What Is That To You?

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: John 21
Meditation:
John 21:22

“Jesus said to Peter, ‘If I will that he remain till I come, what is that to you? You follow Me.’”

Shift Your Focus… Jesus had been addressing Peter, drilling down to some issues that needed to be resolved in this rough fisherman-turned disciple. This was a difficult conversation that needed to happen before Peter could become the apostle Jesus had in mind.

And Peter did what so many of us do: When the spotlight got focused on him a little too brightly, he tried to shed some light on John’s junk. But Jesus kept the focus right where it needed to be: “Peter, quit worrying about what will happen to John and just focus on what I’ve called you to do. If I allow him be alive until I return, that is none of your business. You’ve got enough to worry about just taking care of your own junk let alone John’s. Just take care of you and you’ll be fine!”

Not bad advice! I would save myself a whole lot of wasted energy by just minding my own spiritual business. The time and emotional drain I spend worrying whether someone else is walking with Jesus the way I think they should takes away from the spiritual energy that could be focused on growing me up in Christ.

That is not to say that I shouldn’t express loving concern for another’s progress as a believer. There are appropriately levels of attention that I must bring to bear in challenging them to step it up in their spiritual formation. But I’ll be honest, my challenge is not reaching those appropriate levels, it is exceeding them.

I have a feeling that may be true of you as well. It is a fairly regular occurrence for me as a pastor to have believers come with “concerns” about what another sister has said or how another brother is living or what another local shepherd is doing or the kind of theology a prominent Tele-evangelist is espousing. “Did you know ‘so-and-so’ didn’t even quote Scripture on his last television show?”

My typical response to those concerns: What is that to you? You just worry about you and make sure you are following Jesus!”

You see, those other people will have to answer to God for their lives one day, but so will you. It is very likely that you will not be able to change them one bit by all the energy you spend worrying about their spiritual condition. All you can work on is your own obedience. Beside, if you really want to see them change, the better focus of your energy would be to pray for them. Spend at least as much time bringing them before the Father in prayer as you do thinking and talking about how upsetting they are to you.

Do that and change will happen…but it will be you that changes! So mind our own business today—it is not such a bad thing to do!

“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.”  ~Carl Gustav Jung

Prayer… Lord, there is so much work yet to do in me, so keep me focused on my own spiritual development.  Help me to mind my own business, working on the things that I can change and leaving the rest up to you.

Reckless Abandon

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: John 20
Meditation:
John z20:3-6

“Peter therefore went out, and the other disciple, and were going to the tomb. So they both ran together, and the other disciple outran Peter and came to the tomb first. And he, stooping down and looking in, saw the linen cloths lying there; yet he did not go in. Then Simon Peter came, following him, and went into the tomb.”

Shift Your Focus… You’ve got to give Peter credit—he was never one to hold back. John outran him to the tomb, but nervously stopped at the entrance to peek in. Not Peter! When he finally arrived, huffing and puffing, Peter pushed past John right into the place where great respect was to be given and strict protocol was demanded.

Of course, the greatest part of this story is that Jesus wasn’t there! He was alive forevermore, the victor over death and sin. If the body of Jesus had still been sealed behind the stone entrance to that tomb when they arrived, nothing else about this story would matter. As the brilliant historian Jaroslav Pelikan put it, “If Christ is risen, nothing else matters. And if Christ is not risen—nothing else matters.”

But Jesus did rise, and that is why the other details of this story matter. Even small, seemingly insignificant details become both interesting and instructive—like Peter pressing in past John to witness the reality of the resurrection first hand.

There was a spiritual pushiness about Peter that endeared him to Jesus. His personal deficiencies are well documented; the entire world knows of them thanks to the Gospel writers. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John pulled no punches in their accounts of this braggadocios, foot-in-mouth, leap-before-you-look, think-before you speak disciple.

Yet is was Peter’s reckless abandon when it came to spiritual expectancy that led Jesus to declare, “Peter, on your kind of faith, I am going to build this small team of disciples into a world-wide force called ‘the church’ that will take back Planet Earth from Satan and return it to its Rightful Owner.” (Matthew 16:18)

Sure, Peter got into trouble more than his fair share, but he was the only disciple to actually get out of the boat to walk on water—albeit a walk that was short-lived and ultimately very wet. He was the first to go into the tomb—Ground Zero of the Christian faith. And he was the one who was called upon to give the first sermon of the Christian era—where two thousand people responded to his altar call.

Jesus loved Peter’s brassy boldness. That was the kind of raw material the Lord could work with. It was certainly raw, but it was ready. It didn’t take much to light a fire with Peter; he was a tinderbox waiting for combustion.

I think we could learn something from Peter’s example. Peter didn’t have it all together in his life, but he was always willing to offer all that he had, raw as it was, and press into Jesus with full expectancy of what could happen when raw readiness met with resurrection reality.

Be Peter-like today in your journey with Jesus: a bit bold, daring to go so far as to be a little spiritually pushy. Chances are, you will encounter some resurrection power. Word has it that it’s still floating around out there.

“Faith takes God without any ‘if’s.’”  —D.L. Moody

Prayer… Lord, help me to cast off my natural reserve for a little Peter-like raw readiness today. Enable me to see those opportunities where walking on water is calling me to get out of my boat.  Pour some fresh resurrection power into this ready heart.

God’s Sovereignty, Our Submission

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: John 19
Meditation:
John 19:11

“Jesus answered, ‘You could have no power at all against Me unless it had been given you from above.’”

Shift Your Focus… There is nothing in this world that happens apart from God’s sovereign knowledge and by his sovereign permission.

Jesus understood that as he stood before Pilate, who nervously tried to impress upon our Lord that he held the power to either crucify or free: Then Pilate said to Him, “Are You not speaking to me? Do You not know that I have power to crucify You, and power to release You?” (John 19:10)

That is when Jesus, who had previously held his peace, looked Pilate directly in the eye and informed him in no uncertain terms that even though he might be a high officer of the Roman court, he held no such power—only God did.  In the awful light of what Jesus had been through, and what he knew he was about to go through, what an amazing statement of not only an understanding of the sovereign will of God, but complete trust and submission to it.

That was the reason Jesus could so calmly and resolutely traverse the terrible way of the cross.  And that is the reason you can walk through the difficulties of your life as well—even if your path takes you through the valley of the shadow of death.   As King David said, you don’t have to fear even death because “Thy rod and Thy staff will comfort me.”

You can know what King David knew that our Lord Jesus knew:  Because of God’s sovereign control over all the affairs of this universe, and because of his immeasurable love for you, this world is a perfectly safe place for you—even if you are standing before your cross.

Before you begin this day, take a moment to read the Shepherd’s Psalm printed below.  In fact, you may want to read it every day this week before you head off into the busyness and challenges of your world:

The LORD is my shepherd; I shall not want.
He maketh me to lie down in green pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreth my soul: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for thou art with me; thy rod and thy staff they comfort me.
Thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies: thou anointest my head with oil; my cup runneth over.
Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the LORD for ever.

No matter what you face today, be strong and courageous—the Lord is your Shepherd!

“Much that worries us beforehand can afterwards, quite unexpectedly, have a happy and simple solution…Things really are in a better hand than ours.”  ~Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Prayer… Lord, my life is in your hands, therefore I will not fear.

What Jesus Did Often

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: John 18
Meditation:
John 18:1-2

“Jesus went out with His disciples over the Brook Kidron, where there was a garden, which He and His disciples entered. And Judas, who betrayed Him, also knew the place; for Jesus often met there with His disciples.”

Shift Your Focus… We know that this garden was called Gesthemane. By the other Gospel accounts we also know that when Judas showed up with the guards to arrest him, Jesus was in deep and agonizing prayer.  But what may be lost in the greater drama of Judas’ betrayal and Christ’s passion to follow are the words, “for Jesus often met there with his disciples.”

This was a regular place for Jesus.  The disciples were familiar with Jesus’ garden retreat; so was the devil, who had moved Judas to betray the Savior. Jesus had gone there often enough that those who knew him knew where he prayed.

Why does John include and bury this small, seemingly insignificant detail here amidst the more obvious story of Jesus’ arrest?  Perhaps he wanted us to see what Jesus had made plain to his disciples:  That even the Son of God found the time and made the place in his life for regular communion with his Father.

Jesus had purposely included his disciples in his private times with God to leave an example for them.  If he, the Son of God, needed quiet time, so did they.  So do I—and so do you.

Do you have that regular place?  Do the people in your life know where you spend time with God?  Does the devil know where to find you?  The place itself is not important.  The fact that people know that you are regularly in that place is not important.  What is important is that you are in that place where you can touch God and God can touch you with his love and grace.

It is said that early African Christians were dedicated and regular in their personal devotion to God.  Each one reportedly had a separate spot in the thicket where he would pour out his heart to God.  Over time the paths to these places became well worn.  As a result, if one of these believers began to neglect prayer, it was soon apparent to the others. They would kindly challenge anyone neglecting their prayer life, “Brother, the grass grows on your path.”

Keep the path to your garden well worn!

“Prayer is the acid test of devotion.” ~Samuel Chadwick

Prayer… Lord, it is a pleasure meeting with you in this regular time again today. Not for my credit, but may others be inspired by my regular and persistent devotion to you.  May they, too, discover the pure delight of spending time in your presence.

Unexpected Loss & Overwhelming Grief

God’s Timeless Word

Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! (Romans 11:33)

One of the bittersweet callings of a pastor is to stand with people to offer comfort and strength on the worst day of their lives. More often than not, my experience tells me that in those times, there are no words, there are no answers—so you simply cry, and hug, and pray.

As I reflected this morning on the tragic loss of a young husband just a few hours ago, searching for a truth that would anchor his grieving wife and devastated family, my thoughts were directed to a verse we all know and love, Romans 8:28,

“We know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for them.”

sepia-praying-womanOn the one hand, I am grateful for such an “easy” verse to quote in the face of hardship and tragedy. On the other hand, I have to stop and ask myself, in light of this young believer’s sudden and unexpected home-going, “do I really believe that God will cause even this to work for the good of his grieving wife and devastated family?”  I think you would agree that in all honesty, it’s a stretch to see how any good could come of this.

As I was thinking about this, a story popped into my head that I had read several years ago about the all-too-brief life of a would-be missionary named Glen Chambers.

When God called him to the mission field, Glen didn’t hesitate.  He began his preparation with fervor.  He earned his way through Bible College by working nights and weekends.  He mastered the rigors of language school; he learned Spanish as well as two Indian dialects.  And he suffered the added heartbreak of a broken romance because his girlfriend didn’t want to become a missionary’s wife.

The toughest part for Glen, however, was saying goodbye to his widowed mother.  But with Spanish Bible in hand, he set out on a flight to Quito, Ecuador to begin his service with a radio ministry known as Voice of the Andes.

But Glen never reached Quito.  Without warning, a late afternoon storm struck with violent fury.  The airliner lost its bearings and slammed into the side of the rugged 14,000 foot Andes mountain peak, El Tablazo, and exploded into a thunderous fireball.  Everyone on board the plane, including Glen Chambers, lost their lives.

Before Glen had left the Miami airport that morning, he wanted to write a note to his mother.  So he picked up a scrap of advertising on the airport floor, scribbled a note on the back, slipped it into an envelope and dropped it into a mailbox.

Just a few days later, after the news of the tragic accident had reached her, Glen’s grieving mother received the note.  With trembling hands she opened the envelope to read her son’s final words.  What caught her eye, however, was one single word from the folded advertisement.  One word, emblazoned across the back of Glen’s note, silently screamed the question of questions we’re all tempted to ask during times of tragedy,

WHY?

Of all the questions we ask, this is the most searching, the most tormenting, the most haunting.  It falls from the lips of the mother who delivers her baby—stillborn … from the wife who has to tell her children, “daddy is gone”… from the husband who hears the doctor say, “Your wife has cancer—it’s terminal” … from the heartbroken lover who hears the devastating words, “It’s over” … to the financially struggling young father who loses his job …

WHY?  That’s the question that haunts us all, at one time or another.  Why did this happen?  Why is this happening now?  Why am I the one who is going through this?  Why should I believe that anything good can come of this?  WHY?

The truth is, we may never fully get an explanation in this life to satisfy that burning question or soothe the ache of the sorrow that grows from it, but as followers of the One who invaded Planet Earth to rescue us from the tragic effects of the Fall, there is this abiding truth to which we can confidently cling in unexplainable and unexpected times,

God is too kind to do anything cruel
Too wise to make a mistake
Too deep to explain himself

The Apostle Paul once wrote,

“Oh the depth…of the wisdom of God and knowledge of God!  How unsearchable are His judgments and unfathomable His ways!”  (Romans 11:33)

We don’t always know “why”, but we do know “Who”.  We do know Who has promised to work all things to our good … Who has never broken a promise, not a single one!  … Who has promised to walk with us in our deepest sorrows and ultimately bring victory out of what the Evil One intended as harm.  We can, and we must, cling to that truth at times like these.  It is the only antidote to the deep darkness of hopelessness into which we would otherwise sink.

“He who promised is faithful!”

Remember Glen Chambers?  On his way to Quito, Ecuador to be a missionary, to devote his life to the Lord’s call, when his plane crashed into that mountain not too far from Bogota, Columbia and tumbled into a ravine below in a heap of twisted metal.  It would seem that Glen’s lifelong dream of serving God had been aborted.

Or had it?

Some years later, another missionary was in a remote area of the Colombian Andes where missionaries had never been.  As she shared the gospel with a family, the father interrupted.

“Oh, we already know about Jesus!” he said, grinning from ear to ear. “We are all believers.”

Ruth was shocked, and finally asked, “How do you know about Jesus?”

The father shared that years before, a man had come across a charred suitcase in the mountains.  Inside that suitcase was a Spanish Bible that had made its way into their possession. They showed that very Bible to the missionary.  As she opened it, there in the flyleaf was a name.  You guessed it—none other than Glen Chambers.[1]

We may never know why things happen like they do.  We may not know when and how our trials will be turned into triumphs.

But we do know one thing … we do have this certainty … we know “Who” is bigger than all our questions.  And He is faithful!

May the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort, comfort you in His love and care.

Pastor Ray


[1] *Story based on Dr. Robert Petterson, When Serving God isn’t Fair, (Covenant Presbyterian Church), March 6, 2005, and from Chuck Swindoll, Seasons of Life—Asking Why, (Portland, Oregon, Multnomah Press), 1983.

Worth The Effort

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: John 17
Meditation:
John 17:20-21

“I do not pray for these alone, but also for those who will believe in Me through their word; that they all may be one, as You, Father, are in Me, and I in You; that they also may be one in Us, that the world may believe that You sent Me.”

Shift Your Focus… Jesus spent his last hours on earth praying desperately for the unity of his church. He knew that without unity, the church would fall apart. But with it, Jesus knew that nothing could stop his people from accomplishing the mission of reaching the world with the Gospel.

That is the power of unity. The great preacher Vance Havner once said, “Snowflakes are frail, but if enough of them get together they can stop traffic.” So it is with the church. If we get together in unity in our church, we’ll stop the traffic in our community.

The question is, since we all agree that unity is a powerful and a necessary thing, how do we move from agreement to action? How can we practice unity?

The Apostle Paul gives us some insight in his words to the church in Ephesus:

“As a prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received. Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love. Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.” (Ephesians 1:1-3)

Did you notice the word, “effort?” Paul says we are to “make every effort” to attain and maintain unity in our church. Frankly, it takes hard, focused, continual, intentional and strategic effort individually and corporately to keep the church united as one.

The word “effort” means to be diligent, to be zealous, to make haste to do something, in this case, being eager and fully dedicated to maintain the unity of the Spirit. It refers to a holy zeal to guard our Christian unity. Why do we need holy zeal? Because Satan’s number one goal is to divide us. That’s why each Christian needs to take the responsibility for the spiritual unity of his or her church.

James Hewitt tells the story of one woman’s unforgettable experience teaching Vacation Bible School with her primary class. The class was interrupted one day about an hour before dismissal when a new student was brought in.

The little boy had one arm missing, and since the class was almost over, she had no opportunity to learn any of the details about the child’s disability or his state of mind. She was afraid that one of the other children would make a comment and embarrass the poor little guy, and there was no time to warn them to be sensitive.

As the class time came to a close, she began to relax. She asked the class to join her in their usual closing ceremony. “Let’s make our churches,” she said. “Here’s the church and here’s the steeple, open the doors and there’s…”

Then the awful reality of the situation hit her like a ton of bricks. The very thing she’d feared the kids would do, she’d done. As she stood there speechless, the little girl sitting next to the boy reached over with her left hand and placed it up to his right hand and said, “Hey Davey, let’s make the church together.”

If you and I give every ounce of effort to keep the unity of the Spirit with other believers, we will make the church together! And it will definitely be worth the effort.

“We must all hang together or assuredly we shall all hang separately” ~Benjamin Franklin

Prayer… Father, nothing is more important to you than the unity of your people.  May I do my part always to maintain the unity of the spirit through the bonds of peace.

Heads Up

5×5×5 Bible Plan

Read: John 16
Meditation:
John 16:33

“These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.”

Shift Your Focus… I hate to be blindsided, and I am sure you do, too. Nobody likes to be caught off guard by bad news or troubling circumstances. The surprise of such experiences makes these difficulties doubly devastating.

That’s why Jesus gives us a divine heads-up in John 16. Standing at both ends of this chapter, like bookends, Jesus gave his followers an FYI on some of the challenges they would surely face. In verse one, he says, “These things I have spoken to you, that you should not be made to stumble.” Then again in verse 33, the very last verse of the chapter, he reminds them of the insider information he has provided so that when it takes place, they won’t be unsettled by it.

Just what insider information did Jesus provide? Simply that your faith is going to get you into a fair amount of trouble in this life. People are not going to like you because you follow Jesus. You will be persecuted not only for the stand you personally take on moral issues, but just for the position your Christianity represents. In fact, some people will even hate you with a murderous zeal disguised as religious passion simply because of the Christian life you live (verse 2). Without even trying, your lifestyle of faith will bring them under such conviction that they will find it intolerable and want to do away with you. Things may get a bit rough, so be ready for it, Jesus says.

The good news, however, is that you will never have to face these difficulties alone. The fact is, through Christ you will overcome each challenge victoriously, even the most extreme challenge of staring into the face of martyrdom. You will overcome because you know what is coming (verses 1,4,33). You will be victorious because Jesus has already been victorious under these same pressures (verse 33). You will be able to face these situations with courage and grace because of the presence of the Divine Helper, the Holy Spirit (verse 7.) You will win in the hour of trial because the Sovereign Father who loves you (verse 27) will hear and answer your every prayer (verses 23-24).

Knowing ahead of time what is coming, and knowing that your victory has been secured already, you can go about your day, and come what may—trouble, hardship, disappointment, failure, persecution, hatred, even death—live in the wonderful reality of what Christ promised: “In Me, you will have peace!”

“God knows our situation; He will not judge us as if we had no difficulties to overcome. What matters is the sincerity and perseverance of our will to overcome them.” ~C.S. Lewis

Prayer… Lord, I don’t know what this day holds, but I know Who holds this day. And I know Who holds my life in his hands. So I thank you ahead of time for the peace of God that will guard my heart and ease my mind today no matter what circumstances I will face.