Category: JOURNEY

“Run in such a way as to get the prize.

1 Corinthians 9:24Amplified Bible (AMP)

Do you not know that in a race all the runners run [their very best to win], but only one receives the prize? Run [your race] in such a way that you may seize the prize and make it yours!

Those who win in a race,

“Believe while others are doubting. Plan while others are playing. Decide while others are delaying. Prepare while others are daydreaming. Begin while others are procrastinating. Work while others are wishing. Save while others are wasting. Listen while others are talking. Smile while others are frowning. Persist while others are quitting.” (William)

The word of God says, “run in such a way to win.” But who is he that overcometh the world? – 1 John 5:5 – He who believes that Jesus is the Son of God.

The victory which overcomes the world is faith. For it is by believing: that we are made one with Jesus the Son of God, so that we partake of His victory over the world, and have dwelling in us One greater than he who is in the world (1Jo 4:4). “Survey the whole world, and show me even one of whom it can be affirmed with truth that he overcomes the world, who is not a Christian, and endowed with this faith” [Episcopius in Alford].

The Journey

Doctorate of Theology (Th.D.) Conferred on Friday, May 27, 2016.

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“In Sacred theology, all things are treated from the standpoint of God.”

– Thomas Aquinas –

familysupport

Thankful for the support of my precious family!

God never gives up on anyone and you can use that for encouragement

Hear the word….. again….

1. “… fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” ~ Almighty God; Isaiah 41:10

2. “Anxiety in a man’s heart weighs him down, but a good word makes him glad.” ~ Solomon, King of Israel; Proverbs 12:25

3. “The Spirit himself bears witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs— heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ, provided we suffer with him in order that we may also be glorified with him.” ~ Paul of Tarsus; Romans 8:16-17

4. “Blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial, for when he has stood the test he will receive the crown of life, which God has promised to those who love him.” ~James, the brother of Jesus Christ; James 1:12

5. “For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments. And his commandments are not burdensome. For everyone who has been born of God overcomes the world. And this is the victory that has overcome the world— our faith.” ~ John, son of Zebedee; 1 John 5:3-4

The Security of an Honest Life

About three years ago we transitioned from local church involvement to serve the wider Body of Christ. We have no church–based salary but enjoy the adventure of ministry partnership with faithful friends undergirding us in this new season of life. That is our current station in life.  In Christ, we secure and enjoying the abundant life Jesus promised.

In adulthood when stakes are high and issues of ethics and integrity impact other people’s lives, we must steer clear of all duplicity and deceitfulness. God takes this very seriously as documented by a medical doctor in the Book of Acts.

God wants to bless His children for honest work and generosity

The first mention of sin and the term “church” in Acts is in the fifth chapter. The latter is cited in verse 11, “Great fear seized the whole church and all who heard about these events.”

As Christianity was being launched, there was such a high level of purity and power on display that “many miraculous signs and wonders” (v.12) occurred; “no one else dared join them, even though they were highly regarded by the people” (v.13); “more and more men and women believed in the Lord…” (v.14); and, “Crowds gathered also from the towns around Jerusalem, bringing their sick and those tormented by evil spirits, and all of them were healed” (v.16).

This description of the early Christian church took place immediately after a couple by the name of Ananias and Sapphira experienced divine discipline. His name means “the Lord is gracious” and hers “beautiful”, but the narrative unfolds a chilling yet factual account of their judgment for trying to manufacture an image not rooted in truth.

As part of the covenant community that agreed to voluntarily share possessions in common and help the less fortunate in their midst (Acts 4:34-37), this power couple sold some real estate, projected an image of giving everything, yet cleverly concealed the truth as they held back some for themselves.

Ananias and Sapphira had every right to keep back whatever amount they chose, but to dishonestly give the inflated impression that they were giving all when they had not was the sin of deceit. They both paid dearly for their deliberate deception as the account reveals.

Here’s the deal: Because of a lack of a healthy fear of God in our society plus our casual approach to sin, the narrative seems severe. Yet the closer we get to the return of Jesus at the end of the age, shouldn’t we expect to see similar activity of a holy God simultaneous to an increase in signs, wonders and the miraculous?

We want the latter but are we ready to accept the former as God awakens and restores His true Church? Are we candidates for God’s pruning so we can drop the masks, stop man-pleasing, renounce the fear of man and simply rest in being who God uniquely designed us to be?

REFERENCE: Adapted from a Christian Post article by Larry Tomczak, a best-selling author and cultural commentator with over 40 years of trusted ministry experience.

God’s purpose will prevail regardless of our plans.

Proverbs 19:21 is clear that God’s purpose will prevail regardless of our plans. Proverbs 21:31 reminds us that, while it seems like we are the ones doing the planning, it is God who is working behind the scenes to grant us success. John 15:5 warns that without Christ we can accomplish absolutely nothing. In Zechariah 4;6 the prophet reminds us as well as Zerubbabel, “Not by might nor by power, but by my Spirit, says the Lord Almighty.”

LET’S REMAIN FAITHFUL

Comprehensive transformation takes a five to seven-year process, sometimes longer. Example of comprehensive transformations would be a shift to ministries that target un-churched persons, a major transitions in the racial or ethnic composition of the membership, movement to significantly different size, or the journey from a “chaplaincy” stance to a missional posture.

We must remain faithful at evangelizing the lost because we see the rest of churches avoiding them. We must address marriage and family issues in otherwise healthy adults because families are coming apart in our community. We must care for the addicted person because he is helpless without the power of the Holy Spirit. Above all, we must give ourselves to our own families because they are our first priority. The important thing to remain faithful to the end of our lives and that we accomplish all God hopes we will. What is not so important is not to build the biggest church possible or to achieve fame among our peers. We should simply want to hear those words, “Well done, my good and faithful servant” (Matt. 25:21).

THANK YOU

It is from a full, settled conviction, that we say thank you for your support and prayers. We owe this labor of continuing the legacy of spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ to all people, nations and kindred to you, and to our tender parent The General Conference by whom we have been nourished for now more than six years. We are humbled by your love, care, concern and support and we trust in God that we shall retain a grateful sense till that day our spirit returns to God who gave it.

Now to him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to his power that is at work within us, 21 to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, for ever and ever! Amen. (Ephessians 3:20-22).

Rooted in the Holiness Movement


Soon after the work in Dallas began, Rev. Philiph A. Bashaw came to lead to lead the church. He brought a distinctly evangelistic and missionary spirit embedded in a zeal for Church extension in the golden west. He stated on several occasion he protested apostasy and passionately desired to call the church to return;

  • To the Christ Centered and Bible Oriented Message of Holiness
  • To the Historic Doctrines of Christianity as they are expressed in the Apostle’s Creed.
  • To fellowship with other Christians who believe in Repentance, regeneration and a New Life in Christ Jesus
  • To membership in a church that believes that (a) the Bible is the Inspired Word of God, (b) that man is sinful and lost without Christ, (c) that Christ is the Son of God and man’s only Savior, and (d)  that Christians should be loyal to God, to home and to Country – and love one another.
  • To Original Methodism and Bible Oriented Message of Holiness shared by John Wesley.

John Wesley’s idea of entire sanctification and freedom in Christ was so strongly imbedded in his movement. He insisted that the Christian is a free man and more or less the master of his own destiny within the Bible’s ethical injunctions and the obligation he owes to his sovereign Lord.

Peitism even to the point of perfectionism set goals of human behavior for Methodists far in advance of those help by most Protestants. Through personal conversion and holiness Methodism made a tremendous impact upon the social order, reducing the incidence of such social ills of English society as crime, intemperance, slavery and child labor.

Freedom was originally the hallmark of American Methodism. Wesley, completely ignoring Anglican ecclesiastical procedure, ordained ministers for the colonies, appointed Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury as superitendents, prepared a liturgy and articles of faith and declared American Methodists free and independent of all Anglican hierarchical control. By means of the remarkably free ministry of the “circuit riders,” permitting traveling preachers to hold revivals and establish new societies wherever they were “led by the Spirit,” early Methodism spread more rapidly than any other movement in America.

When hierarchically-minded successors began to impose arbitrary ecclesiastical controls over ministers and congregations, there were various revolts on the part of Republican Methodists, the Methodist Protestants, the United Brethren, the Evangelical and the Negro Methodists. When the Civil War end, Southern Methodists withdrew and set up their own denomination.

The control by a central ecclesiastical establishment has been responsible for much of the unrest that characterizes American Methodist today. Such control prevents any possibility of biblical reform within the churches and forces dissidents to leave its ranks to rectify the wrongs they would protest.

The central eclesiastical establishment came under domination by liberals beginning with a meeting of a small group of “modernists.”  They agreed to work together for the liberalizing of the denomination. A four point program was accepted (1) place a rationalist in every chair of English Bible in various church colleges, (2) liberalize the Book concern; (3) liberalize the church rituals; (4) liberalize the approved course of study for the training of the ministry.

This strategy was overwhelmingly successful. In a generation the denomination was firmly in the control of liberals. Every Methodist college and university was in their hands. The Sunday school board had eliminated all its old evangelical leadership and was sending its emissaries to every conference in the land, spreading the new educational philosophy. Liberalism was able to reach and mis-teach the many millions of children and youth in Methodist Sunday Schools. Finally through political manipulation, the Bishopric came under liberal domination and the whole episcopal framework of the church began to operate to the embarrassment of every evangelical minister.

Today, there is a growing revolt among Methodist laymen. It is a common thing for disillusioned Methodist men to call meetings of their families in each others’ homes to discuss the situation. The Liberal Establishment have done everything imaginable to smear and discredit Circuit Riders Inc. but it still continues to carry on its work.

Ministers have less readily led in revolts against ecclesiastical tyranny and apostasy. When they have protested openly, adopted independent courses of action or failed to increase fiscal support of the unified budget, they have been demoted. Finally, finding themselves in small rural or village parishes, and without significant influence in the denomination, they have quietly acquiesced in the status quo and sorrowfully awaited retirement. But there have been exceptions. One was the late Bob Jones, Southern Methodist Evangelist, who concluded that the best antidote for liberal position in Methodism was to start a college Committed to old-time Wesleyan Principles.

Apart from the Nazarene, Free Methodist Church is another that sought to call the church to faithfulness. The Free Methodist Church originated in the General Conference in 1860 when a group of pastors protested apostasy from the Wesleyan doctrine of entire sanctification, membership in secret societies, approval of slavery and the rented-pew system of church support.

Spirit filled ministry


Spirit-filled ministry is where the word of God is proclaimed to all people and lived in all places of the church, family and society.

The greatest need of this time of all times, is a consecrated, Spirit-filled ministry in the pulpits of the land who, in holy love and fearless courage, will preach the WORD OF GOD to the people of God. God has said that HIS WORD shall prevail. It shall not return void. The WORD OF GOD is quick and powerful. The GOSPEL is the power of GOD unto salvation.

If we can have a faithful, unselfish, consecrated and holy ministry the WORD OF GOD will be preached, the church will be spiritual, righteousness will prevail, laws will be enforced, vice will be suppressed; the home and human life will be sacred; the nation will prosper, the missionaries will go to the ends of the earth and untold millions will be saved. By all means let us have a truly consecrated ministry.

{H.C. Morrison,  The Pentecostal Herald}

Enlivened by the Holy Spirit

Acts 13:1-3

 Now there were in the church at Antioch prophets and teachers, Barnabas, Simeon who was called Niger, Lucius of Cyrene, Manaen a lifelong friend of Herod the tetrarch, and Saul. 2 While they were worshiping the Lord and fasting, the Holy Spirit said, “Set apart for me Barnabas and Saul for the work to which I have called them.” 3 Then after fasting and praying they laid their hands on them and sent them off.

Praying for Most Central Relocation Site

COPPELL, TX

  • Coppell is located in northwest Dallas County, five miles from the Dallas-Ft. Worth International Airport and 15 miles from Dallas Love Field Airport.  Surrounded by major regional freeways such as I.H. 635, I.H. 35 E, Highway 161 and the S.H. 114/121, these assets make Coppell easily accessible to any place in the Metroplex and anywhere in the world.

Little by Little the Dream is becoming a reality

Sometimes a dream is only a picture, an image that we don’t fully understand and requires faith to believe in. God may give you a dream in pieces – asking you to believe. As you take small steps in faith, He’ll fill in the gaps along the way.

This is what happened in Joseph’s life in Genesis 37. God gave Joseph an unusual dream that he didn’t fully understand, but Joseph immediately believed. And because of it, Joseph’s brothers hated him and his father scolded him. No one believed Joseph, and for years and years his dream made his life really difficult. Betrayed and left for dead by his brothers, sold into slavery in a foreign land, alone and afraid, all Joseph had to hold on to was his dream and his faith in God. But Joseph would not let go of it, and little by little he began to see hints and clues that his dream was coming true.

Ministerial Duties

Acts 13:1-4.

“Now there were in the church that was at Antioch certain prophets and teachers; as Barnabas, and Simeon that was called Niger, and Lucius of Cyrene, and Manaen, which had been brought up with Herod the tetrarch, and Saul. 2 As they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Ghost said, Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them. 3 And when they had fasted and prayed, and laid [their] hands on them, they sent [them] away. 4 So they, being sent forth by the Holy Ghost, departed unto Seleucia; and from thence they sailed to Cyprus.”

The Christian ministry is both a great joy and a solemn responsibility. Jesus called the twelve to be with Him, first of all, even before sending them out to preach and to serve (Mark 3:14-15).  The intensity of this relationship will determine the spirit and motivation and performance of your entire ministry. This relationship is cultivated through secret devotion to God, constant prayer, and the careful study of God’s Word. God does not share His Lordship with another.

The calling of the Christian minister is primarily that of a servant. Each servant of God must guard against the multiplicity of ministerial duties which will tempt you to choose the non-essential functions. People are more important than things, institutions, rules or schedules. Paul wrote to Timothy in I Timothy 4:13 thus;

3 Until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of Scripture, to preaching and to teaching. 14Do not neglect your gift, which was given you through prophecy when the body of elders laid their hands on you.  15 Be diligent in these matters; give yourself wholly to them, so that everyone may see your progress.

WHAT IS AN ELDER?

The New Testament uses three words for elders. These words discribe elders and give a clue as to their work.

A. Presbuteros (from which we get the word Presbyterian) is the Greek word for Elder. The word can be interpreted to mean elderly.  The Hebrew elders were not only older men, they were men who had shown leadership capabilities. Not everyone who achieves a ripe old age is automatically qualified to be an elder. The person needs to be old enough to have experienced some of life, and mature enough to show that he has learned some lessons from it.

B. Episkopos (from which we get the word Episcopalian) is the Greek word for Bishop. The word means “overseer”. This describes an important aspect of the elder’s work. These men collectively are the spiritual overseers of the church. They should be the primary teachers, evangelists, visionaries, administrators, and examples for the rest of the congregation. These men are the ones to demonstrate what the Christian walk should be. In word and deed they are to show forth the mind of Christ.

C. Poimen is the Greek word for shepherd or pastor. Although there are many churches where the minister is called “Pastor”. The elders are actually the pastors of the church. The work of pastor or shepherd implies spiritual nurturing of the flock. This word reveals that, rather than just becoming chief administrators, the elders are to become the caretakers of the members of the congregation.

WHAT ARE ELDERS TO BE ?

The spiritual qualifications of Elders are found in the Pastoral epistles. We read in 1 Tim. 1:7(concerning elders)

“Here is a trustworthy saying; if anyone sets his heart on being an overseer, he desires a noble task. Now the overseer must be above reproach, the husband of but one wife, temperate, self-controlled, respectable, hospitable, able to teach, not given to drunkenness. not violent but gentle, not quarrelsome, not a lover of money. He must manage his own family well and see that his children obey him with proper respect. (If anyone does not know how to manage his own family, how can he take care of God’s church?) He must not be a recent convert, or he may become conceited and fall under the same judgment as the devil. He must also have a good reputation with outsiders, so that he will not fall into disgrace and into the devil’s trap.”

WHAT DOES AN ELDER DO?

Paul gave this admonition to elders for their work in the church. In I. Pet.51-4 he wrote,

To the elders among you, I appeal as a fellow elder, a witness of Christ’s sufferings and one who will also share in the glory to be revealed: Be shepherds of God’s flock that is under your care, serving as overseers- not because you must, but because you are willing, as God wants you to be; not greedy for money, but eager to serve; not lording it over those entrusted to you, but being examples to the flock, And when the chief shepherd appears, you will receive a crown of glory that will never fade away.”

These are the issues which are most crucial in the work of leadership in the church. The good elder will be a model, a good example, a concrete expression of the kind of life a believer is to lead. Paul gave Titus sound advise for leadership in the church he served. He wrote in Titus 2:7-8,

” Let your life stand as a pattern of good living. In all your teaching show the strictest regard for truth and show that you appreciate the seriousness of the matters you are dealing with.”

God will lead in all of these things if we seek His will and blessings

Rev. Phil Bashaw gave this report about the work in Dallas,

Now let me tell you that when we were in Dallas in June, there was a good turn-out at the meeting, and seemingly good interest. However, we do not have a minister anywhere near (the nearest is in Shreveport), and when no Minister there contacted us, and no layman offered to lead a “Committee for the formation of First Southern Methodist Church of Dallas,” we decided not to encourage the organization of a church at that time. We had groups organize without adequate leadership, or with political aims, or with Baptistic leadership, and they fell by the wayside. The latter formation of a Southern Methodist Church is a near impossibility. Therefore we felt that it would be better to wait until strong, Bible-Methodist leadership presented itself or until we could find a preacher who could give the leadership needed.

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Now when the committee is officially formed, old-time revival services might be planned for April, and the actual formation of the church can be consummated at that time if the Lord so directs. I would be pleased to lead the services at that time, or perhaps the group the group would like to ask one of the other men whom you will meet February 27. The next step will be to find a minister to fill the pulpit for the group, or even become a pastor. Again it is possible that I can move to Dallas in August (although I won’t know for sure until later in Spring). However, God will lead in all of these things if we seek His will and blessings. I am sure that, with divine leadership, a good strong testimony can be established in Dallas of old-time, fundamental Methodist position.

While we talk of these things, and work toward this, let us be sure to PRAY, PRAY and PRAY. We can form an organization without prayer, but if a church, worthy of the name is born, it will only be after MUCH prayer, seeking the will and blessing of God.

Signed Rev. Philiph A. Bashaw. Date: January 31, 1969

Rev. Philiph A. Bashaw, described The Southern Methodist Church as follows;

  • Is a “back-to-the-Bible” Methodist Movement, “Conservative in theology and evangelical in message.”
  • Not to be identified with the United Methodist Church, nor is it affiliated in any way with the National Council of Churches…….
  • There are no Bishops, and each local church owns and controls their own property and calls their own ministers.
  • It also takes a strong position for a conservative, evangelical interpretation of Scripture and historic Methodist doctrine.

Rev. Bachaw gave a little background concerning the Southern Methodist Church as follows;

When the merger of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South occured in 1939, the South Carolina Conference of the Old M.E. Church, South voted against entering that union. It felt that the so-called “modernist” unbelievers in control of both groups were simply consolidating their own strength and would crowd the fundamentalist out of the schools, etc., until they finally controlled completely……… The courts ruled that the property and the name, “Methodist Episcopal South” belonged to the United Church.

As a result of the court ruling, those who wished to preserve a Bible-believing, gospel-preaching church were forced to withdraw, leaving their property, etc. As a result, the newly-formed SOUTHERN METHODIST CHURCH was slow in its growth.

When congregations were formed in Nashville, Memphis, two in Florida and two churches attempted to form in Texas, the second annual conference was formed. When our church here in Baton Rouge was formed in 1960, it was the sixth to be admitted to the Mid-South Annual Conference of 1961. Today we still have only two annual conferences (S.C and Mid-South), but they are growing rapidly.

When the general conference meets again in 1970, I am sure that the Mid-South Annual Conference will be divided into at least two and probably three conferences giving a total of 3 or 4 conferences in the denomination.

Since 1961 the Mid-South Conference has grown from six to more than eighty member-congregations, and the S.C. conference has grown from about 40 to more than sixty. With the churches that have been formed since conference in August, we now have over 150 churches. These are ten states; Virginia, North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas.

We only have two congregations in Texas at this time, They are in Port Arthur and Shamrock. However, with a little work and with the Lord providing ministerial leadership, there can soon be many congregations in that state……

I, for one, am especially thankful for the hard, straight line drawn by the conference relations committee which examines all incoming ministers and churches. They must be ………….. EVANGELICAL, and there is no room in our church for those who do not agree with the historic METHODIST doctrinal position.

Running the Race





Hebrews 12

1 Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles. And let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us, 2 fixing our eyes on Jesus, the pioneer and perfecter of faith. For the joy set before him he endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.

Coach Nigel Hetherington, the Scottish National Sprints and Hurdles coach, shares ten principles of the baton relay as follows;

  • The race is about the baton, not the runners. The objective is to keep the baton moving at maximum speed at all times throughout the race. The baton must always remain the fastest member of the squad!
  • The relay brings out the best in everyone. The relay should increase, not decrease, the speed of the athletes. A properly-trained 400 meter relay team will post a time that is less than the four runners’ combined 100 meter times.
  • Every team member should be prepared to run in all positions. Every possible combination of positions and changeovers should be practiced to allow complete flexibility in covering every eventuality.
  • It is a good idea to practice the baton pass. Have all members of the squad stand one step apart in the same lane, facing the same direction. Give the baton to the athlete at the back and ask each to pass it until it arrives at the front.
  • Practice until the handover becomes instinctual. Athletes must learn to trust one another. Rather than looking back, the outgoing runner should be trained to respond to a ‘hand’ command.
  • Practice under pressure. Introduce the pressure of race day during practice. For example, run two or more closely matched teams together and practice exchanges with athletes on either side. Recreate spectator noise if possible.
  • The last runner must be chosen carefully. The last leg runner must maintain form while under pressure— there’s no one else to help them out. Choose an ‘adrenaline’ runner who can hit the finish line at full speed.
  • The baton exchange should occur at very close maximum speed. The incoming athlete should not be overstretched, or he will be off-balance when making the exchange. The outgoing runner must focus on reaching full speed and only put his hand back when he receives the ‘hand’ command.
  • A baton drop does not automatically disqualify a team. Whoever had the baton when it was dropped may retrieve it and continue the race. If the incoming runner drops it, he may pick it up and complete the pass.

God’s Grace

What do you do when you have danced in triumph on the banks of the Red Sea only to find yourself dying of thirst on the banks of the Marah three days later?  In the afterglow of the amazing miracle at the Red Sea, the Israelites are giddy with excitement.  But after the celebration, reality sets in.  Standing between them and their hope is the desert.  And you canít get to the Promised Land without going through the desert.

Exodus 16 reads;

1 And they journeyed from Elim, and all the congregation of the children of Israel came to the Wilderness of Sin, which is between Elim and Sinai, on the fifteenth day of the second month after they departed from the land of Egypt.

2 Then the whole congregation of the children of Israel complained against Moses and Aaron in the wilderness. 3 And the children of Israel said to them, “Oh, that we had died by the hand of the LORD in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the pots of meat and when we ate bread to the full! For you have brought us out into this wilderness to kill this whole assembly with hunger.”

4 Then the LORD said to Moses, “Behold, I will rain bread from heaven for you. And the people shall go out and gather a certain quota every day, that I may test them, whether they will walk in My law or not.

From this passage we see Moses faced  with what we might think is comparable to “crisis of recession.” This is a crisis that comes from an awareness that one does not have the means to meet basic needs, at least not without pain and sacrifice.  Moses shows the right perspective here.

  • He shows trust in God in order to help the flock develop trust.
  • He shows  patience in order to give time for others to “come to know.”
  • He recognizes  the importance of short-term wins in order to maintain some sense of hope and confidence.

When you read the passages before and after this particular text, you notice that Moses left the familiar, did the unusual, defied the critics, took no shortcuts — all actions requiring considerable effort to maintain perspective.

This text has been considered the manna story. This story  is not about what they were eating but rather about three things;

  • God’s trustworthy generosity.
  • The need for equity in the distribution of resources related to basic human needs such as food.
  • Reassurance in the face of common human urges to hoard out of fear and anxiety for the future.

These three things teaches us that the journey to a new place is;

  • A shared responsibility,
  • A collective project that derives its authority from a cooperative attachment to mutually defined commitments, values, and smart visions and strategies.

There are too many moving parts when trying to find solutions to complex problems. We must be willing  to;

  • Listen to the Spirit of God and to one another
  • Willingly accept delegated responsibility
  • Contribute what one is able
  • Hold the tension of the tragic gap between what it is and what is yet to be
  • Maintain perspective and
  • Witness the God’s Provision.

The Journey of God’s People

Remember the days of old, consider the years of many generations… (Deuteronomy 32:7)

HISTORICAL TIMELINE

  1. 2000 – 1500 BC: The Patriarchs; Abraham, Isaac, Jacob – forefathers of the Jewish people and bearers of a belief in one God – settle in the Land of Israel. Famine forces Israelites to migrate to Egypt.
  2. 1300 through 1200 BC: Exodus and Wilderness:   Moses leads Israelites from Egypt, After 400 years of bondage, the Israelites were led to freedom by Moses who was chosen by God to take his people out of Egypt and back to the Land of Israel promised to their forefathers (c.13th-12th centuries BCE).This was followed by 40 years of wandering in the desert. Torah, including the Ten Commandments, received at Mount Sinai.
  3. 1200 – 1000 BC: Conquest and Settlement: During the next two centuries, the Israelites conquered most of the Land of Israel and became farmers and craftsmen; a degree of economic and social consolidation followed. Periods of relative peace alternated with times of war, during which the people rallied behind leaders known as judges, chosen for their political and military skills as well as for their leadership qualities.
  4. 1020 -5867 BC: The Monarchy: The first king, Saul (c.1020), bridged the period between loose tribal organization and the setting up of a full monarchy under his successor, David. King David (c.1004-965 BCE) established his kingdom as a major power in the region by successful military expeditions, including the final defeat of the Philistines, as well as through a network of friendly alliances with nearby kingdoms. Consequently, his authority was recognized from the borders of Egypt and the Red Sea to the banks of the Euphrates. At home, he united the 12 Israelite tribes into one kingdom and placed his capital, Jerusalem, and the monarchy at the center of the country’s national life. Scripture depicts David as a poet and musician, with verses ascribed to him appearing in the Book of Psalms.
  5. 960 BC: First Temple, the national and spiritual center of the Jewish people, built in Jerusalem by King Solomon. David was succeeded by his son Solomon (c.965-930 BCE) who further strengthened the kingdom. Through treaties with neighboring kings, reinforced by politically motivated marriages, Solomon ensured peace for his kingdom and made it equal among the great powers of the age. He expanded foreign trade and promoted domestic prosperity by developing major enterprises, such as copper mining and metal smelting, while building new towns and fortifying old ones of strategic and economic importance. Crowning his achievements was the building of the Temple in Jerusalem, which became the center of the Jewish people’s national and religious life. The Bible attributes to Solomon the Book of Proverbs and the Song of Songs.
  6.  960 – 586 BC The Prophets: Religious sages and charismatic figures, who were perceived as being endowed with a divine gift of revelation, preached during the period of the monarchy until a century after the destruction of Jerusalem (586 BCE). Whether as advisers to kings on matters of religion, ethics and politics, or as their critics under the primacy of the relationship between the individual and God, the prophets were guided by the need for justice and issued powerful commentaries on the morality of Jewish national life. Their revelatory experiences were recorded in books of inspired prose and poetry, many of which were incorporated into the Bible.
  7. 930BC Divided Monarchy:  The end of Solomon’s rule was marred by discontent on the part of the populace, which had to pay heavily for his ambitious schemes. At the same time, preferential treatment of his own tribe embittered the others, which resulted in growing antagonism between the monarchy and the tribal separatists. After Solomon’s death (930 BCE), open insurrection led to the breaking away of the 10 northern tribes and division of the country into a northern kingdom, Israel, and a southern kingdom, Judah, the latter on the territory of the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. The Kingdom of Israel, with its capital Samaria, lasted more than 200 years under 19 kings, while the Kingdom of Judah was ruled from Jerusalem for 400 years by an equal number of kings of the lineage of David.
  8. 722BC: The expansion of the Assyrian and Babylonian empires brought first Israel and later Judah under foreign control.  The Kingdom of Israel was crushed by the Assyrians (722 BCE) and its people carried off into exile and oblivion. Over a hundred years later, Babylonia conquered the Kingdom of Judah, exiling most of its inhabitants as well as destroying Jerusalem and the Temple (586 BCE).
  9. The First Exile (586-538 BC):  The Babylonian conquest brought an end to the First Temple period, but did not sever the Jewish people’s connection to the Land of Israel. Sitting by the rivers of Babylon, the Jews pledged to remember their homeland: If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget its cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth; if I do not set Jerusalem above my highest joy. (Psalms 137:5-6)
  10. Persian and Hellenistic Periods (538-142 BC): Following a decree by the Persian King Cyrus, conqueror of the Babylonian empire (538 BCE), some 50,000 Jews set out on the first return to the Land of Israel, led by Zerubbabel, a descendant of the House of David. Less than a century later, the second return was led by Ezra the Scribe. Over the next four centuries, the Jews knew varying degrees of self-rule under Persian (538-333 BCE) and later Hellenistic (Ptolemaic and Seleucid) overlordship (332-142 BCE). The repatriation of the Jews under Ezra’s inspired leadership, construction of the Second Temple on the site of the First Temple, refortification of the walls of Jerusalem, and establishment of the Knesset Hagedolah (Great Assembly) as the supreme religious and judicial body of the Jewish people marked the beginning of the Second Temple period. Within the confines of the Persian Empire, Judah was a nation whose leadership was entrusted to the high priest and council of elders in Jerusalem. As part of the ancient world conquered by Alexander the Great of Greece (332 BCE), the Land remained a Jewish theocracy under Syrian-based Seleucid rulers. When the Jews were prohibited to practice Judaism and their Temple was desecrated as part of an effort to impose Greek-oriented culture and customs on the entire population, the Jews rose in revolt (166 BCE).
  11. Hasmonean Dynasty (142-63 BCE): First led by Mattathias of the priestly Hasmonean family and then by his son Judah the Maccabee, the Jews subsequently entered Jerusalem and purified the Temple (164 BCE), events commemorated each year by the festival of Hannuka. Following further Hasmonean victories (147 BCE), the Seleucids restored autonomy to Judea, as the Land of Israel was now called, and, with the collapse of the Seleucid kingdom (129 BCE), Jewish independence was achieved. Under the Hasmonean dynasty, which lasted about 80 years, the kingdom regained boundaries not far short of Solomon’s realm, political consolidation under Jewish rule was attained and Jewish life flourished.
  12. Roman Rule (63 BCE-313 CE):  When the Romans replaced the Seleucids as the great power in the region, they granted the Hasmonean king, Hyrcanus II, had limited authority under the Roman governor of Damascus. The Jews were hostile to the new regime, and the following years witnessed frequent insurrections. A last attempt to restore the former glory of the Hasmonean dynasty was made by Mattathias Antigonus, whose defeat and death brought Hasmonean rule to an end (40 BCE), and the Land became a province of the Roman Empire. In 37 BCE Herod, a son-in-law of Hyrcanus II, was appointed King of Judea by the Romans. Granted almost unlimited autonomy in the country’s internal affairs, he became one of the most powerful monarchs in the eastern part of the Roman Empire. A great admirer of Greco-Roman culture, Herod launched a massive construction program, which included the cities of Caesarea and Sebaste and the fortresses at Herodium and Masada. He also remodeled the Temple into one of the most magnificent buildings of its time. But despite his many achievements, Herod failed to win the trust and support of his Jewish subjects. Ten years after Herod’s death (4 BCE), Judea came under direct Roman administration. Growing anger against increased Roman suppression of Jewish life resulted in sporadic violence which escalated into a full-scale revolt in 66 CE. Superior Roman forces led by Titus were finally victorious, razing Jerusalem to the ground (70 CE) and defeating the last Jewish outpost at Masada (73 CE). The total destruction of Jerusalem and the Second Temple was catastrophic for the Jewish people. According to the contemporary historian Josephus Flavius, hundreds of thousands of Jews perished in the siege of Jerusalem and elsewhere in the country, and many thousands more were sold into slavery. A last brief period of Jewish sovereignty followed the revolt of Shimon Bar Kochba (132 CE), during which Jerusalem and Judea were regained. However, given the overwhelming power of the Romans, the outcome was inevitable. Three years later, in conformity with Roman custom, Jerusalem was “plowed up with a yoke of oxen,” Judea was renamed Palaestina and Jerusalem, Aelia Capitolina. Although the Temple had been destroyed and Jerusalem burned to the ground, the Jews and Judaism survived the encounter with Rome. The supreme legislative and judicial body, the Sanhedrin (successor of the Knesset Hagedolah) was reconvened in Yavneh (70 CE), and later in Tiberias. Without the unifying framework of a state and the Temple, the small remaining Jewish community gradually recovered, reinforced from time to time by returning exiles. Institutional and communal life was renewed, priests were replaced by rabbis and the synagogue became the focus of the Jewish communities, as evidenced by remnants of synagogues found at Capernaum, Korazin, Bar’am, Gamla, and elsewhere. Halakhah (Jewish religious law) served as the common bond among the Jews and was passed on from generation to generation. Masada: Nearly 1,000 Jewish men, women and children, who had survived the destruction of Jerusalem, occupied and fortified King Herod’s mountaintop palace complex of Masada near the Dead Sea, where they held out for three years against repeated Roman attempts to dislodge them. When the Romans finally scaled Masada and broke through its walls, they found that the defenders and their families had chosen to die by their own hands rather than be enslaved. Halakhah is the body of law which has guided Jewish life all over the world since post-biblical times. It deals with the religious obligations of Jews, both in interpersonal relations and in ritual observances, and encompasses practically all aspects of human behavior – birth and marriage, joy and grief, agriculture and commerce, ethics and theology. Rooted in the Bible, halakhic authority is based on the Talmud, a body of Jewish law and lore (completed c. 400), which incorporates the Mishna, the first written compilation of the Oral Law (codified c.210),and the Gemara, an elaboration of the Mishna. To provide practical guidance to the Halakhah, concise, systematic digests were authored by religious scholars beginning in the first and second centuries. Among the most authoritative of these codifications is the Shulhan Arukh, written by Joseph Caro in Safed (Tzfat) in the 16th century.
  13. Byzantine Rule (313-636): By the end of the 4th century, following Emperor Constantine’s adoption of Christianity (313) and the founding of the Byzantine Empire, the Land of Israel had become a predominantly Christian country. Churches were built on Christian holy sites in Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Galilee, and monasteries were established in many parts of the country. Jews were deprived of their former relative autonomy, as well as of their right to hold public positions, and were forbidden to enter Jerusalem except on one day of the year (Tisha B’av – ninth of Av) to mourn the destruction of the Temple. The Persian invasion of 614 was aided by the Jews, who were inspired by messianic hopes of deliverance. In gratitude for their help, they were granted the administration of Jerusalem, an interlude which lasted about three years. Subsequently, the Byzantine army regained the city (629) and again expelled its Jewish inhabitants.
  14. Arab Rule (636-1099): The Arab conquest of the Land came four years after the death of Muhammad (632) and lasted more than four centuries, with caliphs ruling first from Damascus, then from Baghdad and Egypt. At the outset, Jewish settlement in Jerusalem resumed, and the Jewish community was granted the customary status of dhimmi (protected non-Muslims), which safeguarded their lives, property, and freedom of worship, in return for payment of special poll and land taxes. However, subsequent restrictions against non-Muslims (717) affected the Jews’ public conduct as well as their religious observances and legal status. The imposition of heavy taxes on agricultural land compelled many to move from rural areas to towns, where their circumstances hardly improved, while increasing social and economic discrimination forced others to leave the country. By the end of the 11th century, the Jewish community in the Land had diminished considerably and had lost some of its organizational and religious cohesiveness.
  15. The Crusaders (1099-1291):For the next 200 years, the country was dominated by the Crusaders who, following an appeal by Pope Urban II, came from Europe to recover the Holy Land from the infidels. In July 1099, after a five-week siege, the knights of the First Crusade and their rabble army captured Jerusalem, massacring most of the city’s non-Christian inhabitants. Barricaded in their synagogues, the Jews defended their quarter, only to be burned to death or sold into slavery. During the next few decades, the Crusaders extended their power over the rest of the country, partly through treaties and agreements, but mostly by bloody military victories. The Latin Kingdom of the Crusaders was that of a conquering minority confined mainly to fortified cities and castles. When the Crusaders opened up transportation routes from Europe, pilgrimages to the Holy Land became popular and, at the same time, increasing numbers of Jews sought to return to their homeland. Documents of the period indicate that 300 Rabbis from France and England arrived in a group, some settling in Acre (Akko), others in Jerusalem. Following the overthrow of the Crusaders by a Muslim army under Saladin (1187), the Jews were again accorded a certain measure of freedom, including the right to live in Jerusalem. Although the Crusaders regained a foothold in the country after Saladin’s death (1193), their presence was limited to a network of fortified castles. Crusader authority in the Land ended after a final defeat (1291) by the Mamluks, a Muslim military class which had come to power in Egypt.
  16. Mamluk Rule (1291-1516):  The Land under the Mamluks became a backwater province ruled from Damascus. Acre, Jaffa, and other ports were destroyed for fear of new crusades, and maritime as well as overland commerce was interrupted. By the end of the Middle Ages, the country’s towns were virtually in ruins, most of Jerusalem was abandoned, and the small Jewish community was poverty-stricken. The period of Mamluk decline was darkened by political and economic upheavals, plagues, locusts, and devastating earthquakes.
  17. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917): Following the Ottoman conquest in 1517, the Land was divided into four districts, attached administratively to the province of Damascus and ruled from Istanbul. At the outset of the Ottoman era, some 1,000 Jewish families lived in the country, mainly in Jerusalem, Nablus (Shechem), Hebron, Gaza, Safed (Tzfat) and the villages of Galilee. The community was comprised of descendants of Jews who had always lived in the Land, as well as immigrants from North Africa and Europe. Orderly government, until the death (1566) of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, brought improvements and stimulated Jewish immigration. Some newcomers settled in Jerusalem, but the majority went to Safed where, by the mid-16th century, the Jewish population had risen to about 10,000, and the town had become a thriving textile center as well as the focus of intense intellectual activity. During this period, the study of Kabbala (Jewish mysticism) flourished, and contemporary clarifications of Jewish law, as codified in the Shulhan Arukh, spread throughout the Diaspora from the houses of study in Safed. With a gradual decline in the quality of Ottoman rule, the country suffered widespread neglect. By the end of the 18th century, much of the Land was owned by absentee landlords and leased to impoverished tenant farmers, and taxation was as crippling as it was capricious. The great forests of Galilee and the Carmel mountain range were denuded of trees; swamp and desert encroached on agricultural land. The 19th century saw medieval backwardness gradually give way to the first signs of progress, with various Western powers jockeying for position, often through missionary activities. British, French, and American scholars launched studies of biblical archeology; Britain, France, Russia, Austria, and the United States opened consulates in Jerusalem. Steamships began to ply regular routes to and from Europe; postal and telegraphic connections were installed; the first road connecting Jerusalem and Jaffa was built.  The Land’s rebirth as a crossroads for commerce of three continents was accelerated by the opening of the Suez Canal. Consequently, the situation of the country’s Jews slowly improved, and their numbers increased substantially. By mid-century, overcrowded conditions within the walled city of Jerusalem motivated the Jews to build the first neighborhood outside the walls (1860) and, in the next quarter century, to add seven more, forming the nucleus of the new city. By 1870, Jerusalem had an overall Jewish majority. Land for farming was purchased throughout the country; new rural settlements were established; and the Hebrew language, long restricted to liturgy and literature, was revived. The stage was set for the founding of the Zionist movement. Zionism, the national liberation movement of the Jewish people, derives its name from the word “Zion”, the traditional synonym for Jerusalem and the Land of Israel. The idea of Zionism – the redemption of the Jewish people in its ancestral homeland – is rooted in the continuous longing for and deep attachment to the Land of Israel, which have been an inherent part of Jewish existence in the Diaspora through the centuries.Political Zionism emerged in response to continued oppression and persecution of Jews in Eastern Europe and increasing disillusionment with the emancipation in Western Europe, which had neither put an end to discrimination nor led to the integration of Jews into local societies. It found formal expression in the establishment of the Zionist Organization (1897) at the First Zionist Congress, convened by Theodor Herzl in Basel, Switzerland. The Zionist movement’s program contained both ideological and practical elements aimed at promoting the return of Jews to the Land; facilitating the social, cultural, economic, and political revival of Jewish national life; and attaining an internationally recognized, legally secured home for the Jewish people in its historic homeland, where Jews would be free from persecution and able to develop their own lives and identity. Inspired by Zionist ideology, two major influxes of Jews from Eastern Europe arrived in the country at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. Resolved to restore their homeland by tilling the soil, these pioneers reclaimed barren fields, built new settlements and laid the foundations for what would become a thriving agricultural economy. The new arrivals faced extremely harsh conditions: the attitude of the Ottoman administration was hostile and oppressive; communications and transportation were rudimentary and insecure; swamps bred deadly malaria; and the soil had suffered from centuries of neglect. Land purchases were restricted, and construction was banned without a special permit obtainable only in Istanbul. While these difficulties hampered the country’s development, they did not stop it. At the outbreak of World War I (1914), the Jewish population in the Land numbered 85,000, as compared to 5,000 in the early 1500s. In December 1917, British forces under the command of General Allenby entered Jerusalem, ending 400 years of Ottoman rule. The Jewish Legion, with three battalions comprising thousands of Jewish volunteers, was an integral unit of the British army.
  18. British Rule (1918-1948); In July 1922, the League of Nations entrusted Great Britain with the Mandate for Palestine (the name by which the country was then known). Recognizing the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine, Great Britain was called upon to facilitate the establishment of a Jewish national home in Palestine-Eretz Israel (Land of Israel). Two months later, in September 1922, the Council of the League of Nations and Great Britain decided that the provisions for setting up a Jewish national home would not apply to the area east of the Jordan River, which constituted three fourths of the territory included in the Mandate and eventually became the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. Immigration:Motivated by Zionism and encouraged by British sympathy with Jewish Zionist aspirations, as communicated by Foreign Secretary Lord Balfour (1917), successive waves of immigrants arrived in the Land between 1919 and 1939, each contributing to different aspects of the developing Jewish community. Some 35,000 who came between 1919 and 1923, mainly from Russia, strongly influenced the community’s character and organization for years to come. These pioneers laid the foundations of a comprehensive social and economic infrastructure, developed agriculture, established unique communal and cooperative forms of rural settlement – the kibbutz and moshav – and provided the labor force for building houses and roads. The next influx of some 60,000, which arrived primarily from Poland between 1924 and 1932, was instrumental in developing and enriching urban life. These immigrants settled mainly in Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem, where they established small businesses, construction firms, and light industry. The last major wave of immigration before World War II, comprising some 165,000, took place in the 1930s following Hitler’s rise to power in Germany. The newcomers, many of whom were professionals and academics, constituted the first large-scale influx from Western and Central Europe. Their education, skills, and experience raised business standards, improved urban and rural amenities, and broadened the community’s cultural life.
  19. The Holocaust ; During World War II (1939-45), the Nazi regime deliberately carried out a systematic plan to liquidate the Jewish community of Europe, in the course of which some six million Jews, including 1.5 million children, were murdered. As the Nazi armies swept through Europe, Jews were savagely persecuted, subjected to torture and humiliation, and herded into ghettos, where attempts at armed resistance led to even harsher measures. From the ghettos they were transported to camps where a fortunate few were put to hard labor, but most were either shot in mass executions or put to death in gas chambers. Not many managed to escape. Some fled to other countries, a few joined the partisans, and others were hidden by non-Jews who did so at risk of their own lives. Consequently, only one third, including those who had left Europe before the war, survived out of a population of almost nine million, which had once constituted the largest and most vibrant Jewish community in the world. After the war, Arab opposition led the British to intensify  the British intensified their restrictions on the number of Jews permitted to enter and settle in the Land. The Jewish community responded by instituting a wide network of “illegal immigration” activities to rescue Holocaust survivors. Between 1945 and 1948, some 85,000 Jews were brought to the Land by secret, often dangerous routes, in spite of a British naval blockade and border patrols set up to intercept the refugees before they reached the country. Those who were caught were interned in detention camps on the island of Cyprus, or returned to Europe.
  20. The State of Israel is born: On 14 May 1948, Israel proclaimed its independence. Less than 24 hours later, the regular armies of Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and Iraq invaded the country, forcing Israel to defend the sovereignty it had regained in its ancestral homeland. In what became known as Israel’s War of Independence, the newly formed, poorly equipped Israel Defense Forces (IDF) repulsed the invaders in fierce intermittent fighting, which lasted some 15 months and claimed over 6,000 Israeli lives (nearly one percent of the country’s Jewish population at the time). During the first months of 1949, direct negotiations were conducted under UN auspices between Israel and each of the invading countries (except Iraq, which refused to negotiate with Israel), resulting in armistice agreements which reflected the situation at the end of the fighting. Accordingly, the Coastal Plain, Galilee and the entire Negev were within Israel’s sovereignty, Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) came under Jordanian rule, the Gaza Strip came under Egyptian administration, and the city of Jerusalem was divided, with Jordan controlling the eastern part, including the Old City, and Israel the western sector.

Nothing Last Forever

In 146 BC the sun set for the final time on the North African city of Carthage. After a brutal siege in which more than a million people were slaughtered, Roman legionnaires annihilated the last of the Carthaginians as they huddled inside the temple of their god Dagon.

On a hillside overlooking the Gulf of Tunisia, Roman General Scipio Africanus watched Carthage die. But he did not smile in triumph. Instead, the Greek historian Polybius recorded that Africanus wept for he foresaw, in the flames of Carthage, the end of his own city. Just as Rome had destroyed others, she would one day be destroyed.

Some 550 years after Carthage fell, the day Scipio Africanus dreaded came to pass. On August 24, 410 AD the Visigoths sacked Rome. The city that had stood on the banks of the Tiber for 700 years lay in ruins, and Europe began her tortured descent into the Dark Ages.

When word of Rome’s fall reached North Africa, petrified Christians rushed to their Bishop, St. Augustine. How were they going to survive this catastrophe? Augustine went into the desert to find answers that might calm fears and give hope. He compiled his meditations in one of history’s towering masterpieces: The City of God.

It became the blueprint for the Western civilization that rose from the ashes of Rome. The truths he set down in The City of God are as relevant today as they were 1600 years ago. Let’s focus on two of them. One, Augustine told his parishioners that they were far too Roman. He reminded them that their citizenship was in heaven. They belonged to the City of God, not to Rome. He might say to us, “You are far too American. Your hope should be in the City of God, not in Washington D.C.”

Two, he reminded them that Christians are aliens in this world. Like ancient Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, we are pilgrims passing through. Like our ancient fathers, we are called to live in tents that can be packed up at a moment’s notice. Augustine quotes the words of John 1:14—”The Word became flesh and dwelt among us…” He reminds us that the original Greek literally says, “Jesus pitched his tent among us.” Our Lord never purchased a piece of property, or built a house. His earthly life was spent on the go. He stayed here for only 33 years before he moved on to heaven.

In the same way, we are called to pitch our tents, not build permanent residences in the cities of men that will never last.

2011 is Here!


As you face 2011, may you sense God’s timing to turn to a year of new opportunities and new challenges. At the foundation of this renewed focus may you have a commitment to the Lordship of Jesus Christ who calls us to share his love with all people. Without the help of the Lord we will accomplish nothing. It is our prayer that God will grant you the gift of faith so you can choose to respond to God’s new opportunities

Step forward by faith into 2011 with renewed faith, hope and love of God that enables you to stay focused in His mission that he might be glorified. The mission of evangelism, edification, education and equipping is possible because of HOPE that recognizes not only the severity of the situation in our community, nation and world but also what is possible through Christ when we become active participants in manifesting the love, compassion and justice of the kingdom of God.

Remember that possibility only becomes reality when hope moves us with the love of Christ. May you cherish the Lordship of the savior whose birth we now celebrate. Collaboratively, may we seek God’s leading as a community of people committed to Christ and to the vision at hand. May we bear patiently, pray earnestly and act deliberately.

A YEAR WITH RESOLVE

1. BE FAITHFUL. Jesus tells us in John 16:10-12, “Whoever is faithful in very little is faithful also in much; and whoever is dishonest in very little is dishonest also in much. The word says do not despise a small beginning. Such beginnings are the place that tests our faithfulness. If then you have not been faithful with the dishonest wealth, who will entrust to you the true riches? And if you have not been faithful with what belongs to another, who will give you what is your own. If you will be faithful you will hear him say;


2.BE DISCIPLINE. Life is a marathon, not a sprint. The hardest part of a marathon race is not the beginning or the end, but the middle.

3. BE SELF-CONTROLLED. Desperation is definitely not cool to any generation.

4. BE PATIENT. Time is an equalizer– it doesn’t discriminate. The best use of time is helping others for in life, most people require some kind of assistance, whether it’s physical, financial or spiritual. No one gets to where they are alone. God puts  people in places to get his people where he ultimately wants them to be. A lot of times patience is required.

5. VALUE EVERYONE.Everyone can be great because everyone can serve. You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t even have to make your subject and your verb agree… You only need a heart full of grace…a soul generated by love.” —Martin Luther King, Jr.

6. BE OBEDIENT. One act of obedience is better than one hundred sermons… “Preach the gospel always…. if necessary use words.” (St. Francis). And Samuel said, Hath the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the LORD? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams ( I Sam. 15:22).

7. REMEMBER SELF-CARE. You and your needs are important, too. Create time for you and family. Take time to relax, retreat and renew.

8. START SOMETHING YOU WILL NOT FINISH.  Think of Moses in that day of his farewell as he walked up the mountain where God had prepared his funeral service. I’ve got a feeling he was overwhelmed with joy as he looked over the promised land and the generations that were left to finish the race. To think that the vision had actually come this far for him was a testimony to God’s faithfulness.

9. INVOLVE GOD IN ALL YOUR PURSUITS. Moses is told to go to Egypt and assemble all the elders of the people and explain to them what only God can deliver. Moses reacts and responds in a way in which any of us might react and respond. Five times he tries to get out of it. However, God promised that he would be involved. When God is involved success is sure.

10. BE PRAYERFUL. There is no room in the service of Jesus Christ for boasting or too much self-confidence.

 

Reformation

REFORMERS like John Wycliffe, John Huss, Martin Luther, John Calvin and John Wesley saw;

  • the power of people without priests to intercede between them and God,
  • the need for the people to read and interpret the Bible, and
  • correction of distortions from original Christian thinking, as well as their protests against church abuses.
  • they advocated a return to the simplicity and authenticity they believed was described in the New Testament.

Martin Luther, John Calvin, and Ulrich Zwingli are considered Magisterial Reformers because their reform movements were supported by ruling authorities or “magistrates”.

Having far-reaching political, economic and social effects, the Reformation became the basis for the founding of Protestantism, one of the three major branches of Christianity. The three largest groups in the world of Christianity are

  • The Roman Catholic Church,
  • The Eastern Orthodox Churches, and
  • The various denominations of Protestantism.

The Catholics, Protestants, Anglicans, and other closely related denominations comprise Western Christianity. Eastern Orthodox Church, Oriental Orthodox Churches and the Assyrian Churches of the East are considered Eastern Christian denominations.

The world of the late medieval Catholic Church from which the 16th-century reformers emerged was a complex one. Over the centuries;

  • The church, particularly in the office of the papacy, had become deeply involved in the political life of Western Europe.
  • The resulting intrigues and political manipulations, combined with the church’s increasing power and wealth, contributed to the bankrupting of the church as a spiritual force.
  • Abuses such as the sale of indulgences (or spiritual privileges) and relics and the corruption of the clergy exploited the pious and further undermined the church’s spiritual authority.

The Reformation of the 16th century was not unprecedented. Reformers within the medieval church such as St. Francis, Peter Waldo, Jan Hus, and John Wycliffe addressed abuses in the life of the church in the centuries before 1517. In the 16th century, Erasmus of Rotterdam, a great Humanist scholar, was the chief proponent of liberal Catholic reform that attacked

  • Moral abuses and popular superstitions in the church and urged the imitation of Christ, the supreme teacher.

These movements reveal an ongoing concern for reform within the church in the years before Luther is said to have posted his Ninety-five Theses on the door of the Castle Church, Wittenberg, on Oct. 31, 1517, the eve of All Saints’ Day–the traditional date for the beginning of the Reformation. Martin Luther claimed that what distinguished him from previous reformers was that while they attacked corruption in the life of the church;

  • He went to the theological root of the problem–the perversion of the church’s doctrine of redemption and grace.

Luther, a pastor and professor at the University of Wittenberg, deplored the entanglement of God’s free gift of grace in a complex system of indulgences and good works. In his Ninety-five Theses,

  • He attacked the indulgence system,
  • Insisted that the pope had no authority over purgatory and
  • That the doctrine of the merits of the saints had no foundation in the gospel.

Here lay the key to Luther’s concerns for the ethical and theological reform of the church:

  • Scripture alone is authoritative (sola sciptura) and
  • Justification is by faith (sola fide), not by works.

While he did not intend to break with the Catholic Church, a confrontation with the papacy was not long in coming. In 1521, Luther was tried before the Imperial Diet of Worms and was eventually excommunicated; what began, as an internal reform movement had become a fracture in western Christendom.

The Reformation movement within Germany diversified almost immediately, and other reform movements arose independently of Luther.

  • Huldrych Zwingli built a Christian theocracy in Zürich in which church and state joined for the service of God.
  • Zwingli agreed with Luther in the centrality of the doctrine of justification by faith, but he espoused a much more radical understanding of the Eucharist.
  • Luther had rejected the Catholic Church’s doctrine of transubstantiation, according to which the bread and wine in the Eucharist became the actual body and blood of Christ.
  • According to Luther’s doctrine of consubstantiation, the body of Christ was physically present in the elements because Christ is present everywhere.
  • Luther was not willing to go as far as Zwingli, who claimed that the Eucharist was simply a memorial of the death of Christ and a declaration of faith by the recipients.

From the group surrounding Zwingli emerged those more radical than himself. These Radical Reformers, part of the so-called left wing of the Reformation, insisted that the principle of scriptural authority be applied without compromise.

  • Unwilling to accept what they considered violation of biblical teachings, they broke with Zwingli over the issue of infant baptism, thereby receiving the nickname “Anabaptists” on the grounds that they re-baptized adults who had been baptized as children.
  • The Swiss Anabaptists sought to follow the example of Jesus found in the gospels. They refused to swear oaths or bear arms, taught the strict separation of church and state, and insisted on the visible church of adult believers–distinguished from the world by its disciplined, regenerated life.

Another important form of Protestantism (as those protesting against Rome were designated by the Diet of Speyer in 1529) is Calvinism, named for John Calvin, a French lawyer who fled France after his conversion to the Protestant cause.

  • In Basel, Calvin brought out the first edition of his Institutes of the Christian Religion in 1536, the first extensive, systematic, theological treatise of the new reform movement.
  • Calvin agreed with Luther’s teaching on justification by faith. However, he found a more positive place for law within the Christian community than Luther did in his concern to distinguish sharply between law and gospel.
  • In Geneva, Calvin was able to experiment with his ideal of a disciplined community of the elect.
  • Under Calvin’s forceful leadership, church and state were united for the “glory of God.”

The Reformation spread to other European countries over the course of the 16th century. By mid-century,

  • Lutheranism dominated northern Europe. Eastern Europe offered a seedbed for even more radical varieties of Protestantism, because kings were weak, nobles strong, and cities few, and because religious pluralism had long existed.
  • Spain and Italy were to be the great centers of the Counter-Reformation and Protestantism never gained a strong foothold there.

In England the Reformation’s roots were primarily political rather than religious.

  • Henry VIII, incensed by Pope Clement VII’s refusal to grant him a divorce, r
  • Repudiated papal authority and in 1534
  • Established the Anglican Church with the king as the supreme head.

In spite of its political implications, Henry’s reorganization of the church permitted the beginning of religious reform in England, which included

  • Tthe preparation of a liturgy in English, The Book of Common Prayer.
  • In Scotland, John Knox, who spent time in Geneva and was greatly influenced by John Calvin, led the establishment of Presbyterianism, which made possible the eventual union of Scotland with England.

The specter of many national churches supplanting a unitary Catholic Church became a grim reality during the age of the Reformation. What neither heresy nor schism had been able to do before–to divide Western Christendom permanently and irreversibly–was done by a movement that confessed a loyalty to the orthodox creeds of Christendom and professed an abhorrence for schism. By the time the Reformation was over, Roman Catholicism had become something different from what it had been in the early centuries or even in the later Middle Ages.

Whatever its nonreligious causes may have been, the Protestant Reformation arose within Roman Catholicism; there both its positive accomplishments and its negative effects had their roots.

  • The standing of the church within the political order and the class structure of Western Europe had been irrevocably altered in the course of the later middle Ages. Thus the most extravagant claims put forward for the political authority of the church and the papacy, as formulated by Pope Boniface VIII (reigned 1294-1303), had come just at the time when such authority was in fact rapidly declining.
  • By the time Protestantism arose to challenge the spiritual authority of the papacy, therefore, there was no longer any way to invoke that political authority against the challenge.
  • The medieval class structure, too, had undergone fundamental and drastic changes with the rise of the bourgeoisie throughout Western Europe; it is not a coincidence that in northern Europe and Britain the middle class was to become the principal bulwark of the Protestant opposition to Roman Catholicism.
  • The traditional Roman Catholic prohibition of any lending of money at interest as “usury,” the monastic glorification of poverty as an ascetic ideal, and the Roman Catholic system of holidays as times when no work was to be done were all seen by the rising merchant class as obstacles to financial development.

Accompanying these sociopolitical forces in the crisis of late medieval Roman Catholicism were spiritual and theological factors that also helped to bring on the Protestant Reformation. By the end of the 15th century there was a widely-held impression that the resources for church reform within Roman Catholicism had been tried and found wanting:

  • The papacy refused to reform itself,
  • The councils had not succeeded in bringing about lasting change, and
  • The professional theologians were more interested in scholastic debates than in the nurture of genuine Christian faith and life.

Such sentiments were often oversimplified and exaggerated, but their very currency made them a potent influence even when they were mistaken (and they were not always mistaken). The financial corruption and pagan immorality within Roman Catholicism, even at the highest levels, reminded critics of “the abomination of desolation” spoken of by the prophet Daniel, and nothing short of a thoroughgoing “reformation in head and members [in capite et membris]” seemed to be called for.

These demands were in themselves nothing new, but the Protestant Reformation took place when they coincided with, and found dramatic expression in, the highly personal struggle of one medieval Roman Catholic.

  • Martin Luther asked an essentially medieval question: “How do I obtain a God who is merciful to me?”
  • He also tried a medieval answer to that question by becoming a monk and by subjecting himself to fasting and discipline–but all to no avail.

The answer that he eventually did find, the conviction that God was merciful not because of anything that the sinner could do but because of a freely given grace that was received by faith alone (the doctrine of justification by faith), was not utterly without precedent in the Roman Catholic theological tradition; but in the form in which Luther stated it there appeared to be a fundamental threat to Catholic teaching and sacramental life. And in his treatise The Babylonian Captivity of the Church, issued in 1520, Luther denounced the entire system of medieval Christendom as an unwarranted human invention foisted on the church.

Although Luther in his opposition to the practice of selling indulgences was unsparing in his attacks upon the moral, financial, and administrative abuses within Roman Catholicism, using his mastery of the German language to denounce them,

  • He insisted throughout his life that the primary object of his critique was not the life but the doctrine of the church, not the corruption of the ecclesiastical structure but the distortion of the gospel.

The late medieval mass was “a dragon’s tail,” not because it was liturgically unsound but because the medieval definition of the mass as a sacrifice offered by the church to God–not only, as Luther believed, as a means of grace granted by God to the church–jeopardized the uniqueness of the unrepeatable sacrifice of Christ on Calvary.

  • The cult of the Virgin Mary and of the saints diminished the office of Christ as the sole mediator between God and the human race.

Thus the pope was the Antichrist because he represented and enforced a substitute religion in which the true church, the bride of Christ, had been replaced by–and identified with–an external juridical institution that laid claim to the obedience due to God himself.

  • When, after repeated warnings, Luther refused such obedience, he was excommunicated by Pope Leo X in 1521.
  • Until his excommunication Luther had gone on regarding himself as a loyal Roman Catholic and had appealed “from a poorly informed Pope to a Pope who ought to be better informed.”
  • He had, moreover, retained an orthodox Roman Catholic perspective on most of the corpus of Christian doctrine, not only the Trinity and the two natures in the person of Christ but baptismal regeneration and the Real Presence of the body and blood of Christ in the Eucharist.

Many of the other Protestant Reformers who arose during the 16th century were considerably less conservative in their doctrinal stance, distancing themselves from Luther’s position no less than from the Roman Catholic one. Thus Luther’s Swiss opponent, Ulrich Zwingli, lumped Luther’s sacramental teaching with the medieval one, and Luther in turn exclaimed: “Better to hold with the papists than with you!” John Calvin was considerably more moderate than Zwingli, but both sacramentally and liturgically he broke with the Roman Catholic tradition. The Anglican Reformation strove to retain the historical episcopate and, particularly under Queen Elizabeth I, steered a middle course, liturgically and even doctrinally, between Roman Catholicism and continental Protestantism.

The polemical Roman Catholic accusation–which the mainline Reformers vigorously denied–that these various species of conservative Protestantism, with their orthodox dogmas and quasi-Catholic forms, were a pretext for the eventual rejection of most of traditional Christianity, seemed to be confirmed with the emergence of the radical Reformation.

  • The Anabaptists, as their name indicated, were known for their practice of “rebaptizing” those who had received the sacrament of baptism as infants; this was, at its foundation, a redefinition of the nature of the church, which they saw not as the institution allied with the state and embracing good and wicked members but as the community of true believers who had accepted the cost of Christian discipleship by a free personal decision.
  • Although the Anabaptists, in their doctrines of God and Christ, retained the historical orthodoxy of the Nicene Creed while rejecting the orthodox doctrines of church and sacraments, those Protestants who went on to repudiate orthodox Trinitarianism as part of their Reformation claimed to be carrying out, more consistently than either Luther and Calvin or the Anabaptists had done, the full implications of the rejection of Roman Catholicism, which they all had in common.

The challenge of the Protestant Reformation became also the occasion for a resurgent Roman Catholicism to clarify and to reaffirm Roman Catholic principles; that endeavor had, in one sense, never been absent from the life and teaching of the church, but it came out now with new force. As the varieties of Protestantism proliferated,

  • The apologists for Roman Catholicism pointed to the Protestant principle of the right of the private interpretation of Scripture as the source of this confusion.
  • Against the Protestant elevation of the Scripture to the position of sole authority, they emphasized that Scripture and church tradition were inseparable and always had been.
  • Pressing that point further, they denounced justification by faith alone and other cherished Protestant teachings as novelties without grounding in authentic church tradition. And they warned that the doctrine of “faith alone, without works” as taught by Luther would sever the moral nerve and remove all incentive for holy living.

Yet these negative reactions to Protestantism were not by any means the only, perhaps not even the primary, form of participation by Roman Catholicism in the history of the Reformation. The emergence of the Protestant phenomenon did not exhaust the reformatory impulse within Roman Catholicism, nor can it be seen as the sole inspiration for Catholic reform.

SUMMARY

The grace-filled faith leads to a regeneration of every prodigal son and daughter that produces victory over sin through the indwelling Spirit of God.  While there is possibility of apostasy (i.e falling away), we also believe in the possibility of Christian Holiness as a maturity in Christ and a conformity to the character of Christ. It is our calling is to spread this pure, apostolic Gospel that can change our confused, misguided world, one life at a time.  The Gospel is our only Hope and we must be involved in the process of passing it on as revealed in scriptures as informed by reason, tradition and experience.

There is great joy in knowing Jesus as LORD and SAVIOR. When His GRACE, greater than all our sins, abounds, why not be stirred to live for Him? There is real joy in spreading the redemptive story of the unfathomable depths of God’s grace that saves a wretch like me and you. Our prayer is that you will join us in all manner of prayers, in participation, in giving or in shedding tears so that souls can be won to Jesus.