Saturday, January 26, 2019

Can You Relate?


 “Anyone who welcomes you welcomes me, and anyone who welcomes me
welcomes the one who sent me.”
 
-- Matthew 10:40

We've all done it once or twice, and some people tend to do it more than others.

It's name-dropping, or suggesting that we have a relationship with a celebrity, politician or other notable personality. It's a favorite sport at parties, and sometimes it's useful at job interviews because it can create familiarity and connection.

Name-dropping can also be annoying, but it's OK to brag a bit about a relationship
with the right person. In the Bible, this is actually encouraged. After all, Christianity is a faith that embraces relationship over religion. Specifically, there's a parent/child relationship between us and God. And it's a bond that's only made possible through Jesus' substitutionary death on the cross -- a punishment we all rightly deserve for our lifetimes marked by personal failures and shortcomings (also known as "sin"). But since we're connected with the right person (Jesus), he's already paid the price to save us from a certain death and eternal separation from God.
  
That's the primary relationship we enjoy as Christ-followers. But God also wants us to make relationships with others. That means introducing them to Jesus, sharing his story and relating how his death on the cross means a whole new life now -- and later in eternity.

How can we get the ball rolling? One of the best ways is to pray for people by name. They can be family members, co-workers, neighbors, political leaders, the unsaved -- and particularly our enemies. After that, don't be surprised if God opens up the circumstances where we become the answer to someone's prayer.

Jesus set our example when he sent 12 of his followers to the nearby Jewish communities to spread the Good News (the Gospel):

"Do not go among the Gentiles or enter any town of the Samaritans. Go rather to the lost sheep of Israel," he told them. "As you go, proclaim this message: 'The kingdom of heaven has come near.' Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse those who have leprosy, drive out demons. Freely you have received; freely give."

Here was a time Jesus instructed his followers to be the answer to someone's fervent prayers in the midst of difficulties and pain -- and all while using their connection with him to do the seemingly impossible. As the saying goes, it's not always what you know that counts in life. It's who you know that makes all the difference.

Saturday, January 19, 2019

Seek First


I know how to live when I am poor, and I know how to live when I have plenty. I have learned the secret of being happy at any time in everything that happens, when I have enough to eat and when I go hungry, when I have more than I need and when I do not have enough.

-- Philippians 4:12

The story goes that a reporter once interviewed a billionaire and marveled at the rich man's ability to amass wealth. "Just how much money is enough?" the reporter inquired. 

"Just a little bit more," replied the billionaire.

Whether you're rich, living from paycheck to paycheck or somewhere in between, a little bit more always seems to be the remedy for life's dissatisfactions. Rather than In God We Trust, perhaps America's national motto should be Supersize It.

God has blessed us with a nation of incredible wealth. Even our poor and unemployed could be considered rich by the standards of most of the world. Yet an epidemic of discontentment tends
to blind us to this fact. The more possessions we gather and the higher we climb on the corporate ladder, the more disillusioned and unfulfilled we become. And rather than thanking God for his blessings and making the most of them, we wonder (often aloud) if this is all there is to life.

This disease of discontentment has some nasty symptoms. Those afflicted with the malady often turn to alcohol, drugs, illicit relationships and gambling to ease the self-inflicted pain. Things might get better for a while. But the hunger returns soon enough.

This problem is hardly new. And it's not confined to the United States or even Western society. In fact, the Bible addressed the issues of greed and discontentment centuries ago. And its advice is as valid today as it was back then:

First, consider how God has blessed you. It could involve your family, career, health, friends ... just count the ways. Then, stop trying to compare what you have with your neighbor's possessions. Advertising agencies prosper when they convince you that the grass is greener on the other side of the fence. But don't forget that someone else is probably wishing they could enjoy just one or two of your blessings!

Contentment isn't something that we can get by buying a new car, moving into a bigger house or landing that job with the corner office. Rather, it’s an internal source of fulfillment and comfort acquired by knowing our Savior and living out the abundant life he's purchased for us.

It's really all about Jesus. A growing relationship with him renders contentment because there's nothing bigger, better or more necessary. Comparisons fall away and material things lose their luster. What was once so important soon fades into obscurity.

Does this sound simplistic or too good to be true? A whole new life is just inches away: It's the distance between our head and our heart. And we’re all free to accept Jesus' grand offer and grow in contentment.

"Seek first God's kingdom and what God wants," he tells us through Matthew's gospel. "Then all your other needs will be met as well."


Saturday, January 12, 2019

Best Laid Plans


We are ruined by our own stupidity, though we blame the Lord.

-- Proverbs 19:3

“The best laid plans of mice and men often go astray,” wrote Scottish poet Robert Burns. And no matter how well we prepare, “stuff happens.” When it does, it can lead to disappointment — or much worse. Just ask the Coca-Cola executives about their disastrous product known as New Coke.

Back in the 1970s and 80s, Coca-Cola and Pepsi were engaged in an intense conflict to win the hearts, minds and taste buds of American consumers. The press dubbed the companies’ marketing efforts The Cola Wars.

The Pepsi Challenge is probably the best-known battle of the conflict. It was a
series of TV commercials depicting head-to-head taste test comparisons between the two colas. Time after time, Pepsi was the people’s choice. And within a few years, Pepsi’s sales overtook Coke’s, which lead to one of the greatest marketing blunders of all time: the reformulation of tried-and-true Coca-Cola into New Coke.

Consumers weren’t convinced. And after plummeting sales and more than 400,000 letters of complaint, Coke’s executives admitted their mistake, reintroduced the beverage’s original formula (called Coca-Cola Classic) and eventually won back their audience. Today, Coke is the king of colas with a nearly 18% market share. Meanwhile, Pepsi’s share has dropped over the last decade from 10.3% to 8.4%.

We all make plans that result in varying degrees of success or failure. And we’ve also felt from time to time like our circumstances have gotten out of hand. Maybe you feel like that today — and for good reason. But believe it or not, God is in control of the situation. 

This is a fundamental truth that every Christ-follower should embrace. One reason that we don't feel his control is because we can't see the big picture. We don’t know the life-changing people and situations that he’ll introduce to the mix. We also don’t have his vantage point of knowing what’s around the corner and miles up the road. Moreover, it’s hard for us to see a greater purpose in our lives when we're going through the pain of unemployment, lingering illness, family problems or even death. But God is in control. And for those who trust and follow him, he offers this assurance:

"Before I made you in your mother's womb, I chose you,” says our Creator. “Before you were born, I set you apart for a special work. I appointed you as a prophet to the nations."

Have your best-laid plans led to frustration and depression? Don’t lose hope. God knows what we need — and he knows it long before we ask him for help. And when our plans align with his purpose, success is on the horizon.  


Saturday, January 5, 2019

Our Backs to the Wall


Consider now, for the LORD has chosen you to build a house as the sanctuary.
Be strong and do the work.

-- 1 Chronicles 28:10

About 200 years before Jesus’ birth, construction began on the world’s largest man-made structure. The Great Wall of China, which stretches across Asia, was built to protect the Chinese dynasties against invading semi-nomadic people known to cross into the land and steal just about anything of value.

The wall’s completion was an incredible engineering feat, even by today’s
standards. After all, transporting large amounts of building materials was essentially impossible in a time before 18-wheelers, cranes and excavators. The solution was a reliance on locally-accessed resources such as stone from the mountainous regions. In some remote desert areas with few available building materials, the Great Wall was formed with soil pressed between wood, which was bound with woven mats.

Work on the wall continued into the 1600s. The result was a 4,000-mile-long monstrosity that — at its peak — was guarded by more than a million soldiers. Historians estimate that 2-3 million workers died over the centuries of construction and repair. And was it worth the immense cost and effort? For the most part…yes. Indeed, The Great Wall of China generally succeeded in repelling invaders. However, in 1644, the Manchus crossed through (but not over) the massive barrier when a Ming border general who disliked the ruling Shun Dynasty simply opened the wall’s gates. The capital city of Beijing soon fell into the enemy’s hands.

Tragedy struck when a lone individual failed to protect the heart of their great nation. Likewise, Christ-followers have a duty to protect their hearts and minds from invasive influences that can wreak havoc on their souls. That’s an important concept because what we expose our heart to is what flows out of it. Let’s consider this admonition from the apostle Paul to the believers at the church in Ephesus:

Be very careful, then, how you live — not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil,” he wrote. Therefore do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is. Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit …”

As Christ-followers, we have a duty to make the most what God gives us each day. Let’s recognize that we'll have no neutral opportunities. Moreover, it’s how we approach life that determines how we experience it.