Friday, April 22, 2011

Book Review: "The Treasure Principle" by Randy Alcorn

This book is a quick read but will not leave you as it found you. The author, Randy Alcorn, delves into the subject matter of finances and how a Christian is to see his/her role in handling their (God's) resources.

This book was a pleasure to read. As the author wrote in his introduction: "Some books try to motivate giving out of guilt. This isn't one of them. This book is about something else - the joy of giving." The author lives up to these statements. Over and over, he brings out Scripture, personal and biographical stories to show that seeing ourselves as stewards of God's resources allows us to experience great joy in managing our Lord's wealth that happens to be in our pockets.

The author deals with such issues as tithing, hoarding, giving to worthy ministries, and so much more. I'm glad I read it and now desire to pick up a lengthier work of Alcorn's to see where he may elaborate on some of the issues he quickly discussed in this book.

I obtained my free copy of "The Treasure Principle" from Multnomah for review.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Sermon (video): Calm in the Storm (Luke 8:22-25)

This sermon gives a biblical perspective on how to think about life's struggles and how to work with God through them to become who He wants you to be. It was preached at First Baptist Church of Brooksville, Florida on April 10, 2011.


Click here to view the sermon.
    

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Calm in the Storm (part 2)

(For Part 1 of this article, click here.)

When you were a child and you fell down and scraped your knee, who did you run to? Your dad? Fat chance! You ran to your mom, didn’t you? 

Moms around the world tend to be nurturers and are great empathizers. Dads, on the other hand, tend to toughen us up. They may have said something like: “Stop your crying and get over it. You’re going to be ok.”
 
While Jesus related to his disciples in various ways throughout his ministry, most certainly he acted like their dad in Luke 8:22-25. He wanted to toughen them up. Let’s look at the text and draw out another principle that will help us get through the tough times.
 
“One day He and His disciples got into a boat, and He told them, ‘Let’s cross over to the other side of the lake.” So they set out, and as they were sailing He fell asleep. Then a fierce windstorm came down on the lake; they were being swamped and were in danger. They came and woke Him up, saying, ‘Master, Master, we’re going to die!’ Then He got up and rebuked the wind and the raging waves. So they ceased, and there was a calm. He said to them, ‘Where is your faith?’ They were fearful and amazed, asking one another, ‘Who can this be? He commands even the winds and the waves, and they obey Him!’”
  
We saw in our last post that Jesus intentionally sent these disciples on this terrifying trip … on purpose. He knew that they would fear for their lives like never before but He did it anyway. Could it be that He sent them on this journey to toughen them up?
 
The storm was so bad that these seasoned fishermen became terrified. Some of these men had probably been fishermen their whole life. (In Matthew 4:21, it states that James and John were in a boat mending their nets with their father before Jesus called them to follow Him. This leads us to believe that they may have been in the family business and had grown up learning the trade from their father. Fishing and boating was probably all they knew but that implies that they may have been extremely good at it.)
 
Not only did they know how to handle a boat, they may have believed that they had the home-court advantage the moment they stepped into one. When they were on land, they were content to let Jesus take charge. 

But stepping into a boat … well, that was quite another matter. They were perfectly content to let Jesus take a seat in the back of the boat and go to sleep. They would take over from there. If any trouble arose, they’d be able to handle it. They couldn’t imagine a scenario on the sea in which they would acknowledge their deficiencies with fear in their eyes and plead with Jesus for help (“Master, Master, we are going to die.”). 


They would have died before acknowledging their fear to a “landlubber” … which gives us a clue as to how bad the storm must have been.
 
We can’t fault them for being terrified, can we? It made perfect sense that they were scared. A massive storm had taken them by surprise when they were far from land. Lightening was flashing around them. The thunder was deafening. Rain blinded them. The waves treated the boat like it was a piece of driftwood and threatened to capsize it. Those waves also crashed over the boat and threatened to swamp it.
 
All of this happened while these men did everything they had been trained to do. Everything they tried in order to maneuver the boat and get it to shore failed miserably. They went from confidence to concern to sheer terror.
 
If you had asked one of them in that storm if they were scared, they would have looked at you like you were 10 bricks short of a load. Of course they were scared! They had never seen a storm this bad. They had tried everything and weren’t getting any closer to land. There was a frightening realization that the boat would be filled with water and sunk. There was a very real possibility that none of them would survive this trip to tell about it. Of course they were scared!
 
No one in his right mind would have faulted them for their fear. It made perfect sense. Everyone of us would have assured them that fear was appropriate in this circumstance … except Jesus.
 
Jesus rebuked them. And notice at what point He corrected them. It was after He calmed the storm. He looked each of them in the eye and said, “Where is your faith?” It was as if He was saying, “Toughen up! If your hearts had remained calm, I wouldn’t have had to calm the storm.”
 
Now, if I had been one of those disciples, I may have been tempted to justify my fear. “But Jesus, You were asleep and didn’t see how bad it was. We had been fighting with the storm for hours. It was like none we had ever experienced. Some of us are skilled fisherman and know all of the tricks of the trade for handling a boat in any circumstance. Yet, none of it worked. We were nearing death, Jesus. Ordinarily we would have trusted You, Jesus, but this storm was the worst thing we’ve ever experienced. Our fear was justified … wasn’t it?”
 
That argument didn’t fly with a father-figure who desired to build toughness into his followers. They got scared when they should have been calm.
 
But that brings up a question: “What is the foundation for toughness in Christ-followers? What could have enabled these men to remain fearless in a hurricane of a storm? What can help us to get through the tough times of life?” Faith!
 
These men had erred by hopping into the boat and trusting in themselves. The storm brought them to the end of themselves. That’s when they should have realized that Jesus was in the boat with them. In fact, they should have remembered that they were in God’s will because the boat trip was Jesus' idea to begin with!
 
Knowing that they were in God’s will and knowing that God was in that situation with them (even when He seemed to be asleep and completely unaware of the ordeal) would have been more than enough to give them the confidence to weather the storm. If their hearts had been tough and calm, the storm could have continued to rage around them. And Jesus would have awoken with a smile as He looked upon these men who had evidenced such manly, godly character.
 
As I conclude, I want to leave you with one of my favorite, all time quotes. Thomas Jonathan (“Stonewall”) Jackson was a devout Christian who loved the Lord. His life had been tough from birth and he had learned to find strength from the Lord to make it through those tough times. He learned that as long as he was in God’s will and he was assured that God was with him, he had nothing to fear. The Almighty would watch over him as he trusted in Him.
 
Someone asked him on a battlefield how he could remain so serene while the bullets and cannonballs were piercing the air all around him. In the book, "God's and Generals," Jeffrey Shaara allowed Stonewall to provide the following answer (probably something Stonewall could have actually said:

My religious belief teaches me to feel as safe in battle as in bed. God has fixed the time for my death. I do not concern myself with that but to be always ready whenever it may overtake me. That is the way all men should live ... then all men would be equally brave.”
 
Because of his steadfast faith in his Lord, Stonewall sounds like a man who may not have panicked in the boat. What about you? Do you have some toughening up that needs to happen? It will come only when Jesus sends you into some storms ... but you've got to trust Him through it. That's the only way you'll learn this lesson.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Calm in the Storm

When I was a child, I remember reading about Alexander who had “a terrible, horrible, no-good, very bad day.” Have you ever had a day like that? A week? A month? Or longer? I have!
 
There was a time when Jesus knowingly sent His disciples on a trip that would shake them to the core. From that story, we can learn some principles to help us in our difficult times. Here’s the story as told in Scripture:
 
“One day He (Jesus) and His disciples got into a boat, and He told them, ‘Let’s cross over to the other side of the lake.’ So they set out, and as they were sailing He fell asleep. Then a fierce windstorm came down on the lake; they were being swamped and were in danger. They came and woke Him up, saying, ‘Master, Master, we’re going to die!’ Then He got up and rebuked the wind and the raging waves. So they ceased, and there was a calm. He said to them, ‘Where is your faith?’ They were fearful and amazed, asking one another, ‘Who can this be? He commands even the winds and the waves, and they obey Him!’” (Luke 8:22-25)
 
One of the first questions that would come to our 21st century, American, litigious mind is: "Whose fault was it?" We've erroneously developed a mindset that assumes that the experience of anything undesirable must also include someone to blame for it.

Well, let's play along and ask that question of this story, "Whose fault was it?"

Very clearly, it was Jesus’ “fault.” Jesus is the one who sent them into the storm. It was His idea. He’s the one who said, "Let's cross over to the other side of the lake."

Now, we either have to assume that Jesus didn’t know that there was going to be a storm that would shake these seasoned fishermen to the core or He did know it. There isn’t a third option. 

The fact that Jesus is God leaves us with only one choice. He knew He was sending His disciples into a storm. Yet, He did it anyway.
 
In fact, there is another interesting insight embedded in this story. Luke 8:24 states: “Then He got up and rebuked the wind and the raging waves.” The storm immediately stopped. 

That begs the question: If Jesus calmed the storm after His disciples became terrorized by the experience, couldn’t He have calmed the storm before it got out of control? In fact, couldn’t He have kept the storm from forming in the first place?
 
The fact is that there will always be storms in life. There will be trials that come our way that terrorize us to the core. And, yes, Jesus is the One responsible (at least to some extent) for sending us into a storm that He quite possibly could have averted. Yet, knowing that it came from His hand is the very thing that can keep us sane.
 
In a sermon entitled “Reasons for Turning to the Lord”, Charles Spurgeon once said: “Ungodly men set down their troubles to chance, and sometimes they even trace them to the devil … Frequently they lay their ills at the door of their fellow men, and grow quarrelsome, malicious, and revengeful. It is a happy day for a man when he knows in whose hand is the rod, and learns to trace his trouble to God.”
 
That sounds strange, doesn’t it? In fact, it goes against the grain of those who insist that God is loving (and only loving) since in our minds, we cannot fathom how love could exist while sending the object of one's affection into a storm.
 
Yet, in God’s loving, holy, wise plan, He has never promised to keep us from harm (...at least not in this life. Heaven is a completely different story.). Instead, He has promised to work everything that happens to us for our good (Romans 8:28). He’s about the business of building Christlike character into us and it is just common sense that we don’t typically grow in the good times. It takes storms to make the roots of character and Christlikeness grow deep.
 
Joseph, the Old Testament hero, knew what trouble was. He had been sold into slavery by his brothers. Later on, he was falsely accused of sexual misconduct with Potiphar’s wife. For that, he was wrongly sent to prison for many years. Yet, after his prison time was finished, he told his brothers, “You planned evil against me; God planned it for good to bring about the present result – the survival of many people (Genesis 50:20). 

Clearly, Joseph believed that God was responsible for the false allegation and prison time. It was God’s way of preparing the man for the incredible task ahead of being second in command of the major world power at that time.
 
Are you going through some tough times right now? Know that God has ordained this time of trial. Maybe you did nothing to get in this spot. Then again, maybe you did. However, God is sovereignly in control and has orchestrated your present life’s circumstances (Ephesians 1:11) to bring about Christlikeness in you. 

Trust Him. Allow Him to mold you. And then anticipate celebrating in Heaven for eternity how you weathered the storm and were equipped by God for the task ahead.

___________

To read 'Calm in the Storm' Part 2 of 2, click here.