Author Archives: Pastor Tommy

About Pastor Tommy

Pastor Tommy is the senior pastor of Cross Community Church (PCA) in Deerfield Beach, FL. Rev. Tommy Boland is his official title. Pastor Tommy often seems too formal. Most everyone calls him "Coach".

Overlooking Offenses

When was the last time you overlooked an offense?  You know, when someone said something that got under your skin . . . when someone did something that really ticked you off.  Perhaps it was the time someone changed their plans without telling you and that disrupted your plans.  Or when someone put together a special invitation list that included everyone and his uncle—except you!

We’ve all been offended.  And we have all offended others.  Today I want to tell you about the Gospel power that helps us overlook offenses, regardless of the cost.

Fools show their annoyance at once, but the prudent overlook an insult.

(Proverbs 12:16)

A person’s wisdom yields patience; it is to one’s glory to overlook an offense.

(Proverbs 19:11)

It is so much easier to go on the offensive when we are offended!  We build our case, review the record of wrongs, and plan our counterattack.  But Scripture tells us there is another way that will yield better fruit, fruit that will last: that fruit is overlooking offenses.

To be sure, there are some offenses that demand our attention and our appropriate response.  But I think we would all confess before the Lord that we are far too thin-skinned and ready to get back at those who have offended us, often in the most trifling matters.

Because it is not in our DNA to overlook offenses, we need to rest more securely in the truths of the Gospel.  The Gospel frees us to overlook when we are offended and slighted.  We can overlook the thoughtless mistake.  We can overlook the quick quip.  We can overlook the snide remark.  We can overlook the rude comment.  We can overlook the insidious insult.  The Gospel not only empowers us to overlook offenses, it empowers us to stop trying to vindicate ourselves to the offender or the onlookers.  In the eyes of the only One who truly matters, we are already vindicated by His blood poured out on Golgotha’s Hill.

Jesus endured every imaginable offense to make us His.  He endured the offense of unbelief.  He endured the offense of betrayal.  He endured the offense of false accusations.  He endured the offense of denial.  He endured the offense of ridicule, gossip, and slander.  He endured every offense, including cruel scourging, tearing thorns, and crushing nails.  And at the end, He said, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”  So the Gospel is ready to help us endure and overlook offenses, and it will do it by a Gospel-thickening of our skin.

One final point!  It is in our DNA to want to get back at those who have offended us.  “Vengeance is mine!” says the one who was offended.  But the glorious Gospel frees us from our incessant need to want to get even.  Here is where the grace of forgiveness kicks in and allows us to pay down the debt of an offense rather than demanding that the offender pay it.

Only the Gospel can help us steward our emotions, actions, and words to respond to an offense in a way that glorifies God and brings good to others.  Remember, overlooking offenses is a decision; and it is a decision we must make every time we are offended.

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!  

1 Comment

Filed under General

Christian Cedars

The trees of the Lord are watered abundantly,
the cedars of Lebanon that he planted.

 Psalm 104:16

Lebanon is a land of immense beauty and important history.  Located on the east coast of the Mediterranean Sea, the Lebanon mountain range rises majestically from the sea to snow-capped mountain peaks that reach over 10,000 feet.  Deep in the mountains in the north are the famous Cedars of Lebanon which are often referred to in the Bible.  We read about the cedars of Lebanon in the books of Kings, Song of Songs, Isaiah, and in the Psalms. These trees, which can grow up to 130 feet tall with a trunk size of over 8 feet in diameter, are symbolic of every Christian for a two important reasons.

1. THEY ARE PLANTED BY GOD

As the cedars of Lebanon are planted by God, so too is the Christian.  It is not a work of man and machinery scattering seed that sprouts up into the cedars of Lebanon . . . any more than it is the work of man and machinery scattering seed that sprouts up into Christians.  It is only the hand of God that plants the seed in the right soil to produce the desired results, whether He is planting cedars of Lebanon or Christians of the Lord.

2. THEY ARE WATERED BY GOD

The second reason these majestic trees are symbolic of Christians is the fact that you will not find an irrigation system watering them.  In His providence, God not only plants these beautiful trees, but He also waters them and cares for them . . . just as He does for the Christian.  The grace that planted the Christian in the soil of salvation is the same grace that sanctifies him as he grows to maturity.  God does not plant the Christian and then expect him to grow on his own, by the spiritual sweat of his brow.  God graciously creates the perfect environment for growth and maturity.  For “We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose” (Romans 8:28).

What a comfort to know that our faith is rooted in the work of God and not our own!  Is there anyone reading this today who would take any comfort whatsoever in knowing that you were the one who was responsible for your salvation?  Have you not done many things that would cause you to doubt the reality of your faith if you were the one who was responsible for generating it in the first place?  I know I have, and it is only in knowing that I played absolutely no role in my salvation that I am secure in knowing it is real, even in the face of my many failures.

In the very same way, is it not also a comfort to know that our Christian growth is rooted in the work of God and not our own?  To be sure, God’s Word commands us to work and to practice the disciplines of grace: Bible study, prayer, communion with the saints, service, giving, fasting, etc.  But it is not in the practice of these and other disciplines that we grow.  If this were so, our growth would be dependent upon our effort.

Thank God it doesn’t work that way!  Who has the strength and stick-to-itiveness to continually stay on track?  The grace that made us Christians matures us as Christians.  What starts in grace continues in grace, and will one day be completed in grace.  God finishes everything He starts and that includes you!  (Philippians 1:6).

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

From “Fixing Problems” to “Finding Perspective”

As a pastor, I often find myself in a counseling situation confronted with people who have only one goal: to “fix the problem.”  The problem with just “fixing problems” is the same things keep breaking again and again and again.  The solution is to move beyond fixing problems to finding perspective—and the only perspective that will truly fix problems is God’s!

Let me put it this way: we need to develop a biblical perspective (or “worldview,” if you prefer) about the life we are living.  Troubles in marriage simply will not be fixed by addressing the troubles in marriage.  Difficulties at the office simply will not be corrected by addressing difficulties at the office.  Challenges in raising our children simply will not be overcome by addressing the challenges in raising our children.  We need the appropriate perspective, and that perspective is found in the pages of Scripture.

Only the Bible makes sense out of the stuff of life.  Only the Bible identifies our universal problem—sin—and the universal solution to that problem: the Savior, whose name is Jesus Christ.  All the marriage books and professional counseling in the world will not “fix” a marriage . . . without the Savior; they only make them worse.  Business seminars on conflict resolution and communication will not fix difficulties at the office . . . without the Savior; they only make them worse.  Parenting workshops will not help us overcome the challenges we face in raising our children . . . without the Savior; they only make them worse.

You see, without a biblical perspective we cannot understand what is most important:

  • The glory of God
  • The sinfulness of man
  • The fallen condition of everything (people, places, and things)
  • The grace of the Gospel of Jesus Christ
  • The reality of the devil and hell
  • The reality of heaven
  • The certainty of eternity

Oh, sure, we can fix problems for a while.  Behavior can be modified and restrained with a little extra “want to” for enough personal gain.  Whether it is the desire to avoid pain or achieve pleasure, behavior can and often is modified and changed . . . for a while.  But only the truths of the Gospel can truly transform behavior, because only the truths of the Gospel can change the heart.

The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?  (Jeremiah 17:9)

For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony, slander. (Matthew 15:19)

The human heart is far too corrupted by sin to be changed by behavior modification.  Only an all-out cleansing of the heart by the truths of the Gospel will move a person beyond behavior modification to heart transformation.  Only looking at our lives from the biblical perspective will cause our hearts to beat less for ourselves and more for our Savior.  And when our hearts are beating more for our Savior, God is glorified, and all those we come in contact with are benefited and blessed!

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

When Having It All Isn’t Enough

Have you ever wondered what life would be like if you had it all?  I am sure we’ve all daydreamed about such an existence at one time or another, but I can tell you that it’s not all that it’s cracked up to be.  As a pastor, I have counseled those who looked like they had it all but were cracking up behind closed doors.  A few cracked all the way through, and I found myself standing over open graves alongside broken hearts.

Why?  Because the promise of “having it all” simply cannot deliver! Those folks who found it to be an empty promise learned the hard way what C. S. Lewis explained in Mere Christianity:

If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world (something supernatural and eternal).

This profound truth has been lived out in the lives of far too many who desperately sought their identity, purpose, meaning, significance, happiness, fulfillment, and joy in something smaller than God.  Have you ever wondered why God began His Ten Commandments with “I am the Lord your God . . . you shall have no other gods before me” (Exodus 20:3)?  Because God knew the ultimate end of chasing after “other gods,” and that end is a meaningless existence marked by self-rule, self-focus, self-atonement . . . and ultimately self-desctruction.

Anything that has replaced God on the throne of your life is an “other god.”  It is anything you have made more important than God.  It is anything that rules your heart and shapes your life.  It is anything you believe will do for you what only God can do.  It is anything so important and central to your life that, if you lost it, your life would be ruined.  In other words, ANYTHING can be your “other god.”  Here are just a few examples:

  • Career
  • Family
  • Romance
  • Beauty
  • Brains
  • Social Status
  • Applause of Man

As you can see, there are a great many things that can hold title to the functional trust of our hearts.  Yet none of these things will meet us in our place of deepest need.  C. S. Lewis found that desire which no experience in this world could satisfy . . . and that desire is God.

Regardless of where this might find you today, if you have been chasing after “other gods” in search of having it all, there is hope: His name is Jesus Christ.  The way forward is to turn back—turn back to the One True God, who loved you so much that He chose to take your place on the cross to claim you as His own.  Jesus is the answer to your nagging questions and the solution to your pressing problems.  Jesus is the only One who can truly meet your every need and fulfill your deepest desires.

I can tell you from personal experience that there is a time when having it all is enough.  It is when our “ALL” is the ALMIGHTY!

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

When History Messes With Destiny

When was the last time you let your history mess with your destiny?  I can tell you when it was for me.  It was when I was wasting valuable time trying to rewrite it!  Our history is what it is—history—and spending time bemoaning it or trying to rewrite it is wasted time that distracts from the destiny God is calling you to do.

The most common way we let our history mess with our destiny is when we bog down in blaming others.  We blame others for our failures.  We blame others for our current station in life.  We blame others for our lack of meaning and purpose in life.  Blame-shifting is simply the blank page upon which we attempt to re-write our history and justify in our minds why we are not moving in the direction God would have us go.

There is a solution to overcoming the problem of history messing with destiny.  The Gospel!

There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life has set you free in Christ Jesus from the law of sin and death. For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh, in order that the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not according to the flesh but according to the Spirit.

(Romans 8:1-4)

For those who understand the truths of the Gospel, history can never mess with destiny.  Paul tells us that there is NO CONDEMNATION for those who are in Jesus.  We don’t have to waste time grieving over our past.  We don’t need to shame or blame people in our past.  There’s no need to rewrite our histories.  We never again need to sink into blaming others to help us deal with our current circumstances in life.

Jesus has set us free from our past, no matter what was in it.  We need not fear our past.  We need not deny our past.  We need not blame others for our past.  We need not be chained to our past.  We need to simply embrace the truths of the Gospel, which assure us that we have been set free from our past and from the desire to recreate it or whitewash it in order to make ourselves look better or feel better about it.

The devil is a liar; he wants your history to mess with your destiny!  So he keeps trying to get you to focus on a painful past, littered with broken dreams, unfulfilled promises, and unrealized potential.  Don’t waste your time trying to rewrite all that old news.  You have been freed from the pain of your past and can submit to God’s call into the promise of your future. The prophet Micah rejoiced in the freedom God has granted us from our past history.

You will again have compassion on us;

you will tread our sins underfoot

and hurl all our iniquities into the depths of the sea.  (Micah 7:19)

God is for you.  He has not only wiped the slate of your past clean; He has broken it and promised to never use it again.  He has hurled that slate into the depths of the sea.  Every time we attempt to rewrite our history in order to make ourselves look or feel better, we are denying the power the Gospel.  We are forgetting, just as Peter warned we might, that we have been cleansed from our past sins (2 Peter 1:9).  We are ignoring Jesus’ victory cry from the cross (John 19:30) that all that history is finished!

The Gospel is not only the power of salvation; it is the power of sanctification that increases our reflection of Christ.  It is the power that propels us past whatever history we have, knowing that we are completely forgiven and unconditionally loved.  These Gospel truths free us from living in the past so that we can lean toward our future.

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

The Cruel Current of Complacency

The dictionary definition of complacent is “to be contented to a fault; self-satisfied and unconcerned, especially when accompanied by unawareness of actual dangers or deficiencies.”  Sadly this describes far too many in the church today.  They have grown so comfortable with their spiritual standing that they have become complacent, to the point where they are living out a Christless Christianity.

Complacency is never good; contentment is another thing altogether. The Holy Spirit inspired the apostle Paul to encourage us:

I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. I can do all things through him who strengthens me.  (Philippians 4:11-13)

When the apostle Paul said he had learned to “be content,” we misunderstand if we believe he was equating content with satisfied.  Sure, we all need to learn to be content with what we have, but that is to be in the context of pursuing what God has set before us.  The rhythm of redemption is not to rest on our laurels and succumb to the cruel current of complacency.  We are to continue pressing on until our race is over.

Not that I have already obtained this or am already perfect, but I press on to make it my own, because Christ Jesus has made me his own. Brothers, I do not consider that I have made it my own. But one thing I do: forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.  (Philippians 3:12-14)

In Paul’s contentment, he continued straining forward and pressing on in the direction God was calling him to go.  Paul knew that being “satisfied” would only lead to complacency and watering down his impact in expanding the cause of Christ.

Do you think Paul was ever satisfied with the level of ministry he was accomplishing?  If he was, he probably would have rested while behind prison walls.  Honestly, if it had been you . . . do you think you might have sulked and pouted at this unpleasant turn of events? “Lord,” we might well whine, “I did all that great ministry for You, and this is what I get?!” Yet we know that most of what Paul contributed to the New Testament was written while he was in chains.  He never stopped pressing on toward the goal.

Paul never grew complacent about his relationship with Jesus.  We know that his heart continually ached to be in the presence of his Lord, yet he knew he still had work to do, because God had not called him home.  Paul was not subject to the cruel current of complacency.

What about you?  There are so many areas in life where we can grow complacent.  Here are just a few:

  • After many years of marriage
  • When we have finally climbed the ladder of career success
  • When we have reached a comfortable level of service in our church

The call to every Christian is to continually press on and pursue God’s perfect plan for our lives.  And those who are His by faith know we never reach our final destination until we get to the other side.  The cruel current of complacency is not to be the mark of the committed Christian.

It has been wisely said, “It is far better to burn out than rust out!”  Now, I am not encouraging burn out; if you’ve been around the church for any length of time, you’ve seen that happen to great men and women of God who did not find balance in life.  Remember that a life without balance leads to an unbalanced life.

But let me close by encouraging every member of the church to be active in playing their part, straining forward until the moment they are no longer needed . . . and that will be the moment when God calls us home.

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

Sticks and Stones…And Names Hurt!

I’m sure you remember the children’s rhyme, “Stick and Stones.”  The rhyme dates back to 1872; it was designed to encourage children who were being verbally bullied to rise above the bully’s hurtful words and refrain from any kind of retaliation.  The version familiar to most of us is:

Sticks and stones

will break my bones

but names will never hurt me.

To be sure, stick and stones can break our bones, but if you have ever been on the receiving end of name-calling, you know this chant is just not true.  Names hurt.  Often they hurt far worse and cut more deeply than any stick or stone.  Just ask the child whose father said time and time again, “You’re an idiot!” or “You’ll never amount to anything!” or “I’m sorry we ever had you!” or “You make me sick!” or worse.

Harsh words outlive the days of our youth; they wound us as adults too.  Harsh words, fueled by raw emotion, spill out in a heated argument between a husband and wife where nobody wins.  Then there are those angry outbursts between friends that fracture relationships and often cause their ruin.

The words of the reckless pierce like swords, but the tongue of the wise brings healing.  (Proverbs 12:18)

The Bible makes it clear that our words can either build or destroy . . . heal or hurt . . . comfort or crush.  The words we speak into the lives of others are either considered life-giving (deposits) or death-dealing (withdrawals).

So . . . what does your word bank account balance look like these days?  What would those closest to you say?

I’ve worked as a coach for decades, and I can tell you that the athletic arena of competition is fertile ground for hurtful words.  Countless kids have been driven away—not only out of sports but, out of any kind of physical activity as adults, simply because of the damage done by the words of the reckless—coaches, parents, fans, and other players.

I wince every time I remember my own grievous failure.  I was coaching my son Brock’s little league baseball team.  I was always good at encouraging and lifting up the players, but at times I could be hard on Brock, especially being one of those coaches who never wanted it said that I “played favorites” or “babied” my son.  One night we lost a game that would have put us in the championship game.  When we went into extra innings after a poor decision by Brock that let the tying run score, I singled him out in front of the whole team: “YOU cost us this game!”

It still breaks my heart to think about what I did that night, but I thank God that He has grace enough to cover our mistakes—all of our mistakes.  Now, six years later, Brock is playing for his high school team and I am a dad in the stands cheering him and all the other players on.  Whenever I speak of that awful night when teaching, or preaching, Brock will jokingly say, “You know dad, I’m sure I’ll get over it in a few decades!”

If you have been on the giving or the receiving end of hurtful words know this: the truths of the Gospel have given all those who are in Christ new names—“HIS”!  It is only because Jesus has renamed us in the Gospel as HIS that we are lifted above every damaging and destructive name we have spoken into the life of another or have received ourselves.  Gospel renaming redeems us from a past littered with wicked words, nasty names, and destructive dialogue.  The Gospel empowers us to rise above the names others give to us, knowing that we are HIS, and it empowers us to speak redemptive rhetoric to all those we encounter.

Gracious words are like a honeycomb, sweetness to the soul and health to the body.  (Proverbs 16:24)

And there are no words more gracious, more sweet, and more healing than Christ’s triumphant cry from the cross: “It is finished!”

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

Traveling Mercies

When Christians hear the phrase “traveling mercies,” we usually think of the words we use when we ask God to protect and provide for those who are about to go on a journey.  But I’d like to share another picture of traveling mercies, one that we should understand and emulate.

How God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, and how he went around doing good and healing all who were under the power of the devil, because God was with him.  (Acts 10:38)

The Traveling Mercies pictured in this verse is none other than the Lord Himself.  He was continually on a mission from His Father in heaven as He went around doing good.  Notice a few things in this wonderful picture of Traveling Mercies:

1.  Jesus did it Himself.  He went around doing good.  He did not send others to do His work; He did not send the angels or the apostles; He Himself went about doing good personally.  The incomparable Charles Spurgeon described it, “Jesus went on His errands of mercy.”  Jesus used His legs to walk.  He used His fingers to touch.  He used His eyes to see.  He used His voice to speak.  He used His ears to hear.  He used His heart to ache with compassion for those who were “harassed and helpless, like sheep without a shepherd” (Matthew 9:36).  What a wonderful example He has left for us, that we also might go around doing good personally with the passion of our Lord!

2. Jesus went around.  He did not wait for the hurting to show up.  He went to the woman at the well.  He went to the lame at the pool.  He went to the sick in the bed.  He went to the dead in the tomb.  Difficulty did not deter Him, nor did danger.  He went personally to every object of His affection and mercy to do good.  “When the days drew near for him to be taken up, he set his face to go to Jerusalem” (Luke 9:51).  He went—even to His sacrificial death; nobody had to come looking for Him.  His face was set in determination to go and die for you and for me.

What a wonderful example He has left for us, that we might go to those in need rather than waiting for them to seek us out!  Now, it is true that Scripture teaches us God does not need our good works, but it also teaches us that our neighbor does.  We are God’s workmanship (Ephesians 2:10), created in Christ Jesus to do good works for His glory and for the benefit of all those we come in contact with who need a touch from God—and that’s everyone.

The truths of the Gospel should compel us to be continually engaged in traveling mercies, regardless of the cost or circumstance.  Because of what Jesus has already done for us (past grace), and all that He has promised He will do for us (future grace), our hearts should beat to the rhythm of the traveling mercies drum.

One final point: We see in Acts 10:38 that God was with Jesus throughout His “errands of mercy.”  And He has promised to do the same for us: “Behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20).

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

One Thing Technology Has NOT Made Faster!

God’s has infused His wisdom into the hands of all those “techies,” which has made the world around us move at light speeds.

A trip by car across the United States took weeks before the interstate highway system; now it can be done in less than four days.  By airplane it can be done in a matter of hours!  Advances in computer technology and telecommunications have made newspapers all but obsolete.  Some of you will remember a time when you actually had to get up and walk across the room to flip through the handful of television channels available . . . if the stations hadn’t signed off at the end of the day.  Today we grumble if we have less than 100 24-hour cable channels. The Post Office is rapidly becoming history, due to the advent of email and overnight delivery services.

How about the technological advancements in medicine?  From fast-working medicines to out-patient surgeries, injuries and illnesses which laid our parents low for weeks or months are now dispatched in days or even hours.  In 1976 I had knee surgery for a torn meniscus; I hobbled on crutches for weeks.  I had the same surgery on the other knee in 1995; by that time arthroscopic surgery had been developed, and I was walking unassisted in a few days.

Microwave ovens have eliminated the time-consuming process of thawing food and cooking it in the oven.  Now we push a button or two, and in minutes we are sitting down to a piping hot meal.  “Fast food” has become even faster, because we simply refuse to wait for anything, especially when we’re hungry.

But there is one thing technology has not made faster, and that is the speed in which you can reach your God in prayer!

In my distress I called to the Lord, and he answered me.  (Psalm 120:1)

Hear Thou from the heavens their prayer. (2 Chronicles 6:35)

As comforting as it is to know that our Lord hears our prayers instantly, it is even more comforting to know He knows our prayers even before we speak them.  Now that is super fast!

Even before a word is on my tongue, behold, O Lord, you know it altogether.  (Psalm 139:4)

When you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.  (Matthew 6:7-8)

There is no way and no need for technology to make improvements in our prayer life.  God knows what we need even before we ask Him!  In fact, the challenge for believers is that all this technology often makes our prayer life slower.  Our prayers are reaching God as fast as ever, but with all the distractions we now have at our fingertips, many of us neglect our time alone with God.  With all the voices and gadgets and games calling out for our attention, we can easily find ourselves immersed in things much smaller than God.  And our inattention leaves us poor, blind, and naked.

But this is not for you!  God has invited you into an intimate, personal relationship with Him, and He delights when you call on His mighty name.  Call on Him in seasons of want and in seasons of plenty.  Call on Him in seasons of sickness and in seasons of health.  Like an earthly father who delights when his children come to him in all seasons, your heavenly Father delights every time you come to Him in prayer.

“Do not be anxious about anything,” Scripture assures us, “but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God. And the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:6-7).

I can’t think of a better way to close out today than with the words from the hymn by William Hickson, written in 1836: Now To Heaven Our Prayer Ascending . . .

Now to Heaven our prayer ascending,
God speed the right!
In a noble cause contending,
God speed the right!
May we live our lives before Thee,
Like the good and great in story,
If we fail, we fail in glory:
God speed the right!

Patient, firm, and persevering,
God speed the right!
No event or danger fearing,
God speed the right!
Pains, nor toils, nor trials heeding,
Never from the truth receding,
And in Heaven’s own time succeeding,
God speed the right!

Still our onward course pursuing,
God speed the right!
Every foe at length subduing,
God speed the right!
Truth! thy cause, whate’er delay it,
There’s no power on earth can stay it,
Proudly let us then obey it,
God speed the right!

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

Leave a comment

Filed under General

From Woe to Go!

When was the last time you felt like God simply couldn’t use you?  Notice I didn’t ask if you have ever felt this way, because we all feel like this from time to time.  Well, God has words of great comfort for you and for me:

In the year that King Uzziah died I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up; and the train of his robe filled the temple. Above him stood the seraphim. Each had six wings: with two he covered his face, and with two he covered his feet, and with two he flew. And one called to another and said:

“Holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts;
the whole earth is full of his glory!”

And the foundations of the thresholds shook at the voice of him who called, and the house was filled with smoke. And I said: “Woe is me! For I am lost; for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for my eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts!”  Then one of the seraphim flew to me, having in his hand a burning coal that he had taken with tongs from the altar. And he touched my mouth and said: “Behold, this has touched your lips; your guilt is taken away, and your sin atoned for.”  And I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?” Then I said, “Here I am! Send me.” And he said, “Go…”  (Isaiah 6:1-9)

On the occasion of his calling, the prophet Isaiah went from “woe” to “go” because of the grace of God.  When Isaiah was given a glimpse into the court of heaven, he instantly recognized the holiness of God and the sinfulness of man—including himself.  He cast an oracle of “woe” upon himself, but the story does not end there!  God, in His mercy and grace, reached down to Isaiah, cleansed him from his filthiness, and fitted him for service.  The Lord, high and lifted up, equipped Isaiah to “go” and advance the cause of God’s Kingdom.  This is God’s way.

God took Isaiah from his sinful inadequacy—“Woe is me!”—and transformed him into the almighty adequacy of “Go and tell.”  God is in the business of cleansing us and calling us . . . and cleansing us and calling us . . . over and over again.  This is the message we need to press deep down into the very marrow of our souls.

God delights in taking us from “woe” to “go,” which displays for all the world the adequacy of His almighty strength, put to use in weak and broken vessels like you and me.  The only qualification for service is to know we are unqualified.  Remember, God chose the weak to shame the strong and the foolish to shame the wise (1 Corinthians 1:27); that way there is no doubt as to the cause of victory.  God has been putting His omnipotent strength on display in vessels who are so weak and unwise that there can be no doubt as to the One who is the victor.

So . . . when was the last time you went from “woe” to “go” in some area God was calling you to advance?  Or is it possible that you are stuck right now in the middle of “woe?”  In your marriage?  In your parenting?  In a friendship?  With a family member?  At the office?  In your service to others?  The only thing wrong with beginning with “woe” is if you end there too!  The devil would love for you to stumble through life going from one woe to another.  Perhaps even someone close to you has the “gift” of pointing out a place of woe, intending to keep you wallowing around in it.  But as Steve Brown would say, “This smells like smoke and comes from the pit of hell.”

The Bible is filled with examples of men and women who went from “woe” to “go,” and in the process did some mighty things for the expansion of the kingdom of God.  We were designed to go from strength to strength (Psalm 84:7).  Is this the confession of your life?  It will be, if you remember the One who is constantly calling you out of your “woe” and into His “go” and remember that He is with you every step of the way.

This is the Gospel.  This is grace for your race.  NEVER FORGET THAT . . . AMEN!

 

Leave a comment

Filed under General