Our Methods and God’s Movement – Devotional for Sunday, April 10, 2011

I spent most of the day yesterday at a Kairos State Board meeting in Alexandria. The day was spent in discussions about the new manual we use, software programs that we use to keep up with donors and organizing the Kairos weekends, quality control measures… all our methods to do God’s work. Ministry is always a balance between doing the best job we can based on our shared experience and our willingness to be yielded to God’s Spirit. We clearly have an obligation to do the  best job we can at what God has called us to do; yet we also need constant reminders that no matter how great the method, it’s God who does the work.When ministry becomes tiresome and tedious and doesn’t feel very fruitful, it’s usually time to step back and make sure we’re doing what God has told us to do, in the way He would have us do it. To make sure we are relying more on His spirit and wisdom than on our methods and experience.The Good News is no matter how bad we blow it; he seems to always be there to take up the slack.Praise Him for His movement and His […]

Judging – Devotional for Saturday, April 9, 2011

I did some judging this morning. We judge all the time. We go to MacDonalds instead of Burger King, or the other way around, because we “judge” one to be better than the other, or cheaper or closer. We make judgments concern our television watching and with whom we choose to associate. This morning was a little different. It was a little closer to the situation in which Jesus asked “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.” I went into the Waffle House with my ear phones in my ears. So a bit oblivious to those around me. Somehow I noticed a woman at the counter. She just had a cup of water in front of her. I picked up pieces of the conversation and figured out she was asking for some food and explaining she had no money. The manager gave her some food. She said she need to get to the closest truck stop to get a ride. The manager told her he couldn’t take her but gave her some cash. She then asked for a phone book and the use of the phone and tried to call a cab. When she went to […]

I hate it here – Devotional for Friday, April 8, 2011

By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another. John 13:35 Do you have a loved one who is not only unsaved, but seems about as far from God as you could imagine? Someone who hates the idea of being in church. I hope this story from the last Kairos weekend told by the leader of that weekend will encourage you. Saturday morning, a team member approached me with worry and concern about a resident at his table. The concern was a common one – the resident was not participating and seemed quite angry. This particular team member was a first timer, and I gave him a rather typical answer, “stick with it, we are only half way through and today will be a good day. Keep the faith.” I was curious and wanted to gauge the resident myself, so I approached him during a break and asked, “How are ya…having a good time?” His response was quick and to the point, “I hate it here!” His eyes could have cut through steel. “I don’t want to be here, and I just can’t stand it. This is not for me.” Inside, I was crushed. […]

Happy Kids – Devotional for Thursday, April 7, 2011

“Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness: for they shall be filled.” Matthew 5:6 Have you ever said, regarding your children, grands and great grands, I just want them to be happy? I have. But when I think about it I really want more than that. I guess I don’t want  just “happiness” for them, but Joy.  People can be happy as a result of lots of things: great marriage, good kids, even money or friends. But happiness has a temporary quality to it.  Joy, for me, is deeper and longer lasting. It doesn’t depend on circumstances. It is rooted in relationship, specifically relationship with Jesus. Joy of the Lord is our strength.  But joy doesn’t foreclose happiness. Adrian Rogers once said, “Happiness is something you stumble over on your way to serving Jesus. When you are serving the Lord Jesus Christ, happiness is the by-product of righteousness. People who are trying to be happy are focusing their energy at the wrong target. If you will seek after righteousness, then you will be happy.” I guess we could say that happiness is a diet thing: drinking of the Spirit and feeding on the Word. I heard something recently […]

You’re a Christian? Why are you stressed? Devotional for Wednesday, April 6, 2012

“Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which today is, and tomorrow is cast into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?” Matthew 6:30 As Christians, we should never be stressed. But we are. Consider that  the basis of stress is a concern that we will be lacking something we think we need. As Christians, Jesus is all we need. Our problem is that we upgrade our wants to the level of needs. But for us only one thing is important – Jesus and His righteousness.  When you feel the stress moving in, stop and consider. What is it that you think you need that you fear you won’t have? Identifying the cause of your stress allows you to realize that you’re stressing over something that doesn’t deserve it. For in Him, we have all we need.  He has alway been faithful. He will always be faithful.  Stress? What stress? Don’t stress. Be blessed. Nick

Basketballing for Jesus – Devotional for Tuesday, April 5, 2011

I write this as the finals of the NCAA Basketball tournament is on television. The tournament has become so popular we now know it as “March Madness.” Did you know that basketball began as a Christian outreach?  The inventor of basketball,  James Naismith wanted a more effective way to win men for Christ. In 1891, there weren’t a lot of good indoor games. Naismith set out to invent a new indoor game that students could play during winter. He came up with basketball. Basketball served as an important evangelical tool during the next 50 years.  In 1941, Naismith wrote that “whenever I witness games in a church league, I feel that my vision, almost half a century ago, of the time when the Christian people would recognize the true value of athletics, has become a reality.” The next time you’re watching a basketball game with friends, particularly young ones, why not use the history of the game as an opportunity to turn the conversation to spiritual matters.  We could be doing a lot better with our young who are leaving the church and rejecting the faith of their fathers in alarming numbers. We need to be more creative and energetic in sharing […]

Grace – The Real Story – Devotional for Monday April 4, 2011

Titus 2:11-14 (New King James Version)11 For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men, 12 teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly in the present age, 13 looking for the blessed hope and glorious appearing of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, 14 who gave Himself for us, that He might redeem us from every lawless deed and purify for Himself His own special people, zealous for good works. I took on the subject of abuses of Grace at our Sunday night session tonight and did a really poor job of it. To those who were there, I apologize and ask you to consider what I say here. To those who were not there, and, thankfully,  many more of you missed the session than attended, please consider this. God’s grace is unmerited favor. It’s something we don’t deserve. It comes in two potent forms: Forgiveness of sin and the power to live without sin. We need to proclaim  that in Jesus there is forgiveness of sin and the ability to live as His disciples.   We owe a lost world the truth: that they are living in sin which condemns them, that in faith in […]

Separating God from the Church – Devotional for Sunday, April 3, 2011

There is a tendency to confuse God and the church. For the non-believer, this provides an opportunity to reject God based on the imperfections in His church.  A believer may turn away from God having been hurt by His human church.  God is good. All the time. The church is not always good. The church, albeit the body of Christ, is still made up of human beings – redeemed to be sure, but still sinners. As a preacher from New Orleans puts it, “Sinners gonna sin; you gotta expect that.” How does this play out in our lives? We must put our faith in God. We should testify how God has saved us and is sanctifying us. We often err in putting faith in man or it believing that our goal as Christians is to get the unbeliever into church. Our goal is to lift up Christ and have Him draw men unto Him. This does not diminish the importance of the church and our need, as Christians, to be a part of it. It is in and through the Church that we live out our call to “make disciples.” It is where we love so that all may […]