A unique giving of thanks


                Thanksgiving is an awesome day.  Typically the day consists of spending quality time with loved ones and eating food prepared with love.  Not to mention football (!!), but not everybody is into that.  Memories are constructed and hearts are softened this time of year.  While reading Psalms 9, you cannot hold a smile back hearing David lay out and further explain God’s faithfulness to us.  As Christians, what should we ultimately be thankful for?  Jesus’s death and resurrection on the cross that literally tore down the barrier between us and God, thus allowing us to have a relationship with our creator.  It is really easy to say how we are thankful for everything that is a result of Christ’s blessing on our lives.  Looking at gifts and consistently forgetting where they came from, and potentially putting them above the giver.  Let’s get this straight: Jesus saved us from ourselves while being physically, mentally and emotionally tortured by the very people he was saving.  He came from a perfect paradise to the corrupt earth all to save a people that he knew would never be able to live perfectly.  He knowingly bought a piece of junk, because he loves the piece of junk more than any of us can comprehend.  He loves us so much that he doesn’t let us just stay where we are, but promises to renew us inwardly day by day and forgive us when we repent and accept his ultimate gift of grace to us.  God had every reason to forsake us and let us self-destruct, but instead he made a way possible that all our needs could be met.  Rectifying our hearts, minds, bodies, and ultimately our souls.  Promising that his faithfulness would endure forever even amidst our faithlessness.  All he wants is our hearts, and our desires.  So as we sit with our families enjoying small puzzle pieces of the ultimate picture, let us thank the Father, Son and Holy Spirit for all things, but most importantly salvation.  If you have accepted Jesus’s gift on the cross and committed your life to him, you’ve got every reason to be thankful this year and every year in the future.  If you haven’t, he wants you to more than anything.  He paid a price for you, and conquered death all so he could talk to you and be with you!  Ask him into your heart, and repent from the sin that separates us from him and as he says, you are forgiven.  It is finished.

God Bless everyone.

Fly Like An Eagle


I look up to and respect Michael Vick, even if he is a convicted felon and dog murderer…and no, it’s not just because I’m an Eagles fan.  Why?

The first time I saw Michael Vick play football was during the divisional playoff round of the 2002-2003 season in which the Philadelphia Eagles played the Atlanta Falcons.  Vick actually played awful in the game, but I developed a certain admiration of him that evening.  Every time he touched the ball, his feet seemed to be literally engulfed with flames, torching the infamous Veterans Field turf wherever he stepped.  He was running so fast it was as if his feet were on fire and he was attempting to put the flames out by running at sickening speeds.  How could this dude be exploding out from under center, whipping around his tackle and burst into the Eagles secondary in a few measly seconds?  From that game on, I watched his career from a love-hate point of view.  I loved watching his animal like speed and agility and arm strength.  I hated watching his arrogant press conferences.  He continued to puzzle defensive coordinators around the NFL, but as he talks about in his autobiography, Finally Free, he was making his way down a very destructive and evil path.  

                On November 19th, 2007 Mike went to prison on a twenty-three month sentence for dog fighting.  Mike was one of the best quarterbacks in the NFL at the time, and this shocked and deeply angered many people.  Not just football fans, but everybody.  Animal activists were enraged and advocated the death penalty for Mike.  While many had different views on punishments, one thing most agreed on was that what Michael Vick did was evil.  Life went on for the rest of us, but as Mike describes in his book, he was in a stand still during his prison time…he was a “caged bird.”  That cage was opened in August 2009 when the Eagles signed him after serving his prison sentence and being cleared to play football again by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, but ultimately when he rededicated his life to Jesus Christ in a Kansas prison cell.          

                There is sooo much to process and consider with Michael Vick’s story, it is something that can be debated for days and days.  One thing that cannot be debated however, is that this man changed and not because of his doing.  Mike’s accomplishments on the football field with the Eagles in 2010 is not what makes his story interesting, it’s what went on in his heart.  God grabbed him where he was, and lifted him out of the disgusting sin he was indulging in when he turned his back on Christ upon entering the NFL.  His 2010 season shows how God richly blessed him and used him in the lives of many, including myself.  Mike lays it out for us in the eighth chapter of his book…

                “From the moment I first heard those prison doors slam behind me, I began to turn back to God-praying, reading the Bible, and recommitting my life to Him.  The only thing I could do was have faith and stay strong and to trust and believe that God would give me another chance”.  

                When he is talking about another chance, he is talking forgiveness.  Mike went from being one of the most beloved athletes to hated Americans in the course of a few months.  The forgiveness he NEEDED was from Christ.  It is the forgiveness we all need, and receive when we turn to him in faith and believe in his son’s death on the cross.  The forgiveness he DESIRED was from all his fans, friends, and family.  While many have forgiven him and many have not, it is troubling to think that some of those that have not call themselves “Christ-followers”.  It begs one question, its okay for God to forgive you of all your sins and call you his child but you don’t think it is fair for him to forgive and cleanse someone else?  Well for all the people who believe Mike Vick should never be forgiven for what he did, it isn’t up for you to decide.  We all have the same sentence, death.  We are all as much of a sinner as Mike and desire to be free!  Free from sin, free from evil, free from the deep wounds that lay in the depths of our hearts.  Jesus Christ’s death on the cross is the only path to the freedom we need and desire.  The wages of sin is death, but when we repent…

“You have been set free from sin and have become slaves to righteousness.” Romans 6:18

“But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the benefit you reap leads to holiness, and the result is eternal life.” Romans 6:22

Forgiveness is a beautiful and powerful thing.  Instead of the eternal death we have been sentenced to because of our incessant sin, we receive eternal life.  When we confess our sins, God is faithful and just to forgive us…and his mercies are new each day!  We must forgive, like we have been forgiven!  Live free.  Fly like an Eagle, free from sin and basking in the glorious riches God has for you!

 

 

 

 

 

A little validity….

How often do men come out of prison a better person than the one who entered prison?  Look at this statistic from the U.S. Department of Justice…

                “More than 650,000 ex-offenders are released from prison every year, and studies show that approximately two-thirds will likely be rearrested within three years of release.”

                Doesn’t sound like rehabilitation, does it? 

True rehab comes from Christ, and Christ alone.

Communication Factor


 

The past two years I was blessed with the opportunity to work on the grounds crew of a golf club who hire migrant workers all the way from Mexico to come up and work every March through November.  Hailing from Vera Cruz, Mexico, a place riddled by drug cartels, most of these men speak very little to no English which presents some interesting challenges during the course of the work day.  However, all these guys are hilarious and awesome people, so the miscommunication was usually very entertaining for both English and Spanish speakers alike.  Despite the language barrier between the Americans, Mexicans, and single Jamaican on the crew (shout out to Gopie) everything that needed to be done, always was finished by the end of the day.  There were some days where I was absolutely blown away by the efficiency that was displayed, with such an inefficient method. 

 

                One day this past fall, I was working side by side with a man from Mexico named Samuel.  Samuel is a small, skinny man who sports a grey goatee off of his wrinkly face.  Smoking about a pack of cigarettes a day while being in his sixties having done manual labor his entire life, the man musters up the strength each day to weather the elements and earn money for his family back home.  Serious respect.  Anyway, we got to talking on this blustery fall day.  I asked “You excited to go back Mexico and see familia?”  Wow.  Who would have known something as simple as that would spark such a grammatically incorrect yet involved conversation?  Samuel started telling me about his daughters, and how one of his daughters was a widow because her husband was murdered by the cartels.  She had 3 kids to raise with no job and no husband to provide.  Samuel knowing my minimal grasp on the Spanish language simply said it was “No Bueno”.  He got that across to me amidst the massive wall separating us conversationally, so I decided to tell him about something’s that were going on in my life.  I realized how I hadn’t had a good conversation like this with someone who even spoke ENGLISH in a while!  Everything was straightforward, to the point and perhaps most important, we both really had to think about what the other was saying in order to understand.  Later on in the day, Samuel, out of the blue came up to me and said “We no good understand each other for Tower of Babel!”  I just started laughing hysterically, partially because of how funny he sounded saying it (a common occurrence for us to laugh at the language barrier), and because of how blown away I was!  We then started talking about various Old Testament occurrences including The Tower of Babel, Daniel in the Lion’s Den, The Battle of Jericho, and also talked about Paul from the New Testament a little.  It then hit me like a bag of bricks, there still is a universal language…The Gospel!!

 

In Genesis chapter 11, the first verse states that at the current time, there was only one language.  Then people travelling from east find this big plain in the land of Shinar (most likely modern day Iraq) and decide to build a gigantic tower “with a top that reaches the heavens so we can make a name for ourselves and not be scattered over the whole earth”. (v.4). God decides to punish them for their pride and protect them from dangerous unification by “confusing” their language.  This was the origin of miscommunication between Samuel and I, and millions of others!

 

If God eliminated having only one language, but wants us to “go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit (Matt.28:19), then how do we do so when the other countries speak a different language then we do?  The Gospel isn’t bound down by words, its living.  The Holy Spirit lives in us and communicates to others through our actions.  Even if there is a physical language barrier, there will never been a spiritual language barrier between us.  The Gospel is for everyone!  Not just English speaking Americans, or Spanish speaking Mexicans.  The consistency of our sinful hearts needing to be saved that will exist in all of us until we accept Jesus Christ into our lives by faith transcends words.  Which is why through hand motions, broken words, and tears there is amazing ministry going on all over the world, because it is Spirit led, sincere, and truly from the heart.

 

Jesus says we should let our Yes be Yes and our No be No in Matthew 5:37.  How often do we communicate like Jesus though?  He was always truthful, honest and loving with his words.  Mark 1 and 2 provide a good lesson on how to communicate with one another. 

 

  • Mark 1:15…short, honest, and sincere.

 

“The time has come,” he said.  “The kingdom of God is near.  Repent and believe the good news!”

 

  • Mark 2:17…truthful, and patient with the wishy washy Pharisees after they questioned him about eating with “sinners” and tax collectors.

 

“It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick.  I have not come to call the righteous, but

 

sinners.”

 

                Unlike us, he had every right to be harsh with these people and to flip things around and judge them as we often do with people who do things contrary to what we think they should do.  Jesus was without sin though, and we are overflowing with it.  It puts things in perspective to know that we never have the right to judge anyone yet we always do, and he had every right to, and was calm, patient and slow to anger.  Another way we need a savior.

 

The latter half of Matthew 5:37 says that “anything beyond this (simple, truthful answers) comes from the evil one”.  Sadly, rarely are people upfront about things.  Or if they are, it’s out of bitterness and sin, not truth.  Instead, they choose to people please and aim to earn the acceptance of man rather than of their Savior.  Ironically, people pleasing really is only done with self-glorification in mind…we only do it to make things easier on ourselves, rather than thinking about the others best interests.  Our yes’s are not yes’s and no’s are not no’s, and this is a very devastating place to be for everyone, nobody wins! 

 

We can be strong though, when our confidence isn’t in compliments from others or approval of man but resting solely in God and his word.  It’s an amazing freedom, and serves as an opportunity to build better more meaningful relationships with people when we are bold in Christ and learn to communicate as he would.  He’ll provide amazing ways, just like he did with Samuel and I, but most importantly, he’ll teach you how to better communicate with him!  He’s the best person to talk with around. 

 

               

 

 

 

Go To War


Motivation can be hard to come by at times.

                As difficult circumstances pile on top of one another like logs, our hearts become weighed down.  Physically the presence of pain, stress, hurt, or guilt traps people in a fog of fear, anger, depression, or sorrow to mention a few.  Sometimes there seems like no way out and the heavy vest being carried will never be lifted.  In our minds, these things are magnified, whether we want them to be or not.  It’s time to break that magnifying glass!

                Where does incessant thinking about fear, or stress (among others) guide us?  The path is a dark one with no end and an exponential increase in the struggles.  For some reason however, it seems so enticing to give into those thoughts and let them have their stay.  The reason for that is because as Christians, we have a common enemy.  It’s not Atheists, homosexuals, prostitutes, junkies, or Muslims.  It is sin, and the flesh that is inspired by Satan.  If we truly believe that our God is real and his Bible is truth, why can’t we accept that the enemy is real as well?  Starting down this path, nobody realizes who is really behind it…the deceiver.  However, when Jesus is accepted and believed in with all of one’s heart, they quickly turn one hundred eighty degrees and start sprinting in the other direction and no matter how real the enemy is, he has no power. 

                The moment his word penetrates our hearts, souls are changed, truth is realized and war is declared.  What used to be a nice sounding sentence of literature becomes the strength we need to make it through the day and the joy we so desperately lack.  If God says it, that settles it.  As believers, our weapon, sharper than any sword or physical weapon, is the Bible.  Which begs the question, why would God have given us a weapon if there was no war to be waged?

                Believing that a book is more powerful than an AK-47 is ridiculous to anyone who has never read and believed the Bible.  This war isn’t a physical one, though.  Take 2 Corinthians 10:4…

“For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds.” (KJV)

                Paul uses the word carnal, or in Greek, SarkikosSarkikos literally means fleshly or of the body, but implies weakness, frailty, and imperfection in the Greek language.  An antonym of Carnal in Greek is Pneumatikόs.  This literally means spiritually, or supernatural and is described in the Greek language as pertaining or proceeding from the Holy Spirit.  The entire New Testament of the bible was written in Greek originally (2 Corinthians is in the New Testament). 

                When belief in God is present, his Holy Spirit lives inside the body of the believer, empowering them with Chôzeq, or literally filling them with “The Lord’s strength”.  The weapon, protection, and strength is all supplied with Jesus.  Thus, it is time to go to war.  Making war against addictions, fears, and selfish desires is possible by taking God’s word for what it really is, truth…and living in accordance with it.  Satan and our flesh’s only power is derived from what we give to it, so it is time to battle those because God has enabled us to and calls us to do so!  We will lose battles, BUT he has already won the war, ultimately.  Go to war.

Free from the Flame


The story of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego is a popular one because of the seemingly fairy tale ending when these three men are saved from a fiery death and given a promotion by the man who was trying to kill them, King Nebuchadnezzar.  The problem is that with this amazing story many Christians and non-Christians alike take it not for what it truly is, but as they interpret it…a fairy tale.  The thing is, it’s the furthest thing from a fairy tale.

                A quick version of the story is this: King Nebuchadnezzar builds an “image of gold” and issues a decree that when people hear the sound of a horn, flute, zither, lyre, harp, pipes or any other kind of music, they must fall down to their knees and worship this golden image.  If anyone doesn’t, they will be thrown into a fiery furnace.  So then these tattle-tail astrologers tell the King about the 3 Jewish men (Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego) who are not obeying his orders to worship this image.  Nebuchadnezzar then tells them face to face in his fury that they will be thrown into the fire if they do not worship his idol and “then what god will be able to rescue you from my hand?”  I wonder if he thinks his metal “god” can. They respond that they don’t have to defend themselves to him.  The boldness and faith of these three men in their next statement is something we need to ask God to give us!  They say “If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God we serve is able to save us from it, and he will rescue us from your hand, O king.  But even if he does not, we want you to know, that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up.”  Nebuchadnezzar, furious, throws them into the furnace then cranks up the heat seven times its usual temperature.  The guards manning the entrance both are incinerated upon the furnace door opening, but these three mighty warriors are not harmed at all.  The King watches the men walk around his mighty furnace unharmed while a fourth figure is with them.  Nebuchadnezzar recognizes the figure as the Son of God and calls the men to come out of the furnace at once.  Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego walk out without any damage whatsoever.  Nebuchadnezzar recognized the men’s devotion and faith in God and noted how they did not compromise and how God blessed them for that, issuing another famous decree that anyone who speaks out against “their God” would be cut into pieces and their houses would be destroyed.  The three men are then promoted in Babylon…

It is safe to say that in this world, there is fire all around us.  Nobody in their right mind would say that this world is perfect, fair, and easy to live in.  There is evil all around us, and in us!  The fact of the matter is, we ourselves are fuel to those flames.  Our sin ignites that fire on a daily basis, and keeps it going.  We are so worried about being burnt, our eyes are constantly on the flames.  So we get torched over and over again and wonder if there is a way to resist being engulfed by these flames.  The fact is that sin remains.  We live in a fallen world separated from God, our creator and without him there is nothing but flames.  What if there was some kind of fire retardant we could cover ourselves in daily?  A safe haven.  Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego had it!  It’s called faith.    

In the Christian world, there are so many ideas on what faith really is and we tend to over complicate it. This stuff in the bible, it’s real.  These aren’t fairy tales. Faith is faith, believing but not seeing, doing but not knowing; trusting.  However, having faith is not completely understood.  There is serious power when one has complete and utter faith in God, and Jesus Christ their savior.  Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego understood this completely!  When there was no possible, logical, plausible way of them surviving being thrown into a furnace, they did not fear and did not doubt that God had already saved them!  Even if they did die, they knew they would be met face to face with their savior, so where is the fear in death?  Faith in God sending his only son to die for us changes lives, and there is no circumstance that is irrevocable with him.  A beautiful freedom from fear and doubt is born in our souls and we no longer see the flames, we just see the peace that transcends all understanding.  Did God not tell us that if we believed, we would see the glory of him? (John 11:40). 

Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego clung to him to get them out of the flames.  We should do the same.  Repent from our sins daily and ask him to change our hearts and give us more faith!  He wants to make us valiant warriors…even more than that.  We just need to understand his power and put our faith in who he is. 

So when the going gets tough and you don’t know where you are headed, keep on walking.  It may just take you out of those flames.  By the way, you aren’t walking alone.