Category Archives: Frank Becker

Never Again

Week Twenty-Four, 2018

NEVER AGAIN

By John Grant

But he that shall endure unto the end, the same shall be saved (Matthew 24:13).

As I stood there before the boxcar, I could only imagine its history. One of the actual cars which transported Jews to the gas chambers was right there in front of me. When it was brought there, a girls small ring was found, placed between the boards on her way to the death camp.

Throughout history, the Jews have endured hardships and have teetered on the edge of extinction, only to have a remnant so save them. Shamgar slew the Philistines against all odds. Ester saved them again.

In modern times there was the horror of the Holocaust in Nazi Germany, another time Satan tried to blot them out. The fact that, as of 1948, the Jews have a restored national identity helps to fulfill Biblical prophecies found in Ezekiel 37 and Matthew 24. Defeating Nazism and giving the land of Israel back to the Jews is a classic example of God’s thwarting Satan’s plan and bringing about good in spite of the evil.

Hundreds of these boxcars coupled to dozens of trains carried thousands upon thousands of Jews on their way to be gassed in the showers. Sadly, local people closed their eyes and failed to act.

There was one church along the tracks and when the trains would pass by during worship times, the organ music was turned up to blot out the sound of the Jews screaming for help.

And while Nazism took hold in Germany, where were the European churches? Some, it is true, stood fast against the evil in their midst, and some churchmen, such as Dietrich Bonhoeffer, paid the ultimate price for dissenting. But they were the minority. Most churches of the era acquiesced to Nazi Party rules and remained silent while the Jews were slaughtered.

Satan is alive and well and evil continues to surround us. Will we as Christians sit idly by with our hands over our ears and ignore? Unless we rise up against evil, another holocaust could well happen and maybe, it will be the Christians who are persecuted.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

CRUSADE:

When we organized the Executive team for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association for the 1994 Cleveland Crusade, we were reminded on Day One that the only theme we would all have to make sure we committed to was The Main Thing.

For the next year and all through the Crusade, our focus was on one unifying ideal, the Saving Grace of Jesus Christ. When people came forward to dedicate their lives to Christ, we did not ask for information about their background, beliefs, or traditions, but were they ready to give their life to Jesus?

How simple and how profound! When I have friends who are seeking God and having this yearning to know more about God, the last thing I want to do is distract them from the “main thing”.

There is always time after a decision is made to reflect on one’s heritage and faith journey, but to allow that to muddy the waters at a critical time in life more often than not brings procrastination, not clarity. Dwight Short

NEWS: Oregon Legislature Passes Bill to Allow Starving Mentally Ill Patients to Death.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Never take your liberty for granted, and be careful whom you vote for because it may be the last election you’ll ever have. Rep. Jamie Grant

The Bible is a list of authoritative books, not an authoritative list of books. Dr. Bruce Metzker

Christianity needs more oars in the water.

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Selected portions of Thoughts on Life can also be read at TheLife.com.

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to be taken off the mailing list a simple e-mail will do it. Feel free to pass this along to others and to contribute your ideas and thoughts. Address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2018

©2018 John Grant | Florida State Senator (Ret.) | 10025 Orange Grove Drive | Tampa, FL 33618

“THE GREAT RECONCILER”

By Rev. Jeremy B. Stopford, Pastor

First Baptist Church, Earlville, NY

“THE GREAT RECONCILER” (Matt. 5:23-24; 2 Cor. 5:16-21)

June 3, 2018 10:30 AM

TODAY’S FUNNY: “Hard Working Farmer” – in honor of this year’s “first cut” which was able to be done by the last week of May!

A farmer and his recently hired hand were eating an early breakfast of biscuits and gravy, scrambled eggs, bacon and coffee that the farmer’s wife had prepared for them. Thinking of all the work they had to get done that day, the farmer told the hired man he might as well go ahead and eat his lunch too.

The hired man didn’t say a word, but filled his plate a second time and proceeded to eat. After awhile the farmer said, “We’ve got so much work to do today, you might as well eat your supper now too.”

Again, the hired man didn’t respond but refilled his plate a third time and continued to eat. Finally, after eating his third plate of food, the hired man pushed back his chair and began to take off his shoes.

“What are you doing”? the farmer asked.

The hired man replied, “I don’t work after supper.”

INTRODUCTION: This past week I learned about a really sad incident. Two good friends – they had been friends for decades – suddenly separated their friendship. Perhaps the reasoning for the separation was good, perhaps it was petty. In either case, it may take awhile for these two friends to patch up. And that “patching up” is what the Bible calls “reconciliation” – where an offended party is able to make amends with the one who caused the offending. We often say, “it will take an act of God to do that”. And that’s just what God has done for you and me. On this communion Sunday, let’s observe how this plays out in Scripture. PRAYER

#1 THE PRINCIPLE (Matthew 5:23-24)

* Note the context: v. 21ff talks about a broken relationship equivalent to murder; and v. 25ff talks about a wise judge desiring offended parties to try to patch up before the extreme – appearing before the judge.

* In the midst of that is this story about the prodding of God at the altar. What is the Lord Jesus trying to have done? A “change in attitude” toward one another. And that, in a nutshell, is reconciliation!

* Here’s the principle: in order to have true reconciliation, a true “change in attitude”, the offended party and the one causing the offense must meet. Together. One on one. Alone.

This can happen between two people. As we soon shall see, this can happen between God (the offended “Party”) and man (the “one causing the offense”.

* ILLUSTRATION: When serving as the City of Norwich dog control officer, I often wrote tickets for violations of the dog ordinances – either local or state. And in almost every case, the wise judge would ask both the one receiving the ticket and I, “would you take a moment out in the hall and see if this can be settled out of court?”. I believe he took that principle right from the Scriptures.

* Let me share from personal experience: what happens when an offended party does NOT reconcile with the one causing the offense? Usually one word (can you guess it?): “bitterness”. Whenever they see each other, they remember the incident. Or perhaps the one causing the offense has forgotten, or even does not know the offense caused. Reconciliation is an huge thing. So is bitterness. Which would you rather have, reconciliation or bitterness?

#2 THE PATTERN (2 Corinthians 5:16-21)

Let’s apply what we learned in Matthew to this passage in 2 Corinthians. And when we do, we will see a decided pattern – one which must be made in every heart in order for a person to come to know Jesus as Savior:

1. Identify the offended party (v. 16). The Lord Jesus is the eternal offended “Party”! He is often viewed from a “worldly point of view” and not from Scriptures. When we choose not the world’s pattern but the pattern of Scriptures, then we can identify the offended Party.

2. Identify the one “causing the offense” (v. 17-18a). Once again, in the eternal perspective, WE are the ones causing the offense! Ephesians 2:12 tells us that every man, woman, boy and girl who has ever been born is born without God and without hope.

Yet in the midst of that hopelessness, what happened? God initiated the reconciliation – the “change in attitude”; the eternal “patching up”! How did He do that? By sending His Son to take our punishment upon Himself at Calvary’s tree.

And every one who receives that Savior – the One Who did the reconciling – is called a “new creation” and “the old has gone, the new has come!”. That isn’t religion. That isn’t churchianity! That is an eternal relationship with the living God Who has loved us with an everlasting love (Jer. 31:3) shown in His sending His Son to die in our place.

3. Identify the new ministry (vs. 18b-20). What is the new ministry? The ministry of reconciliation! We are to be God’s ambassadors where He has wisely planted us. We are to make a difference before others. We are to show them Jesus, to show Him in that same world that is “without God, without hope”. And we are to point them to the One Who is the “offended Party” Who took the place of the one “causing the offense”.

ILLUSTRATION There is a ministry headquartered in Illinois which has been around for over 80 years called “Bible Tracts”. The title seems simple enough. But the ministry is based upon this one foundation: that God has promised to honor His Word (Psalm 138:2) and that His Word loves to change hearts (Romans 10:17). I encouraged you to look at the tracts we have – in the narthex both on the table and on the tract rack. Perhaps you will find one you can become familiar with and share with someone this week. Remember, you are not sharing yourself. You are sharing the Lord Jesus, the One Who wants to do the ministry of reconciliation through us as His instruments!

CONCLUSION:

As we wrap this up and prepare for this morning’s communion service, did you look ahead and read verse 21? “God made Him Who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God.”

In a nutshell, that is what the communion service is all about. God made Jesus Who had no sin – the “offended Party” – to be sin for us – the ones “causing the offense”. And as a result, we might become His righteousness!

The Apostle John said, “He was in the world, and the world was made through Him, and the world did not know Him. He came to His own, and His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, to those who believe in His name.” (1:10-12).

Do you know the Lord Jesus as Savior?

Don’t you wish everybody did?

Close in prayer

(Good job, Moxie! -FB)

THE GLORY OF CREATION

By John Grant

Week Twenty-Three, 2018

The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands. – Psalm 19:1

It was a cold, dark night as we stood there in freezing cold, with a thirty knot wind in our face. We waited and suddenly they appeared showing the glory of God’s creation.

The bright dancing lights of the aurora are actually collisions between electrically charged particles from the sun that enter the earth’s atmosphere. The lights are seen above the magnetic poles of the northern and southern hemispheres. They are known as ‘Aurora borealis’

The temperature above the surface of the sun is millions of degrees. At this temperature, collisions between gas molecules are frequent and explosive. Free electrons and protons are thrown from the sun’s atmosphere by the rotation of the sun and escape through holes in the magnetic field.

Traveling at tremendous speed the discharge from the sun still takes about eighteen hours to reach the earth’s atmosphere. We live in a time when our knowledge of the heavens is expanding quickly. Our knowledge should lead us to praise God for His amazing provision and protection.

As I got back on the bus and headed back to town, I thought of how creative God is and how magnificent his creation is. You can see it in the Northern Lights and also in the smile of a new born baby. His creation all around us. The Bible tells us that God has left clues of Himself everywhere and they’re not hidden. They are right out in the open where every human being can find them.

The God who made the world and everything in it, this master of sky and land, doesn’t live in custom-made shrines or need the human race to run errands for him, as if he couldn’t take care of himself. He makes us; we don’t make Him. Praise Him and praise the glory of His magnificent creation.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

THE DIAMONDS RIGHT IN FRONT OF YOU:

In his book, Acres of Diamonds, Russell Cromwell tells the story of a man named Ali Hafed, a farmer who had lived on his farm for years with his wife and children. He had health and peace and was content with his life. Until one day a priest visited and talked of “diamonds” sparkling like a million suns, the most beautiful things in all the world.

And Ali Hafed became discontented with what he had and sold his farm, left his wife and children with a friend and set out to find diamonds. For then, he thought, he would be rich. Then he would be happy and content with his life.

He searched the world over, looking for white sands and tall mountains, but found no diamonds. Until one day, broken, destitute, unable to see his family again, in a fit of utter despair and discontent with his life, he threw himself into the sea and died.

Meanwhile, the man who had bought Ali Hafed’s farm when he left, spotted an odd-looking chunk of black rock, took it home, put it on the mantle, and thought no more of it. Until one day that same priest came along, looked at it and saw a brilliant flash of light emitting from a crack in that rock. Something shiny, something beautiful lay beneath that rough exterior.

A diamond. And more and more diamonds were found there in an area. This became the greatest diamond mine in all the world, and produced diamonds used in the Crown Jewels of England, Russia and Persia.

Right there on the very property that Ali Hafed had sold to begin his search for contentment and riches. Right beneath his very feet, the richest diamond mine in the world, and he didn’t even know it. He’d searched the world over to find contentment in life, to find meaning in life. Always looking somewhere else, and all he found was frustration, disappointment, heartache, despair, failure and ultimately death.

We may know people like that. Spending years of their lives in all kinds of pursuits of success, pleasure, fame and wealth-in an effort to find happiness and contentment. When it’s right beneath their very feet, in their own backyard. If only they would look. If only they would believe that we are each something beautiful created by God and can find our purpose in life right where we are in whom He created us to be.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

A thought to remember: we can never un-ring a bell or take back a word, spoken or written, or any action we make in our daily journey of life. Be diligent because someone is watching. General Dick Abel

None of us know how long we have. What we do know is we have the ability to unwrap any ugliness layer by layer until we find the collateral goodness underneath. Kathy Merlino

It’s not my commitment to Jesus that saves me. It’s Jesus commitment to me that saves me. Ken Whitten.

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Selected portions of Thoughts on Life can also be read at TheLife.com.

Your feedback is welcome and if you want to be taken off the mailing list a simple e-mail will do it. Feel free to pass this along to others and to contribute your ideas and thoughts. Address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2018

©2018 John Grant | Florida State Senator (Ret.) | 10025 Orange Grove Drive | Tampa, FL 33618