Our Prayer

Our Prayer

Heavenly Father, I know that I have sinned against You and that my sins separate me from You. I am truly sorry. I now want to turn away from my sinful past and turn to You for forgiveness. Please forgive me, and help me avoid sinning again. I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, died for my sins, that He was raised from the dead, is alive, and hears my prayer. I invite Jesus to become my Savior and the Lord of my life, to rule and reign in my heart from this day forward. Please send Your Holy Spirit to help me obey You and to convict me when I sin. I pledge to grow in grace and knowledge of You. My greatest purpose in life is to follow Your example and do Your will for the rest of my life. In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Class Lesson for May 31, 2020

Click on the ZOOM link you were sent to join us!

New Day & Time
This Thursday @ 7:30 PM



Last Lesson on DEALING WITH MESSY RELATIONSHIPS

We've been looking at six traits God calls us to exhibit, traits that can clean up and restore a messy relationship. Living a life infused with these traits can even prevent a relationship from getting messy in the first place.

Love / Encourage / Forgive / Serve / Yield / Accept



Let's conclude with the six trait to ACCEPT.




THE BIBLE MEETS LIFE

In a perfect world, everyone would agree with me, everyone would bring up their kids like I do, everyone would vote for the candidates I endorse, and everyone would spend their money like I spend mine.

What a wonderful world it would be if everyone started reading from the right script, which just so happens to be the one in my hand!

But the reality is we don’t always see eye-to-eye. The question for each of us is: What do we do when we disagree? A lot of us spend an enormous amount of time persuading—trying to get the “blind” person to subscribe to our point of view. But what if that approach doesn’t work? What happens when you talk until you’re blue in the face and the other person still stands his or her ground? Is the relationship over?

In the Book of Romans, Paul taught us to remain humble when we have differences in opinion. Clearly, some hills are worth dying on and at times we need to stand our ground, but Paul helped us to see where to draw those lines. Paul’s instructions guide us to maintain strong relationships in spite of any difference of opinion.




WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?

Romans 14:1-4
1 Accept anyone who is weak in faith, but don’t argue about disputed matters. 2 One person believes he may eat anything, while one who is weak eats only vegetables. 3 One who eats must not look down on one who does not eat, and one who does not eat must not judge one who does, because God has accepted him. 4 Who are you to judge another’s household servant? Before his own Lord he stands or falls. And he will stand, because the Lord is able to make him stand.

Paul addressed the importance of peaceful relationships—not simply staying in the same church but staying closely knit together. Romans 14 indicates rival groups of individuals were popping up in the church because members were joining forces according to their personal persuasions and preferences. Believers became critical of one another for holding different views. This division was wrong and out of place, especially given the fact that they were arguing over petty things. They were not debating the gospel or dividing over whether Jesus had truly died for their sins. They were not debating the most effective ways to reach their community for Christ. They were arguing over foods and festivals.

Question 2:
How should we behave when 
we disagree as Christ-followers?

Paul later referred to these two groups as the weaker and the stronger (Rom. 15:1). What made one group stronger was their spiritual maturity; they rightly understood Christian liberty. Those in the “strong” group were far from perfect, but they understood that whether a person ate meat or only vegetables and what day another person considered holy did not point to disobedience or a lack of love and commitment to Christ.

Who were the people in the “weaker” party? These included the Christians who had grown up week after week with certain rules and practices that were deeply ingrained in them. Some also may have come from pagan backgrounds and thus believed the food sold in the markets was not good for food. These believers were every bit as saved as the “strong” believers. They were committed followers of Christ, but their conscience kept them from embracing new freedoms.

While one group may have been more mature in their thinking, both groups were guilty of a critical spirit. Rather than running each other down and resenting the positions held by the other group, Paul challenged them to “accept” one another. Accept carries the idea of welcoming others and being generous toward them. The world defines acceptance as a full affirmation, even endorsement, of a person’s beliefs and practices. The Bible doesn’t use the word accept to mean to condone sin. Instead, it’s a desire to stay close, even when both parties see things differently.

It’s important to keep in mind that Paul was talking about disputable matters—those things Scripture is silent about. In Romans 14, Paul was addressing “gray areas” in the Christian life. Still, in verse 4, he made it plain that each of us will have to answer to God for the way we have lived this life. God is not going to ask me what I thought about another person’s actions. God is the Lord and Judge over the other person. I’m not.

Question 3:
What unintended damage can occur 
when we judge one another?


Romans 14:13-15
13 Therefore, let us no longer judge one another. Instead decide never to put a stumbling block or pitfall in the way of your brother or sister. 14 I know and am persuaded in the Lord Jesus that nothing is unclean in itself. Still, to someone who considers a thing to be unclean, to that one it is unclean. 15 For if your brother or sister is hurt by what you eat, you are no longer walking according to love. Do not destroy, by what you eat, someone for whom Christ died.

The “stronger” group had a more mature understanding of freedom, but Paul still challenged these believers not to be insensitive by flaunting their freedoms. They should avoid offending others.

Out of respect for others, mature Christians will restrict their freedom, removing anything from their lives that would cause others to feel wounded in their conscience. Our personal relationships should trump our personal freedoms. The strong should move toward the weak.

ACCEPTING DIFFERENCES

In the space provided, compare “disputed matters” (Rom. 14:1) we might disagree about with indisputable matters of the faith. List some examples of each. Then answer the question.

Disputed Matters                Indisputable Matters







How do you determine the difference?



“With all humility and gentleness, with patience, bearing
with one another in love, making every effort to keep
the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace.”
EPHESIANS 4:2-3



Simon was a vibrant, young worship leader. While in college, he was often called on to lead the music in chapel services as well as in surrounding churches. One Sunday, he was invited to bring his band and lead the music at a more traditional church. The pastor was very kind and appreciative, but he did request that Simon wear a coat and tie, the normal attire for their church leaders. Feeling insulted, Simon hung up the phone and wondered: “How could this church insist on a dress code that is not found in Scripture? Why can’t they accept me for who I am?” Simon made a decision in the heat of his emotions. He rejected the pastor’s request and arrived on Sunday in his faded jeans and favorite t-shirt. His attitude? “Those people can get over it.” It’s easy to fall into Simon’s selfish, self-centered way of thinking. It’s likely that you—just like me—at some point have tried to justify your behavior by saying, “Those people need to get over it.” But this mentality doesn’t build healthy relationships. Furthermore, wounding your brother or sister in Christ for no good reason is wrong.

We need to have the opposite attitude. Whenever we consider the conscience of others as we make adjustments to our lives, we are demonstrating maturity more than compromise.

Question 4:
How do you balance exercising your 
freedom and avoiding stumbling blocks?



Romans 14:16-19
16 Therefore, do not let your good be slandered, 17 for the kingdom of God is not eating and drinking, but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. 18 Whoever serves Christ in this way is acceptable to God and receives human approval. 19 So then, let us pursue what promotes peace and what builds up one another.

The most important things in life are not meats and vegetables! Though we must eat to live, we do not live to eat. So what is to be our main focus?

  • We live to make the kingdom of God and His glory known throughout the earth.
  • We live to build His kingdom and promote His purpose.
  • We live to see our Savior return in power and glory, with our lives prepared and poised for service.


We serve Christ when we give proper proportion to trivial things and keep the cause of Christ in full view, refusing to “major on the minors.” In so doing, we sense God’s pleasure and enjoy growing relationships.

We are called to wear the badge of a servant. Again, we’re talking about preferences and differences of opinion. Certainly, times may arise when we must make a clear moral and biblical stand, and that stand could cause division. Even then, however, we must stand for truth in a loving way, with unity in mind.

When someone disagrees with us or offends us, our natural reaction is to run away from the person, build a wall of defense, or just keep our distance. In some situations, these boundaries are needed, but the healthiest Christian response is to maintain the relationship. We are called to stick with it and serve the people God has placed around us.

Scripture compels us to do our part to preserve relationships. The kingdom of God is about “righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit.” May we promote these things in the lives of our families and our churches and never give up on the hope of healing.

Question 5:
How does serving Christ in this way 
change how we approach disagreements?




LIVE IT OUT

What will you do to build relationships in spite of any differences of opinion? Choose one of the following applications:

  • Extend grace. If someone has offended you because their actions go  against your convictions, forgive. Do not hold these actions over their  heads.                                                                                                                                                    
  • Let go. You may feel perfectly free in Christ to participate in some  activities, but others do not. Let go of your freedom to engage in the  activity in order to respect and serve the other person.                                                                                     
  • Agree to disagree. Meet with someone with whom you have a difference of opinion. It might help if you each communicated why you hold to a certain conviction; in the end, however, you may still choose to agree to disagree. Maintain love and respect for the other person in spite of the difference.


Your relationships are more important than your opinions. Love Christ by loving the other person more than you love your rights or opinions. 




Looking forward to seeing everyone this Thursday night at 7:30 for our Zoom class!!

In His Love,

David & Susan















Sunday, May 24, 2020

Class Lesson for May 24, 2020

Click on the ZOOM link you were sent to join us!

Sunday @ 6:00 PM



DEALING WITH MESSY RELATIONSHIPS

In this series, we are looking at six traits God calls us to exhibit, traits that can clean up and restore a messy relationship. Living a life infused with these traits can even prevent a relationship from getting messy in the first place.

Love / Encourage / Forgive / Serve / Yield / Accept



Let's continue with the fifth trait to YIELD.




THE BIBLE MEETS LIFE

I get amused when I see a news story about people who camp out overnight to be one of the first to purchase the latest phone, tablet, or gadget. On the other hand, I am saddened when I see reports of people pushing, shoving, and even punching to be the first in the store for the black Friday sales during Thanksgiving weekend.

We don’t always want to be first though.
  • The four-year-old will gladly let his sister go first when lining up for shots.
  • The adventurer will step back and let someone else volunteer for the boring assignment.

These examples share one thing, whether it’s to be the first in line or the last: selfishness. It’s about what I want . . . or what I want to avoid. A desire for something is not necessarily wrong, but when I push to get it at the expense of others, I have placed myself first and damaged my relationships.

In this session, we learn of a better way. Paul contended that we are called to be first in line for one thing: looking out for others. And when we do that, we get the benefit of strong relationships.




WHAT DOES THE BIBLE SAY?


Philippians 2:1-4
1 If then there is any encouragement in Christ, if any consolation of love, if any fellowship with the Spirit, if any affection and mercy, 2 make my joy complete by thinking the same way, having the same love, united in spirit, intent on one purpose. 3 Do nothing out of selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility consider others as more important than yourselves. 4 Everyone should look out not only for his own interests, but also for the interests of others.

Paul challenged the church at Philippi to strive for a new level of maturity in relationships. He encouraged believers to “make my joy complete by thinking the same way, having the same love, united in spirit, intent on one purpose” (v. 2). Live in harmony! Unity among His people pleases God (Ps. 133:1), just as a well-rehearsed song becomes “music to our ears.” If your church is like most, the members will not agree on every single line item in the annual budget, but you can agree to stay together, work together, pray together, and serve together. You can choose to push your differences aside and interact with each other with “affection and mercy.”

Paul’s emphasis on unity and oneness with Christ feels warm and inviting, and in verses 3-4 he spelled out the challenging realities of how believers are to maintain that love and unity. He stated this truth in both negative and positive terms. Negatively, he instructed, “Do nothing out of selfish ambition or conceit” (v. 3) and don’t look out only for our own interests. On the positive side, Paul counseled believers to practice humility, “consider others as more important than yourselves,” and “look out . . . for the interests of others.”


Question 2:
What circumstances in life tempt you to ignore the instructions in these verses?

Humbly place the needs of others before your own. This is not an invitation to be a doormat and let others walk all over you! Paul was not suggesting that you ignore your own needs or stifle your own interests. It’s good to tend to whatever you’re responsible for in your life, but don’t do it at the expense of others. Work to help and meet the needs of others just as you work to meet your own needs. Jesus said the second greatest commandment was to “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Matt. 22:39)—not instead of yourself. Still, we shouldn’t consider our interests as more important than those of others.

Do you “look out” for others . . . or do you mainly “look out” for yourself? If you are like me, you probably have no trouble at all thinking about your own desires—what you want. Most of us don’t need alarms on our phones to remind us to eat, sleep, or play. We serve ourselves without thinking. However, we do need frequent promptings to keep our minds focused on others. Paul offered that prompt here, urging his Philippian friends—and us—to make the needs of other people a major focus of our lives.


Philippians 2:5
5 Adopt the same attitude as that of Christ Jesus.

Watching someone else perform a task may be the best way to learn. It’s not surprising that demonstration videos on YouTube® have multiplied exponentially. Wouldn’t you rather learn by observation rather than reading an instruction manual?

Paul challenged believers to observe Jesus to learn what humility looks like. We are to follow His example. Christ provided a perfect sacrifice for our sins, and He offers a perfect model for navigating our way through personal relationships. It all comes down to attitude: “Adopt the same attitude as that of Christ Jesus.”

Jesus is the quintessential example for us. Verses 6-11 show us how Jesus perfectly demonstrated humility and provided us the ultimate service: He died for us to bring us to God. “He emptied himself.” Jesus is completely God, but He humbly emptied Himself of the glory and privileges that are rightfully His.

We’ve all met someone who was “full of himself.” You may have fit that description a time or two yourself. When a person is full of himself, he leaves no room for others. His opinions are the cleverest and his experiences are the richest. He tries to fill the room with his own self-importance. Jesus’ attitude calls us to empty our egos and put others first. This is the essence of submission.

Jesus taught humility in His parables as well. In Luke 14:7-14, Jesus used a parable of a wedding banquet to challenge His followers to humbly select the worst seat in the house. Leave the coveted seat for someone else and consider yourself unworthy of such honor. “For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and the one who humbles himself will be exalted” (Luke 14:11).

Don’t buy into the lie that greatness comes only when an ever-growing number of people know your name, follow you on Twitter®, or place you at the head of their table. Kill this attitude before it kills your connection with others.


Question 3:
How do we balance our responsibility to ourselves and to others?



Philippians 2:13-15
13 For it is God who is working in you both to will and to work according to his good purpose. 14 Do everything without grumbling and arguing, 15 so that you may be blameless and pure, children of God who are faultless in a crooked and perverted generation, among whom you shine like stars in the world.

“Do everything without grumbling and arguing” (v. 14).

C’mon, Paul. You surely don’t expect me to stand in line for over an hour without griping! We can’t truly accept our circumstances without raging against those responsible—can we? Yes, we can. Jesus did it . . . and He expects us to follow His example. By the power of His Spirit, we can live without grumbling and arguing—or griping and raging. It means you must make the choice to remove all whining from your world.

Jonathan Edwards was a pastor who had a prolific writing career. He became world famous for his role in the First Great Awakening in the 1730s-40s. His life was busy and full, yet like nearly all of us, he experienced great heartache along the way. After twenty-three years of serving his church, his flock fired him, sending him and his family out on the streets. While he was in the midst of being fired, badgered, and backstabbed, the people of the town paid close attention to his demeanor. As they observed his behavior, one man said:

“I never saw the least symptoms of displeasure in his countenance the whole week, but he appeared like a man of God, whose happiness was out of the reach of his enemies . . .”1

Edwards had found what Paul had found: a joy that soars above the ups-and-downs of life. Like an airplane that flies above the turbulence, we can fly above our stormy circumstances. Our joy can be placed beyond the reach of our enemies.

Paul was showing us how to “shine like stars in the world” (v. 15). The world is brimming over with whiners, haters, critics, and cynics.

Be the breath of fresh air our culture is so desperately longing for. How? By being convinced that God is up to something great in your life! I’m not talking about having a blind optimism, but rather living in the reality of what God is doing. “For it is God who is working in you both to will and to work according to his good purpose” (v. 13).

When you start taking Paul’s words seriously, your relationships will be affected.

  • When you take the focus off yourself and your circumstances . . .
  • When you look for ways to humbly serve others . . .
  • When you stop complaining and start loving others through service . . .
  • When you take on the same attitude as Christ . . .

. . . all your relationships will be affected. And those same people will discover you have stumbled upon a treasure they desperately long to find: inner peace and fixed joy.

Question 4:
How have you seen relationships strengthened through acts of humility?


Question 5:
How can our group serve as a safe place for honest conversation?




LEARNING TO YIELD

In the following arenas of your life, how can you act without grumbling or arguing? (choose 3) Jot down some ways of responding that would be so counter cultural that you would certainly shine like a star.

while driving    
hanging at a sports event  
functioning in your home
choosing what you wear  
choosing entertainment options
speaking to others 
spending money    
working at the office

“Humility is nothing but the disappearance
of self in the vision that God is all.”




LIVE IT OUT

What steps will you take to practice humility and place the needs of others before your own? Choose one of the following applications:

  • Small steps. Park in the worst space in the church parking lot next Sunday. Extra credit if it’s raining. Come early and set up the room for your next small group meeting. Tell someone how much you appreciate his or her gifts or skills in a particular area.
  • Medium steps. Share a story of a major failure from your past. Confess your need for the gospel. Volunteer in a homeless ministry and treat those people as you would treat governors and kings.
  • Large steps. Offer a sincere apology to someone you’ve hurt. Share your desire to be forgiven. Meet someone’s need with a large sum of money . . . and do it anonymously.

When’s the last time you fought hard to be first in line for something you wanted? When’s the last time you fought hard not to be first in line for something you dreaded? There’s a better way; by faith, let’s practice it! 






Hope to see everyone this evening on zoom!

In His Love,

David & Susan

Teacher Notes:



And if you're wondering why the above quote about humility and underwear includes an image of two dogs, that's a pair of Boxers. 


Humility is a character trait some people equate with weakness; they wrongly associate humility with being a doormat, being passive, so pliable as to be unable or unwilling to take a stand for something. They are convinced to be humble only allows a strong dictatorial or domineering person to take advantage of them and treat them as objects. The Epistle to the Philippians paints a far different—and better—picture of humility. Paul pointed to Jesus as the model of what it means to live with a submissive attitude. Hence, we may learn from Him how to yield our personal desires to address the needs of others.


Lynn Pryor writes, I’ve thought for years I should write a book titled: The Ten Most Humble People and How I Mentored the Other Nine.

Yeah, right.

Humility is a virtue we know we need, but if we know we have it … well, maybe we don’t have it after all. An acknowledgment of our own humility may just go against what it means to be humble!


So, who is the most humble person? Three names come to mind.

  1. Moses. The Bible describes him as humble. “Now Moses was a very humble man, more humble than anyone else on the face of the earth” (Num. 12:3).
  2. Jesus. The Son of God is our perfect example of how we are to live with humility (Phil. 2:5-11).
  3. _______________________. Actually, I don’t know the third person’s name. Maybe it’s you. But it is someone who loves Jesus wholeheartedly and serves so humbly and quietly that no one even notices.


I find such humility admirable in today’s world. We live in a world that encourages you to wave your own flag. Market who you are. Toot your own horn, because if you don’t, who will?

Churches are beginning to emerge from the COVID-19 quarantine and many are starting to meet again. The church where I am serving as the interim pastor will resume meeting on May 31. Like many churches, we will be doing so with self-imposed restrictions: facemasks, physical distancing, and 55-gallon drums of hand sanitizer … well, lots of hand sanitizer.

Unfortunately, COVID-19 with its wide range of opinions and theories (including conspiracy theories) is dividing people—even believers in Christ’s body.
  • We’re going overboard with all this “protection.”
  • No one is going to make me wear a mask!
  • We’re the church. We should be trusting God, not unsure doctors or the government.


What does humility look like as we come back together? Humility is willing to restrict my freedoms for the sake of others.


“Do nothing out of selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility consider others as more important than yourselves. Everyone should look not to his own interests, but rather to the interests of others” (Phil. 2:3-4).

I don’t want to wear a face mask, but I will. I’m happy to shake someone’s hand (or fist bump or whatever the cool kids are doing this week), but I won’t. I choose to restrict myself for the sake of others. We can debate until the cows come home about the legitimacy and value of the guidelines and restrictions, but for the moment, I choose to err on the side of discretion.

It’s not about me. I choose to restrict myself for the sake of others. To do otherwise is to be centered on what I want.  That is being self-centered—and that’s pride.

Love and value those around you. Place their interests before your own. That’s what Jesus did for us—and we are called to be like Jesus. In the very next verse after Paul wrote on living in humility, he said:

“Adopt the same attitude as that of Christ Jesus, who, existing in the form of God, did not consider equality with God as something to be exploited. Instead he emptied himself by assuming the form of a servant, taking on the likeness of humanity. And when he had come as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death—even to death on a cross” (vv. 5-8).

Let’s humble ourselves before God, setting aside ourselves, and living for the sake of others. God honors our humility. Let’s honor Him by living humbly before others.

What does it mean to consider someone more important than yourself?





Philippians 2:5
5 Adopt the same attitude as that of Christ Jesus.

How would you describe “the same attitude as that of Christ Jesus” (v. 5)?
Jesus is the quintessential example for us. Verses 6-11 show us how Jesus perfectly demonstrated humility and provided us the ultimate service: He died for us to bring us to God. “He emptied himself.” Jesus is completely God, but He humbly emptied Himself of the glory and privileges that are rightfully His.
We’ve all met someone who was “full of himself.” You may have fit that description a time or two yourself. When a person is full of himself, he leaves no room for others. His opinions are the cleverest and his experiences are the richest. He tries to fill the room with his own self-importance. Jesus’ attitude calls us to empty our egos and put others first. This is the essence of submission.


Philippians 2:13-15
For it is God who is working in you both to will and to work according to his good purpose. Do everything without grumbling and arguing, so that you may be blameless and pure, children of God who are faultless in a crooked and perverted generation, among whom you shine like stars in the world.

What does it look like to practice these verses on a daily basis?


What are some lasting truths from Philippians 2:13-15?
  • God is at work within us and gives us spiritual energy to do His good will.
  • Our attitudes give definition to the depth of our spiritual character.
  • The world in which we live needs to see the difference Christ can make in people’s lives.



LIVE IT OUT
We live in a power-grabbing world where the person with great honors, the highest attainments, and the most prestige have the most influence and tend to be valued above others.

Jesus long ago turned that worldview upside down. He called for humility of spirit; think of others first and foremost.

Paul had many things he could boast about but in the end, he knew those things were not that important. In fact, they could be regarded as rubbish (Phil 4:4-8). Such is the attitude Paul aspired for the Philippians. And it is an attitude, disposition, and approach to life still needed among believers in our churches and in our communities.