Saturday, August 10, 2013

MISSION TRIP REPORT


MISSION TRIP REPORT
Bungoma, Kenya Area
July 18-31, 2013



TEAM MEMBERS:  Richmond Goolsby, Landon Northcutt, Mel Malloy, Shirley Malloy-Lundy, Mary Caves, Robert Mendez (Harvey BC, Stephenville, TX); Robert and Donna Lane, Carolyn O’Neal (Lake Fork BC, Lake Fork, TX); James and Mary Lynn Donohoe (FBC Gunter, TX); Jimmie Carter (FBC Dallas, TX)



We worked primarily in the villages surrounding Bungoma in far western Kenya.  The area is situated near Mt. Elgon and the border of Uganda.  We worked mainly among two people groups, which are related to the Luhya people.  Our mission was to provide efforts of evangelization, church starting, and pastoral training among the Luhya Bukusu and the Luhya Lutachoni.  The Bukusu are listed as a “reached people group”, but further field research shows that what has reached the vast majority of the people is not Christianity.  It is more of a mutated version of something similar to Christianity which teaches a works-based salvation and includes such odd initiatory rites as walking under a flag to pledge allegiance to the “Salvation Army” rather than biblical baptism.  The Lutachoni are listed as an unreached people group.  According to the national leadership this group is living interspersed among the Bukusu and we found them to be quite receptive to the gospel.  In my estimation, it would be a mistake to consider the peoples of this area as “reached” with the gospel according to the statistical percentages provided in recent missiological data.  Although there are many gatherings which are considered churches, a few further questions will reveal that most of these are more of an amalgamation of superstition and traditional African beliefs with an imaginary Jesus mixed in rather than orthodox Christianity.  It also must be emphasized that the great need of the hour in our churches is to train up faithful leaders.  The pastors are willing and greatly desire to please God, but they are largely uneducated and untrained.  If there is not further discipleship for these pastors most of the churches will fail by closure or by falling into heretical teachings.  This has been a continued problem in the east African region, but I truly believe it can be corrected with the proper diligence.  The final results of the Lord’s blessing on this trip were 2,268 professions of faith among 6 new churches (all with new pastors ready to work) and 1 existing church strengthened.


JULY 21 - We gathered together with local believers in the two mother churches for worship.  Agape BC and Bumangale BC were both made up of dedicated brothers and sisters in Christ and we had a wonderful time together worshipping Christ.

JULY 22 - Our first day on the field was a little slow but God blessed in many ways.  We saw 202 people make professions of faith in Christ and the Chongoi Baptist Church had a strong core group of about 50 people commit to the new church that afternoon.  Pastor Dennis Wanyama of Agape BC did an outstanding job of preparation before our arrival.  He and Samson Kisia had every location well thought out with a meeting location secured, a new pastor in place, and 1 to 4 other leaders per new church start.  The logistics of our evangelistic efforts operated very efficiently due to their prior planning.

JULY 23 - We began our witnessing efforts each day at about 9:30AM after breakfast, devotional and an approximate 30 minute drive.  Day 2 on the field was productive for the beginning of the Toloso BC with a total number of professions of faith at 330.  They also had a strong core group gathered with us at 3:00PM to commit to the new work.

JULY 24 - God provided a great day of witnessing and 361 people professed faith in Christ for the beginning of the Butonge BC.

JULY 25 - We worked in another village outside of Bungoma and the Lord drew 376 people to himself for the start of the Bukoli BC.  One particularly exciting example was a man named Paul who had been released from a 1 1/2 year prison sentence on that Monday.  He professed faith in Christ that Thursday and brought his family to be a part of the new church.  

JULY 26 - There were 423 professions of faith among the people in this village and several Muslims were won to Christ.  The new church is called Sichei BC.

JULY 27 - We worked in a small village known as Madisi.  This was the home area of one of our favorite national leaders, Pius, who is an assistant pastor at Samson Kisia’s church in Ruiru.  There were 409 professions of faith for the Madisi BC.  We were a little concerned about the amount of people committed for the new work, but on Sunday morning the worship service had an attendance of 92!

JULY 28 - We split up into 7 groups and each of our men preached in the local churches that Sunday morning.  Everyone except me, I was sick with a fever in the motel room.  God was especially gracious to us all and each of the new churches had many people gathered to worship Jesus.

JULY 29 - Our group worked during the morning hours for the Bumangale BC.  This is an established church and we provided assistance in local evangelistic efforts for half of the day before leaving for Eldoret to catch our flight back to Nairobi.  There were 167 professions of faith.

JULY 30 - We spent the day in Nairobi, where I was able to visit with Samson Kisia and Elijah Wanji.  Elijah is the pastor of Ridgeways BC and the current Moderator of the Kenya Baptist Convention.  He is a brilliant pastor and a great leader.  We discussed the needs of the Baptist churches in Kenya which are primarily needing assistance in the training up of leaders who can train others.

Samson Kisia, Pastor of FBC Ruiru (Nairobi suburb) spent 6 years as the Moderator of the Kenya Baptist Convention and has led multiplied mission trips over the years.  He has been an extremely effective church planter throughout east Africa and has developed a network of national leaders which is more than impressive.  Samson and I continue to strategize and seek God’s blessing as we work together to strengthen the work in east Africa.


Ways You Can Help:

  • Pray for the new churches and their pastors
  • Pray for continued faithfulness to the work that has been started
  • Metal roof including trusses and labor     $1,000 each
  • Purchase Bibles      $7 each
  • Sponsor a Pastor for 1 year in Bible College     $250
  • Bicycle for a Pastor     $150 each
  • Purchase a goat for Pastor’s family     $35
  • Purchase a cow for Pastor’s family     $350 
  • Continued funding for my return to teach in Bible College




Gifts can be sent to:
GateWay East Africa Ministries
1375 Cage St. 
Stephenville, TX 76401
ATTN: Richmond Goolsby

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Had I Been At Calvary:




Had I been there, I would have plotted against Him to preserve my position.
I would have betrayed Him for the gain of silver coins.
... preferred murderous Barabbas to sinless Jesus.
... called for His crucifixion instead of His acquittal.
... declared my political innocence before the unruly mob.

Had I been there, I would have begged for the guilt of His blood to be upon my family in my irrational anger.
I would have scourged Him and delivered Him into lawless hand for execution.
... stripped Him of His garments and His dignity.
... twisted the thorny vines to compose His crown. 
... pierced His brow with the razor-sharp thorns.

Had I been there, I would have bowed my knee in mockery to His sovereign rule.
I would have spit in His pathetically swollen face.
... struck His head from behind and beside.
... led Him to Golgotha’s dark hillside.
... offered Him only sour wine in His darkest and driest hour.

Had I been there, I would have divided His garments and taken bets for the main event.
I would have posted a sign to accuse Him before all who passed by.
... raised His body on a mast in the company of 2 thieves.
... blasphemed Him and shaken my head in disgust.
... screamed with the crowd, “He trusted God, let God save Him!”

Had I been there, I would have laughed when He cried out to God.
And when He breathed His last breath, I would have said, “serves Him right” and I would have walked away.

Had I been there, Jesus would have looked at me and loved me just the same.
I know this because I was there, spiritually present as my sin was placed upon His perfect body.
He bore the cross for me and prayed for my forgiveness as He provided perfect atonement for all who believe.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

DID JESUS RISE FROM THE DEAD?





The Resurrection of Jesus Christ is the foundational event of the Christian faith.  1 Corinthians 15:14 says, “if Christ is not risen, then our preaching is empty and your faith is also empty” and verse 17 tells us, “if Christ is not risen, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins!”  The paramount question of all eternity is this, did Jesus rise from the dead?  The great historian Luke reports that Jesus “presented Himself alive after His suffering by many infallible proofs” (Acts 1:3).  I will present these infallible proofs in three categories that can only be rightly answered by affirming the historical resurrection of Jesus.  First, the origin of the Christian faith.  Second, the many physical appearances of Jesus after His death.  Third, the empty tomb of Jesus after His burial.

The Origin of the Christian Faith

There is no other plausible answer for the transformation that took place in the lives of the disciples of Jesus than to accept their testimony that Jesus rose from the dead.  How else could a group of men who were cowardly absent during the crucifixion of Jesus become such courageous proclaimers of the Christian faith just a few days after their abandonment?  A great change had occurred in their lives that could only be attributed to one event, namely Christ’s resurrection.  They were no longer hiding nor denying their association with Jesus, but after they witnessed Jesus alive they began praying fervently and preaching passionately that Jesus was risen from the dead.  These men had nothing to gain by preaching this message, unless you count suffering and death as gain.  Their sincerity was verified by their deaths, in that every one of the apostles died a martyr’s death (with the possible exception of John).  Would you die for a lie?  
Extraordinarily Ordinary Men - One must also remember that this group of disciples were common men.  They consisted primarily of fishermen, but were all just average men.  They were not particularly crafty nor were they especially prominent in any way.  Their message of Jesus rising from the dead was also completely opposite of the expectations in the Jewish mind of their day.  While many of the Jews did expect a general resurrection at the end of time, no one expected a singular person to rise from the dead, especially not Jesus, who was the antithesis of the expectations they had for their Messiah.  So how did such a small group of common everyday fellows gain such a large following of people with a message that was inconsistent with Jewish expectations?  The only acceptable answer is that Jesus really had risen from the dead.
A Self-Refuting Response - The Jewish opposition did have two responses that attempted to conceal the truth of Christ’s resurrection.  The first was silence through persecution.  Just as they had persecuted Jesus so did they persecute His followers.  The second attempt is found in Matthew 28:11-15.  The chief priests bribed the soldiers who kept guard of Jesus’ tomb and said, “tell them, His disciples came at night and stole Him away while we slept.”  The responsive question should be obvious to all.  If you were asleep, how do you know that it was the disciples who stole His body?  
The apostles of Jesus went out preaching that Christ had been risen from the dead.  No matter how much it cost them they were willing to testify to this truth with their blood.  They wrote down historical accounts of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus at a time and place of such close proximity that it would be almost impossible to fabricate a lie.  The origin of the Christian faith would have been easily dismantled if these accounts were false because those living nearby would have come forward and disputed the apostle’s claims.  But they didn’t.  
The only proper explanation for what caused these 12 men from an obscure corner of the Roman world to transform the world from that moment to today, is the actual resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead.

Physical Appearances

After Jesus was crucified, they took His body down from the cross and wrapped it in linen graveclothes.  He was then placed in a tomb which was borrowed from Joseph of Arimathea.  The tomb was securely guarded by Roman soldiers, sealed with a large stone, and wrapped with the authoritative seal of the Roman government.  In spite of the highest measures of security, on the third day from His burial the stone was rolled away, the clothes were left in the tomb, and Jesus was risen from the dead.
Multiple Appearances - Jesus then began appearing to various people during the 40 days between His resurrection and ascension.  He appeared to Mary Magdalene and then again to the women as they were returning from His tomb (Mark 16:9; Matthew 28:9,10).  He physically met with two disciples who were walking on the road to Emmaus (Luke 24:13-33).  Christ revealed His resurrected body to the apostles while Thomas was absent and again while Thomas was present, even inviting Thomas to place his finger in the scars from His crucifixion (John 20).  Jesus met with Peter and also with a group of seven at the Lake of Tiberias (John 21).  He miraculously appeared to a group of over 500 (1 Corinthians 15:6).  Morevover, He met with James (1 Corinthians 15:7) and then began meeting with the apostles for a summation of His instructions (Matthew 28:18-20; Mark 16:14-20; Luke 24:33-52; Acts 1:3-12).
Even after the heavenly ascension of Christ other resurrected appearances are well documented.  He met with Paul on the Damascus Road (Acts 9:3-6) and He appeared alive to Stephen in Acts 7:55.  The apostle John witnessed the unveiling of Christ in glory while he was in exile on the isle of Patmos (Revelation 1:10-19).
Reliable Reports - Some may object at this point by saying that I am using the Bible to prove the historicity of the physical appearances of Jesus.  It is true that I am referencing parts of the Bible as historically accurate presentations, and although I know of no sufficient reason to reject any of the rest of the Bible as historically accurate, here I am simply offering to you portions of the Bible.  Please consider the historical reliability of these texts as sufficient to at least establish that Jesus did indeed physically appear to many people.
Independently Agreeing Testimonies - The Resurrection became (and has become) such a widely held belief that it demands an explanation.  There are multiple, independent testimonies from ancient literature, which have never been proven false, declaring that Jesus physically appeared to multiplied hundreds of witnesses after His death (as cited above).  Their testimonies are dependable corroborative evidence but they are not collaborative.  The independent testimonies of these multitudinous witnesses complements each other but they did not work together to create such reports.  Any historian seeking to discover an event would be thrilled to discover such evidence!
Transformed Lives - Consider the exchanged lives of the early followers of Christ.  Paul had been very successful in Jewish life.  He was a leader among his people and had great authority, even having studied under the great Gamaliel.  Why would he exchange such a life of prominence for a life of suffering and persecution?  James was the half-brother of Jesus.  He did not believe Jesus to be the Messiah before the resurrection (Mark 3:21; 31-35; John 7:1-10).  However, we see that James became one of the pillars of the early church as he served on the council of elders in Jerusalem (Galatians 2:9; Acts 21:18).  The Jewish historian, Josephus, tells us that James was later stoned to death illegally by the Sanhedrin for his faith in Christ around 60 A.D..  Why would these men and hundreds of others exchange lives of prominence and comfort for lives of persecution and martyrdom?  The only sufficient explanatory reason to account for such consistent belief is that they must have really seen Jesus physically resurrected.
What other reasonable conclusion could there be?  An honest seeker of truth must confess the evidence is mounted in favor of affirming that Jesus physically appeared after His death and is therefore risen from the dead.  The late New Testament critical scholar of the University of Chicago, Norman Perrin, stated, “The more we study the tradition with regard to the appearances, the firmer the rock begins to appear upon which they are based.”  

The Empty Tomb

It would not have been plausible for the disciples of Jesus to believe in His resurrection if His body still laid in the tomb.  Moreover, no one would have believed their widespread testimony that Jesus was risen from the dead if the tomb had not been left empty.  The empty tomb of Jesus after His resurrection is recorded by no less than six independent sources of historical importance.  The gospel accounts of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John all present the tomb in which Jesus was buried to be left empty.  The book of Acts contains multiplied attestations to the message that Jesus left His grave vacant.  1 Corinthians 15:3-7 records an early Christian creed which reveals early acceptance by many that the tomb in which Jesus was buried was empty.  
New and Widely Used Phrases - There were significant changes in practice and terminology among those in the first century that reveal clear belief in the empty tomb of Jesus.  A new phrase developed in first century lingo that found widespread acceptance among multiplied thousands of people.  It was the phrase, “on the third day”.  Christians began referring to events and eternal salvation according to the “third day”, with that day being recognized as the third day after Jesus’ crucifixion and the day that He rose from the dead.  Another significant adjustment occurred in the appointment of Sunday as the official day of Christian worship and celebration.  Their choosing of the first day of the week as the day for corporate gathering flowed from the cherished belief that Jesus left the tomb empty on that day.  
Agreement Regarding Burial - Liberal and conservative scholars both agree with the gospel writers that the body of Jesus was buried in a tomb belonging to Joseph of Arimathea.  Joseph was an affluent man who was also a member of the Jewish Sanhedrin.  The Sandhedrin was the group of men who appealed for the death of Jesus and strategized His arrest.  It is thoroughly unlikely that out of all the people that could have buried the body of Jesus, it would have been this Joseph.  However, that is exactly who the gospel writers claim buried Jesus.  Although it is inexplicable for a man who was part of the committee who condemned Jesus to be the very one compassionate enough to bury Jesus, this is exactly what the disciples reported.  This type of irony could not have been fabricated by the disciples for it would have made no sense to do so.  Why would the disciples report that a man who had been a part of the council that condemned Jesus be the one who mercifully buried him unless it was indeed the truth?  Also, there is no other story offered by ancient opponents to contradict this burial account, which also leads to the conclusion that Jesus left the tomb empty.  
Unlikely Witnesses - Women were not extended proper amounts of respect in the ancient world.  Women were not even allowed to serve as witnesses in matters of legal dispute.  Their testimony was not considered worthy to be reported.  However, this is who God chose to be the first witnesses of the resurrection of Jesus.  Although it would have been embarrassing in the ancient world, it was Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary, and other women who first testified that they had seen Jesus alive and the grave empty.  This helps prove that Jesus rose from the dead because this report would not at all have been the kind of testimony the disciples would have chosen if they had been trying to convince people of something miraculous.  The embarrassment involved with having women as primary eyewitnesses in the ancient world for something as miraculous as the resurrection of Jesus would have caused the disciples to produce a different story, but they did not.  They did not create a different story because this was the truth, and although it may have been an embarrassment to some, women were the first to witness Jesus risen from the dead.
Conspiracy Without Denial - The opponents of Jesus did not offer a denial of the empty tomb.  Matthew 28:11-15 records the Jewish priests bribing the soldiers so they might tell others that the disciples of Jesus had come at night and stolen the body of Jesus while they were sleeping.  As previously mentioned, if they were asleep, how would they know it was the disciples who stole the body?  Moreover, notice that the priests did not deny the empty tomb, they only came up with an alternative explanation for why it was empty.  The historical fact still remains, the tomb of Jesus was empty because He had been indubitably risen from the dead.  

Conclusion - The only plausible explanation for the information available regarding the resurrection of Jesus Christ is that He did in fact rise from the dead.  Other reports of historical figures from the ancient world do not contain 1/1000th of the information that is reported to us concerning the resurrection of Jesus.  When one considers the Origin of the Christian Faith, the Physical Appearances of Jesus after His death, and the Empty Tomb left after Jesus rose from the dead, there is only one reasonable conclusion - Jesus is risen!

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Trusting God In Suffering


      
       Job is most likely the oldest book in the Bible.  It’s subject is one of the deepest questions of mankind.  “Where is God in my suffering?”  Job suffered as much as anyone ever has suffered, having seen all of his property taken away or destroyed and then “suddenly a great wind came from across the wilderness” which killed all of his children.  Initially, Job responded with great faith, but there came a time in which he began to question God.  God finally responds to Job with divine declaration in the form of questions, like, “Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth?” (Job 38:4)  One could paraphrase the series of questions by saying God revealed to Job that man is small and has little understanding, but God is grand and His purposes can be trusted.  Job did get there.  And so can we.  Job finally says, “I have uttered what I did not understand, things too wonderful for me, which I did not know.” (Job 42:3)
  God has His purposes, and we do not know them.  Job said, “I uttered...which I did not know”.  There are so many things that happen in the world which are beyond my understanding.  I hold hands and pray with the dying, of all ages.  I cry with people who hurt.  Funerals are a regular part of my life.  I cannot answer every question, but this I know, God is beyond us and His ways are not our ways.  This I also know, God’s ways are good, even when we do not understand them.
God has His purposes, and they are wonderful.  Job said, “things too wonderful for me.”  If we could ever just trust past ourselves.  If we would realize that no suffering will be wasted in the lives of those who trust God.  He is working all things together for good to those who love Him and are the called according to His purpose (Romans 8:28).  One day soon all of those who truly love God will see how wonderful His purposes actually have been, and we will be filled with wonder.  Until then, may we trust God as sovereign Ruler over all that is, and may we do all we can to help one another.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Bungoma Kenya 2013


Dear Friends in Christ, 

God continues to bless us through the richness of His infinite grace.  The church family here in Stephenville, TX has been very gracious and supportive in their response to God’s Word.  We continue to see several people come to know Christ and I am glad to report that God has entrusted to us the great responsibility of discipling many others who have been searching for sound biblical teaching.  The demands of pastoral ministry have been great but God’s grace has continued to be sufficient for me.  I am preparing to return to eastern Africa in July of 2013 in order to preach the gospel in Bungoma, Kenya.  We will be working in the western portion of Kenya, near Mt. Elgon, to start 4-6 new churches in that area as well as training 20 pastors.  There will be 13 brothers and sisters working on this trip from 3 different churches in Texas. 

In July 2012 God used us greatly in the Mpigi region of Uganda to lead many to Christ and provide training for many pastors.  A partnering group just returned from Kenya, where they enjoyed immense blessing with many professions of faith and 7 new church starts.  The time spent in East Africa is a great investment in the growth of the kingdom of Christ.  God continues to use us in the work in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, and Burundi through the national leaders who continue to grow in the faith by the power of the Holy Spirit.  

We know that the harvest is plentiful but the workers are few.  May we continue to pray that God will send many workers into the harvest.  Please pray for the laborers and the harvest on this important trip.  If you would like to partner with us in any way please let me know.

Until He Comes, 



Pastor Richmond Goolsby
Harvey Baptist Church 
P.O. Box 981
Stephenville, TX 76401
254-965-4368



“And the things that you have heard from me among many witnesses,  commit these things to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.”    2 Timothy 2:2

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Who We Value The Most


       In a world where humans are allowed freedom of choice, we all choose what we value the most.  I might choose steak for dinner because at the time I value it more than beans and rice.  I chose to marry my wife because I was so enraptured with her beauty and kindness that I wanted nothing more than for her to be my bride.  In a sense I chose to be a pastor, but only because the call of God upon my life to do so was more important than any other vocational desire.  We are motivated to decide according to what we consider most valuable.  What do you value the most?
The Bible invites us all to come and discover that Jesus Christ is to be valued the most and that there is abundant fulfillment for those who come to Him.  Psalm 34:8 says, “Oh, taste and see that the Lord is good; blessed is the man who trusts in Him!”  Psalm 36:8 promises those who trust the Lord that they will be “abundantly satisfied with fullness”.  Unfortunately, most people love their possessions, and ultimately themselves, more than they love Christ.  Therefore, people are caught in a perpetual self-entrapment that breeds only discontent and misery.  
Our greatest needs are met only when we first value Jesus more than ourselves.  Hope, joy, love, and peace are found only in the One from whom these benefits emanate.  Hope is possible because God owns tomorrow.  Joy is a reality because God is in control and can be trusted.  Love is real because He first loved us.  Peace is available because God removes enmity.  Moreover, we will only find these beautiful gifts when we value the One who owns them.  We will only experience what we need the most when we embrace that Jesus is worthy to be valued the most.  May our lives really matter, and may we know true satisfaction as we see “that in all things Christ may have the preeminence.” (Colossians 1:18)  May we value Him the most.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Divine Vindication Through the Resurrection


     Jesus of Nazareth was condemned to die by the religious leaders of His day.  The charge offered against Him was blasphemy, because He claimed to be the Messiah and the Son of God.  There was no evidence contrary to His claims, but the hatred that spewed out of the overly zealous self-righteous persecutors refused to see the truth.  Herod could find nothing wrong with Him.  Pilate could not find any fault in Him.  So the legal charge trumped up against Jesus was blasphemy, or speaking against God.  If His claims of deity were false then certainly He would have been blasphemous.  
     As He was suffering intense beatings, many assumed He was merely human.  While He was dying upon the cross, the crowd primarily agreed that He was a blasphemer.  After Jesus took His last breath and was buried in that borrowed tomb, it seemed as though He had been defeated.  However, something unprecedented occurred on the third day after His crucifixion.  Jesus was resurrected!  
     In the resurrection of Christ, one can see that His condemnation is divinely vindicated.  Romans 1:4 says that Jesus is “declared to be the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead.”  Acts 13:33 is linked with Psalm 2:7 in heralding that God has raised up Jesus from the dead in order to proclaim that Christ is the divine Son of God.  Wolfhart Pannenberg wrote, “If this man was raised from the dead, then that plainly means that the God whom he had supposedly blasphemed has committed himself to him...The resurrection can only be understood as the divine vindication of the man whom the Jews had rejected as a blasphemer.”  
     In spite of the accusations offered against Jesus then, and the excuses for not following Jesus today, this fact remains:  Jesus is the living Lord.  He has been divinely vindicated by God the Father through the resurrection.  He demands our attention and He deserves our worship. 

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

A Ministry Worth Living

Paul writes to Timothy in 1 Tim. 4:14-16 with words of challenging encouragement.  He says, "Do not neglect the gift that is in you, which was given to you by prophecy with the laying on of the hands of the eldership.  Meditate on these things; give yourself entirely to them, that your progress may be evident to all.  Take heed to yourself and to the doctrine.  Continue in them, for in doing this you will save both yourself and those who hear you."

These words of holy scripture cause me to consider whether I am faithful in a ministry worth living.  I don't just mean as a pastor, but as a follower of Christ, the question must be asked.  Am I fully giving my life in service to God and others in the way that fulfills the high calling of the name "Christian"?  Here are some introspective questions that I believe the Holy Spirit is challengingly encouraging me to ponder:

1.  Am I fully utilizing that which God has imparted to me?  The Bible says "do not neglect the gift that is in you".  The concern is not just that I do not abuse or misuse the gift, but that I do not neglect the gift.  Too many wasted moments and opportunities in my life confirm that I need God's help to empower me to fully utilize the gift entrusted to me.
2.  Am I thoughtfully stirring up the giftedness God has imparted to me?  Meditate, meditate, meditate.  Most often as a teacher I am thinking about the scripture and life's events regarding how I can communicate God's truths to others.  First, before all else, I must commune (with God) before I can rightly communicate (to others).  So many times we don't find the "right" words because we have not first meditated upon THE right WORD.
3.  Am I giving myself entirely to the expression of these gifts?  Vs. 15 says, "give yourself entirely to them".  Entirely?  Really?  Yes!  In every aspect of my life, it is to be a ministry worth living.  Pray without ceasing, make disciples as you are going.  Every moment is a sacred opportunity to commune with Christ and help others do the same.
4.  Is my progress in Christian growth and service evident to others?  No need to be showy, actually there is no room for show-offs in the kingdom of God, only humble servants.  However, my "progress should be evident to all."  There was obvious evidence when I first began to follow Christ, but over the years it sometimes feels that my personal growth is not so evident.  Dear Lord, please help me to continue in Your sanctifying grace, to be more like you each day, to abide in Your holy presence.  Please let it be that others will see You magnified through me.
5.  Is my salvation steadfastly persevering?  "Continue in them".  What a noble calling!  Too many people think only of their beginning and fail to properly work toward finishing well.  We must continue if we will endure to the end.  We must fight the good fight and finish the race.  Discouragement (especially with my own failures) threatens to sideline me, but continue I must, by the power of Christ in me!
6.  Are others being saved because they are seeing and hearing God's grace alive in me?  In a ministry worth living we find salvation.  The saving of ourselves and others through the faithful work of Christ.  The truth expressed in Christian doctrine and the grace imparted through God's gracious gifts provide safeguards to keep us in salvation.  To depart from either one is to enter into the imponderable mystery of apostasy.  However, you understand that word, let us at least agree that it must be avoided at all costs.  The question is, does my life lead me and others to Christ?

God, help me to live a ministry worth living.  To make each moment count for the good of others and for Your glory.  May my light so shine that others will see my good works, and will also come to glorify my Father in heaven.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

How Not To Grow A Church

R.G. Lee spoke with clear prophetic utterance when he addressed this question, "How did Southern Baptists not grow?"  These words were spoken regarding the pinnacle of growth that had been experienced among Southern Baptist churches.  I believe it would serve us well to blow the dust off these ideas and reimplement them in our practices today.  Lee offered these 9 points in avoiding mediocrity in the churches.  We should not:

1.   Practice open church membership - this will devaluate our Baptist position.
2.  Disregard the Scriptural meaning of, and invitation to, the Lord's Supper - this will cheapen communion.
3.  Play down the importance of baptism - this will stifle our testimony.
4.  Emphasize ecumenicity - this will erase our distinctives.
5.  Be apologetic regarding the use of the name "Baptist" - this will weaken our prestige.
6.  Deny direct kinship with the New Testament Christians - this will cut the root of Biblical and doctrinal strength.
7.  Minimize the importance of training - this will close the churches on Sunday evenings.
8.  Take the side track of fanatical conservatism or radical liberalism - this will produce a series of splinter groups.
9.  Solicit financial support from non-Baptists - this will make beggars of the churches.

As I read this list, I realize that most of our churches have erred on most of these points.  My desire is not to beat up on the churches that Jesus loves, but to call us to reform.  That we might once again return to the faith that was once delivered unto us.  Each of these points are rooted either in biblical imperatives or in profound historical significance.  Hopefully, we have not become so ignorant of both that we cannot even see our departure from these truths.

I would like to invert these 9 points and offer them as good counsel to anyone planting or seeking reform in a church.

1.  Practice biblical church membership - regenerate people seeking to follow Christ in a covenant with God and one another for the sake of mutual responsibility and the propagation of the gospel.
2.  Fence the Table - Communion is to be holy, for baptized believers only, and should symbolize sacrifice not convenience.  "For he who eats and drinks in an unworthy manner eats and drinks judgment to himself." 1 Cor. 11:29
3.  Elevate the importance of Baptism - this is your profession of faith in Christ and inauguration into membership of a church, by ignoring it you are living without the most foundational commitment of Christianity.
4.  Get together in God's Word - all disciples of Jesus should be united by His atoning work, which is perfectly revealed in the Bible.  If someone will not unite on the Scriptures, they have moved away, not us.
5.  Don't apologize for being "Baptist" - negative connotations abound, but so do they with the name "Christian" and so did they in the 1st century.  The historic prestige of the free-church movement and the freedom we now enjoy owes gratitude to the Baptist forefathers that were killed because they believed we should be free.  Explain it, don't erase it.
6.  Be Biblical - there should never be a time when being Baptist means anything other than being Biblical.  Enough said.
7.  Offer more Bible training - biblical illiteracy is killing us.  The level of acceptance for what is now considered, "biblically knowledgeable" needs much help.  Sunday night is a good time, after all it is the Lord's Day...all day.  Many may not attend, but its better to have 10 people praying and studying than it is to have 0.  Preach expositionally.
8.  Be knowledgeable - the key to avoiding counterfeits is to know the truth.  To be theologically naive or ignorant is to contribute to fanatical conservatism and/or radical liberalism.
9.  Be a joyful giver - God's finance plan was initiated thousands of years ago.  Tithing is good but its only the beginning.  If everyone in our churches gave joyfully there would be more than enough.

May Christ be exalted and may His churches be faithful!

Thursday, February 28, 2013

The Bible Is Truth


What seemed like a normal day for a shepherd in the Middle East near Qumran, exploded into one of the most significant days of human history.  In November of 1946, a man guiding his sheep stepped into a cave and discovered the first of what are now known as the Dead Sea Scrolls.  The significance of this find was unknown to the shepherd, but later would reveal manuscripts containing portions of every Old Testament book (except Esther), dating back to within a few years of the writing of the last Old Testament books.  The discovery showed that the accuracy of the Bible's transmission to the modern day reader had been preserved.
The New Testament has been increasingly proven to be reliable with an unparalleled amount of manuscript evidence.  With over 20,000 pieces of manuscript evidence, including 5,700 in the Greek language alone, the reliability of the transmission of the original manuscripts is more than probable.  There are now 300 of these manuscripts dating back to the first 3 centuries of the original writing of the New Testament, and when all of the manuscripts are evaluated they reveal agreement of 99.9%.  Even critical scholars will admit that the .1% never negates any significant element of Christian doctrine.  The words of the original text were inerrantly inspired by God and have been preserved for the world.
It would of course make sense that the Bible is reliable and true.  We are told in Titus 1:2 and Hebrews 6:18 that it is impossible for God to lie.  Certainly the God of infinite perfection could never represent Himself falsely.  While praying to the Father, Jesus said in John 17:17, "Thy word is truth."  The Bible claims to be the very word of God.  2 Timothy 3:16 claims that "all Scripture is inspired by God" (referring primarily to the Old Testament) and 2 Peter 3:16 also considers the New Testament as Scripture.  The premises are as follows:  God speaks only truth, therefore God's word is true.  The Bible is God's word, therefore the Bible is true.  In conclusion, the Bible is true in everything that it teaches and affirms, therefore it is worthy of our highest attention as it answers the deepest questions of human experience.

Friday, February 22, 2013

“Foundations of Marriage: What Can I Hope to Gain Out of This Relationship?”


“Foundations of Marriage: 
What Can I Hope to Gain Out of This Relationship?”
Genesis 2:18-25
This message was preached on January 27, 2013 in the pulpit of Harvey Baptist Church.


Chuck Swindoll shares this story, he says, "Several years ago I was speaking at Moody Bible Institute. A lady wrote me a note saying, 'I did not worry about getting married. I did leave my future to God's will, but every night I hung a pair of men’s pants on the bed and knelt down and I prayed this prayer: Father in Heaven, hear my prayer and grant, if you will. I have hung a pair of trousers here. Please fill them with a man.'" Isn't that a great letter? A great prayer! Well, not long after that, as a matter of fact, the very next week, Chuck got back to the church he pastored in Fullerton, California at the time, and he said, "the story really didn't fit my sermon, I just ran it in because it was such a great letter. The father and the older son of a family I knew were in the church, but the mother was home with a sick daughter that day. When I read the woman's note I watched this father and his son. The father just cracked up laughing but the boy was rather serious. Interestingly, several weeks later I got a letter from the mother who had not been in that service. She wrote, 'Dear Chuck, I'm wondering if I have something to worry about. I noticed that our son, when he goes to bed at night has this bikini hanging over the foot of his bed'."  And that really does not have much to do with the sermon this morning but I thought that it was such a good story that I had to cram it in there. It does help us introduce the subject of this sermon series on marriage. I've entitled today’s message "Foundations of Marriage: What Can I Hope to Gain Out of This Relationship?" Not everyone in the room is married, I understand that, and not everyone in the room is going to be married and I understand that. Marriage strictly is a foundational part of our society. It is important that we look at marriage through the divine understanding that God gives us through His word. It is important that we hold up high the ideal of God's standard for marriage, and it is important that we play by the rules when we get married. It is also important we understand what God intends for a marriage to be like and its important that we strive for living that out. So we start this morning in Genesis 2 and we look at marriage by divine design, the foundations of marriage, Genesis 2. I will lay this out for you as we look at Genesis 2:18-25. I am going to lay it out for you in 3 different ways. There are 3 aspects that I see here most clearly. The first one is assistance, the second one is intimacy, and the third is oneness. So when we look at marriage and what I can hope to gain if I live out marriage according to God's plan, we can expect to gain assistance, I can gain intimacy, and I can gain oneness. So let's look at Genesis 2:18, "And the Lord God said, ‘It is not good that man should be alone; I will make him a helper comparable to him.’ Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him. And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. Then the rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman. And He brought her to the man and Adam said: 'This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh; She shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man.’ Therefore, a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh. And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed.” So first of all, we think about assistance and when we notice assistance in the text we think about marriage and the assistance that comes to us through marriage. We are speaking of the functional benefit. So you know God has created all the world, "In the beginning", Genesis 1:1, and then you see God creating the skies, you see God creating the land, you see God creating the oceans and the waters, and then you see God creating animals to crawl upon the land. You see God creating birds to fly in the air. You see God creating fish to swim in the sea and what you see in Genesis 1 is God creating all that is. He is the great uncaused cause that has caused all the universe and existence to come into being. So, God makes a declaration. Do you remember what the declaration is? When God looks out upon His creation He says, "It is very good." So God has declared the light to be good. He has declared the sun, moon and stars to be good and you see that throughout the creation account. You see God declaring these things to be good and now, you get to man. Adam is there. Adam had been created. God looks down upon the aloneness of Adam and says for the first time, "It is not good". This good is not a distinction between what is morally good or morally evil at this point. This is the kind of good that speaks to functionality. So when God looks at all the creation He has made, He declares it to be good in the sense of functional, but this is pre-Fall, sin has not entered the world yet. But when God looks at Adam, he looks at Adam and says it is not good; it is not properly functional for Adam to be alone. Now some people might think that God is like a sculptor, that He is forming and fashioning this creation, this sculpture of Adam and then, as an artist would, he would stand back and look at his sculpture and say, "You know I could do a little improving here or there. I could shake this up a little bit here and there." That's not what God is doing. God is not responding because God does not change. God is immutable. God is unchanging. What God is doing here is making a declaration. The declaration is this: it is not good and it is not functional for you to live life all alone. You need help. You need assistance. And one of the relationships, if not the primary relationship, I guess we should say, in the foundation of our society, so that you won't be alone, is the gift of marriage. But now, that's not just marriage. I know that there are some people that God gives the gift of singleness. I have friends, we have people in this church that God has given them the gift of singleness and there is nothing wrong with that. The apostle Paul was single. Jesus was never married. There is certainly nothing wrong with that, but there is something wrong with you being alone. You know the difference? You can come to church every Sunday and still be alone. If you emotionally separate yourself from other people, you are placing yourself in a very dangerous situation of being alone. The point is this; God has given us marriage so that we may have assistance, so that we may have help, so that we may have companionship. But God also has given us relationships in the life of the church and in the body of Christ through which we can also have companionship and friendship. So we need to hold up high this idea of marriage because it is in the marital relationship, here in Genesis 2, that God looks down upon Adam and says it is not good for him to be alone, he needs a helper. He needs a partner. He needs a co-laborer. He needs a companion. He needs assistance. This is the functional benefit. I can tell you, my life would be an absolute wreck if it were not for my wife. (That's right). Thanks! I mean I have been trying to get "Amen’s" all morning, finally I say something really self-deprecating, and Amen! Everybody's into that. (Laughter) It's absolutely true! It's the truth. And I can tell you that marriage has provided (and I may not get lunch when I get home) for me some of the most frustrating moments in my life. And the wife said, "amen". (Laughter) But marriage has provided for me the most wonderful, encouraging, strengthening and joyous moments in life as well. I'm very thankful for that. Now, I have to warn you, there are going to be times throughout this sermon where you are going to be thinking 'wow, that's really hard to live'. Well, I would ask for just a little bit of sympathy. How much harder do you think it is to live when you are also the guy who is up here preaching it? So I have to not only teach it and preach it according to what God says but then also, my wife is 'okay then Mr. Preacher Man, Mr. Marriage Expert'. We really need to strive for consistency here, and we really need to pray for one another. We are speaking here of the functional benefit. Can you imagine what life was like in the garden before the fall? There was a life of worship. There was no corruption. There was nothing standing in the way. It is a life of pure worship to God. It is a life of delight and pleasure. It is a life in the Garden of Eden, ruling and reigning our all the creatures and creation. It is a life of peace. It is a life of joyful work. They tended to the garden, but not by the sweat of their brow and not by the pain of their back. It was joyful to work. It was joyful to take care of what God had given them and God declared it to be very good, and they are fulfilled in God. As they are fulfilled in God they are serving one another. This is really what I want to focus in on when I talk about assistance and the functional benefits of marriage. I am talking about service. I am talking about serving one another. So God looks at Adam and says, "Its not good for Adam to be alone.” He needs a helper that is comparable to him. He needs someone who will assist him. He needs a co-laborer. He needs a companion. He needs somebody who will serve him and somebody he can serve. There is this great benefit in service, in servant hood. Oh, but sometimes marriage gets a little bit dull and dry and we grow insensitive and we grow slack in our efforts of service. One writer said this, "Marriage begins warm and intimate, but over time it can become cold and businesslike. Consider the seven ages of the marriage cold." So here are seven ways. In the first year of marriage the husband says, "Sugar, I am worried about my little baby girl. You've got a bad sniffle and I want to be you in the hospital for a complete checkup. I know the food is lousy but I have arranged for the food to be sent up from Rosini's. It is all arranged." He is taking care of his woman. Second year: "Listen honey, I don't like the sound of that cough. I have called Dr. Miller and he is going to rush right over. Now will you go to bed, like a good little girl, just for me? Please?" Third year: "Maybe you better lie down honey, nothing like a little rest if you're feeling bad. I'll bring you something to eat. Have we got any soup in the house?" Then year number four: "Look dear, be sensible. After you have fed the kids and washed the dishes you better hit the sack." Only the people who are married get this. Fifth year: "Why don't you take a couple of aspirin?" Year six: "If you would just gargle or something instead of sitting around here barking like seal." Year number seven, he says to his wife, "For heaven's sake, will you stop sneezing? What are you trying to do? Give me pneumonia?" The people in the first service thought that was funnier than you did. But I think it very well illustrates what happens in marriages so many times. We start off strong, like when you meet somebody and you do not show them that you are a lazy slob and insensitive. When you first meet somebody you put your best foot forward. You want to look nice. You want to be charming. You want to charm them. You want to make the feel special and feel good about themselves. Then what happens is that you go through the courting stage or dating, whatever you want to call it, and then you're still excited and emotions are running high and all these things are happening. Then you get married and pretty soon after you get married reality sets in. People get lazy in their relationships. They get lazy in their service for one another. I think that the story about the seven year cold illustrates what happens so many times. When we first start off, we are glad to serve and glad to be of assistance. We are glad to look to one another, to help one another and to benefit each other. But something happens along the way and we get away from God's plan for marriage. And men check out emotionally and women become bitter and resentful and, before you know it people are just cohabiting instead of being married. Now I have to go home and live this and I am doing the best I can to not only preach it but to live it. I can't do this without God's strength. Because the truth of it is, there are times when I am just tired and I don't really feel like being a servant. There are times in my life that I am exhausted, either emotionally or physically. There are times in my marriage when I don’t feel like doing certain things. There are times when I come home and it is seven or eight o'clock at night and I have been going since 6 or 7 in the morning and I have been taking on everybody else's problems and dealing with all my deadlines and going through all the things that I need to do, and I get home and I just want to sit down in my chair for a little while. Which I get to do plenty of times, I am not shorted on that. Their are times when, emotionally, Leanne wants to tell me about something that she has been through that day, and men, if you're honest, your first response is "would she please be quiet and leave me alone? I just want to rest. I am emotionally exhausted." You need to stop right there and realize that God gave you to her to be her assistant and no matter if you're tired or not, get over yourself, get over your tiredness, and be a servant. Serve her. Sometimes you are physically exhausted and my wife might say, "Could you go in there and get the kids bath water going?" Sometimes I’m just like, "No, I don’t want to'. I meant that is what I think. Wrong answer by the way in case you're a total moron and didn't know that. Write it down. That's not the right answer. The right answer is to realize that just as God declared that it was not good for Adam to be alone, God has also declared to me that it is not good for me to be alone. He has also declared to my wife that it is not good for her to be alone. So what God has done in His magnificent plan is put one man and one woman together so that they may serve each other and mutually assist each other and as they are serving each other, they are so filled up with the joy of the Lord that the marriage works and is joyful. Part of our problem is that we have just gotten lazy. We would rather watch television than listen to our spouse. Tell you right now, you get rid of the television, you get rid of that junk that you are paying $50 a month to pumped into your living room and you will have an outright revival in your house. I can tell you from personal experience. I can tell you a couple of other people in the church have done the same thing and they have experienced it. My marriage is stronger, my marriage is much stronger since I have quit letting all that trash be pumped into my living room and taking my attention. You know what actually happens now as a family? There are times that we actually just look at each other and enjoy one another! It is nice. It is good. So think about assistance, think about service and what is going to happen when one spouse is serving the other and the other spouse is serving this other. Then what happens, is the man is serving the wife, the wife is serving the husband and they are so busy serving each other that they have died to self-preferences. They have died to selfish thoughts. They have crucified those things and they are caught up in serving one another for the glory of God, and for the benefit of each other. It’s good stuff. The second thing I want to point out to you in the text is intimacy. What I mean by intimacy is the affectionate trustworthiness. So when we think of assistance we think of the functional benefit, both emotionally and physically. Also, when we think about intimacy we are thinking about the affectionate trustworthiness. What I mean to include is that there is confidence and there is enjoyment. There is to be confidence in a marital relationship and there is to be enjoyment in the marital relationship. There are 4 things I want to point out to you in the text. In verse 18, “And the Lord God said, ‘It is not good that man should be alone; I will make a helper comparable to him.’ Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to Adam to see what he would call them. And whatever Adam called each living creature, that was its name. So Adam gave names to all cattle, to the birds of the air, and to every beast of the field. But for Adam there was not found a helper comparable to him.” Now I want to point out here, it’s not God sitting back saying, “Okay, I need some names for these animals. So let’s see what kind of names Adam will come up with. So I am just going to run them all through the cattle shoot and see what Adam comes up with”. That’s not what is happening here. What is happening here is God at work in Adam’s life. God is creating all of these creatures; he gives Adam the privilege and responsibility of naming all of these creatures and, in all of this process…well let me explain this. As one walks by Adam says, “There is a hairy, creepy-crawly thing”. Another one walks by and he says, “There is another creepy-crawly thing with four legs. There is another creepy-crawly thing with six legs. There is a feathery thing with feet and wings”…and you get the idea. Through all the naming of these animals, God is doing something. Do you see what it is? He is showing Adam that he is alone. He is showing Adam that he needs a helper. He is showing Adam that he needs more than what exists just in the animal kingdom. So God is bringing about this gracious presentation and you see that it is a divine presentation, for in verse 21, “And the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. Then the rib which the Lord God had taken from man He made into a woman, and He brought her to the man”. It is a divine presentation. It is as though God is leading her down the aisle for this great initial wedding ceremony. God creates her out of the side of man and God presents her to the man. You see here, that God is very gracious and He is building a relationship upon which there will be affectionate trustworthiness. After Adam names all of the creatures, he names this, he names that, he names this, and then he names that. And after all of the naming of the creatures, you need to catch what Adam does here in verse 23. Now God presents Eve to Adam and after naming this, this, this, and this, now, in verse 23 Adam says, “Now, this!” There is an emphasis here in the original language to say that Adam has named all of the creatures but now there is this most beautiful, most wonderful of everything that has been created and now, THIS! Yes! Thank you Lord, now this! Do you pretty well get what I am trying to say? Some of you don’t. We will talk later. I don’t know what else to say, other than it is a very exciting moment for Adam. He’s excited about this beautiful woman God has placed in front of him. It is the closest relationship of them all. You see it even reflected in the terminology that is used. There is man and there is woman. So this is the closest relationship they will experience. You even see that in the Hebrew, it is the words ish and isha. It is a very honorable relationship. I think this is very important. I think it has been left out. This has been left out for the lives and marriages of many. Do you know what the divorce rate is now in our country? Over 50%. That means 1 in 2 and I am not much of a mathematician. Every other marriage is ending in divorce. Something is wrong. We need help. We need to fix it. I think that one of the places that it starts is by recognizing that marriage is to be an honorable thing. You see there that they are naked and they are not ashamed. They don’t become ashamed of this until after the fall. Then sin comes in. Then there is guilt. Then they are looking to hide with leaves and all these terrible things are going on but before the Fall there is no guilt. It is an honorable thing to be together and they are enjoying that and what I see is this: Among this honorable relationship there is confidence and there is enjoyment. That should still be very much a part of marriage. There should be an affectionate trustworthiness. Do you know how trust is gained? It’s built. Trust is built. Trust is gained by showing trustworthiness. So in a marriage, you need to be working together in such a way, this is where point number 2 builds off of point number 1, that you’re so busy serving one another through the service to one another you build up this affectionate trustworthiness, this confidence and this enjoyment in the relationship, so as you serve one another you grow in intimacy for one another. It’s such a beautiful thing. It’s a wonderful thing. What happened? Why did this change? Because I promise you, everybody in the room can testify that that has not been the overall experience of marriage. Right? There are some other things involved that are not so happy. Why? Why did that come about? Why do we struggle the way we do? You read about it in Genesis 3. It’s all because of sin. It’s all because of the Fall. You might rightly say that it is all because of the rebellion. At the heart of the Fall, at the heart of Adam and Eve’s rebellion against God, is this: they sought for their desires to be fulfilled somewhere other than God. The lesson there is this: you should not seek desire, you should not seek to fulfill your desire, you should not seek pleasure anywhere outside of your relationship with God and the relationship He has given you to fulfill that pleasure. If you do, you will see Genesis 3 in your life and I can summarize it with this: all Hell breaks loose, literally. I see it all the time. So we need to get back to service, co-laboring, helping and then, therefore, growing this affectionate trustworthiness. It takes time. Our marriage was absolutely crazy for the first couple of years. We didn’t know what to do. We were learning and it was really difficult in so many ways. I’ve thrown a…well, anyway, that doesn’t matter. I will just let you keep…I didn’t throw anything at her but I did throw a cell phone out the window one time…going about 60 miles an hour. You know, back in the day, the bag phones? Because I was so frustrated. I was an idiot…literally. I was an absolute ignorant fool regarding marriage. Then God grew us and matured us. We still have our moments and you know, marriage is difficult but it’s great. It is good. It is because God has taught us how to do it. I will never forget, one time I was invited to preach at this little country church in St. Joe, Texas. Does anyone know where St. Joe is? Not five of you. There is a little Dairy Queen in St. Joe, a couple of little churches. It’s just a small community but it’s a nice little place. A friend of mine pastored a little country church out in St. Joe. He asked if I would come and preach for him one time when he was out of town and I said I would love to. I went over there to this little run-down building. Since then they have built a new building. I will never forget, their were about 18 people there that morning, which was fine with me. I was just glad that anyone would listen to me preach. Right before I got up to preach they announced there was this older couple that was going to do the special music for that morning. Now after we had already sung from the hymnal without any kind of instrumentation, not because they were church of Christ or a capella only, but because there was nobody to play the piano and nobody to play a guitar. I did a little humming but I don’t think that helped much. So anyway, we were sitting there and this old couple starts strolling down and she is in a wheelchair and he is pushing her in this wheelchair and I thought, “Well this ought to be interesting. They are going to sing this special music”. I think this is great but who knows what it is going to be like. So they turn around, and of course there was no accompaniment, there was no instrumentation, they didn’t have a hymnbook, they didn’t have anything. I think he made up the song as he went. I just don’t know. But he looked down at his wife and he looked at us and he said, “We have been married over seventy years and the Lord has sure been good to us. Right now our bodies are falling apart and in our early years we sure had some tough times”. He looked down and he was just weeping. Everybody in the room was weeping at that point. He looked down at his wife in that wheelchair and he took her hand and he held it like this and he patted her on the hand and said, “Darling, I just want you to know I love you”. And she said, “I love you too”. They sang together, what was one of the most beautiful love songs I have heard in my life. I don’t remember the words and I don’t know what they said but I will never forget that moment, because in that moment I was seeing two people who had built confidence and enjoyment. They had built affectionate trustworthiness in a relationship, in marriage. They knew true intimacy. That’s what God has for us. That’s what God gives us in marriage if we would ever just like to get it! If we will just be willing to put forth the effort to gain it, God has provided all of this for us! So I’ll just say a little point of application here, men compliment your wives. Tell them how much you love them. Tell them how beautiful they are. Tell them how much you cherish them. Don’t just tell them, show them! I doubt there is a woman in the room who would reject that. There are some men that I just want to grab them by the shirt and shake them and say, “What is wrong with you?!” Men, encourage your wives. Women, encourage your husbands. Tell your husbands how much they are appreciated. Tell them how proud of them you are. You don’t have to tell them they smell good just tell them that you love them. Then I will also say this as another point of application, because this is where I have noticed infidelity always seems to start. Don’t you dare look for that affirmation in someone else. Husbands, don’t let…nobody is going to be complimenting my wife. As I say this, I know I have work to do in this area. So I’m just going to be honest with you here, I am going to tell you right now that I am going to work hard so that I’m so busy complimenting my wife and telling her how much I love her and how beautiful she is that it doesn’t matter what anyone else has to say because it isn’t anything compared to what I’m saying! There is no excuse for this kind of thing. We should not be allowing this kind of thing. Treat each other with love and respect and mutual admiration. Be each other’s companion. Be each other’s helper. Be each other’s co-laborer. Build each other up and build the affectionate trustworthiness, the confidence, and the enjoyment that goes with the kind of marriage that God created yours to be. One last thing, oneness. Oneness. I know that may not sound like the most scintillating point of a sermon but it is so extremely important. It is such a major theme here in these verses. As a matter of fact, I would say oneness is the foundational essence of marriage. Oneness is the foundational essence of marriage and it is in oneness that fullness is found. It is in oneness that satisfaction is experienced. Your love is there. Many times, God says, “the two become one”. He brought her in verse 22; “He brought the woman to the man”. In verse 23 you see Adam says, “This is now bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh. She shall be called woman because she is taken out of man.” As he declares that with great excitement, you see in verse 24, now Moses offers his commentary on this. “Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.” The union is consummated. God has presented Eve to Adam. They have become one physically, spiritually and emotionally. They are united and it is such a good thing that in verse 25 they are both naked: “The man and his wife, and were not ashamed”. Now you see here that God takes Eve out of the rib of Adam. Isn’t that an interesting place? Why does he take Eve out of the side? He created the woman out of the side of man. It’s not intended here to only refer to the rib bone as the rib bone, the flesh, out of the side of man. I think Matthew Henry gets it right when he says this, “God created woman out of the side of man. Not out of the foot that she may be trampled under foot by him, and not of the head that she may rule over him. But out of the side, that the two may walk together side-by-side helping one another.” You see in this oneness, God made her, that is to say that God built her, and then they become one. They are joined together. They become one flesh. They experience fullness in the community of the two becoming one. I need to point out a few other things as we pass through these verses. You will notice the commentator, Moses. So the story of Adam and Eve had been passed on by oral tradition for all of these years. Then Moses, writing from the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, records this story in Genesis and then he offers this commentary in verses 24 and 25, “Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.” One very important aspect of marriage is understanding very simple mathematics. The two become one, not three and not five. You get married; you’re a big boy now. When you get married you’re a big girl now. You don’t go run to mommy and daddy every time something goes wrong. And mommy and daddy need to help you understand that. This is not Richmond’s commentary, it is Moses’. “Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.” Now in our marriage, that’s one thing that I can say that is so good about my wife. I don’t think there is anyone, I guess I know this, or at least I think I know this. There is not anyone outside of me that my wife has ever spoken badly to about me. Does that make sense? Has anybody in this church, I’m serious; I’m honestly asking this. Has anyone in this church ever heard my wife say anything bad about me? Have you? I want to know and I want to know right now. I already know the answer to the question. You know what is amazing? I have never heard her say anything bad about you either. You know what is even more amazing? My mother-in-law does not hear my wife talk badly about me. She just doesn’t do that because she knows Genesis 2:24 is important. If we are going to have oneness in the marriage then it needs to be us! Not everybody else! Oneness…1+1=2, not 3, not 5.
So we have Assistance, Intimacy, and Oneness.  These are the foundations of marriage, and this is what you can expect to gain from a marriage built upon these principles revealed in God's word.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

I Thee Wed...Marriage by Divine Design

About 6-8 months ago I planned to preach a series of messages on marriage.  We have many younger people in our congregation who are contemplating marriage, at least some day.  I meet with many young couples who are engaged to be married and I help them with pre-marital counseling.  In these meetings, I have always sought to do a simple exposition on what I believe to be the key passages about marriage throughout the Bible.  It seemed to me a good idea to put it all together in a series of sermons and then into a booklet.  So here is a link to the video sermons of the 1st four messages that I have preached so far.  This has greatly challenged me to be the husband my wife deserves and I have found great strength and sustenance in the sufficiency of God's word.  Hope you do also.

http://vimeo.com/user7981643

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

The Necessity of Christ


The contingency of our existence declares the providence of God.  Which one of us will grasp our next breath?  Who will produce global photosynthesis and provide the next meal?  Who will maintain our proper distance from the sun?  We are contingent beings, totally dependent upon God’s merciful provision for our being.  Acts 17:25 says, “God gives to all life, breath, and all things”  and verse 28, “in Him we live and move and have our being.”  Thomas Aquinas rightly noticed that the contingency of our existence cries out the necessity of God’s existence.  I would add that it also reveals to us God’s common grace.  He is gracious to send the rain upon the just and the unjust.  He is benevolent to grant us the ability to enjoy love, kindness, and beauty.  It would be logically absurd to deny the necessary existence of God, but I do not wish only to say that God exists.  The cry of the human heart does not stop there.  We need more.  Who will make God personal to us?  Who will comfort us in our times of sorrow?  Who will rescue us from the trouble sin delivers?  The Bible speaks without equivocation to these questions and so much more.  For Colossians 2:9 tells us, “For in Christ dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily” and John 1:14 says, “And the Word (Christ, who is divine) became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.”  It does not require any great leap of faith to believe that God exists.  The eternally necessary question is this, “will you receive His grace and truth which comes only in the person of Jesus Christ?”