WARNING - Work in Progress

WARNING - Work in Progress
WARNING - Work in Progress
Showing posts with label Luke 9:23. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Luke 9:23. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2016

There's No Place Like Home - 09/11/2016



Warning Preachy…

Proverbs 5:8 - “She gives no thought to the way of life; her paths are crooked, but she knows it not.

Yesterday I started taking a 3D design class with my son (9/8/16), and I learned about the 3D environment in which something is created.  In the world of the 3D object there needs to be a reference point of 0,0,0 from which to create all objects.  Without this reference point, nothing knows where it is and how to move or function: in relation to itself nor with other objects in its universe. 

Literally a few hours later I was talking to a friend, and she wondered why people chose the professions that they chose.  What was it that they liked about it, what was the attraction for them?  And then, not more than 30 minutes after that conversation, I saw a news report, from Chicago, about an old man who was watering his lawn when two men shot and robbed him.

Why do we make the choices that we make?  Why does one person choose to be a brain surgeon and another choose to shoot and rob an old man?  Why do we choose the paths that our lives take?

I believe it has to do with our individual reference points.  We all have them.  The problem is that each of has a differing starting point, each of our 0,0,0 starting points are different from one another, so we collide with each other and shake our heads in disgust by the other person’s ignorance and terrible life choices.

Is there an answer to my friend’s question about a person’s choice of vocation, or a solution for the person who considers murder and thievery as an acceptable path to walk in life?  I believe so, but it’s not easy.

My son has been playing with our 3D drafting software for months, he’s been creating drawings with many different elements and parts, but he did so not thinking about the 0,0,0 reference point that all the parts must share in order to properly function together.  How is he going to fix his drawings?  I suspect he is going to have to scrap what he has and start over, but this time rebuilding with the proper reference point of 0,0,0.

We call the scrapping of our lives being “born again”.  The apostle Paul calls it a dying to self in baptism.  No matter the semantics we use to describe it, the result is always a new starting point, and it looks like a Cross.

Luke 9:23 - Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me”

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Why do Christians Suffer? (Part 3) - 07/30/2016



WARNING PREACHY

So this is my last thoughts on why Christians suffer.  In the first part I suggest that it is because we do not know or disregard the Word of Christ in its written or spirit lead forms.  In the second part I suggest that we suffer in this world simply because we live in a cursed world that is under the dominion of the evil one.  In this third and final part, I am going to suggest that we Christians suffer simply because we are Christian.

Then he said to them all: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.  (Luke 9:23)

These words of Jesus are words of personal sacrifice.  They are words that call to the very core of men to endeavor to die to himself each day for the benefit of his fellow man – nay even his enemy.  Too many of us Christians have responded to the minister’s call to “be forgiven and go to heaven when you die” but have never thought about the life of a Christian.  In Jesus own words, if we are going to be His disciples we are to be a living representation of Himself while we remain on earth.  I suggest that we Christians often suffer because we really did not want to be walking talking martyrs of Jesus with our lives, we simply wanted to go to heaven when we die.

The struggle doesn’t begin there though, it begins the very moment that we understand that we are sinners.  The moment we acknowledge that we really are not a “good person” we must do some self-analysis and admit that we really are self-focused self-serving people.  We suffer with the act of bending a knee in humility before Him and asking Him to take control of our lives.  Then, after that initial act, we suffer with humility all the way through.  Loving our family more than ourselves, loving our enemy at all, humbling ourselves to being taught the ways of Christ from others, and daily remembering and trusting that we have a new identity in Jesus – that the old has gone and the new has come.  We suffer daily with trying to die to self – or at least we should.  A countless number of sermons have been written and preached reminding us Christians that we are no longer as we were, but as His Children, as we now are, by the power of the blood of Jesus.  Having this sort of faith is a constant struggle.

The point is that we Christians all suffer for a variety of reasons.

Few people know of Mother Theresa’s despair and suffering as she walked with God.  She reported that God very clearly called her to begin the ministry to the people at Calcutta, but once she did she reported that it felt like God had abandoned her.  For the rest of her life she daily suffered a spiritual loneliness while begging and pleading with Jesus to allow her to feel His presence once again.  However, every day, in faith, she continued to seek Him while she diligently kept at the task of serving the people she had been called to.   

I appreciate the above story because in Mother Theresa's suffering I see a daily picking up of a cross in order to continue her faithful serving of the people Jesus died for.  I see in her life’s work, a woman who accepted the suffering of the cross, and yet continued to follow Him daily.

Have any of my words over the past few weeks been of any comfort to you?  I think that most of us are willing to suffer so long as we can understand why we are suffering.  For some it may be ignorance or a disregard of God’s will, for others it could be that they are just overwhelmed by the natural world of sin in which we live, or it may even be simply that we struggle with the fact that we are Christian and the battles of faith against the devil, or personal will and desire, weigh us down.  In all actuality, it's a combination of everything that cause us to suffer.  My prayer, however, is that in all of our struggles we will remain faithful to our savior who gave His blood that we might live.

And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him.  (Hebrews 11:6)