Friday, April 29, 2011

A Royal Invitation

Are you currently married, engaged and planning your wedding, or single, but hoping to find “the right one”?  How would you like to say your vows in front of 2 billion witnesses?  As we are all continuously reminded by the media, that is the daunting experience facing Britain’s Prince William and his bride, Kate Middleton, at their wedding this Friday.  Do you ever dream of being this important?

The media tirelessly focuses on the traditions surrounding the royal wedding, speculations about what various royals and celebrities will be wearing, who is invited and who is not, and of course what Kate Middleton’s wedding gown, will be like.  However, what makes this royal union truly unique is not any of these things, but the fact that the prince is marrying a commoner, someone who does not come from either a royal or a noble family.

Growing up an ordinary person and marrying a prince is the stuff fairy tales are made of, but in the thousand-year history of the British monarchy, it is an extremely rare event.  In fact the last time it occurred was in 1660, when Anne Hyde, the daughter of a politician, married James, Duke of York, who later became King James II.

In countries like the U.S. with no history of monarchy or aristocracy, we have difficulty understanding class barriers and how they shape major life decisions and behaviors. 
However, even in our society, we are aware that there is always an “inner circle” in every social setting: school, work, social or service club, church, and sometimes even in our own extended family.

Have you ever been on the outside, and longed to be a member of the “in group?”  Unless someone extends an invitation, you remain in effect “a commoner,” shut out of association with the privileged few.  That exclusion is often very painful and deeply wounding.

Prince William is extending an invitation to Kate Middleton that will permanently end her status as a commoner.  As she leaves Westminster Abbey Friday, she will no longer be Kate, but the Princess of Wales.  Through marriage she will be a royal, and her children will be in line to ascend to the throne.

You may be “a commoner” in your social world.  Perhaps you feel ignored, overlooked and unappreciated.  Maybe you even think it’s hopeless, your life is always going to be tedious and ordinary, never special or exciting.  But did you know that you have been issued an invitation to be a royal in the most powerful monarchy on earth?

God is inviting you to become His child and a member of His own family.  He tells us in Revelation 1:5b-6a: “Jesus loves us and has freed us from all our sins by His own blood.  He has formed us into a royal race, and priests to our God and Father…”  The apostle Peter wrote:  “You are a chosen people, royal priests, a holy nation.  You are God’s very own possession…for He has called you out of darkness into His wonderful light.” 

Don’t live your life as a commoner.  Choose to be a royal.  Say “Yes!” to God’s invitation to become His child and join the royal family!

Please join us this Sunday at 9:00 AM or 11:00 AM, as we look deeper into the royal ties that bind us into God’s family.  I’m discussing parenting principles in my sermon, “Successful Parenting“, that is part 1 in our new “Family Ties” series.


Friday, April 22, 2011

The Biggest Loser

As he clenches his fingers in his sweaty palms, he knows it all comes down to this moment.  Did he do his best?  Did he do enough?  Did all the countless hours of training pay off?  Have all the months of self-discipline and self-denial been worth it?  Can he beat the challenger and win the ultimate prize?  He steps forward onto the platform and closes his eyes as the numbers spin.  Then his heart leaps into his throat as he hears the announcement, “You’ve done it!  Congratulations, you’re the biggest loser!”

If you’ve ever watched the highly popular, TV reality weight loss program, The Biggest Loser, this is a familiar scene.  The program takes 20 contestants, pairs them into teams and then has experts work with them on diet, fitness and self-esteem over a period of months.  Their goal is to be the biggest loser and win the grand prize of $250,000.  But even those who are eliminated say they are winners by what they’ve learned about losing weight and getting fit.  They all get a chance to start a new life. 

Have you ever wished you could start over, erase something from your past, or have a new identity or a different life?  Apparently millions of us do, judging by the explosive growth and popularity of makeover reality shows in the last few years.  There’s Extreme Makeover Home Edition, What Not to Wear (wardrobe, hairdo and makeup), and Clean Sweep (decluttering and room redesign) to name a few.  But there are several dozen currently airing that address everything from kitchen and garden makeovers to smile (dental) makeovers. 

Wouldn’t it be great if there was a “Biggest Loser Life Makeover” program where you could lose all your past mistakes, regrets, feelings of guilt and shameful memories?  A program that could dissolve all your past hurts, pains, and fears, and set you free from bad habits, addictions and everything that currently hinders you?  You could be a new person, have a new identity and a fresh start on a better life!

While you may never be chosen to participate in a TV makeover program, you are invited to be “the biggest loser” in a real life makeover.  The person issuing this invitation to you is God Himself.  He says to you, “Anyone who comes to Christ Jesus becomes a new person, a new creation.  Their old life is gone and a new life begins.” (2 Corinthians 5:17)

God wants you to lose everything in your current life that is weighing you down, holding you back, robbing your joy and hope, and defeating you.  If you will give Him your current, less than ideal life, He promises to give you a new abundant life in Him.  “If you cling to your current life, you will only lose it (be a loser).  But if you lose (give up) your current life for Me, you will find it (a new abundant life).  (Matthew 10:39)

Why not accept God’s invitation to become the biggest loser by giving up your current life, and receiving a new life in Christ.  When you are the biggest loser, you have everything to gain!

Please join us this Easter Sunday at either 9:00 AM or 11:00 AM, and hear more about what God is inviting you to lose and gain.  My sermon, “The Power of the Resurrection” is part 3 in our current “Power of Love” series.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

The Cause Worth Dying For

“God has placed within the heart of every man an overpowering desire for three things:  a battle to fight, an adventure to live and a beauty to rescue.”  (John Eldredge, “Wild at Heart”)

If you ask most men to name their three favorite movies, “BraveHeart” is sure to be one of them.  The movie, based on the legendary life of 13th century Scot, William Wallace, follows his rise from obscure farmer to leader of a massive rebel army, powerful enough to drive the English out of Scotland.  It contains heaping doses of all three desires mentioned by author Eldredge.

After English oppression leads to the death of his father and brother, and later, the death of his wife, Wallace becomes obsessed with one thing, Scotland’s freedom from England.  His entire life becomes an adventure to this cause, and he never wavers in his dedication, even though he is eventually captured by the English and tortured to death.

Is there anything so valuable to you, that you would give your entire life, or even your death for it?  We admire people whose lives are passionately focused on a cause they are willing to die for.  Examples in history are numerous.  The Freedom Riders who were civil rights activists in the early 60’s, endured mob violence, beatings, bus bombings and being jailed, as they traveled the segregated South to bring national attention to racial inequality.  Eventually several of them were killed, as was, Martin Luther King Jr.

More recently, we remember 9-11 and the fall of the twin towers of the World Trade Center.  Intent on saving lives of others, 23 New York police officers and 343 firemen sacrificed their own lives in rescue attempts.  Numerous examples of heroic deaths occur on the battlefields of war.  Since World War II, 62% of the Congressional Medals of Honor have been awarded posthumously.

Is there a cause important enough that you would die for it?  Maybe you would risk your life to save your child, spouse, other family members, or a close friend.  You might risk your life to defend your country or freedoms you highly value.  Any cause you would be willing to die for would have to be extremely valuable and important to you.  It would have to be so worthy and precious, that you would not want to live without it.

Did you know that God has a cause He was willing to die for?  Something so precious and valuable to Him that He was willing to sacrifice His own son?  Something He is not willing to live without: YOU are the cause He found worth dying for!

Romans 5:7-8 states:  “Very rarely will anyone die for a righteous person, though for a good man someone may possibly dare to die.  But God demonstrates His own love for us in this: While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

Jesus said: “Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13)  He then demonstrated this greater love by dying on the cross for YOU!  This Easter take time to ponder how much God values and treasures you. When you see yourself in the mirror, remember you are looking at the cause God found worth dying for!

Please come and join us the Sunday at either 9:00 AM or 11:00 AM for further discussion of how God values you.  My sermon, “The Ultimate Sacrifice” is part 2 of our “The Power of Love” series.

Friday, April 8, 2011

The God Assurance Policy

“Other acts of God…”  Have you ever heard this phrase before?  If you have an insurance policy to protect your home or possessions, it most likely excludes earthquake coverage and other damages caused by “acts of God,” otherwise known as natural disasters.  As I write this, a major 7.1 aftershock has hit the northeastern coast of Japan, adding another stressor to this overstressed country.  Like many people, you may wonder: “Are natural disasters like earthquakes personal “acts of God?”

The Bible makes it clear that we do live in a broken world, a world that is far different from the perfect, harmonious earth that God created.  When Adam and Eve sinned and chose their own way rather than God’s way, they not only lost their own inner peace and harmony, they subjected the environment to unrest and instability as well.  The result is our present earth where natural disasters can and do happen. 

Romans 8: 20a-22a tells us:  “For creation itself (the natural world) was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice…. And creation will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the liberation of the glorious children of God.  We know that the whole creation has been groaning right up to the present time.”

Whenever a catastrophic event occurs, there is always speculation that God may have caused it to express His displeasure.  This type of thinking is not new.  When Jesus was on earth 2000 years ago a tragic event occurred.  A large tower under construction in Siloam collapsed and killed 18 of the construction workers. 

People obviously were discussing what happened and why those particular workers died.  Jesus addressed their ideas about an “act of God” being responsible.  “Those 18 who died when the tower in Siloam fell on them, do you think they were more guilty than all the rest of those living in Jerusalem?  I tell you no!”  (Luke 13: 4-5a)

When an entire village refused to welcome Jesus, two of his disciples thought it would be a good idea to have a natural disaster strike the village to punish it.  What was Jesus’s response to this idea?  But He turned and rebuked them, and said, ‘You do not know what manner of spirit you are of.  For I, the Son of Man, did not come to destroy men’s lives but to save them.’”  (Luke 9:55)

Jesus made it clear to his disciples that in this world we have an adversary, Satan, who will use anything and everything in creation against us.  He told them in John 10:10:  “For Satan, the thief, comes only to kill you, steal from you and destroy you.”  He then made His intentions plain:  “But I am come to give you a life full of abundance.”

Jesus will never impose Himself and His intentions upon us.  He respects us far too much to do that.  We are created as free will agents and can affiliate with anyone we choose to.  God invites us to choose Him and His way.  He gives us this powerful assurance: "Because you love me," says the Lord, "I will rescue you; I will protect you, for you acknowledge my name.  You will call upon me, and I will answer you; I will be with you in trouble, I will deliver you and honor you. With long life will I satisfy you and show you my salvation.”  (Psalms 91: 14-16)

Today as we are faced with the unsettling news of one natural disaster after another, it’s a good idea to review our insurance policy and keep it up to date.  But don’t forget that God loves you and wants to give you His protection.  So do yourself a favor and take the God Assurance Policy.  Walk with Him daily and experience His benefits!

Please come and join us this Sunday for either our first service at 9:00 AM or our second service at 11:00 AM.  My sermon “Redemptive Judgment” is part 1 of our new series on “The Power of Love”.

Friday, April 1, 2011

Live It Up!

Think of some happy moments in your childhood.  Hopefully they are numerous, and if you’re like most people, many of those memories center on holidays and family celebrations.  Just thinking of them now brings a smile to your face.  We love the joy of repeated celebrations for they are the stuff some of our happiest memories are made of.

One of my staff members here at HROCK recently shared this special memory from his childhood.  Every Christmas Eve, his extended family gathered for a special dinner. It was a wonderful time to enjoy a good meal, exchange gifts, and tell stories on one another.  But his favorite part came after dinner.  He would wait, barely able to contain his excitement, for the special “celebration glasses,” to appear.

They were a set of etched crystal stemware handed down from his great-grandmother’s wedding.  Adult glasses were filled with champagne, while the children got sparkling cider.  The family formed a circle in the front room and began a series of toasts to memorable events from the past year, achievements of family members, and personal affirmations of one another.  Everyone had the opportunity to make a toast. 

He remembers standing in that circle, feeling the solidarity of family and basking in the warmth of shared love.  He inherited those glasses and continues the family celebration to this day.

This may surprise you, but God loves to celebrate!  He knows that we need to make time to commemorate special events in our lives and share our joy in remembering them with others.  He wants our lives to regularly be filled with joy!  He commanded Israel to keep 7 feasts every year to take time and remember their history with Him.  Most of these celebrations were several days or even a week in length.  Imagine it being mandatory to take off that kind of time to celebrate!

God went even further with Israel.  He commanded them to completely cease from work, and rest and refresh themselves one day in every seven.  Israel took the Sabbath rest and turned it into a set of legalistic restrictions, but that was never God’s intention.  He wanted the Sabbath to be a joyful remembrance of His act in creating the world.  One of His most repeated encouragements to us is “Rejoice!” or as we might say today, “Live it up!”

God even celebrates you!  He tells us in Zephaniah 3:17b: “The Lord takes great delight in you.  He quiets your heart with His love.  He rejoices over you with singing!”  Receive God’s joy as he remembers you.  His command to you is:  “Rejoice” (“Live it up”) in Me always!”  (Philippians 4:4)

Come and join our family celebration this Sunday as we observe HROCK’s 17th anniversary.  We now have 2 services every Sunday morning, an early service at 9:00 AM and a second service at 11:00 AM.  Hear about all the wonderful things God has done for HROCK as we remember our past!