Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Church is Home


 Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful.  And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching. Hebrews 10:23-25


Consumers or Members


In a church you should never be a number.

You should not be marketed to.

You should be loved, cared for, l
istened to, prayed for and visited.


You are a brother, a sister, a family member, a member of the body of Christ.


I once heard a nationally known preacher say that when he preached on Sunday morning he was making product. After each of the 4 Sunday services someone would critique and change the message to make it better based on the reaction of the congregation and other factors. This type of production does help market to vast audiences and sell many copies of a given series, but as Christians do we want to be seen as consumers or church members?








Who's Your Pastor?


When you listen to preachers on the radio and television you are
often hearing good teaching, but don't elevate the teaching or the preacher above the pastor who is caring for your soul;


the one who preaches the Word at your church,

the one who led you to Christ,

the one who calls to see how you're doing,

the one who visits you when you're sick,

who cried with you when you were steeped in sin and wanted out,

who dedicated your kids,

who counseled you about marriage,

who baptized you,

who taught you the principles of the faith.



Not a Customer


Our life with God is a relationship not a commercial transaction.

Our relationship with the church needs to be the same.

You're not a customer to God.

The pastor is not the proprietor of the business.








Dinner With The Family


Worship is not like going to an Italian Restaurant one week and to a French Restaurant the next to experience the different flavors of each.

Sunday worship is coming home every week for dinner with the family at Mom and Dad's.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Impossible yet Possible


Have you ever been in an impossible situation? The account of Elijah and the widow of Zarephath shows us a lot about how we should respond when placed in difficult or truly impossible circumstances.
            

Looking for Lunch          


In the account of 1 Kings 17:8-16, Elijah was fresh out of water because the brook he was drinking from dried up. It dried up because he, Elijah, pronounced a 3 ½ year drought on Israel. “And Elijah the Tishbite, of the inhabitants of Gilead, said to Ahab, “As the Lord God of Israel lives, before whom I stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these years, except at my word.”” 1 Kings 17:1. Then God sends the prophet to stay by the Brook Cherith to have a source to drink from and to be fed by ravens, by whom He sent food for Elijah. Of course because of the drought the brook dried up. It was then that The Lord directed him to the widow saying, “I have commanded a widow there to provide for you.”



Hunger, Meet Hopeless


I wonder if Elijah was shocked to see the woman who, along with her son, was starving to death. The man of God did not seem to be phased. He told her to bring him a piece of bread and she said, “As the Lord your God lives, I do not have bread, only a handful of flour in a bin, and a little oil in a jar; and see, I am gathering a couple of sticks that I may go in and prepare it for myself and my son, that we may eat it, and die.” 1 Kings 17:12.

If you were Elijah what would you be thinking? “God told me to come here and get food. This woman is obviously in complete despair without any provisions. She’s given up and is backed into a corner with no one to help her and no supermarket to run to. Why am I here again?”

To hear her act out in frustration is totally understandable. The widow had a physical and a spiritual need. She’d lost hope for herself and her son. Death to her would be better than the struggle they were enduring.



A Hidden Blessing


In 1982 when I was called to the Bible Speaks’ mission team in France. The team leader, Pastor Louis DeMeo, was promised by one of his contacts the use of a house in Auxerre France for a year. The team was to rendezvous in the south of France for two weeks to evangelize with a church group there, and then return to Auxerre to begin church planting.

On his way to the south Louis decided to stop at Auxerre to check out our new home. To his surprise someone was living in what turned out to be a 2 room house, and they had no plans to leave! We truly felt like the Lord called us to France but when we got there the comfort we had expected quickly disappeared.

God still had a provision for us. What seemed like a handful of flour and a slow death turned into a mighty provision that sustained us. With the help of gracious French Christians we got our footing in France . We were given a place to live for free for several months and then we were able to rent a large house for what amounted to about $200.00 per month. I don’t recall hearing a word of complaint to God for putting us in a situation where we had to trust Him and His people. Both came through when we needed them.



Just the Facts


These are the facts that confronted Elijah:

He was given a precise command to go to and live in Zarephath.
A widow there was to provide food for him.
The widow he was sent to was starving and had but a few ounces of flour and a few drops of oil.
The promised provision was not out in plain sight but hidden.
The situation seemed hopeless.


The Just Shall Live By Sight?


 A big problem in the 21st century church is spiritual starvation because of a lack of dependence on God. We’re used to having what we need and having it when and where we want it.We can’t miss our coffee break let alone experience famine! Many walk by sight and not by faith, appreciating the professionalism of the church and the nice amenities it has to offer. Like the Laodicean church of Revelation chapter 3, many are rich in Christian platitudes but lukewarm in their faith.

As  disciples we have to be careful not to fall into a life that never experiences need. Much of the Christianity we see on TV, hear on the radio and live in our congregations seems to be religion without a cross, where we are not God’s servants, but He is ours. Some churches have monetized faith, exhorting believers to speak material blessings into being, as if The Lord was a genie waiting to grant our every wish. And why not think that way? Huge ministries abound, advertising all the answers we need from how to raise the perfect child, to experiencing an awesome sex life, to never lacking money to pay a bill, or growing a mega-church in three easy steps.

This is why we can’t get too caught up with celebrity ministers; as good as they look and sound. They are all about their ministry, whatever that is. I mean, they are good! They look good and sing well and are phenomenal preachers. Some are so cool their messages are like Ice Cream Sundaes with whipped cream and a cherry on top.



Small Screen Faith


Your call is to your neighborhood, city, state and country, your continent and to parts of the world you’ve never been to. You aren’t called to serve a personality on a screen. You are called to love your neighbor and lay down your life for your friends. Don’t trust the purveyors of Big Screen Churchianity. They seem more interested in flying their private jets, speaking about the positive influence the Bible can have on your health, or how God doesn’t want you to struggle in life. The message usually lacks commitment and sacrifice and minimizes sin. We can’t make light of sin because in doing so we diminish the sacrifice of Jesus on the cross. “For Christ also suffered once for sins, the just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh but made alive by the Spirit.” 1 Peter 3:18.  Never devalue His sacrifice, for without it we are all lost. If we don’t tell people the truth, who will? Ours is a small screen faith; meeting people at the place of their need and teaching them to depend on Jesus.



You’re Kidding Right?


What went through the mind of the widow when Elijah spoke to her?  “Here I am ready to eat my last piece of bread with my son and along comes this so called Man of God asking me to feed him first. Earth to Elijah, what part of “a hand full of flour” don’t you understand?” It’s not that the widow wanted to die, or didn’t want to believe, she just needed a reason to believe. She needed a word spoken to her that would nourish confidence.

When God comes to us and asks for something we don’t have, what do we do? What kind of God would ask me for a third of my last dollar? What kind of Lord would tell me to share something when I don’t have enough for myself?

Ministry calls us to faith. Our need is what we need most. The widow feared until she began to walk in obedience to the words of the Man of God. Ultimately Elijah needed to be put in a place of faith, and the woman needed to see his faith in action. A little water and a piece of bread sounds like nothing, except when it’s all you have.

“And Elijah said to her, “Do not fear; go and do as you have said, but make me a small cake from it first, and bring it to me; and afterward make some for yourself and your son.  For thus says the Lord God of Israel: ‘The bin of flour shall not be used up, nor shall the jar of oil run dry, until the day the Lord sends rain on the earth.’” 1 Kings 17:13-14.

“Do not fear,” Elijah said to the woman. Here’s a lady that was barely holding onto life, and the Man of God said “do not fear.” What is the Man of God saying to you today? Are you willing to be obedient to the words of a man who is obedient to the Word of God?



A History


Elijah was obedient to God to go to Zarephath
He met a widow who had given up hope for her and her son and wanted to die.
The widow was asked to give and to trust that God would give her back what she needed.
The Lord made a promise through Elijah to the woman that she would have all she needed.
She acted in faith, trusting the words of the prophet, and God kept His promise.




The Giver Gives


God gives us what we need when we need it. We may feel thin in the gifts department. We may not be confident that the time we spent on earth was useful. You might even think you can’t affect the world. The truth is that you need to give God some of what you’ve got and let him make it into an everlasting source of nourishment for you and those to whom you minister the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

None of us have all the gifts. Some of us don’t even know what our gift is. It doesn’t matter. If you are questioning your call and are ready to quit, reflect on the promise Jesus made to the Samaritan woman, “Whoever drinks of this water will thirst again, but whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst. But the water that I shall give him will become in him a fountain of water springing up into everlasting life.” John 4:13-14.

The widow, though she objected at first, obeyed and served Elijah. As a result she was blessed with bread for as long as the drought lasted.  “So she went away and did according to the word of Elijah; and she and he and her household ate for many days. The bin of flour was not used up, nor did the jar of oil run dry, according to the word of the Lord which He spoke by Elijah.” 1 Kings 17:15-16.



Your Turn


One day someone was obedient to God and came to you with a message. At that time you were dead in your trespasses and sins. You were instructed to believe the words of the Man of God. Jesus made a promise that if you gave Him your trust you would receive what you needed. You did, and you acquired His gift of everlasting life.

Now it’s your turn. The world is waiting for a real prophet to come with words of hope that will spur people to trust and obedience. Be that prophet.



Kim Anthony Shibley

Monday, April 13, 2015

Real World Bible

The Bible contains many accounts of people like us. You would think that those written about in the Bible would be people with no faults who overcame every temptation and obstacle in their path. The truth is that from the third chapter of Genesis, where Eve and Adam fail to obey God’s command, to the book of Revelation, a large portion of the Word is about people, or groups of people, whose lives crashed and burned. Scripture is full of accounts that describe those who could not get along without help from God. These were real people like us, not fictional characters.


A Great List of Failures

Noah obeyed God and was saved from the waters of the flood, but then planted a vineyard and got so drunk that he lay exposed at the door of his tent.

Abraham offered his wife twice to two different kings to try to save his own skin.

Jacob conspired with his mother to steal his brother’s blessing.

After Jacob worked for seven years for the right to marry Rachel, his father-in-law Laban substituted Leah for her sister Rachel on the wedding night so that Jacob would be wed the oldest daughter first. He then made Jacob work another seven years to pay for his union with Rachel.

Reuben slept with Bilhah, one of his father’s wives.

Judah sold his brother Joseph into slavery and slept with his deceased son’s wife who was masquerading as a prostitute.

Moses murdered a man and hid him in the sand.

David lusted after Bathsheba, got her pregnant, had her husband killed, and then took her as his wife though he already had multiple wives.

Paul persecuted Christians and cheered on at the stoning death of Stephen.

Peter denied the Lord in the face of fear.

All the disciples forsook Jesus in His time of greatest need.

Then there was Samson and Job and Gideon to name a few of our best-known losers.

The Bible is replete with the woes and sins of men and women in their relationship to one another and to God.

Failure, a New Beginning

What speaks to us is that many of these misadventures don’t end in complete fiasco. Some individuals came to understand that the grace of God was greater than their sin and its resulting defeat.

An old hymn puts it this way:

“Grace, grace, God’s grace,

Grace that will pardon and cleanse within;

Grace, grace, God’s grace,

Grace that is greater than all our sin.”

Grace Through the Work of the Cross

God’s grace is the one thing that we can count on. Bigger than our weakness is Jesus Christ. He is the one who took all these characters and placed them at the foot of the cross to receive a new life and forgiveness for their personal sins. Was it because they were able somehow to redeem themselves by paying back the debt of their sin through their positive actions? No, they became winners because in the end they did not let their sin control their relationship with God. They overcame their own failures through receiving grace and forgiveness, allowing them to have an impact on their generations. They believed God. They trusted in His unfailing love for them.

Down but not Out

If you’ve been defeated remember God’s grace. He died for us when we were still sinners. He didn’t wait till we cleaned ourselves up. Many try to get sanctified before they get justified. The problem with a religious frame of reference is that we feel we must make ourselves presentable to God before He will accept us. We need first to accept Christ’s payment for all our sin and repent.

Then allow Him to change us through the power of His shed blood. Just as He forgave and then used the men and women of the Bible for His purposes, He wants to use us to be reflections of His marvelous grace. Ephesians 2:4-7 says it well, “But God, who is rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved), and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us in Christ Jesus.”

Non-religious truth

The Bible then is different from other religious texts in that it recognizes and condemns sin, but gives mercy and a way out for the sinner. The sins that the people committed were indeed grave, but so are ours. God’s work of mercy continues in us. He doesn’t require perfection on our part, just dependence on Jesus’ work for us. The Bible then is not just a religious text that gives us a goal to shoot for, but a book that has answers for the real problems of real people in a real world.



Kim Anthony Shibley

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Jesus Takes Care of Our Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow



“Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and forever.”
Hebrews 13:8

The more I get to know who Jesus is, the more I see that He’s the same. The consistent nature of the Savior is the thing I can hold onto when all that’s around me is changing.
Life is constant change. It changes biologically, relationally, emotionally, and spiritually.
I know that Jesus’ blood shed on the cross paid for my past. My sins were forgiven the moment I believed. That’s a truth I can hold onto. I don’t need to pay for the things I did, the words I said or the thoughts I thought.

What about now? Now I am a Christian what happens when I sin and make a mess of things and fail to put into practice the things I’ve learned?
Jesus is still the same. His love is the same. His mercy is the same His compassion is the same. His forgiveness is the same. He is the same Savior now as He was then. I may change, but Jesus doesn’t.


The future is before us.  We look forward anticipating marriage, kids, tuition payments, supporting a family, retirement, health issues, loss of loved ones and we naturally worry. What are we going to do? We will trust in the One Who never changes. His plan includes all these things in our lives. We need to experience them and trust in Him along the way that He will never leave us or forsake us.

Saturday, February 28, 2015

Seeking


Seeking the lost is what Jesus came to do as He descended to the world below leaving his majestic throne. I once lost my keys and looked everywhere but couldn’t find them. I realized at one point that I must have thrown them in the trash with some things from my car when I got home. I went out to the trash can and started looking in the filth to find my lost keys. There they were! I was so happy. This is what Jesus did when He came here. He looked for us in our heap of trash and found us. He was so  pleased that He rejoiced with everyone.
It doesn't matter where you are today or what mess you’ve gotten into. Jesus loves you more than you can imagine.
“And Jesus said to him, “Today salvation has come to this house, because he also is a son of Abraham; for the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost.””

Luke 19:9-10