Tuesday, August 24, 2021



A Christian world-view must be developed in order to navigate in this spiritually dark culture that we live in. Since I’m a simple man, I’ll give you the “how” on developing a Christian world-view, are your ready? Read your Bibles daily. Take notes. Use good, solid commentaries. Discuss Biblical themes with others in the body of Christ. Get a book on Biblical hermeneutics. Hermeneutics is a must. We have to understand context…the author…the recipients…why the letter written, and the date of the letter.  Manners and customs of the times is of vital importance. 

One can’t go to far in the New Testament without instruction on HOW we should think. The Apostle Paul in the book of Philippians even gives us specific things to think on, like…things that are pure and things that are lovely, see Philippians 4:8. The book of Proverbs personifies wisdom. Proverbs tells us that wisdom calls out to us  to forsake wickedness and run after righteousness.  Godly wisdom is also pure, gentle and full of good fruit, see James 3:17. 

We see in the book of Romans the first chapter that when a culture turns from God’s wisdom their minds become empty and their hearts become foolish. We can see this so clearly in our present culture where it is accepted that a man can be a woman or a woman can be a man. The call of the church to our present culture must be a call to repent and trust in Christ alone. The Christian must keep himself immersed in God’s word. God’s truth must be the only thing that matters, all else is rubbish and waste.


Thursday, August 5, 2021

How is the Christian to navigate in today’s Twilight Zone culture.

 






Most of us older folk remember the 1959 TV series the Twilight Zone crated by Rod Serling. The episodes are in various genres, including fantasyscience fictionabsurdismdystopian fictionsuspensehorrorsupernatural dramablack comedy, and psychological thriller, often concluding with a macabre or unexpected twist. Sounds very familiar to where we are now as a culture. We have fantasy: Men can become women and women can become men. Absurdism: We have over a virus shut down our economy…We have American wearing masks and we have a new vaccine that is being forced on the American people.  Horror: We had last summer our cities burning, cops assaulted and stores pillaged and with all that we had many in our government and all of MSM completely ignoring the chaos while calling it the summer of love. 


There will be no unexpected twist to the Christian. God has revealed Himself to His people through the Holy Scriptures. We find that God’s patience will one day run out on this wicked, dark world and His wrath will be poured out like nothing this world has ever known, see Romans 1:18: For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven upon all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, suppressing the truth by unrighteousness”

For God’s people the Lord is a strong tower and we run into it and are safe, see Proverbs 18:10. God is our refuge and the follower of Jesus seeks his safety there, see Psalm 461-2a “God is our refuge and strength, a helper who is always found in times of trouble. Therefore we will not be afraid, …”

So in the middle of all this absolute craziness let us take hope and courage in our Refuge and our strong tower. March on Christian soldiers and keep your armor on and keep look up ^. 



Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Our Struggle With Sin






The life long struggle for the follower of Jesus:

The Christian will struggle with sin from the day he is saved until he closes his eyes for the last time. We carry around our corrupted flesh...or old man...or sin nature. The Apostle Paul talks about this in chapter seven in his letter to the Romans.  Hear the struggle of the Apostle:

For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate... For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing" (Romans 7:15, 18b-19).

We can pretend that we are outstanding church folks who have done away with sin in our lives. We can walk with our heads high with the Bible under our arm and all the while the sin of pride is written all over our forehead, and we can’t even see it. Blessed is the man that recognizes his own sin and by God’s grace hates it and confesses it to his Lord.

The Christian who does not struggle with sin is in a very dangerous way. The one thing that a Christian should hate in his life is sin…his sin and the sin that is in the world. I believe that those that do not see their sin are those who have never been regenerated by the Holy Spirit. Those who do not feel the weight of their own sin are those who compare themselves to those around them and to the rest of the world. The reasoning goes like this, I’m not that bad, I never killed anyone…I don’t steal...I go to church on Sunday…I help others when I can. This is the thought process that goes through the mind of an unregenerate man.

On the other side, the Christian compares himself to the holiness of God. The Christian looks at the 
Father and measures himself against His perfection. Here’s a thought: The Bible commands us to love God with all our hearts, minds, bodies and strength. If we are are not loving God like that every second of ever minute of every hour of every day we have fallen short of God’s standard of perfection, and the same would go for loving others all day every day, and yes, even on those days when things are going badly.

The hope for the Christian is the righteousness of Christ.That righteousness is given freely to the believer who has put his faith in Christ’s death, burial and resurrection.  The Christian will stand before God and God will not see his sin, for they have been removed as far as the east is from the west, but the Father will only see the righteousness of his son as he looks at us. I’m always reminded of that great hymn written by Edward Mote:

“My hope is built on nothing less than Jesus’ blood and righteousness…
 On Christ the solid rock I stand all other ground is sinking sand….”

The hope of the Christian is not in our performance. The hope of the Christian is in the atonement of Jesus Christ to cover our sins. When my sin gets me down, I’m always reminded of the saying by Robert Murray McCheyne, “ For every look at self, take ten looks at Christ.”

Monday, October 21, 2019

What to do when your heart is cold




There will be times in the life of a follower of Jesus Christ that he will be spiritually dry. God is sovereign and could fill every moment of our lives with his presence, but for purposes unknown to us He does not. Could it be that God wants us to walk by faith and not feelings? Could it be that God wants His children to trust alone His promises He’s given to us in His revealed will?

What has God given us when He seems so far away and our hearts are cold and lonely? God has given us the promise that He will never leave us or forsake us, see Hebrews 13:5. God has given to the church the marvelous promise that nothing can separate us from His love, see Romans 8: 31. We hide these truths in our hearts and dig down and rest in them when we don’t feel close to God or when He seems so far from us.

God has also given His people the fellowship of the church. God’s people are to be practicing the one another’s of the Bible. Here are just a few:



  • Love one another (John 13:34 - This command occurs at least 16 times)
  • Be devoted to one another (Romans 12:10)
  • Honor one another above yourselves (Romans 12:10)
  • Live in harmony with one another (Romans 12:16)
  • Build up one another (Romans 14:19; 1 Thessalonians 5:11)


How many times have you lifted up another brother or sister in Christ? How many times has another brother or sister in the body of Christ lifted you up? I don’t believe that God’s workings in the church or in the lives of Christians is something nebulous. I believe that God has ordained means and His means are His word, the fellowship of the saints, worship, and the two observances He’s given to the church. 

Christians must avail themselves to the means that God has ordained. If we are looking for or depending on feelings we will never grow beyond baby Christians who are ever wandering and always looking for an experience, which will leave you out in the cold without any real spiritual footing.  

Thursday, October 10, 2019

What is your authority?




What is your authority as a Christian? This question asks on what basis does the church make any spiritual decisions. Many churches and Christians have left the authority of God’s word and have allowed the culture to become their authority.  I feel deeply that unless we allow God’s word to speak we will become just like any secular organization. The church has to be distinguished by the way she worships and by how she stands against the shifting winds of whatever the culture is asking the masses to conform to.

The Bible is not a story book for our amusement, no, the Bible is our daily food and drink. The Bible is God’s revelation to the church. When the church moves away from the authority of God’s word she moves away from God’s revealed will of Himself. The consequences of this departure from God’s word have taken an enormous spiritual impact on the church and in the lives of God’s people.

One reason for this departure from God’s authoritative word is the pride of man. Man wants to do things his way...so the church thinks that they can do church “better” than what God has said. Another reason for this departure from the authority of God’s word is the church wants to be “liked” by the world, so she courts the world and bows to whatever cultural moray is most popular at the present time. In the end what the departing church has become is a spiritual whore, she has left her husband and head to be married to another. The church and the world holding hands dirties the church and makes her unfaithful to her head.

Let the true church rise up and call out this spiritual adultery. Let the true church call out  false  teachers who by their fair speeches and dynamic personalities lead many to that place of destruction.

Tuesday, November 27, 2018




Every Christian goes through dry periods. Every Christian goes through the valley of despair. Charles Spurgeon would suffer from severe bouts of depression, it was said of Spurgeon  by an artist who once tried to paint his portrait “I can’t paint you. Your face is different every day. You are never the same.” To be sure, the most popular preacher in the Victoria era was also one of the most burdened.
Spurgeon owned more than thirty books on mental health. He read about depression, wrote about depression, and suffered from depression. Spurgeon’s letters contain numerous references to his sinking spirits. He often called himself a “prisoner” and wept without knowing why.
“I pity a dog who has to suffer what I have.”

So, how do we deal with these dry times? These times when the clouds roll in and God seems so very far from us. As a counselor, I always tell others that their feelings can’t be trusted. Feelings are like the leaves blowing in the wind. Those who have no anchor are tossed to and fro by their feelings...feelings lie to us...feelings tell us that we have no worth...feelings tell us God does not care about us...feelings tell us that we will never know joy and peace again. 

What I know is that feelings lie. What I know is the anchor that grounds us is truth, the truth of God’s word is the anchor that will keep us moored to the dock. I’m always amazed at how much the Bible deals with our thinking process, like Philippians 4:8 “ Think on these things....” How about 2 Corinthians 10:5  Casting down human reasoning and all knowledge that is contrary to God’s thoughts.  This is how lying feeling are defeated, God’s truth must replace our old thinking patterns and when old thinking patterns are challenged and changed our feelings follow. 

Fellow Christian keep battling on. Keep fighting the fight. When those dark clouds of depression roll in flee to the one who is true and let his voice through the Scriptures be your anchor.

























Friday, February 9, 2018

The Inevitability of Sorrow



Everyone will suffer a broken heart sooner than later in life. We have all experienced the sting of emotional pain and sorrow. Fay Weldon expressed the inevitability of sorrow quite well when she said, “there's no such thing as old age, there is only sorrow”. Well maybe Miss Weldon overstated the degree of sorrow, but we can all agree that sorrow will find us sometime in this life.

Sorrow and happiness have to be understood from a Christian perspective. There is no other worldview that can make sense of pain, sorrow and the attainment of happiness in this life; it is only the Christian worldview that offers a satisfying answer.

Philosophers and men of all walks of life have struggled with the question, if God is good why do we have pain and sorrow in this life? Why does God allow men to suffer? We hear from Leo Tolstoy’s character Anna Karenina who once said, “I’m simple unhappy. If anyone is unhappy, I’m.” We can all identify with Tolstoy’s character, Anna, to some degree; for we have all tasted the same pain and sorrow expressed by Anna Karenina.

We can see this sorrow and suffering in the first book of the Bible, the book of Genesis. We have the scene set: Adam and Eve are placed in perfect surroundings. They have all their needs met by the creator Himself. They enjoy each other’s love, warmth, and friendship. They have all the food they will ever need and they don’t even have to run to the supermarket to get it. It’s all right there. They have all of creation right in their back yard and the best thing of all they are in perfect fellowship with the God of creation.

We all know the story. Both husband and wife disobeyed the Creator’s direct command not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, and baam, it all starts to unravel. Their relationship with God is estranged. The perfect paradise now becomes thorns and weeds. Adam and Eve are now estranged from each other. For the first time in their lives they experience sorrow. We do see God’s mercy and grace immediately, for God makes atonement for them. He provides a covering for them. Adam and Eve did what all mankind has been doing from day one --- they tried to fix the sin problem, the sorrow problem, on their own. They sought to make a covering for their sin with fig leaves, but God would not have it. Instead of Adam and Eve running to God, they ran from Him and sought their own remedy for their sin.

If we pay attention to our lives, and the lives of others, we find out that at the core of all existence is the desire to be happy. The problem is that man has followed in the same path as Adam and Eve. The truth is that man is not happy at his core and is still trying to find his own remedy for happiness. Just like Adam and Eve, man is not running toward God, but running away from God. This running away from God is the root of all man’s pain and sorrow.

How Man Seeks Happiness.

What seems to be an easy solution has eluded man from the beginning of time. Jesus gave us the path to happiness in his Great Sermon called The Beatitudes. In it, Jesus tells us that true happiness is gained by being poor in spirit. When man comes to the point that he realizes that happiness cannot be found inside himself or from anything in this world, he starts down the path to find what Jesus Christ can offer --- and that is life, abundant life. The paradox is when a man becomes poor, when a man senses his own sin --- it’s then when God’s conviction makes him feel poor, he can look to the provision that God has provided and that is the cross of Christ.

Instead of man becoming poor in spirit and looking to the One who can heal his brokenness, he gropes in the dark for an elusive happiness. Some seek this happiness in the Epicurean way. Sensual pleasure becomes for them the goal of life, but at the end it does not satisfy. Some seek happiness in their religious institutions, but in the end it does not bring happiness. Still, others seek fulfillment in philosophy and higher education but, again, it turns out to be a dead end. Christianity offers hope and fulfillment now and in the life to come. The Holy Scriptures offer the most precious of all hopes and promises: the hope that God will wipe away every tear from our eyes and we will never again know pain or sorrow (Revelation 21:4).

The world’s way to happiness and God’s way to happiness are certainly antithetical. The world is fixated on happiness and there are all kinds of voices ever present, calling out, telling us how to find happiness .Today, the smorgasbord of choices on ways to be happy abound. How happiness is defined by these many voices is different. For example BJ Gallagher and Mac Anderson in their book, Road to Happiness speak about happiness in this manner:

“Many of us tie our happiness to external factors…Or feel on the short-end of the stick when comparing our lives to those of other people. But, sometimes, appearances can be deceiving. In fact, freeing ourselves from perfection can be one of the keys to being happy with who we are. The truth is, if you can’t find happiness inside yourself, you’ll never find it in the outside world, no matter where you move. Wherever you go, there you are. You take yourself with you. This is the essence of happiness—learning to find inner contentment in any situation”.

Does the history of mankind teach us that man can be happy by simply finding happiness inside of himself? Is happiness really down in there somewhere and we just can’t find it? Or is happiness really just not there. Here’s the big question: Can man be truly happy and fulfilled apart from being in fellowship with his creator? This is where the Christian worldview comes in and speaks to the idea of happiness.

Think of man this way: He’s a created being was created with a purpose and that purpose was to glorify his creator and enjoy him forever. Apart from man fulfilling that purpose, he will never be happy. Man trying to be happy apart from his creator is like the man who lives his life in the cold, gray, darkness of self delusion; happiness will always be just a concept, a cloud, which he can never capture without being born into God’s Kingdom.


The Battle of the Mind

One can’t read through the New Testament without soon coming upon instructions on what to think and how to think. The Apostle Paul tells us that we are to literally cast down any imagination in our thought life that would be contrary to the knowledge of God. We are to have our thoughts trained to be in accordance with the very thoughts of God, as contained in His divine revelation, as found in the Holy Scriptures. The Apostle Paul tells us in 2 Corinthians 10:15, “Casting down imaginations, and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ.”

The human mind and heart are battlefields. The description of the heart and mind of man, as given by the prophet Jeremiah paints a bleak picture. Here’s what Jeremiah, says of the condition of the heart: “The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? (vs. 17:9)

The thoughts of God are high and pure. Every word of God is pure; he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him (Proverbs 30:5). When we train our thoughts to think God’s thoughts, we are lifted up and we work holiness into the very fabric of our being. We are commanded as Christians to let the word of Christ dwell in us richly in wisdom (Colossians 3:16). We see how far the world is from being happy and fulfilled in this life without being connected to God. The very thoughts and ideas of the natural man are wedded to the things of this life and rise no further than his carnal lusts and desires, but oh what a blessing the child of God has, he has the very words of the creator living inside him.

Albert Mohler sums up the life of the mind very succinctly in The Glory of God and the Life of the Mind when he says:

“In the end, Christianity honors the life of the mind, not because it celebrates the power of human intellect, but because Christ himself instructed Christians to love God with heart, soul, and mind. The fact that God would command that we love him with our minds indicates in a most profound and unmistakable sense that our Creator has made us to know him in order that we would love him and to seek his glory above all else. Understood in this light, our intellectual capacity and the discipleship of the mind are to culminate in the development of a Christian worldview that begins and ends in the glory of the self-revealing God of the Bible.”



The Good News

What is this good news? Where is this good news to be found? The good news is how man can find happiness and fulfillment and reconnect with God. I used the word reconnect because of the estrangement that has taken place by the fall. The Bible tells us “all have sinned and come short of the glory of God” (Romans 3:23). We also read in the Scriptures that our sins have separated us from God (Isaiah 59:2).

The good news is that although we are estranged from God, although we are separated from God and although we have fallen short of God’s standards, He has provided a way for our sins to be forgiven and for our alienation to be made right. God has provided reconciliation for all who believe in His Son as their only hope of salvation.

The answer to all life is found in the person of Jesus Christ. On more than one occasion Jesus would ask, “Who do people say that the Son of Man is…But who do you say that I am?” (Matthew 16:13,15) This is the one answer that we don’t want to get wrong: our life now and our eternal destiny depend on how we answer.

Where do we go to find the answer to this life or death question? There is only one source for that information, and that is the truth propositions as found in the Holy Scriptures as to who Jesus is. Now this truth can be found in the preaching of pastors, in books, and in others proclaiming the good news, but the source of their information was gotten from the Holy Scriptures. Martin Luther, the Great Reformer, said this about the importance of the Holy Scriptures:

“The neglect of Scripture, even by spiritual leaders, is one of the greatest evils in the world. Everything else, arts or literature, is pursued and practiced day and night, and there is no end of labor and effort; but Holy Scripture is neglected as though there were no need of it. Those who condescend to read it want to absorb everything at once. There has never been an art or a book on earth that everyone has so quickly mastered as the Holy Scriptures. But its words are not, as some think, mere literature (Lesewort); they are words of life (Lebewort), intended not for speculation and fancy but for life and action. By why complain? No one pays any attention to our lament. May Christ our Lord help us by His Spirit to love and honor His holy Word with all our heart. Amen.”

The good news of the Gospel is that it offers us eternal life now. The Gospel tells us that Jesus’ promise of peace is for this life now (John 14:27). Think about that offer of peace from the second person in the Trinity as you are going through the most painful of life’s experiences.
In the deepest of sorrows and pains in this life we have the offer of peace from the Prince of Peace. This peace is both experiential and conceptual. We hold onto and believe the promises of God as found throughout the Scriptures. One of the most prized of these promises that God’s people have loved and cherished down through the ages is found in the book of Romans:

“And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose” (8:28).

There is no earthly remedy for sorrow and pain that can stand against this precious promise of God to His people. The promise to God’s people in the midst of their pain and sorrow is that their present circumstances are working for their good, not only now, but for all eternity. We understand that the Christian thinks different; yes, his worldview is the antitheist of this worlds thinking. How could our present suffering and pain be working for our good? How can deep sorrow mean anything other than deep sorrow? Well for the Christian, God is using pain and sorrow to bring His children to be conformed to the image of His Son.

The life of the Christian is not lived unto himself; no, his life is lived to the glory of his creator. The Christian’s life is defined by dying to his own wants and desires, so in dying to himself, he finds his true life in Christ. The good news that the Creator offers man is to come and die to his own wants and desires and find his life in God’s purpose and Divine will. This journey of true blessedness starts at the cross and ends in eternity with all praise, glory, and honor going to the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of all who would believe. And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.






















  How can a culture move so far from reality? A fascinating verse in the book of judges is found in chapter 21 verse 25  “ In those days Isr...