I've not posted anything in a while so I at least wanted to give an explanation. Work has been crazy and to top that off we've been moving! Lord willing I will try to get more postings up over the coming weeks and months. Not that I feel that I have a lot of readers that are hanging on my every word, I'm not that neive! But it does me good to work on the postings, it's a relief valve for the times that I have to go without preaching for a while!
So Lord willing there will be more postings coming soon.
Thus saith the LORD, Stand ye in the ways, and see, and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and ye shall find rest for your souls...Jeremiah 6:16
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Monday, April 26, 2010
What does it mean to be a "Christian"?

Have you ever noticed how we abuse certain words in our English language? Take the word love for instance. A lot of times we are guilty of misusing the word love. A young teenager will begin to be attracted to a member of the opposite sex and will proclaim loudly, "I love her"! Then two weeks later they have forgotten about that girl only to be in love with someone else. We say that we love our trucks, and love our cars, and love our houses, and love our boats, but do we really love those things? Do those "things" really hold a special place in our hearts?
We also abuse the word Christian. Too many people think that because they go to church occasionally, because their grandpa was a deacon, because their uncle is a Sunday School teacher, that they are a Christian. Many people think that they can live any way they want to, but because they have had some kind of religious affiliation in their lives they are a Christian. I'm afraid too many times we are guilty of picking up the title but laying down the mantle.
Every sinner (not just a selected few) that is convicted of their sins by the Holy Spirit, and comes to Christ for salvation, thru faith and repentance is saved by the grace of God, and they are saved forever! However not every saved person is a Christian. To be Christian is to be "Christ like".
How "Christ like" are our daily actions? Would Christ do the things that we do in our day to day lives? It is a sobering thought. Is Christ exalted in everything we do? No, I'm not saying we have to live a sinless life to claim the name Christian. But I am afraid that too many of US (my self included) do not live up to the title that we have bestowed upon our selves.
I pray God help those of us that are saved to truely be Christian. Not just in name only, but in deed.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Insanity ... Part II

It is painfully obvious that the "new" methods we use are not reaching a lost world for Christ, or motivating Christians to put James 4:8 into practice in their lives. So why do we keep trying more of the same? This is insanity in action. I love Revival meetings, but I'm tired of meeting where no one is stirred, no one is changed. There is nothing wrong with having fun with our youth. Our young people need to know that they can have good clean fun and still live for God, but for many churches their "Youth Program" emphasises nothing but fun and activities. Then, when the Lord is mentioned, He's slipped in quietly at the end. How do we break this cycle? What is it going to take to get the glory back in our churches? There are many verses that we can look at, but one in particular comes to mind.

If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land. II Chronicles 7:14
What is the first thing that we must do? Humble ourselves. It's humbling to admit that our programs, our plans, have failed and are failing. It's humbling to admit that we are helpless. Too many times we get lifted up with pride and think that we have a better way than God. But if we're going to have the power of God in our lives and churches, we are going to have to humble ourselves before the Lord and admit that without Him we are helpless!
What's the second thing, prayer. I don't think that I can properly get my burden across right here. Most Christians prayer lives are not even a shadow of what they used to be, what they need to be. I was flipping thru a book on prayer a few months ago. The author said that God understands our busy schedule, and that he doesn't expect us to spend the time in prayer that Saints used to. I disagree with this COMPLETELY! If we are going to have the power of God on our lives, we must frequently visit the prayer closet!
The third thing that we must do is seek God. Are we truly seeking after God? Is HE truly the desire of your heart? When we wake up in the morning, is HE on our minds?
As we go thru our day, do we give HIM any thought at all? Do we go to revivals just to enjoy the singing, so we can shout and have an emotional stirring? (And I believe in shouting). What are you seeking? Be honest with yourself, examine your motives. Are you really seeking after God?
The last thing that we must do, is turn from our wicked ways. We have to turn from those things in our lives that are not pleasing to God. Why do so many people have to have fifty verses on something before they reluctantly give it up? What's the attitude of the average church member? "Well I tell you what, You prove it to me from the Bible, and I'll believe it"!! The truth is that someone with that attitude is not going to change no matter how many verses you show them. Our attitude SHOULD be, "Lord, I'm not sure if this is wrong or right, but I don't want to do anything that would displease you. So I'm not going to do it anymore until you show me different".
The good thing is that if we are doing the first three steps, that fourth one will come automatically! Anyone who vehemently defends their sin, have not humbled themselves, do not have a prayer life, and are not seeking the face of God. No, it won't be easy, but God will give us grace!! Hallelujah!!
When we do these thing, when we start trusting in God instead of the flesh, then we will get the "Revival" back in our revival meetings. Then we will see God work in our youth. God help us, not to trusting in games and gimmicks, but trust in HIM.
Please feel free to leave a comment, let me know what you think.
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Insanity ... Part I

Everyone knows what the definition of insanity is, right? Doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. This is something that I think we are guilty of in our Baptist churches. Let me explain myself.
In years gone by we had the power of God in our baptist churches. The people went to church and the glory fell. A revival meeting was a revival in the true sense of the word, people's lives were forever changed. Bars went out of business. Businesses shut down for the meeting, and a three night meeting was unheard of. Churches were growing in size, not shrinking in size. Their young people were not just in church, but active in church. They were excited about living their lives for God. Young men wanted to be called to preach, to go the mission field. The young ladies wanted to be preachers wives, and raise their children for the glory of God.
But what about today, what do we have today? Our revivals are revivals in name only. No one is changed, no one surrenders their life to God, half the people don't even show up. Yes the preaching is Doctrinally sound. It informs us and perhaps even stirs us, and we "Feel" like we have been renewed. Sad to say that our "Renewal" quickly wears off, and within a week or two we are back to our old routine.
Today we have more programs for our young people than you can shake a stick at! We have children's church, Awana, Kings Kids, church baseball, volleyball, basketball, and football teams. Hot dog Sunday, pizza Sunday, ice-cream Sunday...Sunday. And our youth today are leaving the church faster than rats off of a sinking ship.
So where does the insanity come in?
The last revival didn't work, so lets have another meeting. How do we prepare for this one, the same way we prepared for the last one. No prayer, no fasting, no weeping, not really wanting to go, dragging in late and can't wait to get out because we tivo'd our favorite TV MA rated show.
We can't keep youth in our churches, the ball teams aren't working, the clubs aren't working, the ice-cream Sunday... Sunday's aren't working. So what do we do? Add more ball teams, more clubs, more ice-cream.... you get the point! We do more of the same wishing so hard that it will work.
So what works? in part II we will take a look, and try to find that answer.
Monday, March 29, 2010
The Great Pretenders

Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from such turn away.
II Timothy 3:5
Every time that I've heard this verse preached on, it's always used to refer to those that are hirelings. Those that use "Religion" as a means of financial gain. It's used to refer to the ecumenical movement, to the charismatics that work off of people's emotions rather than the spirit of God, to those that are "Teaching for doctrines the commandments of men" Matthew 15:9. And certainly those can be applied, but when I read this verse I see us, Independent Fundamental Baptist. Why do I say that? We are a form, a shell of what we used to be.
There was a time when men, preachers and laymen alike, had a close personal relationship with Christ. They could do more than just talk about the power of God, they experienced it. They knew what it was to spend great amounts of time with God in prayer, meditation, and study. Men like Johnathan Edwards who would sometimes spend 18 hours a day in prayer and study, who preached the message "Sinners in the hands of an angry God". People clung to the pews and pillars of the church afraid that the ground would open beneath them they cried out
"IS THERE NO WAY OF ESCAPE"!
What about men like Charles Finney who was preaching a revival in a port town. A sea captain testified that conviction broke out among the passengers as the ship neared the town where Finney was preaching.
These are just two examples of the power of God that history is filled with. Why don't we see that manifested power today like they did in years gone by? A better question might be, why don't we care? Most people are content to sit back and talk about the "Good ol' days" with no concern about our present spiritual condition. We go to church, we sing, we pray and preach, then leave church Sunday night to go back to our worldly lifestyles that we live thru the week, there is no conviction in our services, no one gets saved, no one is changed, no one rededicates, no one surrenders their life to the service of the Lord (and I'm not only talking about surrendering to preach), and we talk about what a wonderful service that we had, and we pretend that "the spirit was there"! When in fact, we know little about the spirit that the old time preachers knew.
Why is this, did they have some kind of special power with God that was exclusive only to them? Is God a respecter of persons, giving to them a special relationship with Him that we have no access to? God is no respecter of men, we can have the same power that they had, but if we want it we have to pay the same price they paid. Why, because God is no respecter of men.
I don't want to just read about the power of God, Revival, I want to see it! I was chatting with a preacher on facebook last night, he told me of a great quote by Dr. James Stewart, "The church has been sub-normal for so long, that if we ever got normal, the world would think we were abnormal".
I'm tired of pretending, I want to see the power of God in our churches again.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
What more could He do?

Just got done listening to a message from oldpathsermons.com, the text was Isaiah chapter 5. The message deals with some things that have been on my heart and mind lately.
Isaiah 5
1 ¶ Now will I sing to my wellbeloved a song of my beloved touching his vineyard. My wellbeloved hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill:
2 And he fenced it, and gathered out the stones thereof, and planted it with the choicest vine, and built a tower in the midst of it, and also made a winepress therein: and he looked that it should bring forth grapes, and it brought forth wild grapes.
These verses talk about how a vineyard was planted, how great care was taken to make sure the vineyard would have every opportunity to produce. The verse talks about how the vineyard was fenced, it was protected from intruders and wild animals that might come in and harm the vineyard. It talks about how the stones were gathered out, about the tower that was built in the midst of it, and how he placed a winepress in the vineyard.
What is the purpose of the winepress? So wine could be made when the vines have produced their fruit. This vineyard was not planted simply for show, for people to walk by and say, "what a beautiful vineyard". This vineyard was expected to produced fruit so the owner would have something to show for his hard work of building, working, and caring for this vineyard. But verse two tells us that when it should have brought forth grapes, it brought forth wild grapes. Grapes that were good for no use at all.
We know from John chapter 15 that God is the husbandman, Jesus is the vine, and we are the branches. We are to bare fruit for the masters work. I'm afraid, however, that just like Isaiah chapter 5 when God has expected to reap grapes from our lives we have given Him nothing but wild grapes.
4 What could have been done more to my vineyard, that I have not done in it? wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes wherefore, when I looked that it should bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes?
So the question is, what more could he do? What more could the Lord do for us to get us to produce fruit for His glory? We live in the greatest country on earth, we live without threat of persecution. We have beautiful church buildings, but we do not have the power of God in our hearts, and homes, and at the house of God. We have allowed this world to consume our lives and anything that has any resemblance to God is chocked out.
What happened to Christians living separated from this world. Not because it's popular, not because the preacher preaches it, and not even because the bible say so, but because we want to please HIM. Why do we have to have fifteen verses on something before we are willing to give it up for the Lord? Why can't we say, "Lord, I don't know if this is wrong or not, but there's so much controversy surrounding it that I'm going to give it up because I want to please you". What more does the Lord have to do for us to get us to serve Him? What's it going to take in your life and mine for us to sell out to God?
What more could He do?
Friday, February 26, 2010
A Thirsty Soul
As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.
Psalms 42:1
Sad that too many of us cannot identify with this passage of scripture. Most professing "Christians" are too busy chasing after the things of the world to be preoccupied with Jesus. How we rob ourselves of the blessings, fellowship, and power with God when we chase after the things of this world.
What is the purpose of your life, what do you live for? What consumes your thoughts? Is it money, a better position at work, a better education, a new car, house, boat, flat screen television? What drives you from day to day? I know that we have to work to live and provide for our families, but we have gotten to the point where our job and our possession's are what we live for. I know very, very few people who view their jobs as simply a means to live while they serve God. Most church people view service for Christ as something they do every once in a while to soothe their conscience while they live for the temporal pleasures of this life.
Oh we talk a great talk, we know all the word to "oh how I love Jesus", but we don't know the true meaning. How many times in our lives when we come to a decision between taking the will of God by faith, and choosing the easy path, do we choose the latter.
We are faithful to church, read our bibles, even witness occasionally, but do our hearts really long after Him. Is He truly our hearts desire? I don't believe that there are many of us that can say He is. We need to reach the point in our lives where He is our reason for living, where we hunger and thirst for God and His word.
Psalms 42:1
Sad that too many of us cannot identify with this passage of scripture. Most professing "Christians" are too busy chasing after the things of the world to be preoccupied with Jesus. How we rob ourselves of the blessings, fellowship, and power with God when we chase after the things of this world.
What is the purpose of your life, what do you live for? What consumes your thoughts? Is it money, a better position at work, a better education, a new car, house, boat, flat screen television? What drives you from day to day? I know that we have to work to live and provide for our families, but we have gotten to the point where our job and our possession's are what we live for. I know very, very few people who view their jobs as simply a means to live while they serve God. Most church people view service for Christ as something they do every once in a while to soothe their conscience while they live for the temporal pleasures of this life.
Oh we talk a great talk, we know all the word to "oh how I love Jesus", but we don't know the true meaning. How many times in our lives when we come to a decision between taking the will of God by faith, and choosing the easy path, do we choose the latter.
We are faithful to church, read our bibles, even witness occasionally, but do our hearts really long after Him. Is He truly our hearts desire? I don't believe that there are many of us that can say He is. We need to reach the point in our lives where He is our reason for living, where we hunger and thirst for God and His word.
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