Thursday, December 05, 2013

Top Ten Books Read for 2013

As always, I recommend that if you only read one thing, make sure it's the Bible.  This year, I've dug down in studying Matthew and Genesis, I've read Genesis through Judges and Matthew through Acts devotionally, and I've meditated quite a bit on Deuteronomy.

Of the 57 other books I've read this year, I've narrowed them down to my top 10.  Many worthy books had to be cut, and the choices were difficult.

1.  Radical - David Platt
2.  Brothers, We Are Not Professionals - John Piper
3.  Crazy Love - Francis Chan
4.  Think - John Piper
5.  Worship - John MacArthur
6.  Jesus Manifesto - Leonard Sweet & Frank Viola
7.  God in the Dock - C. S. Lewis
8.  The Explicit Gospel - Matt Chandler & Jared Wilson
9.  Creature of the Word - Matt Chandler, Josh Patterson, & Eric Geiger
10.  Manalive - G. K. Chesterton

Monday, December 02, 2013

November Reading

  • Four Views on God and Canaanite Genocide: Show Them No Mercy - Stanley N. Gundry
  • American History Teacher's Book of Lists - Fay R. Hansen
  • The Overcoming Life - D. L. Moody
  • Coins of the Bible - Teresa Lyle
  • The Power of His Presence - Adrian Rogers
  • Matthew 1-7 - John MacArthur
  • Genesis: Volume 1 - J. Vernon McGee
  • The Second Coming of Christ - Marvin W. Earnheart

Friday, November 01, 2013

October Reading


  • God in the Dock - C. S. Lewis
  • Miracles - C. S. Lewis
  • Genesis 1-11:26 The New American Commentary Volume 1A - Kenneth A. Matthews

Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Words Don't Need Crutches

Truth is so scarce in our society that nearly everyone seems suspect, but Christians should stand out as bright lights of truth contrasted with this present darkness.  Whether you're talking about businessmen, advertisers, news commentators, salesmen, lawyers, doctors, tradesmen, mechanics, teachers, writers, politicians, or even preachers, people are skeptical.
For example, not long ago I took our SUV in to the Hyundai dealership in Texarkana because of a recall on the airbag system.  While I was waiting, the service guy brought me a vial of what he said was my transmission fluid, and then he showed me what was normal looking fluid.  He told me that I needed a transmission flush.  I was a little skeptical.  It seemed too rehearsed like a well-known presentation.  So I said okay, thanked him for his concern, and politely declined his offer to perform that service.  I thought I was done, but he returned with what he claimed was my air filter.  It was filthy to say the least.  Leaves and debris were stuck to it like gum on a tree at Six Flags.  Again the offer was made to change it out for a new one.  Now keep in mind that I was not invited back to my car to see this, but it was brought to me in the waiting room.  Again, I was skeptical.  Again, I politely declined the offer.  A little while later, I took the same vehicle to the Express Lube in New Boston.  I inquired about the fluid and the filter, and I was told that "Everything looks fine."  Later on, on a family visit to Georgia, I asked my dad, a service manager at a Nissan dealership, about the same things.  He confirmed that they were fine.  Basically, the guy in Texarkana lied.  What a racket!
No wonder our society is so skeptical!  Our whole society is built on a network of fabrication, of manufactured "truth."  The Romans in the 1st Century A.D. faced the same problem.  No wonder Pilate asked, "What is truth?"
Genuine truth is valuable, and it should be sought after.  Cicero said, "Truth is the highest thing a man may experience."  Daniel Webster claimed, "There is nothing as powerful as truth and often nothing as strange."  G. K. Chesterton asserted, "Truth is stranger than fiction."  Sir Winston Churchill said, "A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on."
The story is told that shortly after the Communist Revolution, a spokesman for the party visited a small village in order to promote communism.  He said to those gathered, "Thanks to the party, we have increased wheat production by 100%."  On fellow stood up in the back and said, "My name is Menski, and I would like to know where all that wheat is."  The next year the same official returned to the same little village and began the same song and dance of propaganda, except in this case he said, "I want you to know by now we have increased the wheat production by 200%."  The same little fellow in the back stood up and said, "My name is Menski, and I have one question.  Where is all that wheat?"  The third year came, and the same official approached the villagers and began his same talk.  This time he said, "The Communist Party has increased the wheat production by 300%."  A man in the back got to his feet, and the official said, "I know, you're Menski, and ..."  The man responded, "No, my name is Polaski and I have a question.  Where is Menski?"
In Jesus' day, the Scribes and Pharisees lost sight of the truth in their complicated system of oaths (see Matthew 5:33-37).  They had "levels of truth."  They had expanded oaths to matters of technicalities, much like our own legal system here in America that often twists and turns the normal meanings of words.  Remember when Bill Clinton tried to justify his perjury by saying that it depended on "what the meaning of 'is' is."  Legal technicalities can devolve to the point of destroying the justice they are supposed to serve.  This is nothing new.  It was going on in the 1st Century too.  The pharisaical system of oaths was expanded to cover all kinds of promises made to one another.  It was a lot like children telling something, but all the while having their fingers crossed behind their backs.
Rather than having a complicated system of oaths which invoked God's name or something closely tied to God, Jesus said to simply tell the truth.  Let your yes be yes, and your no mean no.  If you have to swear and curse, you are rendering whatever you have to say as suspicious.  Have you ever been in a conversation with someone who suddenly says something to the effect of "I swear this is true!"?  Don't you begin to wonder if everything else that person said was true or not?
It is better just to make a promise and keep it.  Prove by your track record in dealing with people that you are indeed a promise keeper worth trusting.  The words of a Christian should be sacred and believable.  We are so careless with our words.  This must be remedied.  Listen, words don't need crutches!
We should say what we mean and do what we say.  We should be known for our integrity of speech.  Speech reveals who we really are; it reveals the soul.  A dependable heart will produce dependable words.  A person with an honest heart will speak honestly.  As Harry Ironside wisely said, "God forbid that we should traffic in unlived truth."

Monday, September 30, 2013

September Reading

1. Showdown - Ted Dekker
2. Deadlock - James Scott Bell
3. The Spiritual Legacy of C. S. Lewis - Terry Glaspey
4. The Voyage of the Dawn Treader - C. S. Lewis
5. The Joy of Answered Prayer - D. L. Moody
6. Divergent - Veronica Roth
7. The Crisscross Shadow - Franklin W. Dixon
8. Fresh Faith - Jim Cymbala
9. Manalive - G. K. Chesterton
10. The Silver Chair - C. S. Lewis
11. The Last Battle - C. S. Lewis

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Revival in Malta

Running Sunday morning through last night, Malta Baptist Church hosted a series of revival meetings.  Dr. Jim Turnbo, the Bowie Baptist Association Missionary, brought the messages in preaching, and Debbie Reed from First Baptist Church in Redwater, Texas led us in the singing of praises to our Lord.

Here's a few responses to the revival posted on FaceBook:

"The music and messages have been so great it just blesses me so much to feel the Holy Spirit moving as I did last night. Let's just praise the Lord!"

"I learned Sunday morning that I sometimes "fill up" on STUFF and then there is not enough room for God!!! Going to do my best to remedy that. Music and sermons have been great!!!"

"Simply put, it has been a blessing to be a part of, the nights I missed, I missed out!"

Each service was well attended, and God wove the different elements together beautifully.  People responded to the promptings of the Holy Spirit, and we were truly blessed.  I'm looking forward to how God continues to work in our lives!

Saturday, August 31, 2013

August Reading


  • Integrative Preaching - William H. Willimon
  • The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan
  • Think - John Piper
  • The Secret of Wildcat Swamp - Franklin W. Dixon

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Think

Those who have visited me, or have been in my office, quickly make the following observation:  "You have a lot of books!"  I usually respond with something like, "Well, I used to have more."  Over the years I have given away, sold, or loaned (permanently it seems) many books.  On occasion, someone will ask, "Why do you read so much?"  I've even been asked, "Why do you read?"  Of course, I'm tempted to respond with, "Why don't you read (so much)?"

Obviously, reading a lot takes a lot of time, but I believe it is well worth the time, effort, and mental energy.  Why do I believe this is so?  In Matthew 22:37, Jesus, quoting Deuteronomy 6:5, states, "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind."  Jesus said that this is the greatest commandment.  The heart and soul are always being emphasized in the church, but when it comes to the part about the mind, it often receives little emphasis.  Even worse, learning and thinking is viewed as being suspect, and the pursuit of knowledge is rejected altogether.

I recently read a book by John Piper entitled Think: The Life of the Mind and the Love of God.  What Piper articulated in that book is something I also feel quite strongly about, both in my mind and deep down in my heart.  Here is one quote from the book which resonates within me:  "I have never been one of those who found the heart shrivel as God and His Word are known better.  Putting more knowledge in my head about God and His ways was like throwing wood in the furnace of my worship" (Think, 26).  That's it!  That is why I like to read so much.  Through reading and thinking, I'm keeping the fires of my mind and heart burning brightly to the glory of God.

This past Sunday, I preached from Matthew 5:13 about being salt in our world.  You know, as Christians we are to have  preserving and flavorful qualities about us as we seek to have an influence for Christ in this present darkness.  Reading, and then thinking about and evaluating what I've read, provides an avenue for loving God with my mind.  It aids me in renewing my mind and keeping it fresh.  It helps to prevent staleness and apathy in my thinking.  I don't want to get stuck in one of life's ruts.  I want to have some saltiness about me.

Of course, I never intend to be pedantic or prideful in the knowledge I have gained.  My desire is to use it for loving purposes and not arrogance.  I'm also well aware of Solomon's warning in Ecclesiastes 12:12: "The writing of many books is endless, and excessive devotion to books is wearying to the body."  Yes, indeed, it is wearying and tiresome, but it is worth the effort.  To not think, which is the alternative adopted by so many, is to me unbearable.  When it comes to God, His Word, His world, and His plan, ignorance is not bliss!

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Cold Jolt!

When I was a teenager, I would spend a week of my summer break on a mission trip somewhere.  More times than not, that week would be spent in Helen, a quaint little German touristy village in the foothills of North Georgia.  In the midst of doing ministry (puppet shows, clowns, dramas, etc), the team would usually make its way down to the local grocer where that sweet nectar, Jolt Cola, could be bought.  Jolt Cola claims to have twice the caffeine content as a regular cup of coffee.  Now that may not sound like a whole lot compared to all the wacky drinks that are available today, but for us, it hit the spot--cold, refreshing, and it kept us awake.  In fact, late one night, Ms. Sandy Cliett threatened to remove all the Jolt in the house and ban us from buying anymore if we didn't quiet down and go to sleep.

Jared Pickard and I kept the bottle caps, and I'm sure if you look on Wesley Ryals' shelf, you may just see a Jolt cola bottle.  We had fun with it.  That bottle of cold Jolt kept us going.

Going to church is like that because it keeps me going.  Ever since I became a Christian at the age of twelve, I have loved being with my church family--whether that was in Milledgeville, Sparta, Fort Worth, Warthen, or Malta.  Jared Pickard and I used to sit on the back row (as teenagers mind you) and talk about "good old church life."  Well, that good old life is still going to this day.  I can't get enough!  The reason I can't get enough, I believe, is that all I can really have is a taste of what the reality will be like for all eternity in heaven.  And so, I want to be in corporate worship every time the doors are open.

The writer of Hebrews exhorts, "Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful; and let us consider how to stimulate one another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our own assembling together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another; and all the more as you see the day drawing near" (Hebrews 10:23-25 NASB).

It is absolutely crucial for Christians to get together for worship, instruction, encouragement, service, and fellowship.  A believer can't go solo; there are no "Lone Ranger" Christians.  Dr. David Allen, Dean of Theology at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, says that you're either growing in Christ or you're drifting away; the passage of years don't mean anything.

If you go to one service a week, perhaps Sunday morning, then try going back on Sunday night.  If you already go Sunday morning and evening, then go on Wednesday night too.  If you say, "Well, I attend all those things," then stop just attending and get involved with ministry.  Try something new.  Get to know the other believers where you worship.  Let us consider how we can spur one another on to love and good deeds.

Will you be in church this Sunday?  How about a cold jolt for your life?!

Thursday, August 01, 2013

July Reading


  • The Last Olympian - Rick Riordan
  • The Lost Hero - Rick Riordan
  • Perelandra - C. S. Lewis
  • Keys to Becoming an Effective Worship Leader - Tom Kraeuter
  • The Son of Neptune - Rick Riordan
  • VELCRO Church - Ken Hemphill and Mike James
  • Taking Back the Good Book - Woodrow Kroll
  • Jesus Manifesto - Leonard Sweet and Frank Viola
  • How to Listen to God - Charles Stanley
  • Ten Power Principles for Christian Service - Warren W. and David W. Wiersbe
  • Worship - John MacArthur
  • The Scarlet Letter - Nathaniel Hawthorne

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Mollycoddle

That's my new favorite word.  I came across it while reading John MacArthur's Worship: The Ultimate Priority.  It was the first time I remember ever seeing the word.  Merriam-Webster defines the noun form of the word as "a pampered or effeminate man or boy."  In its verb form, as MacArthur uses it, it means "to treat with an excessive or absurd degree of indulgence and attention."

For example, MacArthur writes:
"God is glorified, first of all, when we trust Him without vacillating.  Our faith in Him should be implicit.  That doesn't mean we turn off our intellect or decline to think through the implications of what God has revealed; but it does mean that we must refuse to mollycoddle doubt or let it take root in our hearts...Faith is perhaps the most basic form of worship" (Worship, 175-176).

What doubts are you entertaining?  What sins are you indulging in and giving attention to?  Don't mollycoddle!

My friend and fellow pastor, Bryan Laramore, and I once talked about collecting a list of words we would begin using in our vocabularies.  I think mollycoddle just made my list.

Friday, July 05, 2013

June Reading


  • I Am A Church Member - Thom Rainer
  • Experiencing Spiritual Breakthroughs - Bruce H. Wilkinson
  • It Couldn't Just Happen - Lawrence O. Richards
  • The Hardy Boys: The Secret of the Lost Tunnel - Franklin W. Dixon
  • The Hardy Boys: The Wailing Siren Mystery - Franklin W. Dixon
  • The Power of Prayer - R. A. Torrey

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Fiasco in Austin

"If they intend to keep pushing their extreme personal political agenda ahead of the interests of Texas families, I will not back off of my duty to fight on their behalf."  That was a comment by Texas Senator Wendy Davis, as quoted by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.  Sounds great, huh? Except for the fact that you could turn her own words back on her.  Is she pushing her extreme personal political agenda ahead of the interests of Texas families?  What about those living in her state who disagree with her?  Are they not Texans anymore?
Senator Davis opposed and filibustered a bill that would limit abortions to 20 weeks after conception.  Terminating a life at any point for whatever reason is always terrible.  Choosing to do so to a baby after 20 weeks is barbaric.  Bart Barber sent a Tweet to Senator Davis which said, "It takes a certain kind of person to fight against regulation of abortion in the aftermath of Kermit Gosnell."  Well said.
However, listen to what the Tarrant County Democratic Party chairwoman said after the fiasco in Austin.  Deborah Peoples said, "It was not that it was the right moment, it was actually the right thing to do."  Really?  The right thing to do?  Her sense of right and wrong is backwards.  Her next quote points that out.  Peoples said, "What Davis did was to provide a light in the darkness for many people who needed someone in Texas to speak out for them."  Anyone who has read the Bible, more specifically the New Testament, particularly the Gospel according to John, knows about the contrast of light and darkness.  Jesus is the light who shines into the darkness.  To suggest that Davis' actions is reminiscent of Jesus is indeed backwards.  Woe to those who call evil "good" and call good "evil."
If you're not aware of Tuesdays media circus, all you have to do is look it up. Sources abound the world over.  Governor Rick Perry said it well, "We will not allow the breakdown of decorum and decency to prevent us from doing what the people of this state hired us to do," calling for another session for the lawmakers in Austin.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Ordinary...Extraordinary

How wonderful it is to know Christ doesn't call perfect men.  It doesn't matter who you are or what you have done, Christ wants to come into your life.  He wants you!  He will save you and make you clean.
He'll use you, no matter what your talent might be.  God can use you if you will let Him.  Even if you feel like you have no talent, God can use you.
He won't have us all doing the same thing because we do not all have the same gift.
Jesus calls all sorts of people to follow Him: fishermen, doctors, tax collectors, mechanics, comedians, pilots, secretaries, administrators, teachers, masons, bankers, carpenters, landscapers, weathermen, farmers...ordinary men.  Jesus makes the ordinary extraordinary!

Monday, June 03, 2013

Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Blessed

I woke up this morning and started the day by praising God for allowing me 32+ years of life. He has blessed me indeed with family and friends who enrich me with their constant love. I'd like to thank everyone who has made my birthday special today by their birthday wishes, cards, and gifts. I am blessed to call you my friends!

If God allows me 32 or more (or less) years, I pray that my devotion to Christ would continue to grow white-hot, and that my life would be a testimony to His goodness, faithfulness, and glory!

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

What Is Worship?


What is worship?

Depending on where you're from or what denomination you were brought up in, there are a myriad of responses to that question.

Ronald Allen and Gordon Borror define it as such, "Worship is an active response to God whereby we declare His worth."*  Given that definition, we can draw the following conclusions about what worship is and is not.
  • Worship is not passive; worship is participative.
  • Worship is not just a mood; worship is a response.
  • Worship is not just a feeling; worship is a declaration.
  • Worship is not about us; worship is about God.
  • Worship is not me-centered; worship is Christ-centered.
Come, now is the time to worship!

*Ronald Allen & Gordon Borror, Worship: Rediscovering the Missing Jewel (Eugene, OR:  Wipf and Stock, 2000), p. 16.

April Reading

1.  The Explicit Gospel - Matt Chandler and Jared Wilson
2.  Radical - David Platt
3.  The Year of Living Like Jesus - Ed Dobson
4.  Follow Me - David Platt
5.  Brothers, We Are Not Professionals - John Piper

A Month with Matthew

This past Sunday, I began preaching through the Gospel of Matthew.  After reading a book by a guy who tried to live like Jesus for a year, I picked up on an idea he had.  He decided to read the four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke and John) once a week for a year.  I have decided to do something similar.

Resolved...to read (or listen to) the Gospel of Matthew everyday for one month.

Here are some of the things I can expect:

  • I will have a greater understanding of the Kingdom of God.
  • I will have memorized much of Matthew.
  • I will be much more informed in preaching through Matthew.
  • I will be much more informed in teaching the Bible in general.
  • I will have a greater understanding of who Jesus is.
  • I will have a greater understanding of what it means to be a disciple of Jesus.
I tell you this not in order to boast or brag, because I have so much to learn.  I feel like I need to do this.  Please pray for me as I seek illumination from God's revelation in His Word.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Were Adam and Eve Married?

Yes.  In Genesis 2:22, Moses tells us, “The Lord God fashioned into a woman the rib which He had taken from the man, and brought her to the man.”  God created Eve and presented her to Adam.  Then in verse 24, we learn, “For this reason a man shall leave his father and his mother, and be joined to his wife; and they shall become one flesh.”  God introduced the couple.  He got them together.  He is the first Father to walk His daughter down the aisle.  (OK, there wasn't an aisle in Eden, but you get the idea.)  He then performed the first wedding.  Moses points out that because God did this with the first couple, each couple after them will be joined together in a marriage relationship, and they “become one flesh.”

Think this is a stretch?  Then why does Jesus also make the same connection in Matthew 19 (see also Mark 10) in the context of marriage and divorce?  All marriages since have been based on that first wedding.
In Ephesians 5:31, Paul quotes the Genesis text also, using marriage as a fitting picture to describe the intimate relationship between Christ and the church. 

Wednesday, April 03, 2013

March Reading

1. The Battle of the Labyrinth - Rick Riordan
2. Creature of the Word - Matt Chandler, Josh Patterson, & Eric Geiger
3. The Divine Romance - Gene Edwards

Friday, March 08, 2013

February Reading

1. The Titan's Curse - Rick Riordan
2. City On Our Knees - Toby Mac

Tuesday, February 05, 2013

Her First Hymn

What do the hymns "To God Be the Glory," "Blessed Assurance," "All the Way My Savior Leads Me," and "He Hideth My Soul" all have in common? That's right, they were each written by Fanny Crosby.
Fanny Crosby proves that it's never to late to begin serving the Lord. Like Moses, who was 80, and Paul, who was middle-aged, Crosby met the Lord later in life. She was born in 1820. Six weeks later she was blind. When she was eight years old, she determined to make the best of it. She wrote, "O what a happy soul I am! Although I cannot see, I am resolved that in this world contented I will be."
She spent some years at The New York Institution for the Blind as a student, then a teacher, and then a writer. She rehearsed her poetry for Congress and for presidents.
In 1851, three decades after her birth, she met Jesus. In 1864, the hymnist William Bradbury suggested to her that she could write hymns. In fact, began by writing a hymn for Bradbury. On the day in history, Fanny Crosby wrote her first hymn. She was 44. By the time of her death, 50 years later, she had written 8,000 hymns.
So what's your excuse? What are you waiting for? Start using the gifts and talents that God has blessed you with for His glory!

Sunday, February 03, 2013

January Reading

1. Crazy Love - Francis Chan.  I highly recommend this book to all Christians.
2. Phantastes - George MacDonald.  This is one of the books that inspired Lewis and Tolkien.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Sowing and Reaping

On this day in history in 1859, the famous Cyrus McCormick married Nettie Fowler. She was 26 years younger than Cyrus, and while he is famous for his mechanical reaper, Nettie is remembered for the work she did for Christ. 26 years after marriage, Cyrus died. Nettie was left with a pile of money. She decided to keep honoring the Lord with it, and make some eternal investments.
Here are some of the ways she used her wealth for the Lord:
--established McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago
--helped John Mott to go around the world to start student missions
--helped form the World Student Christian Federation
--contributed to the evangelic endeavors of D. L. Moody
--supported Wilfred Grenfell, missionary to Labrador
--supported George Livingstone Robinson, archaeologist to Jordan
--funded Tusculum College in Tennessee
--helped support education in Appalachia
--involved herself in Asian missions
--offered her Chicago house as a Christian halfway house for missionaries
--improved water supplies
--provided hospitals
--built a Christian college
--built a women's clinic in Persia
--built a seminary in Korea
--sent agricultural machines to India.
She did all of these things in the name of Christ. It seems a lot to us, but she remained humble about it. In her eyes, it was so little. Others, she said, were doing so much more.
If you really want to know where a person's heart is, then follow the money. What about you, what eternal investments are you currently making? What seeds are you sowing for Christ?
"Don't store up treasures on earth! Moths and rust can destroy them, and thieves can break in and steal them. Instead, store up your treasures in heaven, where moths and rust cannot destroy them, and thieves cannot break in and steal them. Your heart will always be where your treasure is." --Jesus (Matthew 6:19-21)

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Manz's Baptism

Remember Zwingli, the Swiss reformer? Well, not everyone in Zurich was satisfied with him. For Conrad Grebel and Felix Manz, reformation wasn't coming quick enough. One point of contention in particular was baptism.
In Zurich, when a baby was baptized, he or she was considered to be member of the state church and a citizen of the city. After reading and studying the Bible, Grebel and Manz discovered that this practice was unbiblical. They argued that baptism was was believers in Jesus, and it symbolizes a commitment to Christ. I agree with them. Zwingli kept insisting on infant baptism. Finally, a day of testing came. Grebel's wife gave birth to a baby, which set the stage for public debate in Zurich. On this day in history in 1525, the Zurich City Council met to have the debate, and Grebel and Manz lost.
A few days later, twelve men braved darkness and snow to visit Manz at his home. One man, George Blaurock, asked Grebel (who was with them) to baptize him because of his confession of personal faith in Christ. Blaurock was a priest, so after being baptized he baptized all the others.
Of course, this course of action made Zwingli spitting mad. The radicals were soon kicked out of Zurich. They went to a nearby town called Zollikon, and there they established a church. This church was different because it wasn't a part of the state church. It was a "free" church. Actually, it was the first one of its kind in modern times.
Zwingli and the hounds of Zurich persisted in persecuting them. Grebel was put in prison. He died of the plague there. Blaurock was burned at the state. As for Manz, because he was such a proponent of baptism, the leaders of Zurich decided that if he wanted baptism, then they would give him a baptism. They took him from prison, tied his arms and legs together, and threw him into the middle of Lake Zurich. His mother, watching the tragic scene from the shore, shouted for Manz to stay true to Christ. Manz's last words were "Into Thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit."
For Peter and Paul and the others, the truth was worth dying for. For Grebel, Manz, and Blaurock, the truth was worth dying for. What about you? Would you give your life for the truth? May all who come behind us find us faithful!

Saturday, January 12, 2013

The Hampton Court Session

On this day in history in 1604, a group of Puritans carrying a petition signed by 1,000 pastors met with King James IV of Scotland (also known as James I of England and Ireland) to plead with him to help reform the Church in England. Having been king in England for nearly a year, James knew that he must do something to help his divided kingdom, so he agreed to hear them out at his Hampton Court estate.
James rejected all of their requests except one. He grew so angry with them that flew into a rage. He shouted in reference to the Puritans, "I shall make them conform or I will harry them out of this land, or do worse." It was a failure for the Puritans. They gave up hope for the Anglican Church and became the Separatists. Out of that group came the Baptists in 1611 and the Pilgrims who went to America in 1620.
However, there was that one request presented to James that he actually liked and with which he was in agreement. John Rainolds, one of the Puritans that day at Hampton Court, requested a new translation of the Bible. You know the rest of the story. James commissioned a group of scholars to produce a new English translation of the Bible, known today as the King James Version or the Authorized Version (because it was authorized by the king). James claimed, "I have never yet seen a Bible well translated. But I think the Geneva is the worst." The KJV was released in 1611, seven years later.

And now, a brief historical sketch of James.
James IV of Scotland was the son of Mary, Queen of Scots. He took his cousin Elizabeth's place on the throne of England and became James I. He was 37 years old at the time.
It's quite ironic what, of all people, James is the most well known name associated with the Bible. Just read Robert Morgan's words:
"How odd that the most famous Bible in history should bear the name of a hard-drinking, foulmouthed, ego-driven homosexual who rejected all demands for reform within the church...He was rude, rough, loud, conceited, and bisexually immoral. He was also shrewd."

Sunday, January 06, 2013

A Note of Encouragement

On Sunday, January 6, 1850, Charles Spurgeon became a born-again believer in Jesus Christ at the age of 15.  A blizzard hit England at that time, and young Spurgeon couldn't get to the church he usually attended.  Instead, he was able to get to a small Methodist church, where he found only a few people huddled around the stove to keep warm.  There was no preacher that night.  One of the men there began to read from the Bible and kept repeating Isaiah 45:22: "Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth."  At one point the man pointed at Spurgeon and said, "Look, young man!  Look!  Look to Christ!"  Spurgeon did look to Christ, and he was saved that very night.  He went home rejoicing.
I'd like to encourage those churches with 15-20 people (or less) showing up each Sunday.  Keep going!  Stay faithful!  You never know the kind of impact you might really have.
Spurgeon went on the preach to multiple thousands each week.  He is known as the Prince of Preachers.  It all boils down to a tiny church who was able to point him to Christ.

Saturday, January 05, 2013

St. Simeon Stylites

Sometimes people do strange and bizarre things in order to show their love and devotion to God.
Today is remembered in some parts of the world as the Feast Day of St. Simeon Stylites, because when it comes to self-denial, he takes home the prize. This is the guy who left home to join a cloister, but he was soon dismissed because of his self-torture techniques. He also moved to the desert of Syria and lived with an iron chain on his feet. Then it gets better, he had himself buried up to his neck for a few months.
Perhaps he is most famous for his next stunt. For thirty years, Simeon lived on top of a pillar or a column. At first it was only six feet high, then he had one made to reach sixty feet. There's no room for comfort on top of a pillar. He had a type of railing and a rope to keep him from falling when he fell asleep. People who followed him and his ways would bring him food and remove his waste by climbing a ladder. There's a really gross thing that happened with the rope. If you want to know about it, just ask.
With Simeon it wasn't all about living the high life. He preached daily about the importance of prayer, selflessness, and justice to the crowds who gathered to see him.

Friday, January 04, 2013

Symbol of Faithfulness

On this day in history in 1577, Hans Bret was executed for studying the Bible and teaching new Christians.  That sounds strange to us doesn't it?  But those were the rules in Antwerp of the Netherlands in those days.  Actually, it isn't that strange at all.  In many places in the world today, someone could and would be executed if they were found to be studying the Bible or teaching Christians.
Hans owned and operated a bakery to support himself and his widowed mother.  One night there was a knock at the door, and Hans opened it to find a mob of officers.  They were there to take him into custody and place him in the town jail.  For his accommodations, he was given a small, dark cell.  We would call it isolation or solitary confinement.  It was (and still is) used as a punishment.  He was questioned and tortured for months, yet he would not yield his faith.  He attested that his strength was from God alone.
Then his situation grew worse.  The questioning and tortures grew worse.  Still, Hans' spirit was not broken.  On January 4th, Hans was sentenced to death.  He would be burned alive at the stake.  Before the executioner delivered him to the stake at the town market square, he forced Hans to stick out his tongue as he clamped on a tongue screw (made of iron) and then seared the end of the tongue with a red-hot iron in order to keep the device from slipping off.  The reason--the authorities didn't want Hans preaching at his execution.  He was chained and burned alive.
Among those in the crowd that day was Hans de Ries.  He was Hans Bret's pastor and good friend.  When the embers and ashes hand cooled, Hans de Ries dug through the remains and found the tongue screw.  He later married Hans Bret's mother, and the tongue screw has been passed down from generation to generation as a symbol of faithfulness.
May all who come behind us find us faithful!

Thursday, January 03, 2013

Here I Am, Send Me

On this day in history in 1745, David Brainard decided to spend the whole day fasting and praying for spiritual power.  He prayed over John 7.  Then he began preaching repeatedly from John 7.  That year was his most productive year in ministry.
Up until that point, he suffered many dangers, toils, and snares.  He faced depression and despondency.  He was tired, worn out, and dried up.  There was little fruit in his missionary endeavors among the American Indians.
However, that January day in 1745 made all the difference.  Many Indians came to know Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.  Even his translator, a drunk named Tattamy, surrendered his life to Jesus.
Just two years later, Brainard died at the age of 29 in the home of Jonathan Edwards.  Brainard's life and story influenced many other missionaries, including Henry Martyn, William Carey, and Adoniram Judson.  His testimony still influences and motivates missionaries all over the world.
One entry in his diary, which became a well-known Christian book in the early days of America, went like this:  "Here I am, send me; send me to the ends of the earth; send me to the rough, the savage pagans of the wilderness; send me from all that is called comfort on earth; send me even to death itself, if it be but in Thy service and to promote Thy kingdom."  What a resolve!  What a passion!  What sweet surrender to the Lord!
Have you surrendered your life to Christ?  Have you decided that you will follow Him and His commands regardless of the consequences?  Will you follow Him even when it's not comfortable or popular to do so?
Read, meditate, and pray over John 7 today, and ask the Lord to use you right where you are to lead people to that life-giving water found only in Jesus Christ.

Wednesday, January 02, 2013

St. Basil the Great

Famous or faithful?  We each have that choice to make in our lives.  Of course, we all want to be remembered in some way or to make our marks on history, but the choice has to be made.  I wonder how many theater actors and actresses can testify to how they started out well, but along the way they had to make moral compromises in order to advance or to try to become famous.  What about in the music business?  What about in Hollywood?
Basil from Caesarea of Cappadocia (modern day Turkey) wanted very badly to be great in society.  He thought very highly of himself, and he wanted all to do the same about him.  However, his godly sister, who also led him to faith in Jesus Christ, challenged Basil with this statement: "It's better to be faithful before God than famous before men."
In humility before God, Basil began a quiet life of prayer, study, and writing.  He preached and helped the poor along the banks of the Iris River.  Before long, God began to make him famous.  The emperor at that time, Julian the Apostate, tried to make Basil one of his advisors, but Basil turned him down.
Basil eventually left his quiet life because he was challenged by Eusebius (another famous Christian) to defend the faith against outside attacks and inside heresies.  He became a very public figure indeed!  In 370, Basil became the next bishop after Eusebius.  He also used his own money to help the poor by building a hospital for lepers.  Sometimes he would even administer treatments personally.  Outside of Caesarea, his network of churches, schools, medical facilities, hostels, monasteries, and charity houses became known as Basiliad.
Every January 2 is remembered by many as St. Basil's day.  Basil became famous in his time and beyond, something he desired early in life, but he had to do it God's way.  If he had tried and continued on the path he was on, I can almost guarantee that we would have never heard of Basil.
The Bible says in 1 Peter 5:5-6, "'God opposes proud people, but He helps everyone who is humble.'  Be humble in the presence of God's mighty power, and he will honor you when the time comes."
Famous or faithful?  Choose wisely!

Tuesday, January 01, 2013

Zwingli and the Word of God

Ulrich Zwingli was born in 1484.  Perhaps Zwingli is best known for being the father of the Swiss Reformation, but how did he get to that point.  The answer comes in the form of two words: God's Word.
You see, Zwingli was a priest, like every priest in those days, who followed the prescribed liturgy and weekly readings each week at church, but that would change soon.  In 1516, he borrowed a copy of Erasmus' newly published Greek New Testament.  He copied it word for word, and carried it with him wherever he went.  He treasured it and memorized it.  Before long, the Word of God began to change his life.
In 1518, he was invited to be the chief preacher in the cathedral at Zurich.  On January 1, 1519, his 36th birthday, he announced on his first Sunday there that he was ending the practice of following the liturgy and readings.  This brought quite a shock to the congregation.  He also announced that he would be preaching verse by verse through the New Testament.  He began that very day by preaching from Matthew 1.  This was a radical thing in those days, but the value of it can't be overlooked.  As Zwingli preached the Bible faithfully, the Word of God began to change people's lives in Zurich.
I remember being on a mission trip to Helen, Georgia, when I was a teenager, and sitting around one night with Jason Baird and Terry Cliett.  As Jason and Terry were deep into their conversation, I was "lost" in the Bible.  I was particularly fascinated by a certain passage at that moment.  I looked over to the guys and interrupted with, "I'm just so excited by this."  They smiled politely and resumed their conversation, but I was having a breakthrough moment.
I received a NASB Ryrie Study Bible from my parents in 1995.  I began that day with Genesis 1.  I didn't have a reading schedule or plan, but I read that Bible off and on for several years until I completed it.  I was somewhere in the middle of it when I had that moment in Helen.
From that point on, I had a greater respect for God's Word.  I already believed it was God's Word because of the faithful preaching and teaching of men like Jerry Pickard and Terry Cliett, and because of the faithful teaching of women like Janie Dunn and Angie Hartley.
Today, I'm still learning; I'm still drinking from those living waters that cannot be exhausted.  I'm still growing and changing.  I'm still excited about the Bible!
One of the thrilling things I get to witness as a pastor is how God changes lives through His Word.  The ministry of the Word does wonderful things!
Read the Bible, but beware, you shall be changed!
Tolle lege.