Sunday, July 29, 2018

Matthew 5:38-43: Greater than the Haters

Presented to the Alberni Valley Corps of The Salvation Army, 29 July 2018 by Captain Michael Ramsay

We have recently moved to Port Alberni, BC. It is a great community. We are getting to know people and enjoying experiencing the things that happen in the community. This is one of the great things about a smaller community. Probably, in part, because of this there is only one movie theatre in town; so every week you can see the same movie as everyone else in town, if you want to.

Last week our family went to see Hotel Transylvania 3;  simply because I hadn't seen one or two I probably wouldn't have gone without the convincing of my family. It was an excellent movie. It was an excellent show in the way that George Reeves' Superman, Clayton Moore's Lone Ranger, and Adam West's Batman were excellent shows: the good guys were actually good guys.

I have seen so many shows on TV and in the movies this century where the 'good guys' are somewhere between as bad as and worse than the 'bad guys'. I have come to expect that the 'good guys' will seek revenge, torture, maim, and or kill the 'bad guys'. I have tuned in to watch more than one show 5 minutes in and so missed the opening scene that provided the supposed justification for the 'good guys' to commit atrocity after violent act after hatred after unforgiveness.

Because of all of this when Hotel Transylvania 3 was nearing its conclusion, I expected the 'bad guy' to die and the 'good guys' to celebrate his destruction. To my surprise and delight the good guy was actually a good guy and he risked his life an limb to save the antagonist. When questioned about his actions he replied, 'we must be greater than the haters'

This is true in our life too. If we do not forgive our opponents and if we are not better than the bad guys than in reality we may also be the bad guys. However, when we forgive our enemies and pray for those who persecute us than we really will be greater than the haters.
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Friday, July 20, 2018

Psalm 121: Edgewalk

Presented to Alberni Valley Corps of The Salvation Army, 22 July 2018 by Captain Michael Ramsay

I lift up my eyes to the mountains—
where does my help come from?
My help comes from the Lord,
the Maker of heaven and earth.

He will not let your foot slip—a
he who watches over you will not slumber;
indeed, he who watches over Israel
will neither slumber nor sleep.

The Lord watches over you—
the Lord is your shade at your right hand;
the sun will not harm you by day,
nor the moon by night.

The Lord will keep you from all harm—
he will watch over your life;
the Lord will watch over your coming and going
both now and forevermore. 

John 16:33: “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.”

1 Thessalonians 5:18: Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.

Romans 12:15: Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn.

John 11:25-26: Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life.The one who believes will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?”

As many of you know by now Susan and I have three daughters: Rebecca, Sarah-Grace and Heather. Rebecca is 17 and she is working at Camp Sunrise for the summer and most of you have met Heather and Sarah-Grace who are here today. Sarah-Grace even had the opportunity to volunteer at the Thrift Store this week.

Susan and I are both originally from the Island. Susan is from Port Alberni here and I am from Victoria. We have served God in The Salvation Army in Victoria, in Vancouver’s downtown eastside (North America’s poorest postal code), in Winnipeg’s North End and Stony Mountain Penitentiary (one of Canada’s oldest penitentiaries, the prisoners from Louis Riel’s Northwest rebellion were confined there); we served in Nipawin and Tisdale in North East Saskatchewan and Swift Current in Southwest Saskatchewan – this is where Heather was born – we were blessed to be able to start both a court worker program and a hospital chaplaincy program there. The last few years we have been serving in Cabbagetown and Regent Park in Toronto: Regent Park was North America’s first housing project. We have moved around quite a bit; so grandma, my mom, offered that if there was anything in Toronto that the kids and we wanted to see or do before we left Toronto, if there was anything at all that we would regret having lived in Toronto and not having seen or done that she would pay for it as a birthday present.

June 9th was Sarah-Grace’s 16th birthday and when we asked her what she always wanted to do, that we could do for her birthday, she said she wanted to go on an ‘Edgewalk’ on the CN Tower. Do you know what that is? Let me tell you. You know that the CN Tower was the world's tallest building and what the Edgewalk is, is you go above the nicely enclosed observation decks at the top of the CN Tower and you climb outside on a ledge of the CN tower without any railing, enclosure or anything and you walk around the edge of the world’s once tallest building. And so we walked around the top of it, outside, without a guard rail, without glass or any enclosure; more than a thousand feet in the air.

The path we were walking on outside the building almost two thousand feet in the air was only the typical width of a normal sidewalk. It was quite something. We circumnavigated the building; we leaned over the edge, and looked down on the city so far below. (There was a Blue Jays game on right beneath us and we were so far up that the Blue Jays looked smaller than very tiny ants).

We were, of course, attached by a harness and ropes. This was good because sometime people slip. I was chatting with one of the guides after our walk and he acknowledged that he has slipped more than once and that in that second before the ropes hold him secure, his heart beats a lot faster, as his instincts brace him for that fatal fall. Praise the Lord for the rope. Nonetheless in that quick moment it is more than little bit scary. And, of course, as we and others are suiting up and getting ready to walk out on that ledge for the very first time more than a thousand feet in the air, it can be more than a little bit scary. You don’t want your foot to slip. Immediately I thought of Psalm 121:3 as it says, ‘He [God] will not let your foot slip.’

Psalm 121 was probably written as people approached a pretty scary situation themselves. Some scholars think that Psalm 121 was originally been written as a pre-battle psalm.[1] It may have been written as people were heading off to fight, some of them to certain death, others to injury but all of them seeking God’s protection. Others have suggested that it was originally a travelers’ hymn that they would sing as they were heading to Jerusalem. They were concerned about the mountains and the bandits that may reside there (Verse 1).[2] They were concerned about the sun and the moon affecting them on their journey (Verse 6). The sun: of course, we are always vulnerable to heatstroke, etc. The threat of the moon: some people suggest that this refers to something as simple as some of the scary things that happen at night. The moon can be scary: did you know that the word ‘lunatic’ comes from the Latin word for moon and that the word ‘moonstruck’, translates to the original Greek as ‘epileptic’? [3] The person who originally wrote this psalm had some serious concerns about troubles.

As well as Psalm 121, we read from the Gospels, Thessalonians and Philippians today. The circumstances that the Christians in the early church, who read and wrote these letters, faced were certainly dangerous. We know that according to tradition, all except one of the disciples, John, was martyred. (And not for lack of zeal: tradition says that he was boiled alive but that the Lord protected him so that he wasn’t even hurt!) Paul himself spent much of his time in prison and actually when he wrote the letter to the Philippians the conditions of his incarceration had significantly worsened and we know that his time of incarceration only ended with his execution.

 These were difficult times. I am sure that they – both the apostles and the psalmist - felt at times the same feeling as if they were leaning over the edge of the world’s tallest building and staring at the streets below of our nation’s largest city. I am sure they may have felt sometimes as if their footing was giving away and they were about to fall. That is what Verse 3 of our text is concerned about.

How about us do we ever get to that point where we feel that we are about to fall in life? Do we sometimes feel like our footing is tentative? Do we ever lose our footing and slip? We have friends from our time recently in Toronto (as well as the other communities in which we have served) who have struggled with addiction or other such things. We have on friend who really struggled with an addiction to Crack Cocaine. Addiction to one thing or another is a ledge that many people walk along. Our friend was doing so well for so long. He was relying of the Lord’s help like it was the support ropes that hold us in place when we walk along the ledge. Zeal, energy, and life came back into him. He was gaining weight and actively participating in the life of the corps and ministry…and then one day we saw him on the street corner begging for money again to feed his addiction; he slipped. Many of us who have some history of addiction have sometimes slipped from the safety of that ledge into our addictions.

What are some other things that threaten our safety? There actual physical slips where we fall and break, sprain, or hurt something and so need to put so much of our life on hold. These aren’t so fun. There are unexpected illnesses too: since just before Christmas, in our previous appointment in Toronto we lost both our finance person and our former CSM to cancer. Both of them had children and one of them was a single mom from a foreign country. There are things that threaten us today. Health is a big one: I was speaking with one lady at our food bank here (Diana) whose very young grandchild has been admitted to hospital because she had a fever and won’t eat and the doctors didn’t know what was wrong. (They do now!) There are other scary things that make us vulnerable too: there is sudden unemployment. There are financial threats. There are rifts in community and many scary things in this world. Even just the simple scary things like moving to a new town or getting new Salvation Army Officers! Our psalm today was written by someone who was facing a scary situation and looking for comfort and strength in the Lord.

Jesus really does love us and he is here for us. Tough times do come. The sun is hot. The night can be dark. The mountains can be daunting and we can lose our balance. Not everything always seems to work out. I have one more true story to share in our time today.

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 in the wind 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

The Lord’s hand reaches out in the winds of our life too. He is a God of miracles and he has saved us. Even when life is tough and even as we do struggle He loves us and He will keep us. In the short passage we read in the psalms, the psalmist encourages us with that no less than six times: in our troubles, the Lord will keep us.[4] Jesus says, John 11:25-26: … The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die… Philippians 1:21: For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain. John 16:33: “I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world” for, Psalm 121:8, “the Lord will watch over your coming and going both now and forevermore.”

The Lord is our opening parachute and our rope in life. Our life is like a walk around the world's tallest building. Even the most experienced, skilled, and talented of us can stumble in this life. We can be tripped up by circumstances and events. Things happen to all and any of us. However, as those of us know who put our trust in the Lord, He is our salvation. He can pull us back up to the walkway and He will keep us in the midst of anything and everything we face in this life: as the scriptures assure us, even if we die, yet shall we live. God loves us and God keeps us, So whatever edges we are walking along and whatever our troubles may be in this life, I encourage us to trust in the Lord. He is our salvation.

Let us pray
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Devotional Thoughts: https://salvogesis.blogspot.com
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[1] James H. Evans, Jr., Feasting on the Word Commentary Year A Volume 2: Exegetical Perspective.
[2] Willem A. VanGemeren in The Expositor's Bible Commentary, Pradis CD-ROM:Psalms/Exposition of Psalms/BOOK V: Psalms 107-150/Psalm 121: Yahweh Is My Guardian/I. Yahweh Is the Creator (121:1-2), Book Version: 4.0.2
[3] J CLINTON MCCANN JR, Feasting on the Word Commentary Year A Volume 2: Exegetical Perspective.
[4] ROBERT E FISHER, Feasting on the Word Commentary Year A Volume 2: Pastoral Perspective.

Thursday, July 19, 2018

Devotion 4.12/166: James 4:14-17: Tomorrow Flooding

My oldest daughter and I recently completed a cross Canada drive. We drove for thousands of kilometers from Toronto to Port Alberni, BC, on Vancouver Island. One of our stops along the way was Swift Current, Saskatchewan. We used to be posted to Swift Current so my daughter and I both still have friends in that community. We each spent the day driving around town and visiting our old friends and dropping into our old corps and thrift store. It was great. The sun was out. It was a perfect day. In the morning we continued on our way. We saw a pretty big funnel cloud off in the distance (I don't know if it touched down anywhere). We ran into some hail - literally the size of baseballs (I was afraid for my windshield). And Swift Current flooded. It was quite something. Yesterday Swift Current was as hot, dry, and nice as anyone could imagine. Tonight when I looked at my news feed I saw pictures of how parts of the city were underwater. This surprised me and reminded me of James 4:14 & 15:

13 Now listen, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go to this or that city, spend a year there, carry on business and make money.” 14 Why, you do not even know what will happen tomorrow. What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes. 15 Instead, you ought to say, “If it is the Lord’s will, we will live and do this or that.” 

This is true. We never know what tomorrow will bring. We need to live for the Lord today; therefore let us not put off the good we can do until tomorrow but rather let us do that good today.

photo from the Southwest Booster on-line (July 10, 2018)
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Devotion 4.11/165: Luke 16:10-13: KFC

We visited the world's first Kentucky Fried Chicken. I invite you to read the sign above if you can. It was posted in the museum located in that original KFC and I think it sums up many of the sentiments of Jesus that are recorded in Luke 16.
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Devotion 4.10/164: Genesis 12:3 and Galatians 3:12-22: It is all about the Ducks

We just completed a family trip through Kentucky and Tennessee. One of our stops was to see some ducks in Memphis. These were real ducks who lived in a hotel. Every morning hundreds of tourists would gather around the fountain in the centre of the hotel as these ducks came down from their penthouse apartment and walked along the red carpet to the fountain where they would spend the day until evening when hundreds more tourists would gather to see them exit the fountain and march along the red carpet to the elevator which they rode up to their room to go to bed. (I’m not kidding!)

On another stop on a trip at a Shaker village in Kentucky, my daughter was able to help with another duck parade. She helped them march back into the barn for the evening. On yet another night, I looked out from our motel balcony to see quite a number of ducks parading to the river. I called my children over. I didn’t realize our trip had a theme but it did: it was all about the ducks.

Scripture is like that.

The first time the Gospel is mentioned in the Bible is Genesis 12:3 when God promises Abraham that all of the world will be blessed through him. The Apostle Paul confirms this for us, millennia later, when he points out that that promise is not simply vaguely pointing to a salvation that is to come but that it is specifically referring to the salvation that comes through Christ alone.

The Gospels and many of the epistles spend a lot of time and words to explain to us exactly how we can know that indeed all of history until that point was leading up to Christ’s penultimate appearance and all of history from then, including now, is leading up to his ultimate appearance. As this is the case let us go now and reserve ourselves a front row seat and even ask to be involved in the show. It will be the time of our lives.
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Devotion 4.09/163: Judges 4:1-9 and all of Exodus: Low Tide

I enjoy kayaking when I have the opportunity. This morning I had the opportunity. It was quite nice I saw cormorants, ducks, geese, a seal, and a number heron. I went out early in the morning, kayaked for a few hours and then returned before 10am.

When I left after 6am, it wasn't that difficult to set out. I had to carry the kayak over a few rocks but it wasn't that difficult. It was certainly manageable anyway. While I was admiring the birds and kayaking around the bays, however, something happened: the tide went out. The tide went way out. I have been kayaking in this area a number of times over the years and I have never seen the tide that far out before. I paddled around the corner from where I launched in order to land and I noticed that the beach had grown by quite a distance which meant that I had a long way to carry my kayak before I could put it away.

Kayaks are relatively light and light and I am not that heavy so I was able to paddle quite a way into the shallow water but when I had paddled as far as I could paddle there was still a long way that I needed to take my kayak.

I hopped out of the boat and immediately that wet sand ate both of my shoes. I pried them from the sand and put them in the boat. I then, barefoot, dragged the kayak as far as I could in the soft mud before I hit the rocks that I would need to lift the boat over. I tried to continue walking barefoot over the rocks: they were too sharp. I put on my muddy soggy footwear. They did not want to stay on my feet but, nonetheless, I managed to get my kayak to where it needed to go. I was more exhausted from 10-15 minutes of putting the boat away than I was from 3 hours of paddling.

This reminds me of Barak and the Exodus. God and Deborah instructed Barak to save the Israelites. Barak declined unless a certain condition of his was met. Because Barak declined the Lord's offer as it was, the Lord gave the glory to another. He still saved Israel. He still used Barak but he gave the glory to another.

In the book of Exodus the generation that the Lord led out of Egypt refused the opportunity God gave them to enter the Promised Land, as a result almost none of that generation entered the Promised Land. God still did what he said he was going to do: bring the people into the Promised Land, it is just that because the first generation refused to follow him there, it was a lot more difficult.

It is the same with us. God is sovereign. His will will be done, it is just a matter of whether we will be a part of it or not. If we listen to God and follow his lead, it is like having the sense to read the tide charts before you set out in your kayak. You get where you are going a lot nicer and easier than if you don't and the tide goes out well you are away. So let us resolve to seek and follow the Lord in all that we do today.
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Devotion 4.08/162: Philippians 3:15-18: Me Too (without the hashtag)

Philippians 3 is a great chapter in a great book. It is, among other things a great call to perseverance. You know what perseverance is? Perseverance is the ability to get through difficult times. And you know why God gives us the ability to get through difficult times? Because He has even more difficult times for us to get through (cf. Romans 5:3,4).

There is a popular song these days by Meghan Trainor called Me Too. Its chorus repeats, ‘if I were you, I’d wanna be me too.’

Philippians is a letter Paul wrote while he was in jail awaiting execution. He voluntarily suffered so much. He didn’t need to be there but because God is most important to him he is in jail, he is on death row and instead of telling all his friends to pray for his release, his ease, or to run for the hills so this doesn’t happen to them; Paul says in essence, ‘if I were you (outside, free, and not on death row) I would want to be me too.’ Paul writes, ‘Join together in following my example, brothers and sisters, and just as you have us as a model, keep your eyes on those who live as we do’ even though it may cost you everything, even your freedom and your life.

Paul goes on to write, ‘for, as I have often told you before and now tell you again even with tears, many live as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their destiny is destruction, their god is their stomach, and their glory is in their shame. Their mind is set on earthly things.’ But you should live as I do and you will have real freedom.
This is quite important. Do you see why Paul wishes we could be like him even though he is in jail? It is because he is there serving God. Paul's life isn't easy. Paul gave up basically all claims to an easy life when he became a Christian. That's when he began his journey towards imprisonment and death and everyone knows that. This is why Philippians is such an important letter. Philippi is a rich city. Paul, on death row here, lets us know how to really have life abundantly. Paul, who used to be every bit as privileged as the Philippians, tells them that he cries not because he is in prison; he cries because they, who are free, really are missing out on something. It is Paul who is living the free life of someone who is redeemed.

I saw an article in the National Post the other week. It was about the curse of the lottery. Maybe even more than two-thirds of big lottery winners in Canada are broke within seven years of becoming millionaires and some have new or worse drug habits and some are now in jail for those habits or for murder or for something else. Success, happiness, wholeness, life isn’t about having it easy by getting things or getting away with things. If in this life, if you have so much but do not have the love of God that produces the contentment of holiness than you have nothing. And then, no matter how wealthy you are, 'If I was you I'd wanna be me too'.

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Devotion 4.07/161: Matthew 7:16-20: Green Tractors Please

We are presently moving from Toronto to Vancouver Island. Prior to living in Toronto we spent a decade or so on the prairies.

As my daughter and I hit the highway heading towards the prairies we noticed a curious thing. We drove past a John Deere dealership (or so the sign said) but all of the vehicles were orange. Do you see what the problem is?

For those who have never lived on the prairies let me explain: John Deere tractors are green! They are not orange! Kubota tractors are orange, New Holland tractors are blue, Case tractors are red and John Deere is green. This dealership either had all the wrong vehicles or it had the wrong sign. Does that statement ever sum up our life?

Do we ever claim to be Christian but have the wrong colour tractors in our life? I encourage us each today to take an inventory and see if indeed the things in our life reflect the faith that we proclaim.

Devotion 4.07/161: Matthew 18:15-16: Ticks off Dollywood!

We were recently visiting Dollywood in Tennessee. It was great. There are many things to see and do. We stayed two days. The first day we went on rides, saw the Southern Gospel Music Hall of Fame, a show about the Coat of Many Colours, the fireworks and much more.

The second day we went to the water park. My youngest loved it. We split up because the older girls wanted to go on different slides than the youngest. I spend the afternoon and evening my youngest daughter. My eldest and I started the day together going on some of the more adventurous rides.

It was when we were in a long line to go down a short ride that my daughter noticed that I had something on the back of my arm. I felt it but I couldn't flick it off so I thought it was nothing. She said that she thought it was something and that she thought it was alive. I felt it again and actually had to dig it out of my skin. It was a tick! (In all my time in the woods and the outdoors in my life, the first time I ever experience a tick is at a water slide!)

I am glad my daughter noticed the tick! I am glad she told me about the tick. I'm glad that when I thought it was nothing she told me that she thought it was alive. At this point a lady in line looked to confirm this as well. I am glad they pointed out the tick to me so that I could remove it, otherwise I might find myself in a serious situation.

Sin in our life is like a tick in our body. If we notice Sin in someone's life we need to point it out to them in such a way as they will notice it and want to remove it from their life. We don't talk about someone for having a tick or sin in their life, we talk to them. We don't make fun of them or lecture them or avoid them or annoy them because they have a tick or sin in their life, we talk to them. We don't talk to them angrily or condescendingly. The point is not to make them mad, ashamed or defensive; the point is to let them know they have a tick or sin in them because we love them and we don't want them to suffer. That is why if they don't believe us or can't remove the tick or the sin that we are supposed to get others to help us to help them.

Sin, like a tick, can cause serious problems for our health and our life. This is why we do our best to help others be free of sin and ticks, because we love them.

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Devotion 4.06/160: Hebrews 11:13-14: Wonderworks

Presented to Alberni Valley Ministries Men's Breakfast, 13 July 2019, by Captain Michael Ramsay

When we were visiting Pigeon Forge, my youngest daughter was quite taken by a tourist attraction that we never did actually have the time to go into and look around. Wonderworks is an upside down building. It is that fact that really attracted her to it. I am sure we have seen similar buildings in Florida and Niagara.

What struck me, as relating to our Faith walk, is how much our world seems turned upside down. I don't know how many conversations I have had over the last few years with people who are just honestly confused. Things that were good when they were a kid are now considered bad, Things that were considered evil and now exalted. The popular view on some topics when I was a teenager, if anyone was to espouse it now they would be shunned. The world seems very much upside down.

As followers of Christ, we are always like that to some regard. The Christian message has always been a radical one: offering mercy in place of vengeance and forgiveness in place of hate. Loving God by loving your neighbour among other things. Healing and wholeness instead of retaliation and division. We know Christ's Kingdom of Forgiveness will come and many have died while still walking in faith only seeing this Kingdom in a distance. We still must walk in faith, mercy, forgiveness. As we do we will find that our lives seem upside down to many others. At Christ's return, we will see, however, that we are really the ones who were rightside up all along. At that time he will set everything right in His Kingdom to come.
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Devotion 4.05/159: Luke 14:28-33: Credit Card Holiday

We have just finished a great family vacation through Kentucky and Tennessee. The exchange rate was not in our favour and gas and food were more expensive than we had anticipated. The weather convinced us to spend more money than we had planned on hotels rather than the campsites that we had planned on staying at. We had planned our vacation in advance so, even with these factors in play, we were able to make it back to Canada after a great holiday.

I did think though about these verses in Luke 14:

28 “Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Won’t you first sit down and estimate the cost to see if you have enough money to complete it? 29 For if you lay the foundation and are not able to finish it, everyone who sees it will ridicule you, 30 saying, ‘This person began to build and wasn’t able to finish.’

31 “Or suppose a king is about to go to war against another king. Won’t he first sit down and consider whether he is able with ten thousand men to oppose the one coming against him with twenty thousand? 32 If he is not able, he will send a delegation while the other is still a long way off and will ask for terms of peace. 33 In the same way, those of you who do not give up everything you have cannot be my disciples.

To follow Jesus, the cost is everything.  Life will throw difficulties our way. That is just what happens. We need to realize that and be prepared. We need to finish what we started or we are lost. Jesus is our credit card and as he is the account we can draw on in times of trouble. As we press ahead, relying on him. Everything will be alright.
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Devotion 4.04/158: 1 Corinthians 10:11: Signs

We had the opportunity this summer to visit the old Ramsay castle in Scotland. It is great. It has secret passages, stairs hidden in floors and even a secret doorway in a bookcase. One thing I found particularly interesting was while we were exploring a back staircase at the castle: there was a sign that said, ‘turn left for the Spa, turn right for the dungeon’. I would hate to make that wrong turn.

Warning us not to make wrong turns is one thing our pericope today is about. We would hate to walk the staircase of our life hoping for the eternal spa and turn into the eternal dungeon. Now, of course, God is not going to let us wander into an eternal dungeon by accident: He does a lot to point us to the safety that comes from Christ alone. He posts many signs like the dungeon/spa sign on the walls of our lives. 1 Corinthians 10:11 tells us that one such sign pointing us away from the dungeon, towards the eternal spa is the experience of those who have gone before us.

Another sign is the encouragement about how we can trust and follow God to the eternal spa even as we go through very difficult passages. Paul draws our attention to the sign of the fiery cloud leading the Hebrews out of Egypt, the parting of the sea, the manna they ate and the water from the rock they drank in the desert (1 Cor. 10:1-4). These are all signs pointing us to the spa, the grace of God we can experience now and forever as we walk with Him through the stairwell of our life.

God knows that sometimes the staircases we navigate in our life can be dark and scary and sometimes we need the encouragement of 1 Corinthians 10:12, to watch our step so we do not fall. Sometimes there is barely any room to move; sometimes these staircases can get pretty dark and sometimes some have wondered if they can even still see the light of God at all through the troubles, trials, and tribulations that can sometimes line the walls of our lives.

Jack Layton, in his farewell letter to Canadians, wrote “My friends, love is better than anger. Hope is better than fear. Optimism is better than despair. So let us be loving, hopeful and optimistic. And we’ll change the world.” The Apostle Paul offers us this same encouragement. And I promise that as difficult as the staircase of our lives may be at times that there is no testing that has overtaken us that God has not already escorted someone safely through before.

So as dark as our lives may seem at times, we can ‘keep on keeping on’ because God is faithful and He will see us through even the most difficult circumstances. As we serve Him in the midst of our very real struggles I know that He will comfort and sustain us and I know that as dark as our lives may get, he will post signs pointing us away from the dungeon of our trials and towards the eternal spa that is grace of God in our lives.

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Devotion 4.03/157: James 2:25: Redeemed

Today when we hear the name Rahab, we often think of this lady whom the LORD used to save the spies and deliver Jericho into the Hebrews’ hands. Did you know the name ‘Rahab’ translated from Hebrew means ‘broad’ or ‘fat’ and in common usage it refers to ‘fierceness’, ‘insolence’, and ‘pride.’ In the Bible, the word ‘Rahab’ is used commonly as an insult for the country of Egypt. Rahab, the lady in this passage, was a marginalized, prostituted Canaanite. But Rahab is saved and Rahab is redeemed!

After Rahab’s faith and deeds were used by God to save the Hebrew spies and deliver Jericho over to the LORD, do you know how the Lord transformed her life? According to Jewish tradition, she, a lady who was extremely marginalized, became the ancestor of eight priests (Tal Megillah 14b). She is listed as one of four women of surpassing beauty (Tal Megillah 15a). Rahab may mean ‘broad’ but this Rahab is nonetheless a beauty. She is – to quote Reba – she is not a back of the store lady; she is a front of the store lady! Like we all can be front of the store people! The Bible tells us Rahab married Salmon, one of the princes of Judah (Ruth 4:21, 1 Chr 2:11, Mt 1:5).

We remember the wealthy landowner, Boaz, who married the Mobitess Ruth; Boaz was Rahab the Canaanite’s son. Ruth was Rahab’s daughter-in-law. Ruth and Boaz had a child, Obed, who was Rahab’s grandson. His son, Rahab’s great grandson was Jesse and his son, Rahab’s great great grandson was King David from whose line God promised Salvation and Dominion for ever! (Mt 1:5-6; cf. 2 Sam 7). This salvation was of course accomplished through another descendant of Rahab the redeemed Canaanite – that is Jesus, the Redeemer himself! (cf. Mt 1:16).

God chose to do this through, to send His only begotten son through the ancestral line of the redeemed life of Rahab. Scholar Richard Hess tells us, “the story of Rahab confirms God’s welcome to all people, whatever their condition. Christ died for all the world and the opportunity is available for all to come to him through faith, even the chief of sinners [like you and like me] (1 Tim 1:15)...Rahab exhibits faith and understanding of the God who saves her. She becomes part of the family line that leads to the birth of Jesus (Mt 1:5) and [she is] a model of faith for all Christians” (Hb 11:31).

Rahab, who was once a prostituted Canaanite on the margins of society stands redeemed, saved, holy, cleansed, and as one of the heroes of the faith. You and I here today, no matter what we done, no matter who we have been, no matter what has happened to us, we too can be saved, we too can be redeemed. Jesus died on the cross so that we could die to our sins and He rose from the grave so that we could live out a holy, redeemed life (cf. Romans 10:9-13)!

As such, it is my prayer that today each of us would - like righteous Rahab - take God up on His offer of His Salvation and of His Redemption.

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Devotion 4.02/156: Genesis 2:16-17: Responsibility

When God made this wonderful garden out of nothing at all for Adam and Eve to tend. He asked something very simple in return. God made the world for His people and He just told them to take care of it and obey Him in some simple ways.

·         Genesis 1:28a: “God blessed them and said to them, ‘Be fruitful and increase in number; fill the earth and subdue it…”
·         Genesis 1:28b: “Rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the air and over every living creature that moves on the ground.’”
·         Genesis 2:16-17: “And the LORD God commanded the man, ‘You are free to eat from any tree in the garden; but you must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, for when you eat of it you will surely die.’”

God says 1) populate the earth (Genesis 1:28a), 2) take care of everything in it (Genesis 1:28b) and 3) in doing this I’ll let you eat anything you want in the garden – but just not the fruit from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, it’s not safe. I’m saving that for something (Genesis 2:16-17).
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This is like if you, as parents, are going out on a Saturday night leaving your older children to baby-sit their younger sibling for the first time. “Be good and take care of the house”, you say. “I want you to unload the dishwasher and you can have whatever treats you want before bed but just don’t touch the cupcakes; they’re for church on Sunday, so don’t eat the cupcakes or there will be real trouble.” Then you come home, very pleased with your children that they are now old enough to be left alone, you look in the kitchen for something to eat and you notice that where the cupcakes should be… they are gone. That disappointment, sadness and anger must be a reflection of the disappointment God felt when He came back to the garden and saw that – even though there was only one fruit He was saving – He came back and it was gone. As parents, of course, if our children ate the cupcakes we would realize that they are not quite ready for the responsibility of being left alone at home and so we would wait awhile before trusting them to take care of the house again. The children would certainly have a time-out from that responsibility. It was the same with God. He wasn’t about to leave His children in the garden when they betrayed His trust. Adam and Eve couldn’t be trusted to take care of the garden. People couldn’t be trusted. We couldn’t be trusted. That responsibility was thus removed from us until we are more able to handle it (Genesis 3).

Humanity has aged quite a bit since Adam and Eve. Jesus now provides us again the opportunity to have access to the tree of eternal life. We also have a responsibility, like older children, to take care of our younger siblings and point them to the fullness of that eternal life with Christ. How do we doing with this responsibility?
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Devotion 4.01/155: 3 John 11: Imitation Parrot

Late one night, a burglar breaks into a house that he thinks is empty. He tiptoes through the living room but suddenly freezes in his tracks when he hears a voice say: “Jesus is watching you!”

When it becomes quiet again, the burglar creeps forward. And again the voice says, “Jesus is watching you.”

The burglar stops dead in his tracks. He is frightened. Frantically, he looks all around. In a dark corner, he spots a… birdcage and in the cage is… a parrot.

Gathering his senses, he asks the parrot: “Was it you all this time who said, ‘Jesus is watching me?’”

“Yes”, said the parrot.

The burglar breathes a sigh of relief, then gaining some confidence he asks the parrot: “What’s your name?”

“Clarence,” says the bird.

“That's a dumb name for a parrot,” sneers the now confident burglar. “What kind of a silly person would name a bird, ‘Clarence?’”

The parrot replies, “The same person who would call his attack dog ‘Jesus’… Jesus is watching you.”

Parrots are good imitators and our verse today is exhorting us to be good imitators, it says, 3 John 11: “Dear friend, do not imitate what is evil but what is good. Anyone who does what is good is from God. Anyone who does what is evil has not seen God.”

Pertaining to this imitation: I think that we have all heard the analogy at one time or another in a sermon about counterfeiting counter-measures and how the authorities spot counterfeit currency. What they don’t do to learn how to identify counterfeit money is study counterfeit money. Instead what they do do is study real money. When they can identify the real thing then they know that all else is not the real thing. It is the same with us as it is only when we spend more time focusing on Christ, in prayer, worship, and Bible study, and less time on ourselves indulging in the selfish values of the world that we recognize what is good and what is evil. And also as we spend more of the currency of our time with God we will obviously become more like Him; however, there are those who will choose instead to use their time spending the counterfeit currencies of the world doing what is selfish and what is evil. 3 John tells us these people have not even seen God. We need to spend time with God to see Him and we need to spend time imitating what is good to build up for ourselves the real treasures that are in heaven (Matthew 6:19-24).

3 John 11: “Dear friend, do not imitate what is evil but what is good. Anyone who does what is good is from God. Anyone who does what is evil has not seen God.”

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Devotion 4.0/154: 2 Corinthians 9:7 Volunteers

 “Remember this: Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows generously will also reap generously. Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. And God is able to bless you abundantly, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work. As it is written: ‘They have freely scattered their gifts to the poor; their righteousness endures forever.”

Staff and management and Officers, we receive a paycheque or a living allowance for the work we do. We are blessed by God as we serve Him and others.

Volunteers are a double blessing. You help without any payment. If there is no money to pay for the work to be done, God still uses you to do His work. It is only because of you that any of the work here is able to be done at all.

You come out to help at the times that you help, on the days that you help, in the seasons that you help not under any compulsion, like our scripture today says. God really does love you as you are a cheerful giver of your time. Everyday that you come to help, you are a blessing to God, to us, and to those who we help in Jesus’ name. As it is written, you who have freely scattered their gifts to the poor, your righteousness endures forever. God’s righteousness endures forever. And for all of that and all you do, we are very thankful and I praise the Lord.

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Devotion 3.52/153: John 13:13-17: Spoonful of Salvation

This story is from an article by Reverend Dr. Darren J.N. Middleton published in The Expository Times where he relates a Ghanaian parable:

Once Kwaku Anansie lived in a town filled with wicked [selfish] people. They were always fighting, backbiting … [gossiping, and just being selfish]. Finally Kwaku decides to teach the people a lesson. He tells his wife to prepare a large banquet. Then he invites everyone in the town on one condition, that they have to eat with the spoons that are provided. As the guests arrive Kwaku hands each guest a spoon with a very [very] long handle. The guests then begin to eat the delicious food set before them. But since they are sitting close together they begin to disturb each other with their long spoons. In a short time all the guests are pushing, shouting, and fighting with one another. Kwaku [then] stands on a chair and calls for order. ‘I have invited you to a banquet and you have turned it into a battleground. Why are you doing this?’ One of the guests then raises his spoon and shouts, ‘Kwaku Anansie, you have [betrayed and] deceived us and made us look foolish! Nobody can eat with these long spoons you have given us! Kwaku responds, ‘no, it is not that I have made you look foolish but rather your own selfishness has betrayed you.’ Then he calls one of the guests to sit across the table from him. ‘This is the way to use these spoons’, he says as he dips his long spoon into the soup and feeds the person across from him.

Kwaku fed his guest personally, everyone at the banquet needed to do the same in order to enjoy the meal. Jesus washed his disciples feet and every one of us who has been cleansed by Jesus needs to do likewise at the eschatological banquet as we inherit everlasting life. Jesus says, John 13:13-17:

“You call me ‘Teacher’ and ‘Lord,’ and rightly so, for that is what I am. 14 Now that I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also should wash one another’s feet. 15 I have set you an example that you should do as I have done for you. 16 Very truly I tell you, no servant is greater than his master, nor is a messenger greater than the one who sent him. 17 Now that you know these things, you will be blessed if you do them.

Now that we know these things, we will be blessed if we do them. This is important. There is no room for selfishness at the everlasting banquet. There is no room for thinking we are above helping others and serving them as a servant would serve a friend of his master. This is the only way we can truly enjoy our place at the eternal feast with Christ.

In what ways can we accept a spoonful of salvation from someone else while we offer them the same? 
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Devotion 3.51/152: John 15:1-15: Vine Pruned

We have been getting our garden all ready lately. We have been pulling weeds and pruning trees, mowing, and raking. My father is good at taking care of a yard; much better than am I. Growing up we always had more than one garden and many fruit trees to take care of. My dad even grafted an apple branch on a pear tree. He was very good at yard work. There was a joke at my house though about my dad's pruning. My mom would say that he would prune so much that there would be no tree left. I did a similar pruning job on a vine in our back yard yesterday.

This, of course, reminded me of John 15. If we don't prune the vine or the tree it will not produce as much fruit as it can. God gives us opportunities in our life to go through periods of pruning. These are opportunities for us to have cut out many negative things in our lives. Sometimes it may feel as if we have got nothing left of us but the truth is as we remain in the Lord through these times of pruning we will bear much fruit.

None of us necessarily like to be pruned. But when have you seen much fruit produced in your life after a period of pruning?

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Devotion 3.50/151: Deuteronomy 6:1-7: Poison and Children

The other night my teenage daughters and I went to see Poison and Cheap Trick in concert. I am blessed. We have seen Alice Cooper, Deep Purple, GNR, Live and others in concert together. It is a lot of fun to be able to share these experiences with my daughters. The Poison, Cheap Trick concert was a Father's Day concert and this was a good way to celebrate Father's Day: listening to music from when I was a teenager with my teenagers. My teenagers actually like this old music! I don't know how they developed the same taste in music as I have. I think it flowed from a school (History?) assignment of Sarah-Grace's but I am not sure. I know that even though I don't listen to music a lot, they did have the chance to hear my old tapes. Some of my influence must of rubbed off on them. Rebecca now even has a tape player so she can and does play my old tapes! They have also gotten these older songs in newer formats to listen to. They must of picked up something from my influence!

Deuteronomy speaks about the importance of teaching our children well. They can learn from us so easily. As much as I enjoy going to concerts and listening to music from the 80's with my teens; I even more enjoy reading the Bible with them and seeing that they read the Bible on their own and pray on their own and worship God on their own and in community. A few months ago I was unable to go to church for a few weeks in a row. My kids still went all on their own. It was a real blessing and a great encouragement to everyone at the church.

I encourage you to read the Bible with your kids when they are little. Talk to them about God and the Bible always and pray as a family. That is indeed a great blessing that I wouldn't want anyone to miss out on.

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