Thoughts from a Central Valley Pastor

Month: December 2020

Upgrading the American Dream

Becoming a Christian changes the way you think. You no longer look to the American dream to guide your decisions because it has been replaced with a heavenly reality. Jesus Christ put it like this, “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” (Matthew 6:19-21) 

When someone comes to Christ they begin to realize that the riches of this world can only imitate the treasures of eternity. When compared to the eternal weight of glory that awaits Christians in heaven, the riches of this world look more like imitation trophies made of hollow plastic. This hit me the other day when I was looking at the only trophy I saved from my childhood. From a distance it looks like a bronze trophy set on a marble stand, but in reality it is almost entirely made of plastic. The only metal it contains are the screws that hold it together. 

That trophy used to mean a lot to me. I still remember winning it back in the 6th grade. It had value because my world was small and my perspective was limited. As I grew older my understanding changed and matured. When I came to Christ my taste for the things of the world changed as well. I realized I had to rethink many of the assumptions that had filtered into my worldview. I realized I had been suckered into pursuing Malcolm Forbes’ often quoted motto, “He who dies with the most toys wins.” My desire for more things and nicer things was not grounded in Scripture. It was coming from the world. The more I read God’s word the more I realized how much I needed to be set free from the imitation riches of this world. 

Jesus was interested in the heart issue of laying up treasures in life. He said, ““No one can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and money.” He wanted people to see the motives behind their decisions in life. Did their actions show love for God or for this world? This is one of our Lord’s most famous quotes because people still struggle with it today. Many of life’s daily decisions come down to a choice between God and money. Are you going to take a job that requires you to spend less time with the body of Christ? Are you going to work overtime if it means you spend less time with your family? Is Christmas more about gifts than worshipping our Savior? We are supposed to ask these questions all the time. 

The heavenly economy is completely different than our world’s economy. It doesn’t look to the material world, but to the immaterial. It asks the question, “How rich am I in the agape love of God?” That is the currency of heaven. That is how we can store up riches that will stand the test of time. We must think in terms of the love of God. How can we grow in our understanding of God’s love? How can we become more loving people? How can we show the love of God to others? If we can taste that kind of love we will never settle for the knock-off lust that the world has to offer. 

C. S. Lewis was a British atheist who came to Christ later in life. He understood the difference between what the world had to offer and what God has in store. He wrote this, “It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.” 

That should shake us up. I know it does for me. That means the American dream is a mud pie in dirty slum. It is selfish and godless. The heavenly reality is a vacation at the sea. Why does the world settle for making mud pies? They know no better. Why do Christians settle for mud pies? They may have never really understood what Jesus meant when he said, “you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” (John 8:32)

There Would Be No Christmas Without Easter

Every Christmas I have to work extra hard to remind our kids of the reason for the season. The more gifts they receive the more I have to slow down and make sure they understand the reason our family celebrates the holiday. I have to remind them that we are celebrating for a very different reason than the one you see in the stores and on TV. The Christmas we celebrate is tied to Easter. We celebrate the birth of Christ because he went on to die on the cross and rise from the dead! 

This is why Christians celebrate differently than the world. Our celebration is not a stand alone event. It is tied to the life of Christ. It is connected to the work that he accomplished on the cross. Christmas has to be celebrated in light of the resurrection because if Jesus never rose from the dead we would have no reason to celebrate his birth. If he didn’t rise from the dead then the main goal of his life would have failed. We would not celebrate Christmas. Instead we would have never heard about him because there would not have been a message worth passing on to the next generation. 

I was thinking about this because our church just put on a Christmas musical called “The Mystery of the Manger.” It follows the story of an investigative journalist who is writing a story about what actually happened at Christmas. At the beginning, he is skeptical and considers it to be a bunch of fairy tales, but by the end he has become convinced by historical evidence and he joins the rest of the cast in celebrating his very first Christmas. 

It’s a fictional story, but I discovered that it is actually based on events that happened in a former atheist’s life. His name is Lee Strobel. He was working as the legal editor for the Chicago Tribune in the 1980’s. His wife became a Christian and he decided he would research the Bible’s claims so that he could prove that they were false. After two years of interviewing experts in the fields of archeology, history, and theology he realized he had to make a decision. He went into his room and began writing down all the evidence he had compiled. He kept writing and writing until he realized the evidence pointed towards the life of Christ, not as an easily dismissed fairy-tale, but an undeniable historical fact. He read John 1:12, “But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.” He repented of his sin and gave his life to Christ. 

Lee Strobel’s main questions were not about the birth of Christ. He spent most of his time researching the death and resurrection. He discovered four lives of evidence that even skeptics agreed with. The first was the integrity of Christ’s execution. There would be no point to talk about his resurrection if there was doubt that he really died. The second was how early the evidence was recorded for the resurrection. Alexander the Great’s biographies are considered historically accurate, but they weren’t written until four hundred years after his death. The accounts of Jesus life and death were written within decades by people who were eye witnesses! Strobel was also impressed with the historical evidence for an empty tomb. Strobel studied law and he knew that one of the strongest arguments is found in something called “Enemy Attestation.” This corroborates the empty tomb because Jesus’ enemies implicitly admitted that the tomb was empty when they said, “The disciples stole the body.” They were not denying the empty tomb. They were actually admitting it was empty by giving a different story for why it happened. The last line of evidence that led Strobel to believe in the Bible as history is when he discovered how strong the eye witness accounts of the resurrection were. The bible records that there were 515 eye witnesses of Jesus after the resurrection (1 Corinthians 15). 

Strobel took his findings to skeptics and asked them to explain how an ancient book could make such a claim if it were not true. One expert named Gary Ludemann wrote, “It may be taken as historically certain that Peter and the disciples had experiences after Jesus’ death in which Jesus appeared to them as the risen Christ.” Ludemann is confident to say they experienced the risen Jesus, but he maintains that they experienced them as hallucinations. So Strobel went to a psychologist who specialized in hallucinations and he asked what he thought. He said it is impossible for over five hundred people to have the same hallucination because  hallucinations are “individual events that happen in individual minds.” This psychologist stated “Five hundred people having the same hallucination is more of a miracle than the resurrection.” 

Lee Strobel had started his research as an atheist who wanted to disprove the biblical account. His conclusion, after two years of careful research, was that “it would take more faith to maintain atheism than to be a Christian. Jesus not only claimed to be the Son of God. He backed it up by rising from the dead.” The same could be said about backing up the claim that Christmas was a historical event. The virgin birth in Bethlehem can be backed up with the evidence of his death and resurrection. There is a mystery surrounding the manger, but praise God the evidence confirms the biblical account. We know what happened on that amazing night. May we take the time to celebrate it, not simply as a wonderful story, but as a supernatural historical event.

Merry Christmas & Maranatha!

The best way to celebrate Christmas is to realize that Jesus is coming back! This is something we need to emphasize in our churches because it is so easy to forget. The Bible wants us to look forward to his return. The apostle Paul captured this so well with the Aramaic phrase “Maranatha,” which means “Lord, come!” (1 Cor. 16:21). We need to celebrate Christmas in light of his return. Merry Christmas Maranatha! 

If you read the prophecies about Christ’s first coming, then you quickly realize that they emphasize a time when the Messiah will reign on the earth. This was foreshadowed with Christ’s first coming, but it will actually be realized when he returns. This is incredibly important for us to consider as Christians because it helps ensure that we don’t forget the reason for the Christmas season. It is not supposed to be a time for milk and cookies. It to a time to be in awe of the incarnation. But it’s even greater than that. We are supposed to be amazed that God’s plan is not over. We are supposed to be amazed that Jesus Christ is coming back, and we need to make sure we are ready for his return! 

The books of Isaiah and Micah contain two of the most famous prophecies about the coming of Christ. We often focus on how they predict his first coming, but it is important to see that the context actually emphasizes his second coming. Isaiah 9:6-7 says, “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder, and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his government and of peace there will be no end, on the throne of David and over his kingdom, to establish it and to uphold it with justice and with righteousness from this time forth and forevermore. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will do this.” 

Did you notice that only the beginning of the prophecy relates to Christ’s birth? Most of it predicts a future fulfillment. Isaiah promised that this child would grow up to become a king who would have a physical kingdom. This government will have no end. This king will sit on the throne of David and he will reign forever! Isaiah was referring to the Millennial reign of Christ, which he will establish once the church age has come to an end. It is easy to emphasize the birth of Christ so much that we forget that Christ’s birth is a stepping stone to his future reign. 

Micah’s Christmas prophecy is fascinating because it actually predicts the birthplace of Jesus seven hundred years before the event occurred. Micah 5:2 reads, “But you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, who are too little to be among the clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for me one who is to be ruler in Israel, whose coming forth is from of old, from ancient days.” Once again, the prophecy of Christ’s birth is placed in the context of his reign. It is so easy to think of Christmas out of context. The birth of Christ points to the cross, but it also points past that to a throne! This is what Micah’s prophecy emphasizes. Jesus Christ is going to be a ruler in Israel. We never saw this fulfilled during his ministry on the earth because God is waiting to fulfill this prophecy when Christ returns! 

And what a return it will be. Paul wrote about it in 1 Thessalonians, “For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord. Therefore encourage one another with these words.” (1 Th. 4:16-18) These words are supposed to be an encouragement to believers. We are not supposed to spend Christmas only looking back at what God did two-thousand years ago. We are supposed to spend Christmas looking forward to his glorious return! 

Understanding Christmas in the context of Scripture will force us to look past all the distractions that our society has added in its never-ending commercialization campaign. We must remember that the first advent of Christ points us to the second advent. We must remember that Christ’s spiritual reign in the hearts of the redeemed will be fulfilled in a physical reign in the future. We need to ask ourselves “Are we living in light of Christ’s return?” He could come back today, are we ready? He could come back today, are your friends and family ready?

The book of Revelation ends with these words, “He who testifies to these things says, ‘Surely I am coming soon.’ Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.” May that be our focus this Christmas season. Merry Christmas & Maranatha!

Keep Calm and Live for Christ

Our family was sharing a meal around the dinner table this week when I thought of one of the most famous slogans from WWII, “Keep Calm and Carry On.” It came to mind because we were talking about how to have the right perspective during these confusing times. Those who do not believe in Christ might want to rally around that slogan because it represents the humanistic philosophy that the right attitude can change any situation for the better.

That slogan may have helped many British patriots make it through the darkest days of WWII, but it didn’t bring lasting peace to their lives. It didn’t solve their problems once the war was over. It didn’t bring meaning to their existence. And there’s no way it could because it was focused on the finite realm of man. True meaning can only come through that which transcends humanity. True meaning can only come through God.

That is why I would like to recommend a new slogan, “Keep Calm and Live for Christ!” Those who truly commit their lives to Christ will find that they also gain peace that brings calm to their life like they have never experienced before. The sense of peace is possible because Christ deals with the ultimate fear of man, death. The Bible tells us that those who repent of their sins and commit their lives to Christ will never have to live in fear of death because Jesus Christ conquered death for them when he died on the cross and rose from the tomb almost 2000 years ago.

Paul’s letter to the church in Ephesus makes this abundantly clear, “But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ.” When someone is made alive spiritually they are also promised to be given eternal life in the presence of God. This is why Paul can write “For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.” The Christian has died to himself and he is committed to living for Christ. This makes everything in life significant and it takes away the fear of death. There is purpose and meaning in life and death. Life is to be lived for Christ. Life is to be lived for the Church, which is the bride of Christ. Life is to be lived to tell others about what Christ did for them so they might be set free from the fear of death as well.

This meaning and significance applies to every situation in life. Even the difficulties in life have meaning because they reveal to humanity that we live in a broken world that needs to be redeemed. Diseases and viruses like Covid-19 remind us that there is something wrong. They remind us that we can’t look to humanity for the answers. We have to look to God. And this mentality changes everything. It helps the Christian stay calm. He might get sick, but he is not living for physical health. He is living for life after death. He doesn’t need to lose hope about his own physical health because his spiritual health is secure. This allows the Christian to think about the spiritual health of those around him. This is what the right perspective is during Covid-19. We are to be concerned about someone’s physical body because it is the residence of their soul. We care for each other so that God can care for our souls.

It is important to remember that the world’s spiritual needs won’t be met with social distancing. They won’t be met with a face covering. In fact, for many people these guidelines are getting in the way of meeting spiritual needs. Just listen to what the apostle Paul wrote in Romans 10, “How then will they call on him in whom they have not believed? And how are they to believe in him of whom they have never heard? And how are they to hear without someone preaching? and how are they to preach unless they are sent? As it is written, “How beautiful are the feet of those who preach the good news!” The non-believing world needs Christians to reach out to them to share the gospel. They need to hear the truth so they can be set free from the power of sin and death.

The Spiritual needs of Christians are also being hampered by misinformed Covid guidelines. Churches in California are now encouraged to meet for outdoor services, yet many Christians are too afraid to go. Are we going to let the world determine how we think about these difficult times? I hope not. We are not living in the fear of man or of virus. We are living in the fear of God and his word tells us, “abide in him, so that when he appears we may have confidence and not shrink from him in shame at his coming.” We need to have confidence that the Christian life is not lived for our physical well-being. It is to be lived for Christ.