Monday 30 September 2013

How precious is Jesus to you

Read Matthew 26:1-30
And when Jesus was in Bethany at the house of Simon the leper,
a woman came to Him having an alabaster flask 
of very costly fragrant oil,
 and she poured it on His head 
as He sat at the table.
But when His disciples saw it, they were indignant, saying, 
“why this waste?
“For this fragrant oil might have been sold for much and given to the poor”
But when Jesus was aware of it, He said to them,
 “Why do you trouble the woman?  For she has done a good work for Me
“For you have the poor with you always, but Me you do not have always
“For in pouring this fragrant oil on My body, she did it for My burial
“Assuredly, I say to you,
 wherever this gospel is preached in the whole world,
 what this woman has done will also be told 
as a memorial to her.”
                                                                                    Matthew 26:6-13
How precious is Jesus to you?  Would you take the most costly thing you have and give it to him?  That’s possibly what this woman did.
We need to evaluate what is most important in our lives.  All too often, going to church is just another thing we do.  We see it as serving our church, not God.  It shouldn’t be that way.
We must remember that while we are called to work within a given church congregation, it is God we are serving, not the institution.
Our service to God should be so important to us, that we get uncomfortable, if we can’t be doing the work He has called us to.
This woman loved Jesus so much, that she anointed Him with the most precious thing she had:
“...‘You shall love the LORD your God 
will all your heart, 
with all your soul, 
and with all your mind.’
                                                                         States Matthew 22:37
Something to think about:
Ask yourself these questions
* Am I serving the institution (church denomination, or congregation) I attend or am I serving God?
* Do I look on serving God in the same way I look at coaching a sports team or is there truly more to it?
* What priority is God in my life?
* Am I truly doing what God wants me to do?
* Am I honouring God?
In my work place?
Around my friends.
In my home?
Do I love the LORD my God with all my heart, soul, and mind?
                                   Think about it.

Monday 23 September 2013

God in a Box

Read John 11
Then they took away the stone form the place where the dead man was lying. 
 And Jesus lifted up His eyes and said, “Father, I thank You that You have heard Me.”
“And I know that You always hear Me, but because of the people who are standing by
 I said this, that they may believe that You sent Me.”
Now when He had said these things, He cried with a loud voice, “Lazarus, come forth!”
And he who had died came out bound hand and foot with graveclothes,
 and his face was wrapped with a cloth. 
 Jesus said to them, “Loose him, and let him go.”
Then many of the Jews, who had come to Mary, and had seen the things that Jesus did,
 believed in Him.
But some of them went away to the Pharisees and told them  the things Jesus did.
Then the chief priests and the Pharisees gathered a council and said,
 “What shall we do?  For this Man works many signs.
“If we let Him alone like this, everyone will believe in Him, and the Romans will come and take 
away both our place and nation.”
                                                                                      John 11:41-48
A very intelligent and wise friend, once said to me, regarding business strategies, “it is the short time thinkers, the ones who play politics that ruin a business.  Look and think to the future and not to the past.”
This truth is true, even in Christianity. Take a look at what we can now see, as a very silly statement.
Jesus had just raised Lazarus from the grave.  Something, none of the Pharisees had done.  He had performed miracles, in front of them, and all they did was try to find a reason to kill Him.  Their reasoning stated in John 11:47,48:
"Then the chief priests and the Pharisees gathered a council and said, “What shall we do?  For this Man works many signs.“If we let Him alone like this, everyone will believe in Him, 
and the Romans will come and take away both our place and nation.”
They were truly worried about losing their position of political power and their nation.  Their logic didn’t extend to the fact that Jesus had just raised a man from the dead.  
  That this was not the thing an ordinary man could do. It was one more proof that Jesus was who He said He was the Son of God, the Messiah.
They didn’t clue into the fact that were they to believe and follow Jesus, they had no need to fear because God would be on their side. That the power of Rome could not stand against the power of God.
These men were short term thinkers who played politics.  They were looking out for their own needs. They worried about losing their political power, their prestigious position.
Something to think about
Many church congregations have withered away, because of this kind of thinking.
Within these church congregations and denominations those in a position of power have become to worried about losing that power if change occurs. They have put God in a box of their own making, set a series of rules and rituals by which they hope to keep the status quo.
They fail to hear the voice of God and see what God is doing around them.
Throughout history great movements of God such as were initiated by, Martin Luther, the Wesley’s, Calvin, and other reformers, have been condemned by the church. All because they didn’t conform to what was considered by those in power to be the norm.
The same is true today in the 21st century. There are many within the church that would put God in a very tight box.
We as Christians must be careful to watch that first we don’t put God in a box of our own making and that our leaders don’t keep the status quo simply because they wish to stay in power.
We must constantly pray and study the word of God asking God for his direction for both ourselves and our church leaders.

Wednesday 18 September 2013

Unifying love

Read John 17
I do not pray for these alone, but also for those who will believe in Me 
through their word;
“that they all may be one
 as You Father, are in Me,
 and I in You; 
that they also maybe one in Us,
 that the world may believe that
 You sent Me....
“I in them, and You I Me that they maybe made perfect in one, 
and that the world may know that You have sent Me, 
and have loved them as You have loved Me.
“And I have declared to them Your name,
 and will declare it,
 that the love with which You loved Me
 maybe in them,
 and I in them.”
                                                                       John 17:20, 21-23, 26
Here in Chapter 17 of John, Jesus prays for Himself, the disciples and in verse 20 to 26 for all believers.
He prays for their unity in love.  That the love of God, be in them, as it was in Christ.
We, as individual Christians, must first of all know what we believe and why we believe it.  That is why we must study the Word of God, and sit under a good teacher, we trust.
Then, it is absolutely, imperative, that we find a church congregation that believes as we do or as close as we can find.  A congregation where we feel God would have us work.  And we must submit ourselves to that group.
In order to do this, we must think, and pray.
A Bible School teacher once said to me, “most Christians think with their heart and forget God gave them a brain for that purpose.
They think their hands are only to use to pick things up with, not put together in prayer, and that their ears are the only thing they hear with.”
What he meant was, many Christians go to where they feel good, not necessarily, where God wants them.  That they never pray and seek God’s guidance about which church they should attend or what they should do.  They listen to others and what comes in through their ears, not what God is telling their heart.
Here Jesus talks about the unity of the believers, about them being one.  And He asks:
“that the love with which You loved Me  maybe in them,  and I in them.”
Something to think about:
I go back to the words of the Apostle Paul in 1Corinthinas 13:4-8a
“Love suffers long and is kind: love does not envy; love does not parade itself, is not puffed up; does not behave rudely, does not seek its own, is not provoked, thinks no evil. does not rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth; bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails.”
This is what Jesus prayed for, for all Christians. This is the kind of love we must show to both our brothers and sisters in Christ and the whole world.

Wednesday 11 September 2013

What Really Matters


“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.... 
                                                                          Genesis 1:1
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, 
and the Word was God.  
He was with God in the beginning. 
Through him all things were made; 
without him nothing was made that has been made...
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. 
We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, 
full of grace and truth. 
                                                                                       John 1:1-3, 14

Perhaps one of the most controversial parts of the Bible is the Genesis chapter one, the creations chapter.
Non Christians point to it and say how could the world be made in six twenty-four hour days. They claim it took aeons.
Frankly I could care less. It doesn’t make any difference to my faith if the world was made in a hundred forty-four hours or a hundred forty-four billion years.
I believe the universe and everything in it was created by God. AND more importantly I believe that Jesus is God.
That he came to earth to live among His creation, to point mankind to heaven.
Jesus said of himself,
“For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, 
that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.  
For God did not send his Son into the world 
to condemn the world,
 but to save the world through him.  
Whoever believes in him is not condemned, 
but whoever does not believe stands condemned already 
because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son. "
                                                                                                     John 3:16-18
God gives us a free will but he makes it clear that we have only two choices in this life.
To either accept Jesus for who he says he is. The very Son of God the Saviour of the world, or to reject him as a liar who has perpetuated the most monumental lie in human history.
The choice dear reader is yours.
Do you believe Jesus is Lord and God. The creator of the universe who came to earth to pay the price for your sins?
If you believe, then the question is, if you were to die tonight are you certain you would get to haven?
If not hear is a prayer you may want to pray.
Dear Heavenly Father
I know that I am a sinner. That I fall short of what you want for me in my life. 
I recognize that Jesus is your One and Only Son. That he came to die to take away my sins.
Please forgive me of my sins.
Please Lord Jesus come into my heart and life this day. Lead me and guide me from this day forward.
Amen

If you prayed this prayer and really meant it then Jesus will come into your life. I urge you to read the Bible. Start with the New Testament and read through the whole Bible.
Pray before you read each chapter that God will reveal Himself to you and that He will reveal what you are reading means to you personally.
The next thing is to pray and find a good church in your area.
I personally would recommend a good Baptist church as I have found their teachings to be very well balanced and in line with the word of God.
But above all of this Pray, Pray, Pray, that God would lead you to the right church or group of believers that can help you grow in Christ.
And remember always that with God in your life, if you let Him, He will change your life in a wonderful way.

Sunday 8 September 2013

Blessed is the Man


“Blessed is the man who does not fall away on account of me.” 
                                                                                                    Matthew 11:6

John who is now in prison hears of Jesus ministry. He then sends his disciples to Jesus to ask if He is indeed the Christ.
Jesus in essence tells him to look at the signs. The blind receive sight, the lame walk, the leper is cured, the deaf hear, the dead raised and the good news is preached to the poor.
Then Jesus adds “Blessed is the man who does not fall away on account of me.”
It is so easy to fall away from Christ especially in our day and age. We are and have been waiting for Christ’s return for over two millennium.
It takes a lot to wait that long.
Jesus is the only founder of a religious group that said he will return. This is something we must hold onto as a true statement.
We are called to follow Jesus by faith.
We must have faith that the Bible is true. That the miracles spoken of in the Bible are true.
We must have faith in the words of the apostle Paul when he says in Ephesians that we are saved through our faith not our works.
Christianity is very much a walk of faith. We are presented the truth about Jesus in the Bible and are asked to make a decision as to wether we believe it or not. There is no middle ground.
Moreover we must live our faith openly before those around us.
We must not be ashamed of what the Bible tells us about Jesus no matter what those around us say.
Jesus performed miracles, something that in the twenty first century or for that matter in any century can seem far fetched. Yet the Bible asks us to believe them.
And through the ages the words Jesus said to John the Baptist calls out to us, “Blessed is the man who does not fall away on account of me.”  

Something to think about.

Do you truly believe that Jesus is the Son of God and that he did indeed perform all the miraculous things spoken of in the Bible?

Monday 2 September 2013

Beware

Read Matthew 16:1-12
Then the Pharisees and Sadducees came,
 and hailing Him asked that He would show them a sign from heaven.
He answered and said to them, 
“When it is evening you say, ‘It will be fair weather, for the sky is red’;
“and in the morning, “It will be foul weather today, for the sky is red and threatening.’  Hypocrites!  You know how to discern the face of the sky,
 but you cannot discern the signs of the times.
“A wicked and adulterous generation seeks after a sign,
 and no sign shall be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah.” 
 And He left them and departed.
Now when His disciples had come to the other side, they had forgotten to take bread.
Then Jesus said to them, 
“Take heed and beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and the Sadducees.”
Then they understood 
that He did not tell them to beware the leaven of bread, 
but of the doctrine of the Pharisees and Sadducees.”
                                                                                             Matthew 16:1-6,12
Do you know what you believe, and why you believe it?  Is what you believe based on the Scriptures?  Can you support your beliefs from the Bible and not take verses out of context?  Is what you believe based only on what you have heard from pastors, priests, evangelist, and those on television?
We are not all Bible scholars, but we should all have a good idea of what the Bible says.  We should believe it, read it, as often as we can, from cover to cover, and ask God to reveal His truths in it.
Most Pastors, priests and evangelists are good people, they truly believe what they teach.  I know I thank God for some very well educated pastors, that have come into my life.
One in particular, couldn’t emphasize enough the need to read the Word of God.  “Study to show thyself approved.”  (2 Timothy 3:15) was a quote he used.  He always asserted that any teacher, no matter how good is “human”, therefore, imperfect and prone to make the odd mistake.  He noted that no church, no denomination has it all right, all make mistakes although, they do their best to get it right, for the most part.
It is therefore, up to us as individuals to read the Scriptures, to know what God is saying.  To know that we are in the right place with God.
Throughout the history, the church, has let the leaven of the Pharisees creep in, every now and then.
The Pharisees simply put, let traditions and man’s interpretation of Scriptures get in front of what God’s word actually said.  They covered the spirit and original intent of the Word of God with traditions and mistaken interpretations, thus changing it’s meaning.
Something to think about
Millions of books have been written, interpreting the Scriptures. Each writer with  a slight bias derived from what they were taught.
That is understandable no factual book has ever been written without some kind of bias. It’s the consequence of “being human” and the free will God has given us.
The bottom line in all of his however, is to be aware of what is being taught.  Read the Scriptures.  Question doctrines that you don’t understand.  If it is truly based on the Scriptures, it will stand to independent scrutiny, and those preaching it will not be afraid to have it questioned.

Monday 26 August 2013

He who is greatest among you shall be your servant.


Read Matthew 23
“But he who is greatest among you 
shall be your servant.
“And whoever exalts himself 
will be humbled, 
and he who humbles himself
 will be exalted.
                                                                         Matthew 23:11,12
A subtitle in my New King James Bible for this chapter reads, “woe to the Scribes and Pharisees.”
Jesus made it clear that the religious leaders of his day, had placed so many rules and regulations in place around worship, that the meaning God had intended was being lost.  They were even being hypocritical themselves in how things were done.
God intended the laws to point the way to Him.  He wanted to have a relationship with mankind, not rule him like a slave.  The religious leaders of Jesus’ time had placed all these regulations around, that had to be followed so precisely, that it made man a slave to the law.  God had never intended it to be so.
God knows the heart of man.  He knows what we are like on the inside.  God knows if we bring a gift to the altar, whether it is from the heart, out of duty or to impress those around us.
He wants our faith and our love.  It’s really that simple.
God wants to be in our lives and His ways are not the ways of man.  God wants us to be humble, and He in His time, will give us the acknowledgment we deserve.
“But he who is greatest among you shall be your servant.” States Jesus here in Matthew 23.
It is only when we have a servant’s heart, that we can succeed for God. Even those, most successful men and women in the secular world have a servant’s heart.  I’ve spoken to many, and they all say, “I provide a service people want.”
These people are successful because they find ways of providing the service better than anyone else.  They are constantly working on how they can improve that service.
As Christians, we must always remember that we are God’s servant and that we cannot do that if we are trying to exalt ourselves.
It is all about God and others, not about us.
Someone once gave me this analogy.  She said:
“Serving God is almost like being the manager of an exclusive hotel.  God is the owner.  He had put the investment into the place.
He has a plan and the best hotel in the world.
We are His managers and it is our job to go out there and implement the plan.  To bring people into the hotel.
In order for us to do this, we must first catch the vision that He has and then go out there and show the people how God can meet all their needs.
      We must show the people that we are willing to serve them for in doing so, we are serving God.”
Something to think about:
All too often, we loose track of the fact that even God humbled Himself and became a man.  That the creator of the universe came down to us, lived among us, served us, and died for us. That he became a servant setting the example for us.  Thus we should do the same.

Tuesday 20 August 2013

Christ's Ministry/Our Ministry

"Then Jesus cried out, “When a man believes in me, he does not believe in me only,
 but in the one who sent me.  
When he looks at me, he sees the one who sent me.  
I have come into the world as a light, so that no one who believes in me should stay in darkness. 
“As for the person who hears my words but does not keep them, I do not judge him. 
For I did not come to judge the world, but to save it.  
There is a judge for the one who rejects me and does not accept my words;
 that very word which I spoke will condemn him at the last day.  
For I did not speak of my own accord, but the Father who sent me commanded me what to say and how to say it.  
I know that his command leads to eternal life. So whatever I say is just what the Father has told me to say.” 
John 12:44-50

Points to ponder about what Jesus says about himself.
when someone believes in Him they also believe in God who sent Him.
He as come as a light to the world.
Anyone who hears Jesus’ word and does not keep them, Jesus at least while on this earth dose not judge him, because he came to save the world.
There is a judge that will judge in the last days
Jesus spoke not of his own accord but of the Father
The words of Jesus leads to Eternal life.

I hear a lot of preachers especially in the media condemning the world and those who espouse different beliefs or lifestyles. This aught not to be.
We as Christians are called to present the Gospel of Christ. To point people to heaven not to judge them. That is God’s job not ours.
I firmly believe that in screaming hell fire and brimstone at people you only push them away.
I have seen too many ministers in the media pointing to a persons or group of person’s sin and telling them that they are going to hell.
I at one time was heading to hell as was every preacher that has ever lived.
Fortunately for me I had a wonderful pastor who accepted me for what I was. He slowly pointed me in the right direction and let the Holy Spirit work in my life, showing me where I was going wrong.
The climax came for me at a Doug Oldham concert in Hamilton Ontario Canada when he was led to ask people who wanted to give their life to Christ.
I stood and while I didn’t go to the front, I became a believer that night and have never looked back.
That was close to forty years ago now.
Today when I look to the best way to present the gospel I look to the Apostle Paul when speaking in Athens, Acts 17:16-32.
He was invited by Stoics and Epicurean to speak in the Areopagus.
Paul simply started at a point they were familiar with and presented the unadulterated message of Christ for them to accept or reject.
He never once condemned them for their beliefs or way of life. As a result some believed some sneered but others wanted to hear more on the subject.
And I think the key here is some actually wanted to hear more of what Paul had to say. Which many times is all we can hope for.
Think about it.

Sunday 18 August 2013

The Strongest Bulwark

Faith in God is the strongest bulwark of a free society.  Human freedom began when men became conscious that over and above society and nature there is a God who created them...who fashioned them in His likeness, and that they are, therefore, possessed of intrinsic and independent significance and are endowed, as individuals, with original and irrevocable rights and authority.
                                  Abba Hillel Silver
All societies around the world believe in an afterlife, weather their governments or the intellectuals of their society believe it or not. Likewise the majority of people believe in God. Some in many god’s.
I wonder without God would mankind even be around today?
Think about it. In order to exist mankind needs a set of morals to live up to. A set of guidelines to live by.
I grew up in the “do your own thing” era. As long as is didn’t hurt anyone you could just do what you wanted.
Still even those who espoused this kind of lifestyle realized there was a basic of rules we had to live by. Do not murder for example, don’t bare false witness. Be honest in all you do.
Which begs the question where did our morals come from?
Was it possible for the cave man to write a universal set of morals? A moral code that even the most ardent atheist follows today thousands of years on?
It seems to me that the basic moral code all people live by is with us from the moment we are born. Perhaps proving it is part of our very make up as human beings. Psalm 139:13 hints at just such a thing,
“For you created my inmost being;you knit me together in my mother’s womb”
For me I cannot believe that all of what we have today is by chance or random acts in the universe that just happened to result in us. There has to be a creator.
As I look at what Atheist and many scientist believe I wonder who has the greater faith, them, or me?
I think it takes greater faith to believe there is no God or Creator of the universe than it does to believe.
I see the world as carefully crafted. Very much in the same way an engineer would build it.
Just looking into something as common as a tree leaf fills me with amazement knowing that beyond what I can see with my naked eye are intricate arrangements of cells. All of which work together to make the leaf what it is.
Such structure to me cannot be mere chance. There has to be a God.
It is my firm belief that given enough time and provided scientist keep an open mind they will one day prove there is a creator. That the universe is not just chaos and random chance.
I see such proof coming to light as scientist study fractals. Its something that has been around for several centuries but only recently, with the advent of modern computer capacity has it started to be studied in depth.
I have a definition of Fractal’s that comes from, what is .com, it states,
“The term "fractal" was coined by Benoit Mandelbrot in 1975. It comes from the Latin fractus , meaning an irregular surface like that of a broken stone. Fractals are non-regular geometric shapes that have the same degree of non-regularity on all scales. Just as a stone at the base of a foothill can resemble in miniature the mountain from which it originally tumbled down, so are fractals self-similar whether you view them from close up or very far away. Fractals are the kind of shapes we see in nature. ...
We find trees, mountains, rocks and cloud formations in nature, but what is the geometrical formula for a cloud? How can we determine the shape of a dollop of cream in a cup of coffee? Fractal geometry, chaos theory, and complex mathematics attempt to answer questions like these. Science continues to discover an amazingly consistent order behind the universe's most seemingly chaotic phenomena.”
I like that last sentence “Science continues to discover an amazingly consistent order behind the universe's most seemingly chaotic phenomena.”
Science is an on going process. It is not complete. All good scientist are continually asking questions searching for answers.
Much of humanity is looking for answers this is most prominent when they are near death or someone close to them is near death.
Sadly today all to many people are looking for the answer to life in all the wrong places.
They need to turn to the Bible and learn about Almighty God and the saving power of His Son Jesus Christ.

Tuesday 13 August 2013

Eternal Consequences


Read Titus 2
But as for you, 
speak the things which are proper for sound doctrine:
that the older men
 be sober, reverent, temperate, sound in faith, in love, in patience;
the older women likewise,
 that they be reverent in behaviour,
 not slanderers, not given to much wine,
 teachers of good things–
that they admonish the young women to 
love their husbands, 
to love their children.
To be discreet,
 chaste, homemaker’s, good, 
obedient to their own husbands, 
that the Word of God may not be blasphemed.
Likewise, exhort the young men to be sober-minded,
in all things showing yourself 
to be a pattern of good works: in doctrine
 showing 
integrity, reverence, incorruptibility,”
sound speech that cannot be condemned, 
that one who is an opponent maybe ashamed, 
having nothing evil to say of you.”
                                        Titus 2:1-8
Take a good look at the words above in
* all things showing yourself
* to be a pattern of good works in doctrine showing
* showing integrity,
* sound speech that cannot be condemned
* having nothing evil to say of you.”
All too often, people do have evil to say of Christians, because the example they have seen is negative.
Some groups of people don’t feel welcome in our churches.  They feel they are being condemned.  As a result, they run the other way, when asked to come.
     The world sees self-appointed Christian leaders and speakers, pointing fingers in judgment at various groups. As a result they call all Christians hypocrites, and hate mongers or worse.
The world sees Christian businesses as a Christian version of the secular world.  They see no difference between us and the world.  How sad.
“Judge not” said Jesus.
While Paul here, tells us we should be an example of integrity, reverence, incorruptibility and sound speech that cannot be condemned.  (Titus 2:7)
Something to think about
  I think the key in all of this is that we should be vigilant in what we say and do. We should be very different from the world.
Our churches should be a place where all are welcome regardless of who they are or their lifestyle.
Our Christian leaders should be held to a much higher standard than that of the world. And we should be willing to stand up to those leaders who are in error and correct them in accordance to scriptural principles.
All to often this does not happen but it must.
For if we do not live up to the standards of God. If we do not make our leaders both in the churches and in the media live up to the standards God has ordained for them it will have eternal consequences.
Eternal Consequences for those who don’t live up to the standard and those who were turned from Christ because of them.
Think about it.

Thursday 8 August 2013

Think about it.

“He spreads out the northern  skies  over empty space; 
he suspends the earth over nothing.” 
                                                                                                        Job 26:7
You can think of the Bible what you want. I have always maintained that it is not a science book. It is a book calling people to have faith in the one true God.
Job obviously believed that God created the heavens and the earth as to do I. And  it matters little to me weather the world was formed in six days or six millennium or six trillion years. It does not affect my faith.
Throughout the bible however God reveals Himself to us. He takes a man like Job and inspires him to write the above statement.
On Christmas of 1968 as someone has put it “Apollo 8 discovers the earth,” taking the first ever photograph of earth from space as they orbit the moon.
God is very real and he shows himself in a myriad of different ways to us.
The Psalmist writes,
"The heavens declare the glory of God; 
the skies proclaim the work of his hands." 
                                                            Psalm 19:1                          Astronomers have a place they call the Goldilocks zone. It is the place they look for around distant stars. The place where the right conditions exist for possible life.
The place is like where we are located around the sun.
Our planet is exactly the right distance from the sun. It is exactly the right temperature, (a few degrees either way and we couldn’t live on earth). It has exactly the right balance of gasses, liquids and everything else we need to exist.
That is one of the reasons I firmly believe God exists and that he made the earth the heavens and everything in them.
I firmly believe it takes more faith to be an atheist than it does to be a Christian. I also believe that given time man will see that everything is connected and that connection leads to God.
One just has to look at the complexity of something as simple and everyday as a tree, a blade of grass or an ant climbing on them.
Intricately detailed bio-mechanisms that point to a divine creator.
                                                                                 Think about it.

Monday 5 August 2013

Where’s your treasure?

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal.  
But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal.  
For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” 
Matthew 6:19-20
The other day someone commented that my care was quote “ageing”. I drive a 1991 Honda station wagon.
They told me I needed a new one.
I noted that it’s still in good shape. That with just over two hundred thousand kilometres on it’s just about broken in.
I noted that I never buy new and that I hardly ever pay more than five hundred dollars for a car. With obvious repairs to pass the government’s mechanical fitness requirements the total cost of the car is generally around seven hundred or so.
Usually the cars last me a couple of years, five if I’m lucky.
Still the person thought that me buying a new or nearly new one would look better.
It was then I realized that we were at different ends of the spectrum as far as material things go.
He was very much upper middle class Canadian with a lot of the toys. The nice fifteen hundred square foot house. Manicured lawns, nice up to date cars, designer clothes, flat screen television, computers and so on.
In order to get them he worked long hours and while he  a Christian he quite often missed church on Sunday. Even during the week he would skip bible study in favour of work or looking after his property.
I on the other hand have an illness that at times prevents me from working. Still I own my own business and can choose when I work. Thus I schedule my work around what’s happening at church.
I did this even when I was employed in a so called normal job. I’m far from perfect but I firmly believe that God must come first in my life. It is something I’ve instilled in my children and both are very active in their churches today as adults.
While it would be nice to have millions of dollars. I’m happy with my ninety-one Honda and my tiny nine hundred square foot home that was built in 1949. My second hand lap top computer, a stereo record player, that plays real vinyl records. O and there’s a wind up and a small battery powered radio in case of emergencies.
It’s more than most people in this world have and my situation gives me the opportunity to serve my Lord better.
Isaiah the prophet wrote,
A voice says, “Cry out.” And I said, “What shall I cry?” 
“All men are like grass, and all their glory is like the flowers of the field. 
The grass withers and the flowers fall, because the breath of the LORD blows on them. Surely the people are grass. 
The grass withers and the flowers fall, but the word of our God stands forever.” 
                                                                                                           Isaiah 40:6-8.
What we have in this world will wither and ultimately pass to someone else eventually turning to dust.
It’s only what’s done for Christ that will last.
Are you more into the “toys” of life or Christ?
Think about it.