How is it with Your Soul?

 

John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, had a favorite question that he would employ to others whenever, wherever.  He would asked, “How is it with your soul?” If you never heard that question, it would beg a response.  How is it with your soul?

soul 3

 

The first time that question was imposed to me, I was being interviewed for an executive pastor role with a conservative Methodist church in the Midwest.  After answering 15 challenging questions that I felt good with the replies, the pastor asked me, how is it with your soul?

 

I stammered, made a few audible noises, then shouted “good”.  But deep inside, I was unsure.  I hesitated, and the pastor and search committee recognized my doubt.  It was here that I began to reflect on that one question with the intention that if Jesus Christ stood in front of me, how would I answer.  The result of my study and reflections ended up with me placing a dark blue vanity plate on my car with the question – How is it with Your Soul?

 

My question to you today is the same – How is it with your soul?  Now when we speak of the soul, we strongly believe like others that the soul encompasses the entire human spectrum of heart, mind, body, spirit, and social relationships.  It involves every area of the human experience, not just the spiritual.  When one’s soul is healthy, it influences your heart, emotions, thinking, decisions, and physical health.  When one’s soul is hurting, it carries into these other areas.  The soul is the governing agency that keeps the person operating within God’s will.  As Christians, our soul is being transformed by the work of the Holy Spirit into a new creation.  It is through the soul that life is fully expressed.

 

Yet Jesus said that the soul could die.  What good is it to acquire all the world’s material possessions only to lose one’s soul?  Paul also writes that we are a new creation.  What is being transformed? Is it not our souls? As one soul is clothed with Christ’s righteousness, are we not invited into a personal relationship with our Maker?  The Bible calls it being adopted into the family of God.  And as a family member, we have all the privileges of heavenly royalty.

 

Rather than walking around with a dark soul, swimming with evil, and on death row with no hope, Jesus provides us with a journey that includes a healthy, holy soul that can positively influence the world around us.

 

How is my soul?  In Christ, we are celebrating life.  In Christ, we are living the spiritual abundant life.  In Christ, God’s fullness of love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, kindness, gentleness, self-control, faith, and hope is being generated into a model of his image.

PRAY 8

Thank you for asking, for in Christ – my soul is living life to the fullest – and it is very good indeed.

 

But how is it with your soul?

Dr. Mike

What Kind of Life Do You Really Want?

A Short Essay on the Book of Ecclesiastes

meaning 4

What is Life all about? Does Life make sense to you?  If someone asked you, how would you respond? Someone once asked me if I could only preach from one book from the Bible to today’s generation, which book would it be?  John? Matthew? Romans? Revelation? Genesis?  Would you believe-Ecclesiastes? Why?  Because it is written to self-centered, independent happiness seekers who believe they have life figured out in a simple formula and they are not going to miss out on anything.  Sound familiar?  Does that sound like someone you may know?

Let me ask again…What is Life all about?  Think about it…

One day you are born into a world and into a family that you didn’t ask for.  They raised you as they chose. You go to school, public, private, or even home-schooled – five years of grade school, 3 years of middle school, 4 years of high school, than you have the honor of graduating and deciding what you are going to be doing for the rest of your life.  You may enter a trade school, or a local college, or leave home to a major university – and their spend another 4 more years preparing you for your life’s work.  You graduate and decide to pursue graduate studies, possibly even post-graduate work.  All to prepare you for your life’s work. meaning 21

Meanwhile, you meet a person of the opposite sex that you enjoy hanging around with – you become involved and begin dating more seriously; meanwhile you find a job in the career field you have chosen.  You’re excited that someone is going to pay you that kind of money to do what you want to do…you buy yourself a new car, you buy yourself that low down-payment, fixer-up house that you always wanted; and you even start paying off your student loans.  You marry, you have children -1.8 per the national average. You fix up your house for the additional members.  You expand it up and over.  You build yourself that 3 car garage with the attached tool shed where you like to disappear on weekends.  You work, you run around town watching your 1.8 kids sporting activities.  You watch your kids graduate from high school and move on to college; your company is bought out and your job is eliminated; you sell your dream house and move into a smaller, easier to maintain unit.

You retire, your children get married and occasionally stop by with the grand-kids so you can spoil them.  Your body begins to lose hair as it changes color; you have put on more weight around the mid-section. Your not as quick as you use to be and your hearing and eyes play tricks on you.  One day you find yourself sick, you visit the doctors and he tells you that you have the dreaded C – cancer.  You have a short time to live.  You begin to ask yourself, what has my life been all about?  You die and though you request to be cremated, your mate always stated to you that funerals are for the living and therefore gave you a large open casket funeral where everyone who you haven’t seen in the last twenty years stop by to offer their words of sadness to your late spouse. What is life all about?

As a seventeen year old in my senior year of high school that question impacted my mind for months.  It’s how God led me to begin investigating life’s meaning and purpose in my own life.  It led me to discussion with all the people who are suppose to know – priests, teachers, nuns, philosophers, authors, and eventually to the Bible itself. I would strike up discussions with anyone who wanted to discuss the subject.  Eventually, people would turn away from me because they themselves didn’t have the answers and didn’t want to deal with the questions.

meaning 10

In fact, the very first book that I read from the Bible was the Book of Ecclesiastes – how’s that for a questioning 17 year old?  “All is vanity and blowing after wind” is what the book reads in its beginning refrain.  How would you feel being 17 years old and you read from the Bible that All is vanity?  How would you respond?

Since then though I have made it an annual tradition to read the book at least once per year simply to keep my feet on solid ground at how to deal with reality.  This past year I took a class on the Old Testament  and it has opened my mind to a deeper appreciation on the message the author wanted to convey to his universal audience.

Since the Book of Ecclesiastes is in the Old Testament, most people believe it was written to the Jewish people of its time.  However, there are many theologians today who now agree that it was written to a larger universal audience because of its style, structure, and what is not included within the message.  Today, we would call it an evangelical sermon.

What is the book about?  What does the book have to do with answering the question, what is life all about?  Many who have read it are confused on its message.

Is the author really a pessimist?  Does he only views the worst side of things; finds no comfort in God, and sees no hope for man’s happiness?  Isn’t the ever-recurring theme, “Vanity of vanities; all is vanity” a cynical view of life?

Yes the author affirms that death is better than life; that man’s labor, aim, and ambition ends in disappointment; that the pursuit of wisdom, wealth, and pleasure is unsatisfying.  However, these verses do not represent the teaching of the book; they only occur as a passing observation in the course of his investigation. His pessimism is only a gray cloud covering the sunshine until the proper time.

When he speaks in negative tones of life’s circumstances, he desires to call attention to the weaknesses of reality. Our mistake is to think that we can secure happiness by our own efforts and deny the involvement of a higher power.  Whereas the author repeatedly states that mankind cannot achieve enjoyment except by the gift of God.

The author speaks of “vanity,” not with bitterness or scorn, but as a stated fact. This is the result of his advanced study of men, nature, and life’s circumstances. From such feelings he finds refuge by contrasting this with another fact, which he holds just as strong, namely, that the whole universe is made and is governed by a God of justice, goodness, and power; and the good things in life come from Him.

meaning 14

The mood of Ecclesiastes is one of delight, with prospects of living and enjoying all the goods of life – once man has come to fear God and keep His commandments. It is a book written to celebrate “joy” and God’s “good” creation. The author recommends joy and rejoicing because life is a gift from God.

What is the message of the Book of Ecclesiastes?  Simply this…

               Apart from the Creator God, Life is Empty, Futile, and Meaningless – But God’s Gift is Joy, Contentment, and Fulfillment.

He repeatedly states that there is nothing to gain from this planet apart from God – “under the sun” is how the author states it 28 times.

The simple routine functions of life are meant to be enjoyed as a gift from God.  God has already ordained that we enjoy what we eat, drink, the work we do, the mate we marry, the companions we live life with, and what we wear. 12 times God is said to ‘give’.  Seven times man is said to have a joyful ‘portion’ from God

Let’s read the authors conclusion of his message:

Eccl 12:13-14 NLT

“Here is my final conclusion: Fear God and obey his commands, for this is the duty of every person.  God will judge us for everything we do, including every secret thing, whether good or bad.”

Or to put it in today’s vocabulary (my translation):

            “Believe God; Be at awe of Him; Remember. God is God, we are not.

            Walk with Him, Come to Know Him – Let His character rub off on you.

            Be Accountable to Him; He will bless & yes, discipline you; because He loves you and wants what is best for you.  He will give you the gift of joy, contentment, and fulfillment.”

Jesus Christ stated it more clearly for his disciples today: Matt 6:33 “Seek first the Kingdom of God & His Righteousness…

Seeking the Kingdom of God requires following its King, Jesus Christ.  It means being a disciple of His.  A lifestyle of Kingdom living…..His Righteousness is accepting Jesus Christ’s redeeming life, death, and resurrection as imputing His righteousness in our lives.  When God sees us, He sees the righteousness of Jesus.  As we walk in His presence, develop a lifestyle as His disciple, and allow Him to teach us in His Word through the Holy Spirit, our character, attitude, and life will become transformed like His.

The Preacher lived approximately 1000 years before Christ – He explained it as he saw it.  His conclusion:

Apart from the Creator God, Life is Empty, Futile, and Meaningless –

                          But God’s Gift is Joy, Contentment, and Fulfillment.

Jesus 7If you really want a life full of Joy, Contentment, and Fulfillment, and you have tried everything that this world has to offer – only to discover what Solomon did – how empty, futile, and meaningless it really is, than maybe its time to do business with Jesus….

This is the message of the Book of Ecclesiastes. How does that agree with your theology?

By Dr. Mike



Christian Elitism

“There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.” Gal 3:28 

 

Have you ever met a fellow disciple who believes that they are better than others because of being a Christian?

Not just being a Christian, but one that has special “truth” that makes them feel more “Christian” than his brothers and sisters in the Lord?

I had the unknowing privilege of being such a person in my earlier walk with Christ.  As a member of an organization that we would classify a cult today, I believed that we had precious revelations that made us special in the eyes of God.  But the Holy Spirit over time opened my ignorant eyes to more clearly understand what Christ accomplished through his life, death, and resurrection. His grace assures me that we are all free in Him. It’s not what we do, but what he did that makes us special.  And he did it for all of us.

Today, whenever someone approaches me and looks down at me or others because they are not Christian, or not a true believer, or a mature disciple, or a “and you add whatever you want to,” I cringe.  It only reveals to me where the person stands in her understanding of who Christ is. When one fully understands that Christ died for all – those who are alive today, those who have yet to be born, and those all who have died – and that as a believer, our identity is fully in Christ. And being alive in Christ, there is no special ritual, no special prayer, no specific act, or no unique knowledge that elevates us one above the other. We are all adopted in Christ with a godly relationship with the Triune God. If God chooses to have a favorite, it is His choice. It is not because we exercised some special formula that requires God to act on our behalf.

Paul states it well in 1 Corinthians 13th chapter where he puts spiritual gifts in their place by elevating what is truly more important – love.  Love supersedes all. When love leads, elitism is dead. There is no reason to feel more important than others as we are all one in Christ (Gal. 3:28). Real Christianity expresses itself in love for others, self, and God. Elitism has no room where love blooms.

The next time someone expresses an elite attitude, remember how Jesus acted and lives today – in humility.  Humility and elitism are opposite ends of the spectrum. Elitism’s sister is pride. And pride was the downfall of Lucifer who became Satan. So how do you handle someone who expresses an elite attitude?

Just remember that elitism is not a Christian attitude – and like all humans – we are all dysfunctional at various degrees. Smile, bite your lip, and pray that the Holy Spirit may lead the person to discover who Christ truly is and the love that surpasses whatever we can think or imagine.    Otherwise, who are you going to become?