Categories
Worship

Placed In His Arms

Another scraping from the bowl…

“What is the ultimate good in the good news? It all ends in one thing: God Himself.
All the words of the gospel lead to him, or they are not gospel.”

“For example, “salvation” is not good news if it only saves from hell and not for God.
“Forgiveness” is not good news if it only gives relief from guilt and doesn’t open the way to God.
“Justification” is not good news if it only makes us legally acceptable to God, but doesn’t bring fellowship with God.
“Redemption” is not good news if it only liberates us from bondage, but doesn’t bring us to God.
“Adoption” is not good news if it only puts us in the Father’s family but not in his arms.”

Just reading these words helps to fill me up. I don’t just want heaven, I want to be with my Father. I want to be in fellowship with Him. I want to be in His arms. I’m so glad He provided Jesus to allow me to rest there forever!

(quote from Jon Piper’s book ‘For Your Joy’)

Categories
Jesus

What’s All The Fuss About Jesus?

Why do we Christians keep talking about “getting people saved”? What’s all the fuss about? Why can’t we leave well enough alone? People who don’t have a “relationship with Jesus” may be happy enough and don’t appreciate us telling them they need a savior.

So why do we keep on? Why do we insist that salvation is needed? Why won’t we stop?
Here’s why:

“Man needs salvation not because he is imprisoned in a body but because he willfully chooses his own way rather than God’s way. Man’s evil is not in his body; it is in his affections. He loves the wrong things. This affliction is so deep, so basic to man’s life on earth, that only a special Savior can free him from himself. That is why Christianity insists that Ghandhi and all who agree with him are wrong. Man does not need a teacher. He needs a Savior” (Bruce Shelley).

“The danger for Christianity at present is that it could become secularized, worldly, reduced to a kind of socialist humanism. This is not what the world needs; and, if Christians were reduced to offering the world only this humanism, they would soon be set aside and rightly so, since there have always been socialists, teachers of morality, and organizers of society: they have rendered service, but they have never saved anyone.

“The world today does not need greater social organization but a Savior: man today needs someone who will answer the fundamental problems of his existence, which no social structure has ever been able to answer” (Jean Danielou).

I need a Savior. You need a Savior.

That Savior is Jesus!

“Our problem is not an inadequate education. It is a rebellious heart.” – Ravi Z.

Categories
Serving Others

The Little Life-Saving Station

This parable is not one I created, but it is one of my favorites. I imagine you will quickly catch on to the meaning of the parable of this life-saving station. As you read it, I also hope you will consider where you would fit into the story…

a lighthouse that is a little life-saving station“On a dangerous seacoast where shipwrecks often occur there was once a crude little life-saving station. The building was just a hut, and there was only one boat, but the few devoted members kept a constant watch over the sea, and with no thought for themselves, they went out day or night tirelessly searching for those lost at sea.

Many lives were saved by this wonderful little station, so that it became famous. Some of those who were saved, as well as some from surrounding areas, wanted to become associated with the station and give their time and money and effort for the support of its work. New boats were bought and new crews were trained. The little life-saving station grew.

As time went by some of the new members of the life-saving station were unhappy that the building was so crude and so poorly equipped. They felt that a more comfortable place should be provided as the first refuge of those pulled from the dangerous sea. So they replaced the emergency cots with beds and put better furniture in an enlarged building. Now the life-saving station became a popular gathering place for its members, and they re-decorated it beautifully with comfortable furnishings.

Over time, Less & Less of the members were now interested in going to sea on life-saving missions, so they hired life boat crews to do this work. The mission of life-saving was still given lip-service but most were too busy or lacked the necessary commitment to take part in the life-saving activities personally.

About this time a large ship was wrecked off the coast, and the hired crews brought in boat loads of cold, wet, and half-drowned people. They were dirty and sick, and some of them looked different than most of the members, and some spoke a strange language, and the beautiful new club was considerably messed up. So the members immediately had a shower house built outside the main building where victims of shipwrecks could be cleaned up before coming inside.

At the next meeting of the members, there was a split in club membership. Most of the members wanted to stop the club’s life-saving activities as being too unpleasant and a hindrance to the normal day-to-day activities and patterns of the members who gathered there. But some members insisted that life-saving was their primary purpose and pointed out that they were still called a “life-saving station.” But these few were finally voted down and told that if they wanted to save the lives of all the various kinds of people who were shipwrecked in those waters, they could begin their own life-saving station further down the coast. So they did.

As the years went by, the new station experienced the same changes that had occurred in the old. In time, they also evolved into a club and yet another life-saving station had to be established. If you visit that seacoast today you will find a number of exclusive clubs along that shore. Shipwrecks are still frequent in those waters, but I understand that now most of the shipwrecked people drown.”

So it is easy enough to realize that this parable is about the state of the church today. Now certainly it isn’t truly that gloomy! But at the same time we can see the different types of mentalities that are taking place in this story. The mentality of the rescuers who are dedicated to saving lives, a second mentality of those willing to give finances so others could serve but not a willingness to personally get their hands dirty, and a third mentality of wanting comfort and leisure for self even though people around are needing rescue.

What mentality do you have – are you one of the rescuers striving for the primary purpose, or are you hoping that things can stay safe and comfortable inside the cozy station? There are still so many people around us that are without the love of Jesus Christ. Have you looked out into the “water” around you and heard people crying out for a Savior?

I thought this exchange from Superman Returns was interesting…
Lois Lane states: “The world doesn’t need a savior, & neither do I.”
Superman asks her: “Lois, will you fly with me. There’s something I want to show you.”
[he flies Lois high above the city where it seems peaceful & still. Lois Lane listens, but to her ears, it is silent and calm.]
He then says to her – “Listen. What do you hear?”
She says: “Nothing.”
[and then for just a moment you get to hear what Superman hears with his super-powered hearing]
Superman then tells her: “I hear everything. You wrote that the world doesn’t need a savior, but I hear them crying for one everyday.”

Too many times I find myself and others thinking (and listening) like Lois Lane. We think everyone is OK and that there isn’t anyone around you looking for a savior. So many people say (& write) that we don’t need a Savior and yet Jesus hears them crying for Him everyday. Do you hear (and see) “nothing” when you look at our community? or have you allowed God to open your eyes to a world that is “crying out for a Savior.” They don’t need Superman, but they do need Jesus. And He tells us that the fields are ready to be harvested – We have been called to point people to THE Savior. Let us help people find the Living Water and be rescued by Jesus – let’s continue striving to be part of an effective life-saving station.

Categories
Christian Living

We’re Looking for a Few . . . Sick Men?

Uncle Sam pointing at you“The difference between Uncle Sam and Jesus Christ is that Uncle Sam won’t enlist you in his service unless you are healthy and Jesus won’t enlist you unless you are sick.”

But the amazing thing is that: “God is not only the doctor who prescribes [the proper medicine to cure our sickness]. He is the nurse who lifts up our powerless head and puts the spoon in our mouth. And He is the medicine” (John Piper).

What a great image of who God is to us – He is the One with the cure, He is the One who administers the cure, and He is the cure!

But have we cried out to Him for the cure? We might cry out, but what are we really crying about? I remember moments in childhood when I had disobeyed Mom or Dad, got caught, heard what my punishment would be (often a spanking!), and broke into tears. But was I really crying with repentance wanting a cure for my bad behavior?

“Many a criminal will weep when his sentence is read, not because he hasJudge's Gavel come to love righteousness, but because his freedom to do more unrighteousness is being taken away. That kind of weeping is not true evangelical repentance. And it does not lead to radical Christian obedience.

“The only true sorrow for not having holiness comes from a love for holiness, not just from fear of the consequences of not having it” (John Piper).

Too many times I was crying because I got caught… Not because I was disappointed in myself. How many times am I still unconcerned with righteousness as an adult?

How else but through a broken heart may Lord Christ enter in? –Oscar Wilde

So it is great that we have a cure, but what if you never cry out for it? What if you never develop that broken heart? You will be left empty. And I want to be filled to the top with life. I want to be completely satisfied. “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.” – Jesus

Thank You God for being the Cure for my sickness! And for helping me to realize that I was sick and in need of help.
Father, give me a love for your holiness!

— brian rushing

Categories
Missions

Missionary Mindset

“Please don’t send me to Africa.”
For whatever reason, this silly song stuck in my craw when I was younger. It challenged me with the ending of its chorus:
      “I’ll serve you here in suburbia, In my comfortable middle class life
      But please don’t send me out into the bush, Where the natives are restless at night.”

At times, I have our church family say: “I Am A Missionary.” God is clear that all of His followers are to be on a task to introduce other people to the salvation offered by Jesus Christ – no matter the cost of doing so. But too often I feel like a seed that has taken root on thorny ground.thorns criss-crossing and choking one another - representing the world that chokes out our missionary mindset

“And the one on whom seed was sown among the thorns, this is the man who hears the word, and the worry of the world and the deceitfulness of wealth choke the word, and it becomes unfruitful.” I find that the thorns grow thick “here in suburbia, in my comfortable middle class life.” Here in suburbia, I find that for me – “the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak.”

I want my spirit to drive my flesh, but too often it is the other way around. Pastor John Piper tells me to remember the condition I was in before salvation to provoke within me the missionary spirit:

“Is not our most painful failure…to weep over the unbelievers in our neighborhoods…? In order to grieve [over their lostness], I must believe in my heart certain terrible and wonderful things…. I must feel the awful and glorious truths of Scriptures. Specifically, I must feel the truth of hell — that it exists and is terrible and horrible beyond imaginings forever and ever. I must feel the truth that once I was as close to hell as I am to the chair I am sitting on — even closer. I must feel the truth that God’s wrath was on my head. I must feel in my heart that all the righteousness in the universe was on the side of God and against me.

“…remember, remember, remember the horrid condition of being separated from Christ, without hope and without God, on the brink of hell. If I do not believe in my heart these awful truths — believe them so that they are real in my feelings, then the blessed love of God in Christ will scarcely shine at all. The keener the memory of our awful rescue, the more naturally we pity those in a similar plight. The more deeply we feel how undeserved and free was the grace that plucked us from the flames, the freer will be our benevolence to sinners.”

Our problem is not an inadequate education. It is a rebellious heart. – Ravi Zacharias
We need God to help us to remember our former condition and to grieve over those who do not yet know His Great Love!

Too often I find us missionaries complaining and griping about other people – more irritated than compassionate. How do you keep a compassionate missionary mindset instead of being crotchety like me?

–brian rushing