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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Learning to Come to the End of Yourself

Posted by Pastor Pat on August 16, 2010

Do you ever find yourself succumbing to fleshly lusts? Have you ever wondered why you find it so easy to do evil when the good is equally present? No matter how hard you try to talk yourself out of it, failure seems so inevitable; your frustration level is climbing; stress becomes a part of your every day life. The gap between what you know to be true and how you experience life is glaring and the schism is heart breaking.

I am confident that all who read this can identify with Paul’s dilemma as lamented in Romans 7:19. Those who do not identify fall into one of two categories: those who are spiritually dead as an unbeliever, and those who are spiritually deceived as a believer.

Honesty and transparency are difficult, for they leave us vulnerable. The alternative, however, is mask wearing, and I have always found mask wearing to be uncomfortable as well as stifling and “plastic.”

So, let us be honest – both you and I struggle. While we do not struggle with the truth claims of faith, we do struggle with our progression forward. We want to see Him and have Him use us in an unprecedented way. We want to see Him with the eye of faith. We want to believe that which awaits us can swallow up the trials of this temporal world. We want to believe that somehow in the midst of all this “craziness” God is in control. And yet . . . we struggle. We struggle at work; we struggle with our kids; we struggle with our spouse; and we struggle financially, emotionally, physically, and, at times, spiritually. We just flat out struggle. Life is hard; nothing appears to be easy. We want the supernatural and miraculous. We want God to snap His fingers and fix all of our problems. Yet despite all of these desires, it is still incredibly difficult to do right when wrong is so easy.

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Holding Fast to Learned Lessons

Posted by Pastor Pat on December 11, 2008

Rick Warren, in 1995, wrote, “Surfing is the art of riding waves that God builds.  God makes the waves; surfers just ride them.  No surfer tries to create waves.  If the waves aren’t there, you just don’t surf that day!  On the other hand, when surfers see a good wave, they make the most of it, even if that means surfing in the middle of a storm.  Only God can create waves – waves of revival, waves of growth, and waves of spiritual receptivity.” (Warren, The Purpose-Driven Church, 13-14).

His observation is insightful and correct.  In God’s good providence He has chosen to bring us through many events that, at times, appeared dark and less than favorable.  In the midst of our hardships we often lost sight of the larger picture.  We were so close to the problem that the various pieces were all fuzzy.  God, in His grace, is slowly allowing us to step back and see the bigger picture.  Activities that once appeared to be disjointed are now coming into focus.  God is choosing to act in our midst.  God is creating a wave of opportunity that is going to launch us into this century in a mighty way.  It is not something we will be able to explain or take credit for.  It will be big enough that only God could have done it and only He will be able to receive glory for it.  There are lessons we have learned over the last few years that are invaluable.  They are lessons He has wanted us to learn in preparation for this moment.

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Present Day Slave Traders

Posted by Pastor Pat on December 9, 2008

“But it was because of the false brethren secretly brought in, who had sneaked in to spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, in order to bring us into bondage.” Gal. 2:4

It is hard for us to imagine the abject horror of being awakened in the night by the screams of terror as men, women and children are carried off from knowing the joy of freedom into the chains of slavery.  They were becoming the victims of the slave trader.  Those people whose livelihood dealt with the cargo of humanity.  Our nation poured out its lifeblood to resist and eventually overthrow slavery.  Yet Paul continues to deal with spiritual slave traders, people whose intent is to make cargo of human souls.  Their delight is found in bringing into captive those who were once free.

What appears to be the Galatian problem?  Apparently the believers in Galatia were being “troubled” (Gal. 5:12) by “false brethren” (Gal. 2:4).  The agitation created by them was real (Gal. 4:17).  They were “bewitched” (Gal. 3:1) into leaving their position of liberty to be once more entangled with the yoke of bondage (Gal. 5:1).  Paul saw such a move as shocking (Gal. 1:6).  Why would anyone abandon a position of liberty for one of bondage?  They were running well (Gal. 5:7), but now were being “hindered” and thus “overtaken in a fault” (Gal. 6:1).  Those who turned back had “fallen from grace” (Gal. 5:4) and needed to be “restored” (Gal. 6:1).

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