Tag Archives: Jesus Christ

2014-Advent Week 2-Luke 2:14-Give Peace a Chance

Peace, a dream of mankind ever since Cain looked sideways at Abel. For some, it is but a fantasy, a fancy abstract concept, reserved for rulers and dreamers alike.

Yet, for the Christian, peace is as concrete and real as the pew upon which you are sitting.

This is not some head-in-the-clouds escape from reality, but rather is the reality.

A lifestyle that should characterize the life of a believer, and to others, be as obvious in our lives as the clothes we wear.

Because now, it is possible for God’s peace to be felt by you and me as people: God’s peace is available to us!

God’s rescue mission in giving us Himself is to clear the way so that nothing stops us from experiencing the peace.

Anyone can have it, regardless of your past or what you have done. “Craig, but what about me?” you may ask, “I still struggle and I am not perfect, so what peace does God have to offer me?”

Well, if you look at this story, God picked shepherds, the most unlikeliest of characters to receive this announcement!

Do not think God cannot use you wherever you are at in your life, no matter the age or life situation. You may be in a rut, but God can still use you! He has cleared the way and invites us to be a part of that Kingdom of His, that Kingdom of Heaven, that Kingdom of peace.

When the Bible talks about peace, it means it in a relational sense. This is often deeper than what we think of when we hear the word.

To us, peace often conjures up the idea of a cease-fire between warring parties, or perhaps it makes you think of tranquility in a noisy world.

But the true peace the Scriptures talk about, the true peace that is to be found in Jesus Christ, the true peace that the angels sing to these bewildered shepherds is what is known as ShalomWholeness, completeness

Our blessed Savior to be born soon, is not only the great physician telling us about our sickness, but offers us the treatment, and even greater than that, the cure!

1 Timothy says, “godliness with contentment is great gain”

This shalom, this wholeness, is offered to us in the person of Jesus Christ. Through Him, we have

Peace with God

Peace with Neighbor

Peace with Self

When we take this babe in a manger and make Him king in our lives, He gives us forgiveness from sin, purpose, healing, and new life and peace. This King provides us with great love and compassion, and it is this love He has shown us most fully in Himself.

This is the foundation for peace between us and God.

It is as if God has granted us this great peace, and now we want to share with others. This peace should be a way of life for the believer.

The Bible says in Ephesians 2 that God has already broken down the dividing walls of hostility and created a place where true is to be found. And do you know where this place is to be? The Church!

Here is where God has made it possible for all of us who may be different to be one people.

A New Humanity in the World

The way to have peace with your fellow man is to remember three truths.

First, God made both you and them in His image, and He cares for you and for them too

Two, we are all broken by this blight known as sin, so you or I, we are no better than anyone outside of Jesus Christ.

Three, The same merciful hands that reached out to you and I while we were drowning in our sea of sin and selfishness, those same hands are reaching out to your fellow man to bring them also into God’s kingdom.

I think we need to see ourselves the way our Savior sees us…a beloved mess. Beloved, yet a mess. A mess, yet beloved.

Are you struggling with not liking who you are? Understand that God has forged you with loving yet strong hands, and He loves you even when you feel like no one else on earth ever could. Forgive yourself as God has forgiven you.

Just like the Psalmist said, “the Lord is my shepherd, and with Him I lack nothing.”

We have a new life, a new wholeness, a new Shalom, a new peace.

An Attitude of Gratitude

Gen 41:50-57; Luke 17:11-19-An Attitude of Gratitude: 9/7/14

Happy Grandparents Day!

INTRO
With all of the deep truths seen in Joseph’s life, what we are going to look at today can be easily missed or glossed over.
It is something about Joseph’s life that shows an appropriate response to God’s blessings in it.

It is an attitude of gratitude.

THRUST
Even after all that Joseph has been through, he responds with an attitude that says, “I always want to remember the good things God has done for me.”

I know that life is difficult. I know it is hard to smile all the time when you are just having one of those days. I am not talking about a fake smile that you have to force. I am talking about inner gratitude and thankfulness that can sustain us in the deepest trials.

Joseph could have been bitter, or ungrateful. After all, he was abandoned, enslaved, betrayed, and estranged. He had a rough life, we know this, but do we find any hidden anger?

No, instead we find an attitude of gratitude. Again I urge you, look at the Genesis passage, and then ask yourself this? Why do parents give the names they do to their children? There is something powerful, something symbolic.

It is like “I want you to embody this in your life”. And every time you call out the name, you are reminded of just how and why you chose it.

Joseph chose two names that honored God’s work in his life. Those names were Manasseh and Ephraim. They were meant to remind Joseph of God.

God took away the pain and the suffering that Joseph experienced, and instead blessed him richly with mercy and grace.

In a way, does not this also reflect the life of us as Christians? When we place our trust in Jesus Christ, God takes away and also blesses.

He takes away our sins, and blesses us with freedom and new life. He takes away our wrongs, and blesses us with love.

He takes away our loneliness and blesses us with community. That is what we experience when we, like Joseph, refuse to walk away from God when times get tough.

God not only took the bad away but blessed Joseph with the good: wealth, love, and a family.

God takes our bad away, and blesses us with spiritual wealth, holy love, and a church family.

The only way I am convinced that someone can truly rise above trauma and struggle is with a personal relationship with God through Jesus Christ.

I know that is how Joe did it, and that is how any of us can do it, and the right response to it is to be thankful, to have an attitude of gratitude.

God notices when we give Him praise and thank Him. People avoided lepers but Jesus pursued them.

This story teaches us that on average nine out of ten people suffer from ingratitude.

If you look at the good things in life as what you have earned, then may never be satisfied because there will always be that thirst in your soul, like trying to drink ocean water to quench thirst yet never being satisfied.

Rather if you look at the good things in your life as gifts from God, then you receive them with more joy, more humility, and more thankfulness.

Grateful people focus on what they have, instead of what they have-not.
Gratitude gets us through the hard stuff, the tough stuff, and to reflect on your blessings is to rehearse God’s accomplishments and to do that is to discover his heart

Like the sun burns up mist in the morning, our dread and bitterness is burned away.

Gratitude looks to God and away from dread, this is the bedrock for why we do things as Christians.

It should all spring out of an attitude of thanksgiving that even if God has not chosen to bless us with anything else…he gave us salvation in His Son because he simply loves us.

That is why we can be thankful and it is that reason, out of thankfulness to him, that we serve one another.

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW!
***An attitude of gratitude. Joseph had it. The Samaritan whom Jesus healed had it, and it is the response we should have. When we reflect on God’s goodness, we are thankful, when we are thankful, we are joyful, and when we are joyful, we serve one another, in love.

For full sermon, click http://faithinactionrichlandcob.wordpress.com/genesis-4150-57-luke-1711-19-an-attitude-of-gratitude/