A place to stand

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Forty-Six, 2019
A PLACE TO STAND

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Then Moses climbed Mount Nebo from the plains of Moab to the top of Pisgah, across from Jericho. There the LORD showed him the whole land – from Gilead to Dan. Deuteronomy 34:1

Moses did it and it was on my bucket list as well. Well, I finally did it a few weeks ago. I climbed to the top of Mt. Nebo and stared into the Promised Land. I use the word climb loosely. Actually, I walked up the path from the parking lot, but none-the-less I reached the pinnacle, elevation 2300 feet and looked to the West and saw what Moses saw.

The Dead Sea (elevation -1300) and the River Jordan were stretched out below to my left and to my right I looked up towards Jerusalem in the distance. I was awed by just being there. It was Moses’ last stand. God called him there. After years of leading God’s people in the wilderness, his mission was over, and God forbade him to cross into Canaan.
desert

Taking a stand is important. Archimedes credited with discovering leverage said: “Give me a lever and a place to stand and I will move the earth. Give me a fulcrum, and I shall move the world. Give me a firm spot on which to stand, and I shall move the earth.”

There are commands to take a stand in Scripture that are repeated many times. The call to ‘stand firm’ is one of those commands. It appears all throughout the Bible. “Therefore, put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand.” Ephesians 6:13

Like God called Moses to a place to stand, so too does He call us to take a stand… a stand for our faith. There is no doubt our great nation is at a crossroads, and the church of Jesus Christ needs to take a stand, individually and collectively. Being a Christian means taking a stand for Christ. Although undoubtedly sometimes difficult, the decision to stand up for Jesus is absolutely necessary, and any serious Christ-follower should make it.

Where would our culture be today if the Church and individual Christians stood up and stood firm for a Biblical world view? Does our walk match our talk? Do we take a stand for our faith when it is convenient and then waffle when it might cause us social or economic pain?

Are you willing to stand firm for Christ even if it hurts?
stand-firm


SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Why do optimistic people live longer?

You and I can neither predict nor control the future, but we can control how we respond to its unpredictability. Our response, in turn, plays a pivotal role in our personal future.

A new study suggests that people who tend to be optimistic are likelier than others to live to be eighty-five years old or more. Researchers from Boston University and Harvard found that the most optimistic men and women demonstrated, on average, an 11–15 percent longer lifespan.

How can we become more optimistic? A clinical health psychologist explained that she works with patients to “uncover systems of beliefs and assumptions people are making about themselves in their lives” so they can “begin to change those.”

When we begin making optimistic assumptions, our attitudes toward our experiences become more positive, our stress levels respond, and our physical health can improve as well. In other words, when we choose to view life positively, life often responds in kind. Jim Denison

— o —

New Jersey has rapidly caught up with Nevada in the race to be the nation’s biggest sports-betting market. Online gamblers now account for about 80% of all legal wagers on games in New Jersey, which surpassed Nevada for the first time in May in monthly sports bets. But as other states have waded into sports gambling, some are restricting it to physical locations like casinos, hesitating on mobile betting. More states will be launching sports betting in the coming months, as the NFL season gets underway and baseball playoffs approach. The trend toward mobile betting, following in the footsteps of popular mobile betting in Europe, is clear.

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• Researchers predict that cancer will become the leading cause of death in the US by next year.

• Google, YouTube fined a record $171 million for violating children’s privacy.

• Hold up, diet soda drinkers. Regular consumption of soft drinks – both sugar-sweetened and artificially sweetened – was associated with a greater risk of all causes of death, according to new research published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Participants who drank two or more glasses of soft drinks per day had a higher risk of mortality than those who consumed less than one glass per month.


QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Overcoming consumerism is an essential step in living a simplified life. Even more, it is an important step in living a focused, intentional life—one that is lived to our greatest potential. The Millenalist

Nothing we do impresses God except when we allow Him to be God in our life. Dr. Jim Smith

All you need to do is look at what we have in the world and look at it carefully, and you’ll see that there must be a God who is infinite, eternal, omnipotent, omnipresent, omniscient, personal, emotional, volitional, moral, spiritual, aesthetic, holy, just, loving, and living. It’s all there. And you pick up the Bible, and the Bible substantiates every bit of that. GOD IS!” John MacArthur

The real test of a saint is not one’s willingness to preach the gospel, but one’s willingness to do something like washing the disciples’ feet—that is, being willing to do those things that seem unimportant in human estimation but count as everything to God. Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest

Jesus did not say that the whole world should go to church. But He did say that the church should go to the whole world. Pastor Greg Laurie

The hallmark of a healthy society has always been measured by how it cares for the disadvantaged. Author and Ministry Leader Joni Eareckson Tada

The ideas that shape politics and a culture are rarely advanced by argument. Rather, they are advanced by the stories that shape our imaginations. Warren Cole Smith and John Stonestreet, Restoring All Things.

R. C. Sproul has written, “God can use the smallest words that we speak, the smallest service that we give, and bring a kingdom out of it.

Albert Einstein once said, “Nothing happens until something moves.”

Three In One

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Forty-Five, 2019

THREE IN ONE

By John Grant

But the Helper, the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in My [Jesus’] name, He will teach you all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I said to you. John 14:26

We were visiting in a foreign home and I was offered a cup of coffee. It came in the form of an empty cup and a small “Three-in-One” packet. Our host explained that the packet contained coffee, creamer and sugar all in one. How unique.

With the 3-in-1 it’s amazingly easy to make the perfect white coffee with sugar. Each single-serve sachet combines coffee, whitener and sugar so you get a creamy and sweet tasting coffee every time, says the printing on the packet.

I thought of the spiritual parallel. As Christians, we believe in the Trinity, a difficult concept for many to understand. I remember one day when my wife was trying to explain our faith to a young girl of another faith in our neighborhood. The young girl said she worshiped one God while Christians worship three.

From the beginning of creation in Genesis to the end of times in Revelation, God refers to Himself as “us” or “our” and thus describes the doctrine of the Trinity. The word trinity comes from “tri” meaning three and “unity” meaning one. God is three distinct individuals – God the Father, the Son Jesus, and the Holy Spirit – in one true God.

Three in One

God created us. He sent Jesus to save us and Jesus promised to send the Holy Spirit to guide us until we go to glory. God may seem far away and we might think that He has abandoned us, but God in the form of the Holy Spirit is always with us.

“I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance, but He who is coming after me is mightier than I, whose sandals I am not worthy to carry. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire.’” Matthew 3:11.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

• Rick Warren is right: “Most people fail to realize that money is both a test and a trust from God.”

• An unlimited power to tax involves, necessarily, a power to destroy; because there is a limit beyond which no institution and no property can bear taxation.” —John Marshall (1819)

• Happiness is a state of mind. Specifically, it is a state of “well-being and contentment.”

• There are 29 percent fewer birds in the United States and Canada today than in 1970.

• There’s a reason why we only retain and adopt 5% of our parents and 1% of our grandparent’s values. We are selfish enough to think we know better and we can do things “our” way. Dwight Short

• Three-fourths of a billion of the world’s population live in a country other than where they were born.

• According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, one in four Americans suffers from some kind of mental illness in any given year.

• Duke University’s student government has denied Young Life’s official status as a student group on campus because of the ministry’s commitment to biblical sexual morality for its staff and volunteers. Duke was begun by Methodist and Quaker families and was called Trinity College for many years; I wonder what its founders would think of this announcement.

• The World Health Organization estimates a global suicide rate of one death every forty seconds. By next year, they predict someone will take their life every twenty seconds.

• In these times, answering God’s call to be culture-changing Christians requires both urgency and courage. The higher the summit, the harder the climb.

• This statement from seventeenth-century theologian John Owen: “There is no duty we perform for God that sin does not oppose. And the more spirituality or holiness there is in what we do, the greater the enmity to it. Thus, those who seek the most for God experience the strongest opposition.”

• Pray for my wife, Beverley. She may need an attorney. Seems she ran my wallet through the washing machine and now may possibly be charged with money laundering.

“I will sing of the Lord’s unfailing love forever!

Young and old will hear of your faithfulness.

Your unfailing love will last forever.

Your faithfulness is as enduring as the heavens.”

Psalm 89:1-2 NLT

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

The further a society drifts from truth, the more it will hate those who speak it. George Orwell

Let’s make democracy work and make Roe the rule of this land in every state. U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren

Your Christian witness is Not the words you say, but about the life you live.

Ralph Waldo Emerson said, ‘Do not go where the path might lead; go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.

Overcoming the pull of consumerism is a difficult challenge regardless of our stage in life. Simplicity requires encouragement.

The Service We Give Through Pain Will Be Louder Than the Sermon We Live in Pleasure

“Those who believe the Gospel and behold the Gospel become like the Gospel.” J.D. Greear

Today’s children need a tackle box more than they need an X-Box!!!

When Problems Come into Your Life, Don’t Look for a Place to Run

Find a Place to Stand!!! Ken Whitten

FOR THE LOVE OF MONEY

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Forty-Four, 2019

FOR THE LOVE OF MONEY

By John Grant

He who loves money will not be satisfied with money, nor he who loves wealth with his income (Ecclesiastes 5:10).

Coach Tony Bennett is making headlines… good ones. He recently declined what his employer called a “substantial” raise so others could make more money, after his Virginia Cavaliers won this year’s NCAA national basketball championship. He told his players: “Promise me you will remain humble and thankful for this. Don’t let this change you. It doesn’t have to.”

Coach Tony Bennett is making news not just for what he does, but for who he is. When his team won the national title last April, Bennett told a post-game interviewer, “I do want to thank the Lord and my Savior.” He regularly prays for his players in the hope that “they’ll be able to find the truth in their lives that has really transformed my life.”

He has built his basketball program around the biblical principles of humility, passion, unity, servanthood, and thankfulness. He calls them the “Five Pillars.” He posted them in Virginia’s locker room and emphasizes them in everything the team does.

It’s therefore not surprising that when the University of Virginia offered Bennett a large raise as a reward for winning the national title, the coach turned it down and redirected it to raise the salaries of his staff. “I have more than I need,” he said. “I’m blessed beyond what I deserve.”

Coach Bennett has life figured out: “If my life is just about winning championships—if it’s just about being the best—then I’m running the wrong race,” he says. “That’s empty. But if it’s about trying to be excellent and do things the right way, to honor the university that’s hired you, the athletic director you work for and the young men you’re coaching—always in the process trying to bring glory to God—then that’s the right thing.”

Jesus would agree with Coach Bennett. Our Lord taught us to “be on your guard against all covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions” (Luke 12:15). Here we find the folly of materialism. What we need most, our money is completely unable to buy. Trusting money not only relies on that which cannot save—it depends on that which corrupts and condemns.

By contrast, using money to glorify God and advance his kingdom turns the material into the spiritual and the temporal into the eternal.

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Think about what Christ has done for me—and you. Think about what Christ did for us. That was God climbing up on the cross for us. What can we ever do to earn that? But earning it wasn’t the deal God put on the table. It was believing.

God did what He did to show us how much He loved us—just Grace, no condemnation. That was a picture of Grace we can never match by what we do. Just Grace—free for the asking. To believe in. To accept. Just believe and follow Him in His steps. Grace for me and for you.

Is He finished molding and growing us? No. But there’s no doubt about our relationship with Him.

Remember—it’s not about us. It’s all about Him, and what He did for us. It’s done! Claim it! Believe it! Pastor Scott Whitaker

— o —

A new study indicates that people who regularly work more than ten hours a day for at least fifty days a year are at a 29 percent greater risk of stroke. The risk rises to 45 percent for those who keep such a schedule for ten years.

The American Institute of Stress notes that 77 percent of us regularly experience physical symptoms caused by stress. Forty-eight percent of us feel our stress has increased over the last five years and say stress has a negative impact on our personal and professional lives.

In related news, the CDC reports that the youth suicide rate increased 56 percent between 2007 and 2017. Experts point to a rise in depression, drug use, stress, and access to firearms. Some studies have linked smartphone use to anxiety, depression, and sleep deprivation. Jim Denison

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The underground church in Iran is the fastest-growing Christian church in the world. Even Iran’s intelligence minister agrees that Christianity is spreading in his country.

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64% of American teenagers rarely or never talk with their friends about religion according to the Pew Research Center.

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If all you ever do is seek God’s hand, you may miss His face. But if you seek His face, He will gladly open His hand.

The Bible is not a book of suggestions or a list of best practices. It is the Word of God and not alterable. Ken Whitten

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Planned Parenthood Pledges $45 Million to Pro-Abortion Candidates in 2020 Elections, a Reminder that Every Election Is a Choice Between Worldviews

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By the year 2030, 1.2 billion women will be age 50 or older.

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

My desire for acceptance is one of the crosses that I carry. Each morning I have to attend a funeral. My own. I have to wake up and once again die to my desires for people’s approval. Lecrae Moore

Christians should argue, but not be argumentative. Sean McDowell

We share hope on our knees before we share it anywhere else. Pastor John Onwuchekwa

Christ’s love received must become His love extended. Pastor Andrew Evans

You can’t get good fruit from a bad tree. Frank Camidge

The greatest legacy one can pass on to one’s children and grandchildren is not money or other material things accumulated in one’s life, but rather a legacy of character and faith. Billy Graham

It’s difficult to identify a moral issue today in which our culture is aligned with the word of God. From abortion to euthanasia, sexuality to marriage, racism to poverty, our society is clearly and tragically going the wrong way. Jim Denison

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The Aspens

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Forty-Three, 2019

THE ASPENS

But now, O Lord, you are our Father; we are the clay, and you are our potter; we are all the work of your hand (Isaiah 64:8).

Fishlake National Forest sweeps across 107 acres of Utah. It is one of the world’s largest organisms, a forest of some 47,000 genetically identical quaking aspen trees, which all stem from a single root system that unites the forest. It is the biggest aspen “clone” ever identified; the single most massive living organism known on Earth. What appears to be a massive grove of thousands of individual trees is in fact one single tree, each genetically the same, sharing a single root system.

Compare that genetic sameness with God’s creation of people. We are all different. God created us all with unique features, personalities, and traits. We are not clones. We are all created unique and special. God is the potter and we are the clay. He made us all perfect having our own uniqueness, but different from anyone ever created. Some people have blue eyes, brown eyes, some people can do this, some people can do that, some people are right handed, some people are left handed. We were all made for a purpose.

God has a plan for everyone, and we are all an individual member of the body of Christ, but distinctively different from everyone else. You are a masterpiece. As you grow more and more as a Christian you will truly see how special and unique God created you. Wouldn’t an orchestra be boring if everyone played first violin?

Just as every snowflake is unique, every person is unique because God created him or her in his image—a simple reminder of God’s love for His creation. Millions of snowflakes fall every year around the world, and yet no two snowflakes are alike! Every single snowflake is completely unique.

Equally astounding is the variety of human beings who have lived, now live, and will ever live on the planet Earth. God has created each one of us as a unique creation. No one else is just like you. Your physical appearance, your voice and personality traits—your habits, intelligence, personal tastes—all these make you one of a kind. Even your fingerprints distinguish you from every other human being—past, present, or future. You are not the product of some cosmic assembly line; you are unique…. uniquely created by God, and He has a purpose for your like.

But the most important fact of your identity is that God created you in His own image (Genesis 1:27). He made you so you could share in His creation, could love and laugh and know Him person to person. You are special indeed.

What has God uniquely created you to do?

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Lincoln’s Warning

Long before serving as America’s president, Abraham Lincoln delivered one of his earliest known speeches in 1838, at the age of 28. Known as Lincoln’s “Lyceum Address,” he warned that America faced a great danger. Here’s what he said:

“At what point shall we expect the approach of danger? … Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant, to step the Ocean, and crush us at a blow? Never! All the armies of Europe, Asia and Africa combined … with a Bonaparte for a commander, could not by force, take a drink from the Ohio, or make a track on the Blue Ridge, in a trial of a thousand years.

“At what point then is the approach of danger to be expected? … If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live through all time, or die by suicide.”

— o —

Look at our culture and field of opportunity. Hillsborough and three other Florida counties have a majority non-white population. What is your ministry?

— o —

Often we have a consumeristic secular culture that focuses on what we want more than what others need. For followers of Jesus, however, manifesting his heart for the hurting is central to our faith and witness. Jim Denison

— o —

Oswald Chambers: “Our ordinary views of prayer are not found in the New Testament. We look upon prayer as a means of getting things for ourselves; the Biblical idea of prayer is that we may get to know God Himself.” When we pray for suffering people, the Spirit joins our heart to the grieving heart of God and we weep as He weeps (John 11:35) “Prayer changes me and I change things.”

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Goodness without courage is useless.

Feed the white dog in your life and starve the black one. —Jim Huhta

Don’t get puffed up over success and don’t get destroyed by failure. —Cary Gaylord

Often, we have a consumeristic secular culture that focuses on what we want more than what others need. For followers of Jesus, however, manifesting his heart for the hurting is central to our faith and witness. —Jim Denison

Money is like a fire. If you use it wisely, it will keep you warm. But if you use it poorly it will burn your house down. —Brig Sorber

When Bad Things Help

Week Forty-Two, 2019

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

“We are troubled on every side, yet not distressed; we are perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; cast down, but not destroyed; always bearing about in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus, that the life also of Jesus might be made manifest in our body…. For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory; while we look not at the things which are seen, but at the things which are not seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which are not seen are eternal” (II Corinthians 4:8–10, 17–18).

At first it was a light pain and then it intensified. While I was in church that morning I was in a lot of pain. My wife insisted that we go to the ER and with her insistence, we did. An examination revealed that I had a large blood clot in my lower leg. I was immediately admitted and put on a blood thinner. After a couple of days, I was allowed to go home.

My cardiologist and friend heard I was there and came to visit. He said that as long as I was there, he was going to do a heart cath. He did and found that I had a significant blockage in my “widow maker” artery. He inserted a stent and all was well. My thought was what might have happened to me had I not had the clot and hospitalization. While the clot was not fun, it may have saved my life.

God does that …. Walking us through rough times to lead us where we otherwise would not have gone. James 1:1-4 tells us when we face trials, we can see it as a positive thing in our life because ultimately, we are going to grow from it. That’s hard to realize when our pain is all we can see and feel. But, after you’ve experienced life as a follower of Jesus, and you’ve experienced His faithfulness, then you know it’s true.

James regarded trials as inevitable. He said when, not if you fall into various trials. At the same time trials are occasions for joy, not discouraged resignation. We can count it all joy in the midst of trials because they are used to produce patience.

Faith is tested through trials, not produced by trials. Trials reveal what faith we do have; not because God doesn’t know how much faith we have, but so that our faith will be evident to ourselves and to those around us. Trouble is faith’s best friend

In God’s strange and wonderful ways of ruling this world, life’s most painful trials serve a special purpose for our good. God often draws his straightest lines from life’s greatest difficulties to our deepest and sweetest joys.

God’s preserving work in us through our pain and difficulty is essential to what matters most, and James makes that connection explicit: “Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him.” James 1:12

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

PORN IN THE CHURCH (A Barna Study)

• Most pastors (57%) and youth pastors (64%) admit they have struggled with porn, either currently or in the past.

• Overall, 21% of youth pastors and 14% of pastors admit they currently struggle with using porn.

• About 12% of youth pastors and 5% of pastors say they are addicted to porn

• 87% of pastors who use porn feel a great sense of shame about it.

• 55% of pastors who use porn say they live in constant fear of being discovered.

• The vast majority of faith leaders who struggle with porn say this has significantly affected their ministry in a negative manner. It is not clear why, but youth pastors are twice as likely as pastors to report this kind of unfavorable impact.

• Only 8% of pastors think that a pastor should resign his/her position if he is struggling with porn. Most pastors think he should deal with the struggle through counseling or accountability.

• In contrast, 41% of adult Christians think that pastors should be fired or asked to resign if they are found to be using porn.

• 93% of pastors and 94% of youth pastors say it is a much bigger or somewhat bigger problem than it was in the past.

• More than half of youth pastors have had at least one teen come to them for help in dealing with porn in the past 12 months.

• Although teens seeking help are mainly teen boys, there is still a significant amount of teen girls seeking help from youth pastors.

• Men of all ages and stages, but especially married men, are coming to pastors for help with pornography struggles.

• Despite the awareness of the problem, most churches do not have programs specifically designed to assist those struggling with porn use.

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The emerging generation that calls the shots:

If you want to gain a following today, emphasize community and tolerance. That’s the message of a recent report in the Wall Street Journal.

Here’s the good news: a survey revealed that Americans believe strongly in the principles of hard work, patriotism, commitment to religion, and the goal of having children. Here’s the bad news: that survey was taken twenty-one years ago.

When the same survey was conducted recently, it found that “religion, belief in God” was valued by 67 percent of older adults (ages fifty-five to ninety-one) but only 30 percent of young adults (ages eighteen to thirty-eight). Patriotism values ranged from 79 percent for older adults to 42 percent for young adults. Having children ranged from 54 percent for older adults to 32 percent for young adults.

However, a higher percentage of young adults than older adults value community involvement (61 percent vs. 58 percent) and tolerance for others (83 percent vs. 79 percent).

One of the pollsters who conducted the report noted: “There’s an emerging America where issues like children, religion and patriotism are far less important. And in America, it’s the emerging generation that calls the shots about where the country is headed. Jim Denison

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

But before God could change me, He needed to mature me. And before God could mature me, He needed to move me. Lecrae Moore

Obviously, I support abortion. I can’t believe people would want to protect unborn children. Taylor Swift

If you are not moving, you are not a part of the movement. Ken Whitten

Inspiration is a guest that does not willingly visit the lazy. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Master Composer

We never win at money by comparing our possessions with others. The Minimalist

Partial obedience is joyless because it entails partial sacrifice, but forfeits what God can give only to those who are fully his.

Jonathan Edwards helped spark the First Great Awakening that transformed our colonial nation and is widely considered the greatest theologian America has ever produced. His secret? He lived by the resolution “never to do anything, which I should be afraid to do, if it were the last hour of my life.”

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SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Forty-One, 2019

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

We live in a world where satisfaction comes from things, achievements and money. “If only I had X, I would be satisfied.” We strive for material accomplishments to keep up with our neighbors and then they re-finance and the race starts all over again. People strive for certain goals and when they get there somehow it doesn’t seem that great. It was Alexander the Great who by his early thirties conquered all of the then known world and then cried out is despair saying, “Are there no more worlds to conquer. “

For I will satisfy the weary soul, and every languishing soul I will replenish” (Jeremiah 31:25.”

Achieving the standards of the world simply will bring neither happiness nor satisfaction. Yet Madison Avenue spends millions trying to make people unsatisfied. True happiness is to enjoy the present, without anxious dependence upon the future, not to amuse ourselves with either hopes or fears but to rest satisfied with what we have, which is sufficient and to want nothing. A wise man is content with his lot, whatever it may be, without wishing for what he has not.

There are two ways to get enough. One is to continue to accumulate more and more. The other is to desire less. Those who are not satisfied with a little will never be with much. We should not spoil what we have by desiring what you don’t have.

There is a difference between needs and wants. The dictionary defines a necessity as “an indispensable thing” – something that everyone needs. There are some things that everyone clearly needs just to survive, such as food, water, shelter, and clothing. If a necessity is something that everybody needs, it seems logical that a luxury must be something that nobody really needs, but many people want.

The saving money can’t buy you happiness also means that it won’t prevent sadness. Some of the wealthiest are some of the saddest people. Affluence alone won’t bring happiness. Money will buy you a bed, but not a good night’s sleep, a house, but not a home, a companion, but not a friend. True love is not for sale at any price.

The apostle Paul was a man who suffered and went without the comforts of life more than most people could ever imagine. Yet, he knew the secret of contentment: “I know what it is to be in need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living in plenty or in want. I can do everything through Him who gives me strength.” Yet, people continue to seek after more of the things of this world, never contented with their lot in life. The bumper sticker that reads “He with the most toys wins epitomizes the worlds craving for more.”

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“Be content with such things as you have” means that as believers such should be our trust and confidence in God that we should be satisfied with our condition regardless of our circumstances. For we know assuredly that if we are faithful God will cause all things to work together for our good (Romans 8:28).

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SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Consider these national statistics: • Only 54 percent of foster children earn a high school diploma. • Only 2 percent earn a bachelor’s degree or higher. • 51 percent of foster care graduates are unemployed. • 84 percent of foster care graduates become parents too soon, exposing their children to a repeated cycle of neglect and abuse. On any given day, there are roughly 450,000 children in foster care. That’s one child per church in America. What are you willing to do about it?

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Anxiety continues to escalate in America, especially among young people. According to recent data, nearly half of college students surveyed “felt overwhelming anxiety over the previous year.” A third “had problems functioning because of depression.”

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True joy transcends circumstances. While happiness is a product of happenings, joy is the “fruit of the Spirit” (Galatians 5:22).

Jesus promised his followers that, after his resurrection, “I will see you again, and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you” (John 16:22). The closer we are to Jesus, the more we will manifest his joy.

The key is to focus more on Christ than on circumstances. It is to live vertically in a horizontal culture, bringing every challenge to Jesus and finding in him the courage and hope he alone provides.

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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?”

Peter and Jesus

Then Peter got down out of the boat, walked on the water and came toward Jesus. But when he saw the wind, he was afraid and, beginning to sink, cried out, “Lord, save me!” Immediately Jesus reached out his hand and caught him. “You of little faith,” he said, “why did you doubt?” And, when they climbed into the boat, the wind died down. Then those who were in the boat worshiped him, saying, “Truly you are the Son of God.”

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QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Once abolish the God, and the Government becomes the god. G. K. Chestern

Live clean, innocent lives as children of God, shining like bright lights in a world full of crooked and perverse people. Philippians 2:14–15

The right way is not always the popular and easy way. Standing for right when it is unpopular is a true test of moral character. Senator Margaret Chase Smith

The Lord answers my prayers everywhere except on the golf course. – Billy Graham

The problem with today’s younger generation is that they believe there is not a power higher than themselves.

Hateful ideas lead to hateful atrocities.

What the world throws away still matters to God.

We do not exist for ourselves alone. Thomas Merton

Sin speaks a dead language.

Lust is when you entertain yourself with what Jesus died to overcome.

The Confession

Week Thirty-Four, 2019

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruit” (Proverbs 8:21).

I have a confession. I like country music. I like the style combining the folk music of the Southeast and cowboy music of the West. I like the vocalized, simple in form and harmony music typified by romantic or melancholy ballads accompanied by acoustic or electric guitar, banjo and violin. It is always playing in my truck.

Recently I was listening to the words and was struck by the themes of one losing their truck, their dog and their girlfriend, often in a bar. Suddenly it hit me. I didn’t need to be filling my brain by those types of messages. Perhaps there is the same style of music with a better message. So, I went searching and found similar music with a Christian message.

The next day there was a little brown truck in my driveway delivering my new CD’s. I loaded them in my truck and have been enjoying them ever since. But here is the payoff. As I enjoyed the music, I found that my attitude changed for the good.

Recent studies suggest we get a very strong impression about someone when we ask them what music they like. Our music can become a badge of identity. All believers need to be careful about what they listen to. While our focus may not be paying attention, our brain hears and absorbs the lyrics.

Words are powerful and can influence us to pursue good things, give hope and spark inspiration. Or they can also cause us to pursue what is wrong, break our hopes, and cause us to lose our motivation to reach great heights. We can become what we listen to most.

If we aren’t very careful, we could end up being swayed and influenced by the words of the music around us. Proverbs 18:21 tells us “Death and life are in the power of the tongue, and those who love it will eat its fruit.”

Listening to the wrong things can be very dangerous to us. What we listen to affects what we meditate on. What we listen to or regularly hear tends to stick in our minds. Listening to the wrong words – whether sung or spoken – makes it harder for us to do what Philippians 4:8 tells us:

“Finally, brothers, whatever things are true, whatever things are honest, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue, and if there is any praise, think on these things.”

What we listen to influences us and fills our hearts and minds, and then eventually influences our choices. When a Godly person keeps hearing nothing but ungodly and wicked things, sooner or later that person becomes influenced. His faith can be negatively affected in many different ways: convictions get challenged, ideas become contaminated, purity is compromised, and decisions are influenced. What we listen to either help us grow in our faith or destroy it.

If we soak ourselves in condemning words and keep listening to lies and divisive arguments, we will end up having a shipwrecked faith.

What are you listening to?

***

SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

You’ve probably never heard of Ryan Hrelgac from Kemptville, Ontario, Canada. But he’s an incredible young man.

When Ryan was only 6 years old, he learned in school of children in African villages who didn’t have access to clean drinking water. So, he began raising money to help by doing household chores. In a period of 4 months, he raised $70.

Encouraged by his attitude and actions, others began to join Ryan and during the next 12 months, he raised $2,000. Within two years Ryan had raised $61,000.

Today, Ryan is 28, and is responsible for the foundation, Ryan’s Well, which has raised millions of dollars and completed over 1500 water projects in 17 countries, bringing safe water and sanitation to over 1 million people.

— o —

Fifty years ago, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin separated the lunar landing craft from the Apollo command module. As they moved toward the moon, astronaut Michael Collins stayed behind. He was 250,000 miles from earth.

While Armstrong and Aldrin received much of the attention for their magnificent feat, their journey to the moon and back would have been impossible without Collins. He piloted the command module through maneuvers that detached it from the third stage of the rocket carrying them into space. He then pivoted the module and steered it as it docked with the lunar landing vehicle.

When the lunar module returned from the moon, Collins directed the command module to reacquire it, enabling Armstrong and Aldrin to reenter the craft they would ride for the journey home. Without Michael Collins there would be no lunar mission to celebrate.

Meanwhile, look at the fire at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. It turns out, the firefighters who saved the cathedral did so at great risk to themselves. According to the Paris mayor, “It was clear that some firefighters were going to go into the cathedral without knowing if they would come back out.” The iconic landmark is now being rebuilt and will be a lasting tribute to their sacrificial courage. Though most of us do not know the names of the firefighters who risked their lives to save Notre Dame, we stand in their debt.

The great conductor Leonard Bernstein said: “I can get plenty of first violinists, but to find one who plays second violin with as much enthusiasm. And yet, if no one plays second fiddle, we have no harmony.” – Leonard Bernstein

Remember it is the back-up people who make those up front achieve.

***

QUOTES YOU CAN USE

Scars are the evidence that wounds can heal and don’t last forever and that healing is possible. —Lecrae Moore

The solution to each problem that confronts us begins with an individual who steps forward and who says, “I can help.” —George H. W. Bush

The growth of the Kingdom has blessed the world. Those trusting in Jesus and following His Word can be found in every corner of the world. Emerson once said that the impact of Jesus upon mankind was “…not so much written as plowed into history.”

If our relationship with God is based primarily on the relationship with our favorite pastor, speaker, or teacher, then it’s eventually going to lead to trouble. —Ryan Denison

Something is wrong when our lives make sense to unbelievers. —Francis Chan, Crazy Love

Discipleship demands my heart. My life. My all. —Ken Weliever, The Preacherman

To surrender is our heart admitting our weakness. To accept is our ego demanding the illusion of still being in charge.

Ability to resist temptation is directly proportionate to your submission to God.

The New Testament church was birthed in a cultural and political cesspool. There were no family values. Sexual perversion was normative, human life cheap, and justice nonexistent for anyone except the rich and powerful…. Yet none of the New Testament letters say anything about what we could call culture warfare. And the passages that deal with spiritual warfare are always framed in the context of personal spirituality and righteousness. —Larry Osborne

LIVING ABOVE

By Florida Senator John Grant, Retired

Week Thirty-Nine, 2019

LIVING ABOVE

Be not conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind” (Romans 12:2).

Over and against every competing worldview, the Bible forcefully declares, to live above the world. In other words, the only way to see all of life accurately is through the transforming lens of Scripture.

When confronted by worldly attack, either at work or even at church, the goal of the attack is silence or separation. Your attacker wants you to shut up and or leave. So don’t! We must remain there to graciously set the example.

It’s essentially a domino effect. As we individually become less like Jesus and assimilate into the culture, people around us lose sight of the gospel’s impact and begin replacing it with secular sources.

When Christianity loses its preeminent place in the culture, it’s perfectly natural for people to seek moral authority from others—politicians, intellectuals, political parties, celebrities, self-help gurus, or the state.

When the church becomes less important, people look to secular organizations that can deal with personal and social needs.

When we separate from That Other God (the world), the battle lines will be drawn. Something will have to give. One cannot serve two masters. The immediate reaction of those who still worship that idol will be anger, and then overreach in their attempts to bring everyone back to the status quo.

Likewise, the apostles and the Early Church had little in terms of earthly influence, but what they taught became the dominant religious faith of the Western world. They acted individually, but they also acted as one. Each person understood that if he or she would commit their own lives to becoming authentic examples of the teachings of Jesus, it would change their families, their friends, and those around them.

Great movements don’t always start from the top; they often start from the bottom with our own internal transformation. Often, when we’re confronted with interference, possible punishment, or intimidation, we throw our hands in the air and give up.

If we’re not living out our principles in the culture every day on an internal, personal level, then it’s easy to see why the culture stops noticing. And when that happens, it becomes easier and easier to marginalize the Christian faith on a much bigger and more public scale.

We can be sure that if a renewed Christian commitment comes to our country, persecution will be in vogue again too. Are you willing? Are you ready?

***

SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

UNASHAMED:

I am a part of the fellowship of the Unashamed. I have the Holy Spirit Power. The die has been cast. I have stepped over the line. The decision has been made. I am a disciple of Jesus Christ. I won’t look back, let up, slow down, back away, or be still.

My past is redeemed, my present makes sense, and my future is secure. I am finished and done with low living, sight walking, small planning, smooth knees, colorless dreams, tame visions, mundane talking, chintzy giving, and dwarfed goals.

I no longer need preeminence, prosperity, position, promotions, plaudits, or popularity. I don’t have to be right, first, tops, recognized, praised, regarded, or rewarded. I now live by presence, learn by faith, love by patience, lift by prayer, and labor by power.

My pace is set, my gait is fast, my goal is Heaven, my road is narrow, my way is rough, my companions few, my Guide is reliable, my mission is clear.

I cannot be bought, compromised, deterred, lured away, turned back, diluted, or delayed. I will not flinch in the face of sacrifice, hesitate in the presence of adversity, negotiate at the table of the enemy, ponder at the pool of popularity, or meander in the maze of mediocrity.

I won’t give up, back up, let up, or shut up until I’ve preached up, prayed up, paid up, stored up, and stayed up for the cause of Christ. I am a disciple of Jesus Christ. I must go until He returns, give until I drop, preach until all know, and work until He comes.

And when He comes to get His own, He will have no problem recognizing me. My colors will be clear. Author unknown

— o —

Humans have on average a heart rate of around 60 to 70 beats per minute, give or take. We live roughly 70 or so years, giving us just over 2 billion beats all up. Chickens have a faster heart rate of about 275 beats per minute and live only 15 years. On balance, they also have about 2 billion beats. Gods physical technology is awesome.

— 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?”

reflection

Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?

***

QUOTES YOU CAN USE

If you live for people’s acceptance, you’ll die from their rejection. Lecrae Moore

Sadly, we live in a culture where worldly values are too often the accepted way of life. A culture which—rather than being driven by a sense of absolute truth, integrity, service beyond self and hope—is driven by fast-changing technology, a business, media, sports and entertainment environment which glorifies success at all costs, violence, greed and self before others. Scott Whitaker

The Christian shoemaker does his duty not by putting little crosses on the shoes, but by making good shoes. Anonymous

Broken crayons still color.

Some day you will read that D. L. Moody is dead. Don’t believe a word of it because I will never be more alive than on the day I breathe My last breath on earth. D.L. Moody

All good things come to an end, but so do all the bad things.

I had made the same mistake a lot of Christians make: I saw my connection with God as a contractual relationship, rather than a covenantal relationship. All contracts have terms, but covenants don’t. They last forever. In a contractual relationship, you’re always worried about breaking the rules. In a covenantal relationship, you’re only concerned with loving the other party as much as you can. Lecrae Moore

The darker the room, the more obvious the light.

Don’t let people pull you into their storm. Pull them into your peace.

As long as we are receivers of mercy, we must be givers of thanks.

___________________________________________________________________________

Address all items and comments to [email protected]. © Thoughts on Life Copyright 2019

PRESSING “UNDO”

BY FLORIDA SENATOR JOHN GRANT, RETIRED

Week Thirty-Eight, 2019

PRESSING “UNDO”

“If the anger of the ruler flares up against you, do not resign from your position, for a calm response can undo great offenses” (Ecclesiastes 10:4).

Many items of computer software have an “undo” button. It allows us to erase forever your most recent action and redo it the way you first intended or should have attended. It allows you to dismiss mistakes and proceed as if nothing wrong had happened. It also allows you to restore something you mistakenly deleted. It is so easy.

Real life is so much more difficult. You can’t un-cook an apple or take back and forever erase words you have said and things you have done. We all make wrong decisions at some point in our lives. What’s worse is that no matter how much we repent and ask God for His forgiveness, what’s done is done and cannot be undone. While God in Heaven will forgive us, the consequences on earth are still there.

Many of us feel condemned by what we have done. We fail to understand when God forgives our sins, He also forgets them. He never condemns us for something He has already forgiven.

What many of us do not understand, however, is the fact that while God’s forgiveness erases our offenses from His sight, we still have to face the consequences of our wrong decisions. Life is not as easy as a computer program.

When we have done or said or written the wrong thing, we need to do what we can to right the wrong. Often is not easy and something the world says is unnecessary, but the Bible teaches us it is. So, whoever knows the right thing to do and fails to do it, for him it is sin. James 4:17

One thing I learned as a pilot is that I should always be looking for a place to land. Life is like that. Whenever we make mistakes, we should always be looking for how to right our wrongs as best we can. Sometimes it is embarrassing. Sometimes it is expensive, but it is always the right thing to do.

We go through life making mistakes, some accidental and some foolishly intended. I have done my share and so have you. To err is human; to forgive, divine. (Alexander Pope 1711). The key is how we follow up. Young sailors are taught how to ride out a storm by heading into the wind, not from it. Don’t run from your mistakes; confront them head on. Try to undo as best you can.

As you ask forgiveness of others, ask forgiveness also of God, the ultimate forgiver. We do not earn our forgiveness. We do not pay for our own forgiveness. Jesus died for it before we ever committed a wrong. Unlike our forgiveness of others, He blots it out forever. God’s love can never be taken away from you, ever – Romans 8:37-39

***

SOMETIMES TRUE STORIES

Public trust in government today stands at 17 percent. Trust in the church and organized religion has fallen as well. From 1973 to 1985, American confidence in organized religion was at 60 percent, higher than confidence in any other institution. Today, only 38 percent of Americans say they have a “great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in the church or organized religion.

— o —

We must never forget that the world is watching how we treat each other—and what they see can be far more powerful than what we teach. As it is, it’s no surprise that Christians do a less-than-stellar job when it comes to our attitudes toward each other and the world. It’s that kind of criticism that prompted Gandhi’s famous quote: “I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.” And his follow-up: “If it weren’t for Christians, I’d be a Christian.”

— o —

Let’s start by dumping the idea that “it’s all about me.” That belief alone will dramatically change our perspective on living the Christian life. Instead of being so “inward” thinking, it’s time to get “outward” in our thinking. Here’s a good scale to measure our progress: How many times do we say “I” or “me” in our prayers?

— o —

Three truths Christians should remember:

1. The loudest voices don’t represent all voices.

2. Don’t shout back. Listen.

3. God’s Word stands strong.

Jesus and disciples

“Who do you say that I am?” Jesus asked Peter. His response was immediate. Direct. Unequivocal. And divinely inspired. “You are the Christ, the Son of the living God” (Matt 16:15-16).

***

QUOTES YOU CAN USE

You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.” —Jeremiah 29:13

A Bible that’s falling apart usually belongs to someone who isn’t.—Author and Pastor Charles Haddon Spurgeon

Christians are losing the battle for our culture because we would rather skip the training. We’d rather pursue our dreams than do the hard work. Phil Cook

What if we took Christianity as seriously as Navy SEALS take their training?

A tree that falls in a storm usually isn’t felled by the outside force of the wind. It falls because it’s already rotten on the inside. The same is true of Christians.

Nothing can destroy Christianity if we live like Christians.—A. W. Tozer, Culture

The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it emotionally. Novelist Flannery O’Connor

You are called to a mission! Not just to bask in his glory on the mountaintop, but to share his message with a lost and dying world. Pastor Jack Graham

No one who has ever bowed before the burning bush can thereafter speak lightly of God. A. W. Tozer

In whatever way God is calling you to be a culture-changing Christian, know that the culture will likely resist. Those who hate our Father will hate his children. Jesus warned us: “If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you” (John 15:20). Jim Denison

A person can be removed from slavery in an instant, but it takes a lifetime for slavery to be removed from a person.” Lecrae Moore

SERIES MESSAGE #4: “THE THANKSGIVING OF THE PILLARS”

Jeremy Stopford photo
Jeremy Stopford

Originally preached November 18, 2012, by Rev. Jeremy B. Stopford

Today’s “Special”:  “A Tailor Funny”

A tailor’s shop was next door to a very upscale French restaurant. Every day at lunch time, the tailor sat out behind his shop and ate his black bread and herring while smelling the wonderful odors coming from the restaurant’s kitchen.

One day the tailor was surprised to receive an invoice from the restaurant for “enjoyment of food.” So he went to the restaurant to point out that he had not bought anything from them.

The manager said, “Every day you sit outside our kitchen and smell our food while eating.  We are providing added value to your lunch, and we deserve to be paid for it.”

The tailor stuck his hand in his pocket and rattled the few coins he had inside.

The manager asked him, “What is the meaning of that?”

The tailor replied, “I’m paying for the smell of your food with the sound of my money.”

INTRODUCTION

We have been gleaning the Scriptures for instances in which the 3 Pillars of the faith – Peter, James, and John – learned lessons from the Lord.  Today’s passage is not so much what they learned to do, but what they learned not to do.  Let’s see if we learn, too.      

PASTOR’S PRAYER   

KEY PASSAGE: “And when they had entered, they went up into the upper room where they were staying: Peter, James, John…these all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication, with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers.” Acts 1:13a, 14

#1 THANKS FOR WHAT NOT TO DO 

  1. They did not wait (Acts 1:4)

Acts 1 is Dr. Luke’s introduction to “The Acts of the Apostles.” Many believe this book should properly be entitled, “The Acts of the Holy Spirit.” Was it the apostles who did the work of the early church? Or was it the work of the Holy Spirit in their lives Who did the work? If THEY does the work, who gets the glory? THEY did. But if the HOLY SPIRIT does the work, Who gets the glory? Careful. Think about your answer before you give it. Turn with me to John 15:26. John Chapters 14,15, and 16 are the Savior’s intimate teaching on the ministry of the One He was going to send to earth in His place shortly after the resurrection. After the Holy Spirit would be sent, the Savior assured His disciples that through His ministry they would carry on in ways they could not have during Jesus’ earthly service. How so? For 3 years, the disciples were walking with the Savior, talking with Him, listening to Him, serving with Him. Observing Him. They could only be in one place at one time. Through the ministry of the Holy Spirit, and in the same Power that operates in our Savior, they would be able to fulfill the command of the Great Commission and “go into all the world and preach…and teach…and make disciples.”

All they had to do was wait. 10 days. In fact, they should have understood the Old Testament “Day of Pentecost”. 50 Days after the Passover. Our Savior was on earth for the first 40 days before He ascended back to Glory. So simple math, if you will, tells us – and should have told them – there are 10 more days before the Spirit is sent down. 10 days. 10 measly days.

See also: 

Ps. 27:14:  “Wait on the Lord; Be of good courage, and He shall strengthen your heart; Wait, I say, on the Lord!”

    Psalm 37:9:  “For evildoers shall be cut off; But those who wait on the Lord, they shall inherit the earth.”

Isaiah 40:31:  “But those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength; They shall mount up with wings like eagles, they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk and not faint.”

B. They had no power (Acts 1:8)

  Therefore, whatever they did before Acts 2, they did in their own strength!

Acts 1 is a sad commentary on how not to do ministry.

  How do we know?  Look at 1:15, “And in those days Peter stood up…”. Yes, he quotes Scripture. Don’t you think he has been reading and thinking much since Jesus ascended? He has been reviewing all the Scriptures concerning the death and resurrection of the Messiah. They are in there! Moses! The Psalms. The Prophets. They are in there! Peter has been thinking, “what has been happening to us?”. And don’t you think he came across Psalm 69 which he would know is a Messianic Psalm. He would read verses 24-25, as he shares in Acts 1, and thinks, “whoa! It was there all the time! Judas, who walked among us, would be the traitor among us. How did I miss that in Sunday school at the Baptist Church?” Well, perhaps that’s a slight liberty on Peter’s life. Then he would read Psalm 109:8-9 and see the words, “let another take his office.” And what must Peter have thought? “WE are God’s appointed ones to replace Judas with the 12th apostle.” So by casting lots – which seemingly were a perfectly good Biblical form of making choices – just look at those at the foot of the cross – they make their choice. They chose Matthias.

Look at 1:23-26. When was the last time you read about Matthias in the Scriptures?  Right here – he was never heard from again.  But other apostles were heard from again, in particular the Apostle Paul.

The Lord Jesus said, “wait.” WAIT! 10 days. 10 short days. They didn’t wait. Do we?

#2 THANKS FOR WHAT TO DO

Credit must be given to these early apostles, however. They were dealing with a whole host of emotions thrown at them and in them all at once. The Savior Who had been among them for over 3 years had been crucified. Buried. Rose again. Ascended to glory! And even the angels at the ascension said, “He will come again!!!!” They had much to take in! New truths. Fresh truths! Application of Old Testament truths!

And in the midst of their post-ascension scenes, in the midst of trauma they show all of us some wonderful foundations for thanksgiving.

A. They continued together (Acts 1:13) – they had disbanded at the time of the cross

They continued in one accord – not a Chevy or a Ford (Acts 1:14)

Of the 17 times the phrase “one accord” appears in Scripture, 11 of them are in Acts. That gives us an huge insight into not only the operation of the Holy Spirit in the early church, but also into the hunger of that early church to be the outward evidence of God’s love for the whole world! They were visible evidence of the application of the death, burial and resurrection of the Savior! “For God so loved the world that He gave His One and only Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life!” (John 3:16)

*  See also:  

Luke 14:18 [in reference to the response to the invitation to come be with the Lord Jesus]: “But they all with one accord began to make excuses. The first said to him, ‘I have bought a piece of ground, and I must go and see it. I ask you to have me excused.’” That’s the negative response!

  And Phil. 2:1-2 [the classic passage on the unity of the New Testament church in Philippi]:  “Therefore if there is any consolation in Christ, if any comfort of love, if any fellowship of the Spirit, if any affection and mercy, fulfill my joy by being like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind.” And this is the positive response!

B. They continued in prayer and supplication (Acts 1:14) “These all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication…” Remember what they had begun with the Savior – just like our baby steps with Jesus. They were learning with Him how to have an intimate walk with Him. “Abba, Father” they heard Him pray. Now, with Him in Glory, they knew – they just knew – that in order to wait on the Savior their intimacy with Him was needed more now than ever!

C. They were people of the Scriptures (Acts 1:14,16). As said above, Peter did not simply pull these verses out of his spiritual rabbit’s hat! He was familiar with the Messianic Psalms. Our Savior had given the disciples lessons on the application of the Word of God. Peter actually listened! And as a result, the early church would be people of the Book. Once again is the probing question: are we?

CONCLUSION

Turn to Psalm 109, from which Peter guided his words of Acts 1

  Read 109:1-7

  Note v. 8, from which Peter quoted (referenced above)

  David is lamenting his enemies, while he himself is a man of prayer!

  And note HIS conclusion, vs. 30-31  In the midst of his enemies, of his uncertainties, of his life, he is a man of thanks:

“I will greatly praise the Lord with my mouth; yes, I will praise Him among the multitude.

For He shall stand at the right hand of the poor, to save him from those who condemn him.”

  The very psalm which is the root of Acts 1 is the heart of the thanksgiving of the pillars.

  So… are we thankful? Are you thankful?

CLOSE IN PRAYER

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