What is Weighing You Down?

Week Three, 2020

What is weighing you down?

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

“But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you” (Matthew 6:33).

When I studied pre-flight aeronautics, I learned what I had to do to check my airplane before departing. One important item was weight and balance. In order to fly, an aircraft has to be within weight limitations and weight has to be distributed in the right place. Too much weight or wrongfully distributed weight will keep the plane from lifting off the runway or if it does, if it is nose or tail heavy, it will come back to earth quickly, often with disastrous consequences.

Life is like that. We cannot move forward when we are held back by carrying too much of the past. All too often our priorities are in the wrong place.

Often, we can be oblivious to the number and cumulative impact of the initiatives we have in progress at the same time. Too often we lack the mechanisms to manage the demands that having too much on our plate places on us.

Worse than having too much to manage, is having the wrong priorities. What needs to get done now doesn’t get done, because what can be done later is speaking more loudly. Often our choices are not items that are right or wrong, but rather important or more important.

Sadly, too often our spiritual life gets unprioritized and pushed to the back burner. Often this happens to me and I get disconnected from God

What’s a good way to tell that you’re disconnected from God? When you feel like an emotional mess. Every time you feel angry, sad, resentful, unworthy, depressed, you name it, you are being given a sure sign that you’re putting God last. I have been that way all too often and ashamed of it.

When we put God first, all other things fall into their proper place or drop out of our lives. Our love of the Lord will govern the claims of our affection, the demands on our time, the interests we pursue, and the order of our priorities.

Jesus said that the most important thing in our lives is to first seek the kingdom of God. And, oh by the way, He continues to add that when we do this, everything in our life falls into its proper and manageable place.

What is the most important priority in your life today?

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

The temptation of being good:

As I read about our veterans, thought about my father’s sacrifice, I was inspired to make Jabez’s prayer my own. If millions of men and women could give their best to serve our nation, I can give my best to serve my Lord.

Here’s the problem: it is tempting to settle for less than our best when our good seems better than others. If we have not yielded to cultural pressure on abortion, homosexual relations, euthanasia, etc., we can conclude that we are more moral than those who have. But heterosexual sexual sin is sin as well. God cares for the poor as well as the unborn. He wants the best medical care for the indigent as well as the terminally ill.

And He wants us to champion all that He champions. I have noticed that it is easier to preach against sins I am not tempted to commit personally. Jim Denison

— o —

$123 billion: The value of the cancer-drugs market which is expected to double by 2024.

— o —

The Warren Buffet Foundation Spent $77 Million on Abortion, enough to Kill 220,000 Babies in Abortions.

— o —

Where are you heading? What are you running after? We’re all running after something. Too often we find we’re running after stuff, and money, things, trophies and awards. Maybe we’re running after our image, reputation or some recognition, hoping to find fulfillment, satisfaction and purpose. But whatever it is, we’re all running after something. What are you running after? Pastor Scott Whitaker

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Why is it that people with the smallest minds have the largest mouths? Elle Sheen’s Diary

By limiting our compassion to those we know, we miss the opportunity to serve those we do not. Jim Denison

Within the covers of the Bible are the answers to all problems people face. Ronald Reagan

Start the day with eating the big frog first and nothing worse will happen all day.

We only die once. We live every day. Snoopy

The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. Lao Tzu

Whenever it feels uncomfortable to tell the truth, that’s often the most important time to tell it.” Jennifer Lopez

There is a fountain of youth: It is your mind, your talent, the creativity you bring to your life and the lives of the people you love. When you learn to tap this source, you will truly have defeated age. Sophia Loren

Law and Equity

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Two, 2020

Law and Equity

The Lord shall judge the people with equity” (Psalm 98).

The history of law dates way back to the time Moses ascended Mount Sinai and God gave him what we know as The Ten Commandments. They were a list of do’s and don’ts, and later grew into the Jewish codification of some 613 rules or commandments. They covered many issues, including instructions about food, punishments and how God should be worshipped. They were to be strictly followed. There was no wiggle room. The law was the law. Period.

Civil law developed in much the manner. It was the law. Period. In the early 20th Century courts began to realize that a strict application of black letter law in some situations produced an injustice, so there developed separate courts of equity. It dates back to the times of old when litigants would go to the King and complain of harsh or inflexible rules of common law which prevented “justice” from prevailing.

In American law, men sat as judges of law and strictly applied the law. Then, they donned a chancellor’s hat that sported a tussle and sat as chancellors in equity where they provided equitable decisions that provided more fair outcomes than would happen with the strict application of the law.

The Old Testament is a book about strict application of the law, but the New Testament is different. As civil courts of law moved to a more fair process called equity, God sent Jesus and the process was called grace.

While we all sin and deserve a strict application of the law, our relationship with Christ gives us forgiveness and grace. While we should be held accountable and pay the penalty, He paid the penalty for us.

Aren’t you glad that you don’t have to pay the price and penalty for everything you have ever done wrong? Jesus paid the penalty for you, so you don’t have to.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

THE WHEELCHAIR:

Texas Governor Greg Abbott was paralyzed from the waist down in 1984 when an oak tree fell on him as he was jogging in Houston. He has since made overcoming adversity one of the themes of his public life.

For instance, he recently tweeted a video of a young man in a wheelchair climbing an indoor wall with the caption, “Never quit. Never give up. Overcome any challenge.” A person replied, “So great to see, but if I ever end up in a wheelchair, I’m just ending it.” The governor responded: “That’s what I thought before I ended up in a wheelchair. I’ve done more AFTER the accident that left me paralyzed than before that accident. With God all things are possible.”

Someone then tweeted back to the governor: “God put you in a wheelchair, Greg.” Gov. Abbott replied, “God didn’t cause the accident that left me paralyzed, but He did help me persevere over that enormous challenge.”

He added: “I’m a testament that the glory of God is revealed by a young man’s back being broken in half and still rising up to be Governor of Texas. With God all is possible.”

— o —

A life lesson from Monopoly

Well-known pastor John Ortberg learned to play the game Monopoly from his grandmother. He says of her, “She was a lovely woman, but she was the most ruthless Monopoly player I have ever known in my life.” She would defeat John every time they played.

Then came the summer when John played the game every day with a friend in the neighborhood. He learned how to acquire property ruthlessly. By the end of the summer, he was ready to play his grandmother again.

This time, he says, “I watched her give her last dollar and quit in utter defeat.” Then she taught him something he’s not forgotten, a statement that became the title of one of his best-selling books: “Now it all goes back in the box.”

What will you put in the “box” one day?

— o —

Alabama Sheriff Nick Smith is in trouble. At least with some folks. In their eyes, he’s engaged in an egregious activity that should be censured. “What has sheriff Smith done” you wonder. How has he violated his oath of office?

Recently in the face of two local tragedies, Sheriff Smith has asked the community to pray.

The First Amendment of the Constitution provides freedom of religion. It was not intended to eradicate religion and purge religious speech from the public square. The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals once ruled, “The purpose behind the Establishment Clause was not to create “a wall of separation between church and state.”

— o —

Warning:

When signing documents in 2020 do not abbreviate the year as simply 20. For example, 3/14/20 with the addition of two numbers in the same color ink could be altered to say 3/14/2018. In some date sensitive documents that could be crucial. Don’t take a chance.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Here’s to life and embracing each day with gratitude, passion, compassion, empathy, integrity, love, kindness, faith and purpose! Richard Gonzmart

Perhaps we are not required to be grateful for hard times, just to find a way to be grateful in them. Jim Denison

Belief and knowledge aren’t the same thing. Belief is more powerful. Elle Sheen’s Diary

Religious folks are much happier. Regular church attendees commit fewer crimes, are in better health, live longer, make more money, drop out of high school less frequently, and finish college more frequently than those who don’t attend church at all. J.D. Vance

We know how to organize warfare, but do we know how to act when confronted with peace? Jacques Cousteau

Has it ever occurred to you that nothing occurs to God? Ken Whitten

There is no greater act of kindness than when you do something for a person in need who does not know you and no one else will know that you did it…other than God of course! Dwight Short

Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes, including you. Anne Lamott

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The next generation

Week One, 2020

THE NEXT GENERATION

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Let the elders who rule well be considered worthy of double honor, especially those who labor in preaching and teaching. – 1 Timothy 5:17

TIME announced its annual list of the 100 most influential people. The list reads like a Who’s Who of humanity, spanning genders, generations, ethnicities and professions. In its customary format, TIME’s list features character sketches written by other recognizable names, making for a memorable feature for anyone interested in communications and leadership.

From artists to activists to astronauts, the list is full of inspirational people who have or will make an impact. About equally divided in gender, the list was multi-racial and very young. Most were from sports, entertainment, technology and politics. Other than the Pope, not a single one even touched on faith or religion and certainly there were no evangelicals.

Reading the list made me think about the future of the church and the fact that we are, but one generation away from losing it. Why is there not one evangelical person of influence?

Millennials, those 18-34 years of age make up third percent, one in three, of our population, aged 22-37. They are over 75 million strong and eclipse the current size of the postwar baby boom generation. They are the future. But here is the question: Can religion still speak to younger Americans?

The Millennials are the fastest-growing population on the American religious landscape today and are the “None’s”—people who don’t identify with any religion. Recent data from the American Family Survey indicates that the none numbers increased from 16% in 2007 to 35% in 2018…… one in three Americans.

Over the same period, there has been a dramatic decline in the share of the population who identify as Christian, from 78% of Americans in 2007 to 65% in 2018-19, according to a report by the Pew Research Center released this month. The rise of None’s is even more dramatic among younger people: 44% of Americans aged 18 to 29 are None’s.

If we were to make a list of the most influential people of the evangelical future, could we find 100 strong enough to make the list? The call to the pulpit has changed and Pastors are increasingly hired for their management skills or rhetorical ability over and above their biblical wisdom or their meeting of the biblical qualifications for eldership. Our people don’t know their Bible very well, and this is in large part the fault of a generation of wispy preaching and teaching. People are increasingly drawn to feel good prosperity preaching and preachers both in the pulpit and on TV are giving them what they want. It is all about filling both the pew and the plate.

Think about it, the church as we have known it can be lost in a generation. Evangelicals need to stand up, take back the church and demand Bible based preaching and teaching.

After all, we are only one generation away…..

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

2020…. The new year ahead:

I know this may seem obvious to say, but every sunrise starts a new day in our lives, presenting us with the chance to turn the page and to move on. To open the door to a brand-new day of challenges, adventures and opportunities.

Opportunities to build on all the good of yesterday, learn from all the mistakes and disappointments, and to do what we may not have ever done before—all while continuing to grow into all we were meant to be.

But to do that, we have to turn the page. We have to move from yesterday, and all the yesterdays of your past. We have to move into the new day. Pastor Scott Whitaker

— o —

A Scottish pastor was famous for beginning his invocation each Sunday with a word of thanksgiving. He could find something positive in even the most negative of times. Then came a Sunday when the weather was atrocious: icy streets, frigid temperatures, howling winds. When the pastor rose to pray, those in the congregation thought, “Surely he’ll not begin with thanksgiving on such a terrible day as this. As the pastor rose to pray, he began: “Thank you Lord that the weather is not always as bad as it is today.”

— o —

If the trends measured by a recent survey continue, the nation itself is in its sunset years. A new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll reveals that Millennials and Generation Z have significantly less belief in the importance of patriotism, faith in God, and conceiving children. And despite the fact that most Americans remain satisfied by the state of the nation’s economy and their personal finances, a majority of respondents are angry at the country’s political and financial classes, worried about the nation’s economic future, and what kind of country they are passing on to future generations. How much will the trend continue through the coming new year?

— o —

Abortion clinic CEO compares abortion to removing a mole or getting a root canal.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Your limitations are not simply obstacles to your success—they are also indications from God of the path your life is to take. Michel Quoist

God will either give us what we ask or give us what we would have asked if we knew everything He knows. Tim Keller

The higher the mountain, the harder the climb. But the greater the view when we arrive. Jim Denison

Words and ideas can change the world. And not always for the better. Robin Williams

One cannot enjoy the power of grace unless they have given it or needed it. Elle Sheen’s Diary

Music can open doors our hearts have locked and dead bolted. Elle Sheen’s Diary

So far as religion of the day is concerned, Religion is all bunk… All Bibles are man-made. Thomas Edison

Clinical depression: Nothing will ever be better than it is now. Ken Whitten

There is no limit to the amount of good you can do, if you don’t care who gets the credit. Ronald Reagan

Grief and suffering are intensely lonely experiences. While we cannot truly say to others, “I know how you feel,” we can say to them, “I am sorry for how you feel.” And we can demonstrate our compassion in action. Jim Denison

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A BUSY YEAR

Week Fifty-Two, 2019

A BUSY YEAR?

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired.

The new year is upon us and a time when many resolve what they want in the coming year. Usually it is about wanting more. What if our resolutions were wanting less….. less busyness in our lives? Maybe less busyness is the answer.

We live in a world where busyness is king. We’re so busy glorifying how busy we are, we miss out on experiencing the moments that matter. And while we’re so busy making a living, we forget to make life—which is quite tragic. Busyness crushes our soul, and we should focus more on reducing the number of things on our calendar than adding to it. The key to removing busyness is simple—live intentionally and identify areas in our life we can replace with quiet time.

Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes, including you. Many of us, including me, suffer from FOMO – the fear of missing out. We’re simply afraid if we don’t attend that event, don’t sign up for that committee, or don’t enroll our kids in that sport, we’ll miss out on something.

We think there is happiness to be had, joy to be experienced, and moments to be made. Yes, there might be some truth to this, but who’s to say the moments of solitude or quiet time won’t measure up—or even exceed those altogether?

In solitude, we see more clearly. Alone—in moments of prayer or meditation, or simply in stillness—we breathe more deeply, see more fully, hear more keenly. We notice more, and in the process, we return to what is sacred.

How we spend our days is how we spend our lives. It starts with the decision to live more intentionally, and to make quiet time a priority. Each day is just as important as the next in creating the life we imagine.

Here’s the bottom line: It is not selfish to want time for yourself. It is not selfish to want moments where you can leave the world behind and recapture the magic. I encourage you in the year 2020 to find one—just one—area in your life that you can make a change. Take one small step towards a quiet life.

So turn it off. Put it down. Do not open it. And do not answer it. For once, put yourself first. Love yourself and make yourself a priority. Even for just one day, you deserve everything.

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2020!

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

The truest test of character:

It has been said that the truest test of character is how we treat people we don’t have to treat well.

When people hurt us, our society tells us we have the right to hurt them in return. Jesus says we have the privilege of loving them by praying for them.

When Christians decide that Christ is right and culture is wrong, the culture is drawn to Christ.

— o —

How Comparison is the Thief of Joy:

When we compare ourselves to others, we set ourselves up to add “more” into our life. More money, more cars, more houses, and more stuff. We fall victim to the old adage of “keeping up with the Joneses” which prevents us from living the life we really want to live.

The problem is that we typically compare our “worst” to their “best”, which really paints a bleak picture. Envy is ever joined with the comparing of a man’s self; and where there is no comparison, no envy.

Too many people live their lives without intentionality or thought. They rarely find a quiet moment to sit in meditation or solitude and examine their life—who they are and who they are becoming.

We should stop comparing our lives, and start living them.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

There are three things that are important in human life. The first is to be kind. The second is to be kind. The third is to be kind.

Maya Angelou: “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”

“Sometimes you need to sit lonely on the floor in a quiet room in order to hear your own voice and not let it drown in the noise of others.” —Charlotte Eriksson

You don’t find hope. It finds you often on the way to someone else. Pastor John Onwuchekwa

Christians don’t retire, they refire. Sol Pitchon

Pastors cannot point the way in prayer, they must lead the way in prayer.

How a Church Prays Tells Us Whether It Has Strayed. Ken Whitten

By concentrating on what’s happening to us today, we can miss what will happen to us tomorrow. Jim Denison

Pro-Abortion Professor: Pro-Lifers Shouldn’t Go into Healthcare, They’re “Not Worthy of Serving the Public.”

GREED

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Fifty-One, 2019

Then he said to them, “Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; a man’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions. Luke 12:15

How much money is enough money? For John D. Rockefeller the answer was “just a little bit more.” At the peak of his wealth, Rockefeller had a net worth of about 1% of the entire US economy. He owned 90% of all the oil & gas industry of his time. Compared to today’s rich guys, Rockefeller makes Bill Gates and Warren Buffett look like paupers. And yet he still wanted “just a little bit more.”

Before you can know how much is enough, you’ve got to define enough. It isn’t just an amount. It is also an attitude. Money is wonderful as a tool, but it’s terrible as a tyrant. And therein lies the difference. What is it that you want out of money and the possessions it buys?

As Dwight Short said, “When I pull into my driveway and spend more time looking at my neighbor’s new car than I do checking to make sure my garage door is open, you should understand envy.”

The decisions I’ve made in my personal life have helped me resist the temptations I face in my professional life. I was blessed early in my career and was given wise counsel to cap my income and live below my means. Money itself isn’t evil, but the love of it is the root of all kinds of evil. (1 Timothy 6:10)

Excess possessions rob us of time, money, energy, and focus. As the old proverb goes, “Those who buy what they do not need steal from themselves.” Excess possessions add stress, worry, and burden. As Randy Alcorn writes, “Every increased possession adds increased anxiety onto our lives.”

Our lives have become busy, hurried, rushed, and stressed because we own too much stuff! Consider this: Never in human history have individuals owned as much stuff as they do today.

But there is freedom in owning less—if only we could catch our breath long enough to take hold of it. Some of us have become so busy pursuing, accumulating, and caring for our things, we can’t even find the time to remove those that are no longer needed. How long have the shelves in your garage needed sorting? Or the clothes in your closet needed to be gone through?

Minimizing possessions takes work (especially if you have a lot to begin with). It takes effort and energy and an investment of time. And if both parents are working jobs to make ends meet, finding extra time to own less can be tough. It can be hard enough to minimize just one room of a house—much less an entire home. On the other hand, it is essential we find the time to reclaim our lives. Any time invested minimizing your possessions is never wasted.

Billions are spent each year convincing you to become greedy. You just need more and more. The Bible tells us to be content with less and less. Life will take on new meaning and contentment when we learn to be happy with what we have.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

COHABITATION:

For the first time in our history, more Americans have lived with a romantic partner than have married one. According to Pew Research Center’s new study, the number of those who have ever married has fallen from 60 percent in 2002 to 50 percent today, while the number who have cohabited without being married has grown from 54 percent to 59 percent.

The study also reports that 69 percent of Americans say it is acceptable for a couple to live together even if they don’t plan to get married. Sixteen percent agree with cohabiting if the couple plans to marry. Only 14 percent of us believe it is “never acceptable” for a couple to live together before marriage.

Scripture teaches that God created us as male and female (Genesis 1:27) and that he intends a man and woman to experience sexual union only in marriage (Genesis 2:24). Jesus clearly affirmed these biblical texts, then stated, “What, therefore; God has joined together, let not man separate”.(Matthew 19:6).

God’s word states that “each man should have his own wife and each woman her own husband. The husband should give to his wife her conjugal rights, and likewise the wife to her husband” (1 Corinthians 7:2–3). Scripture adds: “Let marriage be held in honor among all, and let the marriage bed be undefiled, for God will judge the sexually immoral and adulterous” (Hebrews 13:4).

How different would our culture be today if each of us remained chaste before marriage and faithful to our spouse within it? Imagine a world without pornography, prostitution, sex trafficking, and adultery.

This is the freedom and purity God intends for us. Jim Denison

— o —

Every minute, your heart pumps about five quarts of blood through a system of blood vessels that’s over 60,000 miles long, according to the Cleveland Clinic. That translates to about 2,000 gallons of blood every day.

— o —

Florida’s average student loan debt is nearly $35,000 with a statewide total of $76 billion.

— o —

Welcome to the new Orwellian world where censorship is free speech and we respect the past by attempting to edit it.

No-privacy

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Lawmaker Calls Miscarried Babies a “Mess on a Napkin”

When people try to avoid suffering by sinning, they end up sinning their way into suffering. Lecrae Moore

When I pray, I am depending on God. When I don’t pray I am relying on myself. Dr. Ronnie Floyd

God invites each of us on a journey. Ken Whitten

If you don’t know what you have you are going to miss what you got. Pastor John Onwuchekwa

Don’t do it your way, do it Yahweh. Sol Pitchon

There is no book in the Bible that routs out more worldly views and conduct than Romans. Dr. Jim Smith

It’s easy to make a buck. It’s a lot tougher to make a difference. Tom Brokaw

Kill sin or sin will kill you. John Piper

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GOD’S WARnings

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Fifty, 2019

GOD’S WARNINGS

Watch therefore, for you do not know what hour your Lord is coming. But know this, that if the master of the house had known what hour the thief would come, he would have watched and not allowed his house to be broken into. Therefore, you also be ready, for the Son of Man is coming at an hour you do not expect. (Matthew 25:42-44).

The final eruption of Mount St. Helens in May of 1980 was not a sudden event. For two months prior to the massive blast—the most deadly and destructive in American history—earthquakes and volcanic activity signaled a major event was underway. Authorities had plenty of time to sound the alarm and warn those living nearby of the looming danger. Yet despite the seriousness of the threat, some people chose to disregard the warnings.

Probably the best known of those who refused to evacuate was Harry Randall Truman. The eighty-three-year-old man was the owner and caretaker at the Mount St. Helens Lodge at Spirit Lake. He had survived the sinking of his troop ship by a German submarine off the coast of Ireland during World War I, and he was not about to leave just because scientists thought there was danger.

“I don’t have any idea whether it will blow,” Truman told reporters. “But I don’t believe it to the point that I’m going to pack up.” On May 18, 1980, Truman and his lodge were buried beneath 150 feet of mud and debris from the volcanic eruption. His body was never found.

We shake our heads and wonder why someone would be so foolish as to disregard a life-threatening warning. Yet, we see young people jumping off bridges just for fun, with warning signs, “No diving.” A hurricane approaches the coast, and warnings are issued to evacuate. But there are always people who refuse and say “I’m going to ride it out.” Some survive. But sadly, others lose their lives.

Not only does the Bible warn us about being ready for the second coming of Christ, it is a handbook on how to resist temptation and beware of false teachers and be on guard against the schemes of Satan. The apostle Peter put it this way: “Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking whom he may devour.”

We must be awake to the devious devices of the Devil to trip and trap us. Unwholesome entertainment, lurid literature, Internet pornography, trashy TV shows and movies, raunchy music and anything else that appeals to lustful thoughts, lewd feelings, and lascivious actions.

The admonition of Jesus has never been more appropriate than it is today. Christ is coming again. Stay focused. Keep your eyes on Jesus. Be filled with God’s Word. Pray fervently. Fellowship with people of faith. You never know when Satan will strike.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Attorney General William Barr is making headlines for a speech he delivered at Notre Dame University’s law school recently. Barr, a devout Catholic, told faculty and students that “the problem is not that religion is being forced on others, the problem is that irreligion is being forced—secular values are being forced on people of faith.”

Barr adds: “Among the militant secularists are many so-called progressives. But where is the progress? We are told we are living in a post-Christian era, but what has replaced the Judeo-Christian moral system? What is it that can fill the spiritual void in the heart of the individual person? And what is the system of values that can sustain human social life?”

The attorney general said of the moral problems we are facing, “This is not decay. This is organized destruction. Secular forces and their allies have marshaled all the forces of mass communication, popular culture, the entertainment industry, and academia, in an unremitting assault on religion and traditional values.”

I believe Attorney General Barr is absolutely right.

Here’s why we are here: Many in our culture believe the lie that all truth claims are subjective impositions of personal power on others. Tolerance of all viewpoints must; therefore, be mandated, except, of course, for viewpoints deemed intolerant.

According to this agenda, the freedom to express religious beliefs ends where such freedom is deemed harmful to or by another person. Any person. Of course, the harm done to the person expressing his or her religious beliefs is ignored.

— o —

Scripture calls us to “be holy in all your conduct” (1 Peter 1:15). In that light, we should heed the warning of the eighteenth-century scientist G. C. Lichtenberg: “Never undertake anything for which you wouldn’t have the courage to ask the blessing of heaven.”

— o —

“Cowardice asks the question, ‘Is it safe?’ Expediency asks the question, ‘Is it political?’ Vanity asks the question, ‘Is it popular?’ But conscience asks the question, ‘Is it right?’ And there comes a time when one must take a position that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular; but one must take it because it is right.” Martin Luther King, Jr.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Jesus‘ need for me is as constant as the outflow of my love to Him.

Evangelism – A group of “ordinary” Christians living intentionally in a city to bring joy to it through the gospel of Jesus Christ through Word and deed.

Not everyone who believes and is baptized is a real disciple. Ken Whitten

Death is just a comma to Christ, not a period.

The problem with heroes is that eventually they end up showing their humanity and shatter our glittering image of who they really are. Dwight Short

We need to teach others what we believe, but equally we must teach why we believe what we believe. Josh McDowell

The higher the summit, the harder the climb. Jim Denison

Oswald Chambers: “The true mark of the saint is that he can waive his own rights and obey the Lord Jesus.”

Max Lucado noted: “God never said that the journey would be easy, but he did say that the arrival would be worthwhile.”

Encouragement provides us with motivation to persevere. It invites us to dream dreams of significance for our lives. And it begs us to work diligently with optimism and promise.

Dancing at My Funeral

Week Forty-Nine, 2019
DANCING AT MY FUNERAL

There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens: a time to be born and a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot, a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down and a time to build, a time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance. Ecclesiastes 3:1-4

His book made a great impression on me when I read it several decades ago. Written by Maxie Dunnam, Dancing at My Funeral, is a classic. It gave me a whole new perspective on death and dying and a great move forward in my Christian faith.

What if the Christian community suddenly became known as the people who celebrated funerals? And we really mean party! What if we did it so often—and so big—that people started to notice? And what if the culture started asking why?

Why do we cry at funerals? What if Christians became known as the people who celebrate departures from this world? What if we made our memorial services bigger and better than the best wedding you’ve ever attended?

How would that impact the culture’s perception of how seriously we believe what the Bible says? And what would it say about heaven? What will your funeral say about your faith and how will it influence others in their faith walk? Should those in attendance clearly hear the Gospel?

A friend of mine was a funeral director. He had witnessed and conducted hundreds of funerals. I remember him saying that funerals should reflect the way the deceased lived.

We all have an expiration date. We just don’t know when, where or how. Sooner or later we will all be faced with death. For Christians, our funeral should be a time of joy and a time to celebrate, for it marks, not a death, but a rite of passage to a greater life beyond.

When we die, our spirit and body separate. Even though our body dies, our spirit—which is the essence of who we are—lives on. We celebrate other times and events of the passage of life, why not our funeral?

I’m looking forward to my funeral, hopefully, not occurring soon. I want it to be a soundtrack of my life…. well most of it. I want the Gospel preached and I want people to know of my assurance as to my next stop after this earthly life. The best is yet to come.

If anyone at my funeral has a long face, I’ll never speak to them again!


SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

THE POWER STRIP:

Lynsi Snyder describes this culture-changing lifestyle well: “Picture our lives being a power strip. We plug so many things into the power strip—work, family, hobbies, and God. But that is all wrong. God must be the power strip and everything in our life should be plugged into Him as our power source. He gives us life and then we have His power in everything we do. “He shouldn’t be one of the ‘plug-ins’ in our life, but rather we should live plugged into Him and the calling He has for us.”

Who is your power strip today? God must be the power strip. Jim Denison

— o —

As the weeks fly past, it is important to be intentional about certain things, lest we be held captive by the “tyranny of the urgent” for our entire lives. While all of us want to “finish strong,” we are often distracted by things that diminish our physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual strength. Ultimately this can lead to a lack of will to do the things which are truly significant or we lack the conviction to stand firm when our “day of distress” arrives. Lt. Gen Robert Dees

— o —

Half a million bats live at the University of Florida. Their spooky night flights draw scores of tourists. Since 1991, the University of Florida has maintained houses to accommodate its massive population of bats — about half a million now, making it the largest bat population in a human-made structure in the world.

Nearly every night, the bats leave their houses about 15 minutes after sunset to eat an estimated 2½ billion insects. The bats’ exodus has attracted scores of spectators, but getting them to live in the houses hasn’t always been easy.

— o —

BUSY?

And then it becomes a rationalization: I can’t honor my commitments because I’m too busy! I can’t be with my family or friends because I’m too busy. I can’t work out, meditate, shut down at night to get to sleep, or make time for solitude and disconnection … because I’m too busy.

Most of us have used this “too busy” rationalization, because it feels very true. It feels absolutely true that we’re too busy. And there’s a corollary to this: if we want to be less busy, we have to get all our work done first (and be busier in the meantime).

Is it true? Or can we develop a habit of not being busy, even with the same workload? We need to get at the heart of this always-busy habit, and then reverse it. Leo Babuta


QUOTES YOU CAN USE

The great gift of God in prayer is Himself. Maxie Dunnam

There is a wisdom of the head, and a wisdom of the heart. Charles Dickens

While Saul was seeking Jesus, Jesus was seeking Saul. Pastor Andrew Evans

A Jewish mother is a travel agent for guilt trips. Sol Pitchon

A man may die, nations may rise and fall, but an idea lives on. John F. Kennedy

Prayer does not fit us for the greater works; prayer is the greater work. Oswald Chambers

Life on earth has sharp teeth. Lecrae Moore

Do you see obstacles or opportunities? Pastor John Onwuchekwa

The devil doesn’t care what we depend on as long as it isn’t the Holy Spirit.

The worst of times are often the best of times. It just doesn’t feel like it at the time.

Sentimentality is the enemy of simplicity.

“HEAVENLY CHRISTMAS PREPARATIONS”

By Rev. Jeremy B. Stopford
Delivered at Smyrna (NY) Baptist Church

December 1st, 2019

TODAY’S “SPECIAL”:

“A New Bride Funny”
A young man and his new bride take their honeymoon to the old Soviet Union.
On the first day of their stay, they were to go on an excursion over the mountains with their tour guide, Rudy.
As they were heading out of their hotel room the young man grabbed an umbrella.
“Why on earth are you taking an umbrella?” the puzzled bride asked.
“Because our tour guide told me to. He says it is going to rain.”
“Well, that’s the stupidest thing I ever heard,” the bride exclaimed. “There is not a cloud in sight.”
The wise new groom explains, “of course, I will take our umbrella. Because we can be sure, Rudy the Red knows rain, dear”

INTRODUCTION

One of my earthly treasures is an autographed copy of a book, given to me – according to the inscription – within a week after I was born. It was signed by Robert May, a classmate of my dad’s from the Dartmouth College Class of 1926. He wrote the book, a delightful children’s book which has become world famous. Yes, the book is “Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer”.
Dad also had another classmate, named Ted Geisel. He later changed his name. Do you know to what? Yep – Dr. Seuss.
Both Dr. Seuss and Bob May have been greatly used to bring temporal joy to generations of children – and perhaps their parents as well. “Temporal” – that means “earthly, short lasting”. It doesn’t have a viewpoint of eternity, does it?
In our morning “scripture reading”, we read what are always challenging verses from Isaiah chapters 6 and 9. In chapter 6, Isaiah is presented with the holiness of God. And in chapter 9, Isaiah comes face to face with the truth about the coming of the Messiah and Who He is: Wonderful, Councilor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
Why are these important for us as we enter a new Christmas season?
Well let me first ask you: How many of you are done with your Christmas planning? Presents bought and wrapped? Meals thought out? Cards written and sent? A full Christmas involves work! Work! Work!
And our loving Father has been planning, too! Our Great God is teaching us that everything He does throughout eternity has purpose, governed by His holiness and guided to glorify His Son. He has been planning for Christmas for a long time!
And the Bible does not hide from His children what plans the Father has been making! Let’s look at some of them this morning!
PRAYER 

1 THE WORD (Matt. 13:35; Psalm 78)

We are introduced to “Parables” in Matt. 13:1-3
“Earthly story with an heavenly meaning”. Perhaps as He’s teaching, He sees a farmer…points to him, and then tells an heavenly story – an illustration – related to an earthly person or event with which His listeners would be familiar
CF. vs. 10-11 (the “why” of parables); vs. 18, 24, 31, 33

  • Matt. 13:34,35 – the disciples were entering a time frame of the fulfillment of Scripture especially prepared for that moment!
  • See Psalm 78:1-7 [ALWAYS check out the OT source of a NT quoted verse! We may learn its original purpose!) The purpose of this ff is that GENERATIONS may know the Lord!
    Application: IF the Word of God has been prepared as a special love gift for God’s children since the foundation of the world, what priority does the Word have in your life? 
    But wait, there’s more!

2 THE COMMUNION (John 17:24)

In John 17, Jesus enters into prayer with His Father. Most scholars believe that John has put to print here the reasonably full text of Jesus’ prayer prayed at the Garden of Gethsemane. For at the start of John 18 is Judas’ betrayal and Jesus’ arrest.
So what did He pray? What would you pray if you knew your life was about to end – or better, as in Jesus’ case – the purpose for which you came to earth was about to be done?
“Communion” is a word we often relegate to the breaking of the bread and the serving of the wine. But it also refers to the fellowship enjoyed between two people. John 17 is an insight into the fellowship of the Son with the Father.
Let’s listen in…verses 1-5 Here we are introduced to an eternal fellowship, eternal communion. If you had all of eternity to do something, would you spend it all in prayer-talk with your father? Jesus did! Phil. 2:6 tells us that Jesus set aside the independent exercise of His glory so that He could become a man. But since before the world’s foundation, the Son enjoyed a mutual glory.
Vs. 8, 17 Part 1 of our message is a major part of Jesus’ interaction with His disciples: the sharing of the Father’s words through the Son to the disciples. SO do we read God’s Word that way?
Verse 20 It is safe to say that we are prayed for here! But note: He says that He is praying for those who will believe as a result of the disciples giving their word. APPLICATION So…Jesus in turn is praying for those to whom we give His word, and who believe as a result. So that should encourage us to be active sharers of His Word to those He has put in our path – because He has already prayed for…them!
Verse 24 This is where faith becomes sight! The Father has loved the Son before the foundation of the world. Jeremiah 31:3: “The Lord hath appeared of old unto me, saying, Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee.” Jesus wants His children to enter into this everlasting love which He has enjoyed for beyond all eternity! Wow.
APPLICATION #2 So if soon our faith will be sight, and we as believers in Christ will be enjoying an everlasting communion that the Son has enjoyed with the Father since before the foundation of the world, what is tying us down to this world? To what earthly goals are we seeking? And am I daily enjoying sweet communion with my Father, sweet communion that He can’t wait to have us enjoy face to face?

3. THE CHOICE (Eph. 1:4)

We’re not going to turn here, but another classic verse in this subject of the “heavenly Christmas preparations” would have to be Ephesians 1:4, “According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love”. This is one of those loaded passages. I didn’t choose Him – He chose me first! Theologians attempt to wisely explain this by showing the pattern of our salvation. We hear the invitation, “whosoever will may come.” We go through that door of faith, trusting that the offer of salvation through the work of the cross is true. And as we go through that open door of faith, we look back and see written on the other side of the door the words, “chosen in Him before the foundation of the world.”

But don’t let those words stymie you. For the rest of the verse says that His choice brings an eternal purpose with it: that we should be holy and blameless – living a life of truth and trust, not only representing the Savior in our lifestyle, but also pointing the next generation to His invitation – the same one we received when we first came: “whosoever will may come.”
 

4 THE BIG PLAN (1 Peter 1:18-21)

1 Peter 1 in the Greek is a run-on sentence. If the Apostle Peter were in my 11th grade English teacher’s class, Mrs. DeTurk would have failed him royally. But the key is this: Peter is so excited, so overwhelmed with the truth that the Father is sharing with Him, that he can hardly get a breath in.
For it is in these verses that we begin to understand all that the Father was doing before the foundation of the world: the Word, the communion, the choice all lead to the big plan.
Listen to just verses 18-20, “Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; But with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot: Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you…”.
Take a breath Peter! The Father’s big plan from before the foundation of the world is the sending His Son to the cross – and Peter saw that plan in action. And in turn so do we!
Application: the entire text is a vivid one. It calls for a foundation of faith in that cross. And it calls for a faith in action by daily living for His glory through obeying the truth.
Isn’t it amazing that the Father wants us to apply His Big “Before the foundation of the world” Plan to our lives?
But wait…before we go we need to see…Christmas!

CONCLUSION

Christmas, the preparation put to action!
Galatians 4:4,5: “But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law,
to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.”
As we close, picture your filling a glass of water. When the glass has so much water in it that you can’t put any more in, then we call it “full” – and perhaps spilling over, right?
And that’s what has happened here! Time filled up! God’s “heavenly Christmas preparations” were complete!

And a Baby was born in the manger.

  • Have you trusted Him as your Savior?
  • Are you walking with Him daily in His Word?
  • Are you sharing His Word with those He has placed in your pathways?
  • Are you part of His “heavenly Christmas preparations” in order that the next generation after us will know Him? Close in prayer

The Universal Gospel

Week Forty-Eight, 2019

He said to them, “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to all creation. Mark 16:15

While Mahatma Gandhi was a practicing Hindu, Christianity intrigued him. In his reading of the Gospels, Gandhi was impressed by Jesus whom Christians worshipped and followed. He wanted to know more about this Jesus that Christians referred to as “the Christ, the Messiah.”

One Sunday morning Gandhi decided that he would visit one of the Christian churches in Calcutta. Upon seeking entrance to the church sanctuary, he was stopped at the door by the ushers.

He was told he was not welcome, nor would he be permitted to attend this particular church as it was for high-caste Indians and whites only. He was neither high caste, nor was he white. Because of the rejection, Mahatma turned his back on Christianity.

With this act, Gandhi rejected the Christian faith, never again to consider the claims of Christ. He was turned off by the sin of segregation that was practiced by the church. It was due to this experience that Gandhi later declared, “I’d be a Christian if it were not for the Christians.”

Do Christian churches practice selective admission? Are some people more welcome than others? We are called to be racially and culturally inclusive.

As a young boy, I attended a rural southern church that had a policy on how to handle a black person who might seek admission to worship. The ushers were to immediately escort someone of another race out of the church and then the preaching of the Gospel would continue.

Are churches much better today? If someone dressed like they were homeless and who smelled like it sat down in a pew next to you, would you shake their hand and invite them to attend your Sunday School class? While churches have gone past selective admission, don’t we too often practice selective inclusion?

God has no partiality. He saves anyone who believes the Gospel, no matter where they are from, how they are dressed or the color of their skin. God will not reject anyone who comes to Him. The Gospel is for everyone. If we repent of our sin and believe in Christ, we will be saved. That is the message of the Gospel.

The Gospel is not just for the unsaved… we all need it every day and it is not just for people like us. It is for all whom God has created. The Gospel is the message God has given us. Only the Gospel can save us.

Sadly, there are people today who, like Gandhi who can say they “would be a Christian if it weren’t for the Christians.”

Remember, whether it is Little League or in the pros, the dimensions of second base are always the same.


SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

The Church was never meant to be a building. It is a movement of God’s people. You have a sphere of influence no one else has. Be bold and join the movement. Idlewild Baptist Church

— o —

A Thoughts on Life note from a reader in Kenya:

Let us always thank God for what He has done to us day by day. May God bless the message that I have read, Thanks and may God bless you boundedly. Pray for me to have the Heart of giving and helping the needy people.

— o —

Albert Einstein confessed to Time magazine: Only the Church stood squarely across the path of Hitler’s campaign for suppressing the truth. I had never any special interest in the Church before, but now I feel a great affection and admiration because the Church alone has had the courage and persistence to stand for intellectual truth and moral freedom. I am forced thus to confess that what I once, despised, I now praise unreservedly.

— o —

The human eye has more than 2 million working parts and is capable of focusing at 50+ different things in any given second. Muscles responsible for controlling the eyes are the most active muscles in the entire human body.

— o —

According to a YouGov survey, 45 percent of Americans believe ghosts exist. Forty-three percent think ghosts can come back to haunt people or places.

— o —

Nearly 20% of all medical doctors have a problem with alcohol and substance abuse.

— o —

The World Health Organization estimates there are over 200 million alcoholics worldwide. An estimated 88,000 people die from alcohol-related causes every year in the United States. Over 10,00 people die every year on US highways due to crashes that involve alcohol-impaired drivers. The misuse of alcohol costs the US over $249 billion annually.

Solomon was right when he wrote, “Wine is a mocker, Strong drink is a brawler, and whoever is led astray by it is not wise (Prov 20:2) Is it worth the risk?


QUOTES YOU CAN USE

There’s more grace and mercy in Christ than there is sin in us. Edgar Aponte

If we approach each day with the knowledge that the Lord can use us in ways we might not expect, and the willingness to allow him to do so, then we open the doors to endless possibilities. Ryan Denison

Rather than thinking about the world in the categories of simply good and evil, a biblical worldview helps us think in categories of good and redeemable. Lecrae Moore

Avoiding bitterness is key to a healthy and joyful life. Bitterness is the poison we drink to kill someone else — how crazy is that! In our culture of microaggressions, safe spaces, and trigger warnings; bitterness has grown to epidemic proportions with many carrying a “Spirit of Offense” into every life encounter. God’s primary antidotes for bitterness are forgiveness and gratitude. Resilient Warrior

If you worship money you will never have enough. Pastor John Onwuchekwa

Love is not an emotion. It is an action to be demonstrated. Pastor Andrew Evans

Jonathan Edwards noted: The way to Heaven is ascending; we must be content to travel uphill, though it be hard and tiresome, and contrary to the natural bias of our flesh.

Pastor Jim Cymbala: We need the power of God more than prosperity. The word of God can only be carried on by the power of God. The church is a spiritual organism fighting spiritual battles: only spiritual power can make it perform as God ordained.

Giving Thanks

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Forty-Seven, 2019
GIVING THANKS

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

From them will come songs of thanksgiving and the sound of rejoicing. I will add to their numbers, and they will not be decreased; I will bring them honor, and they will not be disdained. Jeremiah 30.19

We were slightly hesitant as we drove to an economically lesser part of a strange country. We were there on mission to help refugees who fled from their neighboring homeland. They appreciated our work to help them and one family invited us to their less than modest small apartment for dinner with the family.

Their home was impeccably clean, and they so welcomed us. While the husband was cooking over charcoal on a grill on the balcony, we visited with the wife and two ever so polite teenage sons. As we ate, they told us their story, how they fled their homeland on foot, each with a small child in one arm and a bag of belongings on the other. They left everything, but they gained freedom in a new land. They exuded thankfulness for what they had.

I listened with tears in my eyes, as I thought of all I had back home and thought of what it would be like to leave it all in order to be free. I have so much, and they have so little, but they had and were thankful for that which mattered…. Faith, family and freedom.

This week, all across America, families and groups will join to celebrate Thanksgiving. It is my most favorite holiday. No commercialism, no last minute shopping….. just family time together to stop and give thanks.

As Christians we should give thanks in all things, and at all times to God the father through Christ Jesus. He has given us all we have and saved us from our sin. Giving thanks is the least we can do.

Psalm 107:1 (NIV) -“Give thanks to the LORD, for he is good; his love endures forever.” 1 Thessalonians 5:18 (NIV) – “Give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. Colossians 4:2 (NIV) – “Devote yourselves to prayer, being watchful and thankful.”

What will you thank God for this Thanksgiving?


SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Howard Hendricks tells a great story when he was on an American Airline flight after a very long delay. A man who had too much to drink was being rude to the other passengers. He was demanding with the flight attendants. And in a word just plain obnoxious!

Hendricks watched this flight attendant treat this unpleasant man with class, dignity and professionalism. She was unruffled. When he was rude, she was polite. When he was uncaring, she was kind.

Howard was so impressed that he walked back to the plane to commend the flight attendant. He told her what a good job she did. How impressed he was. And that he was going to write a letter of commendation to American Airlines.

In response, she said, “Thank you sir, but I don’t work for American Airlines.” Hendricks was briefly baffled until she added, “I work for Jesus Christ.”

Who do you work for?

— o —

Because Jesus humbled Himself for us, it is our duty, obligation, and joy to humble ourselves as well. But to adjust ourselves into a radically humble lifestyle to escape the clutches of that other god, the question we must ask ourselves is this: Have we lived so long worshipping our own egos that we’ve lost our ability—perhaps even our desire—to humble ourselves as Christ did?”

— o —

• French philosopher Blaise Pascal said, “There are only two kinds of men: the righteous who think they are sinners and the sinners who think they are righteous.

• What storms have you allowed to rob you of God’s peace and assurance? What storms have caused you to forget—that no matter what is going on around you—God is still with you? Don’t let what is around you control you. Scott Whitaker

• What does it mean to be a “culture-changing Christian”?


QUOTES YOU CAN USE

We know how to organize warfare, but do we know how to act when confronted with peace? Jacques Cousteau

Ships are safe in port, but that’s not what ships were built for. Brig Sorber

Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free. Ronald Reagan

Money can’t buy happiness, but it can buy cows and cows produce milk and milk makes ice cream and ice cream brings happiness.

Never leave home without a kiss, a hug and an I love you. Then remove the dog hair from your mouth as you walk to your car.

We are not cisterns made for hoarding, but channels made for sharing.
Billy Graham

Buying things isn’t bad or wrong, but shopping to feel a certain way, or to prove yourself to others or because you think something will make you feel happier or more successful doesn’t work.

We are all called to do, not extraordinary things, but very ordinary things, with an extraordinary love that flows from the heart of God.—Jeane Vanier

If we are to better the future, we must disturb the present.—Catherine Booth, co-founder of the Salvation Army.

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