Jesus1st.Net

In search of the authentic Christ

Archive for the 'His Actions (And Ours)' Category

08 August
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Are We Sheep or Goats?

“Now, before we can give anyone food, we have to make sure they are really in need and not taking advantage of us. If we serve meals, let’s make sure each person only gets one and nobody tries to go through the line twice.”

For I was hungry, but you would not feed me.

“I can’t believe those builders. Today was the second time one of them has come into our yard, turned on our hose and stolen our water.”

 I was thirsty, but you would not give me drink.

“I know we should give to the poor and the needy, but these are illegal immigrants. They are in this country illegally. Why should I give to them?”

 I was a stranger, but you would not welcome me.

“I spent 100 bucks on this shirt. Besides, last time I gave to the needy, we didn’t get a thank-you note. People are so ungrateful!”

 I was naked, but you would not clothe me.

“Visiting hospitals just isn’t for me. I don’t know what to do when confronted with terminally ill people. It’s uncomfortable.”

 I was sick and you would not take care of me.

“I don’t understand prison ministries. Why should we waste our time and resources on people who broke the law. They need to pay their debt to society first.”

 I was in prison and you would not care for me.

 Then they will answer him, “When, Lord, did we ever see you hungry or thirsty or a stranger or naked or sick or in prison, and we would not help you?” The King will reply, “I tell you, whenever you refused to help one of these least important ones, you refused to help me.”

11 January
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What Does Jesus Love?

Jesus loves His people unconditionally, but that doesn’t give His followers a blank check to do whatever they want and to act in any manner they choose. Here are some actions Jesus loves:

  • When we feed the hungry.
  • When we give to the poor.
  • When we give second chances for real or perceived wrongs.
  • When we meet the felt needs of the suffering.
  • When we meet the needs of the infirm and visit the sick in hospitals.
  • When we make an elderly person smile.
  • When we forgive people who do and say things we don’t understand.
  • When we show love to one another.
  • When we show love and compassion to those outside the church.
  • When we show love and act in compassion to those who consider themselves our enemies.
  • When we admit we are wrong.
  • When we come to Him for healing, direction, forgiveness and love.
22 June
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Time Well Spent

How much time do you spend:
Fighting against abortion? Lobbying against gay marriage? Boycotting Disney and  Hollywood? Worrying about the future of our country if your political party isn’t elected?

clockDefending the war effort? Criticizing welfare? Spending money on the building fund? Fighting global warming? Watching Christian movies and listening to Christian music? Praying for prosperity?

How much time does the Bible record Jesus spending on these things?

If we follow Jesus, we should spend our time as He did:
Healing the broken.
Fighting for the rights of the oppressed.
Giving to the needy.
Visiting the infirm.
Feeding the hungry.
Forgiving people who have hurt us.
Showing compassion to people who need forgiveness.
Making sacrifices out of love.
Engaging those outside the church in conversation and friendship.
Praying for those whose lives we may touch.

11 May
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Are You Authentic?

You say Jesus lives inside of you. Does he? I mean, where it really counts? Let’s take an inventory.

Is Jesus in your racism?
Is He there in your homophobia?
Is He the one throwing stones at prostitutes and strippers?
Is it Jesus who is causing your self-righteousness and arrogance?
Is He the one that makes you so angry?
Is it Jesus calling you to boycott movies and demonize Hollywood?
Is it really Christ in you that determines how you vote?
Does the Jesus in you tell you not to help the poor and the hungry?
Is it Jesus who allows you to be greedy and store up as much treasure as you can on this earth?
Is this Jesus inside of you telling you not to recycle and be a good steward of the land and air?
Are you representing the God who lives inside you, or have you trapped him and kept Him from getting out?

Do we expect anyone to believe that Jesus lives in us? Are we kidding ourselves?

27 April
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What If Jesus Was Greedy?

When they came to the place called the Skull, they crucified him with criminals, one on his right, the other on his left. Jesus said…

“Act now! For a one time fee of just $250, I will teach you how to make the most of your spiritual gifts. Now you can be just like my best disciples and know what I have called you to do, where I want you to serve, and how My Kingdom can best use you!”

As the skies began to turn black and the people gathered, Jesus again spoke. “Buy my book. It will teach you how to get the best life God has planned for you. It’s the only way you’ll ever know your purpose in this life. Just $29.99 at any local bookstore.”

Looking down at his most beloved disciple Jesus spoke once more. “Behold my servant John, whom I am now giving sole ownership of my beach house near the Sea of Galilee. It is a wonderful place for churches, small groups and families to take a retreat and grow closer to God. John, remember the going rate is $2,000 per week.”

At about the ninth hour, Jesus spoke again. “Just a few short hours left for me to teach you my award-winning seminar on finding your place in God’s world. Because the time is short, I’ll slash the price in half and only charge the low, low fee of $600 per family. Thousands have been through this program and have found forgiveness for their sins and a new path to the Almighty. This is the final time this course is being offered. Hurry. The gates of Heaven are closing soon.”

Actually…

“In the temple he found those who were selling oxen and sheep and pigeons, and the money-changers sitting there. And making a whip of cords, he drove them all out of the temple, with the sheep and oxen. And he poured out the coins of the money-changers and overturned their tables. And he told those who sold the pigeons, “Take these things away; do not make my Father’s house a house of trade.”
-John 2:14-16

27 April
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Wisdom From Jonah

Last night I had the “pleasure” of hosting a movie night for a half-dozen first graders. Overall, I suppose it was a decent experience with the possible exception of when they started dancing in the middle of the movie and overturned a bowl of popcorn on my living room carpet.

We watched the Veggie Tales movie “Jonah.” Yeah… Veggie Tales… Talking vegetables with no hands. Over the years I have sort of developed a phobia of these creatures. Anyway, I’ll be the first to admit I am no Old Testament scholar, and other than knowing Jonah was a prophet and he crossed paths with the wrong fish, I’m not terribly well acquainted with the story, so naturally after the movie night was over I thought it might be a good idea to actually read the book of Jonah.

It’s a short book– just four chapters. Each chapter is about 3 paragraphs long. It may be the closest thing the Bible has to a children’s book. Reading it, I noticed that it spends only one chapter on Jonah’s life in The Churn and Burble Motel. The rest of the chapter talks about God’s incredible mercy.

The Old Testament gets a bad rap sometimes from people who want to see God as cruel and judgmental, but in the book of Jonah I found a pearl that I really wish more churches would teach and more Christians would read.

Before I get to the pearl let me sum up the whole book in just a few words. God tells Jonah to go to Nineveh to warn them of their impending judgment. Jonah runs away because he thinks the people of Nineveh are swine but he knows God is forgiving and that if they hear about God they’ll repent and God won’t give them their just desserts. Jonah’s running lands him on the Ocean Cafe’s menu, but apparently humans give whales indigestion.

Soaked in vomit and slightly embarrassed, Jonah goes and does what God told him to do, but he’s not happy about it. He ends up sitting on a hill waiting for God to strike the repentant city down. When God doesn’t, Jonah asks God to take his life because he can’t stand the thought of living in the same world as those awful people.

God has compassion on Jonah and causes a plant to grow to shade Jonah from the hot sun. Then, God sends a worm to destroy the plant. Jonah goes ballistic and asks to be killed off again. After that, we have the pearl. God speaks, and tells us how he feels about haughty self-righteous religious people and the rest of the world. Here’s what he says:

“You pity the plant, for which you did not labor, nor did you make it grow, which came into being in a night and perished in a night. And should I not pity Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than 120,000 persons who do not know their right hand from their left, and also much cattle.”

Right there. They aren’t awful. They are individuals with dignity whom God has chosen to forgive because “they know not what they do.” We’ve spent so much time in Sunday school and in apologetics lessons talking about the fish that we have forgotten the point. The point of the book of Jonah has nothing to do with the fish. It has everything to do with showing us the character of our God, how greatly He values people and how he really wishes his followers would stop judging people who don’t know any better.

It’s a good point. Jonah missed it, and thousands of years later, I fear we have missed it too. It’s funny how so often we are willing to accept the grace God has given us but we don’t show that same grace to prostitutes, drug addicts, alcoholics, homosexuals or the poor.

10 February
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A Disturbing Comparison

Jesus’ First Miracle:

  • Went with his mother and some friends to a wedding party.
  • Turned water into wine.
  • The wine tasted incredible.
  • The party kept going.
  • Jesus took no credit.

How Christians are known today

  • Not entirely sure if they should go to parties.
  • Don’t want to touch wine and don’t want you to touch it either.
  • Would never admit to drinking, let alone having “good wine.”
  • Would consider a days-long party to be debauchery.
  • If they did anything good, they would make sure everyone in their “prayer chain” knew about it.

My, how far we have come!

04 July
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3 Years That Changed The World

Three years is not even a full term for a United States President. It is the time that a child is in middle school. It isn’t a long time. Married couples who are in their third year of marriage are still considered newly weds, and a three-year-old child can barely walk and talk. The American Revolution lasted from 1776 to 1783, and it took a little longer before the new government was finally seated.

It’s hard to fathom that in just three years’ time, Jesus could have made the profound impact that he did on the world. In just a little more than 1,000 days, a carpenter from a tiny blip on the map known as Nazareth, managed to throw the world into an uproar.

Some loved him, some hated him, and those in power wanted him dead. Entire revolutions that change countries take longer than that, and yet, Jesus ignited a firestorm that would change the entire world.

In such a short time, this man from Galilee healed the sick, raised the dead, redefined people’s thinking about the nature of God, planted the seeds of a new religion, and started a revolution that has well withstood the test of time. There are churches on every street corner now as a result of events that took place over the course of three years 2,000 years ago.

No other man in history has had that much impact in such a short time. To use the earlier example of a U.S. President, who serves a 4-year term, even the shortest-lived presidencies need time to build a legacy. We always rely on history to tell us who the greatest leaders of our country were. First century Jerusalem was immediately dealing with Christ’s legacy, because not only did he change the world, but he rose from the dead. It would have been easy to settle the revolution that was early Christianity, by simply pointing to a dead body, but no such body could be found.

His impact was so widely felt, that 2,000 years later people are still debating about Him, still investigating Him, and still following Him. Perhaps the reason Jesus has had more of an impact than any other man over a short period of time is because He wasn’t merely a man. He claimed to be God, and while His impact alone doesn’t prove that claim, it certainly makes it worth looking into.

Perhaps the reason He is still making an impact is because He is still alive.