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This is a website dedicated to Jesus Christ.
It will be "a work in progress," reflecting the Lord's
inspiration.

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Let hopelessness give way to peace

Among my childhood memories is an anxious period during the Cold War, when President John Kennedy issued an ultimatum to Russian leader Nikita Khruschev to remove missiles from a Cuban launch site. My wife and I both recall school drills that involved crouching under desks in case of nuclear attack.

Those who study history realize how very close this world came to disaster during this standoff, which ended with Khruschev removing the missiles. I was blessed this Christmas with discovery of a sermon my father shared during that "crisis season" of 1962.

In the midst of that time of high anxiety, Dad posed this question: "Will you believe that there are people who do not worry about the prospect of atomic death without warning?"

He then answered boldly: "There is a way to a sure confidence that were death to come this day, life will have just begun."

He continued: "Ways and means of waging war and inflicting destruction become more terrible, but men do not change in their basic nature, loves, loyalties, fears and hopes -- because God has planted in the soul of every man a hunger to know Him and His peace."

"That desire is often perverted," he continued, "and many die trying alone to find their destiny. How tragic this is so! Still, Christ stands with open arms and calls confused, twisted and lost men and women to His peace, His salvation for now and all eternity."

The Christmas message ended with this prayer: "Dear Heavenly Father, let this be the last hopeless Christmas for all who hear, and the first joyous Christmas for as many as yet wander apart from your peace and assurance that life was given to all this day in Bethlehem -- if we will but take the gift of Jesus in whose name we pray. Amen."

We pray that prayer again today, 50 years later. May all who are fearful and alone come to know the peace of a life lived in and through Jesus Christ.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Godly characteristics

I was listening to the car radio a few days ago when the speaker, whose name I cannot recall, talked about "the characteristics of a godly man."

There were four characteristics on his list. They follow, with associated Scriptures:

Listener. Mark 9:7: "Then a cloud formed, overshadowing them, and a voice came out of the cloud: 'This is My beloved Son. Listen to Him'."

Righteous. Hebrews 10:38: "But My righteous one shall live by faith; and if he shrinks back, My soul has no pleasure in him."

Obedient. 1 Peter 1:14: "As obedient children, do not be conformed to the former lusts which were yours in your ignorance."

Humble. Isaiah 66:2: "For My hand made all these things, thus all these things came into being, declares the Lord. But to this one I will look, to him who is humble and contrite of spirit, and who trembles at My word."

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

The wonder of fellowship


Often Jesus manifests His presence in our lives through the words and actions of fellow believers. That reality was demonstrated in dramatic fashion in our lives last week after my wife suffered a serious fall.

Soon after arriving at the emergency room I was able to text a handful of brothers and our fellowship prayer team leader as a series of examinations and tests began in a busy ER center. Prayers for peace yielded immediate results, and prayers for His protection were answered when we ultimately learned my wife had suffered no breaks or threatening internal injuries.

"You're battered and bruised," said the physician, "but not broken."

With that welcome news we were released to the comfort of our home, where we learned of continued prayer on my wife's behalf. We also saw Christ's love reflected by His children in the form of phone calls, visits and delivery of meals, one of which included the delicious homemade bread pictured here.

My wife recalls the painful minutes after her fall on a slippery deck a block away from our home. She remembers asking "Why, God?" as she struggled alone with the pain and uncertainty of the injury that occurred when she was simply trying to deliver a pie to our nephews.

The answer to her question is still not certain, but we see clearly that she was never alone. God was present throughout her ordeal, protecting her from a myriad of physical injury possibilities more serious than what she suffered. We see clearly the opportunity the fall created for an immediate call for His comfort and protection. We have experienced the love He expressed through many gracious brothers and sisters who came alongside, offering His love through prayer, phone calls, visits and delivery of meals prepared with loving hands.

We give thanks, Jesus, for the unconditional love you modeled for us as you "emptied yourself" and became flesh, ultimately choosing -- even though you were without sin -- to take on our sins and die on the cross so that we may be redeemed, admitted into the promise of eternal life with the Father rather than suffering the eternal separation we deserve. We give you thanks for the wonder of the fellowship of believers, a precious and powerful means of manifesting your presence in our lives.

Acts 2:42 They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles' teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.