Thursday, May 07, 2020

A Word From The Wise (i.e., Solomon)...

“Guard your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life.” (Proverbs 4:23 NLT

What is in our hearts eventually comes out through our words, actions and associations (Matt. 15:19) We have to "guard" our hearts against evil influences and not let them be instructed/influenced by unrighteousness. As our "hearts" go, so go our lives. For me, I have to watch what I see, what I hear, where I go, who has influence in my life, what counsel I'm given, what music plays in my head, what movies I go see, what TV shows I watch, etc. (As you watch your food intake to be healthy, you have to watch your "heart" intake to be holy.) I can't avoid all these things all the time, but I have to "guard" my heart as much as possible to keep evil from getting more ingrained in me. Where evil is already ingrained, I have to "guard" my heart by replacing "bad programming" with "good programming" through scripture, worship, prayer, church gatherings, Christian friendships, etc. This is not a one-time event, but a process for all of us. The technical, biblical term for this "process" is sanctification ("set apart from/to"). We are being "set apart" from some things and we are being "set apart" to others! This is an important aspect of the "process" for how Christlikeness is developed in our lives.

Think about it...

Think about it...when right doctrine no longer matters to us, then the true God no longer matters to us.
As frail humans we see things “imperfectly” (1 Cor. 13:12 NLT), so Christians differ sometimes on the finer points of biblical doctrine. However, showing disinterest in and dislike for doctrine says we don’t think God and His Word are that important! I’d rather a person lovingly disagree with me on a point of doctrine than to say our differences don’t matter. Truth matters and it matters that we seek the truth!

Wednesday, May 06, 2020

A Word From The Wise (i.e., Solomon)...

“Pride leads to disgrace, but with humility comes wisdom.” (Proverbs 11:2 NLT


This is a tough one and it certainly doesn't come naturally to any of us. Humility is possibly the greatest need of mankind, aside from the need to know Christ in salvation. But, you can't even know Christ until you humble yourself to acknowledge that you are a sinner in need of Christ's help. A number of the Proverbs deal with this subject and it comes up again and again before finishing these thirty-one chapters. Humility is not walking around with drooped shoulders always talking about your past failures or poor performance. That's pseudo-humilty because what it does is draw attention to yourself so people will notice you. Humility doesn't seek out attention! Basically, It means acknowledging that you need God's help and that you can't live without it! True humility also acknowledges that everything you have and everything you are comes from God as His gift to you. The humble person turns any praise or recognition received back to God because He's the One that made it possible anyway. Consider these thoughts: Humility causes us to place ourselves under others so that we can lift them up instead of lifting up ourselves. Humility means even if you get used at times by others, you refuse to use others in a similar manner. Humility won't engage in petty arguments in order to prove the other person wrong and itself right. Humility tries to recognize what other people need and seeks to quietly meet that need when possible. Humility understands a spouse's weaknesses/struggles in order not to aggravate or exploit them. Humility loves others as God loves them even when that love isn't reciprocated. Humility acts as a peacemaker when relationships are difficult and troubled, rather than stirring up more trouble. I could go on like this, but you get the point. The humble person puts the interests of others ahead of his own, especially in his family and among his friends. Solomon says that apart from humility you can't be wise! The reason is because the humble ask for help, which is something the proud will never do! I have to ask God for help every...single...day!

A Word From The Wise (i.e., Solomon)...

“Don’t say, ‘I will get even for this wrong.’ Wait for the LORD to handle the matter.” (‭Proverbs‬ ‭20‬:‭22‬ NLT)


I think the most difficult word in this verse is, "wait." When you've been wounded you don't want to "wait." You want vengeance now! Justice delayed seems like justice denied. The problem we have as fallible human beings is in bringing justice to a situation...justly. Our emotions and motivations too often get skewed when we are hurting. That's why we have to leave justice to the only One that can execute it justly. Besides, if we all got what we "rightly deserved" (justice) we would all be condemned. Let’s remind ourselves that when we want someone to pay for the wrong they did to us, that the measure of justice we desire for them may well be the measure of justice given back to us. Make the choice to leave vengeance to God and "wait" for Him to "handle the matter."

A Word From The Wise (i.e., Solomon)...

“For wisdom is far more valuable than rubies. Nothing you desire can compare with it.” (Proverbs 8:11 NLT)


Acquiring God's wisdom is a lifelong pursuit and more valuable than any other thing you can desire in life. I really like Proverbs 8 because wisdom is personified as a companion of the Lord in all His actions, words and deeds! It's ever present with Him because it's "His" wisdom! Pursuing wisdom in essence means pursuing God! (Another description of wisdom I like is in James 3:17. Don't read that verse unless you are ready to be punched in the gut!) In this chapter wisdom calls out to us, is with Kings that rule well, was with God at the beginning and during creation, gives life to those that find it, etc., etc. Everything God says and does is wise! I'm in need of God's wisdom all the time. Actually, I pray for wisdom all the time. So much of life is confusing apart from God's wisdom. There are still lots of things I don't have figured out yet and I'm waiting on God to give me greater wisdom so I can understand them. What I do know is that operating according to God's wisdom always pays off. That doesn't mean life necessarily gets easier! Sometimes it gets a lot harder because the world we live in rejects God's wisdom. The wisdom of the world is contrary to the wisdom of God...in most every area of life. What having God's wisdom does for us (when we apply it) is give us a sense of direction, confidence and fulfillment...even if everyone else opposes us for doing life God's way. God's wisdom comes through scripture, worship, preaching/teaching, godly counsel, the Holy Spirit's leading, the fear of the Lord, and other similar things! Make God’s wisdom your supreme goal and you’ll soon find yourself seeing the Lord at work everywhere in your life!

A Word From The Wise (i.e., Solomon)...

“When the storms of life come, the wicked are whirled away, but the godly have a lasting foundation.” (Proverbs 10:25 NLT)

This section of proverbs covers lots of different subjects within a single chapter. I chose this verse today because I'm reminded that living for God gives us an anchor for our souls that prevents us from being destroyed by the storms of life that inevitably come. Thinking that we can live our whole lives without having troubles and trials is unrealistic and reveals an incomplete Christian worldview. I'd like to live where there aren't any reversals or hardships, but that doesn't come till I reach Heaven. As long as we live in this sin-cursed world there will be tragedies and troubles that come to us all. The "godly" are the ones that seek God and know how to depend on Him in a crisis. They are the ones that turn to His promises when His "plans'' don't make sense. They learn to "trust His heart" (that He loves them) even when they can't "see His hand" (understand what He's doing). The ungodly, however, have no such anchor for the soul. They can see no purpose or plan for anything in their lives. From their perspective, everything is mere happenstance or fate. When trouble comes they have no one to whom they can turn for help and they have no hope in the middle of the messes of their lives. The godly still hurt when life hurts, but they have a hope that transcends this life. We've all had our share of heartaches. God sees us, knows our pain and will love us through everything we have to face! The stronger we grow in faith, the more stable we become so we aren't "whirled away" by the storms blowing all around us!

Wednesday, September 06, 2017

Buhfai Tham

Sometimes you read or hear something that moves you deeply, but you wonder if it’s really true. I guess a lot of us Americans have become skeptical and jaded by the hype of deceptively spun stories. That’s why when I heard the story I am about to share with you, I had to discover for myself first whether something so beautiful and convicting could really be true. Once I knew the facts, I could not keep it to myself and had to pass it along to you.

To quickly familiarize you with the background of the story that touched me so deeply, it concerns a part of northeast India called Mizoram. In 1894 there were two Scottish missionaries that entered the remote, landlocked, hilly and heavily forested area to preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The people living there were an animistic people who had no written language and had never heard of the Gospel. So, the two missionaries developed an alphabet for them and translated parts of the Bible into their language in order to tell them the Good News of Jesus Christ. Today, the people they reached are called the “Mizo,” and the language they speak is known by the same name.

From the work of the two missionaries in 1894 there came one Mizo convert to Christianity that year. Not until five years later, in 1899, were the first two converts baptized from the area. But, by the time other missionaries arrived a few years later in the town of Lunglei, they found 125 believers already there. As the missionaries collectively worked together the result was that most of the Mizo people were converted to Christ within 50 years.

Those early missionaries taught their new converts the need to continue the work of proclaiming the Gospel. Even to this day, Mizo missionaries teach new converts about the importance of evangelizing others. In fact, one of the first two converts baptized by those early missionaries, Khuma, became the first Mizo evangelist of that part of India. He was reported to have gone from house to house with this simple invitation: “Come, believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.”

Today, Mizo Christians still consider the task of proclaiming the Gospel to the world their own personal responsibility. (That should really be the mindset of all believers in Jesus Christ.) What makes this story so amazing to me, though, is that the Mizo people financially support their OWN missionaries and evangelists from their OWN resources. That’s an amazing detail when you realize the poverty of the people in Mizo and the incredible generosity they model in missions. To get a feel for the true condition of this part of the world, listen to the words of Rev. Zosangliana Colney, leader of the Mizoram Presbyterian Church. He says that, "Mizoram state is the most backward state in India. And we are the poorest of the poor, but still we can raise funds for the ministry of the Lord." Just so you know, the average income of a person in Mizo is $300 per year, less than one dollar per day.

How is it possible that people of such meager means and simple living conditions could ever raise support for the cause of missions? The answer is found in a beautiful phrase that when I first heard it and understood what it meant, moved me deeply in my spirit. It is—"Buhfai Tham." Please, don’t forget that phrase! Even though it means nothing to you at this moment, you’ll soon understand why it is so important.

“Buhfai Tham” simply means a "handful of rice." However, this simple phrase explains the generosity of the Mizo people and their commitment to the cause of missions. Because rice is the main staple of their daily meals, families in the churches of Mizo set aside a “handful of rice” at every meal. When each family collects enough rice they donate it to their local church, which in turn sells it at the market to generate income. In this way they are able to financially support the cause of missions and the spread of the Gospel.

In 1914 when they first began this way of giving to missions they received from the sale of the rice the equivalent of $1.50 in U.S. currency. By the calendar year 2010, they were collecting and selling enough rice to raise the equivalent of $1.5 million dollars and were supporting 1,800 missionaries with their “handfuls of rice.”

In addition, over the years since the “Buhfai Tham” offering was first introduced, the people continued giving creatively by bringing not just rice but portions of their home grown vegetables, firewood, and other resources (all in addition to the tithes they give to their churches). These, too, are sold at the market to further the spread of the Gospel and the planting of churches in India and beyond.

In other words, the task of proclaiming the Gospel became such a central part of the Mizo people’s identity that they were willing to make sacrifices to advance the Gospel in spite of their own poverty. They heard the missionary call in the Great Commission and accepted it as their own personal calling from God. Let me remind you again, even today this area is among the poorest places on the face of the earth. That’s what makes this story so amazingly miraculous and beautiful to me. It also makes it extremely convicting, as well!

One of the leaders in the church in Mizoram said, “There are many ways of serving the Lord. Some people do great things. Some people are great preachers. Some people contribute lots and lots of money. But when we talk about this 'handful of rice,' it is very humble. The service is done in the corner of the kitchen where nobody sees, but God knows and he blesses it.”

A church member involved in the “Buhfai Tham” offerings said, "It is not our richness or our poverty that make us serve the Lord, but our willingness. So we Mizo people say, 'As long as we have something to eat every day, we have something to give to God every day.'"

WOW! What a testimony of commitment to Jesus Christ and the mission He left to His church.

Conversely, we live in the most prosperous nation on the face of the earth! We think nothing of dropping $50 to $100 for an evening with the family at a nice local restaurant, a ballgame or a movie. The fact is, we have more money invested in one or two of our electronic gadgets than many of the people in Mizo will make in income in five, ten or more years. We sometimes spend exorbitant amounts chasing our kids and grandkids from place to place for various “important” events, but too often we can’t find any money to give to the primary cause God left us on earth to accomplish.

When thinking about the “willingness” of the Mizo people to give a “handful of rice,” I think we’d all have to agree that many of us spend way too much time and resources trying to impress people we hardly know with things we don’t really need for reasons we don’t even understand. I mean, if you lived in Mizo today you’d be grateful for a roof over your head, clothes on your back, the rice you had in your storage containers, and you’d be giving a portion of that away to help others hear about Jesus.

How is it that people who have virtually nothing can demonstrate such generosity in advancing the Gospel when those of us who live in the “land of plenty” can’t seem to eek out even a little for the cause most dear to the heart of God? Could it be that we really don’t believe that Jesus is the only way to Heaven and consequently don’t think it’s important to get the message to the ends of the earth? Or, might it be that we have become so self-absorbed that the only people we think about are ourselves? Maybe we just don’t think Jesus meant what He said to us when He left the command to make disciples of all the nations of the earth (Matthew 28:19-20).

I actually don’t know the reason so many Christians give so little to the cause of world missions, but I know for me and my house we will sacrifice for what Jesus called His church to accomplish: The Great Commission! My heart has been stirred to action by the people of Mizo and their “Buhfai Tham” offerings. How about you? Would you take a “handful of your resources” and give them back to God to help our church take the Gospel to places like Mizoram?

Thursday, May 04, 2017

Resurrection Hope

A father and son were traveling down a country road one afternoon in the springtime when a bee suddenly flew into the car window. Being deathly allergic to bee stings, the boy began to panic as the bee buzzed all around the inside of the car. Seeing the horror on his child’s face, the father reached out and caught the bee in his hand. Soon, he opened his hand and the bee began to buzz around again. The boy went back into panic mode. It was then that the father reached over to his son, and opened his hand showing him the stinger still in his palm. “Relax, son,” the father said, “I took the sting, the bee can’t hurt you anymore.”

That story makes me think of the blessed promise God has given to us all through His Son, Jesus Christ. He assures us that “death” cannot hurt us anymore because He has taken the “sting” out of it for us. Listen to how the Holy Spirit worded this truth through the Apostle Paul, “Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting? The sting of death is sin, and the power of sin is the law. But thanks be to God, who gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ!” (1 Corinthians 15:55-57 NET)

Over my nearly forty years of pastoral ministry I have been called to help on many occasions when families were in crisis because a loved one was critically ill and very near death. Even after all these years of experiencing these things with heartbroken families, it has never gotten easier for me. The pain that comes from the death of someone’s family member still feels like it did the first time I was called as a new pastor to tell a man his wife had passed away tragically one night while he was at work. I still choke back tears when I see the pain in the faces of the ones who are saying “goodbye” to their dearest on earth. Truthfully, I long for the day when death will be no more and it will be totally “destroyed” so it can never touch the lives of any person ever again.

If you stop and think about it, it really shouldn’t be a wonder to any of us why we celebrate weekly the remembrance of Christ’s sacrifice and the reality of His resurrection. It is our hope (cf. 1 Cor. 15:19) and our help! These momentous works of Christ (His death, burial and resurrection) assure us that our family members are not gone forever. We are sustained by these truths, knowing that we will one day meet on Heaven’s shore in the land where we will never be subject to sin or death again. This Good News we call the Gospel helps us know by faith what God has prepared for all His children. It reminds us that though the unpleasantness of death has visited our family, the grave will not hold our loved ones for long. Why? Because Jesus conquered the grave, and so will the bodies of our deceased family members at Christ’s coming! I cannot imagine what it would be like to face death without the strength and hope that comes through our Savior Who gave His life for us so that we might live with Him eternally.

On many occasions through these years I’ve told grieving and hurting families something that I heard when I was a young minister: “We don’t live by explanations. We live by promises!” If you’ve been through a crisis at any time in your life I think you can probably identify with the sentiment of those two statements. The truth is, there are many things in this life we will never understand and we will never be able to explain. The death of a loved one is one of those conundrums that shakes us to the very core of our being. Why did he/she have to die so soon? Why did the disease progress so quickly when others lived for many years with the same illness? What could possibly be the purpose of a person so young being taken when he/she had so much life before them? Why, when we prayed so diligently for our loved one to be healed, did it not happen? Why couldn’t God have called our loved one home after I arrived to be with him/her rather than just before I got there? The questions of this nature could go on ad infinitum! There are just so many things we can’t understand because our perspective is so terribly limited by our humanity.

What we have to do during our moments of crisis while we are living in the “land of the dying” is hold onto the promises of God that sustain us when explanations aren’t enough or not forthcoming. Because of the death and resurrection of Jesus we have the promise that our loved ones are with Him immediately after their deaths! We have the promise that the grave cannot hold their bodies when Christ comes the second time! We have the promise of a future glorified body like His resurrected one! We have the promise of understanding God’s perfect will in matters that confuse us now! We have the promise of a future reunion when we’ll never have to say “goodbye” to our loved ones again! We have the promise that our family member will never be touched by the cruel and sometimes evil things that exist in this world! We have the promise of His sustaining grace to help us until we meet again on that “heavenly shore!”

Do you see the difference between the two previous paragraphs: the one filled with “question marks” and the other with “exclamation points?” If you didn’t already sense the difference, let me explain to you the contrast between them. Dwelling on questions serves only to deepen our pain, while focusing on promises brings us peace in the midst of our turmoil. And, if it were not for the death and resurrection of Jesus there would be no promises to hold onto in the times of crisis...or any other time for that matter!

Occasionally I’ll hear a person tell me that he or she is an atheist. Upon hearing those words I immediately feel sorrow for them because they have no promises on which to lean or to steady themselves when the earth is shaking beneath their feet. They have no hope of gathering on Heaven’s peaceful shore where happy reunions occur. They have no promise of explanations for things that will never be understood in this life. To the “unbelievers,” life seems to be little more than a matter of happenstance or fate. There is no eternal comfort you can offer them or help that can be rendered through God’s promises. Their lives are one big gamble and for them it’s just “bad luck” that things turned out the way they did...or so they think.

Thank God that we as followers of Jesus don’t have to live that way! We know the cross of Christ is God’s way of paying the penalty for our sins. And the empty tomb? Well, that’s God’s way of saying to us; “Relax, dear son or daughter, I took the sting of death for you and it can’t hurt you anymore.”

Friday, December 23, 2016

Discipleship to Christ


"The heart of true discipleship is a settled intent to become like Jesus. A disciple is like the man who in his joy went and sold all he had in order to buy the field with the great treasure (Matthew 13:44). Disciples gladly rearrange everything in their lives around Jesus because of a firm persuasion that He is everything they want." --Del Fehsenfeld III

The greatest pursuit in life is the pursuit of Jesus' mastery of our lives! It's not that we are pursuing Him in HOPES of "being saved." It is that we are pursuing Him BECAUSE we "are saved" and desire that our lives be lived under His mastery. The less we understand about what Christ has done for us, the less we desire Him to be Lord over every part of our lives.


Discipleship to Christ is not about "addition" (adding Christ to our lives to escape Hell), but "submission" to Him (yielding every part of ourselves to Him). It might even be possible to say it's an "addiction" to Jesus! All we want is for Him to be pleased and glorified through every part of our lives. Disciples "rearrange" every aspect of their lives around HIM, HIS priorities and HIS purposes!



Thursday, September 08, 2016

Making the Commission Great Again!


Some time ago I read a provocative quote about cross-cultural missions that piqued my curiosity and got me to reading the author's words more carefully. He wrote, “Churches who continuously indoctrinate their people with ‘your mission field is right where you are’ without simultaneously challenging the congregation to follow Christ into cross-cultural missionary service are effectively splashing an ice-bucket challenge on the global, ethnÄ“-centered words of the Great Commission.”  

To be honest, my first reaction to these words was negative, and I almost put them aside without any further consideration. The reason I felt this way is because I didn’t read carefully enough his entire statement at first. So, just in case you are about to put away this article before finishing it, let me note that the author of this quote did not deny the necessity of teaching people that the “mission field is right where you are.” What he said is that if we do this without ALSO challenging people “to follow Christ into cross-cultural missionary service” we are “splashing an ice-bucket challenge on the global, ethnÄ“-centered words of the Great Commission.”

What he is trying to help us realize is that the Great Commission is not an either/or proposition when it comes to evangelizing our world. He’s not asking us to forget the mission field where we live. He’s asking us to remember that it’s not the ONLY mission field that needs to be evangelized with the Gospel. He wants us to understand that our responsibility as Christ’s witnesses is both in our own neighborhood (“Jerusalem”), as well as to the “ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8)...and all parts in between.

I think when we say, “Your mission field is right next door” and/or “across the street,” we are saying it with the best of intentions in a sincere effort to motivate people. We want them to see the potential harvest of lost souls that are all around them (at least, that’s my motivation); and let’s be honest, too often we haven’t done a very good job at reaching those within our own sphere of influence. However, the danger in primarily making the mission field about “wherever you happen to be right now” is the potentially crippling effect it can have on the church fulfilling the global call of the Great Commission. Just from my observation as a pastor for more than 30 years, I think we in the American church are dangerously close to turning a worldwide message of hope into a truncated, provincial one.  

God’s mission is not just about our present location at this particular moment. It is also about showing the love of Christ through the preaching of the Gospel to every man, woman, boy and girl wherever they may be found on this planet.The responsibility for taking this message to all those people in our own community and the farthest reaches of the earth is that of the church (you and me). We should even be willing to make ourselves available to be that cross-cultural missionary if God so chooses to call us to that specific task. Even if He doesn’t ask us to leave our place of birth to head to a distant land, it is still our responsibility to help others go that have been called by partnering with them to make the global reach of the Gospel a possibility.

In the early days of the New Testament church, the new believers all wanted to stay around Jerusalem. Jesus intervened and broadened their geographic perspective and enabled them to see that the Gospel had to be carried to “Judea and Samaria and to the ends of the earth” (Acts 1:8). Yes, it started where they were, but it didn’t end there! They were to be involved both in the process of making disciples at home and abroad as part of the Great Commission of Christ.

I think we have to be careful when talking about Christ’s commission that we don’t stamp out the “burning embers” in local churches for the cause of worldwide missions. Sure, you can “serve Christ anywhere,” “there are lots of people right here that need the Gospel,” and “moving overseas doesn't necessarily make you a missionary.” However, we have to balance our appeal for local outreach with the regular reminder about the global outreach of the Gospel so that we don’t inadvertently dismiss the clarion call given to the church to make disciples among all the nations of the earth (Matthew 28:19-20; Mark 16:15).

The fact is that where we cannot go cross-culturally to take Christ’s love, we have to be willing to help those that can go in our stead! We should even encourage our children and grandchildren to make themselves available as God’s instruments to carry His glorious Good News to those that have never heard of Christ and “sit in darkness” (Luke 1:79). Making disciples of Christ from every ethnic group of people throughout the whole world has always been and still is the work of the church!

As we celebrate the work of cross-cultural missions during the month of September, we should make our best effort to hear from the missionary guests each Sunday evening of the month. We need to be reminded that while we are seeking to reach out through our own networks of people God has placed around us, there is a great need for the Gospel where people have little or no opportunity to network with anyone that can bring them the Gospel. Think about that for a moment and then put yourself in their place!

Throughout these coming weeks, we should also be seeking and asking God to show us how we can financially partner with our missionaries through our Faith-Promise missions program to enable our church to continue reaching to the “ends of the earth” with the only message that can truly change people’s lives. Faith-Promise giving has always been the primary way we support cross-cultural ministry and church planting. God has blessed our church through our missionary endeavors, as well as those that have given to missions through our church.

It’s time to make the commission (Matthew 28:19-20) great again in our church, and in each of our lives. It’s time we reached out to those around us while reaching out to others in distant lands...at the same time.