Showing posts with label Grace Point. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grace Point. Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2021

Convicted. James 1:2-8

 Presented to the Port Alberni Men's Breakfast at Grace Point Church, 30 October 2021, by Captain Michael Ramsay

 




Oct. 31, 1517, Martin Luther posted his 95 theses on the church door. Jan. 3, 1521, Luther was excommunicated after he had a number of Papal bulls burned and was investigated by the Inquisition; 1521 saw the Diet of Worms and Luther’s kidnapping by Fredrick and by 1524 the religious wars were well underway in Europe. Though not a soldier, Luther was very active in inciting military engagements.

Luther rejected the authority of the Pope, agreed to the principles of Sola Scriptura and justification by faith; rejected the seven sacraments, church tradition, the prohibition to marry for clergy; and he emphasized the power of the Word of God.



Erasmus: His Textus Receptus (1516) was a very important translation of the NT. He was one of the first reformers. Luther was quite upset with Erasmus as Erasmus spoke about good works being shown by those who are saved. Luther really tried to divide faith and deeds – thus he did not like the Book of James very much at all. Erasmus really tried to reconcile the growing violent rifts between the established church and the Reformers.


Wycliffe translated the Bible into English. He wrote, "Englishmen learn Christ's law best in English. Moses heard God's law in his own tongue; so did Christ's apostles." 43 years after his death, officials dug up his body, burned his remains, and threw the ashes into the Swift River. Wycliffe's teachings, however, though suppressed, continued to spread.


Henry VIII: In 1521 After writing Defence of the Seven Sacraments in opposition to Luther, Henry VIII of England was rewarded with the title Defender of the Faith by Pope Leo X. However, he later began the English Reformation in 1534 because the Pope would not grant him a marriage annulment. His marriage to Catherine of Aragon was then declared null and void by Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury in defiance of the Catholic church – and the fight was on! King Henry VIII rejected the Pope's authority and created the Church of England.


Thomas More (1478-1535) wrote Utopia and was close to Henry VIII for a long time but was executed on the orders of Henry VIII for refusing to support the English Reformation.


William Tyndale (c. 1494-1536) published a translation of the New Testament in English. In 1536 Tyndale was executed. William Tyndale was burnt at the stake for heresy. His final words were: Lord! Open the King of England's eyes.


John Calvin - 1509-1564 - Perhaps the most important aspect of Calvin’s theology was his analysis of the doctrine of Predestination. Calvin argued that salvation was something not freely chosen, rather individuals were elected to it by God. These individuals (the elect) are known only to God. TULIP

·       T: Total Depravity

·       U: Unconditional Election

·       L: Limited Atonement

·       I: Irresistible Grace

·       P: Perseverance of the Saints


John Knox – Brought Calvinism to Scotland. His name is synonymous with Presbyterianism.


John Wesley – Successfully argued against TULIP – Emphasized the personal relationship with Jesus Christ; he and his brother were used by God to start a massive revival in England. He opposed the evils of the American revolution; he was not a fan of democracy and was used by God to spare England from all the horrors of the Atheist/ Deist French and American Revolutions. Methodism follows Wesley.


Zwingli – the grandfather of reformed Theology. Politics, religion, and even soldiery became forever mixed for the Great Minister of Zurich. He died in battle fighting against his countrymen in October of 1531 at the age of 47.

Zwingli and Martin Luther were born on the very same day: 01 January 1484.They agreed on many things but finally did break irreconcilably. Intermediaries could not bring them together which is interesting since the issue that they broke over has been considered by many to be a matter insignificance: they broke over an understanding of Christ's role in the bread and the wine of communion. Both men rejected transubstantiation. Luther argued that when one consumed the bread and wine there was no change in their substance, but there was an addition of the elements of the body of Christ to them.”  Zwingli recognized the Lord’s Supper as purely a symbolic act, rejecting 'real presence' all together. The rift between these two great Reformers continued un-mended. Not even Zwingli's violent death appeased Luther. The unforgiving Luther said, that “his death was merely the removal of another fanatic. Zwingli resorted to the sword and received his just reward.” Worst of all, Luther proclaimed, Zwingli “was no fellow Christian.”

Here we have some significant people whom the Lord used to shape the world and His church. Some of them did some very good things and some very bad things. Some of them died violent deaths. Some of them died for political reasons, some of the died for personal reasons, some of them were martyrs for the faith. They lived in violent times when good church men were divided over political, military, and spiritual issues.

It is the same in the Church today. Covid has divided the churches and has caused many to be uncharitable to each other. It has forced us to decide whether we are men of conviction or not and what our conviction looks like. We face real serious moral dilemma.

During the period of the lockdown when the churches were told we couldn’t meet to worship, many churches and many pastors made many different decisions. Some were probably right. Some may have been wrong.  What made me sad was when people in the churches in our country attacked one another, instead of building one another up in service to Christ. We all had to decide then, like we still need to decide now, if we were people of conviction who were prepared to stand up for the Gospel of Christ or not.

Our congregation with the approval of the government and after multiple inspections, we continued to meet. We were allowed to meet because while we were listening to messages and worship music, we were making food to feed the hungry. We then delivered the meals to homeless and other people in our community. We felt strongly convicted that we needed to continue to meet as the Church to worship God in this way. We followed our convictions. God is good: we were able to navigate that storm by being wise as serpents and gentle as doves. I hope and I trust that churches and Christians who made other choices did so also under the conviction of the Holy Spirit. I hope and I trust we all are men who follow the conviction of the Holy Spirit.

This week I came to a head with some people who work for a level of government. We have a contract with them. A government employee and his advisors were all of a sudden trying to force us to hand out crack pipes and needles to people who were struggling to remain sober and safe – or they wouldn’t fund us. This would do so much damage to many vulnerable people. Praise God, as we remained firm in our convictions to stand up to those who seemed to be in authority on behalf of those struggling with addiction, the Lord delivered us. God let the employee’s supervisor overrule the employee and his advisors whose advice would hurt many people. God saved our people.

Now, still in our pandemic, I face another moral dilemma and I am not 100% sure what I should do. (I would like you men to pray for me.) The Salvation Army’s Canadian Headquarters is requiring all our staff and our officers to be double vaccinated in order to continue to serve God in in-person ministry. I am double vaccinated. I feel for my colleagues and certainly the staff under my care who are unable to be vaccinated for reasons of health, mental health, and/or conscience. I feel convicted to stand up for them, to help them, and I am willing; but how?  The devil has taken the opportunities afforded him during covid to try to divide the Church and the churches. This vaccine mandate has possibly caused a real rift even in our organization. I need to continue to discern where and how the Lord is leading me.

These are some of my struggles, my friends. I hope I am always faithful to my convictions. Tomorrow is Reformation Day. The Reformation was a major rift in the Christian Church that caused the deaths of many people and hopefully much good as well. Many Reformers died for their convictions. Some died fighting with each other or for matters of little or no significance. Some died for personal gain. Some of the Reformers, however, died well. They died – as they lived - for the gospel of Christ. I hope I always live for the Gospel of Christ.

We are faced with times of division in our churches today – not just around covid and vaccines but around many other things. There are many issues and struggles facing us in the church today. So today I encourage you to seek God, hear what He is telling you and to do what He is convicting you to do. Pray for me that I will be firm in my conviction to follow Christ faithfully through these times -and that I will be able to always discern where He is leading me - and I will pray the same for you.

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Sunday, April 28, 2019

Luke 9 and the Miracle of Salvation

Presented to Grace Point Ministries in Port Alberni, BC on 28 April 2019 by Captain Michael Ramsay of The Salvation Army[1]

Hello, I am Captain Michael Ramsay. My wife and I have 3 daughters: two are in high school and one is in Grade 3. We are blessed to be Salvation Army Officers - I am from Victoria originally and we have served in BC, Saskatchewan, Manitoba; Toronto Ontario. We have seen many of God’s blessings in all of those settings.

We have experienced many miracles first hand and today we are going to read about the miracle of the feeding of the 5000 as recorded in Luke 9:10-20 (NIV):

10 When the apostles returned, they reported to Jesus what they had done. Then he took them with him and they withdrew by themselves to a town called Bethsaida, 11 but the crowds learned about it and followed him. He welcomed them and spoke to them about the kingdom of God, and healed those who needed healing.
12 Late in the afternoon the Twelve came to him and said, “Send the crowd away so they can go to the surrounding villages and countryside and find food and lodging, because we are in a remote place here.”
13 He replied, “You give them something to eat.”
They answered, “We have only five loaves of bread and two fish—unless we go and buy food for all this crowd.” 14 (About five thousand men were there.)
But he said to his disciples, “Have them sit down in groups of about fifty each.” 15 The disciples did so, and everyone sat down. 16 Taking the five loaves and the two fish and looking up to heaven, he gave thanks and broke them. Then he gave them to the disciples to distribute to the people. 17 They all ate and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over.
18 Once when Jesus was praying in private and his disciples were with him, he asked them, “Who do the crowds say I am?”
19 They replied, “Some say John the Baptist; others say Elijah; and still others, that one of the prophets of long ago has come back to life.”
20 “But what about you?” he asked. “Who do you say I am?”
Peter answered, “God’s Messiah.”
In our Scripture today, I don’t think it is an accident that God and Luke put the story of Peter’s confession of faith directly after the miraculous feeding of the 5000. Luke leaves us to draw the natural conclusion from this miracle that indeed Jesus is the Christ and that God is a God of miracles.

I don't know what you know about The Salvation Army but we help out a lot of people in their time of need with food and other things. I have done a lot of work with the Salvation Army in Disaster Relief. I have helped out in Ottawa, Weyburn, High River and Calgary after floods. I have helped out after fires and explosions in Saskatchewan. I have helped out after hurricanes and other disasters all across this country and beyond. Emotional and Spiritual Care and Feeding is a big part of what The Salvation Army does to help those in disasters.

In 2008 I was privileged to contribute to the hurricane relief effort in Texas. All of the power was off when we were there – there were no open restaurants, no working stoves, no fridges -  in the area. We had around 30 food trucks from which we helped serve 75 000 hot meals every day; and many people told me that without The Salvation Army they wouldn’t have eaten at all.

I heard more than one account of a contemporary miracle paralleling that of the fish and the loaves. Our canteens (food trucks) were instructed to make sure that they gave away all of their food before they came in for the night. One canteen had some food left. It was getting late so they were seeking someone to give their last Cambro (container) of food to. They prayed. One person then saw a line of about 12-18 tired and hungry looking construction workers so they headed over to offer them their food. They were really appreciative.

As they were feeding these men, a number of school buses filled with people pulled up. It is my understanding that they served over 800 meals at that location – no one went away hungry. Feeling blessed by what the Lord had done, they started to clean up. (Now there was a non-believer, a Red Cross worker on their canteen with them today). Someone picked up the container from which they fed the 800 meals and read from the side of it, ‘serves 90 meals’. The Lord fed more than eight times that number and no one went hungry. The Red Cross worker who was helping them on the truck that day, he began to cry. He said that he had never believed in God – until now.

In our Scripture today, I don’t think it is an accident that God and Luke put the story of Peter’s confession of faith directly after the feeding of the 5000. Luke leaves us to draw the natural conclusion that God is a God of miracles and Jesus is the Christ. He performed the miracle of the feeding of the 5000 about two thousand years ago and he performed the miracle of the feeding of the 800 about ten years ago. He is still performing miracles today and in doing so, He is providing us opportunities to know and to help others know Jesus as Christ just like Peter, and just like the Red Cross worker.

In the Salvation Army we often serve God through feeding people in need; our challenge when doing this is to keep our eyes open to the miracles of God and to be willing to help others come to know Jesus’ love through them.

As I was thinking about the scripture this week my mind was flooded with memories of the emergency disaster work with which I have been involved. One of the first was a fire in northern Saskatchewan. When I lived and worked in Nipawin, there was an explosion right behind our building that set the downtown ablaze.

We were blessed to be able to shelter and feed displaced people; feed emergency responders, and provide emotional and spiritual care. However, lives were lost and there were injuries, lost businesses, and a lost home. Animals, our pets are often a source of comfort in difficult times. There was a couple whose home was lost; they were able to escape but their home, their belongings and their dog was not. The building came crashing down on their dog and the fires raged for as long as they did over the site. That night, in his distress, the pet owner missed the comfort of his dog and he prayed, “God, please let me see my dog one last time – if only just in Heaven.”

The next morning at just before 7AM when I was delivering coffee to the people on site, I heard it: barking. The SaskEnergy employees had heard it first. They told the firefighters. The firefighters rescued him; he was pretty much unscathed. He was saved. The dog was saved! Praise the Lord it was a miracle; it really was! God is a god of miracles. God answered prayer and provided salvation that day.

I have been meditating on Luke 9:10-20 this past little bit in the context of The Salvation Army and the Lord’s ministry through us of feeding and helping people in their time of need and how these real miracles providing real assistance often really lead to eternal life.

And more too: Romans 12:15 says, “Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn”. I was meditating on verse quite a bit one year ago as I was trying to come to terms with a tragic bus crash in Saskatchewan – the Humbolt Broncos bus crash, #Humbolststrong. Do you remember that? It was just on the news again the other day. This bus full of teenage hockey players from Humbolt Saskatchewan were driving the highway between Nipawin and Tisdale when their bus was struck by a semi. Many people were injured. Many people died. Friends of mine lost friends and family members. My heart breaks for them. My heart breaks for the young people and their families.

I was living in Toronto at the time. As I led prayer just after this happened, I had to stop more than once to regain my composure. Songs at the Sunday service would remind me of people whom I knew would be grieving. Images would flash before my mind because I used to live in Nipawin and pastor churches in both Tisdale and Nipawin. I would drive that same highway where the accident happened every week, many times a week. If I still lived there, I would in all probability been out there helping in some way. But also a few years before, at about the same time of day, at about the same time of year, I was driving that same stretch of highway with my two young daughters in the car. Our car crashed and rolled over and we were left dangling in the air. We were okay. I, disoriented, even wandered out into the middle of the highway at one point. We were in shock but we were okay.

I can't imagine the family members, friends and others standing recently on that same stretch of road - and their loved ones aren't okay. But from a distance we can, Romans 12:15, mourn with those who mourn. More than that even we, 1 Thessalonians 5:18, we can give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

Also one year ago this week, I represented the Salvation Army in Toronto as the city was supporting those impacted by the terrorist bus attack that killed all those innocent people on Yonge Street at the #TorontoStrong Vigil. Do you remember that? I lived by Yonge Street. The event was hosted in collaboration with community groups Faith in the City and the Toronto Area Interfaith Council on which I was the Salvation Army’s representative. It was a real blessing to be a part of. Many people shared prayers, songs, words of encouragement and comfort.

One of the things that really resonated with me as I was standing with community members and later clergy from other denominations and faiths was a spirit of gratefulness. People were grateful for the support of others. People were grateful for their community. People were grateful for the response, the love, the giving, and the forgiving of others. We were thankful. We were grateful.

This gratefulness, this thankfulness to God is one thing we can offer as a community when our community in need. We can offer comfort and support to those who of us are healing through giving thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

Yes. One may say, I can see that. We can mourn with those who mourn and we can be grateful for all the support of those as we are in difficult times and we can even learn from all of that but some even take that further to ask why, if God really is a loving God why does He send disaster and worse why does He send people to hell?

The answer to the question why does Jesus condemn people to hell is that He doesn’t. Listen carefully to what I am saying here… Jesus doesn’t condemn people to hell. Hell is real but Jesus does not send people there. Those who are going there make that decision all on their own. Those who stand condemned, condemn themselves by denying what is plainly obvious to everyone (Ro 1&2). I truly believe that God gives us all we need to know in this life from our experiences and even creation itself (cf. Ro 1:18-24) and indeed there will still be a time when every knee will bow and tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord (Ro 14:11, Philip 2:10) and then some, some who believe in the Lord and obey His commandments will go off to spend eternity with Him and some, some who deny Christ (Matthew 10:33) and do not obey His commandments (John14:15), some who simply refuse His love will go off to the hear the weeping and gnashing of teeth (Mathew 25:31ff). This is sad.

This is particularly sad because we know that God loves us. John 3:16 says that He loves the entire world. He loves us so much that He laid down His life for us (John 15). God loves us so much that He sent His only begotten, his only natural, his only sired Son to die so that we may live.

I can’t imagine how much this must hurt God that some of us do actually perish. I am a parent. Many of us are parents and grandparents here. Think about this scenario for a moment. The house across the street is on fire; there are children asleep in that house. Your child is able to save them. Your son or daughter – your ONLY son or daughter can reach them so you encourage her “…Go, go, go! Save those people.”

Your daughter goes. She goes. She suffers every peril in that burning house that everyone else in there is suffering (cf. 1 Cor 10:14; Lk 4). There is the smoke – the deadly smoke, there is the fire, and there are the falling beams. She is successful. She gets to where the children are. She can see them. She is able to make an opening in the wall. She points them to the way out. She yells for them to walk through the opening in the wall. She has made a clear path so that all of the kids can be saved - and then she dies. Your daughter dies so that all these kids can be saved. Your child dies so that none of these kids need to die but – here’s the kicker: the children did not want to be saved. They die. She died so that they could be saved but – on purpose – they died. They did not need to die but they chose not to walk through the opening. They chose to die. Your daughter dies for them and they all die anyway; they refuse to be saved.

This is what it is like for God when our loved one’s reject Him. He sent His son to this earth that is perishing. He sent His Son to this house that is on fire – and His Son died so that we may live but yet some still refuse His love for us and some still reject His Salvation. He sent Jesus not to condemn us to burn in the eternal house fire but to save us but some of us refuse to walk to safety. Some of us simply refuse to walk through that opening that Jesus died to make. John 3:18: “Those who believe in Him are not condemned; but those who do not believe are condemned already…” of their own accord because, 3:19, “people loved darkness rather than light.”

It was the same with our relief work on with The Salvation Army. When a hurricane struck Galveston Island about a decade agao, there was plenty of warning. The early warning system meant that no one needed to die. Everyone was saved who chose to leave the Island. Some, however, rejected their salvation.

There is a story of one 19 or 20 year-old who stood on the waterfront, intentionally defying the storm. He was swept away to his death. I met a man who lost his home and his business and praised the Lord for his insurance but he wondered why his brother chose to stay behind and die. How does he deal with the fact that his brother rejected salvation?

This is the same for us today. We praise God that the early warning for the end of times was sounded 2 millennia ago with the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. We praise the Lord, that he gave his life so that everyone can be saved  - but the sad thing is that some will reject this salvation. Some ignore the early warning system. Some defy God. Some refuse to be saved. But there is the good news. Many will be saved; as we share the Gospel of salvation, many will be saved.

Jesus died and rose again, and we, as long as we are still breathing have the opportunity to be saved from the eschatological hurricane and the eternal house fire. As long as we are alive we can still walk to safety through the path Jesus made through His death and resurrection. We can walk from certain death to certain life. All we need to do is believe, obey, and walk through that wall to eternal life because “Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him” (John 3:17). “For God so loved the world that He gave His only [begotten] Son, so that everyone who believe in Him may not perish but may have eternal life” (John 3:16).

Salvation comes from Christ alone and we who know that have a responsibility to share that news. Just like Christ provided the food and asked the disciples to distribute it and Peter then confessed Jesus as Lord; so we are asked to point people to that salvation the Jesus provided for the whole world. And we are invited to share in that salvation. Can you imagine if Jesus made the bread for all the people and the disciples never handed it out?

Romans 1:16-17 states that I am not ashamed of the Gospel for it is the power of Salvation for all. Thinking still of our work with natural disasters; can you imagine if the news announcers were so ashamed of the fact the hurricane was coming that they didn’t share information? Can you imagine if the meteorologists were so ashamed of the fact that they did not know the exact time and hour the hurricane was going to strike that they didn’t tell anybody? Can you imagine if your neighbour knew that the hurricane was coming and she evacuated but she never told you because she was ashamed because she couldn’t explain exactly what, why, where, how, and when the hurricane was coming? Can you imagine the horror as you look up to see your life being swept away – and no one ever told you how to be saved?

Well, an eschatological hurricane is coming and it is a lot more dangerous than Hurricane Ike. There are people in this city here today who are sleeping in their beds or watching their TVs right now who have no idea that the end is coming. There are people out there who are lost and just waiting for us to point them to salvation.

So today, let us do that. Today let us point people to safety. None of us know when our lives are going to end. We may be taken tomorrow. None of us know when the Lord is returning and bringing with him the end to our world. But, like the weatherman watching the storm, we do know that the things of this earth are going to pass away (Mt 24:35, Mk 13:31, Lk 21:33, Rev 21:1) and it is our job to share with everyone we meet the good news of the way to salvation so that they do not need to perish.

It is our responsibility to share the Gospel for, indeed, the Gospel is the power of God for all to be saved both now and forever. To this end then, I encourage us all to look for opportunities to share the good news of salvation in the upcoming weeks here so that we may all turn to God and experience the full power of His Salvation.

I have one more story for us from my time in Texas helping with disasters. I want to share the story of Scott and the story of Paul. Scott was a canteen worker from central Texas who had accepted the Lord not too long before coming to Galveston to help with relief work and Paul was a twelve year-old boy.

Scott was working on of one of our canteens.  Paul lived in an apartment with 10 other people and was familiar with the neighbourhood activities of gangs and drugs.  This boy saw our canteen near his home and wanted to help.  He approached Scott and volunteered to help.  Scott welcomed him with open arms and very quickly made an impression on Paul - he kept coming back. Scott even gave him T-shirt and hat.  The look on Paul’s face was worth a million dollars or more.

The evening before Scott was to return home from his deployment, I had the opportunity to give him his exit interview. During this interview we began speaking about Paul. Scott told me that he had prayed with Paul on a number of occasions and that Paul was asking about Jesus. I asked if Paul had asked the Lord into his heart. Scott said ‘not yet’ and asked me to help him do that.

The next day, Sunday; Scott, Paul, and a number of other volunteers working on the canteen eagerly awaited our arrival – Paul was ready to ask the Lord into his heart.  We arrived and I encouraged Scott to lead Paul in the ‘sinners’ prayer’.  After a simple confession of sin and profession of faith, Paul was welcomed into the family of God.  We then sang a verse of Amazing Grace and Scott presented Paul with a Bible.

While we were celebrating Paul’s proclamation of salvation, two apparent ‘good-ole boys’ rolled up in a pick-up truck with their radio blaring Hank William’s “I Saw the Light.”  They were angels. They were messengers of God who had come to celebrate with us, then they were gone.

In the midst of all the turmoil and all the suffering God was there. In the midst of all our troubles and all our sufferings today, God is here. Ten plus years ago in Texas and 2000 plus years ago in the NT, when people were without food, Jesus was there. Then and now in the midst of real troubles, Jesus offers us his real salvation; the opportunity to make the same proclamation of faith as the apostle Peter in Luke's Gospel and all those others in my testimony today.

Today we all here have a choice or two to make. For those of us who are presently experiencing eternal salvation we have the same choice as the disciples of our text, we need to choose whether to share the bread of eternal salvation with all those gathered around us.

And for those of us who have not yet taken advantage of that salvation Jesus has already provided for us, we have the same choice that faced the people of Galveston Island. We can either defy the eschatological hurricane and perish or we can heed the warning; we can see the light, choose to be saved; we all have that opportunity today to turn our eyes upon Jesus and celebrate with the Angles sent from God in Heaven.

It is my hope today that all of us will choose that salvation.

Let us pray



[1] Based on the sermon of the same name Presented to The Church in the Village at Shepherd Village, Scarborough, ON, June 2017 by Captain Michael Ramsay. Available on-line at https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2017/06/luke-9-ro-1-jn-316-and-miracle-of.html

Monday, June 5, 2017

Luke 9 (Ro 1, Jn 3:16) and the Miracle of Salvation

Presented to The Church in the Village at Shepherd Village
Scarborough, ON, June 2017, by Captain Michael Ramsay

To view a 2019 version presented to Grace Point Ministries, click here: https://sheepspeaks.blogspot.com/2019/04/luke-9-and-miracle-of-salvation.html
  
Hello, I am Captain Michael Ramsay. My wife and I have 3 daughters: two are in high school and one is in kindergarten. We are blessed to be Salvation Army Officers - I am from Victoria originally and we have served in BC, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and we are currently serving in Regent Park. We have seen many of God’s blessings in all of those settings. Today I want to ask us a question even before I delve into our text: Do miracles still happen? Let me attempt to answer this with a story.

There was a fellow who decided to go parachuting with his friend. As neither of them had ever been parachuting before they needed to be trained. They spent the day at the airport studying wind trajectories, physics, the speed of acceleration of a free falling object, as well as what to do if your parachute fails to open. The one friend did not understand it at all and even when they practiced with a mock parachute, he didn’t get it. He couldn’t even get the mock parachute to work. He didn’t get it.

Then they went to the plane. Flipping a coin to see who would go first, the friend lost and was supposed to jump first. Discovering, however, at about 850 ft in the air that he was afraid of heights, he convinced his companion to jump first.

They were jumping from 3000 ft. As this was their first jump, cords were tied to their parachutes so that they would open automatically upon exiting the plane because you never know if someone new will be able to pull the cord to release the parachute or not. The companion climbed out on the wing (as he was supposed to) jumped, counted to five (as they practiced), looked up saw that the parachute had opened beautifully and enjoyed one of the most peaceful experiences of his life noticing the miracles of God’s creation while drifting to the ground on this perfectly windless day.

The friend, emboldened, does the same: climbs onto the wing, jumps, counts and looks to see the parachute; he reaches to grab the steering toggles on his parachute…they aren’t there. His parachute isn’t there (most of it anyway). It isn’t working. He has to take it off his back and pull the emergency chute all the while following faster and faster towards the ground. As he pulls the cord, he prays: “Lord, please save me.” He pulls the cord, looks, and the emergency chute didn’t open properly either. It isn’t catching any wind. It isn’t slowing him down. He falls beneath the trees towards the power lines and highway below.

It is at this time that the Lord’s hand reaches out and actually lifts the parachutist up in the air, opens his parachute and gently sets him on the ground without a scratch. This is a true story; I am that parachutist. Miracles do happen.

Today we are going to read about the miracle of the feeding of the 5000 as recorded in Luke 9:10-20 (NIV):
10 When the apostles returned, they reported to Jesus what they had done. Then he took them with him and they withdrew by themselves to a town called Bethsaida, 11 but the crowds learned about it and followed him. He welcomed them and spoke to them about the kingdom of God, and healed those who needed healing.
12 Late in the afternoon the Twelve came to him and said, “Send the crowd away so they can go to the surrounding villages and countryside and find food and lodging, because we are in a remote place here.”
13 He replied, “You give them something to eat.”
They answered, “We have only five loaves of bread and two fish—unless we go and buy food for all this crowd.” 14 (About five thousand men were there.)
But he said to his disciples, “Have them sit down in groups of about fifty each.” 15 The disciples did so, and everyone sat down. 16 Taking the five loaves and the two fish and looking up to heaven, he gave thanks and broke them. Then he gave them to the disciples to distribute to the people. 17 They all ate and were satisfied, and the disciples picked up twelve basketfuls of broken pieces that were left over.
18 Once when Jesus was praying in private and his disciples were with him, he asked them, “Who do the crowds say I am?”
19 They replied, “Some say John the Baptist; others say Elijah; and still others, that one of the prophets of long ago has come back to life.”
20 “But what about you?” he asked. “Who do you say I am?”
Peter answered, “God’s Messiah.”

In our Scripture today, I don’t think it is an accident that God and Luke put the story of Peter’s confession of faith directly after the miraculous feeding of the 5000. Luke leaves us to draw the natural conclusion from this miracle that indeed Jesus is the Christ and that God is a God of miracles.

Last week I returned from Ottawa where I was serving with The Salvation Army’s flood relief efforts. It was a great experience to be able to help people in their time of need. There were many stories we heard and experienced in Ottawa.

Today, I want to share a story from another deployment: the 2008 hurricane relief effort in Texas that I was blessed to be a part of. All of the power was off when we were there – there were no open restaurants, no working stoves, no fridges -  in the area. We had around 30 food trucks from which we helped serve 75 000 hot meals every day; and many people told me that without The Salvation Army they wouldn’t have eaten at all.

I heard more than one account of a contemporary miracle paralleling that of the fish and the loaves. Our canteens (food trucks) were instructed to make sure that they gave away all of their food before they came in for the night. One canteen had some food left. It was getting late so they were seeking someone to give their last Cambro (container) of food to. They prayed. One person then saw a line of about 12-18 tired and hungry looking construction workers so they headed over to offer them their food. They were really appreciative.

As they were feeding these men, a number of school buses filled with people pulled up. It is my understanding that they served over 800 meals at that location – no one went away hungry. Feeling blessed by what the Lord had done, they started to clean up. (Now there was a non-believer, a Red Cross worker on their canteen with them today). Someone picked up the container from which they fed the 800 meals and read from the side of it, ‘serves 90 meals’. The Lord fed more than eight times that number and no one went hungry. Providentially, there was a Red Cross worker who was helping them on the truck that day. He began to cry. He said that he had never believed in God – until now.

In our Scripture today, I don’t think it is an accident that God and Luke put the story of Peter’s confession of faith directly after the feeding of the 5000. Luke leaves us to draw the natural conclusion that God is a God of miracles and Jesus is the Christ. He performed the miracle of the feeding of the 5000 two thousand years ago and he performed the miracle of the feeding of the 800 nine years ago. He is still performing miracles today and in doing so, He is providing us opportunities to know and to help others know Jesus as Christ just like Peter, and just like the Red Cross worker.

In the Salvation Army we often serve God through feeding people in need; our challenge when doing this is to keep our eyes open to the miracles of God and to be willing to help others come to know Jesus’ love through them.

This week my mind has been flooded with memories of  the emergency disaster work with which I have been involved. One of the first was a fire in northern Saskatchewan. When I lived and worked in Nipawin, there was an explosion right behind our building that set the downtown ablaze.

We were blessed to be able to shelter and feed displaced people; feed emergency responders, and provide emotional and spiritual care. However, lives were lost and there were injuries, lost businesses, and a lost home. Animals, our pets are often a source of comfort in difficult times. There was a couple whose home was lost; they were able to escape but their home, their belongings and their dog was not. The building came crashing down on their dog and the fires raged for as long as they did over the site. That night, in his distress, the pet owner missed the comfort of his dog and he prayed, “God, please let me see my dog one last time – if only just in Heaven.”

The next morning at just before 7AM when I was delivering coffee to the people on site, I heard it: barking. The SaskEnergy employees had heard it first. They told the firefighters. The firefighters rescued him; he was pretty much unscathed. He was saved. The dog was saved! Praise the Lord it was a miracle; it really was! God is a god of miracles. God answered prayer and provided salvation that day.

I have been meditating a lot on Luke 9:10-20 these past couple of weeks in the context of The Salvation Army and the Lord’s ministry through us of feeding and helping people in their time of need and how these real miracles providing real assistance often really lead to eternal life. There are those however – not as many - who when these things happen, question why God allows tragedy and some even take that further to ask why, if God is a loving God He sends people to hell?

The answer to the question why does Jesus condemn people to hell is that He doesn’t. Listen carefully to what I am saying here… Jesus doesn’t condemn people to hell. hell is real but Jesus does not send people there. Those who are going there make that decision all on their own. Those who stand condemned, condemn themselves by denying what is plainly obvious to everyone (Ro 1&2). I truly believe that God gives us all we need to know in this life from our experiences and even creation itself (cf. Ro 1:18-24) and indeed there will still be a time when every knee will bow and tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord (Ro 14:11, Philip 2:10) and then some, some who believe in the Lord and obey His commandments will go off to spend eternity with Him and some, some who deny Christ (Matthew 10:33) and do not obey His commandments (John14:15), some who simply refuse His love will go off to the hear the weeping and gnashing of teeth (Mathew 25:31ff). This is sad.

This is particularly sad because we know that God loves us. John 3:16 says that He loves the entire world. He loves us so much that He laid down His life for us (John 15). God loves us so much that He sent His only begotten, his only natural, his only sired Son to die so that we may live.

I can’t imagine how much this must hurt God that some of us do actually perish. I am a parent. Many of us are parents and grandparents here. Think about this scenario for a moment. The house across the street is on fire; there are children asleep in that house. Your child is able to save them. Your son or daughter – your ONLY son or daughter can reach them so you encourage her “…Go, go, go! Save those people.”

Your daughter goes. She goes. She suffers every peril in that burning house that everyone else in there is suffering (cf. 1 Cor 10:14; Lk 4). There is the smoke – the deadly smoke, there is the fire, and there are the falling beams. She is successful. She gets to where the children are. She can see them. She is able to make an opening in the wall. She points them to the way out. She yells for them to walk through the opening in the wall. She has made a clear path so that all of the kids can be saved - and then she dies. Your daughter dies so that all these kids can be saved. Your child dies so that none of these kids need to die but – here’s the kicker: the children did not want to be saved. They die. She died so that they could be saved but – on purpose – they died. They did not need to die but they chose not to walk through the opening. They chose to die. Your daughter dies for them and they all die anyway; they refuse to be saved.

This is what it is like for God when our loved one’s reject Him. He sent His son to this earth that is perishing. He sent His Son to this house that is on fire – and His Son died so that we may live but yet some still refuse His love for us and some still reject His Salvation. He sent Jesus not to condemn us to burn in the eternal house fire but to save us but some of us refuse to walk to safety. Some of us simply refuse to walk through that opening that Jesus died to make. John 3:18: “Those who believe in Him are not condemned; but those who do not believe are condemned already…” of their own accord because, 3:19, “people loved darkness rather than light.”

It was the same with our huricane relief work on Galveston Island. There was plenty of warning. The early warning system meant that no one needed to die. Everyone was saved who chose to leave the Island. Some, however, rejected their salvation.

There is a story of one 19 or 20 year-old who stood on the waterfront, intentionally defying the storm. He was swept away to his death. I met a man who lost his home and his business and praised the Lord for his insurance but he wondered why his brother chose to stay behind and die. How does he deal with the fact that his brother rejected salvation?

This is the same for us today. We praise God that the early warning for the end of times was sounded 2 millennia ago with the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. We praise the Lord, that he gave his life so that everyone can be saved  - but the sad thing is that some will reject this salvation. Some ignore the early warning system. Some defy God. Some refuse to be saved. But there is the good news. Many will be saved; as we share the Gospel of salvation, many will be saved.

Jesus died and rose again, and we, as long as we are still breathing have the opportunity to be saved from the eschataolgical hurricane and the eternal house fire. As long as we are alive we can still walk to safety through the path Jesus made through His death and resurrection. We can walk from certain death to certain life. All we need to do is believe, obey, and walk through that wall to eternal life because “Indeed, God did not send the Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him” (John 3:17). “For God so loved the world that He gave His only [begotten] Son, so that everyone who believe in Him may not perish but may have eternal life” (John 3:16).

Salvation comes from Christ alone and we who know that have a responsibility to share that news. Just like Christ provided the food and asked the disciples to distribute it and Peter then confessed Jesus as Lord; so we are asked to point people to that salvation the Jesus provided for the whole world. And we are invited to share in that salvation. Can you imagine if Jesus made the bread for all the people and the disciples never handed it out?

Romans 1:16-17 states that I am not ashamed of the Gospel for it is the power of Salvation for all. Thinking to my work with natural disasters; can you imagine if the news announcers were so ashamed of the fact the hurricane was coming that they didn’t share information? Can you imagine if the meteorologists were so ashamed of the fact that they did not know the exact time and hour the hurricane was going to strike that they didn’t tell anybody? Can you imagine if your neighbour knew that the hurricane was coming and she evacuated but she never told you because she was ashamed because she couldn’t explain exactly what, why, where, how, and when the hurricane was coming? Can you imagine the horror as you look up to see your life being swept away – and no one ever told you how to be saved?

Well, an eschatological hurricane is coming and it is a lot more dangerous than Hurricane Ike. There are people in this city here today who are sleeping in their beds or watching their TVs right now who have no idea that the end is coming. There are people out there who are lost and just waiting for us to point them to salvation.

So today, let us do that. Today let us point people to safety. None of us know when our lives are going to end. We may be taken tomorrow. None of us know when the Lord is returning and bringing with him the end to our world. But, like the weatherman watching the storm, we do know that the things of this earth are going to pass away (Mt 24:35, Mk 13:31, Lk 21:33, Rev 21:1) and it is our job to share with everyone we meet the good news of the way to salvation so that they do not need to perish.

It is our responsibility to share the Gospel for, indeed, the Gospel is the power of God for all to be saved both now and forever. To this end then, I encourage us all to look for opportunities to share the good news of salvation in the upcoming weeks here so that we may all turn to God and experience the full power of His Salvation.

I have one more story for us from my time in Texas. I want to share the story of Scott and the story of Paul. Scott was a canteen worker from central Texas who had accepted the Lord not too long before coming to Galveston to help with relief work and Paul is a twelve year-old boy.

Scott was working on of one of our canteens.  Paul lives in an apartment with 10 other people and is familiar with the neighbourhood activities of gangs and drugs.  This boy saw our canteen near his home and wanted to help.  He approached Scott and volunteered to help.  Scott welcomed him with open arms and very quickly made an impression on Paul - he kept coming back. Scott even gave him T-shirt and hat.  The look on Paul’s face was worth a million dollars or more.
 
The evening before Scott was to return home from his deployment, I had the opportunity to give him his exit interview. During this interview we began speaking about Paul. Scott told me that he had prayed with Paul on a number of occasions and that Paul was asking about Jesus. I asked if Paul had asked the Lord into his heart. Scott said ‘not yet’ and asked me to help him do that.

The next day, Sunday; Scott, Paul, and a number of other volunteers working on the canteen eagerly awaited our arrival – Paul was ready to ask the Lord into his heart.  We arrived and I encouraged Scott to lead Paul in the ‘sinners’ prayer’.  After a simple confession of sin and profession of faith, Paul was welcomed into the family of God.  We then sang a verse of Amazing Grace and Scott presented Paul with a Bible.

While we were celebrating Paul’s proclamation of salvation, two apparent ‘good-ole boys’ rolled up in a pick-up truck with their radio blaring Hank William’s “I Saw the Light.”  They were angels. They were messengers of God who had come to celebrate with us, then they were gone.

In the midst of all the turmoil and all the suffering God was there. In the midst of all our troubles and all our sufferings today, God is here. nine years ago in Texas and 2000 years ago in the NT, when people were without food, Jesus was there. Then and now in the midst of real troubles, Jesus offers us his real salvation; the opportunity to make the same proclamation of faith as the apostle Peter in Luke's Gospel and all those others in my testimony today.

Today we all here have a choice or two to make. For those of us who are presently experiencing eternal salvation we have the same choice as the disciples of our text, we need to choose whether to share the bread of eternal salvation with all those gathered around us.

And for those of us who have not yet taken advantage of that salvation Jesus has already provided for us, we have the same choice that faced the people of Galveston Island. We can either defy the eschatological hurricane and perish or we can heed the warning; we can see the light, choose to be saved; turn our eyes upon Jesus and celebrate with the Angles sent from God in Heaven.

It is my hope today that all of us will choose salvation.