May 2008 Entries
May 27th, 2008 - 10:36 PM (9:36 AM EST) by Craig
Dad went quietly on to heaven at 22:18 Tuesday in his hospital room overlooking the Takamatsu that he loved, and the Inland Sea, which he and mother crossed over by ferry 53 years ago.
We have all had a wonderful time together these last few days. All of your comments, letters and well-wishes were read to him during these last days and all of us were reminded of the many lives that God has touched through him. Thank you for your continued prayers over this past month and especially this week. He went without any pain and that was a wonderful answer to prayer.
Representative of the many who came was a Japanese man who came into the room just before dad passed away, and all he could do was kneel down, hold dad’s hand and say, “Thank you. Thank you.” over and over again with tears streaming down his face. I know this is how so many people feel.
Detailed announcements of the funeral arrangements will be posted at a later date on this site, but there will be a funeral service in Takamatsu on Saturday, May 31st at 2:00 P.M. and a memorial service in Tokyo the following Saturday, June 7th.

Yesterday a hero of the faith received his just and good reward - entrance into the presence of His Savior -- I am talking about Ralph Cox. Ralph has served in Japan for over 50 years. He and Stella have been apart of a massive church planting effort since the end of the Korean War when the door way to Asia opened up. Just amonth ago he was diagnosed with cancer and yesterday he went home to the Lord. Providentially, in February we sent over our dear Bruce helland, an 80 year old retired missionary who wanted to spend the rest of his life serving the people of Japan. What a blessing to have him there to support the Coxes while the face what he went through exactly a year ago.  Bruce wrote the following:

Well done RALPH - welcome home!!

Intense...crazy...weighty...burdensome.  I think those are a few of the words that could describe this past week.  I am not one to complain and in a real sense i am not discouraged or ready to throw in the towel (to be honest I have faced worst weeks) -- but this last week was a heavy seven days!  I guess the combination of seeing the affects of people's sinful choices; watching people who should be mature and "know better" act like immature Christians; the normal irritations; budget issues; membership issues; discipline issues; personal disappointments from people I have been working with; seeing good friends in ministry being treated unfair and with little consideration; being falsely accused and then having my family attacked unjustly!!!  WOW WOW WOW!

Yet I hold the the truth....  "cast all your cares upon Him for He cares for us!" -- ENOUGH SAID!

pjm

1.       The re-using and re-cycling of old material. It doesn’t take much to figure out if pastors start playing reruns that something is not healthy.
2.       Changing the Rules – This is when the leadership starts fudging on the constitutions or stepping away from long held convictions.
3.       Shrinking Ministries – When the pastor gets up and declares that they are stopping ministries to make their ministry “simple” but the truth is no one is coming any longer or no one wants to serve - - things are not good!
4.       God sighting, but you did not see Him – When the pastor starts having visions from the Lord or claims that “God spoke” to him about a certain direction – I would be wary.
5.       Spiritualizing bad behavior – when pastors start mistreating the sheep and use all kinds of spiritual mumbo-jumbo to validate the bad behavior – run!
6.       Spending money with little to no accountability – Money seems to be the solution for sinking ships – its not!
It is hard to believe that one year ago I launched Walking in Wisdom.org -- I was not sure when I did it if - ONE - anyone would read it....and TWO - if i wanted the responsibility of creating entries that would inspirre readers and help people walk in wisdom! I am glad to report that both occurred - People are reading it.  Now I would like to see a larger readership but over time people will connect with WIW and we will see boarder impact. We have people in england, Frances and other parts of the globe who check in. A friend from NJ checks us out and it has become an easy way to keep people up to date with me personally and my ministry. The second part of my hesitation a year ago was the fact that I was not sure if I would take on the responsibility. Well it wasn't like I did not have something to say....I could talk to a tree for a long time -- if need be! The fact is I have thoroughly enjoyed writing the blog. I have been surprised at how many entries I have made -- I think it is about 12 a month -- some months more -- that is not bad about 1 every three days... and it has served people. well happy b-day Walking in wisdom. Now its off to think about this coming year and what topics we will venture out on....any sufggestions??
Now by the title don't jump to conclusions and think that my wife came to a fatal end!  Not true -- Kris is alive and well. However over the last four days, me and the son have been bachelors and I have a renewed appreciation for all my dear wife does. Everyday she makes sure Alex has everything he needs; getting him off to school; lunch; breakfast; his vitamin; a kiss and word of encouragement as he heads off to the "blackboard jungle." Then she cleans up the kitchen, keeps the house neat and tiddy. Does laundry, cleans the bathroom, makes beds, thinks through what we will have for dinner and makes sure she takes it out of the freezer (learned that the hard way). Look we were fortunate and had my sister visiting for a couple of days, but still Kris' presence was missing -- she will be home in an hour!  I can't wait -- the house is clean, laundry done, dinner made and her boys waiting with open arms to receive the angel from heaven we call Honey and Mom!!!

What a joy it is to open the scriptures each week and encourage the saints and build up the Body of Christ. Recently I read this article from Al Mohler the president of Southern Seminary. Al is brilliant and a gift from God to the Church.... be encouraged!

 

Study to Show Yourself Faithful
Albert Mohler
Thus says the Lord: "Let not the wise man boast in his wisdom, let not the mighty man boast in his might, let not the rich man boast in his riches, but let him who boasts boast in this, that he understands and knows me, that I am the Lord who practices steadfast love, justice, and righteousness in the earth. For in these things I delight, declares the Lord." ~~ Jeremiah 9:23-24
The life of the preacher is a life of study, and it has been so from the very beginning. The Apostle Paul instructed Timothy to study so that he could present himself to God as an approved worker, "a worker who has no need to be ashamed" [2 Timothy 2:15]. This instruction came within the context of Timothy's call as a preacher and teacher of God's Word, and Paul's instruction to Timothy is our Lord's instruction to all who would preach and teach the Word of God.
A word of honesty is necessary at this point. Any honest assessment of the contemporary church would indicate that vast numbers of ministers serving Christ's church are derelict in this duty. They are intellectually lazy, biblically illiterate, slothful in their study habits, and they often steal the learning of others in order to hide their own disobedience. This is a scandal that robs the congregation of the learned and faithful ministry the people of God so desperately need and deserve.
The preacher's lifetime of study begins with the moment of his call and properly ends only when the preacher breathes his last breath. Between the call and the grave lies a long and rewarding journey of learning--learning that will be put at the disposal of the congregation until we see our Lord face to face. On that day, we dare not be ashamed of our lack of study.
Thomas Murphy, once of the great faithful pastors of the nineteenth century, described the minister's calling of study with these words: "The pastor must study, study, study, or he will not grow, or even live, as a true workman for Christ." The minister's life is "one of incessant study," Murphy explained, and "mere genius" will not suffice--this is a life of constant and rewarding study.
Knowing God
The preacher's first task is to know God--personally. The Bible has no conception of an unconverted ministry. The preacher is first of all a man who has come to know God through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and who find his greatest fulfillment in knowing God personally and redemptively.
God told the prophet Jeremiah, "let him who boasts boast in this, that he understands and knows me" [Jeremiah 9:24]. Our fundamental knowledge is a knowledge of God, and this is the central goal of all true theological education and ministry preparation. The preacher must be one who sets his sight on a vibrant personal knowledge of God. Otherwise, theological knowledge becomes a ground for personal pride and intellectual pretentiousness.
As J. I. Packer reminds us, "To be preoccupied with getting theological knowledge as an end in itself, to approach Bible study with no higher a motive than a desire to know all the answers, is the direct route to a state of self-satisfied self-deception. We need to guard our hearts against such an attitude, and pray to be kept from it."
Furthermore, Packer correctly reminds us that we are indeed to be urgently concerned for theological orthodoxy and biblical truth, but "not as ends in themselves, but as a means to the further ends of life and godliness." In other words: "Our aim in studying the Godhead must be to know God himself better. Our concern must be to enlarge our acquaintance, not simply with the doctrine of God's attributes, but with the living God whose attributes they are."
This approach to the minister's life of study brings a godly sense of balance. Our central aim is to know God, and the aim of our ministry is to lead our people to know God also. The other aspects of knowledge are useful only in so far as they lead us into a deeper knowledge of God. A healthy theological education inculcates a deeper love for God, even as the minister grows in the knowledge of God's Word and the comprehensiveness of God's truth.
Studying God's Word
Paul's instruction to Timothy was very clear. The young minister was to study in order that he would be found "rightly handling the word of truth" [2 Timothy 2:15]. A deep and growing knowledge of God's Word is the indispensable ground of all other true knowledge.
Put simply, the preacher is to be a devoted and skillful student of the Scriptures. This is the most important field of knowledge for the preacher, for his primary task is to preach the Word "in season and out of season," [2 Timothy 4:2] and to teach God's people from God's Word.
Clearly, this strategic call represents a stewardship of truth, of souls, and of calling. Failure in this task is beyond tragedy, and the consequences are eternal. God has given us his Word and has commanded that we preach the Bible with skill, even as Ezra was "a scribe skilled in the Law of Moses" [Ezra 7:6].
This requires skill in the tasks of biblical interpretation, hermeneutics, exegesis, biblical languages, and the history of interpretation. This is a demanding calling, but nothing less than the most serious life of study will do. Those who can gain access to Bible colleges and theological seminaries that are biblically and theologically orthodox and faithful should take full advantage of these opportunities--knowing that this is a matter of faithfulness to our calling. At the same time, we must remember that many faithful preachers never had access to formal theological education. Yet, if they were faithful, they were no less studious or committed to a life of godly learning.
The centrality of the Bible is essential. As Charles Spurgeon encouraged his students: "Study the Bible, dear brethren, through and through, with all the helps that you can possibly obtain: remember that the appliances now within the reach of ordinary Christians are much more extensive than they were in our fathers' days, and therefore you must be greater biblical scholars if you would keep in front of your hearers. Intermeddle with all knowledge, but above all things meditate day and night in the law of the Lord."
If this was true in Spurgeon's time, it is even more so in ours. The preacher must be more knowledgeable and more skilled than his congregation. Spurgeon's other emphasis--that the knowledge of the Bible exceeds all other forms of knowledge in importance--also takes on a new urgency in our times. While there are many fields of knowledge and intellectual stimulation to which we could give our attention, we must keep ourselves first and foremost students of the Bible.
Learning God's Truth
A true theological education stands on the unquestioned authority and truthfulness of the Bible and then moves to display that truth in all its comprehensiveness and to apply that truth to every dimension of life. Thus, the fields of systematic theology, historical theology, ethics, church history, and other theological disciplines all play their part in the preparation of the preacher.
A resistance to systematic theology reflects a lack of discipline or a lack of confidence in the consistency of God's Word. We are to set out the great doctrines of the faith as revealed in the Bible--and do so in a way that helps to bring all of God's truth into a comprehensive focus. The preacher must be ready to answer the great questions of his age from the authoritative treasury of God's truth, and to teach, defend, and proclaim the faith "once for all delivered to the saints" [Jude 3].
Serving God's People
Ultimately, the preacher's calling is a call to serve the people of God. That's why a consideration of the call should include a careful analysis of the man's ability to preach, to teach, and to love the church for whom Christ died.
Once that is established, the preacher is set on a lifetime of studying in order to improve his preaching, to teach with even greater effectiveness, and to serve with even greater faithfulness.
This is no easy task. That's surely why Paul used the metaphors of the soldier, the athlete, and the farmer as he described this calling to Timothy [2 Timothy 2:3-7]. We are called to the obedience of the soldier, the discipline of the athlete, and the patient endurance of the farmer.

We should note carefully that Paul describes the ministry this way just before commanding Timothy to study in order to show himself faithful. May we, like Timothy, do our best to present ourselves to God as workers who have no need to be ashamed.

Hey bloggers.... Ty Lingy id home and doing great....Judah is as cute as a button and getting stronger....Pastor C's dad knows the Lord and will be with Him soon - praise God for "Our Blessed Hope"....Pastor Nate's home finally sold after ten months!!!  There is blessing even through brokeness.