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”?