With Jesus for the long-haul

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6 Therefore, as you received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk in him, 7rooted and built up in him and established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving.  Colossians 2:6-7

In a short track race the way you start really matters. Its over in seconds and if you miss the start, stumble, or fall, the race will finish without you. Fortunately the Christian life is not that way!

The Christian life is not run in seconds. Its a lifetime and none of us start our life of faith with Jesus perfectly. In fact, we may begin with a limp, with the odds stacked against us, and as seemingly unlikely candidates for the family of God.

Paul’s vision of the Christian life is one in which we are living in Jesus’ grace by faith and for the long-haul. It begins with the work of God through the Gospel of Jesus and has a simple confession: Jesus Christ is Lord. But, it also has a vision of discipleship that might go like this:

“I’m so thankful! I have received a gift — Jesus Himself; Christ Jesus the Lord is the gift. He has firmly rooted me in His family; its done! Now there’s a lifetime of knowing Him available to me. I want to walk with Him daily and trust He will build me up with His church, establishing us in the faith so we are able to make Him known and enjoy God.”

 

 

Things I learned on the way to becoming a Christian

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(My mom’s testimony to a church group in the early 80’s.)
There are 5 topics or truths that I want to talk about.
1.  As the title implies, becoming a Christian isn’t a one-shot, all-at-once experience, though sometimes, we get the impression that it is.   Often, too much emphasis is placed on the initial conversion experience, and not enough on what difference it made in the rest of a person’s life.
            I used to worry about not having a dramatic conversion story to relate.  A 12-year old who went to church and Sunday school before and after conversion doesn’t quite make the TV talk shows.  Not dramatic enough.
            But I didn’t become a Christian that night during the summer revival, I only began the process.  I didn’t know that then, I just knew I felt great joy the day I was baptized in the river along with my brother and my father, and I felt great relief thereafter at not feeling guilty when the altar-call was given.  And that leads to the second point.
2.  Becoming a Christian means more than just being saved from Hell.  For awhile, I was happy just having that fire insurance.  I grew up hearing nothing but fire-and-brimstone preaching—- how hot the flames were for sinners.  It was some time before I gradually became aware of another aspect of being a Christian, my third point.
3.  We are saved for something, not just from something.  It was exciting to think that I, in all my uniqueness, was saved by God for something.  I had a responsibility to him—- I was accountable to Him to keep His spiritual laws.  And I planned what I would do for Him.   I was committed, I was willing, I would serve, I would witness, I would live a good life, and I would do great things for God!  The truth is, I did precious little for God.  For we are unable to achieve in our own strength.
4.  I had part of the story correct; I am responsible to God, I am accountable to Him to keep His spiritual laws, but the rest of the story is that it is only to the extent that God lives and works through me that my life counts for Him and I can fulfill my responsibility to Him.
         God lives and works through my life by His Holy Spirit.  The great interest in the “charismatic movement” several years ago stirred me to a greater realization of what being a Christian is.  Hearing people pray in tongues and seeing them “slain in the spirit” left me bewildered and feeling a little “left out.”  I became a seeker.  I began a prayerful study of the Bible concerning the Holy Spirit.  And I found Him—He was there all the time!
          Scripture tells us that we are the temples, or tabernacles, of the Holy Spirit.  Sometimes the tabernacle has to be cleaned out before He can dwell in it.  Some things that may clutter the tabernacle are hypocrisy, white lies, insincerity, cruel thoughts, whispered stories, gossip, hard criticism, jealous longings, pride and love of money.  Mine was full of self.
          If you are having a problem with the Holy Spirit living in your life, check your tabernacle, it may need cleaning out.  God doesn’t dwell in smokehouses and wine cellars and He can’t dwell in an already full tabernacle.  And another thing, not a pleasant topic to bring up, but one we can identify with— tabernacle-keeping is a lot like house-keeping.  An annual cleaning won’t do.   Monthly and weekly cleanings are good, but a daily tidying up is what is needed.
5.  The last point is that God is there all the time.  He works in our lives while we are just bumbling along, rolling with the punches and blowing in the breezes.  He works His purpose through us when we allow ourselves to be used and He rewards us with joy and peace.  That was something else I had to learn on my own, God’s joy and peace.   He gives joy in the midst of pain, peace in the midst of chaos, and courage in all trials.
I didn’t become a Christian at 12 years old, I just started to become.  I’m still becoming.
I have related to you some of the things I’ve learned over a span of thirty years.  I’m a slow learner.  Those of you who are also becoming, and especially beginners, I pray that your becoming will be more rapid than my own.
To summarize:  Becoming a Christian happens over a long period of time. We’re not just saved from Hell, we’re saved for God’s work, not by our own effort, but through His Holy Spirit in us, and God doesn’t give up  on us.  He is there all the time.  He is our strength.

Conduct Yourselves

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13Therefore, preparing your minds for action, and being sober-minded, set your hope fully on the grace that will be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ. 14As obedient children, do not be conformed to the passions of your former ignorance, 15but as he who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, 16since it is written, “You shall be holy, for I am holy.” 17And if you call on him as Father who judges impartially according to each one’s deeds, conduct yourselves with fear throughout the time of your exile, 18knowing that you were ransomed from the futile ways inherited from your forefathers, not with perishable things such as silver or gold, 19but with the precious blood of Christ, like that of a lamb without blemish or spot. 1 Peter 1:13-18

I was 27, married and traveling Ireland with my wife. Yet, even when we left the house my uncle said to us, “Now you, conduct yourselves.”  He said it more than once! We laughed like kids but the exhortation stuck with us.

Peter writes, “You also be holy in all your conduct.” Holy conduct is seen in relationships.

Holiness is a condition gracefully given us through new birth in Christ Jesus and it is a response to the Gospel. Holy conduct is generated when we are in awe of the high price for our ransom – the precious blood of Christ. Holy conduct is generated when we consider our conduct in relationship to people for whom Jesus died. They are valuable to Him and we must treat them accordingly.

Holy conduct is generated by our awareness of our Kingdom citizenship. This place is not our final destination; we are passing through. Yet, what we in this life and day does matter to God. God, our Father, judges impartially. And this judge has a glorious vision of our lives — that we would live in the holiness of His Son, Jesus Christ.

So prepare your mind for action, for holy action consistent with the character of our Saviour Jesus Christ. Prepare your mind by setting it fully on the hope you have in Christ Jesus. He is present in you now and shaping you for life with Him and for His glory.

Community that heals

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11Now may our God and Father himself, and our Lord Jesus, direct our way to you, 12and may the Lord make you increase and abound in love for one another and for all, as we do for you, 13so that he may establish your hearts blameless in holiness before our God and Father, at the coming of our Lord Jesus with all his saints.   1 Thessalonians 3:11-13

I’m impressed at how Paul and his friends longed to be with the churches of Jesus. Paul’s prayer here shows Christian community is not a natural affection or brotherhood. Rather it is a gift of the Gospel through Jesus. As our hearts are turned towards Him, as our hearts are healed and brought into real holiness before God, we are drawn forward into His character together.

Many of us long for community but are unwilling to do what it actually takes. Adjusting is painful and requires honesty, forgiveness, rootedness, servanthood,

and time.

Bastille, sings, of the longing for healing in community:

When all of your flaws and all of my flaws

Are laid out one by one

A wonderful part of the mess that we made

We pick ourselves undone

All of your flaws and all of my flaws

They lie there hand in hand

Ones we’ve inherited, ones that we learned

They pass from man to man

There’s a hole in my soul

I can’t fill it I can’t fill it

There’s a hole in my soul

Can you fill it? Can you fill it?

Jesus is filling our souls and healing us. The mystery is that He has also chosen to bring much of that healing in community and not just in a solitary walk.

Listen to Bastille.

Build a Life that Lasts

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Build a life that lasts

15 Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16For all that is in the world—the desires of the flesh and the desires of the eyes and pride of life—is not from the Father but is from the world. 17And the world is passing away along with its desires, but whoever does the will of God abides forever.

1 John 2:15-17

A life that lasts, it is what God wants for us. It is a movement from inordinate concern for our success to delight in our significance emerging in the truth and grace of our Saviour.

The elder John is concerned for the continued growth and development of the disciples of Jesus from their new birth in Christ Jesus, to their growth in His Word to become strong and courageous in character, and then to become reproducers sharing the Father’s heart. But John knows that Satan and the greedy desires of the heart can derail growth. So he commands them: Do not love the world.

The “world” here is not specifically a reference to creation or to people, but rather to the system of belief and thinking, attitudes and actions, that are independent of the Heavenly Father. He knows that we live “in” the world, but he also knows we do not have to be “of” it. Jesus has set us apart, even as He was set apart for the glory of the Heavenly Father. Such autonomy and independence from God does not originate in His love.

Three approaches to life that are “normal” to our cultures and societies ruin us for a life that lasts. John calls them the desires of the flesh, the desires of the eyes and the pride of life.

The desires of the flesh
The impulse of fallen human nature to satisfy physical desires in ways that are not of God.

The desires of the eyes
The shortsighted desire to live for only what one sees physically, without a thought for its real or eternal value.

The pride of life
The temptation to make worldly things and wealth our source of security and pridefully overlooking our need for and dependence on God.

Here’s the problem with this kind of life. It has destruction as its end. It will abandon the virtues God calls for in Christ and it seeks a victory that has nothing to do with Jesus. John says this kind of life will not last. The world and these desires are passing away (verse 17).

The Life that Lasts
But, the person who does the will of God abides forever. This person will last. Their life will last. It is the will of the Father, that you and I find our greatest joy, satisfaction, and even life in His Son, Christ Jesus. What you do in Christ Jesus, with Him, and in congruence with His character will last. Dependence on Jesus, humility and sacrifice, courage and love will matter into eternity. Its never wasted! This kind of life will last!