Tired?

Keep On Keeping On

tiredSpeed is a relative term.  What may be fast for you may be slow for me. and what may be fast for me may he slow for you.  If we were all running in the one hundred yard summer Olympics race, we would all be measured under the same conditions.  There would only be one first place winner who would be considered the fastest person and everyone else would be slower in comparison.  Thank God that our Kingdom race doesn’t have only one winner.  For all who participate, receives the prize.  And the prize is not awarded to the person who gets there first, but the one who endures to the end.  So that everyone who enters the race is already a winner.

When I use to take my early morning six-mile walk around the public lake there were people who would jog, run, roller blade, bicycle, stroll. etc.  There were many times when these same people circled the lake two and three times while I would only complete one time around.  But we all finished.  The key is to just keep moving.  Find a steady pace that is acceptable to you and just keep moving.  You know when you are slowing down.  When you walk, the spring in your feet may be missing, the legs may feel tired, or the rhythm of your breathing may be erratic.  But when you become aware of it, you may do a little dance, stretch the legs, or do some deep breathing exercises, but you keep on moving.  Likewise. when we are spiritually slowing down, when the carnal self is taking charge of the situation; when we are not surrendering our will to God, when serving others becomes a chore, then we need to realize something is wrong with our relationship with God.  It’s then when we need to realize our communion with God has slowed down.  The spiritual disciplines have been reduced from a practical experience to a mental exercise.  We’ve slowed down our pace by not spending more time with God but by allocating less time with Him.  A dangerous position when you are a disciple of His.  Therefore, what shall we do?

We return back and emphasize the basic Christian disciplines: prayer, Bible study, fast, worship service, simplify, and celebrate. Not for the sake of exercise, but for the intense purpose of strengthening our relationship.  We pick up the speed again.  Our pace may be slow in comparison with some of our brothers and sisters, but then it may be fast for some of our other brothers/sisters; either way, it’s the speed we are comfortable to move at to maintain a deep relationship with our Heavenly Dad.  What speed are you moving at as a disciple of His?

OUR PRAYER

PRAY 8

Almighty Dad, thank you for calling us out of this world and allowing us to participate in the greatest race of a lifetime. We thank you for bringing people into our life to teach us the disciplines that allow us to keep focused on you.  Help us to keep in the race, not to detour or to quit, but to endure to the very end.  Let the speed that we move be at a rate that we can handle and not burnout.  Let our walk with you he steady and refreshing.  Let it always lift up you and me.  Let it always revive the soul and energize the spirit. Let it always change our heart to become more like yours.  Let everything we do, say, think, and breathe be done in your glory and honor. Our success is your success.  Your success is our success. Help us to be successful in your eyes. Again, thank you Jesus for intervening each and every day in every prayer in every way.  Amen.

Dr. Mike

A Church Without Walls?

follower 3

Years ago I belonged to a small men’s group that met once a week in the early morning for a Koinonia Meeting. Koinonia is a Greek word that denotes spiritual fellowship. It is used in the Book of Acts (4:2) to express how the early church met in fellowship. Also John used the same word to explain our relationship with our Lord and Heavenly Dad (I Jn. 1:3-7). In other words, our fellowship is with each other AND with God.  Wherever two or more our gathered in His name, He is with us (Mt.l8:20)!
What is the purpose of our fellowship? Isn’t our fellowship to strengthen one another in the Lord? Isn’t it to affirm our love for each other? Isn’t it to challenge one another in our walk with God? Isn’t it to uplift one another in prayer? Isn’t it to make our differences disappear and produce unity in Christ? Isn’t it Jesus who brings us all together? Isn’t it Jesus who makes us one? Doesn’t He reveal through His disciples that He is the only way that people can walk peacefully with other people? Without Him there is only dissension, fear, and hatred of our differences. Yet, even though intellectually we know we are all the same, don’t we have the tendency to rank each other in our standard of classes? Whether we rank each other under the standard of education, economic status, marriage, career, you name it and isn’t there a label for it? But didn’t Jesus Christ make these walls all disappear?
St. Augustine wrote about two churches that exist and cohabit together at the same time. There are the physical faith communities that we see and support their operations; and may even be a member. Likewise, he wrote about the invisible church; a body of believers cohabiting together within each physical faith community. John Wesley called it the universal church. I call it a church without walls. No walls of denomination, no walls of racism, no walls of community lines, no walls of social or economic status, no walls of age, no walls of sexism, no walls of educational bias, no walls that divide and separate us from each other. Instead, there is Jesus Christ that unifies and brings us together. It is Jesus that eliminated the walls between people. It is through and in Jesus that we have a church that is built without walls. A church built on the foundation of the early prophets and apostles of old with Jesus being the chief cornerstone. A church made of people with a spiritual connection. A church made with people built around an eternal plan; a church that started in the first century with the premise that all people could be a part of the fellowship with the unashamed. No dividing walls. No exceptions. Everyone who is called by our Heavenly Dad is a member and my friend. I gladly fellowship with anyone who is a brother or sister of the God we serve. We have more in common than the closes of relationships: more in common than a marriage of earthly time; more in common than a friendship from youth; more in common than blood brothers. We are linked by the same power and love that links everything together in this universe. We are linked together by our Creator and Sustainer. And we have more in common than we could discuss in a lifetime. Yes, we have fellowship with the divine while we also have fellowship with humanity. Our fellowship is deeper then the deep and higher than the highest high. Our fellowship is built on eternal powers that we don’t quite understand but only see their effects in our daily lives.
Paul writes that we are sons of the Living God and children of the Divine. We are heirs to promises that we can’t even fathom. Though we only have a small taste of these promises now, we await for the fully revealing of those promises beyond our temporary dwellings. We have been promised eternal life. We have been promised offices of leadership. We have been promised life without pain; life without sin. We have been promised a future that seems impossible in today’s world. But yet, nothing is impossible for God. He designed it; made it; sustains it. He alone can change it; reshape it; and do whatever He wants with it. He is God. Supreme Ruler. Supreme Provider. Supreme Lover. He is what He has to be when required. Ask Satan.
When Satan became so self delusional, didn’t he think he could take over God’s role in the universe? When he compared himself with God, he thought he was the better being. But when he attacked God’s throne room, he found himself kicked out so fast that he didn’t realize what really happened. It makes you think that his image of God must have been real small. He probably saw the characteristics of humility, mercy, innocence, and love and thought them as weakness. But when he attacked, God brought out traits that Satan probably never saw until then. God became what He had to in repelling the satanic forces. Satan saw a side of God that hopefully we never have too. Satan with one-third of the angels was kicked-out of heaven. Can you picture a meek, humble, loving being becoming a force to reckon with? I don’t think Satan did. Otherwise, life would be different today than it is.
Now Satan doesn’t have the intimate, friendship with our Lord as we do. We have a relationship that makes Satan very jealous. And he uses that jealousy to motivate himself in his dealing with mankind. He doesn’t want unity, but disharmony. He wants people separated from God and each other. He wants people to be like himself. He is so delusional that he sincerely believes his way of living is the best.
When you look at the confusion in this world, aren’t you looking at Satan’s character? When you look at the disharmony and prejudices in this world, don’t you see Satan’s character? When you look at wars and fighting between people, doesn’t it reveal Satan’s answers to today’s problems? He has been trying to make his system work apart from God. And it has not been very successful.
God’s success is built working through His Kingdom. He makes His Kingdom available for those who diligently seek Him. One of the fruits of His Kingdom is fellowship with Him and His children living in love, joy, and peace with each other. This is something only God can provide and no one else. Isn’t this the fellowship we have while being involved in His church without walls?
 PRAY 9
Our Prayer:Our Heavenly Dad, we again thank you for calling us out of this world and revealing yourself to us. We thank you for Jesus Christ and His Church. We thank you for allowing us to walk with you, to learn from you, and to live in your presence each and every day. Help us to see the magnificent of your Body today. Help us to see and appreciate the differences of our brothers and sisters in the Lord. Help us also to see  how Jesus brings us all together under the same name and family. Help us to breakdown any walls that prevent your love from flowing through us and to each other. Help us to be united in Jesus. Help us to glorify His purposes and to magnify His ways. Again thank you for the Church. Thank you for your gifts. Thank you for sharing your riches with us. Thank you for being you.
Amen.
Dr. Mike

Grace and Performance…

 

“For everyone who asks, receives; and he who seeks, finds; and to him who knocks, it will be opened.”   

 Luke 11:10

 

Becoming 2.

The journey in Christ is a constant relearning of the basics of the Kingdom of God.

Take for example the concept of grace and performance. We live in a performance-oriented society. Whether we are working or playing, performance becomes the standard of measurement. We don’t normally give positive rewards, promotions, or recognition for finishing last.  Yet the Kingdom of God is built on grace and not performance.  Grace extended is how the Triune God relates to us. Grace is the foundation of who God is. Jesus knows our fragility, weaknesses, and the internal strife of sin always knocking at our door.  So how do we express the Kingdom of God in our life when the world around us operates in a politically charged environment that clamors for winners?

Maybe the problem isn’t society around us, but the internal desires of our heart that competes with God. Can we truly say that we desire to truly please Him in everything we do? Or do we want God to bless us with everything we want because we deserve it?

Someone once told me to pray like it all depends on God and work like it all depends on me. I don’t buy that anymore. Instead, I acknowledge that God owns it all, has the capability to bring everything I need to my door, and has promise to provide. So now I ask, seek, and knock. I ask him diligently knowing he is the owner and provider of everything. I seek diligently and expectantly the answer to my prayers; always pursuing all opportunities that come my way no matter how large or small; constantly seeking confirmation. And when a door presents itself to me, I don’t force it open. Instead, I gently turn the knob and allow it to open from the outside-in. I have found out when I force the door open, it is only me still pursuing what I want. Instead, I allow the Spirit to move the door. Whenever I did this, the domino effect occurs; like the tumblers of a safe all falling into place. The door opens easily and the ride toward the goal is like canoeing down the rapids with very little effort on my path. I simply steer the canoe and enjoy the ride.

Yes, learning how to live a grace-based life instead of a performance-based life is a life time journey. Yet, isn’t what this life is? Are we all not being prepared for leadership and service with others as we walk this adventurous journey of transformation in Christ?

 

Dr. Mike

 

Author of Great Business Emulates a Good God