What is the church of Christ?

One would have to be pretty naive not to realize that there is much confusion and disorder in the religious world. A major contributor to this lack of unity is Protestant denominationalism. Denominationalism is the product of dissatisfaction. Martin Luther was dissatisfied with the Catholic church (which had apostatized from the true church) and so began the Lutheran denomination. This mindset started the domino effect, and so we have present-day full-blown denominationalism! What should we do about this religious division that causes confusion and disorder?

We should go back to the New Testament and pattern ourselves after the church found therein. That is what the church of Christ is all about. We are not simply another denomination. We are the church that you read about in the Bible. We do not claim any church founder other than Jesus. We do not have any church creed other than the Bible. We do not have any religious practice other than what the Bible authorizes. We simply claim to be members of the church that Jesus established.

Many times people in the religious world call members of the church of Christ “Campbellites.” By this they mean followers of Thomas and Alexander Campbell, who were men who were tired of the confusion and disorder of denominationalism and simply tried to go back to the New Testament for their doctrine and beliefs. However, we are not “Campbellites” because the church of Christ existed hundreds of years before the Campbells. Furthermore, we are not followers of the Campbells because we are not to follow men, but Christ (Mt. 16.24; 1 Peter 2.21). And, that is what we are encouraging everyone to do today.

How can you go wrong if you follow Christ? How can you go wrong if you seek to become a member of the church He established? How can you go wrong if you put off the yoke of denominationalism for simple New Testament Christianity? If everyone would do this, then confusion and disorder would disappear, and unity would be the grand result! That is for what Jesus prayed (John 17.21). Why not become a simple New Testament Christian? Think about it!

Kevin Williams

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Living with Christ in the Shadow of the Cross: Mark 12:13-17

    The Pandemic over the last two years will not be forgotten by this generation. We will likely talk about it frequently as we move into the future, just as we have done with 9/11 and Pearl Harbor. It was a once-in-a-generation event that we hope doesn’t ever happen again. Among the questions that were raised by the pandemic is the relationship between the civil government and God’s people. To be more precise: Does the civil government have the right by God to force God’s people not to worship?

    When God allowed the nation of Babylon to invade and to take Israel into Babylon, out of their homes and away from their land, He sent the prophet Jeremiah to tell Israel these words: ““Thus says the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel, to all the exiles whom I have sent into exile from Jerusalem to Babylon, ‘Build houses and live in them; and plant gardens and eat their produce. ‘Take wives and become the fathers of sons and daughters, and take wives for your sons and give your daughters to husbands, that they may bear sons and daughters; and multiply there and do not decrease. ‘Seek the welfare (peace) of the city where I have sent you into exile, and pray to the Lord on its behalf; for in its welfare (peace) you will have welfare (peace)’” (Jer. 29:4-7).

    Later, when Persia took over Babylon and allowed Israel to return, the Persians still effectively ruled over the land of Israel. But, King Cyrus asked Israel to pray for the life of their king (who was him) (Ezra 6:10; 7:23). 

    That was to be Israel’s attitude when the Greeks conquered the Persians and ruled the land of Israel and then when the Romans conquered the Greeks and ruled over the land of Israel. God’s people learned to live in two words: the religious / spiritual world where their ultimate allegiance belonged to Jehovah God and the civil / secular world where some respect and submission was required of the kings and governors and emperors who ruled over them. 

    So the same question arises today in the minds of Christians: What is the relationship between the church and state? In Mark 12, in the last week of Jesus’ life on earth, He answers that question.

THE QUESTION – 12:13-15a:

    Notice what all they say to Jesus:

    1.) We know that you are truthful. If they sincerely believed Jesus was “truthful,” why didn’t they do what Jesus told them to do? The word means “honest.” 

    2.) You defer to no one. The word “defer” here means “to be concerned about.” Jesus was going to teach what He believed was the truth from God, regardless of how or what people said or felt about it.

    3.) You are not partial to any. Literally, the Greek language says, “You do not look at the face of men.” The idea is that Jesus does not adjust His teaching based on how men (or their faces) react to His teaching: (Acts 10:34; Rom. 2:11; Gal. 2:6; Eph. 6:9; Col. 3:25). 

    4.) You teach the way of God in truth. Again, if these men truly believed that Jesus “taught the way of God in truth,” then why wouldn’t they trust Jesus and obey?

    Every time a Jew paid his or her taxes, he was reminded that his country was not free. Some Jews, notably the Pharisees, hated the tax because they believed God was their king. Refusing to pay the tax contributed to the final destruction of the Jewish state in the “Bar Kochba” rebellion of A. D. 135.

    They want Jesus to either offend the common people and lose their popularity or offend the political leaders and be jailed or, better yet, killed. They apparently do not realize they are literally fulfilling the previous parable Jesus spoke to them (12:1-12)!

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN GOD’S PEOPLE AND THE CIVIL GOVERNMENT – 12:15b-17:

    With a Roman coin in His hand, Jesus drew the logical conclusion: “If Caesar provides you coins with which to be paid, give him what he requires. But also give to God what He requires.” A more sensible response could not be provided. It also argues against the idea, with which Jesus was put to death, that Jesus was a threat to the civil government. 

APPLICATION:

    Paul (Rom. 13:1-7; 1 Tim. 2:1-2) and Peter (1 Peter 2:17) will reiterate Jesus’ point here that God’s followers are obligated to support their local government, including with taxes (unless their government requires something which violates the commands of God: Acts 4:19; 5:29). 

    Some religious groups, notably the Jehovah’s Witnesses, do not believe one can “pledge allegiance” to their civil government and be devoted to God concurrently. However, giving “what is Cesar’s to Caesar” does not stop one from devoting to God what is God’s, as long as one recognizes that the highest allegiance (see 12:30-31) is owed to Jehovah God. The commands and expectations of God surpass the commands and expectations of the state. Does the state have the right to stop Christians from worshipping? No. It does not. Regardless of what any man-made laws say, the Christians’ obligations to obey Jesus Christ transcend what man might require through his laws. At the same time, in the event that man’s laws do not contradict God’s laws, then man is obligated to obey those who are put into authority over the Christian. 

    Let us give proper respect to those who lead us (locally and nationally) but give our higher allegiance to Jehovah God and His Son.

Paul Holland

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Where do you invest the most time, energy, and money?

Parable of the Rich Fool – The Trouble with Treasure

What is most important in your life? Where do you invest the most time, energy, and money?

Jesus teaches that your treasure is where your heart is (Matt. 6:19-21). So, what do you treasure the most? Where is your heart?

In Luke 12, someone comes to Jesus with his heart set on money and land. He says, “Teacher, tell my brother to divide the inheritance with me” (Luke 12:13). Jesus responds by showing that His purpose as well as man’s focus was not based in earthly things.  Jesus says (v.15), “Take care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for one’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” Life is not about what money you make. It’s not about your land. It’s the old saying “You can’t take it with you.”

Jesus then tells a parable of a rich man (Luke 12:16-21) who had well-producing land, and built up larger barns to store his plentiful goods. After doing so, he said to his soul, “Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry.” God responds (v. 20-21), “‘Fool! This night your soul is required of you, and the things you have prepared, whose will they be?’ So is the one who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward God.”

Temporary goods were not what his soul needed. Pleasures of earth are not what the soul needs. The soul, along with the heart, must be set on and nourished by heavenly things.  One’s life consists of more than the abundance of one’s possessions.

I would argue that Satan’s deadliest tool is distraction, letting us think that important things are the most important thing. Again I ask, “What is most important in your life?” Is it to have success in your hobby or career? To have your dream car or home? To have a large family? Own a large piece of land? None of these are bad goals, just as having ample goods and large barns is not inherently bad.  Yet none of these provide our souls with what they truly need. One’s life does not consist of the abundance of one’s possessions, nor does it consist of the abundance of one’s hobbies, 401k, achievements, followers and likes on social media, fishing, hunting trophies, accomplishments, or goals.  Goals are wonderful. Accomplishments? Great! But at what cost? If accomplishing a goal requires sacrifice of spiritual focus, it is not worth it. “For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his soul?” (Mark 8:35). What does it profit a man to gain anything (401k, success, etc.), and lose his soul? Nothing is of greater value than one’s soul (Mark 8:37).

So, let your treasure be in heaven. Look at Matthew 6:19-21 & Luke 12:33, and replace the word “treasure” with “heart.” “Do not lay up for yourselves your heart on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves your heart in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal.” “Sell your possessions, and give to the needy. Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a heart in the heavens that does not fail…”

Invest your heart and your soul in heaven. Life does not consist of the abundance of one’s possessions. Life is about being rich towards God and the things of Heaven.

Jared McLeod

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DAD THE BUILDER

INTRODUCTION

A comedian defines the difference between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. He insists that Mother’s Day is a much bigger deal because mothers are more organized. Mothers say to their children: Now here is a list of what I want. Go get the money from your father and you surprise me on Mother’s Day. You do that for me. The comedian continued, “For Father’s Day I give each of my five kids $20 so that they can go out and by me a present——a total of $100. They go to the store and buy two packages of underwear, each of which costs $5 and contains three shorts. They tear them open and each kid wraps up one pair, the sixth going to the Salvation Army. Therefore, on Father’s Day I am walking around with new underwear and my kids are walking around with $90 worth of my change in their pockets.” (Bill Cosby)

“A father is someone who carries pictures where his money used to be.”

Some men in a pickup truck drove into a lumberyard. One of the men walked in the office and said, ’We need some four-by-twos. ’The clerk said, ’You mean two-by-fours, don’t you?’ The man said, ’I’ll go check,’ and went back to the truck. He returned in a minute and said, ’Yeah, I meant two-by-fours.’ ’All right. How long do you need them?’ The customer paused for a minute and said, ’I’d better go check.’ After awhile, the customer returned to the office and said, ’A long time. We’re gonna build a house.’

WOULDN’T YOU HATE TO SEE THE HOUSE THEY BUILT?

I wouldn’t do a very good job of building a house, but as a father I have faced the challenge of building a home. Specifically, my task was to help my children grow up to be adults. (Could mention one’s children at this point)

God gives fathers (and mothers) some instructions on how to build better children.

Ephesians 6:4 – “Fathers, do not exasperate your children; instead, bring them up in the training and instruction of the Lord.”

Colossians 3:21 – “Fathers, do not embitter your children, or they will become discouraged.”

Children are to obey their parents, but this is not a one way relationship. Ray Summers observes, “It is a matter of mutual relationship. Just as the child has the responsibility of obedience and honor to the parent, so the parent has a responsibility to the child.”

Kenneth L. Boles – “Parents, specifically fathers have their duty as well. Even though Roman law and social custom might give them virtually unlimited authority over their children, God sets limits.”

Paul’s picture of what fathers should be was much different than the norm of his day.

R. C. Bell – “Since fathers are more likely to resort in haste to the much easier expedient of crushing authority instead of prayerful instruction and prudent discipline than are mothers, fathers are warned against provoking their children to resentment.”

F. F. Bruce – “If children are exhorted to render obedience, parents, and specifically fathers, are urged not to irritate their children by being so unreasonable in their demands that the children lose heart and come to think that it is useless trying to please their parents.”

Owen Olbricht – “Treatment of children that is either too harsh or that shows lack of understanding on the part of parents can cause children to become discouraged or lose heart…The effort of parents should not concentrate solely on training children to avoid being naughty. Too much emphasis on eliminating what is wrong may cause a child to be negative. The proper goal for parents is to train their children to be Christlike in their conduct, which includes putting on positive attributes as well as putting off negative ones. Children need heroes and role models to follow, not constant reprimands for bad conduct.”

John Stott – “Behind this curbing of parental authority there lies the clear recognition that, although children are to obey their parents in the Lord, yet they have a life and personality of their own. They are little people in their own right. As such they are to be respected, and on no account to be exploited, manipulated, or crushed.”

How do we exasperate or embitter our children?

1. Unreasonableness – children are not miniature adults
2. Fault-finding
3. Inconsistency
4. One of the leading causes of angry, rebellious children is parents who do not demand obedience. There is a fascinating dynamic at work here. A subtle deception is perpetrated on parents which leads us to believe that if we give in to the demands of our tantrum-throwing kids, they will be happy, not angry. After all, they do seem very angry when they are throwing their tantrums. Don’t we just add to their angry behavior when we don’t let them have their way? But this is the deception. When we do not demand obedience from our children and let them have their way every time they throw a fit, we simply reinforce and encourage angry behavior as a means for them to get their way.
5. Colossians 3:21 gives us the reason for not provoking our children: “they will become discouraged”

HOW DO WE APPLY THESE BIBLICAL INSTRUCTIONS?

FOCUS ON WHAT REALLY MATTERS

Harmon Killebrew who used to play for the Minnesota Twins said, “My father used to play with my brother and me in the yard. Mother would come out and say, ‘You’re tearing up the grass.’ Dad would reply, ‘We’re not raising grass, we’re raising boys.’”

TIME

Dr. James Dobson said, “Love isn’t something you buy. Your kids spell it T-I-M-E and it costs more than M-O-N-E-Y.”

When Billy Crystal’s daughter turned eleven, Billy was in New York filming a movie. He called her, apologized for his work schedule, and said a package would be delivered soon. He then flew from New York to Los Angeles. Later that day when Lindsay opened the front door, a six foot high carton greeted her, and she began ripping it open on the spot. Dad was inside the carton. Billy said, “She hugged me for five minutes. It was unbelievable.” He went on to say, “I missed twenty-five birthdays with my dad. I’m not going to let that happen with my girls.” Billy was fifteen when his father died of a heart attack.

A young man was to be sentenced to the penitentiary. The judge had known him from childhood, for he was well acquainted with his father—a famous legal scholar and the author of an exhaustive study entitled, “The Law of Trusts.” “Do you remember your father?” asked the magistrate. “I remember him well, your honor,” came the reply.

Then trying to probe the offender’s conscience, the judge said, “As you are about to be sentenced and as you think of your wonderful dad, what do you remember most clearly about him?” There was a pause. Then the judge received an answer he had not expected. “I remember when I went to him for advice. He looked up at me from the book he was writing and said, ‘Run along, boy; I’m busy!’ When I went to him for companionship, he turned me away, saying ‘Run along, son; this book must be finished!’ Your honor, you remember him as a great lawyer. I remember him as a lost friend.”

The magistrate muttered to himself, “Alas! Finished the book but lost the boy!”

INSTRUCTION

Proverbs 22:6 – “Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it.”

The text of one Father’s Day card read: Dad, thanks to your lectures, I never change horses in the middle of a job worth doing, I know the squeaky wheel gets the worm, and I never count my chickens until I’ve walked a mile in their shoes. And you thought I wasn’t listening!

Instruction can be misunderstood.

After hearing his dad preach on “Justification, “Sanctification,” and all the other “ations”, a minister’s son felt suitably prepared when his Sunday School teacher asked if anybody knew what “PROCRASTINATION” meant. “I’m not exactly sure what it means,” he said, “but I know our church believes in it!”

A little boy was playing on a Sunday morning while his Dad was in a lounge chair reading the paper. The father said: “Son, get yourself ready for Sunday School”. The little boy asked: “Are you coming with me today Dad?” The man replied: “No, I’m not coming. But I want you to hurry up and get ready”. The little boy then said: “Did you used to go to Sunday School when you were a boy, Dad?” He said: “I most certainly did!” As he walked away the boy mumbled: “Yeah, and I bet it won’t do me any good either!”

Example is often a more powerful teacher than words.

C.H. Spurgeon – A man’s life is always more forcible than his speech. When men take stock of him they reckon his deeds as dollars and his words as pennies. If his life and doctrine disagree, the mass of onlookers accept his practice and reject his preaching.

Clarence Budington Kelland – “My father didn’t tell me how to live. He lived and let me watch him do it.”

A farmer had toiled over a bumper crop of grain – a badly needed crop of grain – a badly needed crop that was going to pay off many creditors and secure the family for another year. But just a few days before it was due to be harvested a freak wind and hailstorm ravaged the property, and the harvest was lost. The man stood with his little boy looking over the fields of destroyed grain. The boy expected to hear his father cursing in despair. But instead his dad began to softly sing: “Rock of Ages cleft for me, let me hide myself in Thee.” Years later that boy, grown into manhood, said: “That was the greatest sermon I ever heard!” His father had shown him FAITH where the rubber meets the road!

Here is the sad confession of one father. “I took my children to school but not to church. I enrolled them in Little League, but not in Sunday school. I showed them how to fish but not to pray. I made the Lord’s Day a holiday, rather than a holy day. I gave them a color TV but did not give them a Bible. I handed them the keys to the car but did not teach them about the keys to the kingdom. I taught them how to make a living but failed to show them who they should live for.”

DISCIPLINE

Hebrews 12:7f

Proverbs 13:24 – “He who spares the rod hates his son, but he who loves him is careful to discipline him.”

Discipline is more than physical punishment. Certainly, abuse must be avoided.

An Amish man caught his two boys drinking beer at a local tavern. The disappointed father promptly disciplined his sons. He told them “I’ll take the horse home boys… and you bring the buggy.”

CONCLUSION

(Number of years) Father’s Day as a son. (Number if father is deceased) now without dad. (Number of years) Father’s Day as a dad. It is my (number of years) Father’s Day as a grandfather.

Dad helped to build me, and I have the privilege and responsibility of helping build my children and grandchildren.

Charles Wadsworth – By the time a man realizes that maybe his father was right, he usually has a son who thinks he’s wrong.

A father is someone you look up to no matter how tall you grow.

A four year old boy said to his father – “Do you know what I want to be when I get big?” The dad said, “No, son, what do you want to be?” He was expecting fireman, cowboy, astronaut, leader of the free world — something along those lines. With a gleam in his eye and a huge grin of excitement, the son said, “When I get big, I’m going to be a daddy!”

Proverbs 23:24“The father of godly children has cause for joy. What a pleasure it is to have a wise son.”

Tom Keener

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The Deeds of Darkness

There is an old saying that “Nothing good happens after midnight.”  Much of the crime and shootings across our major cities happen late at night.  If bars and entertainment activities were to shut down at midnight, many lives could be spared.  Recent shootings at a popular night spot in our town has the mayor asking, “Why do bars need to be open until three in the morning?”  Good question. What good parent wants their child, teen or grown, out at such late hours?

We are encouraged to “lay aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armor of light…to behave properly as in the day, not in carousing and drunkenness, not in sexual promiscuity and sensuality.” Rather, we must “put on the Lord Jesus Christ” (Ro. 13:12-14).

The word “Carousing” is always connected to “drunkenness” (see also Ga. 5:21; 1 Pe. 4:3). “Bar-hopping,” “clubbing,” or “hanging out” are modern equivalents, and are usually at the core of bad behavior.  Jesus said it best, “If anyone walks in the day, he does not stumble, because he sees the light of this world.  But if anyone walks in the night, he stumbles, because the light is not in him” (John 11:9,10). Live life proudly in the light of day, not enveloped in the deeds of darkness.

-Dennis Doughty

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Making the Most of an Abundant Life: Growth John 10:10

The two great laws of life are growth and death. When things stop growing, they start dying. That is true of vegetation, animals, humans, businesses, churches, and nations.

Growth implies imperfection, that you have not arrived, but it also signifies improvement. Listen to the apostle Paul:

“Brethren, I do not regard myself as having laid hold of it yet; but one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 3:13-14).

It is a command: “Therefore, putting aside all malice and all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander, like newborn babies, long for the pure milk of the word, so that by it you may grow in respect to salvation, if you have tasted the kindness of the Lord” (1 Peter 2:1-3).

The Thessalonians were growing in their faith and love: “We ought always to give thanks to God for you, brethren, as is only fitting, because your faith is greatly enlarged, and the love of each one of you toward one another grows ever greater; therefore, we ourselves speak proudly of you among the churches of God for your perseverance and faith in the midst of all your persecutions and afflictions which you endure” (2 Thess. 1:3-4).

Many, many people (maybe most?) who live long lives continue to be intellectually active. You can take some of the dullness out of life by becoming sharper.

Socially – Those who refuse to grow socially are those who lose the warmth of friends and the strength of fellowship. Jesus was friendly and sociable to everyone who would permit Him into their lives. Among the beautiful attributes of the early church is that they “Day by day continuing with one mind in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals together with gladness and sincerity of heart” (Acts 2:46).

Spiritually – As we saw in 1 Peter 2:1, those who don’t grow are hindered from laying aside sinful behaviors. Consider also 2 Peter 1:5-7. If we stop growing, we will stop producing fruit and the harvest is not going to be pretty (John 15:1-6).

Cursed are those who are the living who die in stagnation: Revelation 3:1-3, 14-22.

Isaac Watts was only 5’ tall but when someone teased him about his height, he stated:

Were I so tall to reach the pole,
Or grasp the ocean with my span,
I must be measured by my soul;
The mind’s the standard of the man.

Engage in those spiritual disciplines God has given us to help us to grow spiritually: Love God supremely; serve man sacrificially. Study. Pray. Fellowship. Worship.

Paul Holland

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The Art of Loving: Be an Encourager 1 Corinthians 13:4-8

    Most of the time, whether we realize it or not, we are either encouraging or discouraging. We either have a positive or a negative impact on others. So, we need to make it a habit to look for ways to lift the spirits of people we are around and whom we meet. Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 13:5 that love “does not seek its own.” Love encourages rather than discourages.

    Edgar Guest wrote:

I watched them tearing a building down,

A gang of men in a busy town.

With a ho-heave-ho and a lusty yell,

They swung a beam, and the side wall fell.

I asked a foreman, “Are these men skilled,

As the men you’d hire if you had to build?”

He gave a laugh and said: “No, indeed!

Just common labor is all you need.

I can easily wreck in a day or two

What builders have taken a year to do.”

And I thought to myself as I went my way,

Which of the roles have I tried to play?

Am I a builder who works with care,

Measuring life by the rule and square?

Am I shaping my deeds to a well-made plan,

Patiently doing the best I can?

Or am I a wrecker who walks the town,

Content with the labor of tearing down?

    Listen to the words of Paul in Romans 12:9-13 and how it relates to being an encourager. Turn over to Romans 14:19-21 and listen to Paul’s words relative to encouragement. This same word translated “building up” in 14:19 (NASV) is translated “edification” in 15:2. Look at where this same word – the noun and its verb – are used:

    1 Corinthians 8:1, 10; 14:3-5, 12, 17, 26

    2 Corinthians 5:1; 10:8; 12:19; 13:10

    Ephesians 2:21; 4:12, 16, 29

    1 Thessalonians 5:11

    One verse I like to use is Acts 20:32: “I commend you totGod and to the word of His grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among those who are sanctified.” The word of God builds us up. We need to use the word of God to build up others. 

HOW CAN WE ENCOURAGE OTHERS?

    There are actually a thousand small ways we can encourage others every day.

    Give a simple smile.

    Say a kind word.

    The tone of voice we use is so important.

    We also encourage by acts of love and kindness.

    Finally, we can encourage others just by being good listeners.

    To love like Jesus loved, let’s work on putting the heart into others around us through kind and thoughtful words and works.

Paul Holland

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What We Think about And What We Love Hebrews 12:1–2 

You have a good friend. This friend has a wonderful wife, beautiful children, steadily attends worship services and participates in the activities of the church, and by all accounts, lives an upright, faithful life. One day, in passing conversation, your friend tells you a startling secret: he dreams about another woman. What’s worse, he says he knows it’s perfectly okay to pine after this other woman, so long as he never acts on his thoughts.

We know, without a doubt, such a mindset is not “perfectly okay.” It is dead wrong. It violates the explicit teaching of Scripture, such as Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:28. Such thinking undermines the very foundation of a marriage – the commitment to love, honor, and cherish. We have no trouble identifying the hypothetical friend’s attitude and thoughts as sinful.

What if we were to back up and change the scenario slightly? Now the friend is you. You don’t daydream about someone other than your spouse. You are faithful to your spouse and your children, and active in the church. But your dreams are not of a brighter, more vibrant relationship with God; instead, you dream of the things of this world. C. S. Lewis put it like this, “If a voice said to me (and one I couldn’t disbelieve), ‘You shall never see the face of God, never help to save a neighbor’s soul, never be free from sin, but you shall live in perfect health till you are 100, very rich, and die the most famous man in the world, and pass into a twilight consciousness of a vaguely pleasant sort forever’ – how much would it worry me?”

Jesus says, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also” (Matthew 6:21). Thoughts, actions, and affections are intertwined. What we think about and what we love directly influences what we do. We know we should delight in the Lord (Psalm 37:4). Practically speaking, how do we do that? First, we must look away from sin (Hebrews 12:1). The more attention we give to sin, the more it grows. We must starve it to death. Second, we must look to Jesus (Hebrews 12:2). The more we look at what is truly beautiful, the less satisfaction we will find in counterfeit beauty. “Taste and see that the LORD is good; How blessed is the man who takes refuge in Him!” (Psalm 34:8).

Clay Leonard

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Weekend Bible study project for youth

Rise Up and Build!
Nehemiah 4:4-10

BACKGROUND NOTES:

    The first king mentioned in Ezra is  Cyrus (559-529 B. C.; 15 times). The Jews had been exiles in Babylon since 598-586 B. C. But Cyrus allowed them to return.

    Cambyses – 530-522 B. C.
Darius I – 522-486 B. C.
“Ahasuerus” is another name for King Xerxes (485-465 B. C.).
Darius II – 424-404 B.  C.
Artaxerxes II – 404-358 B. C.
Darius III – 336-330 B. C.

“Osnappar” (ver. 10) is another name for Ashurbanipal, king of Assyria (668-627 B. C.).

Memorize 4:4-5. If you don’t memorize the text, read it every day this week.

ADULTS:

    How did the enemies of Israel impact the Israelites? What discourages you, as a Christian? What frightens you, as a Christian?

    What did the enemies do to Israel? How long did this effort last?

    Give another name for King Ahasuerus: Which book in the Bible happened during his reign?

TEENS:

    During this king’s reign, what did the enemies do?

    When these men wrote a second letter, in what language was it written?

    What had King Osnappar done to Samaria?

YOUTH:

    Give the men who composed the letter:

    Who else did these men get “on their side” to stop Israel from building God’s temple?

    Give another name for King “Osnappar” (ver. 10):

    Draw a picture of these men writing a letter to the king.

Paul Holland and family

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It is Better in Heaven Phil. 1:21-23; Revelation 14:13

IT IS BETTER BECAUSE WE WILL SEE CHRIST – “To depart and to be with Christ; which is far better.” There is no other joy so great.

Christ died for us (Rom. 5:8).

He daily watches over us, makes intercession for us (Rom. 8:34).

He is now preparing a home (John 14:1-2).

IT IS BETTER BECAUSE WE WILL BE THROUGH WITH SIN

Paul grieved because of his own sins – “O wretched man that I am; who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” (Rom. 7:24).

We shed tears over our own sins, shortcomings. Evil is ever present with us. We grieve over sins of our relatives. The battle continues unabated.

In heaven, we will be delivered.

IT IS BETTER BECAUSE WE HAVE NO MORE GRIEF OF SINFUL COMPANIONS:

Samuel cried all night when his friend, Saul, sinned (1 Sam. 15:11).

Jeremiah had a fire in his bones because of the sins of the people (Jer. 20:9).

Paul had unceasing pain for the sins of his own brethren (Rom. 9:2-3).

God commands, “Fret not thyself because of evil doers” (Psa. 37:1).

How our hearts ache when we hear God’s name taken in vain.

How deep the pain is as we see a nation given over to rum, revelry, and ruin.

There is no evil in heaven.

IT IS BETTER BECAUSE ALL THE TEARS WILL BE DRIED, ALL SORROWING COMFORTED:

Of Lazarus it is written: “…he is comforted…” (Luke 16:25).

Jesus said, “Blessed are they that mourn for they shall be comforted” (Matt. 5:4).

“Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning” (Psa. 30:5).

IT IS BETTER BECAUSE IN HEAVEN THE CHRISTIAN GAINS REST:

“Let us not be weary in well doing for in due season we shall reap if we faint not” (Gal. 6:9).

Jesus said, “The night cometh when no man can work” (John 9:4).

Paul labored night and day with tears (Acts 20:31).

The Lord’s harvest is now white. We must be busy. We grow tired, but we cannot lay our burdens down. Dad cannot stop his work. Mother has no office hours. Hard work is the curse of all mankind. A Christian cannot retire. He must press on (Phil. 3:14).

“They rest from their labors” (Rev. 14:13).

IT IS BETTER BECAUSE IN HEAVEN THERE WE GAIN ETERNAL REWARDS:

Consider Paul’s words in 2 Timothy 4:6-8.

Daniel writes: “They that be wise shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness as the stars forever and ever” (Dan. 12:3).

We strive for earthly rewards to find that they fade. In heaven, what we have gained, we hold. It is glorious to know our anchor holds safely and securely within the vale and when the lightning flashes and the thunder rolls, we will be undismayed. When storms have passed, we will sail safely into the blest harbor and be with Jesus in the celestial city across which the shadows never fall.

Yes, it is far better in heaven.

the late Wayne Holland
from a sermon preached at:
Bayou La Batre, AL 05/25/1980
Hiawassee, GA 06/26/1983
Roxboro, NC 11/13/1988
South Boston, VA 03/19/1995

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