Showing posts with label Truth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Truth. Show all posts

Monday, August 11, 2014

Let's Be Clear: The Priesthood of All Believers


The notion of the priesthood of all believers (1 Pet. 2) by no means negates the important and biblical roles within the local church. It also does not denigrate the calling and office of pastor/elder/overseer or that of the deacons (1 Tim. 3 & Titus 1). Instead, this biblical conviction reveals to us that laypeople have vocations and callings of their own that also entail holy responsibilities, authorities, and blessings.

Because of Christ, all believers—like the priests of the Old Testament—may come into the presence of God through the blood of the Lamb. All believers can handle holy things (such as the Bible) which was at one time denied to the laity. All can proclaim the Gospel to those who need its saving message.
"The priesthood of all believers means that all Christians enjoy the same access to Christ and are spiritually equal before Him. The priesthood of all believers did not make everyone into church workers; rather, it turned every kind of work into a sacred calling" 


Source: Gene Edward Veith, God at Work: Your Christian Vocation in All of Life

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Bringing Truth to the Light



There is great freedom in bringing things to the light. When things are exposed to the light, the enemy loses his power to destroy. One of the worst lies people are convinced to believe is that there is more grief in sharing the truth then in hiding it. While it may be true that, at times, it is difficult to share the truth...the truth always liberates. When we choose to keep things in the dark, rather than exposing them to the light, it is an indication that we fear people more than God. But God will never bless a lie or a willful omission; on the contrary, truth that is known and hidden becomes judgment.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

The Authority of Scripture Over Our Lives


"All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, so that everyone who belongs to God may be proficient, equipped for every good work." | 2 Timothy 3:16-17

With those verses in mind, listen as Matt Chandler shares an always relevant truth from Acts 20:26-31:

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

The Good News of the Gospel


 The good news of the gospel is this: God confronts our primary problem (sin) and offers us the only sufficient solution, namely his grace purchased by the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Monday, March 31, 2014

The (12) Minute Challenge

Gentlemen:
I have a challenge for you. Give me (12) minutes of your time by choosing to listen to the sermon clip below, from Matt Chandler, and then try to convince me that you've spent 12 better minutes today.

Ready, set, go!

Monday, November 18, 2013

The Word of God

For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. (Hebrews 4:12)


The Word of God is our only hope. The good news of God’s promises and the warnings of his judgment are sharp enough and living enough and active enough to penetrate to the bottom of my heart and show me that the lies of sin are indeed lies.

Abortion will not create a wonderful future for me. Neither will cheating, or dressing provocatively, or throwing away my sexual purity, or keeping quiet about dishonesty at work, or divorce, or vengeance. And what rescues me from this deception is the Word of God.

The Word of God’s promise is like throwing open a great window of bright morning sun on the roaches of sin masquerading as satisfying pleasures in our hearts. God has given you his good news, his promises, his Word to protect you from the deep deceptions of sin that try to harden the heart and lure it away from God and lead it to destruction.

Be of good cheer in your battle to believe. Because the Word of God is living and active and sharper than any two-edged sword and it will penetrate deeper than any deception of sin has ever gone and reveal what is truly valuable and what is truly worth trusting.

Original Link: HERE

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Sanctification Comes Through Submission to God's Word

17 Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth. 18 As you sent me into the world, so I have sent them into the world. 19 And for their sake I consecrate myself, that they also may be sanctified in truth. | John 17:17-19 (ESV)

Sanctification is the great quest in the Christian Journey. It's the purification process God uses to "make us holy as he is holy." The process is intentional in it's efforts to make us more and more like Christ, in order that we might rightly image God to the unbelieving world through the way we live our transformed & transforming lives. Another important thing for us to remember is that sanctification is a lifelong process. However, this can't be used as an excuse to continue living in sin. While we should always be growing, the tangible evidences of the Holy Spirit working in our lives is a total dying to self and a desire to annihilate the sin in our lives. As we are growing in holiness, we should be equally growing in our hatred for the things that God hates (sin) and love for the things that God loves. A natural warning sign for anyone is if they have become indifferent to any sin that remains in their life. As we grow in holiness, we should also be growing in our hatred for the sin that remains in our life and a passion to make war against it...to kill it before it kills us.
"The process of sanctification involves both a horizontal-relational component (separation from participating in and being influenced by worldliness and sin) and a moral component (growth in holiness or moral purity in attitudes, thoughts, and actions)" (ESV Study Bible). 
This occurs in the truth, that is, as Christians believe, think, and live according to God's word (the truth). The Bible is comprised of the "truth" that Jesus was referring to when he said, your word is truth.
"The interesting thing about the Greek word used here is that it's not an adjective (meaning “your word is true”) but a noun (alÄ“theia, “truth”). The implication here is that God’s Word does not simply conform to some other external standard of “truth,” but that it is truth itself; that is, it embodies truth and it therefore is the standard of truth against which everything else must be tested and compared. (ESV Study Bible)
So what do we gain from this? For me the answer is simple. God's word is truth and our sanctification is dependant on our submission to this truth. Sanctification is a lifelong process, but our growth will be directly tied to the way in which we submit our lives to God's word (i.e. the Bible). If we submit only portions of our lives to God's truth, then only portions of our lives will be sanctified. If we submit ourselves, fully, to God's word, then we give the Holy Spirit complete access to make us holy as God is holy. This should be the aim of every believer and God will bless us exponentially as we lay down our lives, completely, as living sacrifices for his glory. Why is it important to read the word? Because as Jesus said, God's word is the truth and the primary method he uses to sanctify us.

Finally, if Jesus' words are true, that God's word is the primary method he uses for our sanctification, then how would we respond to the following questions:
  1. Do I truly believe that God's word is the truth? (Do I submit to God's word or to some other external standard of truth?)
  2. Have I truly surrendered my life, fully, to God's word? If so, what is the tangible evidence that this is true?
  3. If God's word is the primary means of my sanctification, am I investing the time that I should be into the spiritual disciple of reading, memorizing and meditating on God's word? (How much time do I spend each day/week doing this, compared to how much time I spend fulfilling the desires of the world and/or my flesh?)
  4. If I truly desire to grow in holiness, then what areas of my life do I need to surrender to God in order that God might sanctify them? (examples: control, pride, anger, lust, insecurity, self-righteousness, sloth etc.)

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

How Do We Feel About God's Word?

"Remember that it is not hasty reading, but serious meditation on holy and heavenly truths, that makes them prove sweet and profitable to the soul. It is not the mere touching of the flower by the bee that gathers honey, but her abiding for a time on the flower that draws out the sweet. It is not he that reads most, but he that meditates most, that will prove to be the choicest, sweetest, wisest and strongest Christian." | Thomas Brooks

Psalm 119:97-104 (ESV)

97 Oh how I love your law! It is my meditation all the day.
A mark of a true Christian will be their love for God's law (his word) and their desire to meditate on it all day. It becomes for them the springboard for discovering who God is, who they are called and created to be and do. Sola scriptura (by scripture alone) asserts that the Bible is the only inspired and authoritative word of God, is the only source for Christian doctrine, and is accessible to all.
98 Your commandment makes me wiser than my enemies, for it is ever with me.
99 I have more understanding than all my teachers, for your testimonies are my meditation.
100 I understand more than the aged, for I keep your precepts.
Why was this writer wiser than the others? Because the psalmist's enemies, teachers and the "aged" people he spoke of did not attend carefully to God’s word.
101 I hold back my feet from every evil way, in order to keep your word.
The psalmist makes a conscience choice to avoid evil in order to keep God's word. Faithfulness over selfish, fleshly and sinful desires.
102 I do not turn aside from your rules, for you have taught me.
Because the psalmist had a humble and "teachable" spirit, he is able to keep from sinning. God blessed his humility and replaced his sin with holiness.
103 How sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth!
One mark of a true Christian is that God's word will become for them a sweet taste in their mouth. It will be a joyous experience for the Christian to read God's word, not out of obligation but instead because they delight in it.
104 Through your precepts I get understanding; therefore I hate every false way.
Understanding sound doctrine will produce a hatred of false doctrine and practices.

Friday, June 28, 2013

God’s Truth: The Only Solid Foundation for Life.


"We have abandoned the role of the formative instruction of our children to those who do not bow in humility before God and his word. Until God is acknowledged for who he says he is, [people] will continue to make moral judgements based upon the quicksand of post-modern, existential thought. The problem lies not with a particular form of education. The problem lies with any form of education that does not see God’s truth as the only solid foundation for life." | Jay Younts

Original Post: Supreme Court: God & Bible are Irrelevant.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Do You Love [Your Sin Here] Enough to Go to Hell For It?


Pornography is ubiquitous today; addiction to pornography, especially among men, is equally widespread. Young men are often introduced to pornography long before they are able to understand what it is and what it means. Many a young man's first awakening to sex and sexuality is by exposure to pornographic sex and nudity. This is sadly, increasingly, the case with women as well. 

Some Christians can take a kind of refuge in the fact that so many others share in the struggle. "We are all in this together" can minimize the weight of it. Yet the ubiquity of porn and porn addiction does nothing to lessen the horror of it. I want to ask you a question. But not quite yet. Read on

Original Post (Desecration and Titillation) by: Tim Challies

Thursday, May 30, 2013

How Will We Know When the Bible Starts to Transform Our Lives?

How will we know when the bible starts to transform our lives? "Not when we enjoy lovely teaching, but when the teaching becomes so [convicting] that [we] walk away and do something about it.” | Bishop Festo Kivengere

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

What Does God Exalt Above All Other Things?


"...you [God] have exalted above all things your name and your word."

Psalm 138. It's short, but the truth wrapped into this Psalm is wonderful. I think the entire Psalm is wonderful, but I've emphasized the parts which stuck out to me the most. I praise God for his word. His living, breathing and spiritually active word!!!

Q. If God exalts his name and his word above all things, then why is it so seldom that his people and churches do the same?


A. I think that generally speaking it's much easier (and more comfortable) for us to put value in some of the other attributes of God (i.e. his love, mercy, grace, forgiveness, faithfulness etc.) God's word says some hard and challenging things. Things that as individuals we will not always like. Things that for a church body will be challenging and difficult. Things that the culture in which we live, will be opposed to and will sometimes even hate. I think it's pretty easy, if we don't put value in God's word, to say, yes I know that such-and-such is a sin...but God is loving and his love covers a multitude of sins. While this statement is certainly true...a side-effect of this kind of thinking is that we tend to become complacent and apathetic to God's word, which this Psalm clearly tells us is one of the (2) things that God exalts above all other things. God cares about his glory. He cares about his reputation and how his name is glorified. Why? Is it because he's an egomaniac? No...it's because he knows the true condition of our hearts. If we are honest with ourselves, the reason that we typically run towards words like forgiveness, mercy, grace etc. is because we are sinners and those words bring us comfort. But God is Holy, He is Just and He is Righteous. Why do we find it so easy to disregard God's command for us to "Be Holy as [He] is Holy" (Lv. 20:26) when His Holiness is an equal part of God's character to his love, mercy, grace and forgiveness.

I believe we do a serious disservice to ourselves and others (both inside and outside the church) when we fail to acknowledge that the thing which God loves most is not us, but is instead his own glory. God alone is great and he alone deserves honor, glory and praise...and I believe that as Christians and as a church we need to start putting the same kind of significance, reverence and exaltation towards His word and His Name that he does.

Psalm 138 (ESV)

Give Thanks to the LORD:

I give you thanks, O LORD, with my whole heart;
before the gods I sing your praise;
I bow down toward your holy temple
and give thanks to your name for your steadfast love and your faithfulness,
for you have exalted above all things
your name and your word.

On the day I called, you answered me;
my strength of soul you increased.
All the kings of the earth shall give you thanks, O LORD,
for they have heard the words of your mouth,
and they shall sing of the ways of the LORD,
for great is the glory of the LORD.
For though the LORD is high, he regards the lowly,
but the haughty he knows from afar.
Though I walk in the midst of trouble,
you preserve my life;
you stretch out your hand against the wrath of my enemies,
and your right hand delivers me.
The LORD will fulfill his purpose for me;
your steadfast love, O LORD, endures forever.

Do not forsake the work of your hands.



For His Glory,

Jason

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Biblical Interpretation and Why it Matters



I wanted to share some thoughts on biblical interpretation. How many of us have been involved in Bible studies where after a passage of scripture is read, the inevitable question is asked, what does that passage mean to you? While I commend the effort to study God's word, the Bible should not be approached this way. The Bible is not filled with subjective truths that can be finagled and twisted to mean whatever we desire for it to mean. Faithful interpretation of the scriptures doesn't ask the question, what does this passage mean to me...but instead asks the question...what does this passage mean and how can/should I apply this truth to my life.

We get into some serious trouble when we evaluate and interpret scripture based on our own feelings and/or our own inner-voice. We must be willing to admit that even our best efforts to interpret scripture based on our own thoughts and opinions are still subject to the simple fact that we are sinners. Pride, selfishness, sin, and many other things will always be working against us, trying to lead us to see things in scripture that simply are not there. To call good what God has called evil and to call evil what God has called good (Isaiah 5:20).

Because the timing of this subject is relevant, I'd like to use yesterday's passing, by the Minnesota State Senate, of the same-sex marriage law. Now, while I do commend the diligence and dedication of those who fought for their right to marry who they please, as a Bible-believing Christian I was not pleased with the results of yesterday's vote. I was saddened not only because as a state, society and culture this is where we find ourselves (morally speaking) but also because many of the arguments being leveraged yesterday by supporters of this bill were being passed off as biblical. We cannot fool ourselves. This battle, while it was painted as a human/civil rights discussion was clearly about the sinful desires of a secular world versus what God has called good (Genesis 1:31) and what he has called sin (Romans 1:26-27). While not all of you will agree with me on how serious yesterday's vote was for our society and our church...it was heartbreaking to hear how people in support of this bill continued to leverage twisted and out of context scripture as well as their Christian faith as the reasons why they must vote yes. 

And then, I thought about how the vote yesterday affects me as an individual and also how it will affect us as a church body. No doubt there are people within our body who affirm the work that was accomplished yesterday in the Senate and what will inevitably be passed by Governor Dayton in a matter of days. But what concerns me most in all of this is, how have these Christians moved towards this conviction, in light of what scripture clearly says about homosexuality? The only thing I can think of is that either these people don't understand how to rightly handle (interpret) scripture...or worse yet, they simply don't care. While there is very little that we can do about the second option, there is plenty that we can do about the former. We can ensure that we are rightly interpreting scripture..and we can also encourage others to do the same.

Why Does it matter?

The results of November's Marriage Amendment as well as the vote last Thursday (house) and yesterday's vote (senate) are a clear reminder that there is a battle going on for our minds. The church has clearly lost the influence it once had on the culture, but what is even more alarming is that it seems the church is also losing its influence on its own people. While God has given the world his infallible and inerrant scripture to be our guide...if we are not rightly handling (interpreting) the word of truth (2 Timothy 2:15) then our efforts to be a faithful and obedient church will always fall short of glorifying God. Only when we are willing to submit our lives and our leadership to the absolute truth of God's Holy and revealed word, will we be able to faithfully reflect God's image and his gospel to a world and a people who desperately need to know and receive both.

When (we interpret Scripture by focusing) on our inner voice, we risk losing the original voice of Scripture, the historic anchor that has given the church its foundation and faith, and the uniqueness of a moment of historical revelation without parallel to anything we may experience. And evaluating our own experience risks confusing what is subjectively true for me with what is objectively true. Truth (does not) reside in my own temporal experience (but rather in the correct interpretation of the Scriptures.) | Gary Burge

For His Glory,

Jason

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Our Feelings vs. God's Truth

“My feelings are not God. God is God. My feelings do not define truth. God’s word defines truth. My feelings are echoes and responses to what my mind perceives. And sometimes―many times―my feelings are out of sync with the truth. When that happens… I plead with God: Purify my perceptions of your truth and transform my feelings so that they are in sync with the truth.” | John Piper

God's Approval is Infinitely More Important Than the World's

"The church at Ephesus faced a culture characterized by immorality. We, too, live in a culture tolerant of [immorality]. It is popular to be open-minded to many types of sin, calling them personal choices or alternative lifestyles. But when the body of believers begins to tolerate sin in the church, it is lowering the church's standards and compromising its witness. Remember that God's approval is infinitely more important than the world's. Use God's Word, not what people around you are willing to accept, to set the standards for what is right or wrong." | Bruce Barton