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March 2016 Spare Change

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The Tough Sayings of Jesus


People like to paint a mental picture of Jesus being all loving, inclusive, and accepting of everyone.  Of course Jesus is loving and accepting, but is that the whole picture of the personhood of Jesus?  What do we think when we hear the tough sayings of Jesus?  What do we do when he talks about commitment, about counting the cost, or about sacrifice?  Let me show you what I mean:

So Jesus said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever feeds on my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day.   (John 6:53-54 ESV)

Now great crowds accompanied him, and he turned and said to them, “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple. Whoever does not bear his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciple … So therefore, any one of you who does not renounce all that he has cannot be my disciple.   (Luke 14:25-27; 33 ESV)

Then Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.   (Matthew 16:24-25 ESV)

These are just a couple of examples that caused followers of Jesus to turn away.  Jesus seemed to have a lot of fair weather friends.  When the teaching got tough or the commitment too great, they were nowhere to be found.  Being a Christian or a follower of Jesus requires commitment.  Understand that salvation comes only from Jesus, it is a work he does in our heart.  Jesus redeems us by his sacrifice on the cross and the resurrection from the grave.  Salvation is only accomplished through faith.  Unfortunately, many people end there.  They think once they have their “fire insurance” they are good to go.  They are not seeking true life change; they just simply don’t want to go to hell.

There were many people in Jesus’ day that came to observe him or to see what they could get.  Only a few actually wanted to follow him.  That is the difference between true salvation and just an emotional response.  When the gospel is truly applied to our hearts, we begin to change.  It is then we gladly follow Jesus.  Being a Christian should not feel like a burden.  There are definitely hard days, but overall we are filled with peace, joy, and hope because of our faith in Christ.

We need to be fair to the whole person of Jesus.  He is loving and accepting, but He also calls us to obedience and commitment.  Even in that calling, He enables us by His spirit to change and grow to be like Him.  Our job, as it always has been, is simply to trust.  We must continually place our faith in Jesus, day by day. Growing in faith consistently is what Jesus wants.  Ultimately, the commitment is one of faith.  When we come to these tough sayings of Jesus we need to learn them, meditate on them, and be encouraged by them.  Don’t walk away like so many fair weather friends have before.  Seek to follow Jesus even in the tough stuff.

 

Posted by Bryan Gotcher with

February 2016 Pastor's Points

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Dear Church Family,

Since we are in the middle of a political season, I thought it might be good to consider at least three qualities we should pray for to be demonstrated in the life of our next president.  I read an article sometime back about this topic and three qualities stuck in my mind.

First, I pray our new president will be marked by humility.  When you lead any group of people it is always necessary to remember that the position you have was first given to you by God.  The leader never accomplishes anything through his or her own power.  Also, the leader must remember that it is not about the leader.  It is about those that he or she leads.  An effective leader is a humble servant leader.  And a leader is never more like Jesus than when he walks in humility.

Second, our new president will need wisdom.  And I am not talking about the need to assemble the best and brightest advisers that human wisdom can offer.  Yes advisers are needed, but I pray for a president that will seek counsel from the pure truth of God's Word.  We need a president that is truly seeking wisdom from God and does not see themselves or advisers as the main source of wisdom to function in.

Third and finally, I pray that our new president will have courage.  A leader must display the courage of his convictions.  Courage to do what is right.  Courage to stand up for the weak and destitute.  Courage to protect the unborn.  Courage to speak truth to power.  Courage to say no when it is necessary.  Courage to say yes to those things that are right even when it is politically dangerous. And yes courage to stand to protect our country from all enemies domestic and foreign.  We need a president marked by humility, wisdom, and courage.  Lets make it a matter of prayer.

I love you and I love being your pastor.

 

Posted by Alan Scott with

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