Pastor’s Perspective:   CHRISTIANS THAT “HAUNT” THE WORLD!

 Uncategorized  Comments Off on Pastor’s Perspective:   CHRISTIANS THAT “HAUNT” THE WORLD!
Nov 222015
 

Pastor’s Perspective:   CHRISTIANS THAT “HAUNT” THE WORLD!

By:  Ron Woodrum

 

Clarence Jordan, famous for building the Christian Koinonia Farm in Americus, Georgia, to benefit poor and needy people, wrote often about Christian influence.  He wrote these powerful words:

 

     It is difficult to be indifferent to a wide-awake Christian.  That is, a real, live person of God.  It is even more difficult to be indifferent to a whole Church filled with Christians like that!  You can hate them, you can love them, but you soon find out that you cannot ignore them!  They are here to stay.  It is not so much what they say; it is not so much what they do;  it is WHO THEY ARE!…they are impactful because of the Jesus they know.  They will haunt you by what they are.  You can’t put them out of your mind anymore thatn you can put off your own shadow.  They are there to confront you with a different way of life; a new way of thinking; a new set of values; a higher standard of living.  In short, when they cross your path you know you have come face to face with the Kingdom of God.  All you can do is crown them or crucify them, YOU CAN’T AVOID THEM!”

 

INFLUENCE!  THAT IS THE INFLUENCE OF A SALTY CHRISTIAN!  THAT IS THE INFLUENCE OF LIGHT DISPELLING DARKNESS!

 

     Bill Bright, founder of Campus Crusade for Christ, and Christian leader par execellance, who went to be with the Lord in 2003, told of how his life was changed forever, to have an impact for Jesus Christ,  He said that in 1947 he visited Glasgow, Scotland.  He met a world renown New Testament Scholar named James Stewart.  Dr. Stewart told him something that forever impacted him, and eventually all he influenced.  Dr. Stewart told him, “Bill, if we could show the world that being committed to Jesus Christ is not a tame, hum-drum, sheltered monotony, but instead the most exciting, thrilling adventure that a human spirit can ever know, those standing outside the Church, looking in, wondering who Jesus is, would instead come in, crown him King, and pay allegience to Him, and we would see the greatest revival that has ever been seen this side of Pentecost!”

 

CHRISTIAN INFLUENCE!  THE INFLUENCE OF A SALTY CHRISTIAN.

 

     Elihu Burritt wrote this, “No human being can come into this world without INCREASING OR DIMINISHING the sum total of human happiness.  Not only of the present, but of every subsequent age of humanity.  No one can detach himself from this connection.  There is no sequestered spot in the universe, no dark niche along the disc of nonexistence to which he can retreat from his relations to others, where he can withdraw the influence of his existence upon the moral destiny of the world.  EVERYWHERE, HIS PRESENCE OR ABSENCE WILL BE FELT!  Everywhere he will have companions who will be better or worse because of him.  It is an old saying…of fearful and fathomless import…that we are forming characters for eternity.  Forming characters?  Who’s?  Our own or others?  Both!  And in that momentous fact lies the peril of the responsibility of our existence.  Who is sufficient for such a thought?  Thousands of my fellow beings will yearly enter eternity with characters differing from those they would have carried there, had I never lived!  The sunlight of that would reveal my finger marks in their primary formations, and in their successive strata of thought and life.”

 

I have chosen that vital statement he made as the title of the message today-CHRISTIAN INFLUENCE:  EVERYWHERE OUR PRESENCE OR ABSENCE WILL BE FELT!  That is what Jesus meant in our text today.  “we are the salt of the world!”  Salt was vital to the ancient world.  It was precious.  It was invaluable.  Jesus delcared that we are too!

 

 

 Posted by at 12:16 am

PASTOR’S PERSPECTIVE: “SLOWLY GROWING WISE-ABOUT THE NEXT TWENTY YEARS!”

 Uncategorized  Comments Off on PASTOR’S PERSPECTIVE: “SLOWLY GROWING WISE-ABOUT THE NEXT TWENTY YEARS!”
Nov 152015
 

PASTOR’S PERSPECTIVE: “SLOWLY GROWING WISE-ABOUT THE NEXT TWENTY YEARS!”

By:  Ron Woodrum

 

Tri Valley Baptist Church has completed its first twenty years of ministry.  Over the years we have had many men of God lead us in the ministry of winning our community to Christ.  I believe it has been the measure of every Pastor to lead this congregation in MAKING DISCIPLES (Winning the Lost); MARKING DISCIPLES (Getting them to join the Church and giving public testimony to being a new creation, dying to the old man, rising to walk in newness of life, and by the baptism of the Spirit being placed in the body of Christ the Church);MATURING DISCIPLES (the goal of all the preaching and teaching ministries of the Church) and probably the number one sign of maturity in Christ is following in the next step of MULTIPLYING DISCIPLES (every mature believer should be involved in sharing his faith and winning others to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ, and teaching their converts to do the same).  It all seems so simple when summarized that way…but somewhere-somehow-the process has broken down.  We are losing ground-FAST!  There must be some changes made in our methods.  They tell us that to keep doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is the definition of INSANITY!  Somehow we need to grow wiser about ministry to our ever-changing world.

Having said that I feel like Parsifal, a young lad in Richard Wagners play of the same name.  It seems that Parsifal’s father had been an honorable knight who joined other knights in the mission of finding the Holy Grail.  He had been killed in the pursuit.  His mother kept the fate of Parsifal’s father from him, and forbid him to even own or use a sword.  The drama is the story about how Parsifal discovers who he is; who his father was; what his father’s mission was; and he finally, and successfully follows in his father’s dream.  Wagner’s characterization of Parsifal is “a good man growing slowly wise”.  That was his key to success.  Perhaps it is our key too.  We need wisdom from on high to understand and love our community.  Our world has changed.  Old techniques.  Old cliches.  Old methods that used to work are quickly rejected by today’s post-Christian culture.  What are we to do?  One of my favorite authors, even still today, is Francis Schaeffer.  His book True Spirituality is one of the most important books ever written on the Christian life.  Another of his books, The Church At the End of the Twentieth Century,  is extremely pertinent today as well.  Two conclusions of his book that we need to understand are: (1)  We live in a post-Christian world that neither understands nor wants what we have to offer in the Gospel of Christ.  (2)  Most of the world is desperately seeking love, as Johnny Lee  said, “in all the wrong places”.  Schaeffer stated that even though the world will change, (an he hit the nail on the head speaking very prophetically) the key to reaching them will not change.  It is still the “love of Christ” fleshed out in his disciples that will be the magnet that will continue to draw the lost to the Christ and His Cross. Jesus words, “If I be lifted up I will draw all men unto myself” (John 121:32) is still true today.  How long will it take us to learn that truth?

Leaving the winning of the world in the hands of an imperfect Church was a risk.  C.S. Lewis wrote, “God seems to do nothing of Himself which He can possibly delegate to His creatures.  He commands us to do slowly and blunderingly (is that a word?) what He could do perfectly and in the twinkling of an eye”.  There is no greater illustration of that principle than fact that Jesus has delegated to His Church the task of winning the world before He comes back.  How do we do it?  Jesus is our PATTERN.  We are to emulate Him.  Helmut Thielicke describes the ministry of Jesus in these words, “What tremendous pressures there must have been within Him to drive Him to hectic, nervous, explosive activity!  He sees…as no one else sees, with an infinite and awful nearness, the agony of dying man, the anguish of the wounded conscience, injustice, dread, terror and beastliness.  He sees and hears all of this with the heart of a Savior…must not this fill his every waking hour and rob Him of sleep at night?  Must He not begin to set the fire burning, to win people, to work out strategic plans to evangelize the world, to work, work, furiously work, unceasingly, unrestingly, before the night comes when no man can work?  That’s what we would imagine the earthly life of the Son of God to  be like, if we were to think of Him in human terms.  But how utterly different was the actual life of Jesus!  Though the burden of the whole world lay heavy on His shoulders-though Corinth, Ephesus, Athens, and whole continents, with all their desperate need, were desperately near to His heart, though suffering and sinning were going on in chamber, street corner, castle, and slums, seen only by the Son of God-though this immeasurable misery and wretchedness cried out aloud for a physician, he has time to stop and talk to the individual…By being obedient in His little corner of the highly provincial precincts of Nazareth and Bethlehem he allows Himself to be fitted into the great mosaic whose master is God.  And that is why He has time for persons; (to love them individually) for all time is in the hands of the Father.  That is why peace and not unrest go out from Him.  For God’s faithfulness already spans the world like a rainbow: He does not need to build it; He only needs to walk beneath it” (The Waiting Father).  So do we.  Jesus encountered people individually.  He loved them.  Sometimes they responded to that love and choose to invite Him into their life, and ended up following HIm.   Other times they walked away-though the Bible says grieved, for rejecting Him who the depths of our souls desire, creates a greater vacuum inside than before we encounter Him.  We must follow His pattern.

But Jesus is also our PRESENCE AND POWER.  Trying to do our mandate and mission in our own power will only end in frustration and failure.  Frederick Buechner describes how he learned this lesson in Telling Secrets:  “Love you neighbor as yourself is part of the great commandment.  The other way to say it is, Love yourself as your neighbor.  Love yourself not in some ego-centric, self-serving sense but love yourself the way you would love your neighbor, nourishing yourself, trying to understand yourself, comfort and strengthen yourself.  Ministers in particular, people in the caring professions in general, are famous for neglecting themselves with the result that they are apt to become in their own way as helpless and crippled as the people they are trying to care for and thus are no longer selves who can be of much use to anybody.  If your daughter is struggling for life in a raging torrent, you do not save her by jumping into the torrent with her, which only leads to the both of you drowning together.  Instead you keep your feet on the dry bank-you maintain as best you can your own inner peace, the best and strongest of who you are-and from that solid ground reach out your rescuing hand…Take care of yourself so you can take care of them.  A bleeding heart is of no help to anybody if it bleeds to death!”  Beuchner was speaking autobiographicaly here.  His own daughter was drowning in the torrent of anorexia.  He tried to help her but was losing the battle because her battle consumed him.  She finally got help in a clinic three thousand miles away from him.  He was not present at all to protect her by manipulating events on her behalf.  The people who were there-the Doctors, nurses, social workers, and even a judge who hospitalized her against her will.  They all loved her with a love that held her accountable for choosing her own healing-something her father could not do.  Buechner concluded, “Those men and women were not haggard, dithering, lovesick as I was.  They were realistic, tough, conscientious, and in those ways, though they would never  have put it in such terms themselves, loved her in a sense that I believe was closer to what Jesus meant by love than what I had been doing”.

Philip Yancey says, “Jesus healed everyone who asked Him too, but not everyone He met.  He had the amazing rare capacity to let people choose their own pain.  He exposed Judas to love, but did not try to prevent his evil deed; He denounced the Pharisees without trying to coerce them to His point of view.  He answered a wealthy man’s question with uncompromising words and let him walk away.  Mark adds the words about that incident “Jesus looked on him and loved Him” (Mk. 10:21).  But he still walked away!  And Jesus let him!  In short, Jesus showed incredible respect for human freedom.  He had no compulsion to convert the entire world in His lifetime or cure people unready to be cured.  He encountered them  and called them to Himself in love.  If they did not have the desire to respond love to love, He let them turn away”.  That will still work today.  Jesus is still the epitome of relevance.  So is His cross.  Charles Swindoll, in Come Before Winter, quotes George Mcloud with words still very relevant to us-“It is we who have hauled the cross out of sight.  It is we who have left the impression it belongs in the cloistered halls of a seminary, or beneath the soft shadows of stained glass between marble statues.  I am simply arguing that the cross be raised again in the center of the marketplace, as well as on top of the Church steeple.  Jesus was not crucified in a cathedral between two candles, but on a cross between two thieves; on a town garbage heap; at a cross road so cosmopolitan that they had to write His title in Hebrew, Latin, and Greek…and at the kind of place where cynics talk smut, and thieves curse, and soldiers gamble, BECAUSE THAT IS WHERE HE DIED, AND THAT IS WHAT HE DIED ABOUT.  THAT IS WHERE THE CHURCH OUGHT TO BE, AND WHAT THE CHURCH PEOPLE OUGHT TO BE ABOUT!”   His way still works…even twenty years later.  But it has to be fleshed-out by real-life Christians.  Any takers?

 

 

 Posted by at 12:17 am

PASTOR’S PERSPECTIVE: “LAST DAY BATTLEFIELD-THE HEART OF MAN”

 Uncategorized  Comments Off on PASTOR’S PERSPECTIVE: “LAST DAY BATTLEFIELD-THE HEART OF MAN”
Nov 082015
 

PASTOR’S PERSPECTIVE: ”LAST DAY BATTLEFIELD-THE HEART OF MAN”

By:  Ron Woodrum

 

     In his book, The Brother’s Karamozov, Fyodor Dostoyevsky poignantly states, “The awful thing is that beauty is mysterious as well as terrible.  God and the devil are fighting there and the battlefield is the heart of man”.  That battle involves recognizing truth-God’s truth.  The devil is, and always has been, in the business of perveting God’s truth into a lie, and getting man to believe it, and thus choose the path of error and destruction.  He is a master of deception and his lies are passing for truth quite successfully in our Post-Christian world.  Paul warned us that in the last days we would be inundated with “doctrines of demons”(   I Tim. 4:1), and that God would let the world “believe a lie, because they believed not the truth”  ( II Thes. 2:11).  Man’s problem today is not knowing the truth, but “suppressing” and “rejecting” the truth in exchange for a lie.  Dostevesky warned about that too.  He wrote, “Above all don’t lie to yourself.  The man who lies to himself and listens to his own lies comes to the point that he cannot distinguish the truth within him, or around him, and so loses all respect for himself and for others, and having no respect he ceases to know love”.  That I believe is a very accurate discription of the very condition modern man finds himself in.  David Roper, in his book A Beacon In The Darkness, hits the nail on the head, when he writes, “We live in a world of Cosmic deceit, hidden agendas, treacherous motivations, illusions, and lies.  And Satan is behind it all.  His strategy is to deceive.  His objective is to destroy.  His shrewd cruel mind is behind the lies that buffet us all day long, the media messages that encourage us to ‘find ourselves’ in something other than the living God, to go for the gusto, but to leave the Savior out.  The lie comes into the world in the guise of beauty and good, (our minds are repelled by ugliness and obvious evil), but the deceit inevitably sickens the soul and it begins to die.  For when Satan has accomplished his purpose and separated men and women from God, what can they do but wither and die eternally?”  That is why Isaiah warned, “Woe to them that call evil good, and good evil; that call darkness light, and light darkness” ( Isaiah 5:20).  Denis deRougement, in a book entitled The Devil’s Share, clarifies the plight of our modern world with more clarity than anyone I have ever read.  He says the problem today is compounded by the difference between a lie and a pure lie.  This is what he says, “There are two ways of lying, as there are two ways of deceiving a customer.  If a scale registers 15 ounces, you can say,’it is a pound’.  Your lie will remain relative to an invariable measure of the true. If the customer checks it he can see that he is being robbed, and he knows by how much you are robbing him; a truth remains as a judge between you.  But if you tamper with the scale itself, it is the criterion of the truth which is denatured; there is no longer any possible control.  And little by little you will forget that you are cheating.  You may even bet that you will exercise all your scruples in giving exact weight, perhaps by adding a few piches for ‘good measure’, for the smile of the buyer and the satisfaction of your virture.  That is ‘pure lying’, the moment you falsify the scale of truth itself, all your virtures are at the service of evil and are accomplices in its contagion”.  The devil has tampered with the scale.  He has caused us to throw out the accurate scale of God’s inspired Word, and receive his counterfeit scale.  When the standard is corrupted, even honorable people become agents of evil.  They believe they are doing right when in fact what they are doing is dead wrong, and they unwittingly foist their wrong-doing on others.  That is what has happened today.  Satan has moved the parameters so that even ‘principaled people’ have been brought into the service of evil.  Their lack of a fixed reference point has led them into profound moral confusion and deep sense of insecurity.  I saw a cartoon once depicting two people talking.  One said to the other, “I still believe in evil-I just don’t know what qualifies!”  People still believe in good and evil, it’s just that no one knows  where the parameters are anymore-and that makes for a very dangerous and uncertain world!  Black is white; white is black; up is down, and down is up;  we are turned loose, without an anchor, of a raging sea helplessly tossed about by which ever way the cultural wind blows.  We will end up destroyed on the rocks unless we turn back to the Word that transcends culture and circumstance, and is older than time!

It seems to me that Norman Maclean raises that question in his book A River Runs Through It.  His book, and Robert Redford’s movie about how A Presbyterian minister tries to teach his sons about life through fly fishing and spiritual wisdom.  One son seems to find the truth, while the other refuses the guidance and help and remains a free-spirited son who drinks too much, lives too fast, and eventually loses his life in a back-alley brawl.  The father tries, through the medium of fly fishing, to pass on to his sons the underlying, unchanging values of his life.  Maclean recalls one streamside exchange with his father:  ” ‘What have you been reading?’I asked.  ‘A book’, my father replied.  It was on the ground on the other side of him.  So I would not have to bother to look over his knees to see it, he said, ‘A good Book’.  Then he told me, ‘in the part I was reading it says the Word was in the beginning, and that’s right.  I used to think that water was first, but if you listen carefully you will hear the words underneath the water’.  ‘That’s because you’re a preacher first and then a fisherman’, I told him.  ‘No’, my father said, ‘You are not listening carefully.  The water runs over the words.  Paul will tell you the same thing.’ I looked to see where the book was left open and knew just enough Greek to recognize ‘logos’ as the Word.  I guessed from it and from the  argument that I was looking at the first verse of John’ “.  Mclean emphasizes that we can take the truth and try to help but it has to be received, not rejected.    Mclean writes, “Each one of us here today will at one time in our lives look upon a loved one who is in need and ask the same question:  We are willing to help, Lord, but what, if anything, is needed?  For it is true we can seldom help those closest to us.  Either we don’t know what part of ourselves to give or, more often than not, the part we have to give is not wanted.  And so it is those we live with and should know are the ones who elude us.  But we can still love them-we can love completely without complete understanding”.

     In today’s message we are considering how in the last days, Christ’s Church will find itself living in the location where Satan’s throne is.  The Church will be challenged by the world to accept the deception that the devil has pawned off as truth.  Some will hold fast to the truth, while others will defect and forsake the Lord and Savior who saved them.  Jesus comes, as the one speaking a sharp two-edged sword from his mouth, cutting through all the deception with His truth.  Only those willing to welcome the word will be enabled to stand fast in a world where the devil is tampering with the scale of truth!

 

 

 Posted by at 12:19 am

Pastor’s Perspective:  “What Is Wrong With The Church?”

 Uncategorized  Comments Off on Pastor’s Perspective:  “What Is Wrong With The Church?”
Nov 012015
 

Pastor’s Perspective:  “What Is Wrong With The Church?”

By:  Ron Woodrum

 

IT IS VERY FASHIONABLE nowadays to ask, “What is wrong with the Church?” It is no new subject. There has always been something or other wrong with the professing church, and there have always been speakers aplenty to discuss it. Unfortunately, their speaking usually relieves only the speaker and not the situation. One is reminded of the soap-box orator in London some years ago. He was lambasting the government with a vengeance. Somebody asked a policeman: “Why don’t you do something with him?” “Oh, leave ‘im alone,” the bobby replied, “It relieves ‘im and it don’t ‘urt us.”  It is very easy today to focus on “What is wrong with the Church?” without attempting to encourage the Church.  In the Book of Revelation Jesus gives us a picture of seven Churches and then gives them His encouragement on how to be overcoming Churches in the Last days.  May we look at these words to be encouraged to focus on what can be right with the Church-so we can make an impact for him.

The composer Igor Stravinsky once wrote a new piece that contained a difficult violin passage.  After several weeks of rehearsal the solo violinist came to Stravinsky and said that he could not play it! He had given it his best effort but found the passage tood difficult, even unplayable.  Stravinksky replied, “I understand that!  What I am after is the sound of someone trying to play it!”  Our Lord knows our shortcomings as His Church.  He knows that what He asks of us is impossible.  But he wants us to give our all in trying and He will add his power to our effort and we can make a great impact for Him.

I remember hearing an illustration of this truth given by Earl Palmer, Pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Hollywood, California.  He was defending the Church against its critics who dismissed it for its hypocrisy, its failures, its inability to measure up to the New Testament’s high standards.  He compared the Church to a High School orchestra attempting to play Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony.  This is what he said, “When the Milpitas High School orchestra attempts Beethoven’s Ninth Symphoney, the result is appalling.  I wouldn’t be surprised if the performance made old Ludwig roll over in his grave despite his deafness.  You might ask, ‘why bother?’ Why inflict on those poor kids the terrible burden of trying to render what the immortal Beethoven had in mind?  Not even the Chicago Symphony Orchestra can attain that perfection!  My answer is this:  The Milpitas High School Orchestra will give some people in that audience their only encounter with Beethoven’s great Ninth Symphony.  Far from perfection, it is nevertheless the only way they will hear Beethoven’s message.”  Every time I find myself discouraged by listening to the world talk about how far we as the Church fall short of what Jesus had in mind for His Church- I remind myself that although we may never achieve what the composer had in mind, there is no other way for His sounds to be heard on earth!

 

 Posted by at 12:20 am