An Unexpected Journey - Fire That Burns

Last week, we looked at a picture of the early years of Jesus. As He asked Mary and Joseph, "Didn't you know that I had to be in my Father's house?" we saw a key to His growth and eventual world changing ministry. At the same time, in the wilderness of Judea, Jesus' cousin, John the Baptist, was developing the same type of relationship with God the Father, which had very specific results. Today as we look at the beginning of John's service to the Lord, we will discover what a holy fire looks like in our lives and the practical means for keeping it burning hotter, brighter, stronger and longer.

Starting a Holy Fire

God wants to start a fire of salvation that will burn through you to the city in which you live.

Luke 3:1-6 In the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius Caesar—when Pontius Pilate was governor of Judea, Herod tetrarch of Galilee, his brother Philip tetrarch of Iturea and Traconitis, and Lysanias tetrarch of Abilene— during the high-priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, the word of God came to John son of Zechariah in the wilderness. He went into all the country around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. As it is written in the book of the words of Isaiah the prophet: “A voice of one calling in the wilderness, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him. Every valley shall be filled in, every mountain and hill made low. The crooked roads shall become straight, the rough ways smooth. And all people will see God’s salvation.’”

Governments, cultures and rulers change, but the Word of the Lord to people will always remain the same.

God wants to bring His salvation to all people. The Word of the Lord for family members, co-workers, neighbors and friends will come to you as you continue to walk with and honor Jesus.

You may think to yourself, "How can this be?"

In the wilderness, John was able to spend time seeking God just as you and I are.

Even in obscurity, you can walk with God, find His pleasure, and learn His ways. You can increase rather than decrease in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and men. John and Jesus learned to lead this way pleasing their Heavenly Father 30 years in obscurity prior to their public ministries.

“The true test of a man’s character is what he does when no one is watching.”
― John Wooden

This is important because who you are in the private place will eventually make its way public.

Jeremiah 30:18-22 “This is what the Lord says: “‘I will restore the fortunes of Jacob’s tent and have compassion on his dwellings; the city will be rebuilt on her ruins, and the palace will stand in its proper place. From them will come songs of thanksgiving and the sound of rejoicing. I will add to their numbers, and they will not be decreased; I will bring them honor, and they will not be disdained. Their children will be as in days of old, and their community will be established before me; I will punish all who oppress them. Their leader will be one of their own; their ruler will arise from among them. I will bring him near and he will come close to me—for who is he who will devote himself to be close to me? ’declares the Lord. “‘So you will be my people, and I will be your God.’”

The key to true biblical leadership is devoting yourself to being close to the Lord.

The environment may be different, but God and His ability to meet with you is still the same.

In God's presence, you develop:

1) Heat for God's honor and mission

It is a clear sign that God wants to bring you out of the mundanity with which you live when you light up more about news regarding celebrities that you don't know or the events of your favorite sitcom series rather than your real life.

When you seek God, you will find Him. You will then see that His honor and purposes are worth far more in regard to your time, efforts and resources than anything else that you can give yourself to.

2) The ability to hear God's message.

As it was with John the Baptist, God will give you a message to deliver to the people.

"A baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins."

This word is summarized in the gospel that there is a Creator God who is perfectly good, loving, pure, eternal, omniscient, omnipotent and omnipresent who made humanity by His power and for His pleasure. We have all as humanity been estranged from God by going our own way in our actions, thoughts and pursuits. This is what the Bible calls sin and is the destructive consequence that the world is now enduring in all types of hatred, greed, fear, oppression, addictions and the like as a result of separation from God. The gospel is the good news that in the historic period of Tiberias Caesar, when Pontius Pilate was ruler of Judea in Israel, God became flesh and would rescue humanity through Jesus' sinless life, miracles, death on the cross and resurrection from the dead. As we turn away from our sins choosing to trust and follow Jesus, we receive forgiveness of sins.

3) The heart of God for people and ministry.

God is so loving that He will raise up every person who trusts in Him out of the valleys in which they find themselves - both here and in eternity.

God is so holy that He will level every person full of themselves living in prideful rebellion. It is because these people are destroying their lives and others.

The goal of your meeting with God is not to merely cultivate a private spiritual life, but to go out into the world and make disciples of Jesus.

"Where passion for God is weak, zeal for missions will be weak."
-John Piper

Thus, we must find God's wisdom to keep the fire burning.

Burning Hotter, Brighter, Stronger and Longer

Once you start a fire, you've got to continually feed it for it to burn.

Mark 12:28-31 One of the teachers of the law came and heard them debating. Noticing that Jesus had given them a good answer, he asked him, “Of all the commandments, which is the most important?” “The most important one,” answered Jesus, “is this: ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’ The second is this: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’ There is no commandment greater than these.”

Once you find Jesus, you must keep your eyes on Him.

Walking with Jesus means that you are learning to love Him with all of your:

1) Heart You nurture this through worship and prayer, both private and corporate. This is how you burn hotter for Jesus. It is where the flames of passion are stoked. Guarding your heart with the words that come off of your mouth is a key to maintaining that heart of worship.

Ecclesiastes 5:1-7 Guard your steps when you go to the house of God. Go near to listen rather than to offer the sacrifice of fools, who do not know that they do wrong. Do not be quick with your mouth, do not be hasty in your heart to utter anything before God. God is in heaven and you are on earth, so let your words be few. A dream comes when there are many cares, and many words mark the speech of a fool. When you make a vow to God, do not delay to fulfill it. He has no pleasure in fools; fulfill your vow. It is better not to make a vow than to make one and not fulfill it. Do not let your mouth lead you into sin. And do not protest to the temple messenger, “My vow was a mistake.” Why should God be angry at what you say and destroy the work of your hands? Much dreaming and many words are meaningless. Therefore fear God.

Practical Each day, set aside time to speak with and listen to God. Download songs that we worship with at church and sing them to God in your own private moments with Him. Write down what you feel like is impressed upon your heart during that time as a point of instruction and action. If you want to learn to pray for others, follow a daily guide like Stormie Omartian's, "The Power of a Praying..." book series.

2) Soul - Meditate on God's Word and practice obedience.

This is where you burn brighter for Jesus as a star while you hold out the word of life.

Jesus was a man of the word.

He studied it in community through the synagogues of the day (community groups), in the temple (church) and privately. All three are important and have different functions.

What you meditate on comes out of you.

Practical Begin a Bible reading plan from You Version. Read a passage from the Bible and write down what speaks to you. What is the Holy Spirit saying to you and how will you apply it?

3) Strength - You grow in this through service.

Service around kingdom purposes helps facilitate true biblical fellowship and is the essence of a shared life. A shared life is not just having a cup of coffee together, but building something tangible and of eternal significance together with your lives.

This is where you burn stronger for Jesus and that strength is felt by others.

Practical Where is your place of service within and through the church in this new year?

4) Mind - Read things inspired by Scripture.

“Tell me how you read and I'll tell you who you are.”
― Martin Heidegger

This is when you burn longer in God because you develop a depth in your faith established in your intellect and reasoning capacity rather than in mere emotion or momentary zeal.

Practical God's Not Dead: Evidence for God in an Age of Uncertainty by Rice Brooks: Read this book. This book will help provide real world answers as to why everyone should trust in, love and follow Jesus.

As the greatness of God is conceptualized you are able to understand why David Wilkerson would have this sentiment in reaching out to those who are not walking with Jesus:

“You win over people just like you win over a dog. You see a dog passing down the street with an old bone in his mouth. You don't grab the bone from him and tell him it's not good for him. He'll growl at you. It's the only thing he has. But you throw a big fat lamb chop in front of him, and he's going to drop that bone and pick up the lamb chop, his tail wagging to beat the band. And you've got a friend. Instead of going around grabbing bones from people... I'm going to throw them some lamb chops. Something with real meat and life in it. I'm going to tell them about New Beginnings.”
― David Wilkerson, The Cross and the Switchblade

"Each one reach one" has been a theme for us here. It essentially means, in every season of your life, to "be a disciple and help make disciples." Despite your trials, who are you praying for and making efforts to see come to Jesus this new year? As a professional who lives in the city? As a man or woman fighting to raise a godly family? As a student returning to school?

If you'd like to lead a community group around this material as an outreach to friends during or after the series, we have material for you. Talk to John. If you need to repent of sin and be baptized, we have our next baptism scheduled Jan. 31. Let's all commit to allowing God to light a fire that will burn within us in ever-increasing measure this new year!

New series: Everyone get their New Year's gift today!

Second City Church- An Unexpected Journey Sermon Series 2015

An Unexpected Journey - Finding Jesus

When the Holy Spirit has birthed something in you, don't ever let anyone dissuade, discount or diminish what you are doing with your daily life in connection to the eternal purposes of God. Mary, a stay-at-home mother, and Joseph, while working a blue collar job, were both devoted to Jesus and were helping to raise God incarnate, the Savior of the world. Like these parents, we all want to be faithful and productive in our lives before the Lord, but ironically, in the midst of our daily pressures and routines, we can unexpectedly find ourselves in a place where we feel that we've lost our connection with Jesus, the relationship which was our greatest responsibility of all. As we begin the new year, we will look at how Mary and Joseph found Jesus when He went missing.

Finding Jesus

If you are not careful, your connection to Jesus can be lost.

Luke 2:41-52 Every year Jesus’ parents went to Jerusalem for the Festival of the Passover. When he was twelve years old, they went up to the festival, according to the custom. After the festival was over, while his parents were returning home, the boy Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem, but they were unaware of it. Thinking he was in their company, they traveled on for a day. Then they began looking for him among their relatives and friends. When they did not find him, they went back to Jerusalem to look for him. After three days they found him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions. Everyone who heard him was amazed at his understanding and his answers. When his parents saw him, they were astonished. His mother said to him, “Son, why have you treated us like this? Your father and I have been anxiously searching for you.” “Why were you searching for me?” he asked. “Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” But they did not understand what he was saying to them. Then he went down to Nazareth with them and was obedient to them. But his mother treasured all these things in her heart. And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man.

Every year Jesus' parents made the trip to the temple. It was regular and according to custom. It is good to have God honoring customs in your life that will set you up for necessary frequencies of spiritual health and development.

For Jesus' parents to get to Jerusalem would have taken sacrifice - time off work, money, and energy to travel. If you want to meet with God in your daily routine, do not expect it to happen for you without sacrifice.

You can think that you are in the company of Jesus when really He is somewhere doing something else.

Mary and Joseph lost God but were confident enough to travel because of the community dynamic. Walking with others in a church family is great and how it is supposed to be, but never mistake having community for having Jesus.

Mary began looking for Jesus when He was missing. It is because He belonged to her. We need to position ourselves to look for three categories of people in the new year: 1) For Jesus our Lord; 2) Our brothers and sisters in Christ who have gone missing and fallen out of fellowship; 3) The lost, which we'll speak about more next week.

To make the trip from Nazareth to Jerusalem, Mary and Joseph would go from a town of hundreds to about 100,000 at the time. In such a setting, it is easy to get distracted, much like in Chicago, and in the meantime lose Jesus. It took Mary and Joseph three days to find Jesus. If you have been disconnected for a while, don't get discouraged if it takes you time to develop a rhythm in your time with Jesus.

People often wonder why they can't "find Jesus" in their everyday life. It is often because we think that He will follow us into the pursuit of our own personal ambitions and dreams rather than Him being about what He said that He is always about, the advance of His kingdom. When you recognize that we are to be submitted to Him and His purposes rather than Him being submitted to ours, we'll be able to reconnect with Him and know where to find Him.

Just as we discovered last week that Simeon and Anna were able to be introduced to the Messiah in the temple courts, Jesus again validated the fact that His purposes will always begin in and through His house, the church.

The best place to get reconnected is in the temple courts. Keep showing up– you at least know He's there.

"Didn't you know I had to be in my Father's house?" We must have the same mentality as Jesus if we are to have our identity grounded in and our trajectory centered on the purposes of Jesus Christ.

It was a given that He needed to be in His father's house. Not only do you become what you behold, but you become like the company that you keep (1 Corinthians 15:33).

A person's ability to understand God, His gospel and its application to the season of life in which they find themselves does not depend on their age. Begin teaching your children how to relate with Jesus now.

Jesus wasn't so spiritual that He had no practical application of the Word of God. Jesus put the Word of God to "honor your father and mother" into practice by going home with Mary and Joseph. Obeying rather than merely being familiar with the commands of God will make you a better son, daughter, husband, wife, mother, employer, employee, sibling and friend.

How are you applying, not just being exposed to the Word of God?

Because of Jesus' study of and adherence to the Word of God, He grew in:

wisdom - the proper application of knowledge;

"The internet is full of information and empty of thought."
Tim Keller

and stature - the weight of a person's respected presence;

and favor - pleasure from and. therefore, the benevolent backing of someone;

with God - the most important and our constant pursuit;

and man - grows as we follow Jesus, even when people disagree with or reject our positions.

It will be the same for you as you search for Jesus daily and are set apart for His purposes. He went to the cross to pay the penalty for your wrongdoing and bridge the gap between you and God. As you repent of your sin and believe the good news of Jesus' resurrection, you can find Jesus, be cleansed and begin a new year with Him today. It will be a second chance and the beginning of a second life.

Second City Church- An Unexpected Journey Sermon Series 2015

An Unexpected Journey - The Old Man and the Prophetess

 

As time goes by, the unexpected circumstances of your existence can push you into the slump of reactionary rather than intentional living. This can happen in your relationships, your career, your use of your resources or your walk with Jesus. To truly live an intentional life in the grand design of God, you must arrange your life based on two things: your worldview and your place within that story. As we look toward a new year, we will continue to reflect on the implications of the arrival of Jesus, taking our cues from an older righteous man named Simeon and an elderly prophetess named Anna. In them, we will find the manner in which God expects you to posture yourself to participate in His overarching purposes.

What Are You Waiting For?

Simeon was waiting with eager expectation for God's salvation.

Luke 2:22-35 When the time came for the purification rites required by the Law of Moses, Joseph and Mary took him to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord as it is written in the Law of the Lord, “Every firstborn male is to be consecrated to the Lord”, and to offer a sacrifice in keeping with what is said in the Law of the Lord: “a pair of doves or two young pigeons.” Now there was a man in Jerusalem called Simeon, who was righteous and devout. He was waiting for the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was on him. It had been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not die before he had seen the Lord’s Messiah. Moved by the Spirit, he went into the temple courts. When the parents brought in the child Jesus to do for him what the custom of the Law required, Simeon took him in his arms and praised God, saying: “Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all nations: a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel.” The child’s father and mother marveled at what was said about him. Then Simeon blessed them and said to Mary, his mother: “This child is destined to cause the falling and rising of many in Israel, and to be a sign that will be spoken against, so that the thoughts of many hearts will be revealed. And a sword will pierce your own soul too.”

God had promised Simeon that he would be able to see the consolation, the comfort, of Israel after years of oppression at the hands of foreign empires, though Simeon had no idea how God would bring it about. The four Gospels and the book of Acts give us clues as to how God will bring His salvation to our city in our times. Read them as Simeon did the Old Testament Scriptures and expect Jesus to bring His salvation.

To better understand Simeon's joy at meeting Jesus, we need to understand the storyline upon which Simeon was placing all of his hopes. Why was he so enthralled when he met the person of Jesus and why should we be?

Timothy Keller expressed it well in a 2012 post explaining the reality of the Christian worldview and storyline in which the world finds itself:

Look again at the uniqueness of Christianity. Only the Christian worldview locates the problem with the world not in any part of the world or in any particular group of people but in sin itself (our loss of relationship with God). And it locates the solution in God’s grace (our restoration of a relationship with God through the work of Christ). Sin infects us all, and so we cannot simply divide the world into the heroes and the villains. (And if we did , we would certainly have to count ourselves among the latter as well as the former.) Without an understanding of the gospel, we will be either naively utopian or cynically disillusioned. We will be demonizing something that isn’t bad enough to explain the mess we are in; and we will be idolizing something that isn’t powerful enough to get us out of it. This is, in the end, what all other worldviews do.

The Christian story line works beautifully to make sense of things and even to help us appreciate the truth embedded in stories that clearly come from another worldview. The Christian story line, or worldview, is: creation (plan), fall (problem), redemption and restoration (solution):

The whole world is good. God made the world and everything in it was good. There are no intrinsically evil parts of the world. Nothing is evil in its origin. As Tolkien explained about his archvillain in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, in the beginning ‘even Sauron was not so.’ You can find this ‘creational good’ in anything.

The whole world is fallen. There is no aspect of the world affected by sin more or less than any other. For example, are emotion and passions untrustworthy and reason infallible? Is the physical bad and the spiritual good? Is the day-to-day world profane but religious observances good? None of these are true; but non-Christian story lines must adopt some variations of these in order to villainize and even demonize some created thing instead of sin.

The whole world is going to be redeemed. Jesus is going to redeem spirit and body, reason and emotion, people and nature. There is no part of reality for which there is no hope.

- Timothy Keller post 12/26/12 on The Christian Storyline, http://kellerquotes.com/the-christian-story-line/

Simeon had been waiting for the predictions of the prophets to be fulfilled for the entirety of his life. Upon meeting Jesus with Mary and Joseph at the temple, Simeon rejoices in the fact that everything God promised the people of Israel was finally coming to pass. He quotes the prophet Isaiah (Isaiah 42:6; 49:6), who wrote about the Savior of all the world 700 years prior to Jesus' arrival.

In the midst of all that Jesus would do, Simeon accurately prophesied about Jesus:

1) He would be a great source of controversy amongst the people.

2) Jesus' work would expose the thoughts of people's hearts and pierce their souls.

Jesus does this as He reveals His unique identity as the only living God, the Messiah who comes to make all wrong things right as He delivers His righteous commands that are to be obeyed.

3) He would be the source of salvation for the Jews and the Gentiles.

This is what Jesus is through His sinless life, death on the cross as a substitutionary sacrifice for sins, and His resurrection from the dead. Jesus offered Himself for all of humanity and turned the known world upside down as He brought men, women and children to repentance and faith.

As it was with the shepherds' finding Jesus in the manger, all things that God has said will turn out exactly as He said they would be. To find ourselves in right standing with God and ready to be a part of His redemptive story, we want to have the same posture of expectation that Simeon had.

Peter, one of the inner circle of disciples during Jesus' earthly ministry, exhorted us to be like Simeon in this manner:

1 Peter 1:13 Therefore, 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.

Looking with expectation prepares you to see what God is doing and how you can be involved.

What To Do While You Wait

Anna was preparing for God's salvation with faithful fasting and prayer.

Luke 2:36-40 There was also a prophet, Anna, the daughter of Penuel, of the tribe of Asher. She was very old; she had lived with her husband seven years after her marriage, and then was a widow until she was eighty-four. She never left the temple but worshiped night and day, fasting and praying. Coming up to them at that very moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about the child to all who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem. When Joseph and Mary had done everything required by the Law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee to their own town of Nazareth. And the child grew and became strong; he was filled with wisdom, and the grace of God was on him.

Anna would have hardly expected to have lost her husband at such an early age. Despite this tragedy, Anna found her refuge in the house of God and built her life around the coming kingdom of God through fasting and prayer.

What do fasting and prayer do?

Fasting humbles you before God when you acknowledge your deep need for the Holy Spirit to move in and through your life. It intensifies your sense of dependency upon Him.

Prayer involves you in the purposes of God by preparing you for action.

In the midst of her loss, Anna's response enabled her to play a special role in announcing the arrival of the Messiah that, undoubtedly, prepared the people of Israel for the redemption of Christ. With fasting and prayer, you can take part in Jesus' gospel purposes in your family, city and the nations today.

Anna never left the temple. We should never leave these two postures of a lifestyle of fasting and prayer. The kingdom of God is not to be an interesting or a beneficial part of your life; it is to be the central thing. It is those who are looking for the redemption of Christ that will be a part of what He is doing when the times will have reached their fulfillment.

Being devoted to God and righteous like Simeon and Anna does not at all mean entering a convent and spending the entirety of your days there. It does mean devotedly doing business, relationships and life according to the leadership of God's Word and counsel. It means they stayed connected to the house of God, were able to meet the Messiah and be involved in announcing His redemption that Jesus would one day bring to the world, particularly to all of those who have been waiting for Him.

This was part of the inspiration behind the name "Second City."

Why Second City Church? (Pastor Rollan shared the vision behind Second City Church.)

“At present we are on the outside of the world, the wrong side of the door. We discern the freshness and purity of morning, but they do not make us fresh and pure. We cannot mingle with the splendours we see. But all the leaves of the New Testament are rustling with the rumour that it will not always be so. Some day, God willing, we shall get in.”
― C.S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory

Let's welcome Christ this holiday season with the same expectation and devotion that the old man (Simeon) and the prophetess (Anna) displayed. If you've never repented of sin and put your trust in God as they did, do so today and watch Him bring His redemptive purpose to your life. If there are sin cycles in your life of which you have not repented as a believer, do so today. Let's build expectation for what the Lord will do in every area of your life and this city in the new year!

Next week we will speak about how to, like Christ, grow in strength, wisdom and the grace of God on our lives.

Second City Church- An Unexpected Journey Sermon Series 2014

An Unexpected Journey - An Unexpected King

After 400 years of Scriptural silence, God once again pierces history in dramatic fashion by the first Advent of the Savior and His heavenly kingdom. The unexpected journey would be epitomized by Jesus Himself. The literal king of the world to be born to parents of seemingly insignificant pedigree, in a small town, amongst various animals with His first bed being a manger used to feed them. With such a paradoxical beginning, it is clear that we need to learn to find Jesus in the details and be ready for unexpected challenges in our life that are meant for God's glory and our good.

Jesus in the Details

God is sovereign and controls world affairs unto His ultimate ends. You better believe that He is in the business of supernaturally directing your life as well.

Luke 2:1-7 In those days Caesar Augustus issued a decree that a census should be taken of the entire Roman world. This was the first census that took place while Quirinius was governor of Syria. And everyone went to their own town to register. So Joseph also went up from the town of Nazareth in Galilee to Judea, to Bethlehem the town of David, because he belonged to the house and line of David. He went there to register with Mary, who was pledged to be married to him and was expecting a child. While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born, and she gave birth to her firstborn, a son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no guest room available for them.

The Nativity story is a picture of the sovereignty of God and His perfect placements.

Seven-hundred years before the birth of Jesus, the prophet Micah would deliver with supernatural accuracy the birthplace of Jesus and reveal important details about His identity.

Micah 5:2 “But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.”

What this means is that:

1) Jesus is the eternal God.

Jesus has been around the block several more eons than you. Therefore, when He gives you commands through the Bible that are to obeyed for your good, you can trust that He has the wisdom to know what He's talking about.

2) God moves sovereignly throughout history.

The fact that Joseph, the adoptive father of Jesus, would be of the line of King David confirmed the covenant made to David (2 Sam. 7; Ps. 89), where David was promised that God would raise up one of his descendants after him, who would reign forever on his throne. This promise to David was made 900 years before Jesus' arrival and became the foundation for Israel’s hope for a coming Messiah. God is faithful to watch over and fulfill His promises over a long period of time.

It is not a mistake that you are here or with the people with whom you find yourself - in your family, church, workplace, school or neighborhood. It is all part of God's overarching plan.

The times and places that you were born, live and are now reaching out to find Jesus are part of the design of God. You are in the right place. Settle down allowing Him to do His work in and through you there until He says otherwise.

As a lesson from the specificity involved in the birth of Christ, two great questions to ask are:

1) Where are you now that you did not expect to be?

2) How has God arranged the exact times and places in which you now find yourself for the birthing of His kingdom purposes through your life?

The answers to these questions reflects the unexpected challenge that Jesus brings to follow Him both then and now.

An Unexpected Challenge

Jesus comes to rule your life because He can do it better.

However, this reality posed a threat to the:

1) Romans

Caesar Augustus was the adopted son of Julius Caesar who had transferred political power to Augustus and two other men. After his defeat of Marc Antony and Cleopatra, Augustus' ascendency to the throne was complete, and through his Pax Romana, he would provide unprecedented unity and safety of travel for those of the Empire. This would be a perfect environment for the spread of the gospel which would highlight the worship of Jesus rather than the Caesars in their imperial rule.

2) Jews

The Zondervan Bible commentary gives us a picture of messianic expectations in the time of Jesus:

"In the century leading up to Jesus’ birth, when the powerful Roman empire dominated Palestine, hope for the coming Messiah to free God’s people from their oppressors became particularly intense. Though these expectations were diverse in the various strands of first-century Judaism, the dominant hope was for a messianic deliverer from King David’s line. In the Psalms of Solomon, a pseudepigraphic work (written under an assumed name) from the first century B.C., the following hope is expressed: See, Lord, and raise up for them their king, the son of David, to rule over your servant Israel…. Undergird him with the strength to destroy the unrighteous rulers, to purge Jerusalem from gentiles who trample her to destruction; in wisdom and in righteousness to drive out the sinners from the inheritance; to smash the arrogance of sinners like a potter’s jar; to shatter all their substance with an iron rod [cf. Ps. 2:9] to destroy unlawful nations with the word of his mouth; [cf. Isa. 11:4] At his warning the nations will flee from his presence; and he will condemn sinners by the thoughts of their hearts. (Pss. Sol. 17:21–25). The Gentiles who “trample [Jerusalem] to destruction” are the Romans. It is not difficult to see why such excitement surrounded Jesus and even John the Baptist (Luke 3:15), when people suspected either might be the Messiah, the Son of David."

It was disconcerting to many that the first order of business for the anticipated deliverer would not be to overthrow the Romans, but the autonomy and rebellion in their hearts. It is the same for us today as Jesus looks to bring people first to repentance so that He might forgive us of our sins and free us of the internal oppression of sin that has ruled our lives.

3) Us

We like to piecemeal our devotion to Jesus, but relationship with Him is an all or nothing proposal. He came to marry a bride, His church. Jesus does not come to make happy suggestions for your life, He comes to benevolently rule it. As you repent of sin and meet Him at the cross you receive His abundant life.

“Men will allow God to be everywhere but on his throne. They will allow him to be in his workshop to fashion worlds and make stars. They will allow Him to be in His almonry to dispense His alms and bestow his bounties. They will allow Him to sustain the earth and bear up the pillars thereof, or light the lamps of heaven, or rule the waves of the ever-moving ocean; but when God ascends His throne, His creatures then gnash their teeth. And we proclaim an enthroned God, and His right to do as He wills with His own, to dispose of His creatures as He thinks well, without consulting them in the matter; then it is that we are hissed and execrated, and then it is that men turn a deaf ear to us, for God on His throne is not the God they love. But it is God upon the throne that we love to preach. It is God upon His throne whom we trust.”
― Charles H. Spurgeon

Jesus came in fulfillment of God's specific promise to the chagrin of the Caesars who hoped to be deified. Jesus brought bigger plans than the Jews of the time anticipated. He would bring an eternal kingdom to rule in the hearts of men and women with His first coming. This is the purpose of the first Advent as He provides an avenue of reconciliation between God and humanity through the cross. The second Advent of Jesus the Messiah will come and overthrow the enemies of God. He will be the long-awaited king of both Jews and Gentiles alike coming to assume His throne. Therefore, let's worship Him now and forever give Him the throne in our lives.

Second City Church- An Unexpected Journey Sermon Series 2014

An Unexpected Journey - The Pregnancy and the Promise

Transforming Truth: Our plans are not always God's plans, but Jesus' plans are always bigger and better.

Who in here is a planner?

We all have plans and dreams of what we want and expect our life to look like in regard to: your career, your spouse, the number of kids you'll have, your achievements, financial portfolio, etc.

Mary and Joseph more than likely had plans of their own to be like all of their young Jewish friends. Growing up in the lackluster town of Nazareth scholars estimate to have had a population at the time between 300-1000 people, the young Joseph would aspire to start his carpentry business. Mary, a girl between twelve and thirteen years old, would be looking to have a nice, respectable Jewish man between twelve and eighteen years old who would provide well for a home and allow them to be a part of the normal happenings of the culture. It is not much different today as people aspire to establish a career, 401K, go on select vacations each year, have a nice donkey or car, beautiful home and settle down like the rest of the American landscape. Yet things still seem to go awry.

The good news is that God always has bigger, unexpected plans!

What We Know About Jesus

There is no plan B with God. God's promise has always been and will always be to send Jesus to be the answer for this broken world.

Luke 1:26-33 In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a town in Galilee, to a virgin pledged to be married to a man named Joseph, a descendant of David. The virgin’s name was Mary. The angel went to her and said, “Greetings, you who are highly favored! The Lord is with you.” Mary was greatly troubled at his words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be. But the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary; you have found favor with God. You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you are to call him Jesus. He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, and he will reign over Jacob’s descendants forever; his kingdom will never end.”

What we know about Jesus is:

1) His entire life would be great and a sign from God.

All the world and history looks to Jesus as a signpost of what is good, true and right. God expects that you acknowledge the signs and serve Him with your life.

Isaiah 7:14 Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign: The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and will call him Immanuel.

2) Jesus would be born of a virgin; thus, 100% human as well as 100% God.

He would literally be God incarnate, meaning He came in the flesh and would be named Immanuel, meaning "God with us." God would not remain distant amidst the hurt and pain of the world's fallen state, but would get His hands dirty and come near to rescue.

Jeremiah 23:5-6 “The days are coming,” declares the Lord, “when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, a King who will reign wisely and do what is just and right in the land. In his days Judah will be saved and Israel will live in safety. This is the name by which he will be called: The Lord Our Righteous Savior.

Jesus is the "righteous Branch" (a Messianic reference) who would rescue the people from the powerful consequences of their rebellion and be their "Righteous Savior" from the penalty of their sins. You may not think that you need a Savior, but you will when the day of judgement comes.

“Knowledge of God without knowledge of man's wretchedness leads to pride. Knowledge of man's wretchedness without knowledge of God leads to despair. Knowledge of Jesus Christ is the middle course, because by it we discover both God and our wretched state.”
― Blaise Pascal

3) He will be the one to assume King David's throne with a kingdom that never ends.

This meant that Jesus would somehow live and rule forever. This is exactly what He does today after offering Himself as a perfect sacrifice for our sins on the cross and rising from the dead.

How we fit into that clear plan today beyond our personal salvation is often a surprise.

What We Didn't Realize God Was Doing

God's plans will unite you with specific people to fulfill His promises.

Luke 1:34-38 “How will this be,” Mary asked the angel, “since I am a virgin?” The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God. Even Elizabeth your relative is going to have a child in her old age, and she who was said to be unable to conceive is in her sixth month. For no word from God will ever fail.” “I am the Lord’s servant,” Mary answered. “May your word to me be fulfilled.” Then the angel left her.

The relational joining of the Lord often takes place when you are not even looking for it. You, like Mary and Elizabeth, get joined to other Christians in the purposes of God when the Holy Spirit is birthing something in you.

Mary had no idea what had been gestating in her relative Elizabeth for the past six months. The beautiful thing is that God places one piece of the puzzle in your spiritual womb (like Elizabeth) which will only find its fulfillment when joined to what God has birthed in your brother or sister's womb (like Mary).

Lessons from the Immaculate Conception:

What God does in your life will be:

1) Stretching

The call of God will pull you beyond your personal ambitions, life goals and dreams.

2) Require Interdependence

Mary and Elizabeth each had vital roles in fulfilling biblical prophecy. The relationships that God places you in play an indispensable part in the redemptive plans of God for our times.

3) Take Faith

Mary's pregnancy had to be conceived by the Holy Spirit and carried out through confidence in God's Word.

"I'm willing to do whatever you say, God, whatever is going to glorify you," is the attitude that Mary had. It is the posture that God is looking for from you.

Surprising Complements

Who you walk with is just as important as what you are pursuing.

Luke 1:39-45 At that time Mary got ready and hurried to a town in the hill country of Judea, where she entered Zechariah’s home and greeted Elizabeth. When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the baby leaped in her womb, and Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit. In a loud voice she exclaimed: “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the child you will bear! But why am I so favored, that the mother of my Lord should come to me? As soon as the sound of your greeting reached my ears, the baby in my womb leaped for joy. Blessed is she who has believed that the Lord would fulfill his promises to her!”

These are the types of intentional conversations we need to have, asking those in the church, "What has God called you to do for His Kingdom and how can we accomplish it together?" As with Elizabeth, a great deal of the joy that God has for you will only be found as you respond to God's purposes with your brothers and sisters in Christ.

The call of God will force you to depend on relationship with the people of God. Mary, a teenager, may not have been expecting to hang out with her elderly relative Elizabeth, but she's exactly who she needed during the pregnancy.

No one but the people of God will fully understand, hold you accountable to or encourage the things that God wants to do because ultimately they are all centered around the person of Jesus Christ.

It will take encouragement from other Jesus loving, kingdom-oriented believers.

Abilities wither under faultfinding, blossom under encouragement. 
Donald A Laird

It is only when we come together with these Holy Spirit inspired ambitions that the fulfillment of God's promises take place. This is to happen in and through Christ's church and is the power He releases in fellowship, biblically defined as a shared life.

Browsing vs. Belonging

Part of our culture's economic engine is run off of the rewards program for loyalty to particular businesses.

Cash Back Featuring Samuel L. Jackson- Capital One Commercial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWfpEjc7XVw

Instead of asking, "what's in your wallet?", we need to ask, "Who's in your life?"

1) When you belong to a church family, you are able to make plans with other believers for your growth, safety and success. When you are simply browsing, you often stand alone.

2) When you are grounded in a church community, people can walk with you through the highs and lows of life. When you are simply passing through, you lack the friendship that God has for you to follow-up your victories and defeats.

Don't try to go it alone. Again, there is great joy in the relationships God forms as His people pursue Jesus and His promises together.

How can you come together to exalt the person and gospel work of Jesus Christ this holiday season and new year?

Second City Church- An Unexpected Journey Sermon Series 2014

An Unexpected Journey - The Preacher and His Wife

The Advent season as recorded in the Gospel of Luke begins with one of the most closely hitting stories to home that one could imagine. If we simply glaze over it, we can miss it. It is the story of a preacher (Zechariah) and his wife (Elizabeth) who must choose to trust God after years of disappointment during the intertestamental period, and ultimately see God bring a history shaping redemption as a reward for their faithfulness. As we prepare to celebrate the coming of Christ today, we will see God's purpose behind our winter waits, acknowledge the power of consistency and embrace our redeeming Lord who brings beauty through it all.

Winter Weight

The wintry seasons of your soul where you feel like you are waiting on the goodness of God to be revealed can be God's shaping agent to make you the man or woman that you are created to be.

Luke 1:5-7 In the time of Herod king of Judea there was a priest named Zechariah, who belonged to the priestly division of Abijah; his wife Elizabeth was also a descendant of Aaron. Both of them were righteous in the sight of God, observing all the Lord’s commands and decrees blamelessly. But they were childless because Elizabeth was not able to conceive, and they were both very old.

Trial in life does not always equate to God's displeasure. Zechariah and Elizabeth were righteous in the sight of God, yet were still denied for the purposes of God one of the greatest longings of their hearts. Where have you been in a waiting period and what is God using it to produce in you?

The purpose of trials:

1) Develop Sight

They show you Jesus more clearly.

Hebrews describes Jesus as becoming a merciful and faithful high priest to people through what He suffered (Hebrews 2:17,18). Through Christ's perfect life and sacrifice that would come on the cross, you are offered forgiveness, healing and restoration.

1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 Rejoice always, pray continually, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

God's goal is not that you would always remain in the place of trial, but that you would be sensitized to the plight of others and become a vessel of the comfort that God Himself will provide.

2) Develop Sympathy Trials are the mechanisms through which you develop genuine sympathy for others that you will inevitably lead.

It fosters empathy in you in regard to matters that otherwise in your undisturbed state would not concern you or you would have no concern for (i.e. - sickness, racism, financial struggle, etc.).

Zechariah would have this in spades as he helped lead the Israelites through 400 years of canonical silence from the Lord.

2 Corinthians 1:3-7 Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our troubles, so that we can comfort those in any trouble with the comfort we ourselves receive from God. For just as we share abundantly in the sufferings of Christ, so also our comfort abounds through Christ. If we are distressed, it is for your comfort and salvation; if we are comforted, it is for your comfort, which produces in you patient endurance of the same sufferings we suffer. And our hope for you is firm, because we know that just as you share in our sufferings, so also you share in our comfort.

3) Develop Strength

Proverbs 24:10 If you falter in a time of trouble, how small is your strength!

Through trial, you can also develop faith for the gifts and power of God to heal, both for yourself and others.

In this way, you learn to truly love others and offer genuine hospitality.

People pack on winter weight because they are not active. If you want to be all about that bass physically, that's fine, but in the spirit you need to remain lean and strong. Zechariah and Elizabeth understood this as they were pressing through their trials.

The Power of Consistency

Make no doubt about it, consistency counts. God hears every prayer, sees every deed and shows himself faithful to those who are faithful (Psalm 18:25,26).

Luke 1:8-20 Once when Zechariah’s division was on duty and he was serving as priest before God, he was chosen by lot, according to the custom of the priesthood, to go into the temple of the Lord and burn incense. And when the time for the burning of incense came, all the assembled worshipers were praying outside. Then an angel of the Lord appeared to him, standing at the right side of the altar of incense. When Zechariah saw him, he was startled and was gripped with fear. But the angel said to him: “Do not be afraid, Zechariah; your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you are to call him John. He will be a joy and delight to you, and many will rejoice because of his birth, for he will be great in the sight of the Lord. He is never to take wine or other fermented drink, and he will be filled with the Holy Spirit even before he is born. He will bring back many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God. And he will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the parents to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.” Zechariah asked the angel, “How can I be sure of this? I am an old man and my wife is well along in years.” The angel said to him, “I am Gabriel. I stand in the presence of God, and I have been sent to speak to you and to tell you this good news. And now you will be silent and not able to speak until the day this happens, because you did not believe my words, which will come true at their appointed time.”

We think that our obedience to God is only for us. We forget that it also for those who will come behind us (our children, family members, co-workers and friends).

One of the keys to building anything of value in life is consistency. Doing anything one or two times may make you feel good about yourself but most times it does not build anything that is weight bearing. That would be the exception and not the rule. Don't be a one hit wonder.

This is difficult as a concept for our generation to embrace because we live with a sense of entitlement, feeling that we should have, do and experience anything that we can imagine. Zechariah had to live above this self-absorbed thinking to be consistent in his service in the temple.

Our generation suffers from a stop and go syndrome. The kingdom of God does not operate that way.

If you want to build a deep relationship with Jesus or mutually beneficial relationships with His family, you will need to be consistent. If you want to build a Christ-centered business you will need to be consistent. If you want to build a godly family or have an incredible marriage, you will need to be consistent. If you want to build a kingdom-oriented career, you need to be consistent. If want allow Jesus to use you to build His church, you need to be consistent.

You need to set boundaries for your life and live within them. You can not, nor should you, do everything.

Psalm 16:6 The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; surely I have a delightful inheritance.

Know what God intends to build with your life as a part of His church and give yourself wholly to that. Be consistent.

As time goes by, the challenges that you face in school, the marketplace and family life grow more, not less, intense. The decisions that you make to seek Jesus and His kingdom first have greater reaching implications because your decisions impact more and more people. The faithfulness of Zechariah and Elizabeth would ultimately shape John the Baptist who would be used of God to shape the entire nation of Israel in preparation for Christ's ministry.

Do you realize the weight of responsibility that Jesus has placed on your life, even in the midst of your trials? How will your decisions to pursue or not pursue Jesus and His kingdom affect your family? Your friendship group? Your work environment? The city? Your daily decisions as a thriving part of the kingdom community has greater impact than you realize.

Redeeming Lord

God will never waste the pain in your life, but will redeem it for His glory as you trust in Him.

Luke 1:21-25 Meanwhile, the people were waiting for Zechariah and wondering why he stayed so long in the temple. When he came out, he could not speak to them. They realized he had seen a vision in the temple, for he kept making signs to them but remained unable to speak. When his time of service was completed, he returned home. After this his wife Elizabeth became pregnant and for five months remained in seclusion. “The Lord has done this for me,” she said. “In these days he has shown his favor and taken away my disgrace among the people.”

Don't waste seasons of trial and obscurity.

The season of righteous pain and longing in Elizabeth's heart was eventually redeemed by God's faithfulness. Her life became a testimony to both God's perfect timing and watchful eye camped in the magnitude of His purposes. Her story still speaks to you and me many centuries later.

Ask the Holy Spirit to help you stand in the midst of your trial and continue to pursue the Lord. Don't let disappointment into your heart because breakthrough tarries. Know that your Savior will bring breakthrough.

Second City Church- An Unexpected Journey Sermon Series 2014

Famous Last Words - The Coming of the Lord

As we've done an initial overview of the story of the Bible, we've seen God's design in creation, been introduced to several of the patriarchs and matriarchs of the Torah, continued God's plan of redemption in the historical books with the lives of several kings of Israel, and through Malachi have been introduced to the prophets. The prophets of Israel were raised up by God for two primary functions, to call the people back to relationship with God through His law and to announce the coming of the Messiah, the savior of the world. After several eras of prosperity, rebellion and judgment, the last prophet to speak in the canonized Old Testament prior to the coming of Jesus would be the prophet Malachi. After him would be 400 years of canonical silence until the appearing of John the Baptist who would prepare the way for Jesus Christ. Malachi declares the things that are imperative for us to pay attention to since it is the last official recording of a Father to His children about the things that are important to Him. Today we will end this series by venturing to see the world clearly, highlighting the truth about where we are headed and finally acknowledging what God identifies as the key to our future.

Seeing the World Clearly

One of our greatest challenges to a walk with Jesus will be to remain faithful while the world prospers.

Malachi 3:13-16 “You have spoken arrogantly against me,” says the Lord.“Yet you ask, ‘What have we said against you?’ “You have said, ‘It is futile to serve God. What do we gain by carrying out his requirements and going about like mourners before the Lord Almighty? But now we call the arrogant blessed. Certainly evildoers prosper, and even when they put God to the test, they get away with it.’” Then those who feared the Lord talked with each other, and the Lord listened and heard. A scroll of remembrance was written in his presence concerning those who feared the Lord and honored his name.

We can get discouraged when we see the wicked prospering around us while we try to faithfully serve God. This discouragement can attempt to veer us off course if we don't remember the truth of God's Word.

God's scroll of remembrance is for those who have been faithful. Faithfulness is a fruit of the Holy Spirit where you build your life on something other than your emotions or wants in the moment. This is the zeal Jesus calls His people to maintain daily for Him and His kingdom purposes.

The Reality of Where We're Headed

What would you say to a beloved family member if you were sharing a last piece of communication before a very long separation? You would tell them that you are coming again.

Malachi 3:17-4:4 “Surely the day is coming; it will burn like a furnace. All the arrogant and every evildoer will be stubble, and the day that is coming will set them on fire,” says the Lord Almighty. “Not a root or a branch will be left to them. But for you who revere my name, the sun of righteousness will rise with healing in its rays. And you will go out and frolic like well-fed calves. Then you will trample on the wicked; they will be ashes under the soles of your feet on the day when I act,” says the Lord Almighty. “Remember the law of my servant Moses, the decrees and laws I gave him at Horeb for all Israel. “On the day when I act,” says the Lord Almighty, “they will be my treasured possession. I will spare them, just as a father has compassion and spares his son who serves him. And you will again see the distinction between the righteous and the wicked, between those who serve God and those who do not.

This day marks the beginning of the advent season for 2014. Advent means "coming" in Latin and annually celebrates the first coming of Jesus Christ. It will be followed by His second coming.

What accompanies the coming of the Lord?

For the righteous: Those who are righteous are those who revere God's name, who have responded to the gospel, who at the preaching of God's law given through Moses have responded in repentance and put their faith in what Jesus did for them on the cross. Christ's resurrection brings healing to our bodies physically, our minds psychologically, and our souls emotionally.

Great joy is the result of meeting the Lord, so that we frolic like well-fed calves. There will be an even greater amplification of this when Jesus brings the restoration of all things. This is when we will see the true distinction between the righteous and the wicked as a result of God's judgment and reward. You can also see the distinction today as a fruit of godly living.

True hope for the world is not found in human programs, education or exposure but in the person of Jesus who sets hearts free.

For the wicked: There is a coming judgment of God. There comes a day when the arrogant who thought they were getting away with things will be punished with everlasting destruction. The righteous who have persevered in honoring and serving Jesus will be rewarded with everlasting life.

Revelation 21:1-8 Then I saw “a new heaven and a new earth,” for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and there was no longer any sea. I saw the Holy City, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride beautifully dressed for her husband. And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people, and he will dwell with them. They will be his people, and God himself will be with them and be their God. ‘He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death’ or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” He who was seated on the throne said, “I am making everything new!” Then he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true.” He said to me: “It is done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End. To the thirsty I will give water without cost from the spring of the water of life. Those who are victorious will inherit all this, and I will be their God and they will be my children. But the cowardly, the unbelieving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts, the idolaters and all liars—they will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur. This is the second death.”

The Key to our Future

The key to our future is reconciliation with God and one another through the gospel.

Malachi 4:5-6 “See, I will send the prophet Elijah to you before that great and dreadful day of the Lord comes. He will turn the hearts of the parents to their children, and the hearts of the children to their parents; or else I will come and strike the land with total destruction.”

The entire Bible is one continuous story chronicling specific instances of God's interaction with humanity throughout history. It also gives us a picture of what is yet to come.

Elijah was of the greatest Jewish prophets of the Old Testament who spoke to the people at a time of great straying from God and apostasy.

John the Baptist was a forerunner to Jesus who came in the spirit and power of the prophet Elijah calling people to repentance. He pointed to Jesus as the one who would take away sins and save the world (John 1).

Elijah made an appearance with Moses during Jesus' earthly ministry on the on the Mount of Transfiguration to verify that all of the Law and prophets were pointing to the person of Jesus, having their fulfillment in Him (Matthew 17:1-13).

In announcing the birth of John the Baptist, God's messenger, the angel Gabriel said this:

Luke 1:17 And he (John the Baptist) will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the parents to their children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.”

The restoration of the family unit centered around the gospel and Christ's kingdom is the key to renewing the cities and nations of the earth.

Just as God is restoring the natural family unit, He is building spiritual family within the church. Jesus comes to bring you into a new family and, through it, to create cities within cities, a kingdom culture meant for the redemption of the world.

If you want to walk in real relationship with Christ and His people, it will cost you all you have. Church hopping, coming to fellowship or having devotions with Jesus merely when it's convenient and focusing solely on how your needs are being met rather than looking to serve are killers to genuine faith in Christ and your relationship with others. The power of God's grace is seen when you learn to be a giver rather than a taker, faithfully giving yourself so that the gospel can truly transform you and, thereafter, the city.

Timothy Keller speaks of this great relational cost to God and to us when he says:

“...God's grace and forgiveness, while free to the recipient, are always costly for the giver.... From the earliest parts of the Bible, it was understood that God could not forgive without sacrifice. No one who is seriously wronged can "just forgive" the perpetrator.... But when you forgive, that means you absorb the loss and the debt. You bear it yourself. All forgiveness, then, is costly.”
― Timothy Keller

This all leads to the 400 years of canonical silence and the coming of the Messiah, who we will begin to discuss next week with our new series, An Unexpected Journey.

Second City Church- Famous Last Words Sermon Series 2014

 

Famous Last Words - Will a Man Rob God?

Transforming Truth: Your relationship with money is an indicator of your relationship with Jesus.

Prior to 400 years of canonical silence, one of the last things God makes clear to His people through the prophet Malachi is that their relationship with money is a big deal and a huge indicator of what is going on in their hearts. God does not change. From beginning to end, Jesus wants to be your provider, your confidence, your security and your source. He demonstrated this for you on the cross by becoming a substitute for your sin, taking the wrath of God on Himself and giving you His righteousness. He continues this idea of provision with your finances as you give Him what He's entrusted to you to receive His blessing in return. Today, as we walk through the books of the Bible, we will deepen our worship by understanding the tithe and understanding the heart of God behind it all.

Understanding God's Tithe You are to acknowledge God as your source with your firstfruits - the first and best of all your income.

Malachi 3:6-12 “I the Lord do not change. So you, the descendants of Jacob, are not destroyed. Ever since the time of your ancestors you have turned away from my decrees and have not kept them. Return to me, and I will return to you,” says the Lord Almighty. “But you ask, ‘How are we to return?’ “Will a mere mortal rob God? Yet you rob me.“But you ask, ‘How are we robbing you?’ “In tithes and offerings. You are under a curse—your whole nation—because you are robbing me. Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in this,” says the Lord Almighty, “and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that there will not be room enough to store it. I will prevent pests from devouring your crops, and the vines in your fields will not drop their fruit before it is ripe,” says the Lord Almighty. “Then all the nations will call you blessed, for yours will be a delightful land,” says the Lord Almighty.

Being blessed means to have God's divine hand and favor working on your behalf. Being cursed is living with God resisting you.

People often find themselves struggling and feeling cursed because they do not involve Jesus in their financial lives.

As you are faithful to give, God is faithful to take care of every need that you have (Philippians 4:10-20), and then some. By trusting Him, you come into the joy of being blessed to be a blessing (Genesis 12:2).

Exodus 34:26a “Bring the best of the firstfruits of your soil to the house of the Lord your God."

When God speaks of your firstfruits, it means that He expects that what you spend your money on first would be your tithe. It is giving back to Him what belongs to Him. It is not your leftovers. It is the best of what you have.

Make no doubt about it: your giving is an act of worship, faith and obedience to God.

“The worship to which we are called in our renewed state is far too important to be left to personal preferences, to whims, or to marketing strategies. It is the pleasing of God that is at the heart of worship. Therefore, our worship must be informed at every point by the Word of God as we seek God’s own instructions for worship that is pleasing to Him.”
― R.C. Sproul, A Taste of Heaven: Worship in the Light of Eternity

Leviticus was the book that began to describe to the people of God what true and full worship should look like.

Leviticus 27:30-33 “‘A tithe of everything from the land, whether grain from the soil or fruit from the trees, belongs to the Lord; it is holy to the Lord. Whoever would redeem any of their tithe must add a fifth of the value to it. Every tithe of the herd and flock—every tenth animal that passes under the shepherd’s rod—will be holy to the Lord. No one may pick out the good from the bad or make any substitution. If anyone does make a substitution, both the animal and its substitute become holy and cannot be redeemed.’”

Tithe means tenth.

Tithe, tenth and firstfruits are all key words used throughout the Scripture to help us understand God's overarching principle reiterated throughout the generations. God expected the whole tithe, the first tenth and best of all of the Israelites' income to be returned to Him in worship.

Where is the storehouse?

Deuteronomy 12:4-7 You must not worship the Lord your God in their way. But you are to seek the place the Lord your God will choose from among all your tribes to put his Name there for his dwelling. To that place you must go; there bring your burnt offerings and sacrifices, your tithes and special gifts, what you have vowed to give and your freewill offerings, and the firstborn of your herds and flocks. There, in the presence of the Lord your God, you and your families shall eat and shall rejoice in everything you have put your hand to, because the Lord your God has blessed you.

The original storehouse was the temple in Israel, the place God prescribed for worship. Your storehouse is where you worship Jesus, find your Christian community, are being pastored, are serving and are being fed through the Word of God. There is the universal church, but it is important that you embrace the practical function of the local expression of the body of Christ.

Should I begin when I think that I have enough money?

No. It will not get easier as your income grows if you do not develop the right habits now. The truth is there is a big difference between our wants and our needs. When you are making your assessment of having enough, you are often referring to your idea of where you would like to be, not what you need to have. By beginning with what you have now, you are developing a lifestyle through which God can entrust you with more as you are faithful with the little you presently have.

Do I give off of the gross or net of my income?

Luke 20:20-26 Keeping a close watch on him, they sent spies, who pretended to be sincere. They hoped to catch Jesus in something he said, so that they might hand him over to the power and authority of the governor. So the spies questioned him: “Teacher, we know that you speak and teach what is right, and that you do not show partiality but teach the way of God in accordance with the truth. Is it right for us to pay taxes to Caesar or not?” He saw through their duplicity and said to them, “Show me a denarius. Whose image and inscription are on it?”“Caesar’s,” they replied. He said to them, “Then give back to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s.” They were unable to trap him in what he had said there in public. And astonished by his answer, they became silent.

You tithe off of the gross. The government is unapologetic about asking for their share. God is unapologetic in requiring that we give Him the firstfruits before anyone else.

Did Jesus endorse tithing?

Matthew 23:23-24 “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You give a tenth of your spices—mint, dill and cumin. But you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice, mercy and faithfulness. You should have practiced the latter, without neglecting the former. You blind guides! You strain out a gnat but swallow a camel. When you belong to Jesus, your life is not our own. Nor is your money. All 100% belongs to God. He tells you clearly what to do with the first 10%. Bring it into His house. He then expects you to be a steward, led by the wisdom of His Word, the unction of the Holy Spirit and the generosity of your heart to know what to do with the rest.

Understanding the Heart of God There is great joy, liberty and peace when you begin to trust God with your financial life.

Jesus wants your heart, not just your money. The issue is having a generous heart like Christ. When you involve God in your resources, you are giving Him the gateway to everything that is most important to you. You are putting confidence in Him that all of your needs will be met by a good Father and will bless you with your desires according to His wisdom (Psalm 37:4).

However, you end the robbing of God in two ways:

1) You give Him the honor He is due as the true provider when you pay your whole tithe. True worship is a wholistic lifestyle, not a sentiment. He established a faith mechanism through which you acknowledge Him by the giving of your tithes, not your lip service.

2) You demonstrate your concern for His house beyond the borders of your desires when you give joyful offerings beyond your tithe. The full extent of God's gospel purposes are realized when God's people give their offerings. Churches, missions and ministers are funded, the poor are fed and the gospel is advanced. All of these things are accomplished through the resources that God entrusts to us.

God said that He must be recognized as our source.

Deuteronomy 8:10-20 When you have eaten and are satisfied, praise the Lord your God for the good land he has given you. Be careful that you do not forget the Lord your God, failing to observe his commands, his laws and his decrees that I am giving you this day. Otherwise, when you eat and are satisfied, when you build fine houses and settle down, and when your herds and flocks grow large and your silver and gold increase and all you have is multiplied, then your heart will become proud and you will forget the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. He led you through the vast and dreadful wilderness, that thirsty and waterless land, with its venomous snakes and scorpions. He brought you water out of hard rock. He gave you manna to eat in the wilderness, something your ancestors had never known, to humble and test you so that in the end it might go well with you. You may say to yourself, “My power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me.” But remember the Lord your God, for it is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth, and so confirms his covenant, which he swore to your ancestors, as it is today. If you ever forget the Lord your God and follow other gods and worship and bow down to them, I testify against you today that you will surely be destroyed. Like the nations the Lord destroyed before you, so you will be destroyed for not obeying the Lord your God.

When we tithe and make our offerings to Jesus, we are breaking the dominating spirit of self sufficiency in wealth by declaring that we will not live in fear, but rather in faith and trust in God as our ultimate provider, multiplier and source.

I have held many things in my hands, and I have lost them all; but whatever I have placed in God's hands, that I still possess.
-Martin Luther

Second City Church- Famous Last Words Sermon Series 2014

Famous Last Words - A Priesthood of Believers

Transforming Truth: As a follower of Jesus, you are called to be part of a royal priesthood.

The story of the Bible is the history of God's good creation gone bad through humanity's sin and God's subsequent plan of redemption through Jesus Christ. Throughout this narrative, the nation of Israel had been at a height of prosperity when the people were obeying the Law of God. When the Israelites went into rebellion, God disciplined them by sending them into exile at the hands of foreign nations. God in His kindness also promised restoration for the repentant, which took place after the Babylonian exile under the leadership of men like Ezra, who rebuilt the altar of worship that had been destroyed, and Nehemiah who rebuilt the walls of defense around Jerusalem. Unfortunately, by the time Malachi arrives on the scene, abuses had already begun to reappear in the community. God uses Malachi to return people to the commands of God by reminding them of their identity, their responsibility, their first love and the only true God that they should be seeking.

Your Identity and Responsibility

Jesus gives you a priestly identity so that you can become like him in person and mission.

Malachi 2:1-9 “And now, you priests, this warning is for you. If you do not listen, and if you do not resolve to honor my name,” says the Lord Almighty, “I will send a curse on you, and I will curse your blessings. Yes, I have already cursed them, because you have not resolved to honor me. “Because of you I will rebuke your descendants; I will smear on your faces the dung from your festival sacrifices, and you will be carried off with it. And you will know that I have sent you this warning so that my covenant with Levi may continue,” says the Lord Almighty. “My covenant was with him, a covenant of life and peace, and I gave them to him; this called for reverence and he revered me and stood in awe of my name. True instruction was in his mouth and nothing false was found on his lips. He walked with me in peace and uprightness, and turned many from sin. “For the lips of a priest ought to preserve knowledge, because he is the messenger of the Lord Almighty and people seek instruction from his mouth. But you have turned from the way and by your teaching have caused many to stumble; you have violated the covenant with Levi,” says the Lord Almighty. “So I have caused you to be despised and humiliated before all the people, because you have not followed my ways but have shown partiality in matters of the law.”

A priest is one who both worships and facilitates the worship of the one true God who was without predecessor or repetition incarnate in Jesus Christ.

How the Priests Became Priests

Those who were appointed to serve at the temple did so at the intersection of God's choosing and their holy zeal against loved ones to turn them from sin (Exodus 32).

When you belong to Jesus, you've become part of a royal priesthood.

1 Peter 2:9 But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.

The knowledge and instruction of a priest are to lead people to a righteousness that comes by faith in Jesus.

There are two types of righteousness by faith: 1) Saving faith which is imputed (ascribed by exchange) to you when you believe the gospel of Jesus (Romans 3), and 2) Persistent faith which is imparted to us as we continually avail ourselves to Christ and the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives (Colossians 2:6). More is expounded about these two types of faith in R.T. Kendall's book, Holy Fire.

As a priesthood, we are to call people into both.

You will not fear calling people out of sin if you know it is for their good and is the mission of Jesus. John the Baptist, the forerunner preparing the people for the ministry of Jesus said it this way:

Matthew 3:8-10 Produce fruit in keeping with repentance. And do not think you can say to yourselves, ‘We have Abraham as our father.’ I tell you that out of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham. The ax is already at the root of the trees, and every tree that does not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire.

There is a hyper-grace heresy today akin to antinomianism that says that because Jesus paid for all of our sin on the cross, there is no need of ongoing confession and repentance of sin. This leads to a diluted view of the severity of sin and our need to turn from it. It also diminishes the sacrifice of Christ and the price He had to pay for our forgiveness. In this way, we never truly understand the depth of His love.

We begin to compromise the commands of God when we lose Jesus as our first love.

Your First Love

To live out that identity, Jesus needs to define every other love in your life.

Malachi 2:10-16 Do we not all have one Father? Did not one God create us? Why do we profane the covenant of our ancestors by being unfaithful to one another? Judah has been unfaithful. A detestable thing has been committed in Israel and in Jerusalem: Judah has desecrated the sanctuary the Lord loves by marrying women who worship a foreign god. As for the man who does this, whoever he may be, may the Lord remove him from the tents of Jacob—even though he brings an offering to the Lord Almighty. Another thing you do: You flood the Lord’s altar with tears. You weep and wail because he no longer looks with favor on your offerings or accepts them with pleasure from your hands. You ask, “Why?” It is because the Lord is the witness between you and the wife of your youth. You have been unfaithful to her, though she is your partner, the wife of your marriage covenant. Has not the one God made you? You belong to him in body and spirit. And what does the one God seek? Godly offspring. So be on your guard, and do not be unfaithful to the wife of your youth. “The man who hates and divorces his wife,” says the Lord, the God of Israel, “does violence to the one he should protect,” says the Lord Almighty. So be on your guard, and do not be unfaithful.

People often do not want God to speak into their romantic life and relationships.

God puts His hands in your stuff like you do with a puppy's bowl of food when they are young while they are eating so they will learn who is really in charge and from whom the good provision really comes.

What type of spouse should I be looking for? What type of spouse should I be? 1) One who is not an idolator, putting money, relationships or career above Jesus; 2) One who provokes you into kingdom purposes for your family and life (Matt. 6:33); 3) One who will be happy, and with whom you can see yourself, raising godly offspring who will also follow the Lord in this way (natural and spiritual).

If you are single, God is still looking for godly spiritual offspring from you, and who knows about adoption.

Does your romantic life encourage idolatry or greater holiness in your life? How is your significant other provoking and leading you to a greater love for and obedience to the Lord Jesus? This is the point of being equally yoked, and you should settle for nothing less because it leads to the life God has called you to. I would not commend a man of lesser stature to my daughter or a woman to my sons. Your Heavenly Father will not do that for you either.

"If you cannot trust God for the temporal, how dare you trust him for the eternal?"
- Charles Spurgeon

The Lord You are Seeking

We must be messengers to lead people to Jesus.

Malachi 2:17-3:5 “I will send my messenger, who will prepare the way before me. Then suddenly the Lord you are seeking will come to his temple; the messenger of the covenant, whom you desire, will come,” says the Lord Almighty. But who can endure the day of his coming? Who can stand when he appears? For he will be like a refiner’s fire or a launderer’s soap. He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver; he will purify the Levites and refine them like gold and silver. Then the Lord will have men who will bring offerings in righteousness, and the offerings of Judah and Jerusalem will be acceptable to the Lord, as in days gone by, as in former years. “So I will come to put you on trial. I will be quick to testify against sorcerers, adulterers and perjurers, against those who defraud laborers of their wages, who oppress the widows and the fatherless, and deprive the foreigners among you of justice, but do not fear me,” says the Lord Almighty. You have wearied the Lord with your words.“How have we wearied him?” you ask. By saying, “All who do evil are good in the eyes of the Lord, and he is pleased with them” or “Where is the God of justice?”

You can desire to be so inclusive in your idea of religion, that you exclude the only living God who made exclusive claims about Himself to truly be inclusive of all people (John 14:7).

To truly be preaching the gospel, you need to call people out of sin, and to Jesus.

To be sure, it is solely our trust in the atoning, propitiary, substitutionary death of Christ on the cross that will save us; however, we become like Jesus and useful in the hand of the Father for His holy purposes through our ongoing purification. This is worship as we honor God and reflect His glorious design for relationships, family, work, use of wealth and stewardship of His creation in the earth. As a priesthood of believers, we are to walk in the reality of our cleansing by the blood of Jesus and the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit. We are also charged to lead others to that place of repentance and faith.

You can only do this effectively if you lead people to the person of Jesus and the grace shown through His cross.

The truth is there is right and wrong before God. Our culture tries to blur those lines, but Jesus does not.

Jesus is our great high priest. We should have His same attitude as we live as a priesthood of believers today.

If your fundamental is a man dying on the cross for his enemies, if the very heart of your self-image and your religion is a man praying for his enemies as he died for them, sacrificing for them, loving them - if that sinks into your heart of hearts, it's going to produce the kind of life that the early Christians produced. The most inclusive possible life out of the most exclusive possible claim - and that is this is the truth. But what is the truth? The truth is a God become weak, loving and dying for the people who opposed him, dying forgiving them.
-Timothy Keller

Remember your own redemption. Through this you will both offer and see others receive the kindness of God that leads them to true life.

Romans 2:1-4 You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things. Now we know that God’s judgment against those who do such things is based on truth. So when you, a mere human being, pass judgment on them and yet do the same things, do you think you will escape God’s judgment? Or do you show contempt for the riches of his kindness, forbearance and patience, not realizing that God’s kindness is intended to lead you to repentance?

Second City Church- Famous Last Words Sermon Series 2014

Guest Speaker - Shundrawn Thomas

Strictly Business

Matthew 4: 18 (NIV) As Jesus was walking beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon called Peter and his brother Andrew. They were casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. 19 "Come, follow me," Jesus said, "and I will make you fishers of men." 20 At once they left their nets and followed him. 21 Going on from there, he saw two other brothers, James son of Zebedee and his brother John. They were in a boat with their father Zebedee, preparing their nets. Jesus called them, 22 and immediately they left the boat and their father and followed him.

Early on Jesus picked a small band of disciples. These men became the pioneers of the evangelical movement that Jesus launched and leaders of the Church He established. The first disciples chosen by Jesus were not political figures, religious leaders or royalty, but rather commercial fisherman (Four men, two sets of brothers – Simon, Andrew, James and John).

Jesus does not speak of deliverance. This call was in fact a call to discipleship. Jesus invites them to do mission work telling them plainly that He would teach them to be fishers of men. In effect, Jesus invites them to join His mission or business venture – fishing for men.

As the Church, we must focus on both the “gospel message” and the “gospel mission.” The gospel message about the Christ and His kingdom redeems the life of the sinner. By grace and through faith in the message the sinner is saved. However, it is the gospel mission that transforms us. Through commitment to Christ’s mission we are converted. Thus, my topic for today is Strictly Business.

We will examine Jesus’ selection of four fishermen to expand His ministry or vocation. Specifically, we will discuss four aspects:

The Boat The Band The Bait The Business

The Discipleship Difference

-The offer of salvation differs from the call to discipleship. Salvation is an open invitation (…whoever believes Jn 3:16). Discipleship is a special invitation (…I chose you Jn 15:16).

-Salvation has a price that Christ paid (you could not pay the debt of sin). Discipleship has a cost that you must pay (deny yourself, take up your cross and follow Christ).

-While the sinner who accepts the gospel message is delivered (salvation), the believer who responds to the gospel mission is deployed (commission).

The sinner who is delivered must receive God’s grace. The disciple who is converted must serve God’s mission.

-The sinner who is delivered repents (encourages self) and the disciple who is converted witnesses (encourages others).

So let’s turn to the four aspects of discipleship:

The Boat – a vessel for transport (on water) The Band – a company of persons working together The Bait – something used to attract or lure The Business – mission, calling or vocation

Luke 5: 1 (NIV) One day as Jesus was standing by the Lake of Gennesaret, with the people crowding around him and listening to the word of God, 2 he saw at the water's edge two boats, left there by the fishermen, who were washing their nets. 3 He got into one of the boats, the one belonging to Simon, and asked him to put out a little from shore. Then he sat down and taught the people from the boat. 4 When he had finished speaking, he said to Simon, "Put out into deep water, and let down the nets for a catch." 5 Simon answered, "Master, we've worked hard all night and haven't caught anything. But because you say so, I will let down the nets." 6 When they had done so, they caught such a large number of fish that their nets began to break. 7 So they signaled their partners in the other boat to come and help them, and they came and filled both boats so full that they began to sink. 8 When Simon Peter saw this, he fell at Jesus' knees and said, "Go away from me, Lord; I am a sinful man!" 9 For he and all his companions were astonished at the catch of fish they had taken, 10 and so were James and John, the sons of Zebedee, Simon's partners. Then Jesus said to Simon, "Don't be afraid; from now on you will catch men." 11 So they pulled their boats up on shore, left everything and followed him.

The Boat

While this might seem obvious, the first consideration if you are going into the commercial fishing business is the acquisition of a boat. As they performed their work the boat kept them afloat. It was the means to effectively access the environment of the fish. In a proverbial sense, faith keeps us afloat. If we trust in Christ and His Word it will keep us on the seas of life.

The Band

The second ingredient you need for any lasting business is co-laborers or partners. This is why Jesus went about the careful task of identifying and selecting His future business partners… His band of disciples. In a business venture the owner chooses the partners based on the mission. The fishermen offered several very attractive qualities to Jesus including skill, patience and humility. This is in part why they were chosen.

The Bait

Commercial fishermen principally used different types of nets and bait to catch different types of fish. In fact, they could target different types of fish through the type and usage of bait. In the ministry of discipleship the key is also the bait that we use. In order to attract sinners, God has entrusted us with the most effective form of bait, the gospel message. When offered with the hook of Christ’s finished work you can effectively fish for men.

The Business

As we noted earlier, the term business is defined as a mission or purposeful activity. It is synonymous with the term calling. The first chosen disciples had a vocation that they’d chosen. Jesus was in essence compelling them to a higher calling or vocation. We must move past the selfish work of our own soul's salvation to the selfless work of winning souls for Christ. This is the family business and our shared mission.

Conclusion

During Jesus’ earthy ministry, He identified the single biggest challenge to His going concern (fishing for men). It wasn’t the boat, the bait or the business itself. It was the band. He told His disciples that the harvest was plentiful but the laborers (disciples) were few. Indeed He didn’t say pray for greater harvest but more disciples (Matt 9:37:38). Consider the commission, which concludes the gospel of Matthew.

Matthew 28: 16 (NIV) Then the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain where Jesus had told them to go. 17 When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. 18 Then Jesus came to them and said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age."

Second City Church- Guest Speaker Missions & More Sermon Series 2014

First Things First

Famous Last Words: First Things First

[powerpress]

Transforming Truth: Jesus wants your first and your best, not your leftovers.

The narrative of the Bible is a continuous, unbroken story. It begins with creation, God's perfect, grand design. Genesis describes humanity's fall and the beginning of God's restorative plan through the Jewish people. He introduces covenant relationship and the ground rules for redemption through the Torah, the law, found in the first five books of the Bible. The books of wisdom (Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon) expound on this law giving practical instruction for every day living as you follow God. Joshua through Esther give a historic account of the Israelites living under and perpetually straying from the Law. The prophets are God's messengers throughout that time returning the people to that Law. All of the Old Testament speaks of Jesus who would inevitably come to save the world as He perfectly fulfilled that Law on our behalf. Today as we look at the last of the canonized Old Testament Prophets, we will see how God's last recorded communication to His people before a 400 year period of silence emphasized the love that God had for His people, identified some of the unique obstacles to our returned devotion and, finally, the manner through which we properly honor God.

Knowing the Love of God

The first thing you must know is that God has loved you.

Malachi 1:1-5 A prophecy: The word of the Lord to Israel through Malachi. “I have loved you,” says the Lord.“But you ask, ‘How have you loved us?’“Was not Esau Jacob’s brother?” declares the Lord. “Yet I have loved Jacob, but Esau I have hated, and I have turned his hill country into a wasteland and left his inheritance to the desert jackals.” Edom may say, “Though we have been crushed, we will rebuild the ruins.”But this is what the Lord Almighty says: “They may build, but I will demolish. They will be called the Wicked Land, a people always under the wrath of the Lord. You will see it with your own eyes and say, ‘Great is the Lord—even beyond the borders of Israel!’

Why do you have confidence to come to Jesus? Because He has loved you demonstrably.

As someone who is not yet a Christian, God shows you His love today by pursuing you.

As a Christian, God has shown you His love by choosing you.

The wrath and love of God

The gospel tells you the truth about your condition.

“The gospel is this: We are more sinful and flawed in ourselves than we ever dared believe, yet at the very same time we are more loved and accepted in Jesus Christ than we ever dared hope.” ― Timothy Keller, The Meaning of Marriage: Facing the Complexities of Commitment with the Wisdom of God

God loved you by sending Jesus to die on the cross for you that the wrath of God might be paid for your wrongdoing through Christ's sacrifice.

God wants you to choose Him with the same type and intensity of love.

The determination to walk in the love and purposes of God can be a losing effort if you don't identify the competition to that commitment.

The Competition

There are several things that will try to keep you out of the foxholes of your life. Some of the more overlooked ones include:

1) As we move into the colder months in the city, Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) and vitamin D deficiencies will attempt to make you feel alone and force you into hiding. As you remain in God's word, prayer and the community of Christ, you will overcome.

2) Fights with loved ones before the worship service will attempt to convince you it's not worth showing up at the times of worship. As you show up to the life giving church environment, Jesus and His people will arm and fight with you.

3) Self-indulgence, which is the spirit of the age, encourages you to put your desires before God's or anyone else's.

2 Timothy 3:1-5 But mark this: There will be terrible times in the last days. People will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, proud, abusive, disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, without love, unforgiving, slanderous, without self-control, brutal, not lovers of the good, treacherous, rash, conceited, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God— having a form of godliness but denying its power. Have nothing to do with such people.

In the life of every Christian, there must come a transition in thinking from church just being about getting their needs met to our gatherings being a time of worship where we look to honor God and be equipped to serve others for His purposes.

When you understand this, you will submit yourself to learning how to truly honor God.

How to Honor God

Jesus expects to be treated as a great king.

Malachi 1:6-14 “A son honors his father, and a slave his master. If I am a father, where is the honor due me? If I am a master, where is the respect due me?” says the Lord Almighty.“It is you priests who show contempt for my name.“But you ask, ‘How have we shown contempt for your name?’ “By offering defiled food on my altar.“But you ask, ‘How have we defiled you?’“By saying that the Lord’s table is contemptible. When you offer blind animals for sacrifice, is that not wrong? When you sacrifice lame or diseased animals, is that not wrong? Try offering them to your governor! Would he be pleased with you? Would he accept you?” says the Lord Almighty. “Now plead with God to be gracious to us. With such offerings from your hands, will he accept you?”—says the Lord Almighty. “Oh, that one of you would shut the temple doors, so that you would not light useless fires on my altar! I am not pleased with you,” says the Lord Almighty, “and I will accept no offering from your hands. My name will be great among the nations, from where the sun rises to where it sets. In every place incense and pure offerings will be brought to me, because my name will be great among the nations,” says the Lord Almighty. “But you profane it by saying, ‘The Lord’s table is defiled,’ and, ‘Its food is contemptible.’ And you say, ‘What a burden!’ and you sniff at it contemptuously,” says the Lord Almighty.“When you bring injured, lame or diseased animals and offer them as sacrifices, should I accept them from your hands?” says the Lord. “Cursed is the cheat who has an acceptable male in his flock and vows to give it, but then sacrifices a blemished animal to the Lord. For I am a great king,” says the Lord Almighty, “and my name is to be feared among the nations.

How many of you have had holiday leftovers that stayed in the fridge too long? Would you serve it to your guests? Why would we give our leftovers to God our king?

God gave you His first and best in Jesus. You honor God by giving Him your first and best in everything, not your leftovers.

You need to begin today to break from the mold and write a different script.

Audi Script Commercial: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Iq50Ah_-13M

The apostle Paul described the gospel this way, calling people to offer themselves to God in a new way through Jesus:

Romans 6:19-23 I am using an example from everyday life because of your human limitations. Just as you used to offer yourselves as slaves to impurity and to ever-increasing wickedness, so now offer yourselves as slaves to righteousness leading to holiness. When you were slaves to sin, you were free from the control of righteousness. What benefit did you reap at that time from the things you are now ashamed of? Those things result in death! But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life. For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

What are the practical ways that you can begin to give Jesus your first and your best in your time? In your relationships? In your finances? With your skills? In your pursuits? In your heart? In your life? Second City Church: Famous Last Words Sermon Series 2014

Take Me To Your Leader

Boot Camp: Take Me To Your Leader

[powerpress]

Transforming Truth: Jesus develops leadership in you as you faithfully steward unexpected responsibility.

Ultimately, what we see that God was preparing David for was a life of leadership. This leadership began in the midst of his trials. Today, as we conclude studying David's preparation for a life of purpose, we will identify key leadership lessons that we can extract from David's life. Specifically, we will identify the purpose behind seasons of obscurity, reveal loyalty as the basis for leadership and, finally, be encouraged by the reality of the ever-present leader in our lives.

Seasons of Obscurity

Jesus births leadership in you while you are in obscurity.

1 Samuel 22:1-5 David left Gath and escaped to the cave of Adullam. When his brothers and his father’s household heard about it, they went down to him there. All those who were in distress or in debt or discontented gathered around him, and he became their commander. About four hundred men were with him. From there David went to Mizpah in Moab and said to the king of Moab, “Would you let my father and mother come and stay with you until I learn what God will do for me?” So he left them with the king of Moab, and they stayed with him as long as David was in the stronghold. But the prophet Gad said to David, “Do not stay in the stronghold. Go into the land of Judah.” So David left and went to the forest of Hereth.

David in obscurity

David was called to be king and publicly lead the people of Israel. However, he repeatedly found himself on the back end of the "corporate ladder of progress," this time in a dark, damp cave. Have you had apparent seasons of ups and downs?

Seasons of obscurity can be character forming and good for the soul. God uses them to clarify your calling because during these times it becomes not about you and the accolades that you receive, but about Jesus and His kingdom purposes.

We are refined as we ask the question, "For what am I willing to endure when I am not receiving the reward of people's praise?"

Have you found that eternal fire that gives value to your daily work life, relationships and service in obscurity? The answer to these questions can help clarify what God has actually called you to do because it is in these crucibles that the fire of Jesus alone will sustain you.

Faithful with little, ruler over much David would learn the skills he needed to eventually lead the nation of Israel by first leading the sheep, the armies of Saul and then the 400 well.

Psalm 78:70-72 He chose David his servant and took him from the sheep pens; from tending the sheep he brought him to be the shepherd of his people Jacob, of Israel his inheritance. And David shepherded them with integrity of heart; with skillful hands he led them.

In which place do you find yourself today? What level of excellence are you bringing to your work, academic life and present church assignment? Are you approaching it with integrity?

You will eventually have to leave the cave.

As the prophet Gad let David know, the time will come when what you have built when no one was watching will be put to the test. David was no longer a lone shepherd looking after his father's sheep. He was now the commander of hundreds of men who he would lead into battle. David's pursuit of God literally shaped the direction that he was giving the 400 - their destiny. He needed to have the right character to do it.

Loyalty as the Basis for Leadership

Jesus forms the character for leadership in you as you are being led.

1 Samuel 22:6-19 Now Saul heard that David and his men had been discovered. And Saul was seated, spear in hand, under the tamarisk tree on the hill at Gibeah, with all his officials standing at his side. He said to them, “Listen, men of Benjamin! Will the son of Jesse give all of you fields and vineyards? Will he make all of you commanders of thousands and commanders of hundreds? Is that why you have all conspired against me? No one tells me when my son makes a covenant with the son of Jesse. None of you is concerned about me or tells me that my son has incited my servant to lie in wait for me, as he does today.” But Doeg the Edomite, who was standing with Saul’s officials, said, “I saw the son of Jesse come to Ahimelek son of Ahitub at Nob. Ahimelek inquired of the Lord for him; he also gave him provisions and the sword of Goliath the Philistine.” Then the king sent for the priest Ahimelek son of Ahitub and all the men of his family, who were the priests at Nob, and they all came to the king. Saul said, “Listen now, son of Ahitub.”“Yes, my lord,” he answered. Saul said to him, “Why have you conspired against me, you and the son of Jesse, giving him bread and a sword and inquiring of God for him, so that he has rebelled against me and lies in wait for me, as he does today?” Ahimelek answered the king, “Who of all your servants is as loyal as David, the king’s son-in-law, captain of your bodyguard and highly respected in your household? Was that day the first time I inquired of God for him? Of course not! Let not the king accuse your servant or any of his father’s family, for your servant knows nothing at all about this whole affair.” But the king said, “You will surely die, Ahimelek, you and your whole family.” Then the king ordered the guards at his side: “Turn and kill the priests of the Lord, because they too have sided with David. They knew he was fleeing, yet they did not tell me.”But the king’s officials were unwilling to raise a hand to strike the priests of the Lord. The king then ordered Doeg, “You turn and strike down the priests.” So Doeg the Edomite turned and struck them down. That day he killed eighty-five men who wore the linen ephod. He also put to the sword Nob, the town of the priests, with its men and women, its children and infants, and its cattle, donkeys and sheep.

Where did David learn to lead well? Any good leader must first know how to follow.

Your real influence is caught not commanded.

The loyalty that David would one day expect of his followers, he had to first demonstrate toward Saul. Ahimelek was willing to follow David's lead because he had first seen him follow King Saul well.

Loyalty is demonstrated when you do what you are asked to do in your job, not just what you want to do or what you think needs to be done.

Being obedient to and of use to the one in authority is your platform for promotion, not what you think of yourself.

Whose lead are you following for kingdom purposes? Leadership comes as a product of being a servant to all.

Mark 9:35 Sitting down, Jesus called the Twelve and said, “Anyone who wants to be first must be the very last, and the servant of all.”

The Ever-Present Leader

Jesus is the ultimate leader we must cling to.

1 Samuel 22:20-23 But one son of Ahimelek son of Ahitub, named Abiathar, escaped and fled to join David. He told David that Saul had killed the priests of the Lord. Then David said to Abiathar, “That day, when Doeg the Edomite was there, I knew he would be sure to tell Saul. I am responsible for the death of your whole family. Stay with me; don’t be afraid. The man who wants to kill you is trying to kill me too. You will be safe with me.”

In trial, you learn compassion for other people's plights and begin to champion their causes. This is what David did for his family with the king of Moab. It was what he did for Abiathar after his loss. This is the gospel of Christ.

God provided a sanctuary for Abiathar and the 400 men. It would become the incubator for their development in the purposes of God.

You need to find your people when you are in a challenging place, a time of transition.

The culture you live in tells you to float around from one community to another to find what fits you, rather than allowing the Holy Spirit to shape you for service amidst a company of men and women who will be on mission together. When you approach church like an amazon.com purchase, you are off.

As we mentioned a couple of weeks ago, a recent Facebook post I saw read, "Don't just go to church, belong to one."

I think it is better said, "Stop shopping for a church and get grounded in one."

Abiathar and the 400 found their new identity and direction in the company in which they found themselves a part. How is Jesus pairing you with other believers for His purposes?

Abiathar, the 400 men and the gospel

The 400 men that began to follow David during this time were those in distress, those in debt and those who were discontent. Abiathar had just lost everything. The good news, the gospel, is that God does not choose us because of what we have to offer Him, but because we humbly receive what Jesus has to offer us. We are able to "be real," but moldable, in this community enjoying the love described by C.S. Lewis:

"Eros will have naked bodies; Friendship naked personalities." -C.S. Lewis, The Four Loves

David gave himself fully to Abiathar and the 400 men, absorbing their frailties as Christ did at the cross for those who would turn away from their sin and follow Him. Though starting in weakness, Abiathar and the 400 are those who would be shaped by grace and help extend the borders of God's kingdom all across the land (I Chronicles 11+12). Jesus does the same in those who trust in Him.

To whom might you might you avail yourself in this manner, ultimately pointing them to Jesus?

The Apostle Paul summarized the gospel highlighting the reason for our confidence in Jesus this way:

Romans 5:6-11 You see, at just the right time, when we were still powerless, Christ died for the ungodly. Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Since we have now been justified by his blood, how much more shall we be saved from God’s wrath through him! For if, while we were God’s enemies, we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son, how much more, having been reconciled, shall we be saved through his life! Not only is this so, but we also boast in God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation.

It is through seasons of obscurity that Jesus refines our motivations and our focus. As we continually avail ourselves to His redeeming work done on the cross, the Holy Spirit instills virtues such as loyalty and compassion in us. As we find ourselves in gospel community, we are able to successfully follow our ever-present leader, being shaped into the useful men and women who will advance God's kingdom all throughout the land.

Second City Church- Boot Camp Sermon Series 2014

Maximizing Windows of Openness

Guest Speaker: Pastor Reggie Roberson: Maximizing Windows of Openness

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Introduction

Thursday I felt the burden of God, or massah or word, come on me in the shower; the rest of it, I was on the plane.

In general, there is getting ready to be a unique window of openness in the next six to nine months that will establish some ongoing ministry beyond that period of time.

I want to talk this morning on some critical truths that will guide us through what God is going to do.

John 4:39-42 ESV Many Samaritans from that town believed in him because of the woman’s testimony, “He told me all that I ever did.” So when the Samaritans came to him, they asked him to stay with them, and he stayed there two days. And many more believed because of his word. They said to the woman, “It is no longer because of what you said that we believe, for we have heard for ourselves, and we know that this is indeed the Savior of the world.”

1. God reveals Himself to broken people.

James 4:6 ESV But he gives more grace. Therefore it says, “God opposes the proud, but gives grace to the humble.” 

2. God uses people to bring people to God.

Acts 26:15-18 ESV And I said, ‘Who are you, Lord?’ And the Lord said, ‘I am Jesus whom you are persecuting. But rise and stand upon your feet, for I have appeared to you for this purpose, to appoint you as a servant and witness to the things in which you have seen me and to those in which I will appear to you, delivering you from your people and from the Gentiles— to whom I am sending you to open their eyes, so that they may turn from darkness to light and from the power of Satan to God, that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me.’

3. Every person needs an encounter with God. John 17:3 ESV And this is eternal life, that they know you the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent. 

Psalm 16:11 ESV You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.

Second City Church- Guest Speakers Missions & More Sermon Series 2014

Foxholes

Boot Camp: Foxholes

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Transforming Truth: Trials are meant by Jesus to break you then make you.

There is a tendency in every one of us to want to be the lord of our own futures and the captains of our own destinies. Whether it be through issues with work, health, relationships or the larger cultural landscape, things often end up not playing out as you would have imagined. In Jesus, you are to excel where you have the opportunity and ability. However, the longer you live, the more that you will see that you are in charge of your responses, not your circumstances, and in regard to your own soul, you are ultimately in need of a savior. To thrive in Christ, you need to presently find your foxhole, understand the purpose behind the breaking that trials bring and ultimately exult in how Jesus makes you through these trials.

Finding your Foxhole

1 Samuel 21:1-9 David went to Nob, to Ahimelek the priest. Ahimelek trembled when he met him, and asked, “Why are you alone? Why is no one with you?” David answered Ahimelek the priest, “The king sent me on a mission and said to me, ‘No one is to know anything about the mission I am sending you on.’ As for my men, I have told them to meet me at a certain place. Now then, what do you have on hand? Give me five loaves of bread, or whatever you can find.” But the priest answered David, “I don’t have any ordinary bread on hand; however, there is some consecrated bread here—provided the men have kept themselves from women.” David replied, “Indeed women have been kept from us, as usual whenever I set out. The men’s bodies are holy even on missions that are not holy. How much more so today!” So the priest gave him the consecrated bread, since there was no bread there except the bread of the Presence that had been removed from before the Lord and replaced by hot bread on the day it was taken away. Now one of Saul’s servants was there that day, detained before the Lord; he was Doeg the Edomite, Saul’s chief shepherd. David asked Ahimelek, “Don’t you have a spear or a sword here? I haven’t brought my sword or any other weapon, because the king’s mission was urgent.” The priest replied, “The sword of Goliath the Philistine, whom you killed in the Valley of Elah, is here; it is wrapped in a cloth behind the ephod. If you want it, take it; there is no sword here but that one.”David said, “There is none like it; give it to me.”

Foxholes have been utilized in military history as places of shelter from enemy attack and a firing point for offensive strikes. Once David found himself on the run from Saul, he had to find his foxhole, the place of refuge where he was going to be armed and buckle down for the fight.

David continually showing up in the places where he knew that he could be fed is what kept him alive and his feet moving during the trials. In our context, this is represented in things like Sunday service, community groups and service through the church.

If I understand the purpose of trials, I will be free to embrace the process of God's preparation for a life of purpose.

Through trial, you are growing in strength to make your dent on the world, making sure that your life counts for Jesus. By becoming an overcomer, you are able to answer the questions, "Would anyone realize that you were here because of the way that you lived your life for Jesus? Would the church make enough of an impact in the city that we would be missed if we were gone?"

“Human progress is neither automatic nor inevitable... Every step toward the goal of justice requires sacrifice, suffering, and struggle; the tireless exertions and passionate concern of dedicated individuals.” ― Martin Luther King Jr.

The character to walk in this manner was further alluded to in Paul's letter to the Roman church:

Romans 5:1-5 Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we boast in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.

Jesus is the living God who will continually be found in the place of worship. David knew where to go in the midst of life's challenges to ensure his survival. He found food, encouragement and weapons for the fight there.

The Breaking of the Christian

Matthew 21:42-44 Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the Scriptures:“‘The stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone;the Lord has done this,and it is marvelous in our eyes’? “Therefore I tell you that the kingdom of God will be taken away from you and given to a people who will produce its fruit. Anyone who falls on this stone will be broken to pieces; anyone on whom it falls will be crushed.”

Studies are showing that the largest determinant of success in life is not merely your natural IQ, nor your EQ (emotional quotient), but your AQ (Adversity Quotient). Your AQ is your ability to embrace perceived setbacks and rise above them.

The result of trials: 1) It leads you toward a greater dependency on and intimacy with Jesus, His gospel promises and His power. 2) It leads you to His church community in a healthy manner when you realize that you are not meant to live life or pursue God's purposes alone. 3) It teaches you to fight by faith (I Timothy 6:12).

The doctrine of God's sovereignty.

Proverbs 21:30 There is no wisdom, no insight, no plan that can succeed against the Lord.

If this is the case, you want to make sure that you discern what God's purpose is in your generation, your school and your company and throw yourself into it.

When it feels like you are on the run, what are the truths, the things that will keep you grounded? It is the unchanging orthodox doctrines of our faith in Jesus that will contextualize all of your daily experience and living.

The Making of the Christian

1 Samuel 21:10-15 That day David fled from Saul and went to Achish king of Gath. But the servants of Achish said to him, “Isn’t this David, the king of the land? Isn’t he the one they sing about in their dances:“‘Saul has slain his thousands,and David his tens of thousands’?” David took these words to heart and was very much afraid of Achish king of Gath. So he pretended to be insane in their presence; and while he was in their hands he acted like a madman, making marks on the doors of the gate and letting saliva run down his beard. Achish said to his servants, “Look at the man! He is insane! Why bring him to me? Am I so short of madmen that you have to bring this fellow here to carry on like this in front of me? Must this man come into my house?”

The truth is that whenever any of us experience a trial, it lasts much longer than any of us would prefer. We are tempted during those times to drift away from, rather than draw closer to Jesus. In fact, in this last portion of the chapter of David being on the run (in Achish), there is no mention of God. We begin to feel that really, the only answer is for us to take our lives into our own hands. It is here that you begin doing foolish things because you tell yourself that you are just trying to survive (in relationships, career, romantic life, etc.). We begin to blend into our environments rather than shaping them as depicted in the Lego movie: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=S75uFMFK-Gg.

All of Scripture testifies to the fact that we are to build our lives around Jesus.

It is comprised of the elements spelled out for us in the Nicene Creed and represent the themes of Creation, Incarnation and Recreation through Redemption.

The Nicene Creed

We believe in one God, the Father, the Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, of all that is, seen and unseen.

We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the only Son of God, eternally begotten of the Father, God from God, Light from Light, true God from true God, begotten, not made, of one Being with the Father. Through him all things were made. For us and for our salvation he came down from heaven: by the power of the Holy Spirit he became incarnate from the Virgin Mary, and was made man. For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate; he suffered death and was buried. On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures; he ascended into heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father. He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead, and his kingdom will have no end.

We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life, who proceeds from the Father and the Son. With the Father and the Son he is worshiped and glorified. He has spoken through the Prophets. We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic Church. We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins. We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come. Amen.

On the road to fulfilling God's purposes for your life, you will meet challenges and adversity. If Jesus did, you will too. The good news is that in the midst of hardships and trials in the workplace, community or home, Jesus watches over you in both life saving and life-transforming ways. As we remain in our foxholes of Christian community, we are allowing the trials of life to break us in a healthy manner so that we might be made by the eternal truths of God's word.

Second City Church- Boot Camp Sermon Series 2014

Band of Brothers

Boot Camp: Band of Brothers

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Transforming Truth: We all need people who will help us fulfill the purposes of God in our lives.

Today, as we look further into King David's preparation for purpose, we will highlight why we all need a little help from our friends, the dynamics of living in covenant relationships and, finally, the power of a shared life.

A Little Help from My Friends

1 Samuel 20:1-11 Then David fled from Naioth at Ramah and went to Jonathan and asked, “What have I done? What is my crime? How have I wronged your father, that he is trying to kill me?” “Never!” Jonathan replied. “You are not going to die! Look, my father doesn’t do anything, great or small, without letting me know. Why would he hide this from me? It isn’t so!” But David took an oath and said, “Your father knows very well that I have found favor in your eyes, and he has said to himself, ‘Jonathan must not know this or he will be grieved.’ Yet as surely as the Lord lives and as you live, there is only a step between me and death.” Jonathan said to David, “Whatever you want me to do, I’ll do for you.” So David said, “Look, tomorrow is the New Moon feast, and I am supposed to dine with the king; but let me go and hide in the field until the evening of the day after tomorrow. If your father misses me at all, tell him, ‘David earnestly asked my permission to hurry to Bethlehem, his hometown, because an annual sacrifice is being made there for his whole clan.’ If he says, ‘Very well,’ then your servant is safe. But if he loses his temper, you can be sure that he is determined to harm me. As for you, show kindness to your servant, for you have brought him into a covenant with you before the Lord. If I am guilty, then kill me yourself! Why hand me over to your father?” “Never!” Jonathan said. “If I had the least inkling that my father was determined to harm you, wouldn’t I tell you?” David asked, “Who will tell me if your father answers you harshly?” “Come,” Jonathan said, “let’s go out into the field.” So they went there together.

You must make plans for your faith survival and kingdom advance in the marketplace. The deception that you can successfully stand alone in your industry and still maintain the fire of the Lord is deadly.

As Saul relentlessly pursued David, there is an incessant attack on both your focus and faith in the marketplace, the academic sphere and the daily weight of responsibility in your home life to dull your devotion to Jesus and His kingdom vision. In fact, the enemy wants to kill it and have you forget about the promises, the prophetic words and the purposes of God. He wants you to assimilate and become like everyone else fruitlessly living the American dream for your own ends.

God says you need others who will help you survive, be sharpened in your kingdom focus and thrive in the life of God.

“All men desire peace, but very few desire those things that make for peace.” ― Thomas à Kempis, The Imitation of Christ

Just as we ended last week speaking about God fighting for us, we see over and over again in the Scripture that Jesus uses people to help bring us into His Kingdom purposes. These people help you see clearly when you are blinded by your emotions, relationships or circumstances. This is what David did for Jonathan in helping him see who his father really was. This is what Jonathan did for David in continually encouraging him in the promise of his kingship. In every relationship, you are meant to be a David as you pursue the purposes of God. In every relationship, you are meant to be a Jonathan as you look to support and encourage those around you. This attitude cuts off the superiority complex that we are so prone to adopt.

Everyone needs a David. Everyone needs a Jonathan.

In essence, you need to, "Be a disciple and help make disciples."

Who is your David that you are helping to ascend to the throne? Who is your Jonathan that you are looking to for guidance, help and support as you follow Jesus?

The truth is there was only one king in Israel at the time. In our culture's proclivity towards self-obsession and aggrandizement, everyone wants to be the David, the one special one. This is easy to lean toward when you find your value is in position, praise and power rather than in Jesus. To truly follow the example of Christ, you need to come to serve, not to be served. Who glories in having a gift of helps, administration, working behind the scenes and being a support? The Holy Spirit does. If your heart is not in this place, you are serving your "call" as an idol rather than a submitted act of obedience. Summarized, your first goal in relationships should be how you can be a Jonathan to others and not focus on your obsession with being the David.

If you don't feel like you have a specific direction from God in your life, that's ok. You can serve and reflect Jesus' character and kingdom priorities right where you are.

To be clear, the call of God to every person is to reflect the glory of God in the earth: to become like, to live like and to cultivate the earth like Jesus would. If you are on a trajectory in your perception of your "individualized call" that competes with that, you are heading in the wrong direction and need to repent. If it persists, you need to change your environment.

Mark 8:34-36 Then he called the crowd to him along with his disciples and said: “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses their life for me and for the gospel will save it. What good is it for someone to gain the whole world, yet forfeit their soul?

To keep an honest pulse of this in your life, you need to follow the advice of a recent Facebook post I saw which read, "Don't just go to church, belong to one."

This is where you will harness the power of godly relationships and unlock God's grace found in covenant.

Living in Covenant

1 Samuel 20:12-17 Then Jonathan said to David, “I swear by the Lord, the God of Israel, that I will surely sound out my father by this time the day after tomorrow! If he is favorably disposed toward you, will I not send you word and let you know? But if my father intends to harm you, may the Lord deal with Jonathan, be it ever so severely, if I do not let you know and send you away in peace. May the Lord be with you as he has been with my father. But show me unfailing kindness like the Lord’s kindness as long as I live, so that I may not be killed, and do not ever cut off your kindness from my family—not even when the Lord has cut off every one of David’s enemies from the face of the earth.” So Jonathan made a covenant with the house of David, saying, “May the Lord call David’s enemies to account.” And Jonathan had David reaffirm his oath out of love for him, because he loved him as he loved himself.

A covenant essentially means a commitment.

The renunciation of pride in kingdom relationships is vital. If you are constantly thinking that you are better than others, that your work or calling is more important than everyone else's, you will never build the relationships that God intends for you to have through His people to bring you into His purposes. Jonathan understood this. Jonathan could have looked down on David as the natural heir to the throne and disassociated himself from David, the decorated soldier. However, Jonathan humbled himself and, in fact, fulfilled the purposes of God to help spare David's life on the way to his ascendency to the throne.

With whom are you committed to walking out the purposes of God until their fruition?

The Power of a Shared Life

You are meant to face the realities of life together with these friends. For David to save others, he needed to first have a friend who would help save him and keep him on track. This took humility.

1 Samuel 20:18-42 Then Jonathan said to David, “Tomorrow is the New Moon feast. You will be missed, because your seat will be empty. The day after tomorrow, toward evening, go to the place where you hid when this trouble began, and wait by the stone Ezel. I will shoot three arrows to the side of it, as though I were shooting at a target. Then I will send a boy and say, ‘Go, find the arrows.’ If I say to him, ‘Look, the arrows are on this side of you; bring them here,’ then come, because, as surely as the Lord lives, you are safe; there is no danger. But if I say to the boy, ‘Look, the arrows are beyond you,’ then you must go, because the Lord has sent you away. And about the matter you and I discussed—remember, the Lord is witness between you and me forever.” So David hid in the field, and when the New Moon feast came, the king sat down to eat. He sat in his customary place by the wall, opposite Jonathan, and Abner sat next to Saul, but David’s place was empty. Saul said nothing that day, for he thought, “Something must have happened to David to make him ceremonially unclean—surely he is unclean.” But the next day, the second day of the month, David’s place was empty again. Then Saul said to his son Jonathan, “Why hasn’t the son of Jesse come to the meal, either yesterday or today?” Jonathan answered, “David earnestly asked me for permission to go to Bethlehem. He said, ‘Let me go, because our family is observing a sacrifice in the town and my brother has ordered me to be there. If I have found favor in your eyes, let me get away to see my brothers.’ That is why he has not come to the king’s table.” Saul’s anger flared up at Jonathan and he said to him, “You son of a perverse and rebellious woman! Don’t I know that you have sided with the son of Jesse to your own shame and to the shame of the mother who bore you? As long as the son of Jesse lives on this earth, neither you nor your kingdom will be established. Now send someone to bring him to me, for he must die!” “Why should he be put to death? What has he done?” Jonathan asked his father. But Saul hurled his spear at him to kill him. Then Jonathan knew that his father intended to kill David. Jonathan got up from the table in fierce anger; on that second day of the feast he did not eat, because he was grieved at his father’s shameful treatment of David. In the morning Jonathan went out to the field for his meeting with David. He had a small boy with him, and he said to the boy, “Run and find the arrows I shoot.” As the boy ran, he shot an arrow beyond him. When the boy came to the place where Jonathan’s arrow had fallen, Jonathan called out after him, “Isn’t the arrow beyond you?” Then he shouted, “Hurry! Go quickly! Don’t stop!” The boy picked up the arrow and returned to his master. The boy knew nothing about all this; only Jonathan and David knew. Then Jonathan gave his weapons to the boy and said, “Go, carry them back to town.” After the boy had gone, David got up from the south side of the stone and bowed down before Jonathan three times, with his face to the ground. Then they kissed each other and wept together—but David wept the most. Jonathan said to David, “Go in peace, for we have sworn friendship with each other in the name of the Lord, saying, ‘The Lord is witness between you and me, and between your descendants and my descendants forever.’” Then David left, and Jonathan went back to the town.

Once again we see the gospel in Jonathan, the heir to the throne, humbling himself to be the advocate of David, the object of wrath. He speaks to his murderous father, but Jesus speaks to His righteous Father in our defense who sent His only Son to save lives, not take them. The story of Jesus and the cross is the story of this type of shared life.

“Surround yourself with people who make you happy. People who make you laugh, who help you when you’re in need. People who genuinely care. They are the ones worth keeping in your life. Everyone else is just passing through.” ―Karl Marx

Karl Marx got it partially right. It is incomplete because life is not always about fun and games. Sometimes, the very people that you need in your life will be the ones who tell you not what you want to hear, but what you need to hear to survive spiritually. They keep you on course by telling you where you need to be and what you need to do to stay on track with Jesus. This is what Jonathan did for David.

Band of Brothers clip - "You're already dead': https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1DFReW8KMuA

When so many of us serve comfort in our nation as our god, the question has to be asked, "Do uncomfortable circumstances mean that you are not in the will of God for your life?" David in the fields was definitely uncomfortable but on the road to the throne. The friends that are gifts from God will lead you to the cross, where you can learn to deny yourself, find the forgiveness of Jesus as you repent of your sin and grace to follow Him through obedience.

Who are you making kingdom plans with, for the saving of your life and others through your individual witness and industry?

You must make efforts to form growing godly friendships and fight off the attacks that come to steal it. People often say, "I'd like to live that way, but I don't know anyone." Go to lunch with someone from church today, join a community group or at least have an appointment set up to be realized by the end of this week. Find people who can help spark your zeal for Jesus.

Also, Roots Class begins today. Everyone can go through it who hasn't already. It is a launching pad for one-on-one discipleship, taking a progression around Next Steps, and culminating in the Making Disciples Class.

The importance of godly friendships with those who are pursuing Jesus wholeheartedly can not be overstated. These friends are the people who remind you of the priority of God's kingdom in your life and help you to flesh out devotion to Christ's cause. Through committed relationship with these brothers and sisters, you can come into the purposes of God for your life and fight off the attacks that come against God's promises. Let's meet Jesus and commit to His people freshly today.

Second City Church- Boot Camp Sermon Series 2014

If God Be For You

Boot Camp: If God Be For You

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Transforming Truth: When you belong to Jesus, God is for you, not against you.

As we continue to study the life of King David, we see this truth represented as David continued to succeed amidst Saul's murderous advances. Through this, we learn at least three things: 1) Jesus intends for His people to excel in the midst of stressful circumstances, 2) we can discover the gospel in some of the most unexpected places and 3) when need be, God Himself will fight for us.

Excelling in the Midst of Stress

1 Samuel 19:1-8 Saul told his son Jonathan and all the attendants to kill David. But Jonathan had taken a great liking to David and warned him, “My father Saul is looking for a chance to kill you. Be on your guard tomorrow morning; go into hiding and stay there. I will go out and stand with my father in the field where you are. I’ll speak to him about you and will tell you what I find out.” Jonathan spoke well of David to Saul his father and said to him, “Let not the king do wrong to his servant David; he has not wronged you, and what he has done has benefited you greatly. He took his life in his hands when he killed the Philistine. The Lord won a great victory for all Israel, and you saw it and were glad. Why then would you do wrong to an innocent man like David by killing him for no reason?” Saul listened to Jonathan and took this oath: “As surely as the Lord lives, David will not be put to death.” So Jonathan called David and told him the whole conversation. He brought him to Saul, and David was with Saul as before. Once more war broke out, and David went out and fought the Philistines. He struck them with such force that they fled before him.

David had done all things well in the court and army of Saul; yet instead of receiving praise, Saul's jealousies were driving Saul to have it out for David.

Have you ever felt like this in the workplace or in your relationships? If you have, you should, nevertheless, like David, look to bring benefit and maximized blessing to your family, school, company and relationships for as long as you are there.

Jesus set the ultimate standard for excellence and leadership in the midst of persecution from the religious leaders of His day:

Mark 7:37 People were overwhelmed with amazement. “He has done everything well,” they said. “He even makes the deaf hear and the mute speak.”

Handling stress in the workplace or relationships will be one of the markers of your deepening trust in Jesus. Jesus is a refuge, and when you run to Him, you will find safety. When you remain in the community of His people and receive the encouragement of His word, you will know peace.

The key is to stay the course.

Do you allow the pressures of your career to throw you off course from your priority of cultivating your relationship with Jesus, His church and engaging in His mission? As we read in the Psalms, though Saul was literally attempting to murder David, David remained steadfast in his devotion to the Lord, his people and the mission of advancing God's kingdom in the land.

Psalm 23:4-5 Even though I walk through the darkest valley, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. You prepare a table before me in the presence of my enemies. You anoint my head with oil; my cup overflows.

David was still winning victories in the midst of his hardships. To ensure this, you need to make sure that you are right with Jesus. Living a holy life is key:

Proverbs 21:31 The horse is made ready for the day of battle, but victory rests with the Lord.

When you are living in the grace and favor of God, you begin to find advocates in all the necessary places for His purposes.

The Gospel in Unexpected Places

1 Samuel 19:8-17 Once more war broke out, and David went out and fought the Philistines. He struck them with such force that they fled before him. But an evil spirit from the Lord came on Saul as he was sitting in his house with his spear in his hand. While David was playing the lyre, Saul tried to pin him to the wall with his spear, but David eluded him as Saul drove the spear into the wall. That night David made good his escape. Saul sent men to David’s house to watch it and to kill him in the morning. But Michal, David’s wife, warned him, “If you don’t run for your life tonight, tomorrow you’ll be killed.” So Michal let David down through a window, and he fled and escaped. Then Michal took an idol and laid it on the bed, covering it with a garment and putting some goats’ hair at the head. When Saul sent the men to capture David, Michal said, “He is ill.” Then Saul sent the men back to see David and told them, “Bring him up to me in his bed so that I may kill him.” But when the men entered, there was the idol in the bed, and at the head was some goats’ hair. Saul said to Michal, “Why did you deceive me like this and send my enemy away so that he escaped?”Michal told him, “He said to me, ‘Let me get away. Why should I kill you?’

The Gospel through Jonathan

Jonathan could have naturally sided with his father Saul in protecting his own rights to the throne. Jonathan showed David kindness instead.

Jesus is our ultimate advocate who left His throne to come to our defense. The truth is that we all have an adversary in the devil who accuses us before God and one another day and night (Revelation 12:10). This adversary continually reminds us of our shortcomings and failings. However, even where there is legitimate guilt, Jesus' sacrificial death on the cross brings blessing where there should only be curses. As we repent and put our faith in His atoning work, Jesus comes to our defense offering forgiveness of sins and a life of purpose.

The Gospel through Michal The wages of sin is death. Jesus had to literally lay in our bed of wrath and cover over our idols with His shed blood that we might go free.

There are times that you will be the recipient of the type of gospel love that came from Jonathan, but we should also be aware that we are here to show that gospel love that was represented in Michal.

By coming to David's defense, she literally took part in saving David's life. Just like Michal, you have a role to play in the story of Jesus saving lives and transforming the city. "Each one reach one" should be our cry as we look to serve others with the same mercy that we've been shown from Jesus.

“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” ― Edmund Burke

God is "Calling Everyone Up" as He did with David in the fields! God has His eye on each of you individually and calls everyone who is willing to repent of sin, put their confidence in Jesus and rise up to a life of service unto impact for His church and kingdom. The question is, "Where is your place of impact?" There are several opportunities in and through this church. Speak to someone after the service at our Volunteer Fair to find out how.

If God Be For Us

1 Samuel 19:18-24 When David had fled and made his escape, he went to Samuel at Ramah and told him all that Saul had done to him. Then he and Samuel went to Naioth and stayed there. Word came to Saul: “David is in Naioth at Ramah”; so he sent men to capture him. But when they saw a group of prophets prophesying, with Samuel standing there as their leader, the Spirit of God came on Saul’s men, and they also prophesied. Saul was told about it, and he sent more men, and they prophesied too. Saul sent men a third time, and they also prophesied. Finally, he himself left for Ramah and went to the great cistern at Seku. And he asked, “Where are Samuel and David?”“Over in Naioth at Ramah,” they said. So Saul went to Naioth at Ramah. But the Spirit of God came even on him, and he walked along prophesying until he came to Naioth. He stripped off his garments, and he too prophesied in Samuel’s presence. He lay naked all that day and all that night. This is why people say, “Is Saul also among the prophets?”

When the admonitions of Jonathan and the appeals of Michal were not enough to keep King Saul at bay, God himself intervened to come to David's defense. As you find yourself in His purposes, He will do the same for you.

“Gentle Jesus, meek and mild' is a snivelling modern invention, with no warrant in the gospels.” ― George Bernard Shaw

The Apostle Paul said it this way when he was speaking to those who had repented of their sin and put their trust in Jesus in the church at Rome:

Romans 8:31-39 What, then, shall we say in response to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things? Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. Who then is the one who condemns? No one. Christ Jesus who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? As it is written:“For your sake we face death all day long;we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.” No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Though stress factors may come, we are commissioned to be shaped by them, not crushed by them. When we understand that Jesus is for us and not against us, we'll have great focus to continue to excel in the midst of the hardships and receive help when needed from unexpected places. God longs to be for you not against you. Let's return to the Savior of our very lives today - Jesus who sees you, Jesus who redeems you and Jesus who gives you purpose as you embrace His sanctifying work in your life.

Second City Church- Boot Camp Sermon Series 2014

 

7 Responses to the Gospel - Pastor Ron Lewis

7 Responses to the Gospel

[powerpress]

Acts 2:36-47 36 “Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Messiah.” 37 When the people heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the other apostles, “Brothers, what shall we do?” 38 Peter replied, “Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. 39 The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off—for all whom the Lord our God will call.” 40 With many other words he warned them; and he pleaded with them, “Save yourselves from this corrupt generation.” 41 Those who accepted his message were baptized, and about three thousand were added to their number that day. 42 They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. 43 Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. 44 All the believers were together and had everything in common. 45 They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. 46 Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, 47 praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

REPENTANCE

BAPTISM

THE HOLY SPIRIT

THE LOCAL CHURCH

GIVING

WORSHIP

TELLING OTHERS

Second City Church- 7 Responses to the Gospel, Guest Speaker Pastor Ron Lewis

God's Preparation for a Life of Purpose

Boot Camp: God's Preparation for a Life of Purpose

[powerpress] When we think about God's preparation for a life of purpose, it is imperative that we acknowledge the need for three things: covenant brothers and sisters, a healthy sense of losing yourself and the reality of God being with you.

Covenant Brothers and Sisters

1 Samuel 18:1-4 After David had finished talking with Saul, Jonathan became one in spirit with David, and he loved him as himself. From that day Saul kept David with him and did not let him return home to his family. And Jonathan made a covenant with David because he loved him as himself. Jonathan took off the robe he was wearing and gave it to David, along with his tunic, and even his sword, his bow and his belt.

The gospel is hidden in the exchange of armor.

For people to want to stick and follow like Jonathan with David, you must be doing something, you must be pursuing and fighting the battles of the Lord. The number of times that the Bible made mention of the people's love for David because he led them in their campaigns can not be overlooked. People are stirred by God to do something and will follow the leader that takes them into His purposes.

Not only did the people of God realize the value of establishing a covenant with God, but they understood the importance of making covenants with one another. Those who are covenant brothers and sisters remind you about what is actually important. They pull you out of the status quo and once again into the fight for the purposes of God.

"Let's do something great for God - together."

Losing Yourself

1 Samuel 18:5-16 Whatever mission Saul sent him on, David was so successful that Saul gave him a high rank in the army. This pleased all the troops, and Saul’s officers as well. When the men were returning home after David had killed the Philistine, the women came out from all the towns of Israel to meet King Saul with singing and dancing, with joyful songs and with timbrels and lyres. As they danced, they sang:“Saul has slain his thousands,and David his tens of thousands.” Saul was very angry; this refrain displeased him greatly. “They have credited David with tens of thousands,” he thought, “but me with only thousands. What more can he get but the kingdom?” And from that time on Saul kept a close eye on David. The next day an evil spirit from God came forcefully on Saul. He was prophesying in his house, while David was playing the lyre, as he usually did. Saul had a spear in his hand and he hurled it, saying to himself, “I’ll pin David to the wall.” But David eluded him twice. Saul was afraid of David, because the Lord was with David but had departed from Saul. So he sent David away from him and gave him command over a thousand men, and David led the troops in their campaigns. In everything he did he had great success, because the Lord was with him. When Saul saw how successful he was, he was afraid of him. But all Israel and Judah loved David, because he led them in their campaigns.

King Saul seemingly had it all. He was the king over an entire nation, had all of the money he ever desired, a loyal group of "followers" who hung on his every word, wonderful children and more romantic relationship than he knew what to do with; yet, he was still discontent. When your identity, value and satisfaction in life comes from anything other than Jesus, like Saul, you will be insecure, dissatisfied and always striving for something that will never really fill you.

In the kingdom of God, there is no room for competition between believers, territorialism, self-ambition, jealousies or destructive insecurities. We are all to be humble servants of Jesus who are looking to bring our part with excellence, faith and submission. We loosely hold what the Lord has entrusted to us for the seasons that He does so. This includes our wealth, our jobs, our children and even our lives. As John the Baptist said, "He must become greater, I must become less." (John 3)

“There is only one thing which is generally safe from plagiarism – self-denial.” ― G.K. Chesterton, The Collected Works

Syncretism in the church is a silent killer.

The Lord was with David but had left Saul.

When God is with Us

1 Samuel 18:17-30 Saul said to David, “Here is my older daughter Merab. I will give her to you in marriage; only serve me bravely and fight the battles of the Lord.” For Saul said to himself, “I will not raise a hand against him. Let the Philistines do that!” But David said to Saul, “Who am I, and what is my family or my clan in Israel, that I should become the king’s son-in-law?” So when the time came for Merab, Saul’s daughter, to be given to David, she was given in marriage to Adriel of Meholah. Now Saul’s daughter Michal was in love with David, and when they told Saul about it, he was pleased. “I will give her to him,” he thought, “so that she may be a snare to him and so that the hand of the Philistines may be against him.” So Saul said to David, “Now you have a second opportunity to become my son-in-law.” Then Saul ordered his attendants: “Speak to David privately and say, ‘Look, the king likes you, and his attendants all love you; now become his son-in-law.’” They repeated these words to David. But David said, “Do you think it is a small matter to become the king’s son-in-law? I’m only a poor man and little known.” When Saul’s servants told him what David had said, Saul replied, “Say to David, ‘The king wants no other price for the bride than a hundred Philistine foreskins, to take revenge on his enemies.’” Saul’s plan was to have David fall by the hands of the Philistines. When the attendants told David these things, he was pleased to become the king’s son-in-law. So before the allotted time elapsed, David took his men with him and went out and killed two hundred Philistines and brought back their foreskins. They counted out the full number to the king so that David might become the king’s son-in-law. Then Saul gave him his daughter Michal in marriage. When Saul realized that the Lord was with David and that his daughter Michal loved David, Saul became still more afraid of him, and he remained his enemy the rest of his days. The Philistine commanders continued to go out to battle, and as often as they did, David met with more success than the rest of Saul’s officers, and his name became well known.

You do not have to choose having an intimate life with God or doing great exploits in His name. It is not one or the other. David cultivated his devotional life with God, which encouraged and empowered his military campaigns because God was with him.

There is great importance in doing things within community and not solo.

Another Parable

Batman first destroys the bomb, then invites partners in for redemption: Catwoman and Robin. The home is the result for the at-risk youth and boys. This is the gospel and vision of the church.

Jesus' impact on the world can be clearly seen because He did not remain in the grave. Like the Batman, Jesus: 1) takes us out of the corruption of empty, power-brokering religion (Robin leaves the force); 2) makes provision for the needy of the world (Jesus' church and Wayne Manor); 3) raises up a band of heroes to continue His work, fighting the evil in the world (Jesus' disciples being witnesses of His gospel (Robin); 4) and gives us a means to continually access Him (prayer and the bat signal); 5) He allows for appearances (Bruce Wayne in Paris - Jesus and the 40 days).

The Dark Knight Rises ending: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=myMtrZfEtFE Second City Church- BootCamp Sermon Series 2014

Facing the Giants

Boot Camp: Facing the Giants

[powerpress] We are in a war. We are in a fight for our relationship with God, others, and at times, seemingly even our sanity. Through these struggles, Jesus defines and refines us for His purposes. Today as we study the legendary battle between David and Goliath, we will discover the importance of facing our own giants, the task that each one of us has to reach others and, finally, the trust we should have in the great giant slayer.

Facing Your Giants

1 Samuel 17:1-11 Now the Philistines gathered their forces for war and assembled at Sokoh in Judah. They pitched camp at Ephes Dammim, between Sokoh and Azekah. Saul and the Israelites assembled and camped in the Valley of Elah and drew up their battle line to meet the Philistines. The Philistines occupied one hill and the Israelites another, with the valley between them. A champion named Goliath, who was from Gath, came out of the Philistine camp. His height was six cubits and a span. He had a bronze helmet on his head and wore a coat of scale armor of bronze weighing five thousand shekels; on his legs he wore bronze greaves, and a bronze javelin was slung on his back. His spear shaft was like a weaver’s rod, and its iron point weighed six hundred shekels. His shield bearer went ahead of him. Goliath stood and shouted to the ranks of Israel, “Why do you come out and line up for battle? Am I not a Philistine, and are you not the servants of Saul? Choose a man and have him come down to me. If he is able to fight and kill me, we will become your subjects; but if I overcome him and kill him, you will become our subjects and serve us.” Then the Philistine said, “This day I defy the armies of Israel! Give me a man and let us fight each other.” On hearing the Philistine’s words, Saul and all the Israelites were dismayed and terrified.

The Philistines were inhabitants of the land of Israel, a people group who constantly looked to plunder and enslave the people of God.

What do giants practically look like in your life? The areas of your life that remain undiscipled or untouched by the Word of God are areas that giants are waiting to subdue you. They are things or patterns of behavior that you might have become accustomed to, as the Israelites were to the Philistines in the land, but are nonetheless looking to destroy you. As in Rome during the time of Paul's ministry, in this city, the giants are not hard to find. We must wake up from our slumber and address them.

Romans 13:11-14 And do this, understanding the present time: The hour has already come for you to wake up from your slumber, because our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed. The night is nearly over; the day is almost here. So let us put aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light. Let us behave decently, as in the daytime, not in carousing and drunkenness, not in sexual immorality and debauchery, not in dissension and jealousy. Rather, clothe yourselves with the Lord Jesus Christ, and do not think about how to gratify the desires of the flesh.

What have you seen in your family line (generational patterns) or in your past that you are terrified to repeat? What mistakes have you made that taunt you? What are the sins keep you up at night or people at arm's length during the day? These are your giants.

The good news is that as we face our giants, not trying to deny or ignore them, we are able to overcome them through the freedom that Jesus Christ purchased for us on the cross. To be a conqueror implies a fight. We become more than conquerors through our continued relating to Jesus who strengthens and loves us.

Giants are not only personal, but they are, like the Philistine camp, the ills that impact whole cities. David knew that he was anointed of God not only to win personal battles, but battles for those who surrounded him. To see deliverance for his nation, he would have to face the giant directly in front of him.

Each One Reach One

1 Samuel 17:12-36 Now David was the son of an Ephrathite named Jesse, who was from Bethlehem in Judah. Jesse had eight sons, and in Saul’s time he was very old. Jesse’s three oldest sons had followed Saul to the war: The firstborn was Eliab; the second, Abinadab; and the third, Shammah. David was the youngest. The three oldest followed Saul, but David went back and forth from Saul to tend his father’s sheep at Bethlehem. For forty days the Philistine came forward every morning and evening and took his stand. Now Jesse said to his son David, “Take this ephah of roasted grain and these ten loaves of bread for your brothers and hurry to their camp. Take along these ten cheeses to the commander of their unit. See how your brothers are and bring back some assurance from them. They are with Saul and all the men of Israel in the Valley of Elah, fighting against the Philistines.” Early in the morning David left the flock in the care of a shepherd, loaded up and set out, as Jesse had directed. He reached the camp as the army was going out to its battle positions, shouting the war cry. Israel and the Philistines were drawing up their lines facing each other. David left his things with the keeper of supplies, ran to the battle lines and asked his brothers how they were. As he was talking with them, Goliath, the Philistine champion from Gath, stepped out from his lines and shouted his usual defiance, and David heard it. Whenever the Israelites saw the man, they all fled from him in great fear. Now the Israelites had been saying, “Do you see how this man keeps coming out? He comes out to defy Israel. The king will give great wealth to the man who kills him. He will also give him his daughter in marriage and will exempt his family from taxes in Israel.” David asked the men standing near him, “What will be done for the man who kills this Philistine and removes this disgrace from Israel? Who is this uncircumcised Philistine that he should defy the armies of the living God?” They repeated to him what they had been saying and told him, “This is what will be done for the man who kills him.” When Eliab, David’s oldest brother, heard him speaking with the men, he burned with anger at him and asked, “Why have you come down here? And with whom did you leave those few sheep in the wilderness? I know how conceited you are and how wicked your heart is; you came down only to watch the battle.” “Now what have I done?” said David. “Can’t I even speak?” He then turned away to someone else and brought up the same matter, and the men answered him as before. What David said was overheard and reported to Saul, and Saul sent for him. David said to Saul, “Let no one lose heart on account of this Philistine; your servant will go and fight him.” Saul replied, “You are not able to go out against this Philistine and fight him; you are only a young man, and he has been a warrior from his youth.” But David said to Saul, “Your servant has been keeping his father’s sheep. When a lion or a bear came and carried off a sheep from the flock, I went after it, struck it and rescued the sheep from its mouth. When it turned on me, I seized it by its hair, struck it and killed it. Your servant has killed both the lion and the bear; this uncircumcised Philistine will be like one of them, because he has defied the armies of the living God."

God wanted to free the people of Israel, but the Israelites were reticent. The Israelites would continually come to the battle lines to meet Goliath, but took off running as soon as the giant offered any type of resistance.

David lived with the worship of God as central to his daily existence so was different. When you experience God's deliverance, you are emboldened to fight for others who are fighting their giants. Each one should have a desire to reach one.

To be used of God, you will have to overcome obstacles. David's brothers tried to judge his motives and discourage his efforts, but David kept his focus on the Lord.

Never succumb to the theories of why certain people can not be reached. David would be willing to face the giant because in obscurity, while defeating the lion and the bear in the fields, David's heart was being filled with confidence in the unstoppable greatness of the Lord.

“We might be wise to follow the insight of the enraptured heart rather than the more cautious reasoning of the theological mind.” ― A.W. Tozer, The Knowledge of the Holy

Engagement is the key. Making disciples is not theoretical, but practical. It is turning people from the sin that is destroying their lives to the life of joy and forgiveness that is found in Jesus.

Jesus would put it this way:

Luke 15:7 I tell you that in the same way there will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to repent.

Defeating the giants and making disciples is not the result of you merely studying your favorite Christian books or theories espoused in a classroom setting. It is the result of you intentionally building relationship with and interacting with live people with the love and gospel of Jesus Christ.

The Great Giant-Slayer

David was able to overcome Goliath because he knew the real giant slayer.

1 Samuel 17:38-58 Then Saul dressed David in his own tunic. He put a coat of armor on him and a bronze helmet on his head. David fastened on his sword over the tunic and tried walking around, because he was not used to them.“I cannot go in these,” he said to Saul, “because I am not used to them.” So he took them off. Then he took his staff in his hand, chose five smooth stones from the stream, put them in the pouch of his shepherd’s bag and, with his sling in his hand, approached the Philistine. Meanwhile, the Philistine, with his shield bearer in front of him, kept coming closer to David. He looked David over and saw that he was little more than a boy, glowing with health and handsome, and he despised him. He said to David, “Am I a dog, that you come at me with sticks?” And the Philistine cursed David by his gods. “Come here,” he said, “and I’ll give your flesh to the birds and the wild animals!” David said to the Philistine, “You come against me with sword and spear and javelin, but I come against you in the name of the Lord Almighty, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. This day the Lord will deliver you into my hands, and I’ll strike you down and cut off your head. This very day I will give the carcasses of the Philistine army to the birds and the wild animals, and the whole world will know that there is a God in Israel. All those gathered here will know that it is not by sword or spear that the Lord saves; for the battle is the Lord’s, and he will give all of you into our hands.” As the Philistine moved closer to attack him, David ran quickly toward the battle line to meet him. Reaching into his bag and taking out a stone, he slung it and struck the Philistine on the forehead. The stone sank into his forehead, and he fell facedown on the ground. So David triumphed over the Philistine with a sling and a stone; without a sword in his hand he struck down the Philistine and killed him. David ran and stood over him. He took hold of the Philistine’s sword and drew it from the sheath. After he killed him, he cut off his head with the sword.When the Philistines saw that their hero was dead, they turned and ran. Then the men of Israel and Judah surged forward with a shout and pursued the Philistines to the entrance of Gath and to the gates of Ekron. Their dead were strewn along the Shaaraim road to Gath and Ekron. When the Israelites returned from chasing the Philistines, they plundered their camp. David took the Philistine’s head and brought it to Jerusalem; he put the Philistine’s weapons in his own tent. As Saul watched David going out to meet the Philistine, he said to Abner, commander of the army, “Abner, whose son is that young man?”Abner replied, “As surely as you live, Your Majesty, I don’t know.” The king said, “Find out whose son this young man is.” As soon as David returned from killing the Philistine, Abner took him and brought him before Saul, with David still holding the Philistine’s head. “Whose son are you, young man?” Saul asked him.David said, “I am the son of your servant Jesse of Bethlehem.”

To slay the giants of our generation 1) Don't assume anything about anyone. Just because someone says that they have a church background doesn't mean they've been born again or are living in the freedom of a disciple. In the same way, just because someone did not grow up in church, doesn't mean that they won't be mightily used of Jesus after coming to faith and repentance. 2) Go in the armor the Lord gives you. Don't try to be someone else. David had to battle Goliath in his own armor, not Saul's. 3) Know who really wins the war. Engage people with the truth of God's Word, knowing it's Jesus who secures rescue and salvation for people.

David ran to the battle line and did not procrastinate. He had a living, not merely an intellectual, faith. We should have the same urgency.

“Who will deny that true religion consists, in a great measure, in vigorous and lively actings of the inclination and will of the soul, or the fervent exercises of the heart? That religion which God requires, and will accept, does not consist in weak, dull, and lifeless, wishes, raising us but a little above a state of indifference. ” ― Jonathan Edwards

David's confidence was being clothed, as Paul mentioned, with the living God. This is a clear picture of the trust God is calling you to in Jesus.

There are people surrounding you every day who are facing giants that are hindering and destroying their lives. As you meet Jesus, you are anointed to reach the one in front of you, even while God works on you. Reaching one person can precipitate the deliverance of entire families, friendship groups, communities and inevitably cities (like the Samaritan woman in John 4). Bring people to the feet of Jesus and He will defeat both your giants and theirs.

A Parable The giant in the 2008 film The Dark Knight was the Joker. He literally held the city of Gotham captive by his sociopathic campaign for anarchy. Though Harvey Dent attempted to combat the Joker, Dent was ultimately overcome in his efforts and as Two-Face, fell into the same destructive patterns as the Joker. To truly rescue the city, Gotham needed a substitutionary hero who would both defeat the giant and absorb the penalty of Harvey's shortcomings. It is here, in this parable, that Batman is similar to our Savior, Jesus, the only true giant slayer.

The Dark Knight ending video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jAj20UOc3DE

We all face giants in our lives that attempt to steal the life of God. The city is a macrocosm of this reality and stands waiting for those who will challenge the giants. It begins as we each determine to reach the one in front of us with the love and gospel of Christ. Jesus is the ultimate giant slayer, defeating Satan, sin and death. Through repentance we can be reconciled with God and through faith in Jesus we can now walk in the freedom that our champion provided.

Second City Church- Boot Camp Sermon Series 2014

The Anointing

Boot Camp: The Anointing

[powerpress] The life of Jesus is one of impassioned relationship and purpose. As we come to understand God's great love for us expressed in Jesus, we are set ablaze to love Him in return with the totality of our lives. This sets us on course for kingdom work which we are able to enact by the anointing of the Holy Spirit. As we begin to study the work of God in the life of King David, we will discover what God's looking for in an anointed servant, who qualifies us for the anointing of God and finally, the purpose of the anointing of God.

What God's Looking For

1 Samuel 16:1-7 The Lord said to Samuel, “How long will you mourn for Saul, since I have rejected him as king over Israel? Fill your horn with oil and be on your way; I am sending you to Jesse of Bethlehem. I have chosen one of his sons to be king.” But Samuel said, “How can I go? If Saul hears about it, he will kill me.”The Lord said, “Take a heifer with you and say, ‘I have come to sacrifice to the Lord.’ Invite Jesse to the sacrifice, and I will show you what to do. You are to anoint for me the one I indicate.” Samuel did what the Lord said. When he arrived at Bethlehem, the elders of the town trembled when they met him. They asked, “Do you come in peace?” Samuel replied, “Yes, in peace; I have come to sacrifice to the Lord. Consecrate yourselves and come to the sacrifice with me.” Then he consecrated Jesse and his sons and invited them to the sacrifice. When they arrived, Samuel saw Eliab and thought, “Surely the Lord’s anointed stands here before the Lord.” But the Lord said to Samuel, “Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The Lord does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart.”

Why Saul was rejected as king

Saul did not live in the fear of the Lord. He did not take obedience to God seriously. In the time of King Saul and David, his successor, God was looking for men and women who would not attempt to serve Him in the wrappings of their own desires, but would worship and obey Him as He truly is. It is no different today. Jesus is continually looking throughout the earth to find those who will love Him wholeheartedly and prioritize doing His will in the earth.

King Saul, David's predecessor, would be removed by God from his privileged position to rule Israel because he gave Him a reasoned devotion. He thought he could negotiate complete obedience to God rather than understanding his place as a vassal, a servant who was appointed to God's will. Saul never imagined there would be such an aversion and consequence to his ignorant pride.

“Those who set up a fictitious worship, merely worship and adore their own delirious fancies; indeed, they would never dare so to trifle with God, had they not previously fashioned him after their own childish conceits.” ― John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion

What is God looking for? God is looking for men and women after His own heart (I Samuel 13:14; Acts 13:22).

The heart in the biblical sense means more than just your untethered passions, as it is reduced to in our popular songs. It is the Hebrew word, Leb, which indicates the center of a man or woman's whole being - translated colloquially as the "heart and soul" of an individual. It consists not only of the whole spectrum of human emotions, but also signifies the intellect or mind, good sense and discernment. It is the seat of the will where wisdom and understanding reside. In essence, it is the totality of who you are, the inner man or woman. To be one after God's own heart is to be like-minded with God and to have your desires and affections directed towards Him.

How have you been living before God? Are you living in partial obedience or with a fully submitted heart?

Some would think to themselves, "This really doesn't matter for me, because I'm not necessarily one of God's anointed." Jesus would say something different.

Anointed by the Choosing of God

Jesus chooses you for His purposes. You don't choose Him.

1 Samuel 16:8-13 Then Jesse called Abinadab and had him pass in front of Samuel. But Samuel said, “The Lord has not chosen this one either.” Jesse then had Shammah pass by, but Samuel said, “Nor has the Lord chosen this one.” Jesse had seven of his sons pass before Samuel, but Samuel said to him, “The Lord has not chosen these.” So he asked Jesse, “Are these all the sons you have?”“There is still the youngest,” Jesse answered. “He is tending the sheep.”Samuel said, “Send for him; we will not sit down until he arrives.” So he sent for him and had him brought in. He was glowing with health and had a fine appearance and handsome features.Then the Lord said, “Rise and anoint him; this is the one.” So Samuel took the horn of oil and anointed him in the presence of his brothers, and from that day on the Spirit of the Lord came powerfully upon David. Samuel then went to Ramah.

How do I know if God has chosen me?

You are not chosen because of your good works, society's determination of your value or even your own sense of self-worth. You are anointed simply because of God's gracious choosing made possible by Jesus' atoning, substitutionary work on the cross. This is the gospel. His family disqualified David, but God chose him to be for the display of His splendor. Will you allow Him to use you?

“Of course God does not consider you hopeless. If He did, He would not be moving you to seek Him (and He obviously is)... Continue seeking Him with seriousness. Unless He wanted you, you would not be wanting Him.” ― C.S. Lewis, Letters of C. S. Lewis

There will be no true rest for you in life until you come into the purposes of God. As the family stood awaiting the arrival of David, God will not allow rest to your soul without it.

When you submit to Jesus, He anoints you.

What is anointing/the anointing? The anointing is when the Holy Spirit of God comes upon you for His divine, eternal purposes.

The horn of an animal was symbolic of its strength. Anointing from a horn filled with oil was symbolic of God's strength coming upon the anointed individual for His divine purposes, to act as God's representative in the areas to which they were called.

Such things as kings in the marketplace, tools in the temple and priests were all anointed for service to God. Jesus was all of these things. In this way, we know how to walk out our purpose when anointed because Jesus is our example.

Because God is the one who does the choosing, what you do with your life should also be His choice.

"The glory of God is the living man, but the life of man is the vision of God', says St. Irenaeus, getting to the heart of what happens when man meets God on the mountain in the wilderness. Ultimately, it is the very life of man, man himself as living righteously, that is the true worship of God, but life only becomes real life when it receives its form from looking toward God.” ― Pope Benedict XVI, The Spirit of the Liturgy

I can ask, "How would Jesus run this business? What would be His purpose in this job that I have?" "What manner would He serve others in the church and what way would He reach out with the gospel to those that I know and love?" "In what way would He look to bring transformation to the community?"

For what have you been anointed?

Anointed To Do What?

You are anointed to introduce the healing power of Jesus and the gospel into whatever environment in which you find yourself.

1 Samuel 16:14-23 Now the Spirit of the Lord had departed from Saul, and an evil spirit from the Lord tormented him. Saul’s attendants said to him, “See, an evil spirit from God is tormenting you. Let our lord command his servants here to search for someone who can play the lyre. He will play when the evil spirit from God comes on you, and you will feel better.” So Saul said to his attendants, “Find someone who plays well and bring him to me.” One of the servants answered, “I have seen a son of Jesse of Bethlehem who knows how to play the lyre. He is a brave man and a warrior. He speaks well and is a fine-looking man. And the Lord is with him.” Then Saul sent messengers to Jesse and said, “Send me your son David, who is with the sheep.” So Jesse took a donkey loaded with bread, a skin of wine and a young goat and sent them with his son David to Saul. David came to Saul and entered his service. Saul liked him very much, and David became one of his armor-bearers. Then Saul sent word to Jesse, saying, “Allow David to remain in my service, for I am pleased with him.” Whenever the spirit from God came on Saul, David would take up his lyre and play. Then relief would come to Saul; he would feel better, and the evil spirit would leave him.

When the Spirit of the Lord departs from an individual or an environment, the end result is torment. David, foreshadowing Jesus, would be the anointed individual to restore peace.

Our answer for troubled times

Ethnic tensions flair in places like Ferguson and Iraq, and even our own neighborhoods in Chicago. However, amidst the violence, the gospel of peace through Jesus' reconciliatory work on the cross can supernaturally change hardened hearts. This is the gospel that we preach calling all men to repentance and faith in the Son of God. This is His barrier dividing, resurrecting work bringing new life where there was previously only death. Jesus breaks down the dividing wall between God and man, man and man and man and God's creation. We are anointed to live as and make disciples who bring this gospel of peace to the world.

God looks at the heart. The anointing of the Holy Spirit empowers you, like Jesus, to fulfill God's holy purposes. When you are anointed, you are a vessel to bring Jesus' transforming gospel and power into individual lives, industries, cities and nations that they might literally be saved from destruction. Let's come to Jesus in worship today, giving Him our whole hearts, allowing Him to anoint us for His purposes in this city and beyond.

Second City Church: Boot Camp Sermon Series 2014