Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Christmas Letter 2014

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And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased” – Luke 2:13-14

One year has passed since Christine went to be with the Lord. How do I sum up a year that has been filled with heartbreak over losing her and joy over knowing she has gone home, to the home all of us who follow Christ long for – our home with God? I am not sure I can, but let me mention just a few highlights.

I have been blessed in the past year by loving family, friends, and a wonderful church, including each one who will read this letter and who also grieve Christine’s death. Longtime family relationships and friendships have deepened for me as a result of our common grief and hope. One longtime friend who has been an encouragement to me over this last year has said repeatedly, “We will get through this together.” Many of you have demonstrated that sentiment without stating it. All I can say is thank you.

I ended last year and began this year with a two month break from my preaching and leadership responsibilities at our church, for which I am grateful. During that time and other time afforded me away from church, I visited family, returned to the church where I held my first preaching ministry, the first ministry decision Christine and I made together after we were married and a church where we have continued to have deep friendships, and I reoriented my life. I returned to preaching on February 2, and continue to carry on my life’s calling.

I was able to travel to a church planting conference in Florida and to the North American Christian Convention where I reconnected personally with friends I had not seen since Christine’s death. I also had occasion to speak at two retreats for church leaders about my journey on the theme, “Leading When Your Heart is Breaking.” Much more has happened that I do not have space to write about.

In early November, our daughter, Nancy, and son-in-law, Dave made their third mission trip to Nairobi, Kenya with a group from their church in Cincinnati. They are both engaged in ongoing work with the mission in Kenya and Dave is extending that work into other parts of Africa through his new mission, Africa Fire Mission. I am looking forward to when I will have an opportunity to go to Kenya with them.

On December 6 and 7, one year after Christine’s accident and death, Nancy, Dave, and I hosted an open house for family, friends and church members, and we held a special worship service on Sunday. Several of our family traveled to Madison for the weekend, including my sisters Karen and Connie, Connie’s husband, Doug, my brother, Tom, and his wife and their two sons, Christine’s sister, Susan, and her husband, and one niece. Christine’s and my longtime friend, Bud Clapp, came to preach for us that Sunday.

Among the things that Christine had on our refrigerator when she died was a scripture quotation from Psalm 73:23-26 that reaffirms everything she lived for: “Nevertheless I am continually with you; you hold my right hand. You guide me with your counsel, and afterward you will receive me to glory. Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you. My heart and my flesh may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.”

I trust you and your family will have a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, and trust you will have a wonderful year in 2015.

Ken

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Are You Ready For an Awesome Christmas

In the November issue of Christianity Today, Megan Hill asks “If Everything Is Awesome, Where Does That Leave God?” In her first three paragraphs, she writes the following:

I have never eaten an awesome meal. I’ve never driven an awesome car or taken an awesome vacation. I haven’t danced to an awesome song or streamed an awesome video. I do, however, know an awesome God.

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My history with the word awesome goes back to my childhood, when my father—an amateur linguist and professional theologian—gently corrected my early attempts to apply that word indiscriminately. In our family, we reserved the adjective for the One whose name is great and awesome (Ps. 99:3).

My dad’s point was not that awesome itself was some sacred incantation only for the divine . He simply wanted me to acknowledge with my words that, in both character and magnitude, God is different from deep-dish pizza.

Hill goes on to describe that “we live in a culture of inflated language,” as illustrated by The Lego Movie in which they sing “Everything is awesome.” Then she says, “But if everything is awesome, then nothing is.”

After reading her column, I began thinking about Christmas, and it occurred to me that we can ready for Christmas — or we can be ready for an awesome Christmas.

So what is the difference. Well, I am glad you asked.

I began getting ready for Christmas early this year because Nancy, Dave, and I are holding a Christmas Open House on Saturday. I knew I would not have time to put the Christmas tree up and do some other decorating after Thanksgiving, so I decorated the tree and did some other Christmas decorating earlier than I ever have — before Thanksgiving. You can’t have a Christmas Open House, after all, without Christmas decorations. Now if I get a few more presents that I still need to buy, I will be ready for Christmas. It will be good to have all of that done for Christmas, but that will not make it an awesome Christmas.

You see, an awesome Christmas requires understanding and celebrating how Christmas began, and worshiping the one Christmas is all about.

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So you will have an awesome Christmas when you reflect again on how the God who alone is awesome came into the world by being born of a virgin in the person of Jesus. Everything about the birth had been prophesied for centuries and occurred just as it had been prophesied. Nothing like that had happened before and has not happened since. God became a man. Angels announced the birth to shepherds who went to worship him. The world has not been the same since. Reflect on that and you will have an awesome Christmas

Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Reflections on “One Another”

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The phrase “one another” is used at least six dozen times in the New Testament, both negatively and positively, to refer on the one hand to how Christians are not to treat one another and on the other hand to how Christians are to treat one another. I will only be able to deal with less than a dozen positive uses of the phrase in my current sermon series, so let me give you a glimpse at some of the other positive things Christians are to do for one another.

Greet one another — In Romans 16, Paul gives a long list of greetings to people in the church at Rome and instructions for them to greet specific people. Then, in Romans 16:16, he says, “Greet one another with a holy kiss.” One of the joys of watching people at Westwood on Sunday morning is how everyone greets one another. I have also experienced this kind of greeting in many church settings and Christian gatherings over the years. It is not only important in greeting one another that we say hello, but that we also keep our spiritual antenna up in listening to people and learning whether there are special joys or hurts that they are experiencing.

Serve one another — This phrase appears in Galatians 5:13 when Paul says “serve one another in love.” Leo Tolstoy studied a young artist’s painting of the Lord’s Supper and, referring to the image of Jesus said, “If you loved him more, you would paint him better.” The same can be said of our service for Christ — ”If you loved him more, you would serve him better” — and of our service for one another — “If we loved one another more, we would serve one another better.”

Bear one another’s burdens — Galatians 6:2 says, “Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.” This verse comes immediately after Paul has told the Galatian church to restore those who have sinned with a spirit of gentleness. In the context in which Paul places this phrase — bear one other’s burdens — it is clear that we are to help fellow believers along the way who have fallen in some manner instead of condemning them. This often takes great effort, but has great rewards when a person is restored to his or her faith.

Bear with one another — Ephesians 4:2 says we are to “bear with one another in love.” It is important to recognize here how important love is in living out all of these one another instructions. Everyone of us will have relationships with other Christians who are hard to accept and love. Even as I write this, there are names and faces that come to my mind. However, we need to bear with these people and recognize the value they bring to the Kingdom of God and to the lives of others, recognizing that we too have our shortcomings and our own detractors.

Encourage one another — This phrase appears in 1 Thessalonians 5:11 alongside the phrase “build one another up.” Paul even says that his readers were already doing this. Everybody has a hard struggle of one kind or other and needs encouragement to keep on trusting and serving the Lord. There is no greater gift that you can give to others than encouragement.

Here’s an idea: search out the one another passages, make a list, and rate from 1 to 10 how you are doing with each one.

Friday, October 17, 2014

When We Are One With God and One Another...

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Several years ago, I read a true missionary account of some unusual bickering that took place in a church in an isolated village in Thailand. There were sixteen Christian families in the village who became seriously divided over the use of their church property.

One of the younger Christian men, those father had owned the land on which the church building was built, decided to make the use of the land more productive. He fenced in the church property, dug up the ground, and planted corn. As the corn began to sprout, he began to dig the ground beneath the church building, which was constructed on stilts, and planted beans under the church building.

These actions caused the other Christians to suspend worship services. They were convinced the young man was laying a trap for them— that he would blame them if the bean crop failed. For many months the church did not meet, except for occasional meetings in individual’s homes. The church had lost its unity and purpose.

About a year later, a visit by two of the missionaries prompted a meeting of the church in the church building. The building was packed, and, then, as one of the missionaries preached, the entire length of floor on one side of the building collapsed and all the people on that side of the building tumbled to the ground. This shared experience helped reunite the Christians and inspired them to build a new building. This time the building was built on the ground with a dirt floor.

When the building was completed, the missionaries returned to the village for a building dedication. But two days before they left for the village, another young Christian man erected a small bamboo and grass house within fifteen feet of the new church, and by the time they arrived, the Christians were split again. Some accused the young man of deliberate disrespect for God and his fellow-Christians. Others were wisely urging patience and understanding. The young man himself pleaded ignorance of the fact that the church grounds were for church use only. In spite of the missionaries’ efforts to exhort both factions, they remained divided and unforgiving of one another. Of course, there was no dedication service.

On the one hand, we may find such division foolish or even laughable, but congregations in America have split over such small issues and Christians are often divided over issues of small consequence. So how do we maintain unity among Christians? Let me mention two things, one that we emphasized at this year’s Great Communion service and one that is the subject matter of my sermon series that starts this coming Sunday.

  1. Become one with the Father and with his Son. Jesus prayed in John 17:20-23 for unity among believers: “...that they may all be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us.” We gain unity with the Father and the Son by experiencing the glory of Christ. Christ experienced his glory in his death, and we experience that glory when we die to self.
  2. Become one with “one another.” When we learn how to treat one another, how to build up one another, how to be members of one another, how to honor one another, how to love another, then we develop a unity that keeps us from dividing. We will examine this theme through the “one another” passages in the New Testament in a sermon series that begins this coming Sunday and extends through November.

There will no doubt always be division between Christians, much of it over silly things, but we can and should work for the kind of unity between one another that the Father and the Son demonstrate.

God bless,

Ken

Friday, August 29, 2014

Building a Life of Faithfulness

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The first home that Christine and I owned we had built. We bought a lot from a couple who became our neighbors and friends, hired a contractor who was recommended to us, chose a floor plan and then floor coverings and fixtures. Then we watched as the house was built.

The second home that we owned was also new when we moved in. We signed a contract to purchase it from the builder, a member of the congregation we had gone to Oklahoma to minister with, while the house was under construction. We made some alterations in the floor plan and again chose floor coverings and fixtures. The next time we saw the house, construction was complete and we moved in.

In both cases, we made decisions about the construction of the house and then it was built, or in the case of the second house, the building was completed. However, after moving in we still had to make each house a home by personalizing it with our own decorating and living in it everyday.

As we come to the second half of Nehemiah, he has completed the rebuilding of the walls. Now he and the people of Jerusalem have to turn the city into a place where they can live.

When Nehemiah 6 begins, the walls Nehemiah set out to rebuild have been completed, but the gates have not been set in place. When Nehemiah 7 begins, the gates have been set in place; the building project is complete. The chapter goes on to describe the heritage of the people who have returned to rebuild Jerusalem. It then sets the stage for the remaining chapters of the book which describe the spiritual development of the city. The pieces of that development include:

  • A commitment to the Word of God—chapter 8. Ezra, the priest who had led a group of exiles back to Jerusalem fourteen years earlier, leads a public meeting at which he reads the law of Moses to the gathering, and the people commit to living by the law.
  • A commitment to the greatness, goodness, and grace of God—chapter 9. After committing themselves to the law, the people of Jerusalem confess their sins for not having obeyed the law and recognize the God who has delivered their nation from trouble again and again.
  • A commitment to obedience—chapter 10. The people then promise to obey even the hard parts of the law.

Just as Nehemiah had to build a nation that committed themselves to our great God and his Word and to obeying him, we need to do the same. When we have rebuilt our lives after being broken, we then need to build a life of faithfulness.

While the rebuilding is hard—as we have seen with Nehemiah and the opposition and problems he faced–so is building a life of faithfulness. There will always be constant temptation trying to pull us away from God, but we have resources available to us to help us maintain our commitment to him. The final chapters of Nehemiah will help us understand these resources.

Monday, August 4, 2014

If A Person Dies, Will He or She Live Again?

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On Friday, August 1, I held Bev Kenworthy’s funeral at Westwood. Many of you who are reading this know Bev as well or better and longer than I do. Bev is an extraordinary woman. She is one of those rare saints that if you are privileged to get to know will bless your life in the most amazing ways. Let me share with you in printed form some of the thoughts that I will share at her funeral.

She was already on the top side of 70 when I first met her in 1996. During all the time that I have known her and much if not all of the time that some of you have known her, her eyesight was failing. During those first years that I knew her, someone would print word sheets in large letters every week for her of the songs we sang in church that Sunday because whether we were using hymnbooks or projecting the words she could not read them. Yet she wanted to participate in the worship service.

Bev very seldom missed church, and she read her Bible and devotional books and prayed with diligence. When she could no longer read, she had the Bible and her devotions read to her. As her health began to fail, she could not get to church any longer, but as long as she was at home and able to do so, she would still get dressed for church and watch church on TV. She told me the last time I took communion to her that on those Sundays she would squeeze the juice out of grapes and use crackers to prepare communion for herself. She asked that day if that was okay.

When you live like that, you can face up to the question that Job asked: If a person dies, will he or she live again? That may be the oldest recorded question. If you fail to ask Job’s question, you miss one of the greatest blessings of life. Understanding the answer to that question will enable you to understand three great things that God wants us to understand.

Understand the Gospel. The Apostle Paul summarizes the Gospel as the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. The Gospel is the action God took through Jesus to restore us to the life he created us for that we lost when Adam and Eve sinned in the Garden of Eden. Through Jesus’ death, the penalty for our sins has been paid. Through Jesus’ resurrection, death has been defeated, and we receive the gift of eternal life. So even, Job could say, “I know that my Redeemer lives…”

Understand Your Reward. After suffering a life of persecution for Christ, Paul was at the end of his life when he wrote 2 Timothy, and said, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.” Therefore the Lord will give me the crown of righteousness. Bev had marked in one of her devotional books this statement: “Because Christ lives, death is not a tragedy but triumph.”

Understand Grief. We will still grieve Bev’s death; her family will grieve her death. We, however, do not grieve as the rest of the world does who have no hope (1 Thessalonians 4:13). We will experience, grief, pain, loss when a loved one dies, when a special person dies. But we grieve in hope and look forward to eternal life.

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Helping Others Rebuild Their Brokenness

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The premise for my current sermon series through Nehemiah is that we can rebuild our broken world if we walk with God as Nehemiah did. However, we can go even further in rebuilding our broken worlds by helping others rebuilt theirs. While we will deal with that in the sermon series, I want to emphasis that even further in this space. Helping people rebuild their broken worlds is after all a part of the church’s mission.

Al Sherrill, pastor of a church in Manhattan, New York, gives an example, in the current issue of Leadership of a lady in his church who did just that. Her name is Ellen. She works in the fashion industry and was placed on a team in her company with a woman whose presence she had begun to dread. Then her coworker was handed a two week notice of termination. She was a single mother of a teenage girl and was already $5,000 behind on rent and was receiving repeated eviction threats posted on her door.

The woman had long since given up any faith that she had. So Ellen sent an email with the subject “Urgent” to fellow believers. She concluded the email by writing, "Would you prayerfully consider joining me in raising $5,000 for this woman over the next 48 hours? I think that showing radical generosity in the name of Jesus will be a powerful display of God's heart towards her in this time. May God's mercy be released over her life through this."

In response to Ellen's plea for a few people to join in resolving her coworker's plight, within two days she arrived to work carrying a sealed envelope. Laying it on her coworker's desk, Ellen informed the woman that there were a few folks at church who believed in her comeback. Later that day Ellen sent an email to those who supported the cause. It read:

"So thankful to share the story of today with you. I wrote a letter to her this morning, and put the full amount in the envelope. I wrote of grace being a free gift, that she is indebted to no one, and that all who gave did so out of the belief that they've received that same but infinitely greater gift of grace from God. When she came in and read the letter, she called me to her office and embraced me weeping. She said she'd never received unconditional help before, and that it was the most profound thing she's experienced. 'Thank God, thank God,' she kept saying. She is now able to stay in her apartment. She has a promising job interview next week.

"Later in the day, another coworker came to me with tears in her eyes and hugged me. The woman had told her what transpired, and said, 'Not only have you changed her life, but you've revived my faith as well.' Just last night she had told her husband that she felt her faith in Jesus was dead. She said that in all her life she had never seen such a thing, and it reminded her of truth."

All stories may not be that dramatic, but, as Sherrill tells it, this was the first time Ellen had seen her job as a place to live out her faith. It was the first time she stepped to help someone else rebuild their brokenness.

The rebuilding of our own brokenness is a result of God pouring his grace into our lives through Jesus Christ. Our mission is to help others rebuild their lives by offering them God’s grace.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Everything Is Broken, But It Can Be Fixed

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All you have to do is read or listen to the news to know that our world is broken. From the flood of immigrants on our southern border to the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas to a NFL draftee receiving an award for courage because he announced publicly that he is gay — and those are just three things in the news on the day I write this — we live in a broken world.

All you have to do is listen to people’s personal stories, and you realize our lives are broken. From divorce to child and sexual abuse to alcohol and drug abuse to dealing with issues related to aging, either your own or your parents, to facing death — just to name a few — we live in our own broken worlds.

All of this brokenness is not new, though. The entire history of the world, ever since the sin of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, has been one of brokenness. When we enter the world of Nehemiah, as we will do this week in a new sermon series, we enter a world that had been broken for centuries:

  • First the nation of Israel was divided into two nations after the reign of Solomon.
  • Then the Assyrians invaded the Northern Kingdom, which thereafter ceased to exist.
  • Next, 130 years later, the Babylonians invaded the Southern Kingdom and took the people into captivity. The Babylonians destroyed the temple and broke down the protective walls of Jerusalem.
  • Fifty years later, the first wave of Israelites returned to their homeland to find it in ruins. After some delays, they rebuilt the temple, but much of the city was still left broken and in ruins.
  • After another fifty-seven years, another group of Jews returned home only to find that people had lost their spiritual edge and intermarried with pagan peoples.
  • Fourteen years later, 140 years following the exile of the southern kingdom, Nehemiah heard about the condition and Jerusalem and went there to rebuild its broken walls.

That is where we will pick up the story— with Nehemiah. He shows us that the brokenness can be fixed by rebuilding the broken walls of Jerusalem, the city of his heritage. In doing so, he brings protection from the brokenness that had controlled his people’s lives for so long.

Nehemiah’s story has often been preached and written as a story of leadership, giving us lessons in leadership that can still be relied on today. It is certainly that, but his story also shows us how God can fix the brokenness in our lives. That is the viewpoint from which we will examine Nehemiah. Our brokenness can be fixed, but only as we follow God’s prompting for our lives as Nehemiah did for his. Those are lessons we need, lessons I hope you will learn with me over the coming weeks.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Rebuilding Your Broken World

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Beginning on July 20, I will begin to introduce our congregation to a Biblical character who may not be as familiar to you as others. Yet he played a very significant role in one of the lesser known periods of Biblical history.

The character is Nehemiah. The period of history is that of the exile. This was the time when the nation of Israel, the nation of God’s people, had been taken captive. After Solomon’s reign as king of Israel, the nation was divided and began to decline as the kings of both kingdoms led the people away from God. We probably avoid this period of Israel’s history for two reasons:

· First, we do not have as much biblical information about this period. We only get some brief glimpses into this time through the prophets who wrote during the exile and through the three history books from the period: Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther.

· Second, the nation and the people of Israel are broken during this period. The messages of the prophets during the exile are filled with messages and images of judgment. We would rather read of the great exploits of those who trusted God, not depressing stories of people God is punishing.

So Nehemiah came onto the scene about 140 years after the southern kingdom of Judah had been taken captive by Babylon. In the intervening years, the Persians had defeated Babylon and were now the world’s leading power. Israel was a broken nation. Its capital, Jerusalem, was broken. The temple had been destroyed and efforts to rebuild it had gone nowhere. Nehemiah discovered that there was no security in the city for the few Israelites who lived there. The lives of the Israelites were broken. They must have asked, how can we ever rebuild this? How can God rebuild our nation, our city, our people?

Have you ever felt that way about your life? Have you ever felt like your life, your family, everything and everyone you care about is broken? Have you ever wondered how you, how God can rebuild your broken world?

If you haven’t asked those questions, you should because we are all broken, everyone of us. Some may be broken into more pieces than others — and perhaps you do not seek to have your life rebuilt because you see others who are more broken than you — but sin has its grip on all of us. We all have broken pieces, and none of us can be used by God the way he wants to use us until we let him fix us.

Nehemiah had probably never been to Jerusalem, the city of his people, but when he discovered how broken it was, he determined to go there and fix it. His story is one of seeking the Lord’s guidance and then going about the business of repairing a broken city. While he faced hardship, difficulty, and opposition along the way, he helped to repair a broken city and a broken people.

Our brokenness is different than what Nehemiah set out to repair. We do not have walls and buildings and physical infrastructure that needs repair. We have hearts that need repair and some of us have our whole world that needs repair. Yet we can learn from Nehemiah how to repair our brokenness. Read the book of Nehemiah. Take a look at this life. Let his story help you rebuild your brokenness.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Remembering

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Over this past weekend and the beginning of this week, I have been remembering. I have known these days were coming, but as I remembered, the days took on more significance than I had previously thought that they would. Let me explain.

Saturday, June 7, was six months from when I last saw my dear wife, Christine. That occurred when I said good by to her in our kitchen as she left for Marquette, MI, to represent WCMA, the church planting ministry that I lead, at Lake Superior Christian Church. The next day, Sunday, June 8, was six months from the day of the accident on her return trip from Marquette that would take her life on earth. I spent the day after her accident at the hospital in Green Bay where she had been taken and remained unconscious until her death early the next morning.

As I remembered these things, I realized that there is an interesting anomaly to these events. Each of those four days six months later were the same day of the week and the same date of the month as they were six months earlier. Her accident was on Sunday, December 8; six months later was Sunday, June 8. She died in the early morning on Tuesday, December 10; six months later was Tuesday, June 10.

Exactly six months prior to the time that I last saw Christine, she and I were with a group of seventy-six other people in the ancient city of Ephesus on June 7, 2013. It was Sunday as we walked through Ephesus. We left the ruins of the old city that day from the area in front of the theater of Ephesus where the apostle Paul narrowly averted being the object of a riot. We walked up a slight incline to the ruins of the second century Church of Mary where we held a communion service that I was privileged to lead.

This weekend I remembered the events of six months ago and my forty years with Christine, just as six months before her death she and I, along with our fellow travelers, remembered, in the city where Paul walked, the death of our Savior. On the Sunday six months after Christine’s accident and one year after our communion service in Ephesus, I preached on the Lord’s Supper from 1 Corinthians 11. That sermon and text had been planned, without any thought of the connection to the events I have described, as part of a series in 1 Corinthians.

Remembrance is a necessary and important part of our experiences in life – both the joyful and agonizing ones. In the past six months, I have rejoiced at the life Christine and I have had together and the eternal life that is now hers, while also agonizing over how much I miss her. I have agonized over the events that led to her death, while rejoicing over the things that God is doing in my life and the lives of so many others who have been touched by her life and death. It is an irony of the highest magnitude, but memory brings both joy and agony.

Yet, such memories of our lives with the ones we love should be superseded by remembering the death of our Lord. Those memories, too, bring both joy and agony to our hearts: joy because Jesus gave himself for us, and agony because of the terrible suffering he endured to bring us forgiveness. Every time, we come around the table of the Lord and eat the bread, the body of Christ given for us, and drink from the cup, the new covenant of Christ’s blood, our memories should draw us to our Savior.

Jerry Sittser in his book, A Grace Disguised, describes how he received communion after the tragedy in his life of losing his mother, wife, and one of four children in a tragic accident in 1991:

“For three years now I have cried at every communion service I have attended. I have not only brought my pain to God but also felt as never before the pain God suffered for me. I have mourned before God because I know that God has mourned, too. God understands suffering because God suffered.”

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Do You Have Unused or Unclaimed Gifts?

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Last year Harvard Business Review published a book titled Harvard Business Review, Stats & Curiosities. Among the statistics that it cites are these:

  • 39.2 percent of shoppers will purchase a department store gift card for friends and family.
  • 33.4 percent of shoppers will purchase a restaurant gift card for friends and family.
  • According to estimates reported in the Journal of State Taxation, the typical American home has an average of $300 in unused or "unredeemed" gift cards. These cards are often misplaced, accidentally thrown out, or only partially redeemed.
  • Between 2005 and 2011, $41 billion in gift cards went unused.

I have never had $300 in unused gift cards at home. There have been times, however, when I have forgotten I had a gift card and it took me a few months to use all of it. I do understand how people could forget to use a gift card.

Some people, however, refuse to use or even claim the gifts that God has given us. There are two primary references to those gifts in 1 Corinthians.

First, there is the gift of grace. In 1 Corinthians 1:4, Paul says, “I give thanks to my God always for you because of the grace of God that was given you in Christ Jesus.” The word grace itself refers to an “undeserved gift” or “undeserved merit” that God gives us. Receiving the gift of God’s grace results, of course, in our salvation. Yet many people decide not to receive God’s gift and thus never experience eternal life. Of all the gifts you can decide not to claim, this is one you do not want to miss out on.

Second, there are spiritual gifts that God gives to believers. These gifts are given to us as a part of God’s grace. It is important that we understand and use our gifts, because it is through our gifts that God ministers to the church and the world. Yet many Christians either do not use their gifts or seek to know what gifts God has given them.

It is important that every follower of Christ exercise their spiritual gifts, that you exercise your spiritual gifts. Paul said, “Now there are varieties of gifts, but the same Spirit; and there are varieties of service, but the same Lord; and there are varieties of activities, but it is the same God who empowers them all in everyone.” Our gifts come from God, and God does his work through us when we use our gifts.

Be sure you do not refuse the gift of grace or your spiritual gifts.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Temptation and Testing

 

One of the great promises of the Bible is one I have drawn on many times. Perhaps you have too. The passage, however, offers us even greater hope than many of us have drawn from it. Let me explain.

1 Corinthians 10:12-13 gives us this great promise: “Therefore let anyone who thinks that he stands take heed lest he fall. No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.” The promise is given after Paul references a series of failures by Israel to trust God during their wanderings in the wilderness. He says that their failures were meant as examples to us.

We need to take heed so that we do not fall as the Israelites did. We can do so because God will not let us be tempted beyond our ability, but will always provide a way of escape. We have taken Paul’s description of temptation as a temptation to sin. It is that, but what we have missed in the passage is that it is much more.

The word temptation that Paul uses, has no negative connotation. It simply means to test or prove. Whether it becomes a proof of righteousness, of trusting God, or an inducement to sin and evil depends on our response;.

Satan, you see, will use inducements to sin to draw us away from God, but he will also try to draw us away from God when we face the hard things in life. These things are also tests for us, tests of whether we will be faithful to God.

Now let me be clear. I am not talking about tests that God sends us. The hard things in life come from Satan and are the result of the presence of sin in the world. So hard things do come to us just as temptations to sin come to us, and Satan tries to use them all to draw us away from God.

The promise of God, however, is that God will provide us a way of escape no matter how difficult the test is, no matter how great the temptation. The question for us is always whether we will remain faithful to God when the test comes.

Since Christine’s accident on December 8 and death on December 10, I have been experiencing the kind of test that comes to us. As I told my daughter on the phone one night about two months after Christine’s death, Satan would like nothing better than to lure us away from faith in Christ as a result of what happened. He would like us to give up on the ministries God has called us to. We have determined that we will not let him do so, but that struggle is certainly hard. How, then, does God provide a way of escape?

Let me illustrate with the experience of a minister I met at at conference last month. As we talked, he told me that his wife had died five years earlier in the midst of what would become a thirty-seven year ministry. When I shared with him about Christine’s death, we discussed our two experiences and he prayed for me. In the midst of our discussion, he told me how God had opened up an entirely new ministry to him that led him to Florida.

God provides a path to a new adventure. I do not know what God will open up to you or me when we face temptation and trials, but he does promise he will provide us a way of escape. My “way of escape” may be different than my new friend’s and yours may be different than mine, but whether it is temptation or testing, God will show us the way out.

We are engaged in a great spiritual battle — we have been ever since the sin of Adam and Eve. Satan wants us to walk away from God. God will, however, always provide us a way out if we trust him. The way out may not be easy, but the promise is still true. Trust God when life becomes hard.

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Worshiping Idols and Practicing Paganism Today

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Worshiping Idols and Practicing Paganism Today

The worship of idols and pagan gods were clearly issues for the church at Corinth when Paul wrote 1 Corinthians. Most of the young believers in the Corinthian church had participated in idol worship. These practices were entrenched in that entire region of the world. Friendships were built in the pagan temples and business was conducted around their religious practices.

We do not have the same kind of idols and pagan worship that they did, but we do have practices in our own culture that lead many people away from God, and our practices are just as pagan.

Consider the TV show Hoarders which aired on the A&E network from 2009 through 2013. The show depicted the real-life struggles and treatment of people who suffer from compulsive hoarding. They people’s compulsions are so strong that they cannot let go of their “stuff.” On the show, loved ones, psychologists, and organizational experts were brought in to try to help the hoarders stop hoarding.

One episode focused on a middle aged hoarder named Phyllis. Her house was so cluttered with dolls and other belongings that she had to crawl over mounds of garbage in order to reach the recliner where she ate and slept. Her compulsions were so strong that she chose to live without running water and heat and to huddle under blankets to stay warm. Another episode told the story about a man who had collected such a large stash of games, action figures, books, and novelties that it was nearly impossible to move through his home.

Most people who watched the show had the same reaction: they could not believe that people just would not let go of all the stuff that was slowly sabotaging important relationships and harming themselves. They treated these things as gods. While many people do not hoard as those on the TV show, we can treat possessions as if they are our “gods.”

In 1 Corinthians 10, Paul warns against not trusting God. He discusses how the Israelites in the wilderness received “spiritual food” and “spiritual drink” and that they drank from the “spiritual Rock,” who was Christ. Yet they put Christ to the test by not trusting him and by grumbling about God’s provision for them, so Paul tells us to learn from them. If you think you can continue in the ways of the world and not fall from Christ, you should “take heed lest you fall.” No temptation is too great, no idol or pagan practice or possession is so great but that God can provide a way of escape for us. God is faithful, so always put your faith in him.

Saturday, May 3, 2014

Come and See

The theme for the Exponential Conference — a conference on church planting — that I attended this week was “Seek and Save—Rethinking Evangelism.” One of the speakers, Larry Osborne, pastor of North Coast Church in Oceanside, California, spoke about how their congregation has reached people for Christ by implementing a “Come and See” approach to evangelism. In short, their philosophy is to encourage their people to invite friends and family to come to church with them to see who Jesus is. They make every effort as a congregation, then, to make sure people see Jesus when they visit the church.

Some Christians, of course, go to much greater lengths to take the Gospel to people. Beginning in 1992, Dr. Bill Becknell of Manchester, Kentucky, for instance, has been recruiting other doctors to go with him to Russia’s far north country. In those isolated villages near the North Pole, where the nearest medical clinic is a three-day trip over rut-filled roads, they treat Nenet Eskimo children who have never seen a doctor or heard about Jesus.

Every trip is a story. On one expedition, Becknell flew from Moscow to Siberia and traveled 10 hours on a rickety bus to a Siberian outpost of about 3,000 people. Leaders asked if he would travel to another village about eight hours away to see people who had never seen a doctor.

In the six to seven hours in a jeep loaded with medicine, Becknell never saw a human being, car or house. At a tent in the middle of nowhere, he met a young shepherd about 25 to 30 years old. “All my life, I have sat on these mountains and looked at the stars at night and wondered if there was a God and if He knew me. I can’t believe He sent you here to tell me about Him,” the young shepherd said as he committed his life to Jesus.

In 2012, 13 expeditions cared for 2,610 people. Currently, there are more than 400 written invitations to come and serve in different parts of Russia.

God doesn’t ask all of us to go to such lengths to witness for Christ. A friend from New Mexico whose wife died in her 70’s in February from cancer told me over lunch this week of all the women his wife had influenced for Christ. Four of them spoke at the celebration service for her life.

For most of us, sharing Christ can be as simple as saying to friends and family, “Come and see.” All of us know people who do not believe and people who do not attend church. We just need to look around us, and we will notice them. Some of them may not respond at first, but as we demonstrate a life that has different values than most people and they begin to see Christ in us, some will come and see. Who do you know to whom you can say, “Come and see”?

Friday, April 18, 2014

Reflections on Good Friday – The Truth About Everything

Tonight many from our church, along with guests, will gather for our annual Good Friday service at 6:00 PM. If you had not planned to come or have forgotten about it, I encourage to join us for this service that reflects on the death of our Savior.

For the last few years, Christine has planned our Good Friday service. In preparing this year’s service, I have been reminded that this year she is no longer here to do so. However the plan that we will use for this year's service is one she found a few years ago and implemented. It takes us through the stations of the cross — those events Jesus endured on his way to the cross and on the cross itself.

My worship on this Good Friday will be richer this year as I reflect on the eternal reward that Christine has now received as a result of Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross. We only have hope for eternal life because Jesus did endure the cruelty and suffering of the cross, and because of Christ’s resurrection, which we will celebrate on Sunday. However, as Charles Colson wrote a few years ago, we must not “rush the celebration before coming face-to-face with the paradoxes that are at the heart of the Christian faith” — paradoxes which are seen most clearly in the c ross.

Richard John Neuhaus wrote about this a few years ago in his book, Death on a Friday Afternoon: Meditations on the Last Words of Jesus. Neuhaus writes, “If what Christians say about Good Friday is true, then it is, quite simply, the truth about everything.” What is that truth? It begins with the truth about the human condition, namely that we are sinners and our sins keep us from God. So what does God do? He paradoxically punishes the offended party — his Son — instead of the guilty party — us.

Colson reflected on the cross, in his meditation on Good Friday, this way: “Our unwillingness to see our sins as they really are—that is, as God sees them—leads us to embrace another falsehood: that is, that we can make things right. Even though our culture is, in many respects, post-Christian, it still clings to the idea of redemption. However, just as with our ideas about sin and guilt, our ideas about redemption are pitiful and impoverished.

“On Good Friday, God made it clear ‘that we are incapable of setting things right.’ He made it clear by taking our place. On the Cross, ‘the Judge of the guilty is Himself judged guilty.’ This is, of course, the great scandal, one that paradoxically points to the great truth at the heart of Good Friday. We are powerless to set things right, and only God, the offended party, could undo the mess we created.

“The Cross—God’s way of bearing witness to the truth about our condition—is as offensive today as it was 2,000 years ago. Now, as then, we insist on misinterpreting the events of that Friday afternoon, but to no avail. Our sin has been judged, and God Himself bore the punishment. And that is the truth about everything.”

So reflect on the cross today. It is the most important reflecting you will ever do.

Friday, April 11, 2014

April 4-6 – An Amazing Weekend

Jerry Kizzire, senior minister at Lake Superior Christian Church (LSCC) in Marquette, MI — who preached at Westwood on April 6 — called it a “God weekend.” He could not have been more right. Our two congregations have been inextricably intertwined since Christine represented WCMA at LSCC on December 8 and then died on December 10 after her accident, and God did some amazing things at both congregations through the events of last weekend.

The weekend events began on Thursday when Jerry and his wife, Natalie, left Marquette to begin their trip to Madison and I left Madison to travel to Marquette so that we could each preach for the other’s congregation. Ryan Gilroy, who has begun plans to plant a church in Manistique, MI, traveled with me so that we could meet with LSCC leadership about the church plant. We all traveled on Thursday because forecasts called for a winter snow storm in the U.P. on Friday, but even an all-day snow storm could not stop what God was about to do.

The actual events of the weekend began with the Madison Christian Women’s Retreat on Friday evening. Although the attendance was smaller than the planners would have preferred, all the ladies were blessed by the retreat events and by this year’s speaker, Shelly Larson. I spoke with Shelly on Monday, and she was thrilled with how well the retreat went.

On Saturday, Ryan and I attended LSCC’s monthly men’s breakfast and shared information about WCMA and the two current church plants in Menomonee Falls and Muskego and plans for the Manistique church plant. Then we met with some of the elders and missions team from LSCC for a broad ranging discussion about the church plant. There is growing momentum and enthusiasm for the church plant project in Manistique that will result in Ryan, WCMA, and LSCC all working together to see another church planted in the U.P.

On Sunday, I preached in both services at LSCC. I preached the sermon I preached at Westwood on February 2 when I returned to preaching after Christine’s death, “When Life Tumbles In, What Then?” Quite a few people at LSCC, shared with me conversations they had with Christine when she was at LSCC on December 8. Jerry preached at Westwood from the parable of the ten virgins in Matthew 25 and asked, “Are You Ready?” He told about his interaction with Christine on December 8 and then told the adult class about Christine’s presentation at LSCC on December 8 and how their congregation had learned about her accident and death and how they then prayed for me, my family, and Westwood in their worship service on December 15.

All through the weekend God was at work, healing our hearts, strengthening bonds of friendship and creating new ones, and prodding us for how God will work in the future through another church plant, the very thing for which Christine had gone to LSCC on December 8 with which to challenge them.

Videos of Christine’s presentation at LSCC on December 8 and of the prayer time there on December 15 are available on LSCC’s website at this link. If you just want to see the applicable parts of the videos, fast forward to 51:37 on the December 8 video and to 13:10 on the December 15 video. Also, the audio of Jerry’s sermon and his adult class presentation are available on Westwood’s web site: www.westwoodchristian.com. The audio of my message at LSCC is also available at this link and the video of the worship service from last Sunday at LSCC is available at this link or either may be accessed through the sermon page on our church website.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Doubting the Resurrection

A few weeks ago, I received a small book in the mail — it is just over 100 pages — that the publisher was marketing in preparation for Resurrection Sunday. The book, written by two pastors, has an intriguing title: Raised? Finding Jesus By Doubting the Resurrection. The title piques your interest — which I am sure is intentional — because it begs the question, how can you find Jesus by doubting the resurrection?

Chapter 1, “Doubting the Resurrection,” goes immediately to the heart of the matter. They say at the outset that “One out of every five Americans does not believe in a deity. The ‘none’ category in religious polls has doubled over the past ten years, and less than half of the population attends religious services on a regular basis.”

This is not new, however. Matthew 28:17 even says about the disciples of Jesus after the resurrection that “when they saw him they worshiped him, but some doubted.” Indeed why wouldn’t some people doubt him? After all, the Christian faith makes some audacious claims.

As Raised? unfolds, the authors answer the doubters questions as they discuss the evidence for the resurrection and why you should want the resurrection be true. They spend a chapter showing “How the Resurrection Reshapes History.”

In chapter 3, “Stepping into the Resurrection,” the authors of Raised? come to the heart of the matter when discussing the resurrection — as does the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 15. Paul maintains that the heart of the Gospel — what “I delivered to you as of first importance”— is “that Christ died for our sins…, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day….”

Raised? lifts one verse out of 1 Corinthians 15 to get us to the crux of the matter in regard to the resurrection. Verse 17 says, “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in sins.” The authors say,

“Here Paul puts it all on the line. If Christ hasn’t been raised, the Christian faith is fiction and we are stranded in the fall of humanity, trapped in our imperfections. In others words, there is no hope, no purpose, no plan for the future. This is all there is. But if the resurrection is true, it means there is hope; there is purpose and a plan for the future.”

Churches will return to the theme of the crucifixion and resurrection with services on Palm Sunday, Good Friday, Resurrection Sunday, and at other times. No matters are more important to our faith, to resolving our doubts, to empowering our walk with Christ. The resurrection is indeed our greatest hope.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

WESTWOOD CHRISTIAN CHURCH DIGITAL PIANO DEDICATION IN MEMORY OF CHRISTINE HENES


Today in our worship service, we have the privilege of dedicating two items for Westwood in Christine’s memory.

Soon after Christine died, Ken and his daughter, Nancy, determined to request that memorial contributions be made to Westwood and WCMA, the church planting ministry that Ken leads. They were blessed to have $6,777.00 donated as of today, and have been notified of memorial gifts that were also made to other Christian organizations, churches, and music organizations with which she or Ken were involved.

Out of that total, just over $3,500 was given directly to Westwood or was from gifts given to Ken and Nancy that were split evenly between Westwood and WCMA. With the money given to Westwood, Ken and Nancy wanted that money to go toward something useful to Westwood’s ministry that would honor some aspect Christine’s life and her service at Westwood.

Since the church’s digital piano was purchased in 1988 and has needed repairs for some time, they determined to replace the instrument with a new digital piano. Eventually, the decision was made to purchase a Yamaha Clavinova, the instrument that we began using for our worship services last Sunday. Ken made a gift from insurance money he received from Christine’s accident to pay for the remaining cost of the digital piano. The instrument should give the church many years of useful service.

So today, we are dedicating the digital piano to the Lord for use in our worship services. In addition, we are dedicating a wall hanging in Christine’s memory. This wall hanging was designed and assembled by Kathi Seman. The wall hanging was designed to include words and phrases from many of you, in your own handwriting, that describe Christine. This art work has several elements that remind us of Christine’s skills and interest such as the music, gardening, jewelry making and quilting. But most of all we are reminded of her dedication to the Lord. The wall hanging will hang next to the front doors of our building.

As we dedicate these two items in Christine’s memory, it is the wish of the family and of the church leadership that when the digital piano is used in our worship services, it will enhance our worship of the Lord. Although Christine loved music in many forms and used it in her professional life as a therapy tool with clients, she mainly saw music as an expression of praise to God. She would above all want a musical instrument dedicated in her memory to be used as a means of praising God for our salvation through Christ. That should always be our goal in worship, and we trust that it will be as we worship with this new digital piano.

PRAYER OF DEDICATION

Heavenly Father, it is a great blessing to be able to dedicate these two items for Westwood in memory of Christine. We are reminded of her great love for you and her many years of dedicated and faithful service to you and your church. It has been a great blessing for all of us to have our lives enriched by Christine’s many talents. So Lord we thank you for the piano and the art work that we will enjoy and benefit from for many years to come. And so it is we dedicate these items to Westwood today. May you be with us now and each Lord’s Day as we honor you with our worship. In Jesus name, Amen.

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Practicing Unconditional Love

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On February 23, I attended the worship service at Orion Christian Church in Orion, IL. My first preaching ministry was at Orion, and when we decided to go there, it was the first ministry decision that Christine and I made together after we were married. Nancy was born while we ministered there. I knew after Christine died that I needed to see people at Orion who have been our friends for over 38 years, and I appreciate our elders giving me the opportunity to be away from Westwood to do so. That morning I experienced the kind of love that Christians are meant to both practice and experience from others.

When I arrived at the Orion church, I walked into their worship auditorium as their adult class was taking place. One of the ladies sensed me or saw me coming down the aisle behind her. She got out of her chair, turned to me, and we hugged and hugged and hugged, while both of us cried. Class over. Within moments, it was hugs and tears all around, and they continued through the morning.

As we have already seen in 1 Corinthians, the church at Corinth had not learned to love like that. In fact, they were divided and it had been reported to Paul that there was quarreling among them. They were choosing between personalities, always a danger in the church and life in general, so that some claimed to follow Apollos or Paul or Cephas (Peter) or Christ. They were not only listening to the teaching of their chosen leader, they were claiming to be disciples of that leader.

Paul wrote to them that their choosing sides in the church showed that they were spiritual infants. Thus, he could not address them as spiritual people because they were being merely human.

There are other behaviors besides quarreling and division that can cause us to be spiritual infants, mere humans. Any behavior or activity in the church that takes us away from making Christ central in our lives and in the church keeps us from being spiritual people.

What, then, was Paul’s solution to the problems faced by the church at Corinth? It was the same solution that works in the church today when we neglect to grow as spiritual people. It is the same thing that was poured out on me at Orion and that you have poured out on me in the last three months: We demonstrate an unconditional love to each other.

One of the high points of 1 Corinthians comes in chapter 13. Paul says that no matter how great our spiritual knowledge or faith, it means nothing unless we love each other. Why? Because “love never ends.” Because “faith, hope, and love abide, but the greatest of these is love.”

Saturday, February 8, 2014

God’s Power and Wisdom Sustains Us

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Last summer, Marion and Marilyn Greaser and Christine and I, along with a group of over 70 other people, visited Corinth as a part of our two-week cruise on the Mediterranean to visit the sites of the apostle Paul’s missionary journeys. We had a delightful day in Corinth and came away with a greater appreciation for Paul’s time there.

Paul’s time in Corinth is recorded in Act 18. He arrived there after his much more famous visit to Athens. On his arrival, he met Aquila and Priscilla and stayed with them. Like Paul, they were tentmakers by trade, so they worked together. When Paul left Corinth, Aquila and Priscilla traveled with him.

Paul established a significant church in Corinth. One of those who believed in the Lord and no doubt became a leader in the Corinthian church was Crispus, the ruler of the Jewish synagogue. Many others also believed and were baptized during Paul’s eighteen months of preaching in Corinth.

Paul would later write at least four letters to the Corinthian church, two of which are included in the New Testament. During the next several weeks, I will preach through 1 Corinthians using the theme “God’s Power and Wisdom Sustains Us.”

The church at Corinth had a number of serious problems which Paul addresses in 1 Corinthians. Paul applies the power and wisdom of God to each one of the problems he discusses. The problems discussed in the book are not unlike problems that Christians still face today. We can learn from this letter how to apply God’s power and wisdom to issues that come up in our lives and in the church.

The problems Paul addresses in 1 Corinthians may not be present in every church and in the life of every believer in Christ. They are, however, problems that we see all around us. We can learn how to apply God’s power and wisdom to whatever problems we face.

Paul’s solution for sustaining our faith in the midst of the issues that are all around us is contained in how he opens and closes the letter:

  • Paul begins by pointing us to the cross which looks to the world to be foolishness and weakness, but instead demonstrates God’s power and wisdom for living. This causes Paul to say, “I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified.”
  • Paul closes by pointing us to the resurrection of Christ. If Christ has been raised from the dead, we too shall experience a resurrection. That is our great hope for everything that we face.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

BUT WHEN LIFE TUMBLES IN, WHAT THEN?

My sermon when I returned to preach at Westwood Christian Church eight weeks after the death of my wife, Christine.

Let me begin today by thanking you for your graciousness and prayers since Christine died. There are not words to adequately express my thanks. From the time I met with the elders on Tuesday evening, December 10 after Christine died early that morning, they did not flinch from giving me time away from Westwood. Thank you. The elders and many of you have taken on additional responsibilities without thinking twice about it during these last weeks. Thank you.

This has been a difficult time for you as well as for my family and I. I will not try to hide my grief from you. It is deep, as it should be. As I deal with my grief, though, I will be a better pastor to all of you and perhaps to many others. That said, however, I cannot let this moment pass without laying before you what all this means for my faith and for yours. I have not bypassed difficult issues in my ministry before and I cannot do so now – even though this one is personal. My faith will only be deepened by this experience, and I hope yours will be too.

When I was in seminary, I came across the preaching of Arthur John Gossip, a Scottish preacher from the early years of the 1900’s. I read some of his sermons and some of his lectures on preaching. One of his sermons had by that time become a classic. I first read that sermon back in seminary, and returned to reread it a few weeks ago.

That sermon was a classic, not because of its content, although its content is very good and very powerful. It is a classic primarily because of the events that caused A.J. Gossip to write it. It was 1927 and Gossip was 54 years old when he wrote and preached that sermon at Beechgrove Church in Aberdeen, Scotland. It was the first sermon that he preached when he returned to his pulpit after his wife’s dramatically sudden death. You understand why I reread his sermon multiple times over the last two months.

Gossip titled his sermon “But When Life Tumbles In, What Then”? Today I would like to ask you Gossip’s question: But when life tumbles in, what then?

Some of you will recall that on November 20, just under three weeks prior to Christine’s death, I preached the funeral of one of our neighbors who had died unexpectedly at age 49. The text I used for that funeral was from James 4 where James asks, “What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes.” I understand that verse far better today that when I had Paul’s funeral.

On the night that Christine died, we waited until the last family member who was coming had arrived. We visited for a while and then, as I had agreed to do earlier in the day, I asked the medical staff to remove her life support equipment. After they had done so and we returned to her room, I stood around her bed along with Nancy and Dave, Christine’s sister, Susan, Christine’s brother, Bud, and his wife, Lorilee, and our dear friends, Carl and Deb Ferguson. As Christine breathed on her own for a few minutes, we prayed and sang hymns together, including “It Is Well With My Soul,” the song she sang at so many funerals and other occasions. Then she took a couple of halting breaths, one more breath, and she was gone. What is your life? It is a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. So when life tumbles in, what then?

It does not have to be the death of a spouse. A week and a half before preaching this sermon, I had already written the first part of it. I was driving by myself and thinking through this part of the sermon when I began to listen to a discussion of the murder of a 21 year old student at Purdue University in January 2014. The student was from West Bend, WI and had attended the University of Marquette High School. His parents were well-liked in the community and he was well-like in high school. He was set to graduate from Purdue in the spring. Yet a man walked into the Engineering Building at Purdue and shot and stabbed him. What is your life? It is a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes? So when life tumbles in, what then?

Buried deep in the Old Testament is a passage where the prophet Jeremiah complains to God. There is no one in all of scripture who places more complaints before God and that is not surprising because he experienced a great deal of suffering. So in Jeremiah 12, the prophet muses about the bewildering matters of life that come before us when he bursts into the presence of God. He is hot and angry and stunned by how God seems to bless the wicked and bring hard times on the righteous. He cries out to God that it is all so unfair.

Then God speaks to Jeremiah and asks him, what is it that you have to complain about? Nothing that everybody does not share. Only the usual issues of life that come to everyone, no more. God says to him, if you have raced with men on foot, and they have wearied you, how will you compete with horses? And if you have a hard time splashing through the shallow waters of a summer brook, what will you do when the Jordan bursts its banks, and rushes, far as the eye can see, one huge, wild swirl of angry waters, and, your feet are caught away, half choked, you are tossed nearer and nearer to the roaring of the falls, and over it? So when life tumbles in, what then?

If the normal affairs of life or what you read in the news or when you have perceived the world to be unfair to you or others, if these things weary you, what will you do when some great tragedy comes bursting into your life and leaves an emptiness where there had been a home, an emptiness you could not imagine even in your worst dreams, a tumbled ruin to a previously ordered way of life, a heart so sore you wonder how it holds together? When life tumbles in, what then?

On the morning of Christine’s accident, I had preached the second and last of what was to be a four sermon series leading up to Christmas that I called “Joy to the World.” The message that morning was about Zechariah’s song upon the birth of his son, John the Baptist. His song describes how God was going to visit the world with the birth of his own son. How would you feel if you had preached that sermon in the morning and in the evening your wife was in the hospital from an auto accident and the next day you discovered she had no possibility of surviving?

This was not only my experience, it was Ezekiel’s experience. In Ezekiel 24:15-18, the word of the Lord came to him and told him God was going to take away the delight of Ezekiel’s eyes at a single stroke. Then Ezekiel said, “So I spoke to the people in the morning, and at evening my wife died.” When life tumbles in what then?

And what about Jesus Christ himself? It became clear that his life on earth would be that of any other man. A tremendous sacrifice was to be asked of him. If it were you, could you face it with even a tiny bit of the courage with which Jesus faced it? There is no question about these things, though. It is a certainty that to you too, in your turn, some day, these things will come.

Yes, unbelievably life’s waves wash across us too. We live our happy lives for years and years and listen to the news of terrors from across the world: a hurricane in Louisiana, a typhoon halfway around the world, a tornado in Oklahoma, a shooting at a university. They all seem so far away that it seems they have nothing to do with us, but then it happens to us too. And when it does, we have no right to complain that we are the only ones ever to have faced this.

So when your heart breaks, what then? When life tumbles in, what then? It is a bit late in the day to be talking about insurance when your house is burning down and somewhat tardy to be searching for something to bring you through when the test is upon you. How are you and I, who get so caught up in the minor worries of life, to handle waters when they flood into our lives and your breath is taken away and you lose your footing? When life tumbles in, what then?

Many people’s faith is a fair weather affair. A little rain, and it washes away. A touch of difficulty, and it snaps like a broken twig. Gossip was a chaplain in World War I. He tells how they would often lay out at the front and watch an airplane high up in the sky on a blue, sunlit day when a shot came out of a cloud and the plane crashed to the earth, a twisted, broken mass of metal. Many people’s faith is like that. So long as everything is fine and we seem to be in the center of God’s will, we follow him without question. But at the moment things become difficult, at the moment we do not understand something, we let go of our faith right when we need it the most.

Do you remember the story Jesus told of the two men who built houses very similar to each other? Perhaps they lived in the same village, went to the same synagogue, sat in the same pew, listened to the same sermons. Perhaps they lived next door to each other. Then one day, a gale blew into their lives, a terrible storm. One man’s house collapsed, totally destroyed. He had built on a foundation of sand. The other man’s house stood firm, but he emerged from the storm stronger and closer to God because he had built his house on a rock; he had put a foundation under his home. So what of us? We have marched with the infantry, but how will we keep up with the horseman? We have walked through the shallow waters, but what will we do when the water rushes over us? When life tumbles in, what then?

This has often been the difficulty of preaching and of living the Christian life. My college basketball coach, one of my mentors at that stage of my life and a friend since, told me about an alumnus of my alma mater who graduated a year or two before I started college. He called Lynn after his wife died and lamented the fact that he had preached all those funerals over the years and had taken people’s grief lightly. He said the right words, but wondered why people did not just get over it. Losing his wife changed his perspective. I never took grief that lightly, but I too have had a happy life, a relatively easy life, a life filled with people of faith around me. Sometimes the Gospel seems like an easy way to respond to anybody who goes through the tragedies of life. They might well say, with irritation, if I stood in the sunshine where you are, no doubt I too could talk like that. But if the cold wind blows clear through you, are you absolutely sure about your faith? When life tumbles in, what then?

Let me tell you now. I have always thought much of the Christian faith. I was raised in the faith. The Christian faith now extends across at least five generations in my family. Today, though, I think far more of the Christian faith than I ever have. So what is it about our faith that can ring far more true when life tumbles in? It is this: the Christian faith has a certain loyalty about it that we can trust God without reservation even in the dark and that still trusts God even when the worst happens, even when things go terribly wrong.

Isn’t that exactly what Christ did? He faced the greatest terror of all – that of the only sinless person, who died without cause and then had God turn away from him. Why? He did so because, even knowing the terror that was before him, it was the only way for the people who God created and loves to be redeemed. So all through his ministry he set his course for that one awful day in Jerusalem where he died the most horrible death of all. And when Jesus died, God grieved. He grieved far more deeply than what I grieve today and far more deeply than any of us will ever have to grieve. More than that, he grieves with me today, and he will grieve with you no matter how great the tragedy when life tumbles in.

What I do not understand today is how people in trouble and loss and bereavement can so easily and lightly fling away the Christian faith. And, for what? Have we not lost enough without losing the faith as well? If Christ is right – if, as he says, there is something grand and glorious beyond this life with all of its darkness, then we can see our way through times of darkness when life tumbles in. But if Christ was wrong and our hope is in vain; if God brought this tragedy down on my life and family with no thought for the grief we would bear, then I have a right to be angry at him. If, however, Christ is right, if the promises to which we hold are true, if we are always only a breath away from eternity, we can manage to trust him even through the worst, even when life tumbles in. As Gossip said, “You people in the sunshine may believe the faith, but we in the shadow must believe it. We have nothing else.”

So what have I learned through all this? What does the Gospel teach us in the midst of this grief? It teaches us much, for we often learn more in the darkness than in the daylight. It is in the darkness, not the daylight, that you can see the immensity of the universe as you gaze out at star after star. In the darkness, faith often develops the most. So, in my own darkness, some things have already become very clear to me.

First the faith works, and its most audacious promises are absolutely true. The glorious assertions of the Scriptures are not mere suppositions and guesses. There is no perhaps or possibly or probably about them. You will recall how the three young men from Israel, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, were thrown by the Babylonian king into the fiery furnace that was heated seven times hotter than it had ever been. When the king peered into the furnace, he saw four men instead of three, and one looked to him like a son of God. I have felt during the last weeks at times as if I were cast into such a furnace, but have also had the sense that one who is the Son of God is standing alongside me. What a blessing that is. I have never been more certain of it. When our feet slip as the waters cascade over us, when the worse thing you could ever imagine happens, when our world tumbles in, a hand leaps out and catches us and steadies us. Jesus said, “I will not leave you comfortless.” It is true. There is a Presence with us, a Comforter, a Fortifier who strengthens us, holds us up, brings us through somehow from hour to hour and day to day. One sage once wrote, that when his wife died, he felt “as if the rushing waters were up to my chin; but underneath the chin there is a hand, supporting it.”

The apostle Paul put it this way about this faith of ours: What then shall we say to these things? If God is for us, who can be against us? He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things? Who shall bring any charge against God’s elect? It is God who justifies. Who is to condemn? Christ Jesus is the one who died—more than that, who was raised—who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? As it is written, “For your sake we are being killed all the day long; we are regarded as sheep to be slaughtered.” No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord (Romans 8:31-39).

Here is another thing that has become clear to me: the faith needs to be lived every day.

Christine lived out her faith for a long time before I even knew her. One of her bridesmaids at our wedding was here for her funeral. She said to me that she would not be a Christian today if it were not for Christine. I heard the story many times over the years of how Christine led her to Christ when they were in high school. Just before Christmas, Christine’s sister and I went to visit a family, one of whose sons was home from California for Christmas. Christine and he had played in numerous piano recitals and performances through high school. She got him attending church, and soon his entire family was in the church. Fred has gone on to be a successful university music professor, although he has left the faith. His father and two of his brothers, however, have served as elders in the church, and the rest of the immediate family faithfully serves Christ. I could tell you countless stories since of people she influenced for Christ, because she lived out her faith every day.

That is one part of living out your faith, but there is more. If you had asked me three months ago, how I would react if something like this would happen to me, I could not have told you. I may have made some response, but I would not have really known. Now I know, and I have some observations to make:

When my family and I stood around Christine’s hospital bed, when we visited with people during her visitation, when we gathered around her casket as it was closed, and when, nearly two weeks later, I lowered her remains into the earth, we were not putting on a show. We were simply responding out of lifetimes of faith, lifetimes of holding dear the truths of the Gospel and the promises of God I have referred to. Indeed for most of us we were responding out of multiple generations of faith within our extended family and families. We have watched our grandparents and parents respond to the issues that came into their lives, and we responded in the only way we knew – as followers of the One who died and rose again to give us eternal life.

One of the things I am still amazed at, but not really surprised at, is that during the tense days of mourning Christine’s death, coordinating travel arrangements for various family members, making funeral and burial arrangements in two different places, we did not have one family argument or disagreement that threatened to erupt and get out of hand. Why? Because we responded in the ways of Christ that we had been nurtured in and in which we had nurtured our children. While living lives of faith puts a certain amount of pressure on when everything tumbles in, we felt no pressure, because we responded out of who we are.

While I have received many compliments about how our family reacted during that time – from personnel at the hospital in Green Bay, from the funeral home staff, from some of you, and from others -- let me tell you that does not mean this has been easy. I know that people who work in critical care in the hospital or in servicing people’s needs at a funeral home or just being part of a family at a time of death, do not always see such grace acted out at a time of death. So all of this has been exceedingly difficult and continues to be, and, as a friend has faithfully reminded me all during this time, it needs to be so. I have felt the difficulty in my own heart, and I have heard it in the voices and seen it in the eyes of my daughter and her husband, of our family, and of friends.

But I also know this: If you will faithfully serve Christ and walk by faith all of your life, Christ will prepare you for when faith needs to take you through some difficulty as life tumbles in. You will feel his presence like you have never felt it, just as I felt it from the time I received the first phone call from the hospital about five hours after Christine’s accident and as my world tumbled in during the next 24 hours. I have also believed from my reading of Scripture that God reveals himself to us in unique and special ways at critical moments in our lives, and now I have experienced it firsthand, and you will too if you always walk with him.

This also has become clear to me: The church is important and those who walk with Christ can and will help sustain us when life tumbles in. I will talk more about this in our adult class later, but let me make some observations now.

Christine and I have been in the church all of our lives. Through our adult years and nearly forty years of marriage, we have seen more good in the church than most, but we have also seen more bad in the church than most. The first church split I witnessed was in my home church when I was middle school age. Yet we determined never to walk away because we have seen the church rise up over and over again when people’s worlds tumbled in.

When Nancy was almost four years old, we had a terrible problem erupt in the church we had gone to Oklahoma to serve. That was just the first really bad situation that she saw develop in the church. We never hid these things from her over the years; she did not know everything, but she always knew enough. Yet today, having watched that and things far worse, she has stayed in the church because we also helped her see the good in the church. About three years ago, Nancy was called by the leadership in their church to help them work their way through an issue in their church. It was the kind of thing you never even want to think might erupt in your church. But today she and Dave are still in the church, because like Christine and I and members of our family over the years, they too have seen the good that happens when the church rises up in times of difficulty.

During the course of forty years, Christine and I have developed friendships that literally extend across the county and in various places around the world. During the hours that Christine was in the hospital and in the hours after her death, word about her accident and death began to spread far and wide. People from church after church, some of them we knew and some we did not, began sending us messages that they were praying for us and asked people in their own network to pray for us. That alerted more churches and more believers, and we began to hear from them and it just kept cascading. I never even had time to begin counting how many churches we had heard from.

Now those people can do only so much in the days, weeks, and months ahead, but you can continue to stand beside me – and I want to ask you to do just that. Invite me to breakfast, lunch, or dinner. Ask me to spend an evening with your family. Call me; email me. If I call and need to get away from my home or office for a couple of hours spend some time with me.

Most of you know that my family and Christine’s are spread across the country. The closest family members that I have are a four hour drive from Madison. You are the family that I have here. I have had some wonderful time with family as I have traveled to see some of them in the past month, but I cannot get in the car and drive across town or an hour away and have a meal with family or spend an afternoon or evening or an overnight with them. You can help fill that gap.

One other matter has become clear to me: Belief in eternal life is no longer in doubt. You think that you believe in eternal life, but wait until you have lowered your dearest into an open grave, and you will know what believing it means. I have always been moved by Paul’s scornful, almost mocking ridicule of death. It is as if he stares down into an open grave and then bursts out with his challenge, “O death, where is your sting? O grave, where is your victory?” But now, I would offer the challenge with him. True, I can tell you today where death’s sting lies. It is the constant missing of a person who used to always be here. It is going through every day with no phone calls, no texts, no emails from the one you love. It is never again hearing the door to the house open as the one you have long been accustomed to returns home, and it is never again walking into the house to hear a word of greeting.

I have always believed the Bible’s promises about eternal life, but any doubts at all were set aside standing around a hospital bed at St. Vincent Hospital in Green Bay. I can say without equivocation more firmly than ever that “I believe in the communion of saints, the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting.”

It is all summed up in Paul’s great argument in 1 Corinthians 15 that the Gospel is summed up in the fact that Christ died for our sins, was buried, and was raised on the third day. Then he asks, “Now if Christ is proclaimed as raised from the dead, how can some of you say there is no resurrection of the dead? But if there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ as been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished.”

If Christ has been raised from the dead, there is no longer any question about eternal life, and death is only a passage from this life to a greater, grander life – eternal life – for those who believe in Christ. It is only when the trumpet sounds and Christ bursts through the clouds that the final victory over death will be accomplished: “O death, where is your sting? O grave, where is your victory?”

So, for me, even as I grieve Christine’s passing from this life, I choose to rejoice that in that moment when she took her last breath, she completed a very brief journey into the presence of the Lord. The days, weeks, months, years until I follow her on that journey may be long, but I would not deny her one moment of her time in the presence of the Lord. That is, after all, exactly what we live for, what she lived for. Why would I want to deny her the greatest longing of her heart?

You see the truth is, death is only a passage from this life to eternity. Donald Grey Barnhouse illustrated this to his children when his first wife passed away. Barnhouse was one of America’s great preachers. His first wife died from cancer when she was in her thirties, leaving three children under the age of twelve. On his way to the funeral service, he was driving with his little family when a large truck passed them in the highway, casting a shadow over their car. Barnhouse turned to his oldest daughter who was staring disconsolately out the window, and asked, "Tell me, sweetheart, would you rather be run over by that truck or its shadow?" The little girl looked curiously at her father and said, "By the shadow, I guess. It can't hurt you." Dr. Barnhouse said quietly to the three children, "Your mother has not been overrun by death, but by the shadow of death. That is nothing to fear." “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me.”

So this life is but a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes away. What do you do, then, when life tumbles in? The apostle Paul gives us the last word on that. He closes his defense of the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15 with this: “Therefore, my beloved brothers, be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.