Monday, October 24, 2011

Next Steps to Serving in Love

Next Steps to Living on the Edge – Serving in Love


Connect:
 Make the decision today to join one of the new Sunday School Classes starting Nov. 13.
 Mark your calendar for the Church lunch on Sunday Nov. 6,
 Invite someone from the church out for coffee, lunch, dinner in order to get to know them better.

Serve:
During a time of prayer this week ask God to help focus your thoughts, eyes and hearts of the needs of those you can serve.
Create a plan for serving those God lays on your heart.
Pray every day for those who are away on our mission trip.

Grow:
 Read John chapter 13, and chapters 17-21 and reflect on the devotion we see in Jesus final hours.
 Memorize Romans 12:9-13 so that it becomes a natural part of our thinking and our living.

Living on the Edge - Serving in Love

As we have been working our way through Romans 12, I have been doing a lot of reflecting back on my life and I hope that if you have been part of a small group digging into this material that you have also been doing some reflection and sharing. I think it is important for us to reflect back on our lives and identify those times when we have experienced a taste of this life on the edge so we can learn from those moments what it is that makes life so good. This week as I have looked back over my life I have come to realize that the best times of my life have come when I have been part of a community larger than just my family. In fact, one of the most formative times of my life was during High School and what made that time so good for me was being involved in my church youth group. Our youth group had one unspoken rule – everyone was accepted. Everyone was loved – unconditionally. When I didn’t feel like I fit in at school – I fit in at my church and when my friends at church were willing to be my friends at school, that acceptance and friendship lifted me up and made my life better. I didn’t just make it through those difficult years of being a teenager; I thrived during that time because I found a place where I belonged and people who served me in love.


The relationships that formed in my church were powerful and many of them have lasted to this day because we were willing to be real with one another. We laughed together and we cried together. We didn’t have to pretend to be better than we were, or different than we were because we knew that we would be accepted for whom we were, the good and the bad. Our love for one another was sincere and that is what helps strengthen relationships and that’s what forms community and it is that sincere love that helps us experience real life.

Last week we heard from Romans 12:5 that we were created to be part of the body of Christ which means that we belong to one another and the only way we will truly belong to one another is if we are willing to be honest with one another. God places a high value on authenticity, integrity and transparency in the life of the church, in fact, when hypocrisy first tried to enter into the early church, God dealt with it swiftly and harshly. The story is found in Acts 4-5, and it begins with a man named Joseph who sold a field and brought all the proceeds from that sale to the disciples and gave it to the church as an offering. The people were so encouraged by this faithful and generous act that they gave Joseph the name Barnabas, which means son of encouragement.

Now the news of what Barnabas did spread and there was a couple named Ananias and Sapphira who wanted that same recognition and praise, but they didn’t want to pay the price, so they sold some of their property and brought just a part of the proceeds to the leaders of the church as an offering but they each told them it was the full amount. In other words Ananias and Sapphira were not being honest. They wanted to appear loving and generous without have to be loving and generous and when the reality of their hypocrisy was revealed both Ananias and Sapphira were struck dead. The first sin exposed in the life of the early church is hypocrisy and it is dealt with swiftly because God knows that not be honest with one another will not only destroy the church, but it will keep relationship from forming and if strong relationships can’t form, then people are kept from experiencing the fullness of life.

This should be a sobering story for us. Think about what would happen if God judged the church this way today? My guess is that there would be no church because in different ways we are all hypocrites, we all wear masks and struggle to be transparent with one another and the reason is that we are afraid of being rejected and yet if we would be willing to be honest with others the first thing we would find is that we are not alone in our struggles which means that there would be others here to accept us and love us and even help us through the difficult times. One of the hardest things as a pastor is when people come and share with me some of the heartache and struggles of their lives and as they share with me I’ll be thinking, wow, someone else just shared with me that same struggle and I wish that I could get these 2 people together so that they would know that they are not alone and they could maybe even find support and encouragement from one another. There is a freedom that comes with being real with others and there can be healing and strength that comes in being honest and yet these kinds of relationships take time to build because they require of us courage and the building of trust which has its ups and downs.

My hope is that we will be willing to invest time and energy in building relationships in the church. One of the saddest things about the church today is that we have replaced these kinds of authentic relationships with religion. We have replaced people with programs and yet there is not one program in the life of the church that can bring us life – but our connection with people can bring life because we were created to be part of one another’s lives, we were created to be members of one another, and when we are part of that kind of strong community of faith we will experience God’s best and the power of God’s life.

So living on the edge comes when we are part of a real community and for community to be formed our love must be sincere, but it’s not enough to just be honest – we also need to be committed to one another. Romans 12:10. Devotion to one another means being willing to serve in love, it means being there for others when there is a need and while we often give lip service to this kind of devotion, living on the edge means being willing to live it out.

Kathy was a recovering alcoholic who had been sober for a while when her grandmother died. Kathy’s grandmother was an important part of her life and many of us were concerned about how she was going to handle her Grandmother’s death. As I spent time with the family at the funeral home the afternoon of the viewing I saw many people come up to Kathy and offer words of love and grace and make offers of support, but then I noticed Rose. Rose was also a recovering alcoholic and was one of Kathy’s sponsors. Like everyone else, Rose told Kathy, I’ll be here if you need me and Kathy said thanks, but then Rose looked her in the eye and said, no I don’t think you understand. I will be here if you need me. I will be sitting right here all afternoon and I’ll be with you for dinner tonight and then be back here this evening and then I’ll drive you home and pick you up in the morning. I’ll be here for you and she was. Rose helped Kathy through that difficult time by being devoted to her not in words but in actions. That’s what the church needs to look like. We give too much lip service to devotion instead of actual service and sacrifice to those who are in need. I have a feeling that if we were to step out in faith and really commit ourselves to one another it would stretch us in many different ways and that kind of stretching might make us uncomfortable, but it will also be thrilling and life giving.

Think about Jesus, he didn’t just say he would love his disciples to the end; he loved his disciples to the very end. Just hours before his death we find Jesus on his knees washing the disciple’s feet. Then he offers them bread and wine at the Passover table, prays for them in the garden, forgives them as they run away when the soldiers come and then carries the cross from them because they are too weak to carry it on their own. The last 24 hours of Jesus’ life he is living on the edge and he shows us what true devotion looks like - it is radical and sacrificial, but I’m thinking that when we are willing to be that radical in our service and love – like Jesus, we will also experience the power of God in a way that will transform our lives. Living on the edge isn’t always easy, but it is where we will find God and if God is there – life is there.

Living on the edge means being part of an authentic community, it means being devoted to one another and being willing to serve in love and the time for us to do this is now. Romans 12:11 some translations record this as never lacking in zeal, which means that we need to be willing to serve God and others in love today. Too often we allow ourselves to wait and we convince ourselves that we can serve tomorrow or the next day but it is my experience that if we put it off until tomorrow it won’t get done at all. Sometimes it doesn’t get done because we are lazy and will just keep putting it off, but sometimes it won’t get done because the moment is gone and we will not have that opportunity again.

I may have shared this story before, but one of the images that haunts me to this day is of a bag lady in NYC who I saw huddled between two buildings and why I can’t get her image of our of mind or heart is because I didn’t stop and help. Living on the edge would have been for me to stop and give her my coat. I would have been cold for the rest of the day – but I would have been so excited that I made a real difference in someone’s life that being cold for a few hours would not have mattered. I never got that moment back and sometimes I wonder how many needs go unmet and how many people struggle and suffer because God’s people don’t respond to the promptings of the Holy Spirit and serve in love when God says serve.

I know that when I stand before Jesus and have to given an account of my life, all I will be able to do when that moment comes is ask God for his forgiveness. I have a feeling that it won’t be the sins we have committed that will weigh down our hearts as much as our sins of omission, that list of things God laid on our hearts to do and yet we didn’t do. This is why being able to hear the voice of God is so important. We need to hear God clearly when he calls us to serve in love because he wants us to be the ones who will meet the needs we see in others. The beautiful thing is that when we step out to meet those needs – we find life.

The last thing we need to remember as we seek to love and serve one another is that to accomplish this our focus always needs to be upward and outward. Look at Romans 12:12-13, verse 12 shows us that we need to look up and verse 13 shows us we need to look out. To be able to make serving in love a way of life and not just a program or event is to make sure our focus is first on God and Romans 12:12 shows us what a life that is focused on God looks like, we rejoice in hope, we are patient through the difficult times and maybe above all we pray. When this is our focus and way of life we will be able to serve in love not once in a while but all the time.

And then something happens as our focus becomes more and more fixed on God, the more we look to God, the more God helps us see the needs of others. Go back to the last 24 hours of Jesus - Jesus focus was during this time was God. At the table he gave thanks to God, in the garden he prayed to God and on the cross he cried out to God. Jesus is focused on God, and yet through that entire time Jesus is also focused not on himself but the needs of others. At the table Jesus gave himself to his friends in love. In the garden Jesus saw his friends sleeping and prayed for them; on the cross Jesus saw the need of his mother to be connected to a new family. From the cross Jesus also saw the needs and heard the cry of a thief and offered him life and salvation. As Jesus looked to God, God helped Jesus see the needs of others and as our hearts look to God our eyes will focus in on the needs of those around us and our minds will uncover the ways God is calling us to meet those needs.

So living on the edge comes when we are willing to invest ourselves in authentic relationship that help build up the church and it comes when we step out in faith to serve one another in love, and as Paul says, the time to live this way is now. Don’t put it off, don’t wait another day, serve in love today.

Next Steps to Seeing our Real Selves

Connect:

Ask God to help you see the real you, both the good and the bad.
Humble yourself and confess the bad.  Acknowledge, celebrate and give thanks for all the good.

Help others see themselves the way God does by offering them positive words of affirmation. Make it a goal to say something positive and affirming to every person in your family (place of business or circle of friends) once a day this week. Seek out those who may struggle with only seeing the negative and offer them positive words of encouragement.


Serve:
Romans 12 identifies 7 gifts given by God: prophecy, serving, teaching, encouraging, giving, leadership and showing mercy.  Identify what your believe your top three gifts might be

How are you using these gifts in your family, the church and community? If you aren’t, what are three specific ways you could use them in the next month:

Grow:
Use the following scriptures to help you see the real you:
Psalm 139:13-17
Romans 8:31-32
Isaiah 61:10
Romans 8:38-39
Philippians 2:13-14
Ephesians 2:10

Living on the Edge - Seeing our Real Selves

After my graduation from college, my first real job was as an assistant manager of a 3 screen movie theater in South Bend, IN. I enjoyed the job and honestly, I did pretty well, well enough that my district manager offered me jobs at larger theaters in the greater Chicago area, but at the time I knew I didn’t want to live in a large metropolitan area and I knew I didn’t want to move away from my family in South Bend, so I stayed put in that little theater, and eventually moved to a 6 screen theater across the street. I was content, but I knew that I wasn’t going to be a movie theater manager all my life. It was a good job and in so many ways that experience helped prepare me for what was to come later in my life because I learned a lot about business and management and working with the public, but during those years I just knew I wasn’t really a movie theater manager. God had created me for something else, but I didn’t know what. I was struggling to figure out who I was and I think that is one of the most fundamental questions we all ask ourselves in life, maybe many times in life. Who am I? We need to come to terms with our real identity if we are going to experience God’s best for us and live a life on the edge.


Now we answer this question in many different ways. We define ourselves by what we do: I’m a pastor, a manger, a teacher, a mechanic, student or a nurse, and at times we define ourselves by what we don’t do: I’m retired, I used to be a teacher, manager or nurse. We also define ourselves by the relationships in our lives: I’m a mother or father; I’m a sister or brother, an aunt or uncle, and we define ourselves by our gifts, interests and abilities; I’m a runner, a musician, an artist, or a gardener. We define ourselves in so many different ways and yet I don’t believe we will ever discover who we really are until we begin to define ourselves and see ourselves the way that God does.

Now you might think this question should have been addressed the first week of our series, but there is a reason we are talking about it today. We will never discover our real identity until we are first willing to surrender to God and then be willing to separate ourselves from the world so that we can hear the voice of God. Paul lays out a journey for us in Romans 12 and surrendering to God and ordering our life in such a way that we are able to hear God’s voice of are the steps that will help us discover our real selves because who God created us to be is not be defined by the world and the people around us, it is not determined by our family and friends, it is not even defined by ourselves. For us to experience God’s best and discover who we really are, we need to be defined by God which is why Paul says to us in Romans 12:3 that we need to think of ourselves with sober judgment. Now sober judgment doesn’t mean we are critical and harsh with ourselves, it means we need a clear heart and mind; we need a mind separated from the messages of the world and a heart fully surrendered to God.

One of the reasons it is so important to have a clear heart and mind is because the world wants us see ourselves in one of two ways – either better than we really are or much, much worse. If we go back to the creation story, we see that the temptation that the serpent used to cloud Adam and Eve’s mind was to get them to think of themselves more highly than they ought. The serpent, who remember is Satan, told Adam and Eve that they could be like God. He appealed to their pride and ego and got them thinking more highly of themselves and that voice is still alive and well today.

There are all kinds of voices telling us that we are OK on our own and that we don’t need anyone or anything in order to have a great life, but the truth is that we all have weaknesses and we all need help and support from others. If we want an accurate view of ourselves we need a dose of humility. We can’t think more highly of ourselves than we ought to, but we also can’t put ourselves down. Humility does not mean thinking less of ourselves; it means thinking honestly about ourselves. We can’t allow our humility to turn into humiliation which means we can’t allow all the negative messages of the world to define who we are and this might actually be a bigger problem for us than pride.

Studies have shown that we are actually wired to receive bad messages more than good ones and my guess is that if we reflect on our own lives we would agree that this is true. We remember and pay attention to all the bad stuff that happens in our lives more than we do the good. We listen to the bad comments more closely, remember them longer and weigh them more heavily in assessing situations including what we think about ourselves and this all works to shape how we define who we are.

I don’t know about you, but I can still hear the name calling of the kids on the bus and the playground who called me fat and still remember what it feels like to be picked me last in gym class every time. Those negative words and actions shape us and define how we see ourselves. We may have been told 1000 times that we are valuable and wonderful and uniquely made, but it is the one critical remark that we remember, hold on to and use to determine our value and self identity. So seeing ourselves with a clear mind doesn’t just mean looking at ourselves with humility, it also means looking at ourselves to see the intrinsic value and worth that God has placed in us all.

Paul gives us a hint of this in Romans 12:3 when he talks about the grace and the faith that has been given to us. Why does God give us grace and faith in the first place? Isn’t it because we are valuable to him and he wants us to see ourselves for who we really? Isn’t it God’s grace and faith which help us see ourselves as deeply loved children born from his heart and mind? God gives us grace and faith so we can begin to identify ourselves as his children. Do you know that there are only 2 times when God speaks clearly in the gospels, and do you know what he says? In each instance God is talking to Jesus and he says to him, “you are my beloved son and with you I am well pleased.” Think about it – even Jesus needed to hear from God who he really was. Even Jesus needed that sense of love, affirmation and assurance that he was a child, the child, of God.

Now what’s really interesting about those two moments of God speaking to Jesus are when they occurred. The first was at Jesus baptism as he is coming up from the waters of the Jordan River, and the second was on the Mt. of Transfiguration when Jesus’ physical presence is transfigured into all the glory and power of God. So the first time God gives definition to who Jesus really is comes after Jesus has surrendered himself fully to God in baptism. Surrender is a necessary first step in order for us to hear God define our lives. The second time is on the top of a mountain when Jesus, Peter, James and John have gone off by themselves – they have separated themselves from all the noise of the world and the chaos of crowds in order to hear the voice of God. So surrender and separating ourselves from the world are the essential steps we need to take if we are going to hear God’s voice revealing to us our real identity. I just love how God’s word only fits together and gives witness to these deep truths of God.

So seeing our real identity requires clear thinking so we can honestly confront our pride, sin and failures but also see who we are as deeply valued and unconditionally loved children of God and if we are children then part of our identity is that we belong to a family. What’s important about this is that we need to understand that experiencing God’s best for us doesn’t take place in isolation because we were created to belong. We were all created with a strong need to belong and that is because we were created to be in relationship – both with God and others – and belonging is really all about relationship.

From the time we are little we want to know that we belong to someone and something. We need to be part of a family, we want to have friends and be part of team. We want to know that our lives matter to someone and that we are noticed. We see the evidence of this strong need to belong so clearly in children and youth in a negative way as they give in to peer pressure and do things they might never do on their own just to fit in. But the need to belong is just as strong in adults as well.

We join clubs and seek out small groups and want to be part of teams because we have this need to belong and around here we see this desire to belong lived out on a very large scale every Saturday there is a home PSU game. 100,000+ people will all get together and wear the same 2 colors because they want to belong to something big and exciting called Penn State Football. We have a need to belong and what God is saying is that we have a place to belong that is not only big and exciting but it is life giving and transforming and when we see that we belong to the body of Christ - the church – we begin to experience real life. Romans 12:4-5.

So we are members of one another which not only means that we are connected to one another, but it means we have a responsibility to one another. We need to start thinking about church not as a place where we come to get our needs met – that is the consumer mind set of the world that we need to separate ourselves from –but as a place where we are willing to give and receive. While there is a lot that we can receive from one another in the church - acceptance, grace, support, help and encouragement, we also have a lot to give and when we start to connect with one another by giving and receiving we begin to see how we belong and that helps us understand who we are as God’s children. We will look at this more next week as we talk about serving in love in the context of an authentic community, but for now it is important for us to see that part of discovering our real identity and experiencing a life on the edge is seeing ourselves as a vital part of God’s family.

So we are children of God who belong to God’s family, but God also has a purpose for us and God gives us the gifts we need to live out that purpose, that what we see in the rest of Romans 12:6-9. The first thing to notice here is that we all have a gift. Paul doesn’t say you might have a gift or God might have a plan for you – it says, we have gifts - period. We each have a gift and living on the edge will come when we identify that gift and begin using it for God’s purpose. The other thing to notice is that there are different gifts. We are not all gifted the same way so we can’t look at others to define what gift God has given to us – we have to look to God, which again is why surrender and separating ourselves from the world in order to hear God’s voice is so important.

So let’s look at these 7 gifts for a moment. There is:

Prophecy – which is speaking God’s truth to a situation.

Serving – which literally means waiting on tables, so it is a practical service that meets people’s needs.

Teaching – which is helping people understand who God is and how God works in our lives and in this world.

Exhorting which is encouraging others and lifting them up. It is inspiring people to be more than they thought they could be and all God created them to be.

Giving – which means giving our time and talents and resources in ways that will better people’s lives and our world.

Leadership - which is moving people from one place to a better place

Compassion – which is reaching out to care for people in times of need.

Now do you notice something about all these gifts? They all focus on others - not us. When we use these gifts we are helping those around us experience more in life and that’s the work which will bring a deeper sense of meaning and purpose in life because that is the work of God. Look at the cross for a moment, the work of Jesus on the cross was never about himself. Jesus himself gained nothing by carrying the cross - in fact he died on the cross, Jesus gained nothing and yet we gained everything. When Jesus says that we will find life when we lay down our lives and take up a cross he is saying that we will experience real meaning and purpose in life and God’s best in our lives when we seek to gain nothing for ourselves but give others everything as we use the gifts God has given us. In many ways experiencing life on the edge comes when we take all that God has given us and use it for the care and well being of others, and what Paul is saying here is that when we live this way, we find our real selves.

I want to invite you to use the next steps in the bulletin this week to help you identify the real you. These steps can help us see ourselves the way God does, they can help us discover and use the gifts God has given us and therefore continue to help us experience living life on the edge.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Next Steps for Seperate from the World

At the beginning of 2011, I began providing what I call "next steps' which are practical steps we can take to put the sermon into practice.  My goal was to provide them each week and other than this summer when we provided a weekly Bible study on the 10 Commandments, we have been able to do that.  Since the next steps are not listed on our church website (http://www.bellefontefaith.com/) and people have asked for them, I have decided to start adding them here.  What can I say, better late than never.  So here are the next steps for this week's sermon Living on the Edge - Seperate from the World. 

Connect to God and one another:
• Pick one day this week when you will “unplug” from the world and fast from all forms of media
• Limit the amount of media you consume each day
• Use the unplugged time to connect with God and with others: share dinner as a family or with friends, join a small group.

Grow in depth of faith:
• Continue with the Bible reading plans you began in October. (*see note below)
• Take 30 minutes you don’t spend watching TV and read all of Romans 12.
• Memorize Romans 12:1-2 (or any verses of scripture).

*Part of the Next Steps for the sermon "Grow" talked about Bible reading plans, so here are the next steps from that sermon.

Grow your faith in 5 horus a week
Spend 1 hour in worship
Spend 1 hour in small groups or Sunday School
Spend 1 hour reading the Bible (that's just 10 minutes a day)
Spend 1 hour in prayer (again, just 10 minutes a day)
Spend 1 hour in mission, ministry or service

Take the 90 day experiment and read the entire New Testament by the end of the year
Reading plans can be found online at www.intothyword.org

Read the entire Bible in a year.
Reading plans can be found online at
http://www.intothyword.org/
http://www.biblegateway.com/
http://www.bibleyear.com/
http://www.oneyearbibleonline.com/

Join a new small group or Sunday School Class that start this week.

Tithe. Part of the overflow of blessing God talks about in Malachi 3:10 is a deeper, stronger faith.

Invite a friend to worship.

Living on the Edge - Seperate from the World

So this month we are talking about living life on the edge which we define as a life filled with all the power and joy and purpose of God. A life on the edge is a life infused by the presence of God in every moment and Romans 12:1 tells us that this kind of life starts with surrender. When we present our bodies as a living sacrifice to God we begin to experience the life God wants us for us and tap into God’s best for us and honestly, this is a great place to live and a great life to experience.


When I finally surrendered to God 19 years ago as a sophomore in college those first few weeks after saying yes to God were amazing. Life just looked different. There was joy in every moment, I could see God working and moving in so many different ways both in me and around me. I began to see people and the world from a different perspective, a more Godly perspective, and it was amazing. I was living life on the edge and it was wonderful and I wish I could tell you that the experience of renewed faith and trust and love for God lasted forever – but it didn’t. Surrendering to God doesn’t mean that we will never wrestle with sin, it doesn’t mean we will be free from doubt and worry and it doesn’t mean we will always make the right decisions and walk in God’s will and way every moment. We know this and my guess is that many of us experienced this reality just this week.

Last Sunday we had the opportunity to surrender to God through worship and prayer and communion and while we were moved to our very core in wanting to give our lives fully to God, when Monday came we faced all the same temptations as last week. We worried about our finances, our hearts and minds wandered to places where we know they shouldn’t go, we struggled with greed and lust and selfish ambition and by mid week were filled with guilt and shame because of poor choices. While we have such great intentions of living on the edge with God, too often we find ourselves far away from the edge living in the midst of compromise. Too many times we find ourselves in this cycle of surrender on Sunday, mediocrity on Monday, watered down faith on Wednesday which leads to failure by Friday and then we end up back here on Sunday filled with remorse and yet with a genuine desire to surrender to God again and experience life on the edge.

While many of us experience this cycle in our lives, I witnessed the real heartache and pain of this while in Lewisburg. Every Sunday there would be college students from Bucknell in worship and many of them had such a great heart for God and I knew that their desire was to live on the edge with Jesus each and every day. We would talk about it on Sunday and through the week and yet weekends on a college campus are not easy when you are trying to live a Christian life. Temptation is all around and every Sunday there would be students in worship filled with guilt and shame and real anguish over poor decisions they had made on Friday and Saturday nights. Sunday would come and they would surrender to God again, but the cycle would continue.

Too many of us live life caught in this cycle and yet the truth is that God wants more for us, but many of us never experience God’s best because we fail to see that we don’t surrender ourselves to God and suddenly become the perfect person who never struggles in faith again, we don’t surrender to perfection, we surrender ourselves to a process. When we surrender to God we enter into a spiritual process that involves growth, discipline, struggle and ultimately victory and the first step in that process is to begin to separate ourselves from the world, that’s what Paul says in Romans 12:2

Paul says here that we are able to know God’s good, pleasing and perfect will which means we can experience real transformation in life if we will no longer conform to this world, or if we will separate ourselves from the world. While surrendering ourselves to God is a necessary first step because it expresses our desire to live for God, the second step to experiencing the life God has for us is to be willing to separate ourselves from the power and influence of the world around us and there is a reason we need to separate ourselves from the world – the world is not run by God but by Satan. Look at Ephesians 6:10-13.

The ruler and authority of this present world is Satan and so we need to separate ourselves from the power of Satan so we can experience the full life of God.

So let’s take a moment and talk about Satan. The name Satan means accuser, or one who obstructs and opposes. So Satan is the one who opposes us and obstructs our ability to live the life God wants for us. In a recent survey, over 40% of Christians said that they didn’t believe in Satan and the problem is that if we don’t believe that our enemy exists, then it’s hard to fight them. Now when I talk about Satan, I am not talking about a little man with a red suit, pitchfork and pointy tail, but I am talking about a real presence of evil and temptation that actively works to pull us away from God and the truth of God. Whether you want to talk about Satan as a real spiritual being, or the full force of evil and temptation in the world doesn’t matter, what does matter is that we understand that Satan is the real ruler and authority of this world and Satan works to pull us away from God. When we surrender to God we are entering in to a real spiritual battle and if we want to experience the life and power of God then we need to fight that battle and work to separate ourselves from the world.

But what does this kind of separation look like? Are we supposed to leave our homes and community and go off to live in a cave or some kind of Christian commune? Many people in the early church did just that, it was called the monastic movement and they literally separated themselves from society and went off to live in the wilderness to be able to live more fully with God, but I don’t think this is what Paul is talking about. If we look at 1 John, we not only hear a call to again separate ourselves from this world but here John defines for us what the world is - 1 John 2:15-16. So the world is the cravings of sinful man, the lust of the eyes, and the boasting of what one has or has done. In other words, the power of this world that seeks to pull us away from God is sex, wealth and possessions, and our desire for status - position – power or pride. Just think about these things for a moment: sex, wealth, riches, possessions, status, position, power… aren’t these the very things that the world tells us we need in order to have a good life? The world of entertainment and advertising that surrounds us tells us that sex and wealth and power will make us happy and bring fulfillment and purpose to life and that grabbing hold of all of that in excess is living life on the edge.

What I find interesting is that as we saw in our study of the 10 Commandments, sex, money and power are the same 3 false gods that the people of Israel were tempted to worship centuries ago (they were called Baal, Mammon and Moloch) – so things haven’t changed. Even the very first temptation that pulled Adam and Eve away from God was the pride of life – the serpent in the garden – who was Satan – told Adam and Eve that they could be like God, they could experience power in life, if they ate the fruit so from the very beginning Satan has appealed to our sense of self interest and ego and pride. So whether it was the serpent in the garden or false gods tempting the people of Israel, or Satan using the power of this world to pull us away from God, there are real spiritual forces at work to obstruct our relationship with God and keep us from experiencing life on the edge. Satan hasn’t changed his message at all – it’s just the media and method that have change. Instead of serpents, Satan tempts and attacks through TV, movies, internet and advertising. The means of communicating changes but Satan’s message stays the same, grab hold of sex, money and power and you will live life on the edge - but what Adam and Eve show us is that when we follow that message we end up filled with shame and grief because we have weakened our relationship with God which is where real life is found.

So we separate ourselves from the world so we can be in a closer relationship with God which is what allows God to shape our hearts and lives. The truth we always need to remember is that there is always something at work shaping our hearts and lives - it is either this world ruled by Satan or it is God. Our lives are shaped by what we feed our heart and mind and what feeds our heart and mind is what enters through our ears and eyes. So if God is going to shape our hearts we need to be intentional about what allow in to our minds, which is why Paul tells us to be transformed by the renewing of our mind, because a mind shaped by God’s truth brings life.

So let’s go back to Romans 12:2. What does it mean for us to not be conformed to this world so our minds can be renewed? It means we limit or stop the flow of messages from the world around us from getting into our hearts and minds which then opens the door for God’s word and spirit to enter in and transform us. One specific way to not be conformed by the world is to limit the amount of media that we consume every day. Studies done last year by the Kaiser Family Foundation show that teenagers spend on average 7 hours and 38 minutes every day consuming entertainment media (TV, movies, internet, gaming) and since we have taught our children how to multi-task, the reality is that they consume an average of 10 hours and 45 minutes worth of media in that 7 ½ hours. But you know, our children are better off than we are because studies show that most adults spend on average 8 hours and 11 minutes a day consuming media and with smart phones becoming the norm, that number will only increase because now we can watch video, listen to music, play games and of course see countless ads with any free moment we have. I know this is going to sound radical – but maybe we need to limit the amount of media we consume in a day or in a week. Maybe we need to fast from all media for a day and see what difference it can make in our minds and hearts.

I believe it can make a difference and here’s why:  The summer of 1983 I worked in Yellowstone National Park and in 1983 there was no internet and in Yellowstone there is no cable TV, or any TV and there were no movie theaters and you couldn’t get any radio stations and the only newspaper or magazine that turned up were usually a couple weeks old, so I spent the summer in a kind of self-imposed media fast, which for this boy who grew up on TV wasn’t easy. But I also have to say that it was a formative summer for my faith because I spent time reading God’s word, talking with friends about life and God and experiencing the power of fellowship and community and God used those very things to shape my heart and renew my mind and therefore bring me life.

So what would happen if we picked one day a week and turned off the TV, didn’t tweet or update our status on fb and only went online for work and to answer email. First of all, we would have about 8 free hours to do something else and maybe that time could be sent in a small groups or having dinner with the family or reading God’s word. As we limit the world’s ability to shape our hearts and minds we give God the opportunity to do just that.

You see, it’s not enough to just turn out the noise of the world; we have to replace that noise with the voice of God. We need to replace the message of the world with the life giving message of Jesus. There is no more powerful tool in shaping our minds and hearts than the word of God so I want to invite us to go back to our core values of connect and grow. When we connect to God through worship and his word and when we grow deeper in our faith through the intentional reading and reflection of God’s word – our minds are renewed and our lives are transformed and we begin to experience more of the fullness and power in life that God wants for us, but let’s be clear, it’s not our reading of the word that transforms us, it’s the power of God’s living and active word in us that renews our heart and changes our lives. On our own, no amount of reading the Bible can bring about transformation, but when we open ourselves up and give God the opportunity to speak and shape our hearts and lives – he will. This is why first step in living a life on the edge is surrender. So can the next step in living on the edge really be as simple as turning off the world and opening our hearts to God’s power and grace and love and our minds to God’s word? Here’s a thought – let’s give it a try and see.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Living on the Edge ~ Surrender to God

A few years ago I was hiking in one of the more remote sections of the Great Smokey Mountains and because of the long drive to get to this section of the park I knew that I would probably never hike in this area again. I was doing a section of the Appalachian Trail that led to the Shuckstack Fire tower and I was excited because the trail book said from the top of the tower you had a great view of Fontana Lake which was created by Fontana dam which is the largest dam at its altitude east of the Mississippi. When I arrived at the fire tower I set down by backpack and started to make the 80 foot climb to the top.

The tower is an open iron stairwell with old wooden boards and the first few sections weren’t too bad, but as I got higher, the stairs got narrower and I could feel the entire thing moving with me and as you can see there is nothing to really protect you so about half way up I decided I’d gone far enough. The problem was that from where I was I couldn’t see much above the trees. So I slowly made my way up another section of stairs so I was about half way and I sat down. As I looked around I was glad I at went a little higher because from that landing I could at least get a glimpse of one section of the lake. After sitting there for a few moments I climbed down and was ready to leave when I though to myself that I was probably never going to be back to that spot again in my life and I hated to think that I didn’t make it to the top of the tower. As I was debating what to do I glanced down and realized I was wearing a t-shirt that said “no fear”. So I put down my backpack again, and started up the stairs.




Now the second time up I knew I could get to the landing I on had been on before without any problem, so I got that high and then as I made my way up the last 4 sections I kept looking straight out – not down – and on every step said, help me God, help me God, help me God, help me God. And God did. I made it to the top of the tower and the view was amazing.

 I felt so energized and excited as I stood in the top of the tower and just looked out at the Lake and mountains and the beauty of God’s creation. Everything was great, until I suddenly realized that going up was easy – going down was the hard part because I actually had to look down at the steps and in between those steps there was nothing but the ground 80 feet away. When I finally got to the ground the 2nd time I was so filled with excitement and joy that I just about ran back down the trail because of what God had helped me do. I had overcome fear, I was doing something that I loved and I was able to see this incredible view that I might never see again, and for me this was living life of the edge. I have to tell you, there is a part of me that wishes every moment of every day could be filled with that same sense of power and excitement and joy. The author Mike Yaconelli says that greatest issue facing the church today isn’t the loss of moral absolutes, the breakdown of the family, drug use, world poverty or violence, the greatest problem facing the church today is dullness – we have forgotten how to live life on the edge.

Last week, we heard Jesus call Peter to drop his nets and follow him, and Peter did just that, and I have to think that for Peter there was some fear and trembling in making that decision. For all of the disciples and for everyone who followed that same call, there was a certain excitement and fear that came in following Jesus because they were leaving behind everything they knew and all that was comfortable to begin a journey of living life on the edge. Following Jesus they were going to see miracles and majesty and mayhem. They would see Jesus praised and cursed, they would experience the thrill of huge crowds and the questions of loneliness, rejection and isolation. Life was going to get exciting and dangerous and it would be anything but dull. Following Jesus should be anything but dull and my hope is that in the next month we will turn to follow Jesus in a way that we will help us experience life on the edge.

If you want this kind of experience, if you want this kind of life and faith then I want to invite you on this journey through Romans 12 and it all starts in Romans 12:1. When Paul says that we are to present our bodies as a living sacrifice he is saying that we need to give our entire lives to God – we are talking about a total commitment here or complete surrender. To surrender to God means to give God all that we hold dear, all that we find comfort in, everything in this world that gives us strength and peace and all that we trust in so that we can trust completely in God, and while surrender is not easy, it is the first step to living on the edge because when we surrender to God we will end up doing things we never dreamed possible. We will be living a life that will make our hearts beat faster, our minds and mouths utter “help me God, help me God” at every step and yet in it all we will find power and joy.

So how do we get this surrendered life? What does it look like? Jesus gives us the answer in 2 parables he tells in Matthew 13:44-46. To surrender to God means to be willing to give up everything we have in order to grab hold of all the life God has to offer. I think Matthew understood the power of these stories because this was his life. Matthew was a tax collector and had a good, safe and prosperous life, but when Jesus called out to him it says Matthew got up and left his tax booth. Now for a tax collector to leave his booth meant he was quitting his job completely. Matthew would never be able to return to the tax business or to the safety and security that the money and position brought him, but like the man who found the treasure in the field – Matthew gave it all up because he could see that what Jesus offered was so much better, and that is the key to surrendering to God. We will commit ourselves completely to Jesus when we see the riches and the power that could only be found in following Jesus into God’s kingdom and presence.

Too many times we struggle with surrendering ourselves to God because we don’t see the riches of a life lived with God and we don’t see those riches because if we are honest we question God’s love and care for us. The reason we have a hard time surrendering to God is because we really don’t believe that God wants what is best for us or that God even knows us and knows what we want in life. Think about it, we don’t want to surrender because when we think surrendering to God we think it only means sacrifice and suffering. We think of all those things God is going to ask us to give up but we never think about all the things that we are going to receive. It’s a sad statement about our understanding of God if all we think about is suffering and loss when we think of surrender.

In Jesus’ parables the people are willing to sell all they have because they know that there is something even better waiting for them. They surrender everything to get a treasure and this needs to be our motivation in surrendering to God. We surrender to God not out of duty or obligation but because we know the God who created us loves us so much that he is just waiting to give us all the fullness of life. So when we hear the word surrender we need to think not of loss but love, not pain but power, not giving up but being filled up, and not trials but treasure. These parables tell us that we need to redefine surrender so that we see the riches of life that comes when we give ourselves to God.

Paul is trying to tell us the same thing in Romans 12. If we were to go back and read Romans 1-11, we would see that Paul has taken his readers on a journey to show them just how good and loving God is. In Romans 1-3 Paul outlines the problem we all face which is that we are all sinners (3:10-12).

The solution for this problem was to send Jesus to die for our sin (5:18).

God then gives us the power of his spirit to help us experience freedom and life in this world (8:1-2).

And God remains faithful to all people offering salvation and grace (10:13).

What Paul has done in Romans 1-11 is to show us just how amazing God’s grace and love for us really is. When we were dead in our sin and unable to do anything about it - God stepped in and saved us and everyday God holds out his hand of grace and mercy and offers us His power in every situation so we can experience freedom and fullness in life and it is because of this great love of God that we can surrender ourselves to Him. Romans 12:1 and this call to surrender only comes after Paul has shown us the love and power of God. So we commit ourselves to God completely because God has given us the treasure of forgiveness, grace, strength and life.

So we surrender to a God who loves us and wants so much more for our lives, but again, what does this kind of surrender look like?  The truth is that a surrendered life looks different for each and every one of us. For me, a surrendered life started on the campus of MSU one October afternoon when I finally realized that I would rather live my life with God than without him because with God there is life and without him there is only death. So I said yes to God. But here’s the thing, while surrender does call for us to make a clear decision at some point in time, it is not a once and done decision. I surrendered to God in October of 1982, but about 10 years later I had to surrender again and do one of the things I said I would never do and that was go to Seminary. I never wanted to go to seminary and I thought I would be miserable doing it, but when I surrendered to God and realized that it was his plan for me, my heart changed. Seminary was hard work at times, but I loved learning about God and growing in my understanding of the church.

But you see surrender is an ongoing way of life. When I started in seminary I didn’t know what kind of ministry I wanted to pursue, I just knew that I wasn’t going to be a local pastor. I would do anything but that, but when I took a position as an intern in a local church - God changed my heart. I loved being in the local church so surrendering to that journey was a joy, but even as a pastor God has continued to call me to surrender. Leaving a congregation in Lewisburg to come to Faith Church required me to once again surrender what was safe and comfortable and fulfilling and step out in faith trusting that the treasure God had for me was better, and I have to say – it was. The joy and power of coming here and seeing God at work among us has been a blessing and it is a treasure.

Surrendering to God isn’t one big step we take once in our lives, it is a series of steps we take as we allow God to give direction to our lives. It means giving up control and stepping out in faith to connect and serve and grow. It means giving up some of our time and energy and money to support the work of God here and around the world and it means being part of that work in real ways so that we can see the power of God transform hearts and the world around us.

While surrender is a series of steps – it does require a decision. When Paul says to present our bodies as a living sacrifice – it is a command to give all that we are and all that we have and all that we want to be to a God who loves us and wants more for us.

If you are here today, you have already taken at least one step in surrendering your life to God – you are here. You heard a call of God to be in this place at this time and to open yourself up to His presence, so I just want to invite you to take another step and surrender your heart and life to God. Maybe you have been attending church your entire life and been going through all the motions but have never really experienced the thrill of living on the edge with God, maybe you have experienced church but never the power of Christ, if that is where you are then I want to invite you to surrender and begin to live life on the edge with Jesus. Maybe today is your first day in church or your first visit to Faith Church, that’s ok, I want to invite you too to surrender to a God who loves you more in this moment than can possibly imagine and I want to invite you take this first and necessary step in following Jesus and living life on the edge.

Before we surrender to God in a time of prayer, I want us to look at Psalm 84:8-12. As we turn to God we need to remember that God loves us so much that he will not withhold any good thing from us. We can freely and fully surrender to God today because he is our sun and shield and so much more treasure to share with us, so let us give everything to God so that we experience the fullness of life lived with God which really is a life lived on the edge.

As we pray, I want to invite you to just hold your hands out before you palms up as a sign of surrender. Opening our hands to God is just another way to let go of all that we hold on to – or to surrender ourselves completely to God. So let us present our bodies as a living sacrifice to God – this surrender of our hearts and lives is all that God really wants and it will be the beginning of living life on the edge.