July 2008 Entries

With the passing of Bill Raws, former director of America's Keswick, forced me to think again at the unique ministry Keswick has and the roots of the ministry. It has been my privilege to speak there these past 12 years as i will this coming August 10-15. But what many might not know Keswick is modeled after the great English Bible Conference KESWICK and the model of teaching and preaching that was conducted at the conference.  The "Keswick Conference" followed a very strict pattern of preaching and a specific order of messages to the week long conference. There were six primary messages that were preached expositionally from the Bible. the topics were:

Day One - SIN - How has sin separated us from God and what are the ravages of sin on our lives?

Day Two - SALVATION - The remedy of sin was salvation found in the person and work of the Lord Jesus Christ and placing our trust for redemption in Grace alone by faith alone in Christ alone.

Day Three - SANCTIFICATION - through Christ we have the potential to be changed by the power of the indwelled Holy Spirit and we now can live a life set apart from sin.

DAy Four - SURRENDER - Geniune sanctification is impossible without complete surrender to the Lordship of Jesus Christ and the authority of the Word in our lives.

Day Five - SACRIFICE - A life surrender means that there will be sacrifices of personal rights and resources for kingdome purposes.

Day Six - SERVICE - a fully surrendered and sacrificing life is one who is in service for Christ in the church and through missions in the world.

I think that there should be one additional day....committed to the idea of SPLENDOR....for the life which practices and ordered there life with the Keswick message of the "Victorious Christian Life" was a life experiencing the splendor and delight of doing the will of God and experiencing the blessing of God.

July 20th will go down in evangelical history as the day the church and most importantly Christian who are affected by addiction lost a true friend. Rev. Bill Raws, "Pastor Bill" to most, the Director Emertis of America's Keswick went home to be with the Lord. I have known Bill some 30 years, first encountering him as a young person. I went on many retreats to Keswick and Bill would be there greeting guests and interacting with us. In my early 20's I took college and career groups there and remember first being aware of the Colony of Mercy. In my mid 20's our pastor's son married one of the RAws daughters and connected with Bill again. Since then I have been speaking at Keswick for the last twelve years and involved much more with the Colony and discipling men in their program. 

Bill was the grandson of the founder of Keswick. In Bill was literally 120 yrs of history in the evangelical movement -- having watch Keswick begin and then having 100's of speakers and Christian statemen come through over the years. His contact with such institutions like Wheaton College, Dallas Seminary, PBU, African Inland Mission, Wycliffe Bible Translators and Friends of Israel put Bill in a unique place to watch history unfold.

Yet Bill's mission in life was to provide a place where those gripped by the wages of sin could come, find Christ and be delivered by the power of the Holy Spirit and the truths of the scriptures. If was always fun to sit with Bill and ask him questions about Evangelical Christianity and him say.... "I was there, I knew him, or here is the story behind that event..."  What a treasure.

Keswick is in the fine hands of my friend Bill Welte -- another Bill! Yet as was said at his memorial service -- there was only one BILL Raws and when God made him -- he threw away the mold.

The last two days I played 31 holes of golf in approximately 18 hours....plus it was 100 degrees outside.  Kris and I went down to Bethany Beach, DE to visit former church members. My friend Dick works at a golf course and could get us on a Jack Nicholas designed course....some holes 600 yards!  CRAZY!  But a beautiful course; tough as all get out;  the hardest course I have ever played. Ashamedly I tell you I shot a 120!  But the course had 169 bunkers; 15 out of 16 holes had water between you and the hole; it had "signature" tees that you needed the Course Pro to sign off that you could hit from!  It was so frustrating -- yet it was completely enjoyable.  I threw my club once....I was set up to chip onto the green and go for my first par....instead I chucked the ball into one of the 169 bunks and took a 6!!  That's when the sand wedge went for a flight!  I felt better and finished the course. When I got home and told Kris, she said, "I could never enjoy a game that makes me that frustrated!"  I told her that men love it -- it's a challenge to conquer....like she was!!!  I'm lucky she didn't have a club in her hand....oh well, I play again Friday!!  that would make 49 holes in five days - a new record!

I have not had too much to say about my beloved Yankees the first half of the season. To be honest they were playing really bad!  But, they also stayed within striking distance.  As they approached the All-Star break you could get a sense that they were getting geared up. Pitchers were catching their rhythm. Players were hitting.  As of today they are only 3 and 1/2 games out of first place.  Also, this year, nearly every division race is close and the National league west has all of its teams UNDER 500!!!  There is great equality in the league -- and that makes it do-able for the Yanks to take the division and bring the play-offs back to Baseball's cathedral one last time!  Wouldn't that be crazy -- last year in the stadium and the World Series victory......I LIKE DREAMING!

Even though I can't stand Obama -- I am not that jazzed about McCain. Don't get me wrong - war hero - paid his dues - certainly he has been an unpredictable wild card in the RNC these years. But his lack of rock solid conservatism really bothers me!  Nevertheless, we need to make sure he gets elected and not the other choice. So to help the cause let me give you my arm chair advise John....

1) "It's the economy stupid!" - Please racket it down John -- Iraq is a problem but when I go to the pump and pay $60 to fill up, the only thing I want to do with Iraq is to tap into the oil supply!  The economy is the major concern in people's minds. You have got to present an aggressive, specific and practical plan on how to grow the economy and throw off the high costs of everything from food, gas, building supplies, etc....

2) Drill here and Drill Now - Nice slogan and it is excellent rhetoric.  The rise of oil and gas and all petro costs is affecting everything. You have got to make a promise to reduce oil prices by 20% in your first year even if it means lifting the taxes on it.  Ability to GO everywhere is effecting every industry in America -- also now we can see that oil dependency is a NATIONAL SECURITY issue.  If we are beholding to anyone because of oil -- we are threatened!

3) Keep the Bush Tax Cuts - No matter what the competition says - Americans would be really hurting if we did not have the Bush Cuts and the rebate check!  Make that point a reality and people will buy it -- also clearly point out how much more tax we will pay if the Big O gets in!

4) Forget about trying to "WIN" the war in Iraq - John you have a problem that you must overcome. When a Navy war hero talks about winning a war, people think that you basically want to hunt down each person who had anything to do with your Vietnam imprisonment and seek revenge. You have to clearly define what "winning" is to you -- spell it out -- not timetables -- but a genuine, fair and reasonable conclusion to the war.  Keeping peace is good -- but not forever.  The American people connect economic struggles with the war involvement -- you must separate the two!

5) Remember the BASE - The base of the RNC is the conservative, Christian Right....sorry John the facts are the facts. You have avoided the fact to a fault.  I know you don't like to seem beholding to anyone -- that is so non-military hero -- but the fact is if you keep us out in the cold -- you will be leaving 4.4 million voters to consider staying home in November. I should know. My wife has said that she cannot, in a clear conscience, vote for you unless you start "kissing up to the conservative evangelical vote." John, do yourself a favor -- get on the "Straight Talk express" and head straight for Colorado Springs and make nice with James Dobson....then Franklin Graham....then Newt Gingrich...and another thoroughly conservative. Shallow your pride -- you need us and we will not (like your mother suggested) "hold our nose and vote!"

6) Pick Mitt as your running mate - The fact is John Mitt could easily beat Obama, where you will have a hard time. He is good looking - you are old and weather beaten. He has real experience in governing, managing and leading an organization - not just putting forth useless legislation that no one understands or cares about. He is appreciated by the moral majority. He is smart, articulate and at times can be cutting with his facts and wit -- where you feel very uncomfortable doing that.  Mitt is your ticket to the White House and again John only your pride will get in the way.  The fact is he might show you up....but the fact is he will give you what you want: the title of PREZ!

I guess it is no big surprise that I am NO fan of Barack Obama.  I think he and his wife are a dangerous pair -- worse than Bill and Hill ever were! What concerns me is that with his very charismatic personality, his satire power persona and the country's outright hatred for Bush and any one who looks like him policy-wise -- Mccain's work is taunting!  However I have a strategy that I think might work. A Six Step plan to defeat Obama....

1. Reveal the dangers of his inexperience. McCain should have his staffers do some research and document EXACT every piece of legislation and any policy Obama actually was involved with. It is little to none. When November rolls around people will want to know substance -- right now they like the sizzle but a hallow suit never sells on election day.  This guy has done NOTHING....but McCain will have to educatio America on how inexperineced he is.

2. Force him to take stands on real issues.  We are already seeing him flip flop on issues like Iraq.  He must do that because he can not win with a liberal radical platform.  he was able to make it work in the dems primaries but not country wide! Confront him on abortion, fuel, Iraq, financial plans, gay issues....he will not go far left -- that will infuriate the liberal element and show him to be the contradicting, politico that he is.

3. Make race the issue. Keep pointing out that he and his handlers are the only one talking about race. This is not about a black man becoming president. I wish it would have happened long ago and I have a list of very capable and qualified afro-americans who would do a fantastic job as President. But Obama keeps bringing up the race issue to make it seem that McCain or anyone against him is racist. I think Obama is the racist! Or at least he is trying to make race the reason why people should vote for him. Any use of the race issue to vite for or against is unacceptable. I would turn the light on his leveraging of it!

4. Question his spiritual discernment. The whole Jeremiah Wright situation is black eye on Obama. He says that Wright spiritually influenced him. 20 years coming under his teaching, mentoring, influence -- will affect a man's discernment. If he attended Racist Wright's church for 20 years and "did not know him to be a racist" -- what kind of judgment and discernment is that? That alone disqualifies him to be able to discern what is best for the country or even be able to size up other leaders who he might have dealings with!

5. Juxaposition MICHELLE to be another Hillary. The reason why the country voted for Obama is that they could not take another Hillary term in the White House. What happens when people discover Michelle is far worst then hillary ever could be? We need full expose on Mrs. O -- who is she - what has she done with her life - what is her views - what has she supported -- what things has she said over the years....  We have yet fully revealed all that is there and once America knows what Mrs. O is all about they will be pining for Hill!

6. Highlight the fact that he is not the agent for "CHANGE" -- but that he is the same old political animal that he speaks against. Hypocricy reigns in this guys life. He is a slicker politician then His Slickness - Bill Clinton.  The way he walks, his stumbling speech, his smile, his sarcasm....all paints him as a politico smoothie! he is not bringing any change to the political landscape -- he is bringing a radical left agenda that says everything is wrong and everything must change. I would say a lot must change but lets do it honestly and with a truly fresh approach. His hypocricy and lack of integrity tips his hand of the klind of old time politics that he despises!

I had the honor to share a few words at Elaina Crema's birthday party on Saturday night.  This was a glorious surprise party thrown by her husband Bob, who brought together 60 or so of their closest friends and family. I wanted to do something special for Elaina so I went searching in the scriptures for a story or character that would honor her, but also be a testimony of what the Lord can do in a life. I could not think of anything more fitting a story then in Acts 16 and the woman named Lydia. Look what it says....

Acts 16:14-15 A woman named Lydia, from the city of Thyatira, a seller of purple fabrics, a worshiper of God, was listening; and the Lord opened her heart to respond to the things spoken by Paul. And when she and her household had been baptized, she urged us, saying, "If you have judged me to be faithful to the Lord, come into my house and stay." And she prevailed upon us.

Lydia was a "seller of purple."  This was common trade, but very expensive. The process of turning cloth into purple was hard work and costly. But it was also very profitable. Lydia was a hardworking, diligent and successful woman. There was nothing she couldn't do -- she was that type of professional, together woman.  Elaina is like Lydia....Elaina was educated as a nurse; gave up a career for a higher calling mother; she has been are her husband's right side for 25 plus years helping him become successful; she is shrewd in a business sense and commands a clip board when building or redecorating homes like a finely tuned general contractor. Not to mention she can swing a golf club, cook gourmet meals; gut a deer and organize a church fellowship like nobodies business!  She is the true renaissence woman!!  Just like Lydia was successful and hard working and known in her world -- so was Elaina is the same!

But is also says that she was "a worshipper of God." At this point in her life, Lydia did not know Jesus as Savior, but she had a respect and fear for God. She had concern for God and wanted to know who He was. This was Elaina Crema when I met her 13 years ago. She was searching and looking. She loved God, although did not know him personally. But the respect she had for the Almighty, put her on a journey to discover Him. Alot of that respect came from her upbringing and the religious instruction she received since a child. It prepared the way for the future encounter with the Savior. Like Lydia -- Elaina respected God.

Then it says that she was concerned with her family. Look at v. 15 - she was so concerned that her family would know the truths of the scriptures -- she demanded that Paul would come back to her home and share the gospel. That is Elaina as well! Like a Momma Bear -- never get between her and her cubs!! She has been called "Momma Dukes" and has no problem showing her hot Italian temper especially if you try to mess with her man or her girls! She loves her family. That is how I met her.... 13 yrs ago her youngest daughter needed a pre-school and Elaina discovered that our church had just opened a school. She enrolled her and then attended a service -- "to check us out!" I just happened to be preaching that day. After the service she found me and the first words out of her mouth.... "I need you to meet my husband!" I am not sure that she wanted me to share Christ with Bob or wanted to see if Bob's questions and unrelented pursuit in trying to disprove Christianity would break me. But all of that was because she knew her family needed something and that possibly what I was preaching could make her family more complete!

Finally it says "she was listening" -- specifically she was listening to Paul share the gospel. When she heard the good news of salvation in Christ -- the deal was done!! Lydia believed and she became devoted to Christ.  All because she was listening! The same happened to Elaina - she was listening.  She heard the gospel and gave her life to Christ. Then came Bob ...then her daughters...then her sister in law and others.  It says about Lydia - "her entire household came to faith." That just simply means "all those who she influenced were open to salvation!"

Lydia came to Christ and affected all those in her circle of relationships. By the looks of her relationships at her party the other night - God is still using Elaina to touch others lives. It was my joy to share these thoughts with that party. Bob her husband is my best friend in the world now (thanks Elaina) -- he insists on a gospel testimony being given at functions like these. Now today, Bob and Lydia desires all who they love come to faith in Christ!!  What a story -- a modern day Lydia story! The best phrase in the story... "she prevailed upon him!"  That too is Elaina Crema -- she has been prevailing on me for 13 years -- we love you!

My friend Ray Pritchard wrote this recently. In light of my birthday being yesterday, it is a great reminder that a life of faith is the only way to go!  Thanks Ray...enjoy reader!

The Incredible Journey
Hebrews 11:8-10

I received an email from someone who is struggling with some decisions that have not worked out the way they expected. The details don't matter except to say that the person took what seemed to be a step of faith and the result has been a great big mess.

"What did I do wrong?"

That's a natural question to ask when life rewards your courage with nothing but trouble. The truth is, it's entirely possible that this person did nothing wrong. Or maybe they did, but their current troubles are not proof that they were wrong in the first place.

That's a hard truth to accept, especially when you're the one in the middle of the mess, after you've done what you thought was the will of God.

There are a lot of things that might be said at this point, but perhaps this one needs to be mentioned first.

Join the club.

What club is that? The International Fellowship of Faith-Walkers Who Feel Like Failures. The bad new is, we're all a member of that club at one time or another. The good news is the membership includes every major Bible hero. Peter is a charter member. And so is David. And Gideon. And Noah. And Sarah. And Job. And Jacob.

The list goes on and on. Hebrews 11 offers us a long list of men and women who obeyed God even when things didn't always work out they way they expected. The names written there are like a biblical hall of fame: Abel . . . Enoch . . . Noah . . . Abraham . . . Sarah . . . Jacob . . . Joseph . . . Moses . . . Joshua . . . David. Different people, different stories, widely separated in time and space. Stories that span thousands of years. Stories that encompass murder, natural catastrophe, family treachery, physical weakness, failed dreams, missed opportunities, sibling rivalry, and military conquest. The men and women whose stories are told in this particular chapter differ in every way but one. What they did, they did by faith.

All of them had moments when they must have wondered, "What did I do wrong?" Yet God considered each of them worthy of mention in this great chapter. Our focus in this message is on the man we often call "Father Abraham." In the Bible he stands as the preeminent example of a man who lived by faith.  Hebrews 11:8-10 tells how he obeyed God’s call at great personal sacrifice. It tells us what he did; more importantly, it tells us why he did it. And it clearly shows us that obeying God doesn't always work out the way we think it will.

Let’s begin with some brief facts about Abraham. When we meet him in the Bible, he is living 4,000 years ago in a far-off place called Ur of the Chaldees--on the banks of the Euphrates River, not far from the mouth of the Persian Gulf. No doubt he and his wife Sarah worshiped the moon-god Sin. He is a prosperous, middle-aged man, successful by any human standard. Life has been good to Abraham and Sarah. Certainly they have no reason to complain.

It is at precisely this moment that God speaks to him--clearly, definitely, unmistakably. What God says will change his life--and ultimately alter the course of world history.

So what does it mean to live by faith in an uncertain world?

Truth #1: Living by faith means accepting God’s call without knowing where it will lead.

"By faith Abraham obeyed when he was called to go out to a place that he was to receive as an inheritance. And he went out, not knowing where he was going" (Hebrews 11:8). There is only one way to describe Ur of the Chaldees. It was a world-class city. Archaeologists tell us that in Abraham’s day perhaps 250,000 people lived there. It was a center of mathematics, astronomy, commerce and philosophy. People from outlying areas moved to Ur because they wanted to be part of that great city.

No doubt many of Abraham’s friends thought he was crazy. Why would anyone want to leave Ur? Obeying God’s call meant giving up his friends, his career, his traditions, his home, his position, his influence, and his country. More than that, it meant risking his health and his future on a vague promise from an unseen God to lead him to “a land that I will show you" (Genesis 12:1).

When Abraham left Ur, he burned his bridges behind him. For him there could be no turning back. Once he left the walls of Ur, he was on his own, following God’s call into the unknown.

You say, “He gave all that up?”
“Yes.”
“That’s kind of strange, isn’t it?”
“Is it?”

Please don’t miss the point. When God calls, there are no guarantees about tomorrow. Abraham truly didn’t know where he was going, didn’t know how he would get there, didn’t know how long it would take, and didn’t even know for sure how he would know he was there when he got there. All he knew was that God had called him. Period. Everything else was up in the air.

You want a long life? So do I.
You want to rise in your profession? So do I.
You want lots of friends? So do I.
You want to grow old and die with your family around you? So do I.

There’s nothing wrong with those desires. All of us feel that way. But living by faith means no guarantees and no certainty about the future.

I was once approached by a Christian ministry asking if I would consider a particular position in their organization. I met the people, liked them very much, and was very impressed by what they were doing. As I investigated further, I found that they take very good care of the people who work for them. I liked everything I learned about the people and their ministry. But when the moment came, I decided to say no. This isn't how I put it to them, but it's how I said it to myself.

I couldn't hear the bells ringing.

You either understand that or you don't. If you don't, there isn't much I can say that will be helpful. And if you do, there isn't any explanation that is needed. But I will add this much. All of us come to moments in life when we say yes or no to certain opportunities simply because it's the right thing to do at the time. Sometimes we take a job because we need to pay bills and take care of our family. It's hard to get more basic than that. And young people take jobs in various places as they are building their careers. I just read an article that suggests that the average worker in the US may have as many as 10 jobs by the time he is 40 and will make 3-5 career changes by the time he retires. People make moves and change jobs and relocate and start over again for all sorts of reasons. Sometimes you are forced to make decisions for reasons beyond your control. In these tough economic times, people scramble to take whatever jobs they can find. But there are moments in life when you have a choice, a decision, and you can stay where you are or you can do something different. I don't know of any failsafe way to know in advance how things will work out.

Abraham heard the bells ringing (not literally--that's a symbol for a sense of God's calling), and so he left Ur of the Chaldees. If you truly want to do God’s will, sometimes you will find yourself exactly where Abraham was--setting out on a new journey that doesn’t seem to make sense from the world’s point of view. How would he ever explain his decision to leave the comfort of Ur for the uncertainty of a long trek across the desert? The only certainty he had was that God had called him and  he must obey. The rest was shrouded in mystery. That fact makes his obedience all the more impressive. The NIV version of Hebrews 11:8 says he “obeyed and went." There was no greater miracle in his life than that. Everything else that happened flowed from this basic decision. God called; he obeyed. That truth was the secret of his life. He stepped out in faith even though there were no guarantees about his own personal future.

Let me put it another way. Living by faith means stepping out for God and leaving the results to him. It’s no guarantee of long life and good success. You may have those blessings. But you may not.

The life of faith means, “I am going to be the man or woman God wants me to be, no matter where it leads. I don’t know the future, but I’m trusting him to work out the details. In the meantime, I step out by faith and follow where he leads me.”

That brings us to the second great truth about living by faith.

Truth #2: Living by faith means waiting on God to keep his promises.

"By faith he went to live in the land of promise, as in a foreign land, living in tents with Isaac and Jacob, heirs with him of the same promise." (Hebrews 11:9). There is within all of us a natural desire to settle down. The older I get, the less I like to move. I value coming home to the same place and the same faces every day. Several years ago we moved from Oak Park, Illinois to Tupelo, Mississippi. As we were packing, our home was filled with boxes waiting to be loaded on the moving truck. It was unsettling to look at bare walls that only a few days before were covered with familiar pictures. Suddenly that home looked less like a home and more like a building where we used to live in some distant past. Now run the clock forward 18 months. When we came back to Oak Park for a visit, we drove past our old home on Wesley Avenue. I had a strange sensation, as if I remembered living there in the distant past. It looked the same but it didn't feel like home to me at all.

There is a certain rootlessness about our life at this point that is instructive. Now that our boys are in their twenties, they are going in all directions at once. Four years ago our oldest son left to teach English in China. He came back and another son went to China. That son came back and another son left for China. Josh met Leah, they got married and went to China for a year. Mark met Vanessa when they served on the same team in China. After they came back to the States, they got married. When Josh and Leah returned to the States two weeks ago, it was the first time in four years that we haven't had a son in China. Two years ago our family was together for a total of three days. Last year I think we were all together for about five days. This year we will all be together for three or four days. That's the way life is--and will be for the foreseeable future. It has hit me that home is a matter of the heart, a moving target, not so much a place as being with the people you love the most. Wherever they are–in the U.S. or in China or anywhere else–is home in the truest sense.

The rootlessness I spoke about can leave you with a vague sense of uneasiness, of trying to figure out where you belong. Multiply that feeling by a factor of 100 and spread it out over fifty years and you approximate Abraham’s situation as he came to the Promised Land. Our text tells us that he lived in tents. I know lots of people who like to camp on vacation, but I don’t know anyone who voluntarily lives in a tent as a permanent residence. Tents speak of impermanence, of the possibility of moving on at any moment, of the fact that you live on land you do not personally own.

That’s Abraham. He didn’t own anything in the Promised Land. God had promised to give him the land; yet he lived like a stranger in a foreign country. If you don’t own the land, you can’t build a permanent dwelling there.

In many ways this is even more remarkable than leaving Ur in the first place. As long as he was traveling across the desert, he could dream about the future. But when he got to Canaan, all illusions disappeared. Think of what he didn’t find:

•    No “Welcome, Abraham” sign.
•    No discount coupons from the merchants.
•    No housewarming party.
•    No visit from the Welcome Wagon.
•    No mayor with the key to the city.
•    No band playing “Happy Days Are Here Again.”
•    No ticker-tape parade.

Nobody expected him. Nobody cared that he had come. Nobody gave him anything.

God had promised him the land . . . but he had to scratch out an existence in tents. Hundreds of years would pass before the promise was completely fulfilled. Abraham never saw it happen. Neither did Isaac or Jacob.

Was Abraham in the will of God? Yes. Was he right to leave Ur? Yes. Was he doing what God wanted him to do? Yes. Why, then, was he living in tents? Because God’s timetable is not the same as ours. He’s not in a big hurry like we are. God works across the generations to accomplish his purposes; we’re worried about which dress or shirt to buy for the big party this weekend. There is a big difference in those two perspectives.

A third principle at work in Abraham’s life is the ultimate key to the life of faith.

Truth #3: Living by faith means never taking your eyes off heaven.

"For he was looking forward to the city that has foundations, whose designer and builder is God."
(Hebrews 11:10). As I have mediated on this verse, it hit me that there is a certain amount of disappointment built into the life of faith. Sometimes we think, "If I follow God's call, everything will work out and I'll be happy all the time." As Dr. Phil likes to say, let me know how that works out for you. By saying that Abraham was "looking forward" to a city, it really means that he never found what he was looking for in this life. This world comes with a huge helping of frustration built into the core of everything. Just recently I read about a certain baseball manager who led his team to a World Series championship. It was a happy moment, the apex of his career, the proof that he had finally arrived, that he was a success and the best in the world at that moment. The next morning as he went outside to pick up the paper, he thought to himself, "Is that all there is?" The answer is yes, that's all there is. It's the same way with everything we do and everything we accomplish. One of Robert Frost's most famous poems captures this truth in powerful images:

Nature's first green is gold,
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf's a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

"Nothing gold can stay." How true that is. We live, we die, we buy a house, we sell a house, someone moves in where we once lived. We take a job, we leave a job, someone else takes the job we used to have. And if we are fortunate enough to have a corner office with an incredible view, we should remember that someone else had it before us and someone else will have it after us. If this moment is golden for you, enjoy it but don't grasp it too tightly because it won't last forever.

That's one part of the life of faith. We never reach full satisfaction in this life. “Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for?” said Robert Browning. And that brings us to the second part of verse 10. Abraham looked for a city with foundations--that is, for a “city,” not a lonely spot in the desert. He wanted to live in a place filled with other people. He also looked for a city with “foundations,” a place with security and permanence that could not be found in a tent. That meant he was looking for a city designed and built by God. Why? Because all earthly cities eventually crumble to dust.

Not long ago I visited the ruins of the ancient city of Jericho. When most people think of Jericho, they think of the city whose walls came tumbling down in the days of Joshua. But that’s only one Jericho. Archaeologists have discovered layers of Jericho, one after another, the city having been built, destroyed, and rebuilt across the centuries. The same is true of Jerusalem. When you visit Old Jerusalem, you aren’t exactly “walking where Jesus walked.” You are actually walking thirty to seventy-five feet above where Jesus walked. According to one source, Jerusalem has been destroyed and rebuilt at least forty-seven times in the last 3,500 years.

That’s the way it is with all earthly cities. Nothing built by man lasts forever. No wonder Abraham was looking for a city built and designed by God. Revelation 21 describes that city as “the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God” (v. 2). In his vision John saw a city of breathtaking beauty, shining with the glory of God, “its radiance like a most rare jewel, like a jasper, clear as crystal” (v. 11). Christians have always looked to the New Jerusalem as the final abode for the people of God, the place where we will spend eternity together in the presence of the Lord. But note this. Heaven is a city. It’s a real place filled with real people. That’s the city Abraham was looking for when he left Ur of the Chaldees.

Abraham was going to heaven, and he knew it. That one fact--and that alone--explains his life. He had his heart set on heaven, and that explains why he could:

•    Leave the beautiful city of Ur.
•    Walk away from his career.
•    Leave his friends far behind.
•    Live in tents until the end of his life.
•    Start all over again in a new land.
•    Die without seeing all that God had promised.

Abraham knew he was going to heaven, and that changed his whole perspective on life. He knew not just that he was going to die, but that after death he was going to enter a city God had designed and made.

Let me add one final thought from this passage. If you had been a consultant watching Abraham's life, you would probably say that he committed career suicide when he left Ur of the Chaldees. It didn't make sense at the time, and frankly, the rest of his life was never a "success" in worldly terms. Hebrews 11:10 says that Abraham was motivated by a vision of something the people around him simply couldn't grasp. He was looking forward to something they couldn't see at all. Following God will sometimes lead you to make decisions that those around you simply will not understand. When that happens, all you can do is to explain things as best you can, and then set off to obey God's call, leaving the results in his hands.

“Died at Twenty-five, Buried at Seventy-five”

Let me ask a personal question: How long do you expect to live? To put it more pointedly, how many more years do you think you have left before someone holds your funeral service? Ten years? Twenty years? Thirty years? Forty years? Fifty years? Sixty years? How much of that time are you sure of? The last question is easy. You’re not sure about any of it. The truth is, you could die tomorrow--or today--from any of a thousand causes. No one knows how long he or she will live or precisely when they will die. There are no guarantees for any of us.

It’s not how long you live that matters, but what you do with the years you are given. Too many people die at age twenty-five but aren’t buried until they are seventy-five. They waste their best years in trivial pursuits, all the while missing out on the excitement of living by faith.

Here is the whole message in one sentence. Following God’s will doesn’t guarantee worldly success. The operative word is “worldly.” God has one view of success; the world has another. Joshua 1:8 reminds us that those who meditate on God’s Word will be “prosperous and successful.” Psalm 1 contrasts the fool who looks to the wicked for advice with the godly who builds his life on the Word of God. The latter will be like “a tree planted by streams of waters” (v. 3a). God rewards such a man in this way: “In all that he does, he prospers” (v. 3b). But let’s not confuse that with the false notion that doing God’s will leads to a trouble-free life. Abraham lived in tents all his life. He died without receiving all that God had promised to him. In many ways you could say that by leaving Ur, he forfeited any chance at worldly greatness. Never again would he know the stability and settled prosperity that he had in Ur. From the day he left until the day he died, Abraham was a sojourner, a tent-dweller, a man living on land he did not own.

If it’s safety you want and a guarantee of earthly success, then you’ll have to look somewhere else. But if you are willing to follow Jesus, I can promise you that you’ll never be disappointed in him and your life will not be boring.

If you ever decide to make God’s will the great priority of your life, you will discover that it is indeed an incredible journey. Like Abraham of old, your search for God’s will will lead you out of your comfort zone into the exciting arena of living by faith. Along the way, you will discover that you can indeed survive without absolute certainty about what tomorrow will bring. You may even learn to enjoy living on the edge between faith and absolute disaster. In any case, knowing God’s will will cease to be an academic exercise, like doing your homework before going to bed at night. Instead, it will become the most exciting adventure you’ve ever known as you set out into the unknown to follow God wherever he leads you.

Yesterday I BEGAN my fiftith year!  That means I turned 49! "Forty-Nine" just does not have the same zip that "Starting my 50th Year" does!  Whatever the case it was a glorious celebration - after three days with our friends the Cremas!  During which we surprised Elaina Crema with a TRULY 50th Birthday party.  Elaina and I have the same b-day -- so really we began a "year long celebration" starting with her surprise party and ending with my huge bash next July the 13th! Well we got her good!!! 

After three days of complete relaxation and semi-debauchery (as debauched as I might get!)....we went to church in the morning and then drove 30 minutes to spend an afternoon around a pool with my childhood friend eric Morrison, his lovely wife Jill and his energetic son Bradley aka "Butch!" We played in the pool, sat around telling stories from the past and catching up on 11 years!  Amazing how time shoots by!! It was a delightful birthday.  Being with friends....laughing our heads off....talking about the wonderful times you have experienced....being with family....and no birthday cake with candles reminding you that you are getting older!

One last thought about my birthday....I am so grateful God has allowed me to celebrate it! Everyday is a gift....every day is to be cherished, enjoyed and lived out to the fullest! Like Lou Gehrig once stated..... "I am the luckiest man in the world." The difference is that I don't believe in LUCK.... I am the most "sovereignly fortunate" man in the world!"

Well this will be the 10th summer that we travel up to friends for a long weekend of relaxing, do-nothing, completely self focused rest. With the exception of one busy summer, the fam and I have visited wonderful friends who open their home and treat us like resort guest for a few days. Lounging around the pool; gourmet dinners; golf at NJ National Country Club; endless DVD movies to watch; an occassional Yankee game; a few rounds of billards and I could keep going. God (and I don't throw that around lightly) gave us these friends -- I believe to "care for the shepherd." They really love to encourage and provide a time of rest and mindless fun. They provide the break from pressures and busyness that you find in the ministry.  I love what I do and love NewSong and all the people!!!  Yet it is very theraputic to walk away for a few days and talk about something other then ministry and the particular issues that I maybe dealing with.  The net result is that when I come back on Monday -- I am excited about getting back to work. Thanks Cremas for being a haven for this shepherd and his family....everyone with a heavily emotionally, relationally and spiritually intense job needs to have a respite from it yearly. You have served our family well.

You probably don't even know what the initials stand for....LCJGT?  Lancaster County Junior Golf Tourney.....it is a parent-run organization that plans and pulls off ten or so golf tournements for young people from as youngt at 8 yrs old to 18. Yesterday my wife and i had the privilege to "marshall" again - which means riding around a golf cart, chasing after mis-struck golf balls and calling on the walkie-talkie if a player gets in a precautious situation like landing a shot next to a tree, inbounds but with a man-made obstruction restricting swing and stantz and we must determine if he plays a provisional; loses distance and stroke; takes a two club length drop or walks off the course because that is the twelfth time in fourteen holes that you have been in that position!!!

All seriously, this is a great organization. Many dedicated parents give a lot of time to make it happen -- some with kids still playing....some with kids long gone from the program but still interested in providing this fantastic opportunity to develop their skills; play some courses that they will play if they compete in HS and learn the pressures of tourement play. It also builds in the kids integity - they cheat - they are DQ!  Respect - how they dress and how they conduct themselves. Mental toughness = there is real pressure and a kid will only learn it having to face a challenge alone - there is NO COACHING by parents....club selection, shot selection and alike are all up to the kids!

Thanks to all  those involved in LCJGT -- real joy to help and be involved!

I hope you looked around church today and recognized that based on a recent Pew Forum research 57% of the people in evangelical churches "believe that there are many ways to heaven!"  MANY WAYS....how is it that one of the key, core, foundational principles of the evangelical movement - that ONLY through faith ALONE in Christ ALONE can anyone be saved.....I will tell you....NO BETTER - I will let you choose!

A) Its the Post Modern day in which we live - where there is a belief that no one is the sole owner of truth; and you really can't know truth; therefore HOW CAN WE say that we know the ONLY WAY to heaven!

B) Its Christian Kindness bleeding through...we just want to be kind and non offensive; they really do believe that Christ is the only way but why make enemies!

C) Its the JOEL OSTEEN factor - the smiling sermonizer of Houston does not beleieve it is helpful to make people feel bad; he has never clearly defined how to get to heaven; he just wants people to live encouraged, filled with hope and abounding with joy!

D) The OPRAH Factor - Pastor O spews her new age mumbo jumbo from her pulp[it every day at 4pm and it clearly teaches that there are many way - recently she held a web-seminar with Ekhart Tolle who espouses a multipath way into eternity.

E) All of the above PLUS a weak, impotent pukpit the last 20 years where pastors thought that they could fill the pew by watering down the gospel and speaking politically correct messages that focused on almost ALL application and very little interpretation and meaning of a text; thus we have raised up a generation of theologically weak believers --- strong on experience and lackimg in discernment.

ANSWER - E....for a fuller explanation go to www.newsongfellowship.com and check out today's sermon in my TOP TEN SERIES - "Why I teach and trust the Bible?"

I know its a bummer having a three day holiday weekend and rain! But the fact is we need rain. Grass is brown and burnt. Water table is down. And its refreshing to feel some coolness in the air (no much but a little after a hot June). Here's some ideas...

1. Clean out the basement. We did this last week and found literally hundrends of old pictures.

2. Clean out your garage. Probably after you do that you will need to have a yard sale between the basement and garage.

3. Clean out the attic. Old suitcases. Old clothes. A run to Goodwill should be in order.

4. Clean out your Bible. What's that? Yeah - probably in the last few days you have not picked it up. Take some time this afternoon. Turn off the TV. Get a cool drink and start reading.....it cleans out the heart and mind at the same time!

I slept like a baby last night! The reason?  We hired our new Pastor of Next Generations - John Lehmberg.  As i have written before - I thought we would never find what we were looking for - a man of God who was devoted to student ministry, had experiennce, was older and even a father!  God lead (and I am not using this lightly) us to find John and for John to find us.  He is 41 yrs old (even though he could pass for a mid-20 someting) - he is married and his wife is a gem (I stated that she was not a kook!) and his kids are normal, respectful and personable children!  He has been in youth ministry for 20 years - four different ministries - all different sizes and denominations.  His last church had 300+ kids BUT he was fed up with the mega church's pursuit of numbers and managing ministry from an executive suite!  He wants to "smell like sheep" -- our kinda guy! All in all we are thrilled and he will arrive in mid August - just in time for the new school year!

One of the things I am very excited about is that NOW we can offer an alternative to families in Lancaster county.  I can not tell you how many times I have heard parents testify that they are sacrificig their spiritual growth and their preference of a church so that there kids could be in good youth groups.  One parent told me, "The church in general is nothing but fluff and as soon as my kid graduate high school we will start looking for a church for us!" How sad? Hos stupid?

PARENTS REMEMBER -- when you are on the airplane and they go over the safety instructions they tell you "in case of cabin decompressure; a mask will drop from the ceiling; PLEASE MAKE SURE YOUR MASK IS SECURELY FASTENED BEFORE CARING FOR YOUR KIDS!!" Why?  Because if the adult, the parent, the leader of the home loses conscientiousness - the child will perish!  Any parent who falls for the evil ones lie that a child's programming needs out weigh the spiritual feeding and nurturing of the parents is putting their entire family in peril. But i also recognize that this is a real concern for parents.

With John coming on board, i believe that we will have one of the most effective and impacting student ministries in the county within a short time.  The foundation has been laid these past few years -- he will be able to lead us to a place where students are reaching and discipling their peers and many will cultivate a life long love for Christ and his church!! But at the same time -- PARENTS will be able to get fed and  nurtured through the rest of NewSong's disciplemaking model.

In addition, PARENTS you will be attending a church that you will be glad to see your ADULT children attending and grow up your grandchildren at -- we will be a genetional church!  As you can see I am excited of the potential that this new addition will bring to our church!  Welcome John, Glenda and kiddos -- and if you are a parent who wants a church that will minister to your life AND your young person....come to NewSong!

Did anyone hear Obama speech on Iraq and what he will do when Prez?  Before I remark on that - test yourself?  What do you know about Obama's position since starting this race concerning Iraq and what he would do if he became prsident?  Simply put....he would bring our troops home immediately! I think it is clear to say that he was dogmatic about the fact that we have no business being there and that we must bring them home "yesterday"!!!  OK I am glad that we agree with that -- that is a clearly stated and well documented fact concern Mr. Obama....

Today, Obama stated that "when I am president I will bring our troops home at a rate of one battalion per month....and they should all be home in "some 16 months" -- he also frankly stated that has always been his position.  And that after his soon too come trip to Iraq he might have a better idea at how soon he could begin bringing them home...

Did anyone miss what just happened?  Mr. Obama has completely changed his position. He was once stated that he was goiing to bring the troops home immediately.  Now he is planning at least to take 16 months....and depending upon his visit -- it could be more!  That is a complete change - complete flip flop - Hillary must be spitting mad -- espcially if she lost out some votes due to her more cautious approach of withdrawing the troops compared to Obamama!

Worst this guy just tried to pull a fast one -- trying to say that this strategy has "always been his position!"  NOT!! He clearly is now showing that he is not a candidate for change -- he is a two faced, double talking, say anything to get elected POLITICIAN!  I hope you can all see it....or are you going to continue to be blinded by his winsome, charismatic coyness.  Remember "charm is deceitful".... and he has what I would call "bold charm."  his type of charm outright lies and everyone is duped!

It is hard to believe that two weeks have passed by and not blog entry! It has been a crazy two weeks. Here is wahat I have been up to....

1. Interviewed a youth pastor possibility

2. Marshalled two golf tourneys

3. Preached 7 times - 3 Sundays - 2 Mondays - 2 Youth Groups

4. TAlked to a number of references for a youth pastor

5. Did annual reviews on all staff members - life was simple with me in my basement and an annual review took place while I shaved!

6. Started the annual review of each of our elders.

7. Continued to work on my screened in porch - ever see the movies - "Funny Farm and Money Pit" - kind of a combo flick!

8. Played a few rounds of golf - by the way on Monday I hit a 381 yard tee shot on the second hardest hole at Reading CC - attested by Don Harpin - I birded the hole - sweet!

9. Got an 8 - 8 - 7 - 5 - 6 in the holes that followed the birdy - I let the birdy go to my head!

10. Interviewed a youth pastor and wife and family (see the next blog entry - entitled "THe Wait is Over!)

11. Started my new summer series - Top Ten from the Last Ten Years!

12. Continued to work on the proch....tomorrow it should be completed!

13. Threw a 16th birthday for my son.

14. Witnessed my son getting his permit and allowed him to drive me...

15. ... bought stock in TUMS!

16. Hired the Youth pastor - helped him find a house - got him started enrolling his children in school -- ALL IN ONE DAY!

17. Realized that I have not written anything in the blog for two weeks.]

18. Signed my new will with the lawyer!

Like I said....its been a crazy two weeks!