Meditation: July 3, 2013

“I am God, your personal God who rescued you from Egypt so that you would no longer be slaves to the Egyptians. I ripped off the harness of your slavery so that you can move about freely.” Leviticus 26:13 (MSG)

God identifies with us and calls us His own. In order for us to experience the blessings of communion, there had to be a divine rescue. The attachments of old held us as slaves to another. It was our condition and geographical location. We were in our Egypt and joined to the culture of Egypt. What where once were was so much a part of us that our objective was to further conform to what we were able to see. But God’s love sought us out and reminded us that we were in a place that we did not belong. The dissatisfaction within our souls not to settle was His mercy and grace reaching down to the lowest parts in order to lift us up above the slavery of Egypt. Then He ripped the harness off our necks enabling us to move about freely. Now that we have been set free after having been given the will to be free, let us not return to the house of bondage. We are now free to worship and free to serve God with our whole heart, soul, and strength. We have been freed that we may move freely.

Meditation: April 19, 2013

“This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief.” 1Timothy 1:15

What Christ did on the cross by dying in order that men may live is amplified through our witness. His voice is raised through the lives of us who understand that we brought nothing that would qualify us to do what is now being done. The worst of sinners now stand with a testimony of victory because the Lord alone has graced us to live on the other side of our prior sins. We should never forget from which we came. We can then appreciate the distance God’s mercy and grace had to reach down and arrest our violent attempts at self destruction. For it to be said that we were at our worst when we thought of ourselves as being at our best is an understatement. He shows us the worst in us that He might bring forth the best in us. Sinners at their worst may find in Jesus Christ a House of Refuge. If we, in the state we were once in could be saved, then He is able to save all who will to be saved.

Meditation: April 13, 2013

“God rewrote the text of my life when I opened the book of my heart to his eyes.” Psalm 18:24 (MSG)

An open heart to the Word of God gives Him permission to transform one’s life. The Holy Spirit works within us not only affects our future, but takes into account our past and our present state and weave all things into a beautiful tapestry fit to be presented to the King. He gives us a new beginning; the reorientation of those things that would otherwise condemn us. This does not happen in the life of the half-hearted. They can only be awakened to the reality that there is more to life than what is being lived. However, the open heart is giving God permission to search deeply into those secret compartments where none are allowed but maybe a select few. When we are under His scrutiny, those things that are contrary to His will are highlighted. He does this, not to be heavy handed in discipline but lovingly purge the heart of the residue of sin that may linger so that He may be worshiped in purity. Our lives then tell a different story. It expresses the message of His mercy, His grace, and His love.

Meditation: July 3, 2012

 “I am God, your personal God who rescued you from Egypt so that you would no longer be slaves to the Egyptians. I ripped off the harness of your slavery so that you can move about freely.” Leviticus 26:13 (MSG)

God identifies with us and calls us His own. In order for us to experience the blessings of communion, there had to be a divine rescue. The attachments of old held us as slaves to another. It was our condition and geographical location. We were in our Egypt and joined to the culture of Egypt. What where once were was so much a part of us that our objective was to further conform to what we were able to see. But God’s love sought us out and reminded us that we were in a place that we did not belong. The dissatisfaction within our souls not to settle was His mercy and grace reaching down to the lowest parts in order to lift us up above the slavery of Egypt. Then He ripped the harness off our necks enabling us to move about freely. Now that we have been set free after having been given the will to be free, let us not return to the house of bondage. We are now free to worship and free to serve God with our whole heart, soul, and strength. We have been freed that we may move freely.

The Certainty of Uncertainties

The earthquake in Haiti was a wakeup call to the world. The question on the mind and lips of many is, can something like that really happen? And since it happened there, could it happen here? Hundreds of thousands of lives were lost as the result of an event that only took a few minutes to occur. The tragedy of Haiti has made such an impact upon the world that relief is pouring in from every sector of the globe. To see images of recently orphaned children whose future was already bleak because of the adverse poverty of the nation merely escalated the cause.

Graphic pictures leapt off the screen and into our lives when we faced the relatives of the victims a few days ago. What could we tell them? As Haitian pastors living in Atlanta gathered together at our request to tell their stories, we could feel their pain. Although they were away from the scene, from their families, and their native land, their hearts were there. How many of their family and friends, who bade them farewell when they embarked upon the journey to America, saw them for the very last time? And unfortunately, there is the lingering impossibility for closure because the graves of their loved ones were the dumping grounds for many who remain unidentified.

I have preached many funerals in my lifetime. I have stood at the graves of weeping widows with orphaned children. I have looked into their eyes and could read their grim and desperate thoughts of uncertainty that were in proximity to their pain. “What can you tell me now preacher?” “Where is God when I need Him the most?” We cannot glaze over these real challenges. A word is needed that surpasses pacification and consolation. God is yet standing in the shadows awaiting the opportunity to be heard, subtly speaking through circumstances that remind us of our vulnerability. “It is because of His tender mercies that we are not consumed. Great is His faithfulness.” Nothing but His mercy stands between what happened to them and what could easily happen to us.

Uncertain calamities do not always come gradually, but often strike suddenly. They awaken us from a state of slumber and make us aware that we must always be in a state of preparedness. After 9/11, the government began taking precautionary measures to prevent such a thing from ever happening again. But on Christmas Day, a failed attempt on a U.S. Commercial airplane exposed areas of vulnerability that yet remained. Nothing done alone, which is done without God’s guidance and assistance, is sufficient. The “Fault Lines” in our lives, just as the “Fault Lines” underneath the surface of the earth, stand to remind us of the inevitability of another earthquake. The question is when will it happen and what will we do differently that we failed to do this time?

We should not blame the victims for their calamities, nor blame God, but rather blame ourselves. We have made decisions that have affected every nation of the world and are offensive to God. The Church must repent of deflecting her emphasis away from God and directing it towards other things. The compassion demonstrated by the world in this crisis must be seen and known as compassion that comes from its Source which is Jesus Christ. Just as a nation can be destroyed in one day, a nation can be birthed in one day as well. Before the coming of the Lord, the birth pangs will signal the dawning of a new day! God is alive, God is still in control, and God alone is to be worshipped. This is the antidote to uncertainty, and the reassuring hope in the promised return of the Prince of Peace.