Sunday, December 27, 2020

Three Words for the Road Ahead

 “The point of your life is to point to Him.”—Francis Chan

“What Would Jesus Do?” often sounds heroic — too heroic, in fact, for just a WWJD wrist band. It can also be subject to “but what if?” hypothetical situations, and suggest a sense of keeping a safe distance, of observing rather than engaging in His first call to every disciple: “Follow Me.”


But “What Did Jesus Do?” gives you something you can wrap your arms around, something tangible, something you can model, something that can deepen the greatest relationship of them all and help eliminate a lifestyle built on someone else’s quotes and bumper sticker slogans. And not only that, as 2020 has taught us, the very idea of WDJD can cut to the heart of what really matters faster and better than a million good ideas, books, programs, the latest and greatest worship songs, and the implication that everything happens on Sunday morning in a building. 


So, what did Jesus do? A lot of things; so many, in fact, that the disciple whom He loved wrote: “There are so many other things Jesus did. If they were all written down, each of them, one by one, I can’t imagine a world big enough to hold such a library of books.” (John 21:25, The Message)


But here’s one, maybe a little less obvious than others, to carry into the new year:


“Each day, Jesus was teaching at the temple, and each evening, He went out to spend the night on the hill called the Mount of Olives…” —Luke 21:37


Each day. Each evening… What Jesus did was give us the blueprint for cultivating good habits that will help point our lives to His, both before we head out the door and after a long day. They are things we know but quickly forget — regular healthy rhythms in the Father’s presence that will buffet a world filled with the pressure of people demands, conflicting messages, and non-stop noise, and will build our faith, strengthen our resolve on the Journey, and brighten our reflection to those around us.


Some days, some evenings, the cultivating is like plowing through soft soil, and is refreshing if not powerful. Many days and evenings, though, the cultivating feels like plowing through rocks. Life happens. But WDJD says, in so many words...


 “...Forward, never give up, fix your gaze steadily on Me just as I looked to My Father, for lo, I am with you always.”


Each day. Each evening.


And don’t forget the WDJD importance of place. Jesus had a go-to place called Mount of Olives — a place to get away, to reconnect, to refuel. It’s a reminder that cultivating good habits in the new year also means tapping into those places where you know you regularly meet God in a special way — a mountain trail, a roaring ocean or still lake waters, a woodworking shop, a favorite chair in a quiet room. The Mount of Olives places in our lives are not just beautiful, or peaceful, or energizing, they are sacred places of Encounter. This year, like Jesus did, I want to be more intentional about not taking these sacred spaces lightly, because they have been designed for me — for us — before time began when God knew just how each of us would be wired to best connect with Him.


There's much more to living in the land of What Did Jesus Do, and a lot of it is challenging to the sensibilities if not costly. But the longer I walk this highway, the more I realize that the simplicity of regular rhythms of Presence and places of Encounter are what God uses to carry us through even the craziest of times. It's a simplicity that needs continual recalibrating, but it is where the foundation of all that really matters can be found. Words from Martin Luther drive the point home:


“What more would you know? What more do you need, if indeed you know Christ, if you walk by faith in God, and by love to your neighbor, doing to him as Christ has done to you? This is indeed the whole Scripture in its biggest form: That no more words or books are necessary, but only life and action.”


Thursday night, when the calendar moves forward to a clean slate, my list of “the point of your life” goals and resolutions will probably be short. Behind them will be an anthem of just three words, but a weighty theme song for every 24/7 ahead…


...Give me Jesus.



Traditional Spiritual; sung by Danny Gokey, from the album "Christmas Is Here"


[Updated from 12-31-17]

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Heading in the Right Direction

 (Photo: enriquelopezgarre @ pixabay.com)


We say, “If I could just figure this thing out.”

The Christmas story says, “Maybe you’re looking in the wrong direction”...


...The Mary and Joseph in our nativity may look older and wiser but they were just teens.

And nothing made sense about the birth of their son. If anyone deserved to say “If I could just figure this thing out,” it was these two. And yet Mary said: “Be it unto me according to Your Word,” and after some wild and crazy dreams about it all, young Joe “did what the angel of the Lord had commanded him.”


Those shepherds may be known for watching their flocks “on a cold winter’s night that was so deep,” except the actual time of Jesus’ birth was closer to September than December, when it is hot by day and in the 60s at night. Even so, here were the low end of society’s totem pole being visited by and shouted to by angels of God. And perhaps like us wondering...


“Wait. You? You speaking to me?”


The shouting, the singing, the blinding light of Glory, the mysterious declaration of some child born in Bethlehem.... “If we could just figure this thing out.” But instead of just shaking their head and carrying on with their sheep watching, they said: “Let’s see for ourselves what the Lord has told us about.”


The “we three kings of orient are” wise men from Persia may have been three…or not. They may have been kings…or not. No one knows for sure. They were sure about a lot of things when it came to figuring out astrology and what the alignment of stars might mean, but when they looked up at this star, even they wondered, “If we could just figure this thing out.” Wise as they were, they didn’t have all the answers to life, but they set a simple tone for all who would follow Jesus ever since: “Where is the newborn King of the Jews? We saw His star as it rose, and we have come to worship Him.” (Matthew 2:2, NLT)


Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, the wise Persians, all had the same response to the age-old question of wanting to figure things out when life doesn’t make sense — the same response the grown up baby in the manger would urge His first followers and those of us following 2,000 years later:


“But first and most importantly seek, aim at, strive after His kingdom and His righteousness, His way of doing and being right—the attitude and character of God—and all these things will be given to you also.”

—Matthew 6:33, Amplified


Seek first the Kingdom of God and not human logic or expert advice…and worship.

Seek first and keep on seeking Him at the start of each day, one step in front of the other, even if you aren’t sure where it all leads…and worship.

“Seek and deeply long for the Lord and His strength His power, His might; seek…and deeply long for His face and His presence continually.” (Psalm 105:4. Amplified)

Keep looking Up…and come, let us adore Him.


Wisdom doesn’t have to be deep, or old, or well-educated or complex to be powerful for living well.

It doesn’t have to have all the answers.

It just knows that all that God has ever said has been true.

We just need to remember that, and the response of the Nativity characters,

And go, and seek Him first, and rest...

Especially in days like these.


“The supreme need in every hour of difficulty and distress is for a fresh vision of God. Seeing Him, all else takes on proper perspective and proportion.”—G. Campbell Morgan




Sunday, December 13, 2020

No Fist Bumps

(Photo: skitterphoto @ pixabay.com)

“O Sovereign Lord! You made the heavens and earth by your strong hand and powerful arm. Nothing is too hard for you!”—Jeremiah 32:17, NLT


The baby Jesus in my nativity isn’t just laying there sound asleep. His arms are fully extended upward, tiny and tender but yet stronger than that of any man who ever was, seemingly lifted toward His Father and our Father who art in heaven. Arms of One-ness and dependency and love that were with God in the very beginning. And through Him and those arms, “all things were made; without Him, nothing was made that has been made. In Him was life, and that life was the light of men.” (John 1:3-4)


His arms, reaching toward us, are everywhere.


Even in Isaiah’s fantastic vision, where the train of God’s robe filled the temple, it is good to remember that under that robe are the hands of Father, Son and Holy Spirit in creation, reign and authority, and the strong arms that laugh at the barbell workouts of this world's so-called mighty men and women. His arms are howitzers of howitzers and cannons of cannons—and while God is holy and glorious beyond imagination, He is zealous in making it clear that He doesn’t just float around out there somewhere in His ginormous robe. He has always been, and always will be, a totally hands-on God.


The baby in the manger with outstretched arms is a reminder that:


God doesn’t do awkward elbow or fist bumps. Never has, never will…

  • His arms are never too far away and always within reach. (Isaiah 59:1)
  • His arms, especially His right one, are victorious (Psalm 98:1) and strong (Isaiah 63:12) and mighty. (Isaiah 52:10)
  • His arms are outstretched in love and longing to offer redemption to all who will believe. (Exodus 6:6, John 1:12, Romans 5:)

And especially in a year like this one, when big stuff and little stuff alike are beyond figuring out, it is good to remember that none of it is, or ever has been, beyond the reach of God’s outstretched arms. They are arms not confined by time or space but come to us and with us in peace and assurance on this journey of ups and downs. And often, they come with words like these that seem to be hitting home in a fresh, wonderful way even now…


“I don’t even begin to get involved in matters too big—matters of faith, state, business, or the many things that defy my ability to understand them. Of one thing I am certain: my soul has become calm, quiet, and contented in You. Like a weaned child resting upon his mother, I am quiet; my soul is like this weaned child. O Israel, stake your trust completely in the eternal God—from this very moment and into the vast future.”—Psalm 131:1-3, The Voice  


…Not to become oblivious to the reality of things, not to be uncaring or un-praying, but to actively rest in His arms like that baby, to exhale, and to be still and know that He is exactly who He says He is—strong enough to carry the weight of the entire world yet tender and compassionate enough to hold the smallest, weakest, most helpless child of His in His arms. 


That baby in the nativity? His Name is "God with us!" And even in 2020, He’s got the whole world in His hands.


No fist bumps.


"The God who lives forever is your safe place. His arms are always under you….”

—Deuteronomy 33:27, New Life Version

Sunday, December 6, 2020

Taking Sides

 

“Sir, my concern is not whether God is on our side; my greatest concern is to be on God’s side, for God is always right.”—Abraham Lincoln


I have heard it said many times, often in a somber, frowning tone:

“God is not on anyone’s side.”

“God does not play favorites.”

“You need to be on His side, not Him on yours.”

I have heard Abe Lincoln’s quote over and over again used as proof for all of that.

Except I don't think that's what Abe meant.

Because my Bible also says this:


“If the Lord had not been on our side—let Israel say—if the Lord had not been on our side when men attacked us…” (Psalm 124:1)

God IS on someone’s side!


“Yes, but Israel is God’s chosen people, of course He’s going to take their side.”


Except even God’s chosen people have a choice who they will follow and trust to guide their lives. He is on their side, as Abe says, under one condition—when they put their trust and hope in God alone, no matter the outcome, circumstance or situation. And that’s why these ancient travelers to Jerusalem could say this shock-and-awe statement, because they also declare:


“Our help is in the Name of the Lord, the Maker of heaven and earth!” (Psalm 124:8)


And no one else. And no other option.


“Yes, but things don’t always go well. What about when there are, say, Christians on one team and Christians on another—someone has to win and lose—then whose side is God on?”


He is not on the side of teams, He is on the side of the Believers, regardless of their team or mission or organization, regardless of the outcome—for reasons well beyond a fleeting game-of-the-week.


When our help and hope is in the Name of the Lord, the same can be true for us even in crazy 2020, A very familiar passage explodes with fresh Light:


“We are confident that God is able to orchestrate everything to work toward something good and beautiful when we love Him and accept His invitation to live according to His plan. From the distant past, His eternal love reached into the future. You see, He knew those who would be His one day, and He chose them beforehand to be conformed to the image of His Son so that Jesus would be the firstborn of a new family of believers, all brothers and sisters. As for those He chose beforehand, He called them to a different destiny so that they would experience what it means to be made right with God and share in His glory. So what should we say about all of this?


If God is on our side, then tell me: whom should we fear?


If He did not spare His own Son, but handed Him over on our account, then don’t you think that He will graciously give us all things with Him?”—Romans 8:28-32, Voice


Maybe not everything perfect, not everything pleasant, or not everything the way we want things to turn out, But always, always when our help and hope is in the Name of the Lord, He is on our side to carry us through…whatever. And one day, that carry-through will mean no more tears, no more death, no more hatred and injustice, no more fear.


Our help is in the Name of the Lord!

The Name of the Lord! 

But what is His Name?…


“‘Listen! The virgin shall conceive a child! She shall give birth to a Son, and He shall be called “Emmanuel” meaning God is with us.”

—Matthew 1:23, Living


Nothing could be more “on our side” than that.

Sunday, November 29, 2020

Breaking Tradition

(Photo: newenglandhistoricalsociety.com, “Home for Christmas,” Norman Rockwell)


“Instead of cursing the darkness, light a candle.”—Benjamin Franklin


Back in the day, coming home to New Hampshire from Thanksgiving dinner on the farm in Massachusetts meant shutting off the crackling AM radio in favor of miles of conversation interspersed with comfortable silence. There were no seatbelts because I remember resting my head on my forearms on the back of the front seat while chatting with mom and dad. The bright lights of traffic on Route 128 went away as we turned up Route 3—hardly the multiple lanes of busyness it is now. Darkness was everywhere. Nobody seemed to live along this stretch of road.


It was always a good feeling to turn off in Tyngsboro (because you had to back then), because it meant we were that much closer to home and because there was light and life going through the village and over the iron bridge into South Nashua where there were neon signs here and there and the spotlight on what was then the Green Ridge Turkey Farm. In their own way, lighted markers of comfort and joy.


As we turned onto Route 101-A, there were lights of a different kind—scattered and warmer, the glow from homes and farms set back from the two-lane highway lined with stonewalls and trees. Getting closer! And I knew “when are we going to be there?” would no longer be coming out of my mouth when we drove through Milford (because you had to back then). A bit more light and life. And something I couldn’t wait to see each year: this one big Victorian that was always and by itself decked out with holiday lights on Thanksgiving night. Except every year, dad would remark something like this to mom:


“Too early! Honeybee, will you look at that?!”


All these years later, I wonder if dad, who loved Christmas, secretly wanted to finish the sentence with “I wish we would do that, too.” But tradition is tradition deeply engrained, and so no lights go up in my house until the first Sunday in Advent.


Until this year...because it is 2020.


The day before Advent, I took out the window candles, set them on each sill, and got them ready for launch in 24 hours. But as afternoon turned to evening and “darkness was everywhere,” I looked at one of the window candles in the kitchen and, for some “”odd” reason, remembered that my theme verse on January 1 for what would turn out to be the craziest year of them all was: “Your Word is a lamp for my steps, it lights the path before me.” (Psalm 119:105, The Voice), which I noticed had a cross-reference to this:


“The people walking in darkness have seen a great Light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death, a Light has dawned.”

(Isaiah 9:2, NIV)


Which, in turn, pointed to this:


“In the beginning, the Word already existed. The Word was with God, and the Word was God. He existed in the beginning with God. God created everything through him, and nothing was created except through him. The Word gave life to everything that was created, and his life brought light to everyone. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness can never extinguish it.” (John 1:1-5, NLT)


I must have read those familiar verses a gazillion times before, and never did they have more clout, more illumination and Hope, than they did on this night before Advent 2020. Hesitantly at first, because gosh, this was family tradition being challenged, I turned the bulb on the first kitchen window candle. And then with a sense of purpose and almost a defiance coupled with joy, “Your Word is a lamp for my steps, it lights the path before me and everyone else’s!” ran through my mind while powering up all the rest of the window candles in the house.


And yet again, just as in the disciple John’s ancient days, the darkness could not extinguish Light.

And it never will.

And that will be the Christmas message from my house to those passing by in this crazy year, whether they realize it or not.

And a reminder to self that, wherever I go, I carry that same Light with me. 


I’d like to think if dad was in the kitchen with me on Saturday night, he would have agreed:“Just in time, son! And don’t be in a hurry to take them down when Christmas is over, either.”


My dad always was a very wise man.


“When the dawn appears,

When the light grows,

When the midday burns,

When has ceased the holy light,

When the clear night comes:

I sing Your praises, O Father:

Healer of hearts,

Healer of bodies,

Giver of wisdom...

Remedy of evil.”

—Synesius of Cyrene

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Remembering a Timeless Password


(Photo: Steve Buissinne @ pixabay.com

How on earth can a Believer have any impact when you’re living in a culture of so any mixed ideas and backgrounds and religious beliefs so that it’s all like mud?

"There hasn’t been anything like this before."

And how on earth do you best strike up a conversation of Hope with anyone when many seem quick to tell you what they think without hearing (or being willing to hear) what you’re saying?

"There hasn’t been anything like this before."

And how on earth do you speak Life effectively and faithfully to a culture that often has its heels dug in but without digging in your own “I know I’m right” heels? 

"Surely, there has never been anything like this before."

Except it was the very description of the culture of ancient Colossae — a culture of many people groups and traditions that forged a hodgepodge of thinking and living, including religious practices. There is nothing new under the sun. And so the apostle Paul’s encouragement from The Message to those Colossian Believers still rings true down through the ages to 2020:


BE FAITHFUL…”My counsel for you is simple and straightforward: Just go ahead with what you’ve been given. You received Christ Jesus, the Master; now live him. You’re deeply rooted in him. You’re well constructed upon him. You know your way around the faith. Now do what you’ve been taught. School’s out; quit studying the subject and start living it! And let your living spill over into thanksgiving.”—Colossians 2:6-7


LOVE CHRIST, LOVE YOUR TOWN…“Use your heads as you live and work among outsiders. Don’t miss a trick. Make the most of every opportunity. Be gracious in your speech. The goal is to bring out the best in others in a conversation, not put them down, not cut them out.”—Colossians 4:5-6


"…yes, but If only I had more time..."

"...If only I had more energy.

If only I were smarter.

If only I could read the Word without daydreaming.

If only I had my act together—maybe tomorrow…"


And Jesus says: “Come to Me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest.”—Matthew 11:28, NLT


And He also says: “If anyone is thirsty, let him come to Me and drink!”—John 7:37, NLT


And Isaiah says: “Everyone who thirsts, come to the waters; and you who have no money come, buy grain and eat. Come, buy wine and milk without money and without cost—simply accept it as a gift from God.”—Isaiah 55:1, Amplified


And Solomon says:“Whoever is naive or inexperienced, let him turn in here!…Leave behind your foolishness and the foolish and live, and walk in the way of insight and understanding.”—Proverbs 9:4,6 Amplified


“Yes, but there hasn’t ever been anything like this before…”


...One of the most beautiful things about being in the upside-down Kingdom of God is that it always has been and always will be built for those who don’t have their act together at any point in their lives. All we need to remember is the culturally upside-down password:


“Come as you are.” And then, go, be, live.


“My grace is always more than enough for you, and My power finds its full expression through your weakness.”

—2 Corinthians 12:9, Passion



Sunday, November 8, 2020

'I Want to See You'

Photo by Daniel Schaffer on Unsplash

"The renewed mind is the canvas on which the Spirit of God can paint."—Bill Johnson

On top of everything else, Jesus was an artist, too.


He was continually painting pictures with words meant to awaken weary minds. Even if a thesaurus had been around in those days, there was no need for one, because Jesus, the Word made flesh, had all of the right words, at just the right time, and especially for every “I don’t get it" moment experienced by His followers — then and now. To help us see the Big picture through the fog and see life with a heavenly perspective, Jesus didn’t do boring lectures but told engaging stories by painting a bunch of word pictures for real people — farmers, homeowners, shopkeepers and people who liked fishing and being outdoors. People like us, and out-of-this-world words like these:


“The kingdom of heaven is like a man who sowed good seed in his field…"

“The kingdom of heaven is like like a treasure a man discovered in a field. In his excitement, he sold everything he owned to get enough money to buy the field—and get the treasure, too!"

“The kingdom of heaven is like a merchant seeking beautiful pearls…"

“The kingdom of heaven is like a dragnet that was cast into the sea and gathered some of every kind…"


When all we see is what’s right in front of us and fret and wonder, Jesus is always thinking bigger picture. Much bigger. His purpose behind these multi-colored descriptions of getting a heavenly perspective on things is not to mindlessly float away into a la-la land that’s out there somewhere and ignore reality. Instead, it's to bring that right and perfect perspective of “the earth is the LORD’s and all that is in it” into the often unhinged craziness of daily responsibilities and decisions, and especially into headlines that would try to add fuel to fear and throw water on faith. To get us to think, to see in the midst of it all: “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”


And the longer I go on this journey, the more I desire that Lord's Prayer perspective above most everything else. It's not a one-and-done request, either. Just about every day, I am right there with blind Bartimaeus:


“Jesus asked him, ‘What do you want me to do for you?’ The blind man answered, ‘Teacher, I want to see You.’”

—Mark 10:51, New Century Version


I want to see what matters, because I’m blinded way too often by all the wrong things that relentlessly try to cloud “the Kingdom of God is like” big picture and distort the right perspective.


And so, I like to imagine that in reply to my plea, if He were to meet me and my Bartimaeus desire on that roadside today, and knowing how much I enjoy taking photos, just maybe Jesus would paint a picture that looks something like this:


“The walk of faith is like a man who went for a walk with his camera, looking for something beautiful. But he had no set-it-and-forget-it autofocus feature because it’s a walk that requires continual, hands-on (re)focus to bring clarity to confusing things, wrong perspectives, and loud distractions. It is a lifelong discipline that leans on Trust, and the Truth of who I AM, and My endless love for you, and not on your own understanding. It is like continually adjusting the zoom lens until what is fuzzy becomes clear and the Subject is in focus while the background fades away. Your eye’s attention is drawn to the one thing that matters. Beautiful! So, keep going, live your life well, never give up, and as you go, ’set your mind and keep focused habitually on the things above—the heavenly things—not on things that are on the earth which have only temporal value.’”


It's a new day…and it’s really good to know that the Artist is still at work.


“We can, by choice and our actions, invite God to be present in our mind. Or, we can close the door to Him. It all depends on what kind of mind we want to cultivate. The goal is to have a mind in which the glorious Father of Jesus is always present and gradually crowds out every distorted belief, every destructive feeling, every misguided intention … God is never more than a thought away!”

—John Ortberg



Sunday, November 1, 2020

What Really Matters

Timely words from more than half-century ago that I’ll stand on as I head to the polls on Tuesday…

“One thing must be kept in mind: We Christians are Christians first and everything else after that. Our first allegiance is to the kingdom of God. Our citizenship is in heaven. We are grateful for political freedom. We thank God for democracy as a way of life. But we never forget that we are sons of God and citizens of another city whose builder and maker is God. For this reason, we must not identify the gospel with any political system or make Christianity to be synonymous with any form of government, however noble. Christ stands alone, above and outside of every ideology devised by man. He does not join any of our parties or take sides with any of our great men except as they may come over on His side and try to follow Him in righteousness and true holiness. Then He is for them but only as individuals, never as leaders of some political faction. The true Christian will be loyal to his country and obedient to those in authority, but he will never fall into the error of confusing his own national culture with Christianity. Christianity is bigger than any country, loftier than any civilization, broader than any human ideology.”—AW Tozer


Yes, but wait. This year is different. “What would Jesus do in such a time as this?”

To which, He might reply, as He has always done down through the ages:

“The real question is, what will you do?”


The answer, of course, is right in front of me. Not easy, but absolutely perfect and right.

It looks a lot like humility and selflessness and seeking first the Kingdom of God.

It looks a lot like that narrow road He talked about.

It brings to life what He meant when He said “take up your cross daily.”

It looks a lot like…Jesus.


The answer is couched in ancient and timeless Words that will be much more important to my Walk and how I live with my neighbors—red, blue or in between—after election day than on it, no matter who wins:


“Pray much for others; plead for God’s mercy upon them; give thanks for all He is going to do for them. Pray in this way for kings and all others who are in authority over us, or are in places of high responsibility, so that we can live in peace and quietness, spending our time in godly living and thinking much about the Lord. This is good and pleases God our Savior, for He longs for all to be saved and to understand this truth:

That God is on one side and all the people on the other side, and Christ Jesus, Himself man, is between them to bring them together, by giving His life for all mankind.”

—1 Timothy 2:1-6, Living Bible

This, too, is worship.

Sunday, October 25, 2020

At Just the Right Time


 (Photo: Pexels.com)

“Faith is acting like God is telling the truth.”—Pastor Tony Evans


When everything in our world seems upside down, it’s good to think of this:

“When the right time arrived, God sent His Son into this world …”—Galatians 4:4, The Voice

And…

“When we were utterly helpless, with no way of escape, Christ came at just the right time and died for us sinners who had no use for Him.”—Romans 5:6, Living


And if that is so, we can be encouraged by this, even in 2020:

“His destiny-plan for the earth stands sure. His forever-plan remains in place and will never fail.”—Psalm 33:11, Living

And…

“There is no human wisdom or understanding or counsel that can prevail against the Lord.”—Proverbs 21:30, Amplified


Trusting in God’s “at just the right time” timing in our day isn’t always easy when our natural eyes and ears see and hear things that try to convince us otherwise...


...But, if “faith is acting like God is telling the truth,” then it means something we know well but forget quickly—the need to stir up an active trust that determines each day to acknowledge the mess as real while remembering that our God is still in the business of “at just the right time.” 


...To remember His promises made and fulfilled, to stand firmly there when “all other ground is sinking sand,” and to fight to look at it all from a Heavenly perspective instead of our own …


“The issue is not what is God doing or going to do; the issue is are we going to see it, agree with it, and be part of bringing it? What will wake you up and become your food for thought, your foundation for emotion, and your confidence for what is possible? Will we continue to be a people who deconstruct, criticize, and dwell on what is wrong? Or will we become a people who believe in the promises, join with the petition, see with the perspective, and fulfill the prophecy that God’s glory is already and will continue to cover the earth? [Habakkuk 2:14] Kingdom now, kingdom coming, kingdom here!…This is the perspective that can birth revival in the face of any circumstances, and any society, at any depth of depravity.”—Andy Byrd and Sean Feucht, from Fire and Fragrance


Our “at just the right time” Savior drives it all home…


“Here’s another way to put it: You’re here to be light, bringing out the God-colors in the world. God is not a secret to be kept. We’re going public with this, as public as a city on a hill. If I make you light-bearers, you don’t think I’m going to hide you under a bucket, do you? I’m putting you on a light stand. Now that I’ve put you there on a hilltop, on a light stand—shine! Keep open house; be generous with your lives. By opening up to others, you’ll prompt people to open up with God, this generous Father in heaven.”—Matthew 5:14-16, The Message


Selah.