good quotes" to my public life, while in my heart practice malcontent, division, and come to live a life or say things that open the doors for unbelievers to have yet another reason to not want to investigate the claims of Christ, the efficacy of prayer, the guidance in prophecy, and the credibility of the Bible. 


Remember this: what you invite in your heart stays there; what is in your heart comes out of your mouth; what comes out of your mouth reveals your character; and your character shapes your legacy.

Make yours a legacy worth reading about -- even if it requires you to humble yourself.    

  

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

How I Wish The Homosexuality Debate Would Go

Just once, I’d like to see a TV interview go more like this:

Host: You are a Christian pastor, and you say you believe the Bible, which means you are supposed to love all people.

Pastor: That’s right.

Host: But it appears to me that you and your church take a rather unloving position when it comes to gay people. Are homosexuals welcome to come to your church?

Pastor: Of course. We believe that the gospel is a message relevant for every person on the planet, and we want everyone to hear the gospel and find salvation in Jesus Christ. So at our church, our arms are outstretched to people from every background, every race, every ethnicity and culture. We’re a place for all kinds of sinners and people with all kinds of problems.

Host: But you said there, “We’re a place for sinners.” So you do believe that homosexuality is sinful, right?

Pastor: Yes, I do.

Host: So how do you reconcile the command to love all people with a position on homosexuality that some would say is radically intolerant?

Pastor: (smiling) If you think my position on homosexuality is radical, just wait until you hear what else I believe! I believe that a teenage guy and girl who have sex in the backseat of a pick-up are sinning. The unmarried heterosexual couple living down the street from me is sinning. In fact, any sexual activity that takes place outside of the marriage covenant between a husband and wife is sinful. What’s more, Jesus takes this sexual ethic a step further and goes to the heart of the matter. That means that any time I even lust after someone else, I am sinning. Jesus’ radical view of sexuality shows all of us up as sexual sinners, and that’s why He came to die. Jesus died to save lustful, homo- and heterosexual sinners and transform our hearts and minds and behavior. Because He died for me, I owe Him my all. And as a follower of Jesus, I’m bound to what He says about sex and morality.

Host: But Jesus didn’t condemn homosexuality outright, did He?

Pastor: He didn’t have to. He went to the heart issue and intensified the commands against immoral behavior in the Old Testament. So Jesus doesn’t just condemn adultery, for example, as does one of the Ten Commandments. Jesus condemns even the lust that leads to adultery, all with the purpose of offering us transformed hearts that begin beating in step with His radical demands.

Host: You say he condemned adultery, but he chose not to condemn the woman caught in adultery.

Pastor: That’s right, but He did tell her to “go and sin no more.”

Host: But who are you to condemn someone who doesn’t line up with your personal beliefs about sexuality?

Pastor: Who am I? No one. It’s not all that important what I think about these things. This conversation about homosexuality isn’t really about my personal beliefs. They’re about Jesus and what He says. I have no right to condemn or judge the world. That right belongs to Jesus. My hope is to follow Him faithfully. That means that whatever He says in regard to sexual practices is what I believe to be true, loving, and ultimately best for human flourishing – even when it seems out of step with the whims of contemporary culture.

Host: But you are judging. You are telling all the gay people watching this broadcast that they are sinners.

Pastor: I’m not singling out gay people. I’m pointing to Jesus as the answer to all sexual sinfulness.

Host: But you are referring to gay people. Why are you so focused on homosexuality?

Pastor: (smiling) With all due respect, you are the one who brought up this subject.

Host: Are you saying that you can’t be gay and Christian?

Pastor: No. I’m saying that you can’t be a genuine Christian without repentance. Everyone – including me – is guilty of sin, but Christianity hinges on repentance. We agree with God about our sin, and we turn from it and turn toward Jesus. When it comes to Christianity, this debate is not about homosexuality versus other sins. It’s about whether or not repentance is integral to the Christian life.

Host: But do you see why a homosexual watching this might think you are attacking them personally? You’re saying that something is wrong with them.

Pastor: I think Jesus’ teaching on sexuality shows us that there is something wrong with all of us – something that can only be fixed by what Jesus did for us on the cross and in His resurrection. That said, I understand why people might think I am attacking them personally. Most people with same-sex desires believe they were born with these tendencies. That’s why they often see their attraction as going to the very core of who they are, and so they identify themselves with the “gay” label. So whenever someone questions their behavior or desires, they take it as an attack on the very core of their being. That’s usually not the intent of the person who disagrees with homosexual behavior. But that’s the way it is perceived. I understand that.

Host: If it’s true that a person is born with one sexual orientation or another, then how can it possibly be loving to condemn one person’s orientation?

Pastor: Well, we really don’t know for certain about sexual attraction being innate and set from birth. All we have is the testimony of people who say that they’ve experienced same-sex desires since childhood. Christianity teaches that all people are born with a bent toward sin. It’s possible that some people will have a propensity toward alcohol abuse or angry outbursts, while others may have a propensity toward other sins. Regardless, Christians believe people are more than their sexual urges. We believe that human dignity is diminished whenever we define ourselves by sexual urges and behaviors. Consider this: married men are sometimes attracted to multiple women who are not their wives. Does this mean they should self-identify as polygamists? Not at all. And surely you wouldn’t consider it hateful for Christians to encourage married men not to act on their desires in an effort to remain faithful to their spouses. It is the Christian way, after all.

Host: No, but it still seems like you are telling people not to be true to who they are.

Pastor: It only seems that way because you believe sexual desire reflects the core of one’s identity. It would help if you and others who agree with you would understand that in your putting pressure on me to accept homosexual behavior as normal and virtuous, you are going to the very core of my identity as a follower of Jesus. The label most important to me is “Christian.” My identity – in Christ – is central to who I am. So I could say the same thing and call you intolerant, bigoted, and hateful for trying to change a conviction that goes to the core of who I am as a Christian. I don’t say that because I don’t believe that’s your intention. But neither should you think it’s my intention to attack a homosexual person or cause them harm merely because I disagree.

Host: But the problem is, your position fosters hate and encourages bullying.

Pastor: I recognize that some people have mistreated homosexuals in the past. It’s a shame that anyone anywhere would mock, taunt, or bully another human being made in God’s image. That said, I think we need to make one thing clear in regard to civil discourse: To differ is not to hate. I hope we can still have a real conversation in this country about different points of view without casting one another in the worst possible light. The idea that disagreeing with homosexual behavior necessarily results in harm to gay people is designed to shut down conversation and immediately rule one point of view (in this case, the Christian one) out of bounds. As a Christian, I am to love my neighbor and seek his good, even when I don’t see eye to eye with my neighbor. Furthermore, the picture of Christ on the cross dying for His enemies necessarily affects the way I think about this and other issues.
I didn't write this, but i sure agree --

From:

"How I Wish the Homosexuality Debate Would Go." Kingdom People. Web. 18 Oct. 2011. <http://trevinwax.com/2011/10/18/how-i-wish-the-homosexuality-debate-would-go/?utm_source=feedburner>.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

"Put your boobs away."

Anyone heard of Rocco Grimaldi? Perhaps not, unless you're a huge College Hockey fan, or follow the NHL draft. The man of the discussion is the 33rd Draft pick to the NHL's Florida Panthers, and a current Fighting Sioux forward (woot woot). This guy can thread a needle in the dark if you know what I mean (hockey metaphor). The most remarkable thing about this extremely talented young man is not the fact that he is touted as the next Johnathan Toews (take your pick from the megamix of talent coming from the ND Locker room), nay, the most remarkable thing about him is his devotion to God, Jesus, and the advancement of the Kingdom.

He isn't just about pretty words either; as most athletes stop at "I would like to thank God," no, this man preaches the whole Gospel - conviction, celebration, and hope. He is also a man who knows how to carry that cross. Some -who have nothing better to write about- have referred to his very recent Twitter remarks as "sexist" which we can see is a common reaction from that of an unbeliever. His "rants" were largely pointed at modesty and purity. He points out that "women are not an object for playing with" and "Guys, when did sleeping with every girl you can make you a man?" or "[girls,] when did being a beautiful girl become dressing with the least amount of clothes?"  .... The one that got him in trouble was "Ladies you can help us out big time. Put your boobs away..."

Yep, that is SEXIST!!! (#psych!!) lol

Click: yardbarker for a 'thoughtful' exposition where Rocco "gets all weird and religious on us" or puckdaddy for some twisted criticism of Rocco's choice of words.

We can call it unfair treatment, but the "world" is not a place for a Christian or a devout, outspoken athlete. We weren't made for this world. The "world" would be heralding this man if he was in support of LGBT or removal of DADT or DOMA, or if he were to drive a Prius and gave speeches for the rights of the "small majority." What a contradiction. Instead, people act as if his Twitter comments are an attack on the very civil rights of others. 



As my wife would say, it's a "travishamockery." But I will digress. We all know how the world treat Christians so I will not spend any more time talking about it. Instead, I will celebrate that the Lord Jesus has done an amazing work in this young mans life. Glory be to God that He has empowered a public figure to be a great example of the message of the Messiah. His words are that exact message:

"I'm not a Christian because I'm strong and have it all together. I'm a Christian because I'm weak and admit I need a savior."  
Amen. Carry your cross, too. Preach the whole Gospel. People don't know they need a mediator until they know they understand the Law.

Now for fun:
       

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

"Delegating to your Kids"

How many FOTF (Focus on the Family) broadcasts have I posted!? How many have you listened to or read? The gang did another fantastic job today with another addition to "Sound Advice for Working Moms."

The topic was how to better delegate to your kids. e.g., chores, responsibilities, and work. These delegations change and increase as your child gets older and can often be stressful. How do you bake a meal, take out the dogs, change a diaper, clean the house successfully, wash clothes and still manage to be happy or joyful? FOTF points out some things I certainly have not considered. Every time I listed to Focus, I have to humble myself even if I am absolutely sure I know what my plan is when Gabriel comes to this world (my unborn son). Well, I invite you to do the same. These three and their guests are very wise and the Lord has placed a huge amount of clarity and understanding to their lives; let them be your blessing as you raise your kids and manage your family and kindle your marriage:

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

The Gospel According to Alice in Wonderland

Alright there is no presentation of the Gospel in the Disney movie, but anyone that has ever watched the cartoon version as an adult can recognize some hidden messages, paradoxes, and allegories - especially allegory.

David Jeremiah had a radio spot where he discussed the Cheshire Cat. You know that creepy, decieving, but mysteriously wise (or perhaps not) cat with huge eyes that meets Alice in the forest:



Isn't the cats message true here? That we all know we need to get somewhere, but most generally don't know where that "somewhere" is, so in essence, it doesn't matter what road you choose. Popular opinions say that all roads lead to the same place. Some say all religions are the same, inherintly. Some say all religions have the same message. Only the Christian religion preaches love, boasts a savior, and claims atonement for sin. I dare anyone who reads this to provide me with these provisions in any other religion or theological viewpoint.

Accordingly, Jesus Christ was the only one to claim that he was the Son of God, and that he alone could forgive sins. Islam preaches Jesus as a mere profit, Buddhism says he was wise, and there are over 20,000 gods in other religions. But Jesus is the only person in history to claim "I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one can come to the father except through me" (John 14:6), even among all three Abrahamic religions. 

There are many signs in the world pointing down many paths.   

Thursday, September 22, 2011

"Do It Yourself Religion"

I really cant say it better than this, by Chuck Colson, guest writer for CP:

 

We often hear that most people in the United States believe in God, and if you trust the opinion polls, they do.

However, when you dig down a little bit, you’ll find this good news isn’t so good after all. According to a new book by George Barna entitled Futurecast, America is filled with people who are do-it-yourselfers when it comes to religion - either making up God as they go along or dropping traditional beliefs and practices, like going to church. Barna tells USA Today, “People say, ‘I believe in God. I believe the Bible is a good book. And then I believe whatever I want.’”
Indeed, Barna says only seven percent of those he surveyed say they believe in seven essential Christian doctrines, as listed in the National Association of Evangelicals’ Statement of Faith.
Barna’s Futurecast tracks changes from 1991 to 2011. It finds that those who say they haven’t been to church in the past six months, except for special occasions like weddings or funerals, jumped from 24 percent two decades ago to 37 percent today. That’s an increase of over 50 percent in the nation’s “unchurched.”
No wonder that Lifeway Research, in a new survey of 900 Protestant pastors, found that 62 percent say that the importance of being identified with a denomination will decline among believers over the next decade.
This buffet-style religion isn’t confined to the church. USA Today quotes Nadine Epstein of the Jewish magazine Moment as saying, that most Jewish people when asked if there can be Judaism without God say yes! Epstein adds, “You pick and choose the part of the religion that makes sense to you.”


Okay, folks, we are experiencing a religious smorgasbord. Indeed, Barna says with just a hint of hyperbole that America may become a nation of “310 million people with 310 million religions.”
Friends, if we believe in the Truth - not to mention in the future of the Church - this can’t go on. We Christians must get back to biblical basics, to “the faith delivered once for all to the saints.”
Don’t get me wrong: I believe in religious freedom and diversity. But I’m talking to Christians today. While we need to exhibit grace to our brothers and sisters in the many debatable matters of doctrine, we’ve got to stand rock-solid and shoulder to shoulder on the essentials.
No Lone Ranger Christians! We learn and practice these in the company of other believers, that is, in the Church. We worship together, we minister together. That’s why I wrote The Faith, a powerful manifesto of the great, central truths of Christianity that have sustained believers through the centuries. The Faith is a good place to go to refresh yourself - or learn for the first time - the doctrines on which every true Christian ought to agree.
But our primary goal in religion is not simply to get the doctrines right - as important as that is. It is to know the Lord Jesus Christ - but know Him as He is, not as we imagine Him to be. As my friend Stan Guthrie writes in his excellent book, All That Jesus Asks, “Jesus, unlike the religious action figures sold at Wal-Mart, is not infinitely bendable, able to assume whatever postmodern pose we give him.”

Monday, September 19, 2011

Marriage is worth $10 a month

"I'm not sure God gave us marriage to make us happy, but to make us Holy." and "My marriage is worth ten dollars a month."

I absolutely love Focus on the Family, and their radio broadcast. Today they had guest Jill Savage talk about they incredible things God revealed about her marriage. Such topics like Marriage v. Children: which comes first? What if someone changes? What then? "I've got to change my husband (or wife)."

Focus has a huge impact. They recently had to cut 45 employees cause they did not have the funds to cover wages. They still employ +650, but that is still a 6% loss. I would give now, but literally, my wife and I are maxed out, and actually spend more than we take in, like many families. Luckily, I get promoted in January, and get a raise then, and in October (for something unrelated), so I am going to give it back to God and commit to sending a check to Focus on the Family each month. If you want to do the same thing click this sentence. I know each of you has a budget, and priorities, but if you can spare, please donate. Imagine if Focus didn't exist any longer. Even if it is a small amount, please give. Here is the message:



Monday, September 12, 2011

Top 100 Largest and Fastest-Growing Churches

image

Outreach magazine recently published the "100 Largest and Fastest-Growing Churches in America." If you know me at all you know that am incredibly analytical with verbiage and language and words and blah blah, yadah yadah... This though, the measure of success from sheer numbers, is a just flattery and senseless statistics. Dare I say, any pastor that measures his success by his attendance has another thing coming. And the measurements here are by attendance and not membership. But let me be fair, too, and say that some of these churches are respectable institutions and their success stems from a rich and fruitful ministry. For example, #32 is James MacDonald's Harvest Bible Chapel - a ministry I get to listen to each day; a fantastic truth filled preacher who delivers with boldness. But #1 is Joel Osteen. I will not sit here and slam him too hard, but any sensible vessel of the Holy Spirit can see the incompleteness of the Gospel in his ministry - and it's really a false Gospel - the "Prosperity Gospel."

I am not willing to look up even most of these, but I don't have to to know that most people want to hear an easy way to heaven; and many churches have traded in apologetics for apostasy, shifting their definitions and "requirements" of salvation, sin, sacraments, and more. Follow the $$$. Confession: in Alaska I served at the most attended church; in Omaha I serve at a very high attendance church. I was extremely skeptical about my current church too, and investigated over a couple rounds of golf with church leadership to make sure they were the real deal - a tactic I suggest for all of you looking for a church. Annoyingly, in Alaska I bothered, offered prayer, and did whatever necessary to make sure my pastor and elders were in the right spot. BUT!!! It was not measured by me, but by the Bible: Titus, Thessalonians, and the Book of Acts and more have specific attributes for leadership.

Okay okay! Back to the subject :)   Outreach magazine's website clarifies their recognition of the importance of small churches - and how large churches should adapt to their outlined six qualities. I liked that. However, the latest issue of their magazine listing the 100 largest only a testament to the popularity of doing what's popular, and not always correct; like #4 Willow Creek separating ties with Exodus International. 


A suggestion you ask? What would be better? What would be better than a comprehensive list of the nation's 100 Most Wonderful Churches? With different areas of servitude: Most prayerful, most compassionate, most impact in missions, most truthful, most bold, most humble, powerfully transformed lives. Opposite of my suggestion, most of the "Largest Churches" are where they are (large) for separate reasons. They would be broken into such subjects: best band, loudest music/silentest crowd (just invented a word), most projectors, best sound system, most fake smoke on stage, most synthetic worship experience, most income, most sales in Barnes and Noble, best coffee shop. See what I'm saying? Do not take offense to the criteria I just listed, as many fine churches have coffee bars, bands, smoke, and such. that's not my point.

Point is, this is a terrible way to display success. Outreach is out-of-bounds on this issue. They give pages and pages of advise from pastors of these mega-churches, as if a church needs an increase in attendance. Ah, I've said enough, the poor horse is dead. Listen; faith without works is dead.


Live a life worthy of no recognition from the masses. Do your good deeds in secret. Love others without expectation of reward. Forgive without gratitude. Boast in the Lord. Carry your cross.    

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Why We Remember 9/11

Why do we "remember 9/11?" Did you ever think of that question? Really, why? Don't each of us have a different reason? I didn't know anyone killed in the WTC, I wasn't in the military at the time, I didn't live anywhere near NYC. To be completely honest, and this is something I haven't heard anyone say since: I didn't even know what the "World Trade Center" was when I was 15 years old. I knew the buildings as the "Twin Towers." So for a while that morning, I was like "whats the big deal" until I turned on the TV. The Pentagon was a building I did know of very well.

But, back to my question. Why do we remember? Is is because we mourn for those lost? Is it cause it instigated a multi-location war? Do we remember cause it was an attack on the US? Do we remember cause it was an attack on each one of us personally? Do we remember cause we were so unprepared and shocked? Or do we remember simply cause we can't forget? I think of Israel, a country that has survived how many attacks week in and week out? Or genocide ravaged countries like Sudan, Burma, DR of Congo, and several others. Then I think how blessed I am. And we throw the word "blessed" around like it's another thing.

I digress. We reap the benefits of a country that was founded on Godly principals, and patriarch-like faith in the God of the Hebrews, and character, and a clear understanding that Jesus is the only way. Those things are now long gone, and we can only hope and pray anymore that those would come back in full. I think we all remember 9/11 cause it changed all of us. This country is so unrecognizable it is disgusting to me.


We don't value human life - we value sensitivity. We don't value God, we value liberal accommodation. We don't value religion, we value "you have to be happy in your own way." We don't value Jesus, most think he was a "good guy." We don't value the Church, they are "too judgmental." We don't value accountability, we value singularity in our actions. We put more value on money than we do on deeds. We like trends more than we like a legacy. We enjoy watching actors on TV and movies more than we like actually being something worth being. We elect corrupt leaders cause we ourselves are corrupt. And it goes on and on and on.

I willingly wore the uniform of my country and am damn proud of it. But this country cannot look to the past and just remember, we have to look at that which has bee pulled over our eyes as "correct" and "good" and "nice." I say: QUIT BEING NICE! Be bold! Be Jesus. Be a frigging heretic for God, for Jesus, and look to the one who did everything right - rather than a society build on lies. (I'm seriously ranting). But seriously, look to your God and tell him thank you for all the blessing. And do that every morning.


We think "if God is good, then why doesn't he do something about it?" He did. Check out the crucifixion and check out Thomas poking the holed scars Jesus bears for eternity to save us from this nightmare we call Earth. Get up, get off the couch, get in a humble position, right now, and thank your Lord for his protection over you. He loves you dearly and have given you how many chances to see his face? Do it, and carry your cross.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

9/11 Prayer

This from CP:

Pastor: 9/11 Ceremony a 'Prayer' Event Despite Absence of Religious Leaders

september 11
  • (Photo: REUTERS/Jim Young)
    A woman visits a mural established in the memory of those who died in the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, around the perimeter of the construction site in New York, September 10, 2011. National and city leaders will commemorate on Sunday the ten-year anniversary of the attacks of September 11, 2001 with a ceremony unveiling a memorial and museum.
 
Steve Stone, founding pastor of the Tennessee-based Heartsong Church, which lets Muslims borrow its sanctuary for worship when the Memphis Islamic Center was under construction last year, commented on the exclusion of religion from the 9/11 service when he was in New York City on Friday to participate in an evangelical press conference about the 10th anniversary of 9/11.
While many religious leaders, including Christians, have protested Bloomberg’s decision to keep religion out of the civil ceremony, Stone told The Christian Post he is actually glad that no religious speakers were invited to speak at the 10th anniversary of the World Trade Center terrorist attack.
“We’ll be one people and there’s no way to cut God and prayer out,” said Stone. “The whole event will be a prayer.”
On Friday, Bloomberg took to the radio airwaves to defend his move to keep the 9/11 memorial service prayer-free, saying to allow religious leaders to speak at the event would be tantamount to government forcing religion “down people’s throats.”
He added that “there are plenty of opportunities for people to have their religious ceremonies” outside of the Sept. 11 service to be held at the 9/11 new memorial and museum Sunday.


Stone also weighed in on the controversy surrounding the World Trade Center Cross, saying that he believes some are being too sensitive about the usage of the symbol in the museum.
The cross made up of two-steel beams found amid the rubble of the World Trade Center was recently put on display at the 9/11 Memorial and Museum after spending five years outside a Catholic church near ground zero. The New Jersey-based American Atheists has filed a lawsuit demanding the WTC cross’ removal from the museum.
“I think the cross was already there, not anything anyone made,” Stone told CP. “For some it’s a cross; for others it’s not. People see Jesus in toast. I think everybody needs to get over being hypersensitive about religious matters.”


Thursday, September 8, 2011

Another great Focus on the Family Broadcast

Once again, a fantastic Focus on the Family radio show today. They interview a survivor from the collapse of the WTC ten years ago. Hard to even believe its been that long. I remember thinking to myself how different things would be, and they sure are. Enjoy.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

My Sentiments Exactly

Here's some lyrics i just heard, and a video:



Sometimes I think about the cross that He endured
Laying down His life unselfishly
And how His suffering means I can rest assured
In His saving grace
Oh when He took our place

Chorus:
He took the scars, felt the pain
Suffered loss so we could gain
This precious life, precious love that we are feeling
He took our sin and the fall
Left His hope here for us all Jesus took the scars
And left us with the healing
Left us with the healing

There is no brokenness that we could ever bring
That would ever be too much for Him to bear
Mistakes and failures don’t mean a thing
Anymore That’s what He was dying for…

(Chorus)

Bridge:
There was beauty in the tragedy
In His death we found new birth
It was unrelenting love
For every soul on the earth

Monday, September 5, 2011

Christians Live in Cloud of Fear in Zanzibar

This, from the Christian Post; count your blessings

Christians Live in Cloud of Fear in Zanzibar, Tanzania

 

NAIROBI, Kenya – On Tanzania’s semi-autonomous island of Zanzibar, Christians live in a climate of fear. It’s a place where a young man flees the island to escape death threats from his Muslim family, and a Christian who accidentally burned pages of the Quran opts for jail by entering a guilty plea rather than face certain death from a furious mob.
Yusuf Abdalla, 23, fled to Moshi, mainland Tanzania, after his family threatened to kill him in June. Having converted to Christianity in October 2010 after hearing the gospel on the radio, he was enrolled at a vocational school in Zanzibar city to learn tailoring when his family found out in March that he had left Islam.
The beating he then received from family members left him with injuries to his head, hand and torso, as well as a serious mouth wound and substantial loss of blood, said an area pastor who requested anonymity.
“The family then took back the tailoring machine which they had bought him,” the pastor said. “They also vowed not to support his training.”
As soon as he had recovered enough to leave, Abdalla found refuge on the premises of the pastor’s church before staying at his home on May 5. Within two months, reports had reached Abdalla’s family that he was staying at the pastor’s house, and on June 10 they threatened to kill him, the pastor said.
The church arranged for his escape to Moshi.


Another convert from Islam, Juma Suleiman of Chake-Chake on the neighboring island of Pemba, is also facing death threats. Suleiman became a Christian just two months ago when Tanzania Assemblies of God pastor Yohana Mfundo preached to him while he was in prison, Mfundo said.
Suleiman was released a little over two weeks ago, and family members have already threatened to kill him. He is now in hiding and plans to flee the island.
The Safety of Jail
In Kiembesamaki, near Zanzibar city’s airport, area pastors said 28-year-old Ramadhan Hunda Tuma earlier this year opted for jail by entering a plea of guilty to charges that he burned the Quran, rather than face an enraged mob calling for his death.
More than 50 Muslims had packed into the courtroom to hear the judge’s Feb. 21 ruling on Tuma, whose landlady had ordered him to burn his trash after evicting him because he had converted to Christianity; he was not aware that among the trash was a small copy of the Quran used by beginning students in madrassas (Islamic schools), area pastors said.
“Outside the courtroom, there was a mob baying for his blood in case he was set free,” said Pastor Leonard Massasa of the Evangelical Assemblies of God-Tanzania. “One lady from church overheard them say, ‘If he is going to be released, then we will kill him.’”
Tuma, member of a church of another denomination in Zanzibar city, accidentally burned part of the Quran.
“Due to the conditions prevailing then, Tuma pleaded guilty because he feared for his life,” said another pastor, who requested anonymity. “He chose to go to jail rather than to be released only to be killed.”
Arriving home from a Sunday church service, Tuma found the wealthy landlady furious to learn that he had converted to Christianity; she had thrown all his belongings out of the house. She ordered him to leave, the pastor said. Tuma burned the trash under the supervision of his landlady, who reported him to a sheikh in a nearby mosque. A raucous crowd of Muslims showed up to kill him before police arrived and took him to the police station, the pastor said.
The church is caring for Tuma’s young family – his wife, 6-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter, the pastor added.
District Magistrate Khamis Ali Simai of Mwanakwerekwe, Zanzibar, sentenced Tuma to 18 months for “disrespecting a religious faith” and six months for “threatening public peace,” though both terms are to run simultaneously, according to International Quran News Agency (IQNA). Simai ruled that Tuma’s burning of the Quran on Nov. 16, 2010 angered the Muslim community, thereby jeopardizing public peace, according to IQNA.
The judge said the punishment was to serve as warning to other would-be offenders, IQNA reported.
Prosecutors led by Raya Issa Mselem said they were not satisfied with the ruling and intended to appeal for a harsher sentence; Mselem said a stiffer penalty would better deter others who would be tempted to commit similar offenses, according to IQNA.
Tuma, who represented himself and was put under tight police protection, pleaded for leniency on grounds that he was the sole breadwinner for his family and that he was suffering from a stomach ailment.
Dangerous Cafés
In Pemba, it has become extremely risky for churches to have their documents typed or printed in cybercafés, sources said, as shop personnel are saving copies that they take to Muslim sheikhs in order to disclose Christian activities.
Their findings are announced in mosques, the pastors said.
“They have announced in their mosques that no Muslim should sell land to infidels,” said pastor Yohana Makulanya of the Seventh-day Adventist church.
The Muslim majority oppresses religious minorities in more subtle ways. Schools teach only Islamic studies, not Christianity, and any student stating that Jesus is Lord will not receive a grade, the pastors said.
“Sometimes our children are forced to change their Christian names to Muslim names so as to be considered for employment,” said the Rev. Apolinali Mapendo Musaki, a Catholic priest.
At times churches are deprived of piped water.
“Here in Wete, we rely on rainwater – no piped water is supplied to us,” said the Rev. Stephen Kamwendo of the Anglican Church.
The church leaders said many Christians have been forcefully converted to Islam, including four from the Catholic Church and six from the Seventh-day Adventist church.


Growing From God's Word

4 May 08 - wow, long time ago as a Shaun far, far away

Growing from Gods Word

Matthew 4:4 “People need more than bread for their lives; you must live on every word of God.”

            If growth is the evidence of life, and in Gods word we must grow, there must be guidelines and a means of growth in scripture. In Hebrews 5:12 we see that as we grow in Christ we become preachers, just as in the Great and Last Commissions! We are to teach each other and help outsiders understand better as well. Our won personal growth will not stop thought as we must Read AND Study God’s word.

1.                  I MUST ACCEPT GODS WORD AS AUTHORITY

As we accept the Bible as the only means for Truth in our lives, we will grow with it, and it will grow in us; powerful! We will depend more on it instead of other things like: Culture in Exodus 23:2, Tradition in Mark 7:8, Reason in Proverbs 16:25, and Emotions in Judges 21:25.   
Not saying that any of these examples are bad, they are healthy and wholesome but they must not be trusted alone, or without fulfillment in scripture.
           
“Every part if scripture is God-breathed and is useful in one way or another – exposing us the truth, exposing our rebellion, correcting our mistakes, training us to live Gods way. Through the Word we are shaped up for the tasks God has for us.
2 Timothy 3:16-17

God’s word is useful in so many ways and this verse names the more useful of those. God’s word will literally protect you in the face of Satan – take the temptation of Christ for example: Jesus bounced back with scripture each time.

Try to remember the “cow metaphor.” A cow will chew up its food and they swallow it. It will have nothing to eat for quite some time, and then it will be caught chewing again.  This is because the cow actually regurgitates the meal for better nourishment.  How awesome – we should do the same thing. Once we think we are done with a verse or a passage, come back to it again later, your mind will be fresh and you can see another aspect or flavor of it the next time around.

Here is a checklist of things to consider with scripture reading and study:

Sin to confess?                                                Error to avoid?
Promise to claim?                                            Truth to believe?
Attitude to change?                                        Something to thank God for?
Command to obey?                                         Example to follow?
Prayer to pray?                                                Commitment to make?

Friday, September 2, 2011

White House Spiritual Advisor

What do you guys think about this? Makes me sick. But as a great friend says, its a constant reminder that sin pervades the world.

WH Spiritual Adviser: Mayor's Decision to Forbid Prayer at 9/11 Ceremony Un-American

The decision by NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg to exclude any prayers from clergy at ground zero in the upcoming 10th anniversary commemoration of the 9/11 attacks is being categorized as un-American by an evangelical leader and spiritual adviser to President Obama.

Pastor Joel C. Hunter, who also serves as an executive board member for both global and national evangelical associations, said Christians should speak out or protest the decision because the importance of faith in the United States is being neglected.
Bloomberg stirred much controversy recently when he stated, "Everybody would like to participate, and the bottom line is everybody cannot participate. There isn't room. There isn't time. And in some cases, it's just not appropriate."
Hunter told The Christian Post, “The problem with this is, because of his singular decision, this ceremony isn’t really going to be representative of America. It’s going to be exclusionary, secularist only, and we are one of the most religious countries in the world. So, the bottom line is, this is not how we were founded. This is not who we are.”
The pastor of Northland church continued, “This is a national time of mourning and healing. I think it is particularly offensive to explicitly exclude any religious expression.”
Hunter said the 9/11 terrorist attacks were an “event that changed the face and the countenance of our nation.” He said he is hoping the 10th-anniversary memorial service will be a time when everyone comes together.

“Our faith is at the heart of our identity,” he said. “I think that Christians should speak out and give some sort of reasonable protest because I do think that, in moments like this, it's especially important to include the perspective of faith, and this is a national day. This is something all of us are involved in and the separation of church and state does not equal expunging all religion from public square activities.That just simply is not what it means.”
Mark Tooley, president of the Institute on Religion & Democracy, also disagrees with Bloomberg's decision, citing a recent Barna Group study that shows that 61 percent of New York-area residents agree strongly that religious faith is very important to them.
"In a city where the most residents in recent memory now cite religious faith as strongly important, New York is tone-deaf to exclude all religion when remembering the slaughter of over 3,000 innocents,” said Tooley in a statement released by IRD Thursday. "To exclude clergy even at a memorial service implies that religion is not welcome in the public square, even in mourning.”
Tooley added, "From presidential inaugurals to opening Congress, to countless civic events routinely in every community across America, clergy and prayers have been a regular part of public life for years. The exclusion of both clergy and prayers is deeply at odds with America's robust religious life and even with the beliefs of most New Yorkers.”
Hunter told CP that he has recently talked with members of the White House's faith-based initiative advisory committee, which confirmed that President Obama will be giving a speech from the Washington National Cathedral the evening of the 9/11 commemoration.
Although he said he has not seen the president’s comments planned for the evening, Hunter believes that the “setting alone” shows that Obama will be including a faith perspective.


From: Christian Post