Sunday, June 17, 2012

Passing On The Torch

Psalm 78:1-8


    1. The Olympic Torch Relay actually began in the Ancient Olympics, but was revived at the 1936 Berlin Games. Originally, the torch was lit at Olympia in Greece and then carried by relay to the host-city of the games. The last runner carries the torch into the Olympic Stadium during the Opening Ceremony. The flame is then lit from the torch and will remain lit until it is extinguished during the Closing Ceremony. The Torch Relay symbolizes the passing of Olympic traditions from one generation to the next!

      God has placed upon us as parents the responsibility of passing on the biblical traditions/truth from one generation to the next, as well. This is a task that is committed primarily to the parents as they have the opportunity for the greatest influence on the children.

      Dr. Howard Hendricks, long time professor at Dallas Theological Seminary, author of sixteen books, and Chaplain for the Dallas Cowboys (1976-1984) said, “Your home is the number one influence in the life of your child. The average church has a child 1% of his time, the home has him 83% of his time and the school for the remaining 16%. This does not minimize the need for churches and schools, but it establishes the fact your home is 83% of your child's world and you have only one time around to make it of maximum benefit.”

      The home is God’s primary method for raising children as even the writing of Asaph indicates in the 78th Psalm. Asaph was the Minister of Music at the Temple during King David’s reign over Israel. This Psalm is meant to be an instructional Psalm teaching the Jewish people about their waywardness and the mercy of God towards them.

      One of the main reasons for Israel’s repeated disobedience to God is found in the failure of the parents to properly instruct their children and pass on the faith to the next generation.

      Words/thoughts of importance in the text:
      • “law” (v. 1) is the Hebrew word Torah. Usually we think of the Torah as being the first five books of the Old Testament, but here it carries its basic meaning of “instruction.”
      • “Incline” (v. 1) means to “stretch out, extend, bend” and it gives the idea of people leaning in to hear what’s being said. It can be used for the ears of a dog or horse that stretch out/turn to hear what their master is saying or in response to noises. Asaph wants Israel to hear his instruction and not miss it!
      • Asaph will be teaching through parables and riddles (i.e., secret sayings shared by the people). He will be using methods that make truth simple and explain difficult things.
      • This tradition/truth he wants them to learn is rooted in the scripture (“a testimony,” “a law,” v. 5). The stories he’s going to tell are based on biblical truth...from the historical record.
      • Potentially, five generations are mentioned here: 1. “Our fathers” (v.5a), 2. “Their children” (v. 5b), 3. “The generation to come” (v. 6a), 4. “The children” (6b), 5. “Their children” (v. 6c). Some only see four generations, but the point is that the message (torch) must be passed along from one generation to the next.
      • There are six outcomes when teaching truth to children the Psalmist wants to see accomplished: 1. That they “might know Him” (v. 6a), 2. “That they may arise and declare them” (v.6b), 3. ”That they may set their hope in God” (v. 7a), 4. That they would “not forget the works of God” (v. 7b), 5. That they might “keep His commandments” (7c), 6. That they might “not be like their fathers” (v. 8).
      • The three core reasons are numbers 3 through 5.

      Three facts are emphasized by the Psalmist concerning the training process:
      1. The Proper Message for Child Training
      • There are many things that we need to communicate to our children, but none is more important than teaching them God’s Word.
      • The stories and riddles Asaph wanted to pass along dealt with things that were all rooted in the scripture (v. 5).
      • There are 168 hours in a week and the church only has your children for maybe three or four of those hours.
      • If Dr. Hendricks statistics (see introduction) are remotely accurate the overwhelming opportunity for influence in a child’s life is through his/her parents.
      • There is no place for neutrality in this realm (spiritual realm) of instruction for our children. Some parents say they don’t want to force religion on their children and want them to make up their minds for themselves. This sounds sophisticated in our modern society, but it is spiritually lethal to our children. “If neutrality is the attitude of the parents then it will become the religion of their children.” --Hampton Keathley
      • Why would a parent leave the choice of religious instruction up to the child, but not math, science, history, geography, etc.? You prioritize what’s important!!
      • We hide the truth of God from our children when we fail to teach it to them (v. 4).
      • After the giving of the Law, God told His people to teach His truth faithfully/diligently to the next generation (cf. Deuteronomy 6:7-9, cf. 4:9; Proverbs 22:6; Ephesians 6:4).
      • We spend thousands of dollars making sure our children are properly trained in many different disciplines of life, but fail to teach them in the one area that has eternal value and consequences. That’s just foolishness!!
      • Dr. Haddon Robinson, Distinguished Professor of Preaching at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary said, “We purchase the latest volumes on child care so we can raise our children by the book, but we have concentrated on the wrong book!”
      • Teach your children what/why to believe and do it from the scripture!

      2. The Preferred Means of Child Training
      • Twice the text tells us that “fathers” (vs. 3, 5) are the preferred means for teaching truth to their children.
      • Sometimes a masculine word/phrase is used in scripture (i.e., “sons of God” - John 1:12 KJV), but the context is clear that it can refer to men or women. But, that is not the case here.
      • The spiritual instruction of children is something fathers should take as their primary responsibility. The only other responsibility that is of comparable value is loving/leading our wives in spiritual things.
      • Obviously, both father and mother should be giving spiritual instruction to their children.
      • And, where there is no father figure the responsibility falls totally to the mother, grandparents, or mentor of the children.
      • One of the great tragedies today is the number of fatherless homes! Sometimes it’s providential, but too often it’s intentional.
      • Can a parent raise their children for God with an absent father? Yes! But, the task is much more difficult for a single parent than when both parents are participating and dad takes the lead.
      • When possible, children need the strong, godly influence of their fathers.
      • An example from the animal kingdom makes this point...

      Illustration:
      To the surprise of game rangers, a gang of delinquent young male elephants began attacking and killing white rhinoceros at South Africa's Pilanesberg Park in the 1990s. At first the rangers thought poachers might be responsible for the killings, but since the horns of the dead rhinos weren't being touched, they ruled out that possibility.

      When rangers discovered the young male elephants were responsible - 39 rhinos were killed, 10 percent of the park's rhino population - they were baffled because that kind of elephant behavior is not typical. After researching the issue, the rangers realized the elephants causing the problems were orphans who had been transplanted from another park when they were young because that park had too many elephants.

      The solution - the rangers brought in some large bull elephants from Kruger National Park who quickly established their dominance and put the rambunctious unruly young male elephants in their place. After the big bull elephants arrived...no more rhinos were killed, according to a story about the elephants on cbsnews.com.

      One author and lecturer uses the elephant story as an example of the instinctive need boys have for male role models. "Fathers have a powerful influence over their sons in many ways and one of the most significant is showing them the difference between acceptable and unacceptable behavior," He said. "Only a father or true father figure can teach what it means to be a male and what it means to be a father. That comes directly from the male lineage."

      • Dad’s have GREAT opportunity to impact their children for good and for God.

      3. The Purposeful Manner in Child Training
      • There must be a goal in mind when it comes to teaching our children spiritual truth (passing on the torch).
      • Of the six goals stated by Asaph, three are primary above the rest.

      1. (7a) “That they may set their hope in God” (i.e., that they trust/rely on God)
      2. (7b) “That they “not forget the works of God” (i.e., that they learn from the past)
      3. (8a) “That they “keep His commandments” (i.e., that they obey His Word)

      Haddon Robbison said, “If you don’t know His works, you have little to hope for and nothing to hope in.”

      • The goal of parenting our children in spiritual things isn’t just to pass along information. It’s to turn them into faithful followers of God who will teach their children to be faithful followers of God, who will teach your great-grandchildren to be faithful followers of God...etc., etc.
      • We’re suppose to be handing off the “Torch of Faith” to each successive generation and it only takes one generation to fail for us to lose the blessing of God! (cf. book of Judges)

      Closing:
      I took a piece of plastic clay
      And idly fashioned it one day,
      And as my fingers pressed it still,
      It moved and yielded to my will.
      I came again when days were past--
      The bit of clay was hard at last;
      The form I gave it, it still bore,
      But I could change that form no more.

      I took a piece of living clay
      And gently formed it day by day,
      And molded with my power and art
      A young child's soft and yielding heart.
      I came again when years were gone--
      It was a man I looked upon;
      He still that early impress wore,
      And I could change him nevermore. --Source Unknown

      Application:
      1. Get started as soon as possible instructing your children while the “living clay” can still be molded.
      2. Be a biblically informed (not ignorant) parent because you can’t teach what you don’t know.
      3. Seize every teachable moment because biblical training is a spiritual process, not a special event.
      4. Be encouraged that the One who is “Father to the fatherless” (Psalm 68:5) will guide you, if your earthly father can’t or won’t.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Consider This...

Oh, the joys of those who do not follow the advice of the wicked, or stand around with sinners, or join in with mockers. (Psalm 1:1 NLT)

First you “listen,” then you “stand around,” and before you know it...you “join in” the evil. There is always a progression to sin and it is never in a positive direction. You don’t want to “isolate” yourself from unbelievers or you’ll lose the opportunity to influence them for Christ. But, you must “insulate” yourself from their sinful ways by doing what the next verse says, “...delighting in the Law of the Lord and meditating on it day and night” (Psalm 1:2). As the old saying goes, “God’s Word will keep you from sin or sin will keep you from God’s Word.”

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Consider This...

Oh, the joys of those who do not follow the advice of the wicked, or stand around with sinners, or join in with mockers. (Psalm 1:1 NLT)

Who has your ear when it comes to giving you advice about life? Too many Christians spout off ideology rooted in the latest pop psychology rather than the sound principles of scripture. We aren't suppose to be living by the wisdom of this world, but according to the wisdom of God. Be careful who you listen to and measure what he/she tells you by what God says! After all, the Bible is the original "owner's manual" for living a blessed life!

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Consider This...

Let your roots grow down into him, and let your lives be built on him. Then your faith will grow strong in the truth you were taught, and you will overflow with thankfulness. (Colossians 2:7 NLT)

False doctrine, extreme suffering, hard questions, skeptical unbelief, and so much more regularly challenge our faith. Only those who are firmly rooted in Jesus Christ can survive the things thrown at them by this fallen world. A growing understanding of God's Word and an ever deepening walk with Christ enable us to stand firm when others are as unstable as a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Consider This...

Do everything without complaining and arguing... (Philippians 2:14 NLT)

Wouldn't the world be a better place if people would just stop complaining so much? Let's face it, our lives are better than any generation in history could have ever imagined them being and yet some people will inevitably find things to grumble about. Certainly, there's a time, place and manner in which to deal with issues that are genuine problems. But, constantly "fussing and fuming" is not very becoming for a follower of Jesus Christ. Start counting your blessings and "turn your frown upside down."

Monday, June 11, 2012

Consider This...

Let there be no sexual immorality, impurity, or greed among you. Such sins have no place among God’s people. Obscene stories, foolish talk, and coarse jokes—these are not for you. Instead, let there be thankfulness to God. (Ephesians 5:3, 4 NLT)

There are things that God says should never be found among His people, but are prevalent in too many churches today. God is looking for a pure people that desire to live distinctly different kinds of lives from the world around them. Don't accept the lie that moral impurity is just an unavoidable reality in this culture or that God doesn't care about these matters any more. Remember, Jesus said, "God blesses those whose hearts are pure..." (Matthew 5:8)

Sunday, June 10, 2012

The Truth About Repentance

2 Chronicles 33:1-20

This is the last message in the series from Hezekiah’s life and it  primarily deals with his son rather than with Hezekiah personally.

Hezekiah was the good son of an evil father and he was the good father of an evil son.

How could a good father have such an evil son?

  • Was it that he neglected Manasseh while doing his work of state?
  • Was it friends that Manasseh associated with in the early years of his life that wrongly influenced him (cf. 1 Corinthians 15:33)?
  • Was it the reputation of his grandfather (Ahaz) that appealed to him as the avenue to express his youthful rebellion?
  • Had he grown callous to spiritual things while watching the resurgence of worship at Jerusalem?
  • Did he see spiritual inconsistency in his father’s life or that of others that led him to rebel against the faith?
  • Or, was it solely the rebellion that was in his own heart (Proverbs 22:15) to reject anything/everything he had been taught? (cf. 33:10)

The text does not give us an answer to why Manasseh rejected the God of Heaven to become a blatant idolater. And, much of the time there aren’t any simple answers to why a child turns out so adversely to the way he was raised.

It appears that his mother was a good woman. Her name was Hephzibah (2 Kings 21:1), which means, “My delight is in her.” This may indicate that she was a pious woman, but she apparently didn’t have the same influence on her son that Eunice did with Timothy (2 Timothy 1:5).

Whatever the reason for his rebellion against God, every reform that Hezekiah had brought to the Kingdom of Judah...Manasseh reversed. Even worse, he took the nation further into apostasy than they had ever been previously.

A list of some of Manasseh’s apostasy:

  • He rebuilt the pagan altars and wooden images (33:3) to false gods.
  • He desecrated the Temple by placing pagan altars inside it’s holy structure (33:3, 7).
  • He instituted the worship of the heavenly bodies in the skies (33:5).
  • He practiced witchcraft, fortune telling, sorcery, and other forms of demonic activity (33:6).
  • He sacrificed his son in a pagan worship ritual (2 Kings 21:6).
  • He killed innocent, righteous people (2 Kings 21:16), which might have included the prophets (possibly Isaiah,# if he was still alive at the time) that delivered God’s message of judgment to him.
  • He was more wicked that all the Kings of Judah that had gone before him and led the people into greater wickedness than the pagans who were originally driven out of Israel when it was conquered (33:9; cf. 1 Corinthians 5:21; 1 Timothy 5:8).

Consequently, what God had done to the Assyrians during their siege of Jerusalem in Hezekiah’s day was now done to Manasseh (33:11; cf. 2 Kings 19:28) in his day. The Assyrians captured Manasseh, placed a “hook” in his nose, and led him away into captivity (33:11). This (“hook”) was an ultimate form of humiliation imposed on the King of Judah!

It wasn’t until Manasseh reached this lowest point in his life that he was broken and humbled before the God of Heaven. Sometimes it takes people reaching their lowest point before they are ready to acknowledge their need of God!

When he began to call on God (33:12-13) he was heard and God delivered him from his captivity (33:13). Manasseh had finally recognized the one true God and bowed his heart before him.

After being freed to return to the Kingdom of Judah, he began to correct the evil he had done. He brought significant reforms to the land, though he allowed the people to continue sacrificing at other places than the Temple in Jerusalem (33:17).

Never-the-less, after all the efforts to make amends for his years of apostasy, the effects of his evil deeds had long term consequences on Judah as a nation. God personally forgave Manasseh of his rebellious ways, but the people of Judah never fully recovered from the direction he had taken them (cf. 2 Kings 23:26; 24:4; Jeremiah 15:4).

Here is “The Truth About Repentance” we must learn from Manasseh’s example. You will be forgiven of your sins by a gracious God Who cleanses the repentant heart, but you may never recover all of the things you lost during the time of your rebellion against Him.

Our rebellion against God has pervasive consequences that may go well beyond our personal forgiveness and recovery. And, sometimes those effects are irreversible, though you personally have been pardoned by God’s grace.

Illustration:

During a roast for Pete Rose to honor the anniversary of his record breaking hit, the historically cocky Charlie Hustle turned into the 69-year-old prodigal son of the Big Red Machine. He told the crowd of 500 or so that included former teammates (Tony Perez, Ken Griffey Sr., George Foster) that he screwed up. That he essentially was guilty of gambling as charged.

That he wanted to become an example of what you shouldn't do when you have the opportunity to confess your sins.

"I disrespected the game of baseball. When you do that, you disrespect your teammates, the game and your family," said Rose, sobbing along the way to the shock of everybody...

Added Rose to that hushed ballroom, "You can talk about hits and runs and championship games. ... (But) I want my legacy to be (that of) somebody who came forward. If anybody has a problem here today, come forward. Don't hide it. ... You can run, but you can't hide.

"If I can help a young kid to know what I went through, maybe I can prevent them from going through the same thing.

"I got suspended 21 years ago. For 10, 12 years, I kept it inside. ... That's changed. I'm a different guy. ... I love the fans. I love the game of baseball, and I love Cincinnati baseball."


It cost him being inducted into the Hall of Fame, which may never happen or not until he's dead. You can be forgiven, but sometimes in the path of your sinful behavior you lose things you can never recover.

Application:
  1. Don’t make God break you to make you acknowledge Him. (cf. Philippians 2:9-11)
  2. Consider the long term impact of your actions, not just the short term pleasure. (Proverbs 14:12; 16:25)
  3. Always keep a short account of sins with God. (cf. 1 John 5:16-17)


Forgiveness is only possible because of the grace of God extended through the Lord Jesus Christ’s death and resurrection!

Friday, June 08, 2012

Consider This...

Enthusiasm without knowledge is no good; haste makes mistakes. (Proverbs 19:2 NLT)

In a world that's seemingly always in a hurry, maybe the best advice anyone can give you is: "Just slow down!" Whether it's young people trying to hurry into adulthood, parent's rushing their children to every conceivable event, or workaholics trying to climb the ladder of success, the end result is that people don't have "time" anymore. Too many of us have gotten caught up in the "rat race" of life! We're keeping the wheel always spinning inside our little cages, but we really aren't going anywhere important. "Haste" will make you miss some of the best parts of life and that is a terrible "mistake.

Thursday, June 07, 2012

Consider This...

Instead, be kind to each other, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven you. (Ephesians 4:32 NLT)

Forgiving those who have wronged us isn't always easy, but it's always right to do. The reason is because we've been forgiven so much ourselves that there's no excuse for not extending the same to others. You don't have to repeatedly subject yourself to people's hurtful ways, but you do have to let go of the anger, bitterness, and desire for revenge they've caused. Those negative emotions/inclinations will ultimately destroy you, not the person that wronged you.

Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Consider This...

Instead, be kind to each other, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven you. (Ephesians 4:32 NLT)

So much hardheartedness in our world today, but God calls His children to be "tenderhearted" towards one another. We're to be sympathetic and compassionate to the needs of our brothers and sisters in Christ. It's easy to become jaded with all the brokenness that is around us, but Jesus said that people will know we are Christians by our love for each other (John 13:35). That includes more than just "saying" we're concerned for those who are hurting. It means we get involved in doing something to alleviate the needs whenever it's possible!