All posts by 5Q

Sunk in a Sinkhole

“One evening David got up from his bed and walked around on the roof of the palace. From the roof he saw a woman bathing. The woman was very beautiful, and David sent someone to find out about her. The man said, ‘Isn’t this Bathsheba, the daughter of Eliam and the wife of Uriah the Hittite?’”1

“In December 1985 an enormous sinkhole swallowed a house and carport and forced the evacuation of four homes in a retirement community in Florida. The hole was about the size of a pickup truck when it was discovered. Within three hours it had grown to 30 by 40 feet and had swallowed half of a small house. Two hours later it had expanded to more than 70 feet, and the house with its carport was gone. Authorities were grateful that it finally stopped growing without doing even more damage.

“David discovered that sin is like an ever-expanding sinkhole. As he was walking on the flat roof of his palace, he saw a beautiful woman bathing. Instead of turning away, he stared longingly at her. At this point the sinkhole was small but expanding. When he inquired about who she was, the hole grew larger. And finally, when he sent for her, he soon found himself and those around him swallowed up. What started out as only a look ended in tragedy for all involved.”2

Many people, like David, find themselves falling into the sinkhole of temptation because they leave the door open for temptation to enter.

Temptation works the same for all of us. It’s progressive. It can start with an innocent look, then a thought, and then if we linger longer on the look, the thought progresses to desire, then to becoming blind to reality and fooling ourselves into rationalizing that it won’t hurt, and then to yielding. Following this pathway can quickly lead one into the sinkhole of sin as well as despair.

To overcome temptation we need to realize how vulnerable we are to the pull that temptation has on us. Note that “what the mind dwells on the body acts on,” so when temptation knocks on our door, the best defense is to change our thinking. To do this immediately, pray, “Help, Jesus, help,” and say over and over, “Jesus Christ is Lord,” until the tempting thoughts are wiped out.

Also, as God’s Word says, “Be on your guard; stand firm in the faith; be men [and women] of courage; be strong.”3 And again, “Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”4 “Submit yourselves, then, to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you.”5

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, may I never forget that I, like David, am just as open and vulnerable to temptation as he was. Please help me to call on you in the hour or even the moment of temptation, and give me the strength to resist the devil so that he will flee from me. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. 2 Samuel 11:2-3 (NIV).

2. “Lessons on Living,” Back to the Bible. www.backtothebible.org/.

3. 1 Corinthians 16:13 (NIV).

4. 1 Peter 5:8 (NIV).

5. James 4:7 (NIV).

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Religion Vs. Relationships

“He [Jesus] appointed twelve … that they might be with him.”1

It may surprise some to realize that God isn’t into religion. He’s into relationships. He’s not into morality either. He’s into reality. And his goal isn’t to make us good for goodness sake. God’s goal is to make us whole for only to the degree that we are made whole will our lifestyle, our actions, our behavior, and our relationships be whole-some.

Becoming whole begins with wholesome relationships both with God through Jesus Christ* and with other loving Christians. As someone has said, “To be is to be in relationships.” We don’t grow in isolation. This is one reason we need to belong to a loving, accepting, non-judgmental, and non-legalistic church and within a smaller group in relationship with likeminded Christians. We only grow and become the person God wants us to be as we are in such relationships. We’re not talking about “head to head” but rather “heart to heart” relationships that are open, authentic and real.

Selwyn Hughes pointed out that “the Christian movement began in relationships.” As today’s Scripture stated, “He [Jesus] appointed twelve…that they might be with him.” If Jesus needed to be in relationship with others, how much more do we?

God’s goal for the Christian is not for him/her to do good or even to be good. It is to be in relationship with Christ and become whole. It is out of being with him and being made whole that our desire to be good and to do good will come. This will be a natural expression of who we have become. As Hughes put it, “Trying to be good without that relationship [with Christ] is like trying to get a stream without a spring, or sunlight without the sun.”2

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to develop a healthy, maturing, and loving relationship with you as well as being in relationship with at least one or two other loving, open, honest and real Christians, so that I will become the person you want me to be, and do what you would have me to do. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Mark 3:14 (NIV).

2. Adapted from Selwyn Hughes in the daily devotional, Every Day with Jesus, November 1989.

* Note: To ensure that you are in a right relationship with God, be sure to read the article, “How to Be Sure You’re a Real Christian” at: https://learning.actsweb.org/christian

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Effective Communication

“If the trumpet does not sound a clear call, who will get ready for battle? So it is with you. Unless you speak intelligible words with your tongue, how will anyone know what you are saying? You will just be speaking into the air.”1

A seminary student turned in his copy of a sermon he had written to his preaching professor for grading. At a later conference the professor told the student how impressed he was with his sermon, how well it was written but that he was giving him a D. Confused the student asked, “Why a D if it’s as good as you say it is?”

“It’s because of your title,” the professor remarked. “Nobody will want to hear a sermon entitled: ‘The Pericopes of Jesus in Relationship to the Eschatology of the Apostle Paul.’ I tell you what I’ll do. You see if you can come up with a better sermon title and I’ll reconsider the grade. What you want is a title that will reach out and grab people by the heart. Imagine that title on the sign in front of a church making such an impact that if a bus stopped in front of the church and the people on the bus saw the sign, it would be so powerful it would motivate them to immediately get off the bus and run into the church.”

The student said that he would give it his best shot and returned with the title, “Your bus has a bomb on it!”2

Whew … from one extreme to another. When seeking to be a witness for Jesus, the words we say (or don’t say) are very important; but of far greater importance and impact is the message that comes from our heart, which is an expression of who we are. This message speaks so much louder than what we say. “People don’t care how much we know but rather how much do we care?” Do we communicate the love of Jesus? If not, our words, no matter how eloquent, may have a boomerang effect and do more to drive people away from Jesus rather than draw them to him.

As another has wisely said, “To win some we need to be winsome.”

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please give me a genuine love for the lost and help me to always communicate your love in some way to every life I touch. And as opportunity arises give me the right words to say at the right time in the right manner so that my life and witness will always draw people to you and never drive them away. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. 1 Corinthians 14:8-9 (NIV).

2. Adapted from Illustrations Unlimited. Edited by James S. Hewett 1988. Cited in Encounter magazine, December ’04-January ’05, Australian edition.

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The Human “Face” of God

“Then, leaving her water jar, the [Samaritan] woman went back to the town and said to the people, ‘Come, see a man who told me everything I ever did. Could this be the Christ?’”1

In the Australian edition of Encounter magazine Ivor Bailey wrote how Trinity College in Cambridge, England, has a long-held tradition of sending students to the slums of South London. At the parish of Camberwell the students sleep in the parish hall and spend a week each year working among the parishioners.

Some years ago a student was helping do some home repairs when the occupant, a bed-ridden elderly lady, asked him if anyone had ever told him that he bore a remarkable likeness to Prince Charles. “Spitting image of him you are,” she said. The student replied, quite truthfully, that no one had ever told him that before. “Strange,” she replied, “even with my poor eyes you look just like him.” To her dying day she probably never realized that her drains were being cleaned by the heir to the throne of England [Prince Charles].2

Some 2,000 years ago the King of kings came into the world as a baby and most of the people of his day, including the religious leaders, never recognized him as the long-promised Messiah because he didn’t fit the role of what they expected. However, there were those who did see him for who he was. Even the loose-living woman, whom Jesus ministered to at the well in Samaria, was so impressed with the fact that Jesus accepted her that she ran back to her community and shared how this stranger ministered to her and she asked, “Could this be the Christ?”

How sad and how tragic when we don’t recognize Jesus for who he is and for the gift of salvation and eternal life he has for all who come to him.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, though I cannot see you with my physical eyes, please open the eyes of my understanding so that I recognize you for who you truly are and always be aware of the leading of your Spirit in every area of my life. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 4:28-29 (NIV).

2. Ivor Bailey, Encounter, December ’04-January ’05, p 15. ACTS International, Australia. www.actsinternational.org/au.

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The Light of the World Is

Jesus said, “Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.”1

Michael Josephson, founder of Character Counts, shares how, “during my idealistic youth I attended an event in a large stadium. Everyone was given an unlit candle. Later, a speaker talked about the power of one person with an enlightened message. He also had a candle and a single match. He lit his candle and walked over to two people in the stands and with his candle he lit theirs and asked each of them to just light two other candles. Within a few minutes, everyone’s candle was lit and the entire stadium glowed.

“It was the most powerful visual metaphor I’ve ever experienced. First of all, thousands of candles were lit by a single tiny flame. What’s more, while the flame was passed on and on, each flame continued to burn with undiminished light. The speed with which the light and warmth of that single flame spread to everyone in the stadium was literally awe-inspiring.”2

In this day of increasing darkness caused by so much evil, terrorism, and turning from God there is an urgent need for every Christian to let his/her light shine. As we used to sing as kids in Sunday school: “This little light of mine, I’m going to let it shine … Hide it under a bushel, NO! I’m going to let it shine … Don’t let Satan puff it out … I’m going to let it shine, let it shine, let it shine.”

The only way we are going to make an impact on the world in which we live is to let our light shine. Our words may be eloquent, our speeches inspiring, our writing powerful, but unless people see and/or sense Jesus and God’s love within us, we are not going to impact anyone.

Remember, too, that all the darkness in the world cannot put out or diminish the light of one small candle. And while Jesus is the Light of the World,3 we are his “lesser lights” and need to be reflectors of his light.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, I’m available today, please help me to reflect your light—the Light of the World—and to be as Jesus to every life I touch and grant that they, seeing Jesus in me, will want him for themselves. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Matthew 5:15-16 (NIV).

2. Michael Josephson, “The Power of a Single Flame” Character Counts 387.5 www.charactercounts.org.

3. John 8:12.

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Is Unbelief an Intellectual Issue?

“Now, therefore, fear [reverence] the LORD and serve Him in sincerity and truth…. If it is disagreeable in your sight to serve the LORD, choose for yourselves today whom you will serve … but as for me and my house, we will serve the LORD.”1

“I don’t believe in God,” say some, “because to do so means committing intellectual suicide.” Really?

There is nothing wrong with having honest doubts about God, asking intelligent questions, and examining evidence. This is good for one’s growth. Furthermore, most of us struggle with doubts from time to time. I certainly do. And there are many things I don’t understand and probably won’t be able to this side of heaven. However, is belief in God an intellectual issue?

Partially yes, but I wonder if it’s not more a moral issue. For example, if I choose to believe in God, I know that I am morally responsible and accountable for my life and actions. This is a demanding path to choose and follow. If, on the other hand, I choose not to believe in God, I don’t have to follow his directives. I then deceive myself into thinking that I am not responsible for my life and actions and am only accountable to myself. This way I can live and do as I please—a very easy path to follow. This, however, is not only self-deceptive but also ultimately self-destructive. For as God’s Word clearly states, in the end “we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ,” 2 and again, “And as it is appointed for men to die once, but after this the judgment.”3

And, by the way, if I say I believe in God but disregard his directives, do I really believe in God? Belief may have many facets but one thing is certain, it is also a moral issue and a moral choice. And it’s not what we say that counts, but what we do.

Furthermore, choice needs to be based not on emotion but on an act of one’s will. As another has wisely said, “A man convinced against his will is of the same opinion still.”

Remember too, “It is choice, not chance that determines destiny.” This includes our eternal destiny. And as Joshua said to the ancient Israelites, “Choose for yourselves today whom you will serve.”

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please open the eyes of my understanding so that I can see my true motives in all the choices I make. Help me to see truth from your perspective and give me the wisdom and courage to choose your way and not my own. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

For further help click on the Know God button below.

1. Joshua 24:14-16 (NIV).

2. 2 Corinthians 5:10.

3. Hebrews 9:27 (NKJV).

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Let God Be God

“In the beginning God.”1

In response to the Daily Encounters on “Do Good People Go to Heaven?” I received many responses. Most were positive and as expected, some disagreeable. On the positive side, in those two days we received 90 salvation responses. On the negative side, we lost a bunch of subscribers, which always happens when I write on “touchy topics” as I like to call them. However, what was most disconcerting was those who claimed that because God was a God of love all good people will go to heaven.

What is alarming is not that people disagreed with me, for my word isn’t of any more value than anybody else’s. Disagreement is a good thing and helps keep me on my toes. The problem is when people disagree with what God has clearly said in his Word and what Jesus, the Son of God, said when he was here on earth. What I have to say is of little consequence but what God has to say is of ultimate and eternal consequence.

Herein lies the danger of disagreeing with God. When we do this, we put ourselves above the God of all creation and make ourselves the judge of God as to whether he is telling the truth or not. When we claim that what God has said is not the truth we are implying that God is a liar. And who are we to judge God, the Creator of you and me and the entire universe?

I may not understand why God says what he says or does what he does. That is acceptable, but to put myself above God and become the judge of him is, in essence, making myself god. Instead of God having the ultimate voice of authority, I usurp his position and make myself the ultimate voice of authority. That’s about the equivalent of an ant telling a man that it knows better than the man—and even this is a hopelessly inadequate comparison. To put myself and my word above God and his word is the ultimate in pride, self-delusion, and absurdity.

What is even more alarming is that putting myself above God is the essence of sin. When man was tested in the Garden of Eden (whether this is literal or symbolic is beside the point in this context), God told man one thing. Satan came along and told him the opposite. Man then made himself the judge of who was correct. In doing so he elevated himself above God and made himself the judge of God. The tragic consequence was that man chose to disregard God’s directive and go his own way. This is how sin entered the human race and is the very nature of sin. What many don’t understand is that sin is rebelling against God and his directives and in essence making ourselves god. Acts of sin are the outcome. To put it another way, we are not sinners because we sin but rather, we sin because we are sinners.

The only sensible and safe way to go is to let God be God and adhere to his directives. To do otherwise is not only the sin of pride (I know better than God) but the pathway to ultimate disaster and eternal damnation in hell which is eternal separation from God and all loving life.

Remember, “In the beginning God.” He will also have the final word in the end. Years ago Nietzsche said, “God is dead.” Today God says, “Nietzsche is dead.”

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please deliver me from the sin of pride and making myself the ultimate voice of authority, and always lead me on the path of truth—your truth as found in your Word, the Bible. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Genesis 1:1.

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Do Good People Go to Heaven? Part II

“Jesus answered and said to him [Nicodemus], ‘Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.’”1

Do Good people go to Heaven? If so, why? And if not, why not?

Continuing our two-part series on “Do Good People Go to Heaven?” If ever there were an individual who would have qualified for heaven through his goodness, it would have been Nicodemus, a religious leader of Christ’s day.

By all human standards Nicodemus would have been a model citizen—strong in character, a man of integrity, and a sincere religious leader. It was to this good man that Jesus said, “You must be born again.” In other words, unless a man/woman is born again he will not even see the kingdom of God/heaven let alone enter it.

“You must be born again,” meant that Nicodemus, like everybody else, needed to be born spiritually (as well as physically) if he is to enter God’s heaven.

Once, after addressing a group of church workers, the famous evangelist Dwight Moody was confronted by an angry person. “Mr. Moody,” she said, “do you mean to tell me that I, an educated woman, taught from childhood in good ways, and all my life interested in the church and doing good, must enter heaven the same way as the worst criminal of our day?”

“No, madam,” said Mr. Moody, “I don’t. God does. He says everyone who would enter heaven, no matter how good they think they are, or how well educated, or zealous in good works, must be born again [that is, born spiritually].”

The difficult thing to grasp is that our sin has made us spiritually dead to God. This is why we all need to be reborn spiritually. To become a member of the human family, we were born physically. To become a member of God’s family, we need to be born spiritually. But how can we do this?

Contrary to what many people think, it isn’t by being good or through good works…or religion. It is simply by confessing our sinfulness to God and by believing that his Son, Jesus Christ died on the cross to pay the penalty for our sins, and by responding to his call to receive him into our heart and life as personal Lord and Savior.

If you’re not sure that you have been born again spiritually, you can be—right now—by sincerely praying a prayer such as the following:

“Dear God, I confess that I am a sinner and ask for your forgiveness. I believe that Jesus, your Son, died on the cross to pay the consequences and penalty for all my sins. And, dear Jesus, I thank you for doing this for me. Please come into my life as Savior and Lord and help me to become the person you want me to be and to live always for you. Thank you for your forgiveness and the assurance that I will spend eternity with you in heaven forever.”

If you prayed this prayer and genuinely meant it, please let us know by clicking on: MY DECISION and we will send you the web address for articlesall without chargeto help you grow in your spiritual life.

NOTE: For more information read “Born Again People” at: https://learning.actsweb.org/art_bornagain1.htm

1. John 3:3(NIV).

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Do Good People Go to Heaven? Part I

“Jesus answered, ‘I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father [God] except through me’”1

Do Good people go to Heaven, and if so, why, and if not, why not?

A Daily Encounter reader asks, “My aunts are of a non-Christian faith and have been good persons all their lives. They are elderly and I’d like to believe that they will be in Heaven. I talked to God about this yesterday. He did not speak directly back to me, but I felt that they would. God is a good and understanding God, and although not all of his children are believers, I think he will use his judgment when it comes to the end times as to who is, and who is not allowed in Heaven.”

Dear Friend: Thank you for your email and for your concern about your aunts. First, however, the only way to know and understand God’s plan for salvation and who qualifies for heaven is to know what his Word—the Bible—teaches, for God never acts contrary to his Word. Never. Furthermore, the issue is never what we feel or think but always based on what God says in his Word.

Second, sad to say no matter how good we are, our goodness doesn’t qualify us for God’s heaven. None of us is sinless no matter how good we are and because God is a God of absolute holiness, no sin or sinner can ever survive in his presence any more than a moth can survive in a flame. It just isn’t possible.

Third, God is also a God of absolute justice and therefore all sinners—no matter how small—must be judged, otherwise God wouldn’t be God. Because God IS God, the just judgment of all sin is death; that is, spiritual death which is actually eternal separation from a holy and just God in the place the Bible calls hell, whatever and wherever that may be.

Fourth, fortunately, God is also a God of absolute love. That’s why he sent his Son Jesus to die in our place on the cross to pay the just penalty for all of our sins. If being good, religious, sincere, or being anything else could have qualified us for getting into God’s heaven, Jesus would never have had to come to earth to die for our sins.

Fifth, to enter God’s heaven we have to be saved or delivered from sin’s consequences. That is, we need to be totally forgiven by God and cleansed from our sinfulness. All we need to do is: (1) believe that Jesus is the Son of God, (2) that he died in our place on the cross to pay the just penalty for our sins, (3) repent of [turn from] and confess our sinfulness to God and, (4) ask God for his forgiveness and accept and invite Jesus into our heart and life as our Savior.

For help to do this click on: https://learning.actsweb.org/invitation.htm

To be continued.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, thank you that you have made it very clear in your Word, the Bible, what we need to do to have our sins forgiven and how we can become qualified for entering your heaven. And thank you for your love in giving your Son, Jesus, to die for my sins and making forgiveness and eternal life in heaven possible. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 14:6(NIV).

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Aussie Boy’s Sacrifice

“There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”1

A headline in NYDailyNews.com reads, “Australian flood hero: Teen boy [Jordan] sacrifices life so that his younger brother could be rescued.” In the following article, Staff Writer, Sean Alfano, reports:

A teenage boy heroically sacrificed his life so that his younger brother could survive after floodwaters ravaged their Australian hometown. Jordan Rice, 13, alerted a truck driver to his mother, Donna, and 10-year-old brother, Blake, who were clinging to a tree in Toowoomba, where a 26-foot torrent of water blasted through the city, killing nearly 10 people on Monday.

The driver [Warren McErlean] tried to help Jordan, who couldn’t swim, first, but the teen told the man to rescue Blake instead.

Kyle Rice, the boys’ 16-year-old brother, who was not with the family at the time, said Jordan would do anything for his family. “Courage kicked in and he would rather his little brother live,” he said.

McErlean was able to rescue Blake, but when he went back to get the mother and older son, both had been swept to their deaths by the current.”2

We can’t help but greatly appreciate what Jordan did in order to save his brother. And what a graphic reminder this is of God’s great love for you and me when he gave his Son, Jesus, to die in our place on the cruel Roman cross to pay the penalty for all of your sins and mine.

As God’s Word, the Bible, says, “Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good person someone might possibly dare to die. But God demonstrates his own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”3

Dear Reader, if you have never confessed your sinfulness to God and accepted his forgiveness and eternal life, I urge you to do this today while you have the opportunity. For help, please click on the Know God link below.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, how can I ever thank you enough for giving your Son, Jesus, to die in my place to save me from the penalty of all my sins? And Lord Jesus because of your great love in giving your life to save me, please help me to always live for you and help bring others to you for your forgiveness and gift of eternal life. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 15:13 (NLT).

2. Source: http://tinyurl.com/6c499l3

3. Romans 5:7-8 (NIV).

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