Sunday 1 December 2013

December 2013 - Staring Into the Future

Pondering/reflecting is what you tend to do as a year comes to a close.  I have been pondering about the year that has past.  I make comparisons with where I feel or believe I was at the start of the year with how I am today.  I look for external indicators of progress.  I consider the goals and outcomes I had for this year and whether they came to pass.  I try to find some measurement for success in 2013.  While all of this can be good; it can also bring death as I eat the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.

Looking back and comparing can tie you to the past.  It can anchor or tether you so that you cannot move forward.  People may experience the same event and yet some can cry while others shout for joy.  If you don’t think that is possible, then consider Ezra 3:10-13.  The relaying of the foundation of the temple was an occasion to rejoice and so the people did.  However, those who remembered the previous temple “wept with a loud voice” because of the comparison they were making.  What kind of comparisons are you making between today and yesterday?  What are we measuring?

While many wept because they were measuring the foundation of the new temple and comparing it with the previous one, God was making a different measurement.  “‘The glory of this latter temple shall be greater than the former,’ says the Lord of hosts.” (Haggai 2:9)  We must allow the Lord to measure the life and glory that we are experiencing.  We must be eating from the Tree of Life.  We must allow the Lord to measure today with the future and not with the past.  And … only He can make these measurements in our lives.

So, having pondered the past, look to the future.  A future that God promises greater glory and life in.  That does not mean there will not be difficulties, trials and things to overcome.  Paul and Barnabas revisited churches “strengthening the souls of the disciples, exhorting them to continue in the faith, and saying, ‘We must through many tribulations [pressures] enter the kingdom of God.’” (Acts 14:22)  Stare into your future.  Let God be the God of your past, present and future and conclude 2013 by moving into 2014 standing on the past without being stuck to it and allowing Him to move your present into His future promise for your life.

Journeying with you,

Merril

November 2013 - Steadfastness

If you didn’t read the front of the bulletin this month either because you skipped past it or because you are reading this pondering online, then let me repeat the verse that is there: “Now these three remain: faith, hope, and love. But the greatest of these is love.” (1 Corinthians 13:13)

We live in a disposable society.  Very little concern is given to what remains.  Yes, there is a large ecological movement concerned with the earth remaining around for a long while, but at the same time the people of the world develop cars, computers, cameras, contacts and companions that are easily thrown away.  Very little seems built to last and we focus on the immediate.

It is not like that with God.  God’s character and nature reflect eternality, endurance, faithfulness and steadfastness.  God created the earth and all that is in it, including mankind, with the intention that it all should stand forever.  Man threw it away.  However, even after that, God pressed forward with the intention that there should be a Kingdom with man in it that should never end.

Of the increase of His government and peace There will be no end, Upon the throne of David and over His kingdom, To order it and establish it with judgment and justice From that time forward, even forever.  The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this.” (Isaiah 9:7)

So, the challenge for us as a church is to co-labour with God in building things that will remain.  It is interesting that Paul would write about faith, hope and love after spending significant time looking at the spiritual gifts.  Our hearts (even mine) can be attracted towards focussing on the gifts and signs and wonders and miracles but Paul’s heart was focussed on what remains.  Don’t get me wrong: he does say to earnestly desire spiritual gifts.  It’s a question of lasting character in the midst of fleeting moments of spiritual manifestation.

I’ve been at this church for fourteen years.  Some are part of this body who have been here longer.  Some have not been here as long but have committed themselves to the work of God in this place.  I applaud your steadfastness of faith, hope and love.  We are not simply building for an immediate gratification but a lasting legacy.  I encourage us all to keep building toward a church where God’s glorious presence is so evident that healing and transformation happen not simply for a moment but for generations; not simply for a hundred or so people on a Sunday but for thousands in our community and around the world.

Journeying with you,


Merril

October 2013 - Pressing Forward

I will make the disclaimer that I am writing this before we have our Tree of Life Conference.  I don’t know what Dennis will be sharing with us.  So, if it touches on anything Dennis says, I am not trying to hammer you with these thoughts.

I have been pondering the church’s mission statement lately.  You may or may not have it in your memory yet.  It’s on the back of the bulletin, along with the core values.  The core values that we have hanging on the walls as you make your way from the entrance of the church’s building to the sanctuary.  I am really not trying to sound snide or condescending.  Please hear me out.  I fully realize that I also can and have lost track of these important things at times.  The bulletin can be just a monthly piece of paper I put in my Bible and the pictures—just wall decoration that I barely notice.  It was a year ago that we presented them to the church.

I’m not going to type the whole mission statement here (you can just look on the back of the bulletin), but I want us to consider that the goal is “developing healthy, mature followers of Jesus Christ.”  Healthy is defined as “possessing or enjoying good health or a sound and vigorous mentality.”  Mature is defined as “complete in natural growth or development.” (Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary)  So, it could also be stated as “developing sound, vigorous, complete followers of Jesus Christ.  We are not only co-labouring with God to accomplish this in others; it is the work that God is doing in us.

There are so many Scriptures that come to my mind.  I was actually compiling them to place in this pondering but it would take up too much space.  And then I realized that if you are as committed to the goal of health and maturity that God is for you, then you would want to look them up yourself anyway.  So, here are a few passages form the Bible that you should meditate on: 2 Timothy 1:7; 4:1-4; Romans 8:6; Galatians 2:20; Colossians 3:3-4; Philippians 3:7-16; Hebrews 12:1-13; 2 Peter 1:2-11.

We must not lose sight of the goal.  Doing so gets people off the path.  Jesus said his disciples must keep their eyes on the goal and not look back.  We must press on towards the goal keeping our eyes on Jesus, Who calls us.  I want to leave one Scripture for you to read here:

I thank my God upon every remembrance of you, always in every prayer of mine making request for you all with joy, for your fellowship in the gospel from the first day until now, being confident of this very thing, that He who has begun a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ (Philippians 1:3-6)

I am thankful for you all and pray for your continued progress in Christ.  God grants the power to accomplish what He calls us to.  You lack nothing in Him.  God is developing us into His healthy, mature sons and daughters so that He might reveal His glory in the earth like never before.

Journeying with you,


Merril