Raised from the Ashes: Easter Sunday

Raised from the Ashes: Easter Sunday

 

“The Lord your God is in your midst, a warrior who gives victory;
he will rejoice over you with gladness, he will renew you in his love;”

Zephaniah 3:17

Read Zephaniah 3:14-20


empty tomb Christ is risen

What is the one thing in your life you wish you could do, but don’t know how you will ever be able? Think about it for a minute. Nothing is impossible with God; Easter Sunday proved that statement. The resurrection of Jesus should not have happened, but it did. He was dead, completely dead. Satan had won, or so it appeared.

But, there was always one thing Satan hadn’t counted on. God, by virtue of who He is, cannot die…completely. All Satan could do was kill the flesh of Jesus, His incarnate person. But, because Jesus is also God, He had the power to raise himself from the dead (John 10:18). And, when we believe in Christ and die to ourselves, we too are raised in that victory.

On Easter Sunday, we not only celebrate the Resurrection of Jesus, we celebrate the victory we have in Jesus; victory over temptation and sin, and yes, even victory over death. If we live for Christ, then we will die with Him, and if we die with Him, we will live forever with Him.

So what is it that you wish you could do in this life, but don’t think you can? Jesus is your victory over all obstacles. If what you desire is what God desires for you…He will do it. You need only live surrendered to His will, seeking His will for your life, and believe.

Jesus’ cross and resurrection was not only the greatest act of love, it was a gift, a gift of victory and power. St. Paul reminds us that we can know Jesus in the power of His resurrection (Phil. 3:10). But, you must not forget that you will often come to know that resurrection power through fellowship in His sufferings. Things won’t always be good. Things won’t always work out the way you want or think they should.

However, if you live completely surrendered to His will, you will always have victory. Jesus is your warrior. He never stops fighting for you. He rejoices over you, and renews you in His love. Today, celebrate the greatest gift, the gift of eternal life won by His victory over the grave. His victory has raised you from the ashes!

Grace & Peace for a Holy Week,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6

Raised from the Ashes: Holy Week – Thursday

“The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.”

John 1:5

Read John 1:1-13


Holy Week By Pastor Brad msc-1

A Night of Shadows

(From my Tenebrae Service Homily)

As we gather tonight in the shadows, we hear the words of scripture and we let our hearts and minds meditate on what it might have been like for Jesus and his disciples that Maundy Thursday night so, long ago. Everything they believed in and had spent three years learning to build, seemed destroyed in a matter of moments.

Of course we know it was not destroyed. Rather, it was changing…changing from an earthly, regional ministry of proclaiming the gospel, (which itself had to give way to death, in order to be raised up) into a life transforming ministry that would sweep the world for all of time to come. That change was only three days away, but must have seemed like forever as they scattered into the shadows in fear.

But, that night, the night on which Jesus was betrayed and arrested, there was only shadows…shadows of betrayal, agony, accusation, and death.

Tonight as we remember, let us contemplate the shadows that may be looming over our own lives. Perhaps some of you tonight have been living in the shadows. The shadows may be many; pain, disappointment, fear, broken relationships, perhaps even the shadow of death. Tonight, let us remember that no shadow can exist for long in the light of Christ’s presence.

It only seems as if the shadows have overcome us, but in John 1 we are reminded that, In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcomea it.” (John 1:4-5)

John goes on to speak about our fellowship with this great light in his first epistle. He says it is the message he heard from Jesus himself, and he is now declaring it to those who read his letter, and he declares it to us tonight.

“This is the message we have heard from him and declare to you: God is light; in him there is no darkness at all. If we claim to have fellowship with him and yet walk in the darkness, we lie and do not live out the truth. But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, purifies us from all sin.” (1 John: 5-7)

We Must Choose to See the Light

John tells us we have a choice tonight. We can choose to walk in the darkness that inevitably falls upon us in this fallen world…or, we can choose to see a light that pierces the darkness. By faith we can claim the light of Christ and know that that light will shine in ever increasing measure in our lives as it dispels all darkness, until one day, one day we find ourselves in the light of his everlasting glory for all eternity. But, until that day comes, the choice is ours.

Tonight let us choose Light, even though we shall leave this room in a little while in darkness. And, just as the darkness didn’t last forever in the lives of the disciples, so too it will not last forever in our lives. We must choose to look for the light. I assure you…it is there. It is here.

There is however, one shadow in which we must forever stand. We stand in it because it’s shadow covers the known world, it’s inescapable. It’s the shadow of the Cross of Jesus Christ. God has shone his glorious uncreated light down upon the cross that all would see it and have hope.

It is in that shadow, the shadow of Calvary we come tonight in this service to bring all our others shadows, all our darkness and despair, all our sin and shame, and we sacrifice them to His Cross.

And, it is in that shadow that the blood of Calvary still flows, and the tide of that flow will raise us from the ashes.

Grace & Peace for a Holy Week,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6

Raised from the Ashes: Holy Week Wednesday

13 You call me Teacher and Lord; and you are right, for so I am. 14 If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet.

John 13:13-14

Read John 13:1-17


Holy Week By Pastor Brad msc-1

Smelly Feet

When you really love someone, you can put up with a lot of things – including smelly feet. I remember the first time I watched some people wash each others feet in church. I was probably about six years old or so. I remember thinking how weird it was. Why would they do such a thing? Then, as I grew older (a young teen), and observed such services, I remember thinking, “Oh no. What if they want to wash my feet? My feet stink really bad!”

I used to play outdoors barefoot a lot when I was young. I know how dirty my feet used to get, especially if I went a few days without washing them (Hey, I was just a kid, lol). I can imagine how dirty the disciple’s feet were that night; they didn’t have the benefit of socks and shoes. Washing your own feet was a custom in the middle east of Jesus’ day, as a person entered a home. If the home was one of a wealthy family, they often had a slave to wash the feet of their guests. It really was a slave’s job. So, why would Jesus, the Lord of life, wash His disciple’s feet? Because He was teaching them to love someone is to serve them.

True Love isn’t Bound By Anything

True love isn’t bound by smelly feet or dirty hygiene. Jesus used the best example of a menial service no one would want to do, in order to show His disciples how much he loved them. And, if He being their Lord, could stoop to such a lowly service, they must do the same. In verse seven, Jesus told them they wouldn’t understand what He was doing until afterward. He meant after he had risen and sent the Holy Spirit to infill them; now, two thousand years later, we should understand.

Many of us will gather this week in Holy Week services, and some of us will be asked to wash the feet of another. If you’ve never done it, it is a very powerful feeling of servitude toward a brother or sister in Christ. Imagine what it would mean to wash the feet of someone you don’t even know, perhaps a person off the street?

Jesus has given us the Holy Spirit. We should understand how important this kind of loving service is. Foot washing isn’t supposed to be about only performing a ritual for each other after we’ve all made sure to clean our own smelly feet before we get to church. (We do, don’t we?). Foot washing is a metaphor to inspire us to love and serve others in Jesus’ name, to be willing to go out and touch the “smelly feet” of the world around us. When we stoop that low, He raises us from the ashes.

Grace & Peace for a Holy Week,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6

Raised from the Ashes: Holy Week Tuesday

18 For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.

1 Cor. 1:18

Read 1 Cor. 18-31


Holy Week By Pastor Brad msc-1

The Daily Cross

As we journey through Holy Week, we are drawing ever nearer the source of our power as believers. The cross of Christ was not only the instrument of Jesus’ death; it is the instrument of His saving grace. All salvation comes through death. Each day, as we read the scriptures of Holy Week, we see Jesus facing His impending death on the cross. Each day, we too want to face the reality of our own cross, so when Friday comes we too may be crucified with Christ.

About now you may be thinking you already faced your cross when you were “saved”. Yes, it is to be saved, in a moment of time, by placing our faith in Jesus and His cross. Yet, it remains for us to see that salvation is so much more than a past event in our life; it is a present and future deliverance as well. The English word, “saved” or “salvation” is best translated from the original Greek as “deliverance”. Scripture speaks to salvation in three tenses; past, present, and future. We are saved, we will be saved, and we are being saved (ex. Titus 3:4-5, 1 Cor. 1:18, Rom. 13:11).

From what are we delivered, still being delivered, and will be delivered? The trials and tribulations of this world. Just because we’re saved, (have placed our faith in Jesus), we’re not free from temptation and hard times. That’s why it’s important we hear what St. Paul is saying to those who believe in Christ…the cross is the power of God to deliver us, and oh how we need that deliverance!

The Daily Cross of Holy Week

Each day, as you rise to serve Christ and others in this world, remember that Jesus calls you to “take up your cross” (Matt. 16:24). Each day of Holy Week, as we see Jesus facing the horror of the cross, if we listen to the scriptures, we will also see Jesus gaining strength to take up the cross.

As we move ever nearer the cross, God will bring to our hearts and minds the things to which we must yet die. Today there is more of me to surrender, and from which to be delivered. And, tomorrow there will be even more. We must see the cross as more than a past event in our lives, but something we face every day. Paul went on to describe it to the Corinthians like this:

“…always carrying in the body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be manifested in our bodies. For we who live are always being given over to death for Jesus’ sake, so that the life of Jesus also may be manifested in our mortal flesh.” (2 Cor. 4:10-11)

If we wish to live with Christ in the next life, we must die with Him in this life, and not just once, but daily. To those who are being saved, the Cross IS the power of God…the power to raise us from the ashes.

Grace & Peace for a Holy Week,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6

Raised from the Ashes: Holy Week Monday

17 And he taught, and said to them, “Is it not written, ‘My house shall be called a house of prayer for all the nations’? But you have made it a den of robbers.”

Mark 11:17

Read Mark 11:12-25


Holy Week By Pastor Brad msc-1

Is Your Temple Clean?

When I was younger, and was beginning to study the meaning of scripture, I was curious as to why Jesus waited so long to clear out the Temple. Why did He do it at the beginning of His last week before the cross? Surely Jesus had seen the money changers and merchants buying and selling in the Temple for years. Then, I learned what a cataclysmic event the clearing of the Temple really was.

Many leaders of Israel wanted to kill Jesus for some time, but couldn’t find the right opportunity. Had He done something as bold and riotous as the clearing of the Temple earlier in his ministry, no doubt they would have accelerated their plan to stop him. The clearing of the Temple was the, “last straw so to speak”. The leaders couldn’t tolerate Jesus anymore. If He could change the way the Temple worked, He could change everything.

The True Temple

In many ways, the Temple is a metaphor for us. Jesus knew the Temple building itself would soon be destroyed, never to be rebuilt. Going forward the real Temple of the Holy Spirit would be the human heart. Everything Jesus did was to save humanity, to redeem and sanctify us. Clearing the Temple at the beginning of Holy Week was a strong statement about everything He was about to do that week. Jesus would soon show us the real, “House of Prayer” is in our hearts as he agonized in Garden of Gethsemane.

As we begin Holy Week together let’s ask of ourselves, “Is our Temple clean?” Our Lenten journey has been about re-centering our lives on Christ through prayer, fasting, and works of mercy. But, just as Israel’s worship of God in the Temple had lost its true meaning, so too our Temple can be voided without a proper cleansing of our hearts. Our prayer, fasting, and works can be to no avail if our hearts are not cleansed along the way.

The Psalmist has a prayer for us to begin our Holy Week. Won’t you pray it today and allow The Father’s House to be swept clean and made ready to be raised from the ashes?

Psalm 51

1 Have mercy on me, O God, according to your loving-kindness; *
in your great compassion blot out my offenses…(to pray the psalm, click here)

Grace & Peace for a Holy Week,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6

 

Raised from the Ashes: Lent – Day 35

7 For he is our God, and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand.

Oh, that today you would hearken to his voice!

Psalm 95:7

Read Psalm 95


Lent 2016 Daily Devotions-4

The Voice

I don’t care much for the sheep analogy scripture presents for those who belong to God. Sheep may be cute, but they’re dumb animals, form all I’ve been able to learn. However, when I do something stupid in life (more often than you may think), I suddenly hear a voice in my head. No, it’s not God calling me a moron; He wouldn’t do that. It’s the sound of a sheep going, baa baa!

We humans, for all the capabilities of intellect and learning God gave to us, can be pretty dumb. So, scripture is right. And thankfully, God didn’t leave us here in the the world’s pasture without a shepherd to watch over us. I think of all the images the Bible presents of God, Jesus as the Good Shepherd is my favorite.

Good Shepherds Care

Shepherds (A synonym for Pastors) are remarkable people. They nurture and care for their flock, keeping them well fed and safe from the wolves. There are many wolves in our world, sadly even in our churches. Jesus warned of this; ““Beware of false prophets, who come to you in sheep’s clothing but inwardly are ravenous wolves.” (Matt. 7:15). Notice that the wolves don’t just run into the flock and bite and devour the sheep, they pretend to be a part of the flock. They break down the flock’s defenses by pretending to be one of them.

Sheep are also easy to scare. They flock together in groups to feel more secure. Sheep have an inbred sense to follow a leader, any leader, rather than to think for themselves. I’m thinking of some great political illustrations here, but I digress. Jesus knew we would be tempted to follow false leaders, so he also told his followers to be, “wise as serpents and gentle as doves” (Matt. 10:6). Those are not easy attributes to attain. Our best chance of gaining such wisdom and meekness is to become intentional about or discipleship.

Be Intentional This Next Week

Today is one week before Good Friday on the Western Christian Calendar. I hope you’ve been challenged through your Lenten journey to become a more intentional disciple of Jesus. But, even if you haven’t done so well this Lent, it’s not too late. Holy Week is perhaps the greatest opportunity to be intentional. Follow the events of Jesus last week leading to the cross. Be in church on Palm Sunday. Then, look for services each day of the week, many churches have them.

My Holy Week devotions will take on a new look and feel for the week. Meditate on them throughout each day and I promise you will hear the voice of your Shepherd. “Oh, that today you would harken to His voice” (Vs. 7b). When you harken to His voice, you will hear the voice that raises you from the ashes.

Grace & Peace for a Holy Lent,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6

 

Raised from the Ashes: Lent – Day 33

“15 Truly, I say to you, whoever does not receive the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.”

Mark 10:15

Read Mark 10:1-16

It’s All About Jesus

There are very few things at which we adults do our best when acting like a child. In fact, it’s really quite annoying when you see a grown up behaving in a child like manner. St. Paul said, When I was a child, I spoke like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I gave up childish ways.” (1 Cor. 11:13). I think we all know what Paul meant by that. But, there is this one thing in life in which we must think like a child – our faith.

I’m a real theology and history nut. I love to study different theologies. I like to understand why different Christians believe as they do, and learn how they got to those beliefs. One thing I’ve observed about almost all church theologies; they’ve made things more complicated than necessary. Jesus said our faith must be a “childlike” one. But, what is a childlike faith?

I think a childlike faith can best be described as the opposite of the Jewish faith. The Old Testament faith of the Jewish people was a faith steeped in complicated laws and traditions. Certainly not all laws and traditions are bad, but the New Testament believer in Jesus Christ doesn’t need to learn all those complicated laws and rituals. In Jesus all those laws are fulfilled, and Jesus simplified it for all of us when he gave the Great Commandment recorded in Matthew 22; that we should love God with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love others the same.

The Simplicity of Faith

Notice how simple that is? John 3:16 isn’t too complicated either; “…whoever believes in Him shall not perish.” We might also consider that the early church grew at an amazing rate the first few decades, as the simple gospel message was spread throughout the Roman world. In fact, there weren’t even any books or letters written, that we would know as a part of scripture, for almost two decades after Jesus’ death. And, it took over 300 years before there was an official New Testament at all.

How did the church spread so quickly and so powerfully so as to transform the known world at the time? Because the message was simple – Jesus is God, the Messiah, savior of the world. Over two thousand years, various church groups have complicated things with defining the faith in more detail, and some of that was necessary as many false teachings arose leading people astray. However, we do best to remember, whatever church or denomination we belong to, that the essence of the Christian faith is simple; we must believe like a child and just accept it – believe in God, and that Jesus is God come into our world to save us from our sins.

Our Lenten season is moving quickly toward Holy Week, when we will remember the last week of Jesus’ life leading to the cross. Won’t you spend some time the remainder of this week thinking about your faith? Have you allowed it to become too complicated? If so, spend some time meditating on the Holy name of Jesus, the name by which all are saved. It’s all about Jesus. He’s the one who will raise us from the ashes.

Grace & Peace for a Holy Lent,

Pastor Brad

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Matthew 5:6