Philippians - Purpose Keeps Us Going
In this powerful sermon, Pastor Marty Parker from Beach Church delves into Philippians 1, revealing how understanding and embracing our purpose in Christ can profoundly change our lives. By applying God's Word, we draw closer to Him and navigate life's challenges with faith and trust. Join us to discover how your purpose can keep you focused and motivated, even in the toughest times.
When we apply God's Word to our lives, we draw closer to Him and begin to trust Him more. Trusting God helps us understand our purpose, which keeps us going even through difficult times. Knowing your purpose can motivate you, keep you focused, and sustain you through challenges and distractions.
Understanding Purpose: Philippians 1:20-26
In today's passage, the Apostle Paul exemplifies a life driven by purpose. Let's read Philippians 1:20-26:
20 For I fully expect and hope that I will never be ashamed, but that I will continue to be bold for Christ, as I have been in the past. And I trust that my life will bring honor to Christ, whether I live or die. 21 For to me, living means living for Christ, and dying is even better. 22 But if I live, I can do more fruitful work for Christ. So I really don’t know which is better. 23 I’m torn between two desires: I long to go and be with Christ, which would be far better for me. 24 But for your sakes, it is better that I continue to live. 25 Knowing this, I am convinced that I will remain alive so I can continue to help all of you grow and experience the joy of your faith. 26 And when I come to you again, you will have even more reason to take pride in Christ Jesus because of what he is doing through me.
Paul's life purpose was to serve Christ and His people, magnifying Christ through both his life and his death. His mindset was that whether he lived or died, it was for the glory of Christ.
God's Direction in Our Lives
God directs our lives for a purpose, as seen throughout the Bible:
Ruth: Though she may not have recognized it, God guided her steps, leading her to Boaz's field and eventually into a pivotal role in the lineage of Jesus.
The Woman at the Well, Noah, Moses, Joseph: Each experienced God's purposeful direction, often through circumstances that seemed coincidental or challenging.
God is constantly working in our lives, often in ways we may not immediately see. He places us where we are for a reason, and there are no accidents or coincidences with God.
Personal Testimony: Finding Purpose in Pain
I struggled with understanding my purpose during a challenging period in ministry. My life was full of despair and hopelessness, and I wanted God to change my circumstances. However, when I began praying for God to change my heart about my circumstances, I found that He had placed me exactly where I needed to be for a purpose.
For instance, I experienced a heart attack, which wasn't a stroke of bad luck but part of God's plan for me. This taught me that suffering cannot destroy the real purpose of life. Life is not just for happiness and personal fulfillment but for serving and honoring God.
Living Out Our Purpose
As Christians, our calling is to become like Christ, a process that continues throughout our lives until we see Him face to face. Purpose keeps us going, as illustrated in Philippians 1:20-26. Even in the midst of pain, chaos, and life's challenges, we can hold firm to the belief that God is directing us.
Reflection and Prayer
Consider these questions:
Does your purpose keep you going?
Have you questioned where God has placed you?
Are you fearful of where God is guiding you?
Don't let the pain and suffering of this world keep you down. Embrace the purpose God has for your life, which is far better than anything we could ever want or imagine.
Philippians - Things That Have Happened
In this powerful sermon, Pastor Joe Donahue explores the life of the Apostle Paul and how his imprisonment became a tool for spreading the Good News of Jesus. Through Paul's story, Pastor Joe highlights how pain can either make us bitter or better, emphasizing the importance of our attitude in overcoming life's challenges. Join us to learn how to transform your pain into a doorway for personal growth and positive change in others.
If any early follower of Jesus was considered a “superstar” it was the Apostle Paul. He had the origin story of being a former persecutor of Christians. He hunted them down. He chased them out of towns. He was a Pharisee following in the footsteps of those Pharisees who worked with the Roman government and murdered Jesus. But then – he had a life-changing encounter with Jesus.
He met the resurrected Jesus on the Road to Damascus. A few days later he received the Holy Spirit. He became a missionary, traveling from town to town, telling people that hope for their broken lives can be found in Jesus.
Hope for the forgiveness of sins.
Hope for a relationship with the true God.
He planted churches. He raised up leaders. Wherever Paul went, people became followers of Jesus. People surrendered to the Lordship of Jesus and their lives changed. They stopped placing their hope in false idols, in sorcery, in witchcraft, in Caesar and began to live lives of worship to God.
It was a radical change.
And many Roman citizens and the government of Rome did not like it. Paul’s message was that there was only one GOD…but Rome believed there were many gods. So, Paul was arrested. He was placed under house arrest and chained to a wall…for two years.
I have never been arrested. I do not know what that feels like. I love the fact that we have many men and women who are part of Beach Church who know what it is like to sit in a jail cell and experience the GRACE of GOD that has changed their lives.
I do not know what it is like to be confined to a certain amount of space, sleep in a certain spot, have somebody tell me when it is time to wake up, go to sleep, what to wear, and what to eat…
Wait a second – that sounds like Parenting.
And when Paul was arrested – some people were ecstatic…but they thought, “His arrest isn’t enough. We need to make it harder on him…”
So, they devised a plan. Just outside the quarters, Paul was confined; day after day, they preached to anybody who would listen. They told others that Jesus was the Son of God, and nobody could be saved except through Him…
Paul was able to hear them from within his place of confinement…mocking his ministry. So as he wrote this letter to the Philippian church, Paul addressed the fact the fact that other people were trying to make life more difficult for him. Let’s begin reading in Philippians 1:12-18.
Philippians 1:12-19 (NLT2)
12 And I want you to know, my dear brothers and sisters, that everything that has happened to me here has helped to spread the Good News. 13 For everyone here, including the whole palace guard, knows that I am in chains because of Christ. 14 And because of my imprisonment, most of the believers here have gained confidence and boldly speak God’s message without fear. 15 It’s true that some are preaching out of jealousy and rivalry. But others preach about Christ with pure motives. 16 They preach because they love me, for they know I have been appointed to defend the Good News. 17 Those others do not have pure motives as they preach about Christ. They preach with selfish ambition, not sincerely, intending to make my chains more painful to me. 18 But that doesn’t matter. Whether their motives are false or genuine, the message about Christ is being preached either way, so I rejoice. And I will continue to rejoice. 19 For I know that as you pray for me and the Spirit of Jesus Christ helps me, this will lead to my deliverance.
Scholars tell us that this was one of the first times that Paul had been arrested for his faith – if not the very first time. No doubt, some early followers of Jesus were discouraged when they heard that Paul – the “superstar” preacher, had been arrested.
This imprisonment caused pain for Paul and Pain for the early followers of Jesus. May I ask, is there something in your life that has recently caused pain for you?
As much as we would like to think that some people never experience pain…we all do. Painful seasons of life happen to us all.
Some may experience a miscarriage.
Some have recently experienced the death of a family member.
Some have experienced the pain of a diagnosis or disease.
Some people have to deal with childhood trauma.
Other people have to deal with a marriage that seems to be on the brink of disaster.
Some people have to deal with being rejected and not accepted by others.
So how should followers of Jesus manage pain in our lives? What type of Pain Management should we be involved with?
How do we walk through painful seasons in life?
First, we have to understand that even for followers of Jesus…
PAIN WILL MAKE ME BITTER OR BETTER
Pain will make me BITTER or BETTER.
What do I mean by that?
I have met people with the chronic symptoms of bitterness. I love them. God loves them…but they sure make it hard to be around them. They are almost always a victim. They are always blaming other people when something bad happens to them.
The moon is too bright. The sun is not bright enough. They complain about their work, their family, their church. They always seem to speak negatively about other people.
They simply are not pleasant to be around…have you ever met somebody like that?
Look—if you struggle with bitterness, I want you to know that you can change. God can change you, and God can help you become a better person. If you struggle with any hurt, habit or hangup, Celebrate Recovery meets every Friday night at 6 PM in Adventure Beach, and can help you overcome bitterness and negativity.
Paul was arrested for telling other people about Jesus, but the arrest did not make him bitter. In fact, it made him better. His confidence in the Lord grew. It actually grew! He could have complained and said,
“God – why did you let this happen to me? I have been busy telling people about the good news of Jesus and now you let me get arrested.”
“Thanks a lot.”
But instead, his pain made him better.
Philippians 1:12-13 (NLT2)
12 And I want you to know, my dear brothers and sisters, that everything that has happened to me here has helped to spread the Good News. 13 For everyone here, including the whole palace guard, knows that I am in chains because of Christ.
When he said, “helped spread the Good News,” he was making it clear to the early church that this setback, this discouragement, this two-year imprisonment would not cause him to take a step backward in his faith. He said the pain actually helped him carry out his mission to spread the good news of Jesus…Now the whole palace guard had heard the good news about Jesus.
I love it.
He is chained to the wall of the house. And smiling.
He is confined and chained up for two years. And joyful.
He tells every one of the guards…you know why I am here? Jesus. Jesus sent me here to tell you about Jesus. He acknowledged that even though the people outside his window had wrong motives, the gospel was still being preached. When people experience church hurt and see a church leader's selfish motives, they can begin to question whether or not God has been working through this pastor or church leader.
If this person is so bad, how could God have been working in my life? If these things are true, was God ever really working in my life?
If you have recently asked yourself questions like that, I understand. These men outside Paul’s windows had selfish motives to make Paul’s imprisonment worse, so they preached hard and loud. Paul said, as long as Jesus was being preached, that’s all that matters. Let me add this. God can use the teachings of a selfish, self-centered, corrupt pastor to help you grow in your faith.
In Numbers 22:21-39. God spoke through a Donkey to get Balaam’s attention. If God can speak through a donkey, God can speak through anybody. So, it’s understandable if you leave a church when you discover the truth about the church leader; just don’t doubt the work that God has been doing in your life.
Paul’s arrest. His pain made him BETTER.
What about you? Does your PAIN make you better?
If you are not intentional about becoming better when you experience pain, by default, you will become bitter. You have to be determined when you walk through hardship that you will not let this devastating event that has occurred to you make you a bitter person.
Rest assured, your…
ATTITUDE DETERMINES OUTCOME
Now, your ATTITUDE can not take away your diagnosis. Your ATTITUDE can not cure disease, but your attitude when facing pain and discouragement in your life can determine whether or not you become a better person.
Those people outside Paul’s house wanted to make life miserable for Paul. In the streets, they were “mocking” the Good News of Jesus. Up and down the streets, they yelled that people needed to trust in Jesus for the forgiveness of sins. They thought that by doing so, they would make life more difficult for Paul. So, how did Paul say that their motives in preaching the Gospel did not matter in verse 18? We see HOW later in his letter in Chapter 4:8.
Philippians 4:8 (NKJV)
8 Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy--meditate on these things.
Paul’s attitude was determined by focusing on the things that were excellent and worthy of praise. Anyone without Jesus can focus on the negative…but followers of Jesus have hope, and when we walk through pain, we must focus on the things that are just, pure, lovely, and full of virtue. As you focus on these things, it will become clear that…
YOUR PAIN CAN BE A DOORWAY TO LIFE-CHANGE FOR OTHERS
Paul said his pain actually was helping him in telling other people about Jesus. The pain of his arrest gave him an opportunity to demonstrate LOVE and FORGIVENESS to the people guarding him. But Paul’s attitude was simple: He chose to use his PAIN to bring the life-changing good news of Jesus to other people. If he had not been arrested, he may have never shared the good news with the prison guard. God has used the pain I experienced as a child as a doorway to life change for others.
Before I turned thirteen:
My dad sexually abused me. He was an alcoholic with an Irish temper.
Night after night, he would holler, scream, and play loud country music.
My mom finally had enough; she left him, and we moved into a domestic violence shelter in Nashville, TN.
I ran away from there and went back to my dad.
My dad sent me back to the shelter and the shelter had me placed at a Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Hospital for three months.
Then, my mom couldn’t afford me, so I moved in with my nana for my High School years.
And, after I graduated from High School, I surrendered my life to Jesus.
For over 26 years, I have been transparent about my childhood and the pain I experienced, because I understand my pain can be a doorway of life change for other people. It’s uncomfortable, and sometimes, it makes others uncomfortable. But my pain is a doorway to sharing the life-changing good news of Jesus. And so is yours.
I firmly believe in the power and the promise of Romans 8:28
Romans 8:28 (NLT2)
28 And we know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for them.
Everything means everything.
Your cancer diagnosis is a doorway to sharing the life-changing message of Jesus with your medical team. Your Church-Hurt is a doorway to sharing the life-changing message of Jesus with others. Your child’s crazy behavior in school is a doorway to sharing the life-changing message of Jesus with his teachers. Every bit of pain God allows in your life can be redeemed to impact others if you are willing to allow the pain to make you better and amplify the message of Jesus.
So live Romans 8:28 like you really believe it.
Philippians - Unfinished
Pastor Joe Donahue launches our new series on Philippians, exploring Paul's profound transformation and his powerful message to the early church. Pastor Joe emphasizes our dual identity as both slaves and saints in Christ, highlighting the significance of being bought by Jesus' blood and living out our faith joyfully and obediently. Join us in uncovering how Paul's teachings can inspire us to spread the Good News and deepen our relationship with Jesus.
With four girls, we have many toys that I never played with as a child. One Christmas, among the typical toys, an unusual and sometimes offensive creature waited for Sofia to open it.
Furby.
This little guy can be fed, showered, use the bathroom, and lay eggs through an app on our phone. He talks and uses his own language, which is mixed with English. He’s a rather silly toy. One of the unusual things about Furby is that the designers of that particular model designed him so that his personality is shaped by the way he is treated. The designers shaped him to learn and adapt constantly, and his personality was shaped by the attention he received.
When Sofia received Furby, she was six years old, a snuggler, and a lover. She would cup Furby in her hands, nuzzle their nose, pet him lovingly, and treat him sweetly. For the first few days, he cooed and ooh-ed and said things like, “Me like that. Me love you.” Furby’s personality was warm, loving, and caring…until our two-year-old, Violet, got a hold of him.
On Day 3, while Sofia was occupied with something else, Violet carried Furby around the house by his foot, sometimes by his ear, banging him against the wall, the stairs, and her toys. He tumbled down the stairs and was dropped on his head a few times…then she sat him down and walked away. Later, when Sofia picked him up to snuggle with him, the Furby yelled, “No likey!” He made all kinds of odd shrieks because Violet had shaped Furby’s personality, too.
Most toys that came into our house were finished products, but the Furby remains unfinished, even today.
He, like us, is unfinished.
If you are a follower of Jesus, take a moment and reflect upon who you were the day before you surrendered to Jesus as your savior. What did you find pleasure in? What did you want to do with your life? If you had any, what were your goals and objectives? Hopes and aspirations? Desires?
Now, fast forward one day to the moment after you surrendered your life to Jesus. You experienced the life-changing power of the Spirit of the Living God and were made brand new. What did you find pleasure in? Who did you want to become like? What were your hopes and aspirations? Desires?
And now, fast forward to this moment. This worship service. This sermon. Are you any different from the moment you were saved? Have you changed? Perhaps you have become stronger in your faith. More disciplined. More joyful. More seasoned.
Or perhaps your journey from that day to this has been riddled with ups and downs. Two steps forward, one step back. Perhaps you have backslidden several times yet still cling to your hope in Jesus Christ. Or perhaps you are not as joy-filled as you once were. Perhaps you feel empty on the inside…shallow. Not a deep trust and closeness with Jesus, but a hesitant faith.
Today, we will look at Philippians 1:6. You will be encouraged. Regardless of where you are on your journey…Christ is not finished with you.
Let’s read:
Philippians 1:6 (NLT2)
6 And I am certain that God, who began the good work within you, will continue his work until it is finally finished on the day when Christ Jesus returns.
In describing to others the moment we surrendered our lives to Jesus, we may at times use language like:
“I trusted in Christ.”
“I surrendered my life to Christ.”
“I was saved.”
“God saved me.”
But…
GOD BEGAN THE GOOD WORK.
“And I am certain that God, who began the good work within you.”
It is interesting that the Greek word Paul chose for “began” is only used once other time in the New Testament.
Enarchomai: to make a beginning
The use of this verb communicates that it indeed was God who BEGAN salvation in our hearts.
“God made the beginning.”
He is the initiator. We did not initiate our salvation – if we did, it would be considered a “work.”
And, we understand we are not saved by works but by Grace.
By using the verb enarchomai (en-ark-home-eye), Paul reminds the Philippians that God began the work in their hearts. And, the very first time Paul visited Philippi in Acts 16, we see a perfect example of God initiating salvation in someone’s heart.
Acts 16:13-14 (NLT2)
13 On the Sabbath we went a little way outside the city to a riverbank, where we thought people would be meeting for prayer, and we sat down to speak with some women who had gathered there. 14 One of them was Lydia from Thyatira, a merchant of expensive purple cloth, who worshiped God. As she listened to us, the Lord opened her heart, and she accepted what Paul was saying.
The Lord opening the heart of Lydia is the perfect picture of God making a beginning in a person’s heart. Lydia listened to the same message we preach every weekend.
She heard Paul tell her that God loves her.
As humans, we sinned and rebelled against our creator God. We chose sin and rebellion rather than obedience. But God’s love never changed. We sinned, and the punishment for sin was death. Yet, God loved us, so Jesus voluntarily came to the earth to pay our punishment for sin. Then, he rose from the dead, returned to heaven, and will one day return. As Lydia listened to the Good News, the Lord opened her heart, and she accepted Jesus as her Savior.
That is what happened to me. I heard that Jesus paid the price for sin through dying on the cross. While I listened, the Lord opened my heart to trust Christ as my Savior.
It wasn’t a WORK I began.
It wasn’t a journey I began.
It was a supernatural encounter with the Living and Holy God who loved me and gave up his Son for me. Then, Paul uses another word to teach us that:
GOD WILL CONTINUE THE GOOD WORK
Paul used the word Ergon for the word work.
Ergon: that which one undertakes to do, undertaking …
Paul used this word to communicate God is presently working in your life. If you have surrendered your life to Jesus, God will continue to work! It is an ongoing undertaking of God for each of us who have surrendered to Him. We can find great confidence and inner strength when we understand He not only initiated our salvation, but he has been working in our hearts since then as well! From the moment you trusted in Christ – God has been working in your heart.
The seasons of hard you endured.
The brokenness.
The moments you almost walked away from your faith in Jesus.
When you experienced the miscarriage.
The diagnosis.
The betrayal.
The divorce.
God is taking all the pain, heartache, and crud that living in a fallen world brings and is PRESENTLY using it to craft your character so that you become more like Jesus. All of the good. All of the bad. He uses those things to cut away the parts of you that do not reflect Jesus so you continue to LIVE more like Jesus and reflect Jesus to people in need of a Savior.
He is working on the foundation he laid! From the moment you surrendered, God has been working in your heart. Whether you have wandered far from Christ or not – He has been working in your heart.
None of us are finished.
God has not stopped working in our hearts.
But…why?
Have we not been made NEW? Is not the old gone, but the new here? What work is there to do within our hearts if we have already been made right with God? If we have already been perfected through the blood of Christ, what work could He possibly do? After all, Paul wrote:
1 Corinthians 6:11 (NLT2)
11 Some of you were once like that. But you were cleansed; you were made holy; you were made right with God by calling on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.
If we have already been made right with God, why would God continue to work in our hearts? A few paragraphs later, Paul speaks about the ongoing work of the Lord in the hearts of the believers…and this time, he tells them…
Philippians 2:13 (NLT)
For God is working in you, giving you the desire and the power to do what pleases him.
God continues to work in our hearts to give us the desire and the power to do what pleases Him!
This October, our staff and leadership will have an annual planning meeting. Each ministry will come prepared to share its Goals and Objectives for 2025, centered around our Mission to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
I will not dictate their goals; they will develop them because I have learned that when it comes to following Jesus, it is impossible to accomplish goals if you lack desire. Without desire, we will not finish goals that require hard work. And you can trust that:
GOD WILL FINISH THE GOOD WORK
God began the good work in your life and continues to work in your life, giving you the godly desire to do what pleases him. God will finish the good work in your life.
He began it.
He will continue it.
He will finish it.
Paul described what the finished Christian would look like as the Lord continued to work inside them.
Paul said in Acts 20:24:
Acts 20:24 (NLT2)
24 But my life is worth nothing to me unless I use it for finishing the work assigned me by the Lord Jesus—the work of telling others the Good News about the wonderful grace of God.
The unfinished goal for followers of Jesus is to invite others to experience a life-changing relationship with Jesus. Are you inviting others to Jesus? Invite them to church, to lunch with you afterward, to a relationship with Jesus simply by inviting them to experience worship here at Beach Church. Paul’s attitude was so strong that he could write, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, the TRUTH that his life was worth nothing to him unless he used it to finish the work of telling others. Even though God had used Paul in the past to tell countless others about Jesus – unless he was used in the future, it meant nothing to him. He wanted to finish the unfinished work.
Do you?
Do you sense the desire and compelling tug of the Spirit of God to tell others about Jesus and finish the work?
Listen to the words of Paul written about ten years later to Timothy:
2 Timothy 4:7 (NLT2)
7 I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, and I have remained faithful.
Paul wrote to the Philippians from a prison cell and told them to finish...roughly ten years later, he sat in another prison and wrote to Timothy that he had finished the race. Paul finished the work that had been assigned to him. Let’s strive to finish our assignment and lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus by inviting them to worship with us.
Philippians - Slave and Saint
Pastor Joe Donahue launches our new series on Philippians, exploring Paul's profound transformation and his powerful message to the early church. Pastor Joe emphasizes our dual identity as both slaves and saints in Christ, highlighting the significance of being bought by Jesus' blood and living out our faith joyfully and obediently. Join us in uncovering how Paul's teachings can inspire us to spread the Good News and deepen our relationship with Jesus.
I am excited to kick off our sermon series from Philippians! Over the next 18 weeks we are going to be teaching from the letter that Paul wrote to the Philippians. Before he became a follower of Jesus, Paul was a Jewish terrorist. He was one of the leading pharisees that persecuted followers of Jesus – but then – Paul surrendered his life to Jesus, and everything changed.
Instead of being the persecutor, he became the persecuted.
He was chased out of city after city by the Jewish religious leaders.
He was threatened, beaten, stoned, and left for dead.
He often went without food, was often in prison, and was constantly on the move telling people about Jesus and leading others to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
As Paul traveled and preached, people responded to the good news and surrendered their lives to Jesus. Churches began to pop up. Paul would help establish leaders in the churches who would help people grow in their faith and then he would move on to another city. Many of the Letters Paul wrote, were written to churches he had planted. When Paul wrote Philippians, he was under house arrest for preaching the Gospel.
Most of us got a small taste of what it would be like to be under house arrest a few years ago when we had Covid. But in Paul’s case it was a little different. He was chained up – but friends and others could come and go as they pleased. So, Paul spent two years chained up, teaching about Jesus.
Paul began his letter with his traditional greeting – let’s read it:
Philippians 1:1-5 (NLT2)
1 This letter is from Paul and Timothy, slaves of Christ Jesus. I am writing to all of God’s holy people in Philippi who belong to Christ Jesus, including the elders and deacons. 2 May God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ give you grace and peace. 3 Every time I think of you, I give thanks to my God. 4 Whenever I pray, I make my requests for all of you with joy, 5 for you have been my partners in spreading the Good News about Christ from the time you first heard it until now.
Any time I receive an email, text, or message, one of the very first things I do is to see WHO sent it. If it is an anonymous letter or spam, I throw it in the trash can. Now, I have softened a bit on this, but if someone does not think it is important enough to sign their name, I do not think it is important enough for me to read. And, I am guilty of writing anonymous letters in the past. Mostly to girls that I liked in Middle School…and high school…
If you have your hand up, we are also collecting handwriting samples for the future just in case. Paul never wrote an anonymous letter. From the start, he said HE wrote it, and WHO he was sending it to.
From his greeting, we see that…
A FOLLOWER OF JESUS IS A SLAVE AND A SAINT
Your identity always matters. In my younger days of driving, I was known to speed and drive recklessly. One year, I was pulled over five times for speeding, and I even was given a ticket for riding in a friend's trunk. That’s a sermon illustration for another day. Every time I was pulled over, the Officer asked for my Driver’s License first. The identification that I handed to each officer told him exactly what he needed to know.
In verse one, the word Paul used for Servant in the original language is Doulos. (doolos) It means SLAVE. Paul described himself as a SLAVE of Jesus.
He is in chains.
He is locked up for telling people about Jesus.
And he identifies as a SLAVE.
But – he also called the Jesus followers he was writing, saints. In the original language he used the word hagios (hag-ee-os) which means “morally blameless and pure.”
These two words, side by side, sum up how followers of Jesus should describe themselves. We are slaves. We are saints. Think about the weight each of those words has behind them. First,
A SLAVE IS BOUGHT, BELONGS, & BIDDABLE
In Early America – slavery was a horrible evil. Men and women in Africa were living out their lives peacefully, and then, by force, they were taken from their families and sold in the United States. They were bought by a master and often beaten, treated harshly, and thought to have less value than cattle.
If you are a follower of Jesus, you too, have been BOUGHT. A transaction has been made. A price has been paid.
1 Corinthians 6:20 (NLT2)
20 for God bought you with a high price…
It is a clear teaching throughout the New Testament that Jesus BOUGHT you with his blood. There is no higher currency than the BLOOD of Jesus. Nothing is as valuable as the blood of the Son of God. So that means, you BELONG to him! He owns you. You are his property. We belong to Jesus. We have been adopted into his family through the blood of Jesus. We belong to him, and we belong with him.
Since he bought you and you belong to Him, that means you are biddable.
When Paul called himself a slave of Christ, he implied that he did God’s bidding. That he was the hands and feet of Jesus. That Christ lived his life through Paul. And if you are a follower of Jesus, I encourage you to ask yourself what God is bidding you to do for him.
Whether you are the youngest in this room or watching online your responsibility as a follower of Jesus is to DO his bidding. A slave of Jesus never gets to retire. Do what he wants you to do.
Serve in the way He is calling you to serve.
SLAVES do their master’s bidding. You have been BOUGHT, you BELONG so continue to be BIDDABLE. That is what Paul implied when he called himself a slave.
Then look how he addressed the Philippian followers of Jesus in the second part of verse one…
“To all the saints in Christ Jesus who are at Philippi.”
It is a little uncomfortable to think about ourselves from God’s point of view. In most of our prayer time with God, as we describe ourselves, we most likely lean toward our sinfulness.
I am a miserable sinner.
I am the chief of sinners.
Undeserving of grace and forgiveness
While those thoughts are true, I also think we need to remind ourselves of how God sees us. God sees us through the lens of Jesus's sacrifice. Through the sacrifice of Jesus, I am no longer only a sinner. I am a SAINT.
You are too.
A SAINT IS HOLY, HAPPY, & HELPS SPREAD THE GOOD NEWS
I grew up Catholic. I attended Catholic school until fourth grade, and later, I went to Saint Francis of Assisi Catholic Church. The walls of the school and church were covered with images and portraits of Saints. The Saints were always portrayed with glowing halos above their heads. Their hands folded in prayer…. a cross necklace… in my mind…they were HOLY…
Saints were people I could never identify with.
In the Catholic church, a person can only be called a Saint after they have been through a long process called canonization. It happens long after that person dies. They look for at least two miracles that happened through their hands. They read all of their writings to make sure they were theologically sound. Their actions, attitudes, and works are examined closely…then if they pass the process, they are made saints.
But, from God’s perspective, there is only ONE step to become a Saint.
Romans 10:9 (NLT2)
9 If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
A SAINT can be a drug addict who has surrendered her life to Jesus. You might think of them as an ex-addict, but God says she is a saint.
A SAINT can be an alcoholic who has surrendered their life to Jesus. You may call him a drunk, but God says he is a saint.
A SAINT can be a man who has surrendered his life to Jesus but still struggles with temptations to be unfaithful to his spouse. You may call him an adulterer, but God calls him a saint.
The married couple who have each surrendered their lives to Jesus are SAINTS, but they struggle with bickering back and forth. You may say their marriage is crumbling, but God says they are SAINTS.
If you have convinced yourself that you are worthless and add no value to this world, God says you have been chosen and purchased and that you are a masterpiece. If you feel like a zero on a scale of 1 to 10, God says that you are a perfect 10. The sacrifice of Jesus has made you RIGHT with God – YOU have been perfected in his sight. You have been made HOLY. As Holy as Jesus is and was. And since you have been made HOLY you should live HAPPY.
Happy because God loves you.
Happy because God KNOWS you.
Happy because God lives within you.
Happy because have been chosen and adopted by God.
Happy because you are free from condemnation.
Happy because you have direct access to God through the Holy Spirit.
Happy because you have been forgiven for all your sins.
Happy because you are a citizen of Heaven.
Happy because you are born of God, and the Evil one cannot touch you.
Happy because you are the dwelling place of the Most High God
Happy because you can approach God with freedom and confidence anytime day or night.
Happy because you will never be rejected, abandoned, deserted, overlooked, or treated poorly by the one who gave his life for you.
God’s TRUTH about your identity matters more than your negative thoughts about yourself. Because a follower of Jesus is HOLY and HAPPY, they HELP spread the GOOD NEWS of Jesus to others.
Paul said in v. 5.
Philippians 1:5 (NLT2)
5 for you have been my partners in spreading the Good News about Christ from the time you first heard it until now.
Sharing the GOOD NEWS of JESUS is all of us working together in unity. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
When you invite others to church – you help lead people to Jesus.
When you serve on the tech team, you help lead people to Jesus.
When you help in the Junior High ministry, you help lead people to Jesus.
When you serve on the First Impressions team, you help lead people to Jesus.
When you serve in the Kids ministry, you help lead people to Jesus.
And if you are interested in serving to join us in our mission, grab one of those connect cards, fill it out and drop it in the offering box on your way out. We believe that people who have experienced the overwhelming love of God want to show others the same love they themselves have experienced – and we often do that by helping and serving.
A few years ago, I served as Lead Pastor at a church that averaged about 2,500 on the weekend, and I volunteered to serve in the Junior High Ministry on Thursday night. I was not up-front preaching…I sat quietly in the back of the room, and when the students went to small groups, I grabbed a broom, a dustpan, and a trash can and went to work sweeping up candy wrappers, skittles, crushed candy bars. Then, I filled a mop bucket and went to work cleaning up all the cans of Coke that had spilled onto the floor.
I was finishing up when a 7th-grade boy came over and said, “Are you the Janitor?”
I said, “What makes you think I’m the janitor?” He said, “Because you are mopping the floor. Aren’t you the Pastor? Why are you mopping? That’s what the janitor does.”
I told him, “I am a Pastor…but I shouldn’t be if I am not willing to mop floors and serve others. I don’t ever want to be guilty of asking other people to step in and serve but be unwilling to myself.”
I am a SLAVE and a SAINT and there is nothing else I would rather be!
When you experience difficult days and seasons, know that you can overcome any difficulty that comes your way because you belong to Jesus. You do not face life alone because you have been bought by the blood of Jesus, and you belong to Him.And if you are facing life alone without Jesus, you don’t have to. Jesus can be your Lord and Savior if you surrender your life to Jesus and commit to following Him.
Beach Life - Anchor Points
Explore the mission and guiding values of Beach Church, drawing from Jesus' teachings. By examining Matthew 7:24-27, he highlights the importance of building a solid foundation on God's Word to withstand life's storms. Discover how daily reflection on our Anchor Points can help deepen your relationship with Jesus and prevent drifting away from your faith.
Throughout this “Beach Life” series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us to follow him and make his mission and values our own. We kicked off this series by discussing the Mission of Beach Church. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
Our Mission is the reason we exist. Our five guiding values guide us in fulfilling our mission.
At the beginning of his ministry, Jesus invited men to follow him and learn from him. He showed his disciples the way to live.
1 John 2:6 (NLT2)
6 Those who say they live in God should live their lives as Jesus did.
Our Guiding Values are rooted in Jesus's life. The more we allow these guiding values to shape our character, the more effective we will be in leading people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
Our Guiding Values are:
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Uncomfortable Grace
Captivating Celebration
Selfless Service
The life-changing truth of the Word of God begins to change a person. They embrace the value of transparent living and understand that they find accountability when they share their wins, sins, and struggles. That leads to Uncomfortable Grace. We show grace so powerfully that it's unusual and a bit uncomfortable when we first begin to demonstrate it. That leads to Captivating Celebration. Followers of Jesus celebrate their faith even through the hard seasons, which is captivating to others drawn to Jesus. This leads to Selfless Service. Jesus has changed our lives, and we want to serve others.
You may be asking, now that we have discussed our mission and our Guiding Values, what is left to discuss?
Today, we are talking about our Anchor Points and looking at Matthew 7:24-27.
Matthew 7:24-27 (NLT2)
24 “Anyone who listens to my teaching and follows it is wise, like a person who builds a house on solid rock. 25 Though the rain comes in torrents and the floodwaters rise and the winds beat against that house, it won’t collapse because it is built on bedrock. 26 But anyone who hears my teaching and ignores it is foolish, like a person who builds a house on sand. 27 When the rains and floods come and the winds beat against that house, it will collapse with a mighty crash.”
Jesus said the life of a follower of Jesus can be compared to a house. Every decision you make in life is part of the house you are building. According to Jesus, our lives are the houses we build, and the materials used are our decisions.
Those who listen to his teachings and develop applications are wise and are building a strong house that can withstand storms. And those who hear and ignore his teaching are building a house that will collapse when the storms come.
When we bought our house, we looked at many homes, and every house we looked at had a foundation. Even the houses in the Grand Strand that appear to be built along the coast on shifting sand are built on piers that dig deep through the sand into the bedrock. Can you imagine only being concerned about what the house looked like on the exterior and not being worried about the foundation of the house? It would not matter how beautiful the home is if it isn’t built on a solid foundation. When the hurricane comes, the house will be destroyed.
Jesus tells us that our lives are the very same way.
A dating relationship built without the solid foundation of the word of God will collapse.
A marriage without the solid foundation of the Word of God will collapse.
And, a LIFE without the foundation of the word of God will collapse. When the storm of this life comes, the flood waters will crash against the life you have built, and if you have not built on the proper foundation, great will be your fall.
Life Storms come in all varieties
At points in your life, you will face STORMS that have the potential to destroy you.
Storms that can destroy your faith and weaken your trust in God.
Storms that can wipe out everything you.
Many of you have faced storms you never thought you would have to face, and if it wasn’t for your faith in God, you would not have made it through the storm.
You kept your faith through that cancer diagnosis.
You kept your faith through the betrayal of a close friend.
You kept your faith through the financial collapse that wasn’t supposed to happen.
You kept your faith in God through that injury at work.
You kept your faith through that job loss – you didn’t know how to provide for your family, but you made it through, and God took care of you.
You kept your faith in God even though your spouse was unfaithful to you.
You faced death, family disputes, friendships falling apart, divorce, and unemployment.
You faced depression, anxiety, and darkness – but you made it through to the other side of that dark storm because you kept getting out of bed. You kept putting one foot in front of the other. You kept trusting in God. You kept believing in His Word. You kept applying His Word to your life. You kept on following Jesus…
You made it through the storm because you continued to follow Jesus and apply his word to your life.
You have faced high winds, rain, tornados, and hurricanes of life…and have made it through because you have spent a lifetime building your house on the Word of God.
You have anchored your life to the Promises of God’s word.
You have anchored your heart and your attitude into the bedrock of God’s word.
Somehow, you learned along the way that…
Anchors prevent drift and provide stability
Last July, during a double red flag warning, we baptized 95 people at the beach. This summer, we will have another Beach Baptism on July 14. I learned the importance of having an anchor last summer. I set my water bottle and phone down in a little spot on the sand, walked out into the ocean, and began baptizing people.
We could go through the line, take turns, and baptize one at a time. The sand under my feet was twisting and churning. The foundation was constantly shifting under my feet because of the power of the waves and the tide. I was continually in motion, trying to stand up and encourage people to enter the waves.
When we finished baptizing, and I came out of the ocean, I couldn’t find my water bottle or my phone. I thought, “Somebody I just baptized stole my iPhone!”
Then, somebody pointed down the beach and explained we had drifted about forty yards from where we began. I had no idea we had drifted far from where we began. And sometimes, as followers of Jesus, we can drift away from our relationship with him.
The storms come, the waves beat us down…, but we make it through. But our relationship with Jesus drifts. It is not as deep, meaningful, or personal as it once was. We made it through the storm; our faith in God carried us through, but our relationship with Jesus feels…hollow. Not all storm damage can be clearly seen. Some storms gut us, but other storms cause us to drift away from Jesus.
In the book of Revelations, Jesus spoke to different churches and warned them about specific issues they were facing. To the church in Ephesus, Jesus acknowledged how hard the church had worked. The church in Ephesus knew the Word of God so well that they discovered false teachers and turned away from them because they were liars. But they were missing something.
Listen to Jesus:
Revelation 2:2-5 (NLT2)
2 “I know all the things you do. I have seen your hard work and your patient endurance. I know you don’t tolerate evil people. You have examined the claims of those who say they are apostles but are not. You have discovered they are liars. 3 You have patiently suffered for me without quitting. 4 “But I have this complaint against you. You don’t love me or each other as you did at first! 5 Look how far you have fallen! Turn back to me and do the works you did at first. If you don’t repent, I will come and remove your lampstand from its place among the churches.
Hard work.
Patient Endurance.
They did not tolerate liars, evil people, and those who pretended to be God-called Pastors.
They patiently suffered without quitting…
But they still drifted away. They endured the storm but drifted away in their love for Jesus. I have been there. I have endured brutal storms in my life.
Childhood of abuse.
Six years of infertility.
Three children were diagnosed with type one diabetes.
Job loss.
Financial loss.
Betrayal of friendships.
It appears as though I have endured those storms…but the words of Jesus call to me today as they call to you.
“I have this complaint against you: You don’t love me or love each other as you did at first. Turn back to me. Turn back to your relationship with me. Turn back to your first love.”
We can be on target with our mission to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
We can live out our guiding values of:
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Uncomfortable Grace
Captivating Celebration
Selfless Service
We can practice 1 John 2:6 and live our lives as Jesus did. We can do all of the right things. We can live right through the storms…but our hearts can drift away from our first love. We can endure the storms. We can endure suffering. We can stay on target in our mission.
But our hearts can drift away from Jesus.
So, to prevent ourselves from becoming hypocrites, we must daily check to see if we are truly anchored to Jesus. To help you with that, in the Beach Church App, you have 7 Anchor Points to ask yourself daily. To prevent drifting away, even when you do everything right, use these questions to reflect on and evaluate your life every single day:
Beach Church Anchor Points:
LOVING: How am I showing others kindness and respect?
GROWING: How am I deepening my relationship with God?
CONNECTING: Who am I getting real with?
FORGIVING: Who am I forgiving and extending grace to?
SERVING: How am I selflessly meeting the needs of others?
INVITING: Who am I encouraging to follow Jesus?
GIVING: How am I trusting God with my finances?
All of these questions are rooted in the challenge to return to Jesus daily—to return to your first love every single day. And, when you build your house on the words of Jesus. When you face the storms of life without drifting away…
You can become a refuge for others
I was living about forty miles south of Atlanta when Hurricane Katrina destroyed New Orleans. Lives were lost, and homes were destroyed. Families fled. Refugees from New Orleans made their way to Atlanta and needed food, clothing, and shelter. Kristy and I got involved, cooking meals, leading clothing drives, and trying to help as much as we could. It seemed that the entire community wanted to do something to help because of the storm's damage and destruction.
Beach Church is a place for refugees searching to rebuild their lives.
Beach Church is a place for those who have been hurt by the church, hurt by life, and hurt by the storms. Here, you will find community, you will be encouraged, you are welcome, and you can join our mission to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
This isn’t just a place for you to attend. This is a body of believers in Jesus Christ who are serious about building our lives on Jesus, and we are committed to building relationships with each other and doing life together.
Beach Life - Selfless Service
In this sermon from Pastor Joe, we explore the core value of selfless service in the Christian journey. Drawing from Jesus' example of washing his disciples' feet, Pastor Joe emphasizes the transformative power of love in action and how serving others leads to blessing. Discover how embracing a lifestyle of selfless service reflects the heart of Jesus and impacts both individuals and communities.
Throughout this “Beach Life” series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us to follow him and make his mission and values our own.
We kicked off this series by discussing the Mission of Beach Church. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
Our Mission is the reason we exist. Our five guiding values guide us in fulfilling our mission. At the beginning of his ministry, Jesus invited men to follow him and learn from him. He showed his disciples the way to live.
1 John 2:6 (NLT2)
Those who say they live in God should live their lives as Jesus did.
Our Guiding Values are rooted in Jesus's life. The more we allow these guiding values to shape our character, the more effective we will be in leading people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
Our Guiding Values are:
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Uncomfortable Grace
Captivating Celebration
Selfless Service
The Life Changing truth of the Word of God begins to change a person. They embrace the value of transparent living and understand when they share their wins, sins, and struggles, they find accountability.
That leads to Uncomfortable Grace. We show grace so powerfully, its unusual and a bit uncomfortable when we first begin to demonstrate it.
And, that leads to Captivating Celebration. We celebrate forgiveness, honesty, and reconciliation. That life of celebration centered on Christ leads us to our final guiding value: Selfless Service. Today, we are going to talk about our fifth guiding value:
Selfless Service
FOLLOWERS OF JESUS BEST DEMONSTRATE LOVE TO OTHERS THROUGH ACTS OF KINDNESS AND SERVICE.
Love is best demonstrated through our ACTIONS, not through our words. If you love somebody, you show them that you love them by doing things for them. If you are married, you show your spouse you love them by serving them and doing nice things for them. You go out of your way to show them how much you care for them.
And if you are a follower of Jesus…by that, I mean …you believe that God created you. You believe that you were separated from God because of your sin. You believe that Jesus paid the price for your sin when he died for you on the cross. You believe that Jesus rose from the dead, went into heaven, and will return one day. And because you believe, you surrendered your life to Jesus and received forgiveness for your sin.
Then, you try to live out the greatest command: to Love God with all your heart. You strive to love your neighbor as yourself.
The entire life of Jesus demonstrates God's love for us, but one story stands out among all his miracles and teachings.
Let’s read together.
John 13:1-17 (NLT2)
Before the Passover celebration, Jesus knew that his hour had come to leave this world and return to his Father. He had loved his disciples during his ministry on earth, and now he loved them to the very end. 2 It was time for supper, and the devil had already prompted Judas, son of Simon Iscariot, to betray Jesus. 3 Jesus knew that the Father had given him authority over everything and that he had come from God and would return to God. 4 So he got up from the table, took off his robe, wrapped a towel around his waist, 5 and poured water into a basin. Then he began to wash the disciples’ feet, drying them with the towel he had around him. 6 When Jesus came to Simon Peter, Peter said to him, “Lord, are you going to wash my feet?” 7 Jesus replied, “You don’t understand now what I am doing, but someday you will.” 8 “No,” Peter protested, “you will never ever wash my feet!” Jesus replied, “Unless I wash you, you won’t belong to me.” 9 Simon Peter exclaimed, “Then wash my hands and head as well, Lord, not just my feet!” 10 Jesus replied, “A person who has bathed all over does not need to wash, except for the feet, to be entirely clean. And you disciples are clean, but not all of you.” 11 For Jesus knew who would betray him. That is what he meant when he said, “Not all of you are clean.” 12 After washing their feet, he put on his robe again and sat down and asked, “Do you understand what I was doing? 13 You call me ‘Teacher’ and ‘Lord,’ and you are right, because that’s what I am. 14 And since I, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you ought to wash each other’s feet. 15 I have given you an example to follow. Do as I have done to you. 16 I tell you the truth, slaves are not greater than their master. Nor is the messenger more important than the one who sends the message. 17 Now that you know these things, God will bless you for doing them.
I am willing to bet that the last time you entered a friend's house, you may have taken off your shoes—or offered to take them off. I am also willing to bet that your friend did not grab a bucket of sudsy water and wash your feet.
In order for us to fully appreciate the significance of Jesus washing His disciples' feet, we need to understand the historical context. In Jesus' time, people wore sandals and walked long distances on dusty, dirty roads. But people were not the only living things that traveled those roads. Goats. Horses. Donkeys and livestock traveled the roads as well. And, I have never seen a potty-trained horse. When a horse has to “go,” they “go.”
They don’t get embarrassed, and they don’t care who is watching. In Jesus’ day, the roads were filled with horse and livestock filth. Sandals had a single leather strap for the toes, and a leather strap around the heel. So, feet were disgusting: Caked in mud, dirt, and who knows what else.
So, because feet were so filthy when guests entered a home, the host provided water, and the least important servant would wash their feet. (That lowly servant also had to remove human waste from the house as well.)
So, understand the significance of Jesus's act. Jesus took on the role of the lowest servant because,
DOING THE HARD DEMONSTRATES LOVE
We often don’t mind serving others when it is easy. We can let others in line in front of us at the grocery store or wave them into our lane of traffic. But, if strong winds knocked over your neighbor's trash can on trash day, and a bag had opened and was being spread around, would you go out of your way to demonstrate love, do the hard, straighten up their can, and pick up the trash?
We demonstrate real love when we choose to do the hard things for others.
When your neighbor’s dog is missing, you could go out of your way to help them find it.
When your neighbor’s grass is too high, you can go out of your way to cut it.
Selfless service often does the hard things that other people do not want to do. Jesus washing His disciples' feet was hard physically and emotionally. Jesus washed the feet of all 12 of his disciples, including Judas, whom he knew would betray him.
So, the neighbor that has hurt you in the past? Demonstrate love to them.
The neighbor who has called HOA on you for painting your front door the wrong color? Bake some cookies for them.
Washing the disciples' feet was gross, but it wasn’t physically demanding…(Unless they smelled.) The “hard” part was the emotional hard part: washing the feet of the man Jesus loved and invited to follow him, who betrayed him for a little cash. We selflessly serve our neighbor when we do the hard, physically or emotionally. Next, it is important to understand that…
SELFLESS SERVING IS A LIFESTYLE, NOT AN EVENT
Peter could not believe that Jesus would stoop to such a lowly position and do the work that the lowest of the servants did.
John 13:6-7 (NLT2)
6 When Jesus came to Simon Peter, Peter said to him, “Lord, are you going to wash my feet?” 7 Jesus replied, “You don’t understand now what I am doing, but someday you will.”
Jesus wanted Peter to understand that serving is a lifestyle, not an event. Serving others should be a way of life for each of us. Doing the hard things others do not want to do should be how we live. If we truly do want to become like Jesus to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus, we must understand that serving is part of our new nature because God is love, and love is best demonstrated through acts of kindness and service.
It wasn’t just this example of washing feet that proved Jesus loves us.
And it wasn’t just his willingness to pay the price for our sins that proves he loves us.
The entire life of Jesus is an example of selfless service.
The Apostle Paul wrote this to followers of Jesus:
Philippians 2:5-8 (NLT2)
You must have the same attitude that Christ Jesus had. 6 Though he was God, he did not think of equality with God as something to cling to. 7 Instead, he gave up his divine privileges; he took the humble position of a slave and was born as a human being. When he appeared in human form, 8 he humbled himself in obedience to God and died a criminal’s death on a cross. Jesus was a servant long before he washed the disciples' feet. Jesus was a servant long before he paid the price for sin. In fact, there never was a time when Jesus was not, in his nature, a servant.
Hebrews 13:8 (NLT2)
Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.
If Jesus poured out his life to demonstrate God’s love to us, then Jesus is still a servant today. In fact, even now, Jesus is taking the form of a servant, and he is praying for you and me:
Romans 8:34 (NLT2)
…Christ Jesus died for us and was raised to life for us, and he is sitting in the place of honor at God’s right hand, pleading for us.
Hebrews 7:25 (NLT2)Therefore he is able, once and forever, to save those who come to God through him. He lives forever to intercede with God on their behalf.
So, if you want to live your life like Jesus, learn to live like a servant to everybody. And finally,
SELFLESS SERVING LEADS TO BLESSING
John 13:15-17 (NLT2)
I have given you an example to follow. Do as I have done to you. 16 I tell you the truth, slaves are not greater than their master. Nor is the messenger more important than the one who sends the message. 17 Now that you know these things, God will bless you for doing them.
Selfless serving leads to Blessing. Can you imagine what the disciples thought when Jesus told them this? Out of the thirteen men there that evening, Jesus was the most important. They knew him as “Teacher,” but the universe knew Him as Creator. They knew him as “Rabbi,” but the Angels knew him as The Promised Messiah. They knew him as the one who held the keys to life and death in his hands.
So, why didn’t one of the disciples serve the others first? It was customary for the Jewish people to have a servant to clean guests' feet, so in the absence of a servant, why didn’t one of the disciples get up and wash their feet? The topic of dirty feet must have come up because the disciples were arguing with each other over who the most important follower of Jesus was.
During supper that evening…
Luke 22:24 (NLT2)
Then they began to argue among themselves about who would be the greatest among them.
The disciples refused to wash each other’s feet because they wanted to portray themselves as the greatest. I am sure they were talking trash to each other and saying things like, “You wash our feet; I’m too important.” Then, Jesus rises. Takes off his robe and proceeds to wash all their feet. Then he says, “When you live your life as a servant to others, you will be blessed.”
The disciples must have felt so dumb at this moment. They argued about who would be the greatest, and “the Greatest” washed their feet.
If you want to be blessed, live your life “washing the feet” of others.
If you want to be blessed, do the hard things others won’t.
If you want to be blessed, prove to the world you are a follower of Jesus by doing kind things.
Beach Life - Captivating Celebration
Experience the transformative power of Captivating Celebration. Learn how celebrating our faith in Jesus not only brings joy and freedom but also attracts others to experience the life-changing power of His love and grace.
Throughout this “Beach Life” series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us to follow him and make his mission and values our own. We kicked off this series by discussing the Mission of Beach Church. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus. Our Mission is the reason we exist. Our Five Guiding Values guide us to fulfill the mission.
At the beginning of his ministry, Jesus invited men to follow him and learn from him. He showed his disciples the way to live.
1 John 2:6 (NLT2)
6 Those who say they live in God should live their lives as Jesus did.
Our Guiding Values are rooted in the life of Jesus. The more we allow these guiding values to shape our character, the more effective we will be in leading people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
Our Guiding Values are:
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Uncomfortable Grace
Captivating Celebration
Selfless Service
Today, we are going to talk about our fourth guiding value:
Captivating Celebration
We believe that…
FOLLOWING JESUS RESULTS IN A JOY-FILLED LIFE THAT DRAWS PEOPLE TO JESUS.
We believe that when followers of Jesus celebrate – other people without Jesus are drawn to a life-changing relationship with Jesus. I have been around people who claim to be followers of Jesus – and never crack a smile.
They don’t laugh.
They don’t celebrate.
They are not joyful.
But that is not who we want to be. We want to be followers of Jesus who always live lives filled with JOY. Life is simply more fun that way. I can’t find any other man in scripture that best demonstrates this core value than a crippled man from Acts 3. I don’t know how old this man was, but I do know that since he was born, he had been carried around wherever he went. He never learned to stand or walk, and he never knew what it was like to run and feel the wind on his face.
Most likely, he was not married.
Most likely, he did not have children.
During this time period – anybody that was crippled, blind, paralyzed, or diseased was considered an outcast. From the time of his birth – this crippled man had been rejected by the world.
But his life was about to change radically!
Peter and John were followers of Jesus who met this man right outside the temple…
Let’s read together.
Acts 3:1-12 (NLT2)
1 Peter and John went to the Temple one afternoon to take part in the three o’clock prayer service. 2 As they approached the Temple, a man lame from birth was being carried in. Each day he was put beside the Temple gate, the one called the Beautiful Gate, so he could beg from the people going into the Temple. 3 When he saw Peter and John about to enter, he asked them for some money. 4 Peter and John looked at him intently, and Peter said, “Look at us!” 5 The lame man looked at them eagerly, expecting some money. 6 But Peter said, “I don’t have any silver or gold for you. But I’ll give you what I have. In the name of Jesus Christ the Nazarene, get up and walk!” 7 Then Peter took the lame man by the right hand and helped him up. And as he did, the man’s feet and ankles were instantly healed and strengthened. 8 He jumped up, stood on his feet, and began to walk! Then, walking, leaping, and praising God, he went into the Temple with them. 9 All the people saw him walking and heard him praising God. 10 When they realized he was the lame beggar they had seen so often at the Beautiful Gate, they were absolutely astounded! 11 They all rushed out in amazement to Solomon’s Colonnade, where the man was holding tightly to Peter and John. 12 Peter saw his opportunity and addressed the crowd. “People of Israel,” he said, “what is so surprising about this? And why stare at us as though we had made this man walk by our own power or godliness?
Then… Peter continues to preach and teach. We will look at the end of his sermon in a few minutes, but now I want us to focus on the man who demonstrates our Guiding Value of Captivating Celebration. This man was just sitting outside the temple asking for money…and unexpectedly…his life was changed forever.
Peter and John looked at him and said to him, “We do not have any money, but what we do have, we give you. In the name of Jesus, get up and walk!”
Then Peter took him by the hand – and as the man rose to his feet – his feet and his ankles were healed!
Suddenly this meant:
No more begging for food! No more depending on other people to move him around. No more dragging himself through the town. He was changed. He was made better. He was a new person. So, how does this relate to you and me?
If, by faith, you believe that you have been forgiven. If, by faith, you believe that you Jesus rose from the dead and one day he will return. If, by faith, you took a moment, received Jesus into your life, and committed to follow Him.
Then you KNOW exactly how this man felt. Before you and I became a follower of Jesus, we were just like this crippled beggar.
We lived crippled by sin.
Crippled by shame.
Crippled by guilt.
Crippled by hopelessness.
Crippled by doubts.
But when we became followers of Jesus, we were made new and set free!
We were set free to follow Jesus.
We were set free to show GRACE to others.
We were set free to HOPE and to BELIEVE THE BEST DAYS ARE AHEAD.
We were set free to experience the overwhelming, never-ending, breathtaking love of God found through Jesus. So, as we remember what we have been rescued from, we should look at the example this man provides:
CELEBRATE LIFE-CHANGE HARD
Acts 3:8-9 (NLT2)
8 He jumped up, stood on his feet, and began to walk! Then, walking, leaping, and praising God, he went into the Temple with them. 9 All the people saw him walking and heard him praising God.
WALKING – this shows us that this man was healed.
LEAPING – this shows us this man had strength.
PRAISING – This shows us that Jesus was credited for the change, not Peter and John.
The old, crippled man was GONE. The new man with strong feet and legs was here – and he could not have celebrated harder! If there is anything that the people of Myrtle Beach do well – whether they are born again or not – is CELEBRATE! People love to PARTY! They party on the beach – they party in the ocean. They celebrate on the miniature golf courses. They go on helicopter rides and race go-karts. People like to celebrate and gather with friends.
And…at Beach Church, we really seem to CELEBRATE well.
We celebrate Baptisms. We cheer and applaud when somebody comes out of the water.
We celebrate when marriages are rescued from the brink of divorce and redeemed.
We celebrate stories of people being rescued from addictions and their new life in Jesus.
We Celebrate Recovery every Friday night.
But I would love it if we celebrated MORE.
I sometimes wish our voices were louder in worship.
I sometimes wish our voices would drown out the band on the stage.
I sometimes wish our applause and cheers would linger longer during our services as we celebrate our great God that changes people's lives…I am not talking about the fake kind of celebration. Not the polite golf-clapping type of worship that I have been guilty of doing before. I am talking about the type of celebration this man showed:
UNHARNESSED ENTHUSIASM for the work God did in his life. And I sometimes find myself wishing for that because I recognize that…
CAPTIVATING CELEBRATION ATTRACTS OTHERS
As this man was whooping and hollering—leaping and shouting and praising God—all the people who were outside the Temple area heard the celebration and came rushing in!
Acts 3:11 (NLT2)
11 They all rushed out in amazement to Solomon’s Colonnade, where the man was holding tightly to Peter and John.
The people who heard the CELEBRATION were curious about what had happened, so they ran together and surrounded the man, Peter, and John. When we celebrate our faith, those without Jesus, those on the outside of our faith, will grow curious.
They will be captivated as they see us living lives that CELEBRATE GRACE, REDEMPTION, FORGIVENESS, HEALING, SECOND CHANCES.
CELEBRATION will draw others in – because people love to have a good time! People love to celebrate! If you don’t believe me – stand up in a crowded restaurant, tell people it is your child’s birthday, and ask them to join you in singing HAPPY BIRTHDAY and see if they join in.
When I was a Student Pastor in Georgia, Kristy and I hosted some college students at the house. I was at the grocery store buying food. My daughter Naomi was about four years old. She found out we were having a party, and she stood up in the shopping cart – spread her arms wide, and yelled – EVERYBODY COME TO MY HOUSE! The more, the merrier.
And that leads me to my final point:
CAPTIVATING CELEBRATION LEADS TO MORE CHANGED LIVES
Crowds of people rushed in when they heard the celebration of the former crippled man. Now think about that. Jesus had told Peter and John to tell everybody about him – and now, because of the hollering and celebration of this man, all these people gathered around Peter and John. We see how Peter responded in verse 12.
Acts 3:12 (NLT2)
12 Peter saw his opportunity and addressed the crowd. “People of Israel,” he said, “what is so surprising about this? And why stare at us as though we had made this man walk by our own power or godliness?
Peter SAW his opportunity to tell others about Jesus! The crowd was full of questions. They wanted to know how Peter and John had made this man walk – and Peter took the opportunity to tell them about Jesus. Peter tells them about forgiveness and hope through Jesus for the rest of this chapter. He helped them understand that the power of Jesus healed the crippled man and that the Power of Jesus can give them new life as well – new spiritual life.
The only reason why those people were there was because the celebration of the man had drawn them in. I love it when friends and family are invited to celebrate baptisms! I love it when they give their lives to Jesus and are baptized as well. An invitation to celebrate your faith in Jesus can result in more people experiencing a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
So, check it out – Peter took the opportunity to tell them about Jesus – and skip to Acts 4:4 as Peter wrapped up his message.
Acts 4:4 (NLT2)
But many of the people who heard their message believed it, so the number of believers now totaled about 5,000 men, not counting women and children.
Do you see it? Isn’t it beautiful?
When followers of Jesus celebrate our faith – others can be drawn in out of curiosity and become followers of Jesus as well. In case you have forgotten, here are a few reasons why followers of Jesus can celebrate.
Followers of Jesus can celebrate because Jesus defeated sin.
Followers of Jesus can celebrate because Jesus has defeated death.
We can celebrate because Jesus holds the keys to life and death in his hand.
We can celebrate because Jesus has defeated hopelessness, loneliness, and addiction.
We can celebrate because Jesus sent his Holy Spirit to guide us.
Followers of Jesus can celebrate because we know for certain that we will be in heaven.
We can celebrate because NOT ONE THING will ever be able to separate us from the love of God. That is why CAPTIVATING CELEBRATION is one of our GUIDING VALUES at Beach Church – and I invite you to make it one of yours.
Beach Life - Uncomfortable Grace
Discover the essence of UNCOMFORTABLE GRACE and its transformative power in our lives. Learn how God's limitless grace, demonstrated through Jesus, sets us free from shame, guilt, and fear, enabling us to extend grace to others without judgment. Join us on a journey to embrace grace, forgiveness, and freedom as essential components of our faith journey.
Throughout this “Beach Life” series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us to follow him and make his mission and values our own. We kicked off this series by discussing Beach Church's mission. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus. Our Mission answers the question of " why” we exist, and our Guiding Values answer the question of " how” we fulfill our mission.
We could gather every weekend for worship, distribute food to 500 families every week, go on mission trips, have life groups, and have a ministry for children with special needs, but without our guiding values, we would not be leading people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
The Bible tells us without love, we are nothing.
Our Guiding Values, shaped by the love of Jesus demonstrated while he lived on earth, will help us fulfill our mission.
The Values are:
The Values are:
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Captivating Celebration
Uncomfortable Grace
Selfless Service
Today, we are going to talk about our third guiding value:
UNCOMFORTABLE GRACE
That is, we believe that:
FOLLOWERS OF JESUS GIVE THE SAME LIMITLESS GRACE THEY HAVE RECEIVED FROM GOD.
If you are a follower of Jesus – the Grace god has given to you isn’t only FOR you – but it is also FOR you to GIVE to others. We are going to keep talking about that – but for now let’s look at the passage of scripture that best demonstrates UNCOMFORTABLE GRACE.
Let’s read together from Colossians 3.
Colossians 3:12-13 (NLT2)
12 Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. 13 Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others.
If you grew up in church, you might be thinking to yourself, the two words “Uncomfortable” and “Grace” are two words that do not go together.
“Uncomfortable Grace”
We are taught that GRACE is wonderful. And it is.
That GRACE is comforting. And it is.
That Grace is AMAZING. And it is.
When we pray for others, we often pray that they would experience the GRACE of God in their lives…because God’s GRACE is a good thing. But – what is GRACE? The Word “Grace” can be a little confusing. For instance, I grew up saying “Grace” before I ate a meal. My family would close our eyes and say GRACE.
Bless us oh Lord, For these thy Gifts, Which we are about to receive, From thy Bounty, Through Christ, our Lord. Amen.
Then, after I surrendered my life to Jesus and received Him as my Savior and received forgiveness for my sins, people used the word differently. The mealtime prayer was no longer called Grace. That was for the Catholics…and the Clark W. Griswold family. Now the mealtime prayer was called a Blessing…”Who wants to say the Blessing?”
No wonder people can get confused the churches choice of vocabulary.
For the sake of the message, Grace is not referring to a mealtime prayer. Grace is not the name of a woman who is very uncomfortable right now.
You can jot this down in your Lifenotes.
God’s grace is best described as:
GRACE: GOD’S GOODNESS TO THOSE WHO DESERVE PUNISHMENT.
I deserve to be punished for my sins.
I have lied.
I have stolen.
I have cheated.
I have looked at pornography.
I have hated in my heart.
I have been drunk.
I have sinned in my anger and lost my temper.
I have been arrogant.
I have been filled with pride.
I have wanted the spotlight on me, rather than God.
I have been selfish, unfaithful to God, and unfaithful to friends.
I have been rude.
I have been impatient with others.
I have carried grudges in my heart.
I have not helped somebody when they needed it the most.
I have not cared for my body, my wife, and even my children the way I should.
I have rejected my Creator.
I have used the name of Jesus as a cuss word.
I have openly mocked followers of Jesus for living for Jesus.
I have not worshipped God.
I have not lived for God.
I have not loved others the way I should.
And…I deserve to be punished for my rebellion against my CREATOR GOD.
God says in Ezekiel:
Ezekiel 18:4
“…all people are mine to judge—both parents and children alike. And this is my rule: The person who sins is the one who will die.”
All people belong to God…and since we belong to Him, he makes the rules…and he says, “The person who sins is the one who will die.” The punishment that I deserve for my rebellion against God is DEATH. Not only do I deserve to physically die, but I deserve to be punished by experiencing spiritual death.
I deserve to suffer in Hell for ALL eternity. I deserve to be tormented in a fire that is so awful the flames never consume what they burn. An everlasting flame that never goes out.
That is what I deserve. And so do you.
Let that sink in.
You deserve to be punished for your sins.
When you accept that weight of that statement – you can best understand how life-changing the Grace of God is. God’s goodness toward those who deserve punishment.
God’s Goodness is NOT PUNISHING us by giving us what we deserve.
God’s Justice demands that punishment be paid.
God’s LOVE chooses to pay the punishment himself.
Jesus chose to willingly suffer on the cross and pay the price for our sins. God’s rule was that all people who sinned would die. Jesus became a person and paid the penalty as a man for our sin.
The PRICE was paid. The debt was satisfied.
And the relationship between God and People was redeemed. That is the GRACE we sing about and embrace.
Amazing Grace
How sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me
I once was lost
But now I’m found
Was blind but now I see
So, if you feel hopeless, discouraged, overwhelmed. If you wake up every morning and your past sins weigh you down. If you feel like a failure in life. If you think that God will never forgive you for something you have done…I want you to look down at your Life Notes and ask yourself honestly:
WHICH ONE OF YOUR SINS WILL GOD NOT FORGIVE?
Which ONE of your sins do you think God is holding against you?
Have you done something that damaged somebody else so bad you think God will not forgive you for it?
Do you wake up every day with regret? Shame?
Do you go through pill after pill, or bottle after bottle trying to forget the pain you caused?
God has something better for you.
It is called: FREEDOM!
You do not have to be weighed down by the sin of your past. God’s goodness toward you cannot fail. God’s goodness toward you, demonstrated by Jesus on the cross, cannot be watered down, explained away, or made powerless. Jesus has set you free from your sin – and that means he has set you free from shame, from fear, from doubt, and from insecurities about your past mistakes, sin and failure. He has set you free – so stop chaining yourself down by the weight of guilt.
Walk in Freedom. Live in Uncomfortable Grace. And as you live out God’s uncomfortable grace in your own life, ask:
DO YOU ALLOW OTHERS SPACE TO FAIL?
Do you allow other people around you and give them space to fail?
Do you criticize people when they mess up? Do you harp on people around you because they have made poor choices?
Do you whisper about the teenage girl who got pregnant? The mother who drinks too much? The parent losing their temper in the grocery store?
Do you gossip about your neighbors choice of swimwear at the beach? (She is too old to be wearing a bikini…she is 95!)
Weren’t you once like that? (Minus the 95-year-old bikini.)
Didn’t you once make horrible mistakes? Didn’t you once live as a sinner with no hope?
Then, give other people space to fail without judging them. You once made similar choices. You deserved death. You deserved God’s judgement over sin…
But you were made new – So why limit the Grace of God only toward you? Why not demonstrate God’s grace so much it makes other people UNCOMFORTABLE? Followers of Jesus ought to show so much grace, that everybody gets a second, third, fourth, fifth chance.
Kristy and I are talking about camping. I love building a nice hot fire for mornings and evenings…When it comes to camping, the one problem I have with the campfire is the smoke!
Have you ever noticed, when it comes a campfire, the smell of smoke soaks into everything. My hair. My beard. My hat. My clothes. My undies. The tent. The sleeping bags, the van, the tent…
After camping, in order to be clean – I have to do more than change my clothes. I need to take a shower, scrub that smoke off my skin and hair, then put on clean clothes. But, if I only changed clothes to be clean, it would not make sense. The smokey odor would still be on my skin. I would not feel clean – and I would not be clean. Putting on fresh clothes would not fool anybody.
Sometimes people try to do that to feel better.
They start attending church.
They start using the churchy words like grace and peace and Jesus.
They begin doing nice things to other people…
But they have never accepted God’s Grace, personally.
If you would like to receive forgiveness for your sins, all your sins, and begin a relationship with God, and start over…I invite you to surrender all you are, into God’s hands, by receiving Jesus as your Savior.
It looks something like this:
PRAYER OF SURRENDER
Thank you, God, for creating me. I admit that I have sinned, and I deserve to be punished for my sin. Thank you that Jesus paid the punishment for me I deserved on the cross. I believe Jesus died, rose from the dead, and will one day return. I surrender my life to you and receive Jesus as my Savior.
We will continue to change the world around us, when we clothe ourselves with the Grace of God and demonstrate that towards EVERYBODY.
Beach Life - Transparent Living
Explore the transformative power of Transparent Living with Lead Pastor Joe Donahue in this insightful sermon from Beach Church's "Beach Life" series. Discover how embracing vulnerability fosters genuine connections, deepens fellowship, and leads to freedom in living out Jesus' mission.
Throughout this “Beach Life” series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us to follow him and make his mission and values our own. We kicked off this series by discussing Beach Church's mission. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus. Our Mission answers the question of " why” we exist, and our Guiding Values answer the question of " how” we fulfill our mission.
We could gather every weekend for worship, distribute food to 500 families every week, go on mission trips, have life groups, and have a ministry for children with special needs, but without our guiding values, we would not be leading people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
The Bible tells us without love, we are nothing.
Our Guiding Values, shaped by the love of Jesus demonstrated while he lived on earth, will help us fulfill our mission.
The Values are:
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Captivating Celebration
Uncomfortable Grace
Selfless Service
Today, we are going to talk about our second guiding value,
Transparent Living
GOD DESIRES US TO BE REAL, OPEN, AND HONEST ABOUT WHO WE ARE AND ALLOW OTHERS TO DO THE SAME.
Because we love one another, you can be the real you at Beach Church. Because we love one another, I am allowed to be a real Pastor, a real person, a real husband, and a real daddy. You do not have to pretend to be perfect.
Maybe you grew up in a church that practiced “privacy” rather than “transparency.” Maybe you were encouraged not to talk about real life and real problems at church. Maybe your experience was to sing from a Hymnal, listen quietly to the sermon, and leave just at the end of the last song to get to the restaurant first.
Maybe your experience in church has leaned toward “pretending to be perfect.”
Because we love one another, you get to be real, open and honest about who you are – AND you allow others to do the same. If I get to be transparent, if you get to be transparent, then others are allowed to be transparent, too. Because followers of Jesus love each other, we all get to be who we really are during the week. When you come to church, it's okay if you wear mismatched socks, have baby vomit on your shirt, and toothpaste on your chin.
The apostle John describes transparent living and some amazing benefits when followers of Jesus live transparently with one another.
Let’s read:
1 John 1:7-9 (NLT2)
7 But if we are living in the light, as God is in the light, then we have fellowship with each other, and the blood of Jesus, his Son, cleanses us from all sin. 8 If we claim we have no sin, we are only fooling ourselves and not living in the truth. 9 But if we confess our sins to him, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all wickedness.
First, John is writing to believers in Jesus. He describes what happens when believers in Jesus are serious about living in the light and following Jesus. If you have surrendered your life to Jesus, you are living in the light. But you didn’t always live in the light. Before you surrendered to Jesus, you lived in darkness. I did too.
And, there is a vast difference between living in darkness and the light. Thanks to the light outside, every one of us followed a predictable pattern when we arrived on our campus this morning.
You parked your car. You and your crew got out of your car. You walked through the parking lot. You entered the lobby. Maybe you stopped to use the restroom. Maybe you picked up a cup of coffee. Then, you finally entered the worship center and sat in your seat. I imagine you will do that in reverse when it is time to leave.
Getting into the building and making your way to the seat wasn't difficult because you were “living in the light.”
However, imagine that after parking the car, your crew put blindfolds on and attempted to make it into the worship center. Just simply finding the entrance would be hard enough. Obstacles of parked cars, moving cars, bushes, and steps would make it difficult for you to enter the worship center. Some of us would still be wandering around outside. In the same way, a lack of transparency creates an obstacle for you to really experience “fellowship” with God and with other believers. The word fellowship communicates a deep intimacy with other believers. It suggests an “exchange” of lives with one another.
“Exchanging” means giving and receiving. When believers share their burdens with each other, they live in the light of Jesus. They are living in community with each other. Living in the light and fellowship means sharing the burden, which goes both ways. Others share their wins and sins with you, and you share your wins and sins with them. You may not have a problem with people sharing their real lives with you, but you may struggle to open up to others.
Maybe you aren’t sure what others would think about you if they knew what you really struggled with, so you remain private. You listen to others but do not share your life with them. Maybe you smile and nod and tell people everything is okay, but your heart cries out for somebody to listen to you. Maybe you don’t tell others about the struggle you are having with sin at work or with your family. Many of us sometimes pretend everything is ok when everything is not ok.
You might think, “If people knew the real me, they wouldn’t like me.”
The truth is, transparent living is hard.
Transparent Living means we are vulnerable with others
1 John 1:8 (NLT2)
8 If we claim we have no sin, we are only fooling ourselves and not living in the truth.
Being open and honest about who you are means you are vulnerable.
And, when we are vulnerable, we can be hurt.
When we are vulnerable to others, we can be rejected.
When we are vulnerable, we give people power with areas of our lives we keep secret for a reason.
And, if other people view you as a leader, vulnerability is even more difficult.
You are the leader in your family, and your family looks to you for protection and provision.
You are the leader at work, and your coworkers turn to you for advice and solutions.
You are a leader in your neighborhood, and your neighbors may bring their complaints to you to solve them.
You are a leader in your life group, and people look up to you as a role model…
You may be tempted to think, “I can’t live transparently because people expect me to be strong.”
If I am vulnerable, people will turn on me.
If I am vulnerable, people will reject me.
If I am vulnerable, others will think I am too weak to lead and find another leader.
If I am vulnerable with my spouse, they will find somebody else.
If I am vulnerable with my children, they won’t respect me.
If I am vulnerable at work, I will never get that promotion.
That is not true. For example, let's look at Animal Kingdom:
In the animal kingdom, every ‘pack’ has a leader guiding them through life.
Wolves have a pack leader. Lions have a den leader. Orangutans have leaders.
The pack leader keeps the pack safe and provides solutions to the dangers they may face. We may be tempted to think that if a pack leader demonstrates vulnerability, the pack will reject them and find a new leader. We can learn some lessons about the power of vulnerability from animals!
When the leader of the pack demonstrates appropriate vulnerability, amazing things happen inside the community:
The leader becomes more relatable.
The leader’s vulnerability reduces tension, which leads to less conflict and stabilizes the pack.
The leader's vulnerability helps promote and develop future leaders of the pack.
In situations of potential conflict within the pack, leaders who show vulnerability de-escalate tension and preserve strength for the critical battles the pack faces with other packs.
Pack leaders who show appropriate vulnerability enhance the entire pack's survival and success!
The lesson: When followers of Jesus lead with transparency and demonstrate vulnerability, the entire church is strengthened. Sharing our weaknesses makes us stronger!
Paul, a Christian leader, said:
2 Corinthians 12:10 (NLT2)
10 That’s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong.
So, trust others. Be vulnerable. Because,
Confessing our sins, our wins, and our struggles develops fellowship.
We develop genuine, meaningful friendships when we confess our sins, wins, and struggles to one another. If you have been attending church for a while and still feel like you do not know people, you are probably correct.
If you love the worship and are engaged with the message but are still missing friendships with other believers, it may be because you have not yet taken the initiative to join a life group or serve on a ministry team.
Transparent Living does not mean everybody in the church knows you. The power of transparent living is best experienced in the context of a life group.
A life group commits to confidentiality, exchanges life experiences with each other and develops meaningful friendships. But from time to time, some stories must be told churchwide. Sometimes, stories of triumph and victory must be captured and shared with the church to strengthen the whole church.
I believe one such story is the story of Stephen and Mary Boyd. For years, they struggled with infertility. They prayed to conceive a baby. They desired to be parents, - but spent a long season in the valley of disappointment and struggle.
Here is their story:
When God works in our lives, the stories must be shared. Some share the story of God’s work in their lives through baptism. Some share their stories in lifegroups. And sometimes, stories need to be shared with the church.
This is because,
Transparent Living leads to freedom!
When real connections are made, we live in freedom. When real friendships are made, we live in freedom. We can confess our sins, our victories, and our journey as followers of Jesus—and that type of living leads to freedom! You can be free to be the real you.
Transparent Living invites us to love our neighbor as we love ourselves, to live in freedom with each other, and continues to help us lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
Beach Life - Life-Changing Truth
Discover the guiding values that shape the mission of Beach Church, starting with Life-Changing Truth! Through exploring the significance of Scripture in transforming lives, Pastor Joe shares practical insights on reading and applying the Word of God. Join the journey of embracing biblical truths for personal growth and spiritual transformation.
Throughout this “Beach Life” series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us to follow him and make his mission and values our own. Last week, we kicked off this series by discussing Beach Church's mission. Our mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus. Our Mission is the answer to the question of “Why we do anything around here.”
Why we gather together for worship each weekend.
Why we serve in our community.
Why we have children’s ministry.
Why we go on mission trips.
Why we provide stoves in the Mayan jungles.
Why we have student ministry.
Why we have LifeGroups.
Why we plan for the future.
Why we have an online presence.
The “Why” behind everything we do is answered by our Mission, “To lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus Christ.”
We have five Guiding Values that I believe will help us fulfill our mission.
Life-Changing Truth
Transparent Living
Captivating Celebration
Uncomfortable Grace
Selfless Service
For the next five weeks, I encourage you to embrace these guiding values as your own. Today – we are going to talk about the first Guiding Value of Life-Changing Truth.
You might have noticed that we begin every sermon with an invitation to take a Bible home…and then say something like, “At Beach Church we believe…”
IF WE READ AND APPLY THE WORD OF GOD, GOD WILL CHANGE OUR LIVES
That is not just a cute saying. That statement is developed from the life of Jesus in Matthew 4 when Jesus used God’s word to resist the temptation of the Devil and in Second Timothy. I have never met anybody that didn’t want to experience some level of change in their life…
They want a better marriage.
Better relationships at work.
Better relationships with their family members…
They want to be better off financially.
They want to have more peace, more joy, and give more love in their lives.
And the BEST and most PRACTICAL way to experience life change is found in 2 Timothy 3:16.
2 Timothy 3:16 (NLT2)
16 All Scripture is inspired by God and is useful to teach us what is true and to make us realize what is wrong in our lives. It corrects us when we are wrong and teaches us to do what is right. In the original language, Paul used the word “inspiration,” which suggests the Bible was “breathed out” by the mouth of God.
THE BIBLE IS GOD BREATHED AND TEACHES RIGHT AND WRONG
The Bible is not merely a religious book. The Bible is not just a collection of churchy books smashed together. The Bible is a collection of 66 books. God, the Creator of the world, BREATHED out into the minds of men, who recorded His words.
For the first season of Human History, God walked and talked with His creation – until Adam and Eve – the first man and woman, rebelled against God and sinned. They preferred living for themselves rather than living for their Creator. Then, God communicated with his creation through the Prophets, through Jesus and his Apostles. His communication and interaction with humans are recorded in this Book.
The Bible is God Breathed.
Just like these words you are hearing right now are Joe-Breathed. I am forcing air out of my lungs into my vocal cords; they vibrate, and you hear these words I am saying – God spoke into the minds of the Prophets and Apostles and gave us words that have endured for the past 4,000 years. God loves Human Beings enough to communicate with us. We have not been abandoned by our Creator.
Even when we FEEL alone – our feelings are wrong. Through the Bible, we are encouraged and comforted by the heart of God.
The Bible tells us what is right and wrong.
I love hearing an ATTABOY, and I love words of affirmation when I am doing something right. It motivates me to continue to do right, but not many people like to be told when they are living or doing something wrong…
Today, the culture of the world EMBRACES what is WRONG and REJECTS what is RIGHT. If an athlete or a politician is a follower of Jesus and uses his platform to be a role model and point others to Jesus – he/she is ridiculed and mocked by the culture. But if an athlete or politician uses their platform to promote anti-Christian views, they are hailed as heroic status symbols. The reality is this: if you enjoy doing wrong, the Bible is going to offend you.
If you enjoy doing wrong and do not want to be corrected, sermons here at Beach Church are going to offend you. They are going to step on your toes and get all up in your business.
I will offend you because, from time to time, I will teach something from the Bible that goes against what you value and embrace. There is RIGHT, and there is WRONG.
I acknowledge that since the Bible is GOD BREATHED, it has authority over our lives. We can depend on it as the foundation upon which we can build our lives. I don’t preach sermons wagging my finger at you. I look in the mirror, point the truth of God’s Word at myself, and seek to apply the truth to my life before I ever preach, and I ask you to do the same.
My focus when I preach is to help YOU apply God’s Word to YOUR life. We believe that Spiritual Growth is evident when each of us individually applies God’s Word to our lives. So, how can you train yourself to apply God’s Word to your life?
In 1996, five years after I became a follower of Jesus. Five years after I understood that there was a right and wrong. Five years after I surrendered my life to Jesus, received Christ as my Savior, and became a born-again believer in Jesus…
I was taught how to READ my BIBLE and develop an application from it… If we do accept the Bible as the living and active Word of God – then we have to figure out how to read it and apply it. How do we read the Bible without falling asleep? How do we read the Bible without our minds drifting off? It happens to all of us. We open up the Bible to read it…and our minds drift off, and we begin to think about other things.
Today I want to give you a tool to help you be able to read God’s Word and apply God’s Word to your life: If you do not have a Letter or Book of the Bible that you are currently reading on a regular basis, I want to invite you to begin reading the shorter letters in the New Testament. The letters were written to followers of Jesus and gave instructions on how to live as followers of Jesus. How to raise their children, get along with their neighbors, and LIVE out their faith as followers of Jesus.
When I read the Bible, I typically read these shorter letters in one sitting. As I read them, I underline all the verses that make me go, “Hmmm.” Or strike me in a particular way…
That’s all I do in that first sitting. I read the letter, and when a verse stands out to me…I underline and move on. The next morning, I typed out the first verse that stood out to me, and I began to meditate on it and let it sink into my life. I ask myself, did this verse leap out to me because there is a…
SIN TO AVOID or CONFESS
Is there a sin I have been thinking about doing (robbing a bank, committing murder, overeating tacos) that I need to avoid? Or have I murdered somebody, and I need to confess it to God, admit it was wrong, and stop doing it? Mostly, I don’t struggle with temptation in those areas – but I am tempted in areas of lust, gossip, greed, selfishness, resentment, bitterness, unforgiveness…
If there is, I will write about it. I journal about it. Then, I ask myself if this verse leaped out at me because there is a…
PROMISE TO CLAIM
Within the New Testament, God has made over 250 promises to followers of Jesus. Here are a couple of them as examples:
Jesus promised rest in
Matthew 11:28-30 (NLT2)
28 Then Jesus said, “Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. 29 Take my yoke upon you. Let me teach you, because I am humble and gentle at heart, and you will find rest for your souls. 30 For my yoke is easy to bear, and the burden I give you is light.”
Jesus promised abundant life to those who follow Him
John 10:10 (NLT2)
10 The thief’s purpose is to steal and kill and destroy. My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life.
There are many more promises of God, and every single one of them find their ultimate fulfillment in a life-changing relationship with Jesus Christ. If there is a promise, I write it down and CLAIM it. I pray it into my heart and life.
Third, I ask myself…did this scripture pop out to me because there is an…
EXAMPLE TO FOLLOW
Am I supposed to follow the example of somebody I am reading about? Is there an example I am supposed to follow about somebody’s strength, faithfulness, or obedience? Does somebody inspire me to walk with God more closely?
If so, I will write about it, and I will seek to follow their example. Fourthly, I ask myself, is there a…
COMMAND TO OBEY
Is there an area of my life that I need to bring into alignment with the Word of God? What is it?
I write about it and begin to apply it to my life. I often find commands I once obeyed that I have become relaxed about continuing to do. Am I no longer generous like I once was?
Do I love others as I once did?
Am I being patient and kind and tenderhearted with my family and friends? Am I following Jesus like God expects me to?
Then, finally – I ask myself if the verse leaped out at me simply because it has some bit of…
KNOWLEDGE TO GAIN
…about God or my fellow man that I need to be reminded of, tuck away, and even pass along one day.
You will never know how much of an encouragement you can be to others by simply passing along an encouraging thought from the Bible to others. Now, I have given you solid questions you can ask yourself as you read the Bible. These things will help your mind stay focused and alert as you read God’s Word.
I want you to ask yourself,
WHAT IS MY DAILY PLAN TO READ GOD’S WORD?
Will you wake up thirty minutes earlier daily to read the Bible and pray?
Will you go to your bedroom thirty minutes earlier to read God’s Word and to pray?
Devise a plan for the next thirty days and stick with it. I guarantee you will never regret developing a plan to read and apply the Word of God.
Beach Life - Our Mission
Discover the significance of embracing Jesus' mission and values both personally and as a community. Explore key passages from Proverbs and Acts, uncovering the timeless relevance of divine guidance and the ongoing mission of Jesus for believers today. Learn how we at Beach Church want to live out our mission : “Leading People to a Life-Changing Relationship with Jesus”
Today, we are launching our Beach Life Series. Throughout this series, we will explore Jesus' mission and values and how he calls us as a church to follow him and make his mission and values our own. If you are interested in joining our church or if you are already a partner or member, this series is going to be very appealing to you. As we begin, it is so important to address the question, “Why?” Why should we spend 7 weeks in a series called Beach Life?
As followers of Jesus, ultimately, when our life is finished here on this earth, and we stand before God, we all want to hear Jesus say to us: Well done, my good and faithful servant.
Most of us want to be a part of something significant. We want to leave our family, friends, community and even the world a better place when we pass on from this life. The only way we will hear those words from Jesus is if we value what Jesus values and make his mission and values our mission and values—personally and together as a church.
The Bible calls Solomon the wisest man who ever lived. Solomon was a great “people reader.” He knew how to read and motivate people. Read through the Proverbs, and you will discover incredible God-breathed wisdom. In Proverbs 29, Solomon wrote about the importance of leaders casting vision for God’s people.
He writes:
Proverbs 29:18 (NLT2)
18 When people do not accept divine guidance, they run wild. But whoever obeys the law is joyful.
If you grew up in church, you may be familiar with other translations. The King James version reads:
Proverbs 29:18 (KJV)
18 Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he.
And the English Standard Version reads:
Proverbs 29:18 (ESV)
18 Where there is no prophetic vision the people cast off restraint, but blessed is he who keeps the law.
In other words, without divine guidance and vision, God’s people will not hear the words, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
Without vision, God’s people will run wild.
Without vision, God’s people will cast off restraint.
Without vision, God’s people will perish.
The direct result of not living with a clear direction and mission will result in God’s people running wild. I really like the emphasis on “running wild.” During my college years, I worked in an after-school program for elementary-age children. If we didn’t have a plan, those kids ran wild!
Cliques of kids would do whatever they wanted to do. Some would try to play kickball on the same field others were trying to play football. Kids would swing on the swings, and other kids would play tag in between. Girls were playing, dancing, and getting smashed by others playing football.
Without direction – there would be bumps, bruises, and tears.
That’s how it is for the church or any organization without a clear mission. Without unity around a clear mission, God’s people can be playground bullies and hurt others. So, that’s why, for the next seven weeks, we will do this series on “Beach Life.”
At Beach Church, we are…
Leading People to a Life-Changing Relationship with Jesus.
Our mission, our purpose, is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus, and our mission is formed by Jesus's life and mission. Throughout the New Testament, Jesus' mission is very clear. Before he was born, an angel appeared to Mary and told her his purpose:
Matthew 1:21 (NLT2)
21 And she will have a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.”
Jesus described his mission early on in his ministry and said:
Luke 5:31-32 (NLT2)
31 …. “Healthy people don’t need a doctor—sick people do. 32 I have come to call not those who think they are righteous, but those who know they are sinners and need to repent.”
And he made his mission even more clear in Luke 19:10
Luke 19:10 (NLT2)
10 For the Son of Man came to seek and save those who are lost.”
50-60 years later, the apostle Paul described the mission of Jesus to Timothy and said:
1 Timothy 1:15 (NLT2)
15 This is a trustworthy saying, and everyone should accept it: “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners”—and I am the worst of them all.
The mission of Jesus was to seek and save the lost.
The mission of Jesus was to save sinners.
The mission of Jesus was to save people from their sins.
That is why our mission as a church could not be any clearer. Our Mission is to lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus. If you are a follower of Jesus, that is your mission as well because the mission of Beach Church is the mission of Jesus. Over the last few weeks, we have looked at the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus. Now, before Jesus ascends into heaven, Jesus passed his mission on to his followers:
Let’s read together From Acts Chapter One.
Acts 1:6-11 (NLT2)
6 So when the apostles were with Jesus, they kept asking him, “Lord, has the time come for you to free Israel and restore our kingdom?” 7 He replied, “The Father alone has the authority to set those dates and times, and they are not for you to know. 8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you. And you will be my witnesses, telling people about me everywhere—in Jerusalem, throughout Judea, in Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” 9 After saying this, he was taken up into a cloud while they were watching, and they could no longer see him. 10 As they strained to see him rising into heaven, two white-robed men suddenly stood among them. 11 “Men of Galilee,” they said, “why are you standing here staring into heaven? Jesus has been taken from you into heaven, but someday he will return from heaven in the same way you saw him go!”
Jesus left the earth because his part of the mission, to save people from their sins, had been fulfilled. There is only one way a person can be forgiven for their sins, and that is through Jesus' death and resurrection. Jesus' role in his mission had been completed, but his mission is ongoing. He told his followers that His mission to seek and save the lost now rested in their hands.
The timing of when Jesus invited these men to participate in his mission is crucial for us to understand how we are supposed to fulfill Jesus's mission. Jesus did not wait until he ascended into Heaven to select the people to fulfill his mission; he selected them at the very beginning of his ministry. He had already shown them how to fulfill their mission and how to lead people to a life-changing relationship with him.
He did not ask them to do something he had not already shown them how to do. In Jesus's culture, when a teacher invited people to follow him and be his disciple, the teacher was inviting them to become LIKE HIM.
The reason he invited them at the beginning of his ministry is because Jesus knew…
A follower of Jesus reflects the character of Jesus.
The Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John describe roughly three years of Jesus's life. They describe how he interacted with religious leaders, prostitutes, the worst of the worst, and the best of the best. Jesus spent time in the slums with the poor, and he went to the parties of the rich. Jesus taught people who went to the synagogues, and he taught in the streets and fields.
The Gospel writers provide accounts of Jesus working miracles: He healed people with leprosy, brought the dead back to life, made the sick well, and made the paralyzed run and skip. For three years, Jesus engaged with people and taught them how to love God with all their hearts and love their neighbors as they loved themselves. His disciples were right there watching him every step of the way.
Jesus knew their observation of his life would transform their lives. He knew that before he could assign them the responsibility to fulfill his mission, they must be prepared, and the preparation happened partly through their observation of his life and as they became more like him.
Growing up, I acted just like the friends I hung out with. The more time I spent with them, the more I became like them. If they spit spitballs from a straw in the cafeteria, I spit spitballs from a straw in the cafeteria. If they superglued their fingers together, I superglued my fingers together. If they did dumb things, I did dumb things. My teachers always told us that we acted just like each other. If you are a follower of Jesus, the more you observe the life of Jesus through prayer and reading the Bible, the more you will reflect the character of Jesus. When we reflect the character of Jesus, we will lead people to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.
In other words, the character of Jesus rubbed off on his disciples. The disciples became like Jesus – not just in regard to their mission, but in regard to their character.
We have Five guiding values that guide our decision making at Beach Church, these guiding values are reflected in the life of Jesus. The more we grow in these values, the more we reflect the character of Jesus, and the more we fulfill his mission:
Our first guiding value is…
GUIDING VALUE #1: LIFE-CHANGING TRUTH
“We believe if we read and apply the Word of God, He will change our lives.”
Matthew 4:1-11 tells the story of Jesus being tempted by Satan in the wilderness. Despite being hungry and weak, Jesus stood firm and resisted the temptation to sin by quoting Scripture and applying the truth of God's Word to His life. In doing so, Jesus demonstrated the power of God's Word to overcome temptation and sin.
GUIDING VALUE #2: TRANSPARENT LIVING
“We believe God desires us to be real, open, and honest about who we are and allow others to do the same.”
In John 11:35 and Matthew 26:36-46, Jesus is vulnerable. He wept at Lazarus' tomb and experienced anguish in the Garden of Gethsemane. We cannot be transparent without being vulnerable. It is okay not to be okay.
GUIDING VALUE #3: UNCOMFORTABLE GRACE
“We believe followers of Jesus give the same limitless grace they have received from God.”
In Matthew 9:10-17, Mark 2:15-22, and Luke 5:29-39 and throughout the Gospels, Jesus ate with prostitutes, tax collectors, and other notorious sinners. In that culture, sharing a meal was the greatest way to demonstrate love and acceptance.
We must make allowance for the personality clashes, sins, and faults of other people and show the same type of grace Jesus did.
GUIDING VALUE #4: CAPTIVATING CELEBRATION
“We believe following Jesus results in a joy-filled life that draws people to Jesus.”
Throughout the Gospels, when Jesus healed people, the healings led to joy for the person healed and spilled over to others who saw the change in their lives. The joy and celebration that followed the healing would draw more people to Jesus.
We intentionally celebrate during the hardships that living in a broken world brings.
GUIDING VALUE #5: SELFLESS SERVICE
“We believe followers of Jesus best demonstrate love to others through acts of kindness and service.”
In John 13:1-17, Jesus washed his disciples' feet, a powerful act of humility and deference that indicates servanthood is a defining characteristic of Jesus, and he calls his followers to become servants to one another and the world.
We demonstrate selfless service by serving our community with no strings attached. Throughout his ministry, Jesus reflected the value of the Word of God, Grace, Transparency, Joy, and Serving others. These values were blueprints for how we, as followers of Jesus, fulfill his mission. When first-time guests walk into our church, we want them to see that we live with purpose and encounter Jesus's values through each and every one of us.
So, invite!
We are building a culture in which each of us strives to exemplify the values of Jesus. We are developing followers of Jesus who strive to live their lives like Jesus did.
1 John 2:6 (NLT2)
6 Those who say they live in God should live their lives as Jesus did.
We are developing a culture where people are not ashamed to invite their family, friends, and neighbors who don’t yet know Jesus. Regardless of their lifestyle, political views, and past, all people are welcomed at Beach Church because all people are welcomed to the cross.
So, invite others!
And finally,
Jesus will return, are you ready now? (Acts 1:10-11)
I am ready for Jesus to return because I know Him as my Savior.
By faith, I have been made a new creation through the GRACE and FORGIVENESS of Jesus death on the cross. By faith, I believe that Jesus died on the cross for my sins, that he rose from the dead, went up into heaven and will one day return.
But I am not ready based on what BELIEF. I am ready because I have RECEIVED the free gift of forgiveness. In 1991, I knelt beside my youth pastor, and I asked Jesus to forgive me, and I invited Jesus into my life. I had already KNOWN what Jesus had done for me. But I never received him as my Savior.
Paul writes in Romans 10:9
Romans 10:9 (NLT2)
9 If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
If you have not yet made a decision to follow Jesus, I invite you to pray with me right now and surrender your life to God and accept Jesus to be your Savior and Lord. Wherever you are. In your car. At the beach. In an RV. In your House. You can get ready for the return of Jesus, right now.
So let’s pray together.
You can pray something like this:
Dear God,
I am ready to receive Jesus as my Savior. I believe that Jesus paid the punishment for my rebellion and sin. I believe he suffered and died on the cross for me. I believe he rose from the dead. I believe he went up into Heaven and will one day return. God, I give you my life and accept Jesus as my Savior. Thank you for forgiving me!
The Ascension
Last week, we examined the Resurrection, and this week, we will examine Jesus's ascension.
Let’s read together:
Luke 24:36-53 (NLT2)
36 And just as they were telling about it, Jesus himself was suddenly standing there among them. “Peace be with you,” he said. 37 But the whole group was startled and frightened, thinking they were seeing a ghost! 38 “Why are you frightened?” he asked. “Why are your hearts filled with doubt? 39 Look at my hands. Look at my feet. You can see that it’s really me. Touch me and make sure that I am not a ghost, because ghosts don’t have bodies, as you see that I do.” 40 As he spoke, he showed them his hands and his feet. 41 Still they stood there in disbelief, filled with joy and wonder. Then he asked them, “Do you have anything here to eat?” 42 They gave him a piece of broiled fish, 43 and he ate it as they watched. 44 Then he said, “When I was with you before, I told you that everything written about me in the law of Moses and the prophets and in the Psalms must be fulfilled.” 45 Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures. 46 And he said, “Yes, it was written long ago that the Messiah would suffer and die and rise from the dead on the third day. 47 It was also written that this message would be proclaimed in the authority of his name to all the nations, beginning in Jerusalem: ‘There is forgiveness of sins for all who repent.’ 48 You are witnesses of all these things. 49 “And now I will send the Holy Spirit, just as my Father promised. But stay here in the city until the Holy Spirit comes and fills you with power from heaven.” 50 Then Jesus led them to Bethany, and lifting his hands to heaven, he blessed them. 51 While he was blessing them, he left them and was taken up to heaven. 52 So they worshiped him and then returned to Jerusalem filled with great joy. 53 And they spent all of their time in the Temple, praising God.
If you are a follower of Jesus, you made the decision to trust your life to Jesus at some point. If you surrendered your life to God, you understood that Jesus died on the cross to pay the penalty for your sin, you asked him to forgive you, and you accepted him as your Savior.
That only happened because, as we see in verse 45…
GOD HAS OPENED YOUR MIND TO UNDERSTAND THE BIBLE v. 45
The disciples had seen Jesus do some pretty amazing things. He healed people who were disfigured. He fixed the sight of people who were blind. He healed the deaf, and they could hear. Over and over, he healed people with diseases.
Miracle. After Miracle. After Miracle.
Now, in order for his disciples to become fully convinced that Jesus was truly the Savior that the Old Testament prophets had prophesied about, Jesus opened their minds. These disciples had heard the Old Testament prophecy. In fact, by the age of 10, boys had to have memorized the first five books of the Old Testament. Genesis. Exodus. Leviticus. Numbers. Deuteronomy. In the Jewish language, that was roughly 80,000 words! Most likely, these men had memorized these five books of the Bible, and they attended the synagogues each week to worship God and hear the teaching of God’s word on the Sabbath.
But even though they had memorized 80,000 words. Even though they attended the synagogue for worship every week of their lives. Even though they spent roughly three years with Jesus. They were still limited in their understanding of scripture. They knew God created them. They knew that Adam and Eve chose to sin, and sin entered the world. They knew that all descendants of Adam and Eve sinned. They knew THEY were sinners…and they knew they were separated from God…but they did not UNDERSTAND why JESUS died on the cross and rose from the dead.
They heard but did not understand. They HEARD but did not truly get it. Hey, parents, does that remind you of anybody?
We spend half our time parenting, reminding our children of what we have already told them to do. But honestly, our kids get it from us! It is a common problem throughout the history of man.
Ezekiel 12:2 (NLT2)
2 “Son of man, you live among rebels who have eyes but refuse to see. They have ears but refuse to hear. For they are a rebellious people.
I grew up Catholic. I understood that God created me. I understood Jesus paid the price for sin on the cross. I understood he rose from the dead. But nothing in me changed until God opened my mind to understand how to surrender my life to Jesus. If you have surrendered your life to Jesus, it is only because a miracle has occurred. God has opened your mind to understand the hope found in the Bible, that means God loves you and has chosen to open your mind to HIS TRUTH about your life. You have been FORGIVEN.
And we also see in this passage…
FORGIVENESS IS DEMONSTRATED THROUGH CHANGE v. 47
In verse 47, Jesus said, “There is forgiveness of sin for all who repent.”
REPENTANCE and FORGIVENESS are two separate words that communicate one idea. Some people need clarification about the word repentance. They live their lives thinking repentance means living a life filled with remorse, guilt, and shame from their past. They don’t allow themselves to become the person God has created them to be because they do not understand what repentance actually is. Repentance is simply a “change in direction.”
Suppose you are in your car on the 501 headed to Conway. But instead of going west on the 501, you are driving east! Instead of heading to Conway, you are driving to the Coast. You must change your direction to arrive in Conway. If you want to get to Conway before you drive into the Ocean, you make a UTURN and change your direction…
That is what it means to REPENT. When you repent and surrender your life to Jesus, you make a UTURN in life. If you have been forgiven, you will WANT to please God.
You will show signs that you reject the sinful lifestyle you have been living, and you will stop doing those things. Some things you will stop doing immediately, and other sins may take some time, but the difference is…but there has been an inward change because you have been forgiven.
The word FORGIVEN is actually a mathematical term.
In the days of Jesus, when an individual borrowed money from a lender, their name was written down in a book or ledger. As the person made payments on what he owed, the payment was subtracted, and a new balance would be recorded. But if the lender FORGAVE the debt, they would open the book, find the name, and completely blot out that individual's name and amount due. It was erased. It was as though it never existed in the first place. The person who owed that money was no longer bound to the lender. They were no longer loaded down with debt…they were free.
God has dealt with sin the same way. If you have surrendered your life to Christ and received Jesus as your Savior, it is now as though your sin had never existed in the first place. Your sin has been erased through the sacrifice of Jesus. Your sin has been removed from existence. You do not need to live like you are still loaded down with the guilt and the weight of your past lives. You have been set free. So live like it. Embrace the freedom that God has given to you through Jesus. Demonstrate the freedom of forgiveness through a visible change in your life.
LIVE UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT v.49
This is the fantastic part of what happens when you become a follower of Jesus. When you receive forgiveness for your sins, you also receive the Holy Spirit. Jesus told his disciples he was sending the promise of his Father to the disciples and for them to…
Luke 24:49 (NLT2)
49 “And now I will send the Holy Spirit, just as my Father promised. But stay here in the city until the Holy Spirit comes and fills you with power from heaven.”
We see this incredible promise fulfilled in Acts 2. After Jesus ascended into heaven, these men and women gathered in a room. They were praying, then…
Acts 2:2-6 (NLT2)
2 Suddenly, there was a sound from heaven like the roaring of a mighty windstorm, and it filled the house where they were sitting. 3 Then, what looked like flames or tongues of fire appeared and settled on each of them. 4 And everyone present was filled with the Holy Spirit…
If you are new to following Jesus, please understand. The HOLY SPIRIT of God does not live inside a church building, a statue, or a painting on the wall. The Holy Spirit of God lives inside YOU. Growing up, I was told the church building was God’s House.
I had to speak reverently and quietly. I had to dress nice. I couldn’t wear a hat. I was told to behave in God’s HOUSE. I now know that God does not live inside brick, steel, and drywall. The house of the Holy Spirit is reserved for God’s most incredible creation—you and me.
What a blessing to know that we are not abandoned and left to figure out life on our own! You have been changed not through your decision but through the indwelling power of the Holy Spirit. Lean into the presence of the Holy Spirit in your life. Let Him Guide you to be baptized, serve, or invite others to worship with you. Let the Holy Spirit guide you in your generosity and your relationships.
So, since God opened your mind, you have been changed and now have the Holy Spirit. You can live under the influence of the Holy Spirit! That means…
JESUS BLESSED OTHERS, AND SO CAN YOU. v. 50
Luke 24:50 (NLT2)
50 Then Jesus led them to Bethany, and lifting his hands to heaven, he blessed them.
The word BLESSED can be hard to understand. I was an altar boy. I remember the Priest taking Holy Water and flicking it on people in the church – and they considered that a blessing.
In the movie Rocky…right before his big fight, Rocky asks Father Carmine for a blessing. Father Carmine says a prayer in Italian and makes the sign of the cross. We say God Bless you when somebody sneezes. But what does it mean to bless others biblically?
A BLESSING means: TO SPEAK WELL OF, TO THANK, OR TO ASK GOD’S FAVOR UPON AN INDIVIDUAL.
So, as Jesus was leaving, he wasn’t telling his disciples that they better have their rooms clean when he got back home. He did not threaten to punish them if they did something wrong while he was gone. Before he ascended into Heaven, Jesus spoke well of his disciples, thanked them, and asked God’s favor upon them.
He BLESSED them through ENCOURAGEMENT. He Spoke words of LIFE over them. He didn’t point out all their flaws – and certainly could have – instead, he focused on using his words to cause their hearts to swell with joy…not just joy – GREAT JOY. Typically when somebody is saying goodbye to a loved one headed out for a long trip, moving away, or even passing from this life…most don’t waste their breath being critical. Some might. But most people will not waste their being critical and talking about how much their loved ones have disappointed them.
It reminds me of the Seinfeld episode in which Frank Costanza creates a holiday called Festivus, and at the Festivus dinner, he goes around the table and tells everybody why he is sick of them! The sad truth is that while many people may not have a Festivus tradition like that, many choose to live every day like that.
They use their words to criticize, tear down, and destroy others.
They use their words and influence to hurt others…and who knows why?
WORDS of BLESSING can bring great JOY to others.
Don’t you feel good when others speak well of you?
Don’t you feel good when somebody goes out of their way to say THANK YOU to you and appreciate and value you?
So, let's model our lives after Jesus and bless others, encourage them, and say words that will help them, not destroy them.
Easter - 2024
Growing up, my family had a tradition in which the Easter Bunny had hidden our Easter Basket filled with candy around the house, and we had to find it. Sometimes, the baskets were hidden so well that I was certain The Easter Bunny had forgotten about me.
Every Easter, Kristy hides Easter Eggs in the yard, and the girls search for plastic eggs filled with money, candies, and jellybeans.
Can you imagine explaining Easter egg hunts to someone who's never heard of them before? 'So, we celebrate the resurrection... by hiding chocolate eggs... laid by a bunny? Perspective can make our traditions seem a bit quirky. Have you ever noticed that we all respond differently to events?
For instance, if your wife gets a speeding ticket, some husbands will get mad, and some of you will laugh at her. Wives, If your husband stubs his toe or steps on a Lego in the middle of the night, some wives will laugh, others will hide their giggle, and some won’t wake up. We have different responses to almost everything, including the most incredible event in history, the resurrection of Jesus. Some people respond with belief. Some people respond with disbelief. Some people may not care one way or another.
Today, we celebrate Easter, and I think people respond to the resurrection of Jesus the exact same way. Some refuse to believe. Some have doubts. Some fully believe. That is precisely how it was at the time of the resurrection. Many of the followers of Jesus did not believe he had risen from the dead. Even after they talked with him, they still struggled to believe he was actually alive. Today, we will examine Luke 24 and discover how those who did not believe Jesus had risen came to the conclusion that he was indeed alive.
We will do that because you may relate to the people who could not believe that Jesus was alive, and I want to help you move from unbelief or ambivalence to belief and faith in Jesus. So, Let’s read about the events that happened three days after Jesus had been killed on the cross and buried in a tomb.
Luke 24:1-11 (NLT2)
1 But very early on Sunday morning, the women went to the tomb, taking the spices they had prepared. 2 They found that the stone had been rolled away from the entrance. 3 So they went in, but they didn’t find the body of the Lord Jesus. 4 As they stood there puzzled, two men suddenly appeared to them, clothed in dazzling robes. 5 The women were terrified and bowed with their faces to the ground. Then the men asked, “Why are you looking among the dead for someone who is alive? 6 He isn’t here! He is risen from the dead! Remember what he told you back in Galilee, 7 that the Son of Man must be betrayed into the hands of sinful men and be crucified, and that he would rise again on the third day.” 8 Then they remembered that he had said this. 9 So they rushed back from the tomb to tell his eleven disciples—and everyone else—what had happened. 10 It was Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of James, and several other women who told the apostles what had happened. 11 But the story sounded like nonsense to the men, so they didn’t believe it.
“Very early on Sunday morning, the women went to the tomb.”
Now, I don’t know about you, but getting anywhere very early on a Sunday is miraculous in itself, especially if you have kids. It makes sense to me that if anybody ever wanted Jesus to be alive – it would have been the men who followed him for three years of their lives. When somebody you love dies tragically and suddenly, you miss them and want them to be alive. The disciples aren’t any different. This wasn’t a long, drawn-out battle with cancer or disease. One moment, Jesus was healthy and enjoying dinner with his closest friends; the next moment, he was arrested and murdered. They saw him work miracles and change lives. They ate with him, learned from him, and saw the hope he brought to people.
I am sure they wanted Jesus to be alive more than anybody. Yet,
THE DISCIPLES REFUSED TO BELIEVE.
The word Luke used in verse 11 that describes where the friends of Jesus were on their journey to belief was:
Apisteo (aw pis tay o:) to have no belief, to disbelieve
The disciple's first response was not “Hurray! He is alive!”
Their first response was, “No way! That’s not possible!”
They thought the women were nuts! They refused to believe Jesus was alive. That may be where you are today.
You believe Jesus existed, that he did good things, and that you may even appreciate what he taught about forgiving others, loving those who do not deserve it, and the kindness and compassion he showed. You believe that he was put to death by execution on the cross…but like the disciple’s early response, you refuse to believe that Jesus rose from the dead.
It is important to note that the disciples changed. Their minds were changed. They went from “refusing to believe” to fully surrendering to Jesus.
How did they get there?
Well, between verses 12 and 36, Jesus made a few special appearances.
Jesus appeared to a couple of men walking down a road and talked with them.
Then he appeared to Peter.
Then he appeared to his disciples to show them the nails in his hands and feet.
And the disciples got together, and they were talking about it. Jesus appeared to me, me too! He showed us his hands and feet…We had an entire conversation with him…
Luke 24:36-41 shows us that the disciples moved from refusing to believe that Jesus was alive…they conceded a little ground…
And now…
THE DISCIPLES DESIRED TO BELIEVE (v. 38, 41)
Luke 24:36-41A (NLT2)
36 And just as they were telling about it, Jesus himself was suddenly standing there among them. “Peace be with you,” he said. 37 But the whole group was startled and frightened, thinking they were seeing a ghost! 38 “Why are you frightened?” he asked. “Why are your hearts filled with doubt? 39 Look at my hands. Look at my feet. You can see that it’s really me. Touch me and make sure that I am not a ghost, because ghosts don’t have bodies, as you see that I do.” 40 As he spoke, he showed them his hands and his feet. 41 Still they stood there in disbelief, filled with joy and wonder…
When Jesus said, “Why are your hearts filled with doubt?” He used the word:
Dialogismos (dē-ä-lo-gē-smoss): the thinking of a man deliberating with himself. A deliberating, questioning about what is true. Hesitation, doubting, disputing, arguing.
They desired to believe. They made eye contact with Jesus. They saw the wounds on his hands and feet. They wanted to believe, but they were torn by what they saw happened to Jesus at the cross. Their resistance to embrace the TRUTH of Jesus being alive reinforces the suffering and brutality of the cross. Before Jesus was arrested in the Garden, he had been pleading with God to find another way to bring forgiveness to mankind rather than face the brutality of the cross.
Luke 22:42 (NLT2)
“Father, if you are willing, please take this cup of suffering away from me. Yet I want your will to be done, not mine.”
We do not understand the phrase “cup of suffering” the way the Jewish people did back then. In the Old Testament, “the cup” is often used as a metaphor for the wrath of God.
Isaiah 51:17 (NLT)
17 Wake up, wake up, O Jerusalem! You have drunk the cup of the LORD’s fury. You have drunk the cup of terror, tipping out its last drops.
Jeremiah 25:15 (NLT)15 This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, said to me: “Take from my hand this cup filled to the brim with my anger, and make all the nations to whom I send you drink from it.
Habakkuk 2:16 (NLT)
16 But soon it will be your turn to be disgraced. Come, drink, and be exposed! Drink from the cup of the LORD’s judgment, and all your glory will be turned to shame.
Isaiah called it a cup of terror. Jeremiah called it a cup filled to the brim with God’s anger. Habakkuk called it a cup of the Lord’s Judgement.
Throughout the Bible, we see glimpses of God’s Wrath:
God’s Anger over sin is seen in the great flood that destroyed the earth…
God’s wrath destroys Sodom and Gomorrah with fire and brimstone.
God’s wrath is seen in the 10 Plagues upon Egypt.
It was not the physical agony of the beatings, the scourging, and the crucifixion that Jesus dreaded. It was the spiritual agony He would experience as he drank every last drop of God’s wrath that we deserved.
The Disciples watched the physical brutality of the cross. They watched the flesh ripped from his back through the scourging. They heard his final words and watched him breathe his final breath. They saw his dead body. They knew NO MAN was going to come back from that.
If you have heard the message that Jesus is ALIVE over and over yet walk away with doubt, understand that the very same men followed Jesus! Jesus stood in the same room. They made eye contact with Jesus, yet they STILL had doubts! They wanted to believe, but they just couldn't because of what they had already seen.
Is that you? Maybe you really would like to believe that Jesus is alive – but because of the troubles, difficulties, and emptiness you have experienced in this world, you struggle with accepting. If the disciples who walked and talked with Jesus after he was resurrected struggled with believing – it is understandable that 2,000 years later, men and women struggle with fully believing in Jesus as Savior and Lord. Let’s look one more time in Luke 24, and we will discover that…
THE DISCIPLES FULLY BELIEVED, AND THEIR LIVES WERE CHANGED
Luke 24:45-47 (NLT2)
45 Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures. 46 And he said, “Yes, it was written long ago that the Messiah would suffer and die and rise from the dead on the third day. 47 It was also written that this message would be proclaimed in the authority of his name to all the nations, beginning in Jerusalem: ‘There is forgiveness of sins for all who repent.’
What did it take for these men to have faith? The same thing still required today. For us to believe in JESUS as SAVIOR – God must open our minds to believe. If you have repeatedly heard about Jesus’ death and resurrection yet still have doubts or think, “So what? That is not going to change anything about my life...”
I want you to understand why you think that way. The Apostle Paul tells us why some people do not believe:
2 Corinthians 4:4 (NLT2)
4 Satan, who is the god of this world, has blinded the minds of those who don’t believe. They are unable to see the glorious light of the Good News. They don’t understand this message about the glory of Christ...
So, if you desire to believe, ask God to open your mind to believe. Ask God to remove the blindfold preventing you from becoming a follower of Jesus. You can ask him right now.
“God, please remove the blindfold on my mind. If Jesus did rise from the dead, that changes everything. I would like to believe, but I need you to open my mind.”
Take a moment right now. In your own words, say, “ God, open my mind to understand Jesus.”
Then, in verse 46, Jesus taught them that the Savior of the World would have to suffer and die. God opened their minds, and they understood now that Jesus was the Savior who endured the “cup of suffering for all people” so that mankind might never have to experience God’s wrath again.
They understood the words that Jesus told them in John 3:16:
John 3:16 (NLT2)
16 “For God loved the world so much that he gave his one and only Son, so that everyone who believes in him will not perish but have eternal life.
Maybe at this moment, God has opened your mind to understand Jesus. Maybe something has clicked, and you understand how much God loves you. In verse 47, Jesus said, “There is forgiveness of sin for all who repent.”
The word that Jesus used for “repent” communicates a shift or change in thinking. The Disciples SHIFTED their thoughts about Jesus. This was the moment they put their DISBELIEF behind them—they chose to believe that Jesus was alive and that he had died for their sins, and they fully believed by surrendering their lives to him through repentance.
To repent – you, too, must have that SHIFT in your thinking. If you would like to repent, be forgiven for your sins, and become a follower of Jesus today, pray this with me:
God,
I believe that Jesus suffered for my disobedience on the cross and died.
I believe he rose from the dead; he is now with you in Heaven
and will return to earth one day.
I surrender my life to you as my Savior.
Thank you for forgiving my sin and changing my life.
In Jesus name, Amen.
Guardrails - Do Not Lie or Covet
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
Today, we look at the ninth and tenth commandment, “Do not lie and do not covet.”
Exodus 20:16-17 (NLT2)
16 “You must not testify falsely against your neighbor. 17 “You must not covet your neighbor’s house. You must not covet your neighbor’s wife, male or female servant, ox or donkey, or anything else that belongs to your neighbor.”
I had been a follower of Jesus for roughly one year, in 1992. I was a construction worker earning about $4.60 an hour, and I needed new contacts. I could not afford an eye examination and contact lenses…so I lied. I changed the date on my written prescription, took it to my eye doctor, and said I needed to order new contacts. As soon as the receptionist looked at my lying prescription – I blurted out…”I am so sorry! Please forgive me! I am a follower of Jesus, and I knew better than that…I don’t have the money to pay for both an examination and contact lenses. I am so sorry. Please forgive me.”
In that moment, I mishandled the truth. I was willing to lie to get what I needed. And thankfully, I couldn’t go through with that lie. The reason we must speak the truth is because:
TRUTH BUILDS TRUST AND PREVENTS CONFUSION
The Apostle Paul challenged the church with these thoughts:
Ephesians 4:25 (NLT2)
25 So stop telling lies. Let us tell our neighbors the truth, for we are all parts of the same body.
The Church in America has been under the microscope in recent years because of abuse scandals, coverups, and failure to live transparently. In separate studies in 2023, Lifeway Research and Gallup each found that only 32% of Americans had a "great deal" or "fair amount" of confidence that the “church” could be trusted.
Their research highlights the top reasons why people don’t trust the church:
High-profile cases of sexual abuse, financial misconduct, and cover-ups.
The close association of some churches with Republican or Democrat Parties has eroded the perception of the “moral” voice of the church.
Affirmation of lifestyles that do not line up with Scripture
I was only a few months into my first Pastorate when I discovered that our student pastor, who was loved and respected by the church and the community, had been grooming a female student since she was sixteen years old. Immediately after the young lady turned eighteen, he initiated a physical, digital, and sexual relationship with this young lady. She was in her Senior year of high school, and he was married.
Here is how I handled it:
I talked to him, and he admitted it, and I asked him to resign. Because he was married, we provided 6 months of salary and health insurance and offered counseling. I talked openly with the young lady and her parents and offered counseling from an outside therapist for as long as she wanted it. We called law enforcement. I protected her identity and communicated this to our leadership, staff, and deacons. I protected her identity and met and counseled with all of our student ministry leadership. Then, I met with all student ministry parents, explained what happened, and answered every question. Then, I had a church-wide meeting and addressed it there.
The entire time, the only information I withheld was the young lady's name. I still do to this day. She received over one year of counseling and is now married, raising her children, and pointing them to Jesus.
Why take all of those steps?
Because truth builds trust and prevents confusion. People want to believe the church can be trusted, and the church can only earn trust by telling the truth even when it's hard.
Are you truthful in your relationships? If people do not trust you, it may be because you are not living in the truth.
Now, let’s talk about Coveting.
I grew up Catholic. We were taught the 10 Commandments from a very early age. Because of the language used in the translation, I always believed that the 10th Commandment was the “dirty” commandment.
Exodus 20:17 (KJV)
17 Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that is thy neighbour's.
Now you see why. I thought this commandment was dealing with adultery! But, here is the truth about this commandment:
COVETING POINTS BACKWARD TO REFLECT AND FORWARD TO GRACE.
In Hebrew, the word “covet” means: “Indulge in thoughts that lead to sin.”
God placed this commandment at the end to point BACKWARD to reflect on the rest of the commandments. When broken, the first nine commandments can be observed by an outward action:
A lie is heard.
People can see theft.
Adultery and murder have clear unmistakable actions.
Honoring parents is visible.
Rest on the Sabbath. Misuse of God’s name, Idolatry, and worship of other Gods can be clearly seen.
But of the 10 Commandments, coveting is the only commandment that addresses what cannot be seen.
God placed this command at the end for us to reflect because this commandment EXPLAINS why we choose to break the other commandments…We break the other Commandments because we “think thoughts that lead to sin.”
The reason why we steal? We think about doing it.
The reason why we lie? We think the truth will get us in trouble.
The reason we commit adultery? We think that person will give us something we don’t have.
The reason we dishonor our parents? We think they should have been better.
The reason we don’t take a sabbath rest? We think we don’t need to.
God placed this commandment strategically after all the others as if to say, “Don’t even think about doing these things.”
The 10th Commandment moves away from measurable sinful actions and enters the secret places of our hearts and thoughts. As we see in the life of Jesus, God is concerned about our hearts and our actions. But if I only ever think about doing the action but never do it, why does it matter to God?
If I only think about murdering somebody but never do it…
If I only think about idolatry, stealing, or disrespecting my parents but never do it, why does God care?
God does not only want our obedience, God wants us to want to follow him. God wants us to be content in him. In 1647, Church leaders got together and came up with a statement that deals with our desires: “Man’s chief end is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever.”
When you find pleasure in obedience to God, and through Christ, ENJOY your life – God is glorified! God doesn’t want us to simply obey him without finding enjoyment, God wants us to obey him and enjoy obeying him. This leads us to the final point:
THE CURE FOR COVETING IS CONTENTMENT FOUND IN JESUS.
The apostle Paul had been beaten, robbed, stoned, left for dead, hungry, homeless, and abandoned…and he faced those challenges because he had TRAINED HIS MIND to be content.
He writes:
Philippians 4:11-13 (ESV)
11 Not that I am speaking of being in need, for I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content. 12 I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound. In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need. 13 I can do all things through him who strengthens me.
Contentment is a learned attitude. If we have had enough of the negative thoughts racing through our mind that leads to coveting, we must ask God to help us learn to be CONTENT.
God is RECONDITIONING my heart in this area. When I was a child, I coveted other homes, other families, other siblings, other moms, other dads, others athletic abilities, others grades…I coveted everything. I had grown to such a dark place in my heart because of the abuse I experienced from my dad –
I coveted other people's lives and stuff so much that I became embarrassed of our stuff. My house was not good enough to invite people over. My clothes were not good enough to fit in with groups of kids. The family car was worse than everybody else…I coveted everything.
Since I became a follower of Jesus – I thought that old way of thinking was behind me. It wasn’t. I allowed COVETING to creep into my life as a Pastor. I wanted to have a nice big office like other senior Pastors had. I wanted to have a nice big automobile that other senior Pastors had. I wanted to wear the right clothes and speak correctly, “God Bless you…” “Have a blessed day…”
And that is just over the decade. Coveting is thinking that other things should belong to us…and that is precisely what I have done. Paul tells us we have the capacity to CONTROL our thought life.
Philippians 4:8-9 (NLT)
8 And now, dear brothers and sisters, one final thing. Fix your thoughts on what is true, and honorable, and right, and pure, and lovely, and admirable. Think about things that are excellent and worthy of praise. 9 Keep putting into practice all you learned and received from me—everything you heard from me and saw me doing. Then the God of peace will be with you.
If you desire to experience contentment, which is the peace of God in your life, train your mind to think correctly. Think about OURSELVES less and less. Think of ways to honor others. Think of ways to put into practice what is right and good and honorable and true. Take those negative thoughts captive and put into practice God’s word. I mentioned that this final command points us backward and forward.
The 10 Commandments point us forward to the FORGIVENESS and GRACE of JESUS. I hope you have realized, throughout this series, that it is impossible for you to live your life and never sin. You and I will break these commandments. We will never be able to live a sinless life. That is why God gave us Jesus.
If you have come to the end of TRYING and are ready to TRUST in Jesus as your Savior and Lord, I invite you to silently, in this moment, tell God you are tired of trying to do good and be right on your own, and ask him to forgive you of your sins. Thank Jesus for dying on the cross and paying the penalty for your sin.
Guardrails - Do Not Steal
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
Today, we look at the eighth commandment, “Do not Steal.”
The first time I stole something was in a grocery store. I was around seven years old, and I had gone down the candy aisle with my mom. I begged her for one of the candy bars. She said, “No.” But they looked so good! I whined. I begged.
Then, we went to another aisle…and somehow became separated. I wandered back to that candy aisle…I couldn’t keep my eyes off the candy bar.
I passed by the candy bar once…and had this overwhelming impulse to reach out and take it. My heart raced. My face felt flushed. I passed it one more time…grabbed the candy bar, and shoved it under my clothes. I couldn’t believe I had it…and nobody saw me take it!
Then, as I walked out of the aisle to catch up with my mom, a man in a green shirt with thick, curly hair walked past me and said: “Better put it back…”
Shocked, I walked quickly back to the candy bar section, put the candy bar back, and went to find my mom.
Exodus 20:15 (NLT2)
15 “You must not steal.”
The first thing I want to say about “stealing” is this:
If we trust God to provide, this command is easy!
Throughout scripture, we are repeatedly shown that God wants to provide for us. He is our heavenly father and wants to deliver what we need. And, if we trust that God will provide for our needs, this command is easy.
The only reason I have a life insurance policy is so that my death will be a financial blessing to my family when I die. God is your heavenly Father, and He also wants to provide for you. He wants you to trust that He will provide for you.
Psalm 24:1 (NLT2)
1 The earth is the LORD’s, and everything in it. The world and all its people belong to him.
If everything belongs to God, then we can reasonably make the connection that God gave you your possessions. Your stuff, our car, our house, our toys, our boats, our family, our jobs: everything is provided to us by God. You do not need to be anxious or worried about whether or not you have the right stuff; God wants you to trust in Him and trust that He will provide for whatever you need.
Jesus said in Matthew 6:
Matthew 6:31-33 (NLT2)
31 “So don’t worry about these things, saying, ‘What will we eat? What will we drink? What will we wear?’ 32 These things dominate the thoughts of unbelievers, but your heavenly Father already knows all your needs. 33 Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.
If you are a follower of Jesus…by that, I mean if you believe that God created you, but you chose to sin… there is a penalty for that sin. But as God, Jesus came to this earth and paid the price for your sin on the cross. You believe that he died, rose from the dead, and will one day return. And, because you believed, you surrendered your life to Jesus and committed to follow him, then as a follower of Jesus, you prioritize the mission of Jesus to lead people to Jesus.
Our mission at Beach Church is to “Lead People to a life-changing relationship with Jesus.” We are committed to Jesus' mission, and as we stay focused on it, He continues to provide for us and change lives. “Seek the Kingdom of God above all else, and live righteously, and he will give you everything you need.” This is a promise from God.
Notice that the promise is what we NEED…not what we WANT. I want many things, but what I want is not what I need. Jesus promised to provide us with food, water, and clothing—which is all we need. I know that does not sound appealing. We want the mansion on the hill, we want a big pool, we want a big checking account, we want the outdoor toys…
But your perspective might change if you go on a mission trip to a third-world country. Several years ago, I went on a mission trip to Haiti. The Haitian people live in small, crumbling shacks, and the average person only eats three meals a week. As a follower of Jesus, God has promised to provide for all your NEEDS.
Philippians 4:19 (NLT2)
19 And this same God who takes care of me will supply all your needs from his glorious riches, which have been given to us in Christ Jesus.
So, if I begin to compare my house, car, or checking account to others and think I need what they have, I call God a liar for not providing those things to me. If I steal to get what I want, I am telling God that I know better than him, that he really doesn’t keep his word, and that if he does, he doesn’t really understand what I need.
That’s why, if we trust God, this commandment is easy to follow.
The second thing I would like to say about this commandment is:
God created us to contribute
Each of us was created to add and contribute to the world around us in some way. You were created to make a difference and contribute to others.
At the very beginning of creation, God gave Adam a JOB.
Genesis 2:15 (NLT2)
15 The LORD God placed the man in the Garden of Eden to tend and watch over it.
Before Adam and Eve chose to sin, God gave ADAM a job! He was to contribute and make a difference in the world. “Working” is part of God’s plan for me!
Now, think about that in connection to Matt 6:33…
Part of putting God’s Kingdom first is working to contribute to the world around us. As you work, you are paid. God is providing for you! If you are curious about how you can work to put God’s Kingdom first, I want to challenge you to consider volunteering in some capacity here at Beach Church.
Now, you might be thinking:
“You don’t want me to contribute.”
“If you knew my past, you would know that you would never ask me to contribute. You would never allow me to wear the Beach Church hoodie.”
Your past does not disqualify you from contributing to God’s Kingdom and participating in the mission of Beach Church. When the apostle Paul wrote to the church in Ephesus, he said:
Ephesians 4:28 (NLT2)
28 If you are a thief, quit stealing. Instead, use your hands for good hard work and give generously to others in need.
This letter was written to people who had already been born again and were following Jesus. That means stealing did not disqualify people from serving in the Kingdom of God. There is genuine life-changing power in the GOOD NEWS that Jesus gives us a second chance through FORGIVENESS!
God does not hold the sins of your past over your head. God shows grace, kindness, and forgiveness! In this passage, Paul tells the thief to stop stealing, go to work, earn money, and give generously to those who need it. That is the opposite of stealing! And, if God calls the thief to stop stealing and be generous, then that means…
God calls us to be generous
It is just like our life-changing God to use a former thief to provide for other people! A former thief is now working hard—not for himself but so that he can GENEROUSLY GIVE to others in need! The thief should no longer steal but work so that he may have something to share with anyone in need. What a beautiful picture of how followers of Jesus trust and serve God by blessing others with generosity.
In Matthew 6:33, God promised to meet our needs. He keeps this promise by calling us to be generous. When we are generous, we reflect God's character. God wants his followers to live generous lives. The more generous we become, the more we experience his peace and trust in him.
A couple of years ago, I noticed I had grown callused enough to justify my stinginess. At almost every intersection, I would stare straight down the street instead of making eye contact with the homeless person with the cardboard sign asking for money.
I justified my stinginess by saying things like:
“They are probably just running a scam…”
“They probably have a nice car…”
“They should go get a job…”
“If I give them money, they will probably buy booze.”
But God tells us the poor will always be among us.
Mark 14:7 (NLT2)
7 You will always have the poor among you, and you can help them whenever you want to. But you will not always have me.
Deuteronomy 15:11 (NLT2)11 There will always be some in the land who are poor. That is why I am commanding you to share freely with the poor and with other Israelites in need.
So, I began to carry cash in my car…I began to make eye contact with them. I now roll down my window and ask them their name. If I have time, I will ask them their story. I will ask them if they have a place to get warm…
Why did I begin to do that?
Because I want to be generous like God.
Have you ever felt bad about being stingy?
Have you ever felt good about being generous?
That’s because followers of Jesus WANT to be generous to others.
If you are interested in being generous with your time and money, New Directions is a non-profit ministry in Myrtle Beach. It provides for the basic needs of those without, connects them to resources to overcome barriers they may experience, and provides training and guidance.
If you go to HelpNewDirections.org, you can get involved with their ministry by submitting your information to their website. It feels “right” when we put God’s Kingdom first when we trust God to provide, when we contribute, and when we are generous. It feels right because we are becoming more like our Heavenly Father.
Guardrails - Do Not commit adultery
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
Today, we look at the sixth commandment, “Do not commit adultery.”
God placed “Do not murder” right before “Do not commit adultery” just in case your spouse cheats; you know it is wrong to murder them. In the Old Testament, it was commonly accepted that the only reason a couple could be divorced was because of adultery. Frankly put, “Adultery” is “having sex with someone who is not your spouse” when one or both participants are married to someone else. So, that means that both parties are guilty of adultery. Even if they are not married, the married person and the other person they sleep with.
Today, people might refer to that non-married party as a “home wrecker.”
I know that this topic is going to hit close to home for many, so let me say this:
“God demonstrates his love for us in this: while we were sinners, Christ died for us.”
If your spouse has cheated on you, if you have cheated on your spouse, or if you were the outside person, God still loves you. We still love you. Like Paul, I often feel like I am the chief of sinners, and you are welcome here. This message may stir up some unresolved junk in your life. Let me encourage you to talk with somebody about it if it does. A therapist, a counselor, or get involved in Celebrate Recovery. CR meets every Friday at 6 PM. If you struggle with any “Hurt, Habit, or Hang-up,” Celebrate Recovery is a great place to begin the healing process.
Exodus 20:14 (NLT2)
14 “You must not commit adultery. “
Spouses who have been cheated on often describe feeling:
• deeply hurt
• emotionally shattered
• a deep loss of trust
• a sense of abandonment
• they begin to question their self-worth
• and wonder if they were ever really loved.
And the reason it did so much damage is because:
ADULTERY WRECKS RELATIONSHIPS
Adultery wrecks relationships. Remember, just like God desires us to be faithful to Him, God also wants us to be loyal to our spouse. The 10 Commandments are Guardrails to “bless and protect us and keep our lives from crashing.”
And the sin of Adultery wrecks people and relationships. The Book of Proverbs offers practical advice about adultery. Solomon writes:
Proverbs 6:27-32 (NLT2)
27 Can a man scoop a flame into his lap and not have his clothes catch on fire? 28 Can he walk on hot coals and not blister his feet? 29 So it is with the man who sleeps with another man’s wife. He who embraces her will not go unpunished. 30 Excuses might be found for a thief who steals because he is starving. 31 But if he is caught, he must pay back seven times what he stole, even if he has to sell everything in his house. 32 But the man who commits adultery is an utter fool, for he destroys himself.
“If you play with fire, you are going to get burned”
“Sex” is being compared to a fire. A fire in your fireplace can heat the room. But a fire outside the fireplace will burn down the house. Within Marriage, a child finds security, love, and support because Parents are deeply committed to and love one another. Parents, your marriage keeps the whole family warm! But, if you are unfaithful to your spouse, you can burn the whole house down and destroy every single relationship, including your children’s.
Your kids may blame themselves for your affair.
They may blame your spouse for the affair.
Their grades may suffer.
Their emotions may suffer.
Or, as adults, your children may have trust issues and bounce from one relationship to the next. When the foundation of TRUST is gone from the family, the whole family is wrecked. Adultery wrecks relationships between children, parents, in-laws, and grandchildren. Family and friends may take sides. On all sides, guilt, shame, anger, resentment, and bitterness take root and have the potential to destroy every relationship. So, if adultery is so damaging, why do people cheat? Why does it appear so appealing?
Sometimes, they are deceived by the…
THE BLACK ICE OF DECEIT
During the winter, sometimes we get “black ice.” The roads freeze over, but the streets look normal. The thin layer of ice is hard to see, so the roads look OK to drive on. If you drive on black ice unknowingly, you could run off the road and spiral out of control. Many people do not intend to commit adultery, but they get sucked into the black ice of deceit. In John 8:44, Jesus described the Devil as “a liar and the Father of Lies.” Lies deceive people because lies are designed to look like the truth. People begin to believe that cheating on their spouse is the RIGHT thing to do!
In John 10:10, Jesus said:
John 10:10 (NLT2)
10 The thief’s purpose is to steal and kill and destroy. My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life.
If you are married, God wants your marriage to be rich and satisfying. But the Devil seeks to destroy it. The Devil’s purpose is to STEAL, KILL, and DESTROY your marriage. The Devil wants to steal your happiness, kill your joy, and destroy your family.
The Devil is going to whisper into your ear…
The devil is going to tempt you with your eyes…
The Devil is going to put people in your life that you may fantasize about…
The Devil wants to steal, kill, and destroy your life.
First, the Devil is going to try to make you feel…
DISCONTENT
He will whisper that you are just not happy in your marriage. He whispers that you are lonely and sad, and your spouse is not meeting your needs. He tells you once were happy, but your spouse has changed. He begins to whisper that it may be time to find somebody else. Then, the Devil will begin to whisper in your ear about…
ENTITLEMENT
He tells you that you deserve to be happy. You deserve to be with somebody who will laugh at your jokes, have sex whenever you want, and keep the house clean. If you are a woman, you may hear the whisper that your husband is not “manly” enough for you. If you are a man, you may hear the whisper that your wife is not “hot” anymore. Then, the Devil leads you to think you can cheat on your spouse and get away with it. He lets you believe that you can…
CONCEAL the truth.
He whispers that you will be able to keep the affair secret. He leads you to think that you can cover up your sin and nobody will ever find out.
You change the passcode on your phone. Delete messages. Maybe you buy a burner phone. The whole time, you know the affair is wrong, but you believe you can get away with it. And now, you have bought into the lies and the trap of the Devil. You don’t realize it, but your clothes and your house are burning down because of the affair. And now you are living in the land of…
EVASION
You are minimizing the sin of adultery. The Devil has warped your mind into believing that adultery is not as bad as people say it is. You evade the truth that you have already gone too far. Your family is burning down around you, but you fail to see the truth. You have given into the whispers of the Devil who desires to steal, kill, and destroy your life…and if you are a follower of Jesus, somewhere along the line, the Devil began to use the truth as a weapon against you, and you start to believe that an affair was…
INEVITABLE
Because you understand the biblical truth that “all have sinned,” you begin to listen to the twisted deception of the devil and tell yourself, “I’m a sinner. I’m weak. I may as well give in…but God says,
1 Corinthians 10:13 (NLT2)
13 The temptations in your life are no different from what others experience. And God is faithful. He will not allow the temptation to be more than you can stand. When you are tempted, he will show you a way out so that you can endure.
Hebrews 2:18 (NLT2)
18 Since he himself has gone through suffering and testing, he is able to help us when we are being tested.
Adultery is not inevitable. You are not strong enough to resist, but God is strong enough to help you. And all along the way, the Devil has been taking the TRUTH and…
TWISTING it.
Every scripture passage you read, the Devil twists the meaning. Every sermon you hear, the Devil twists the meaning. The Devil wants to steal, kill, and destroy your life – and he will resort to using the Word of God to do it.
He will take the truth of scripture, twist it, and tempt you to cheat on your spouse.nHe will whisper things like:
“You are already forgiven.”
“Nothing can separate you from God’s Love…”
But, as followers of Jesus, we are called to live a changed life.
So, avoid the damage that adultery will do and…
Steer your HEART, MIND, and BODY away from danger. (Proverbs 4:23, 2 Tim 2:22, Matt 5:27-28)
HEART:
Proverbs 4:23 (NLT2)
23 Guard your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life.
You steer your heart away from danger by choosing to love your spouse. Refuse to give in to the whispers of the Devil that tell you, “You are not content with your spouse and deserve something better.” Guard your heart and call it a lie. Then, ask God to help you see the truth about your spouse that you have missed. Guard your heart by embracing the truth about your spouse. Take note of the way they serve, their faithfulness, and their loyalty to you. And steer your mind away from danger! Jesus raised the bar on what it meant to be unfaithful to our spouse.
He said:
Matthew 5:27-28 (NLT2)
27 “You have heard the commandment that says, ‘You must not commit adultery.’ 28 But I say, anyone who even looks at a woman with lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart.
Men and women, I know you do not intend to commit adultery. But Jesus said, if you lust, you have already committed adultery IN YOUR HEART. Keep the thoughts of your mind from veering out of control into adultery as well. Steer your mind as far away from adultery as you can get.
That means:
Stop wondering what your old college or high school flame has been doing.
Don’t send friend requests to old boyfriends or girlfriends.
Stop looking them up on social media to see how their life turned out.
Stop fantasizing about what it would be like to be with somebody else.
Those are simple ways to steer your mind away from temptation.
And steer your BODY away from temptation:
2 Timothy 2:22 (NLT2)
22 Run from anything that stimulates youthful lusts. Instead, pursue righteous living, faithfulness, love, and peace. Enjoy the companionship of those who call on the Lord with pure hearts.
Run away from anything that stimulates youthful lusts!
Practically, that means:
If you can’t wait to get to the gym because you are attracted to a person who works out there, find another gym. If you can’t wait to play pickleball because a certain somebody will be there, stop playing pickleball. Stop sending signals that you are available; don’t remove your wedding ring if you go out with the guys and the girls.
To strengthen your marriage this week, begin attending Celebrate Recovery. If you struggle with hurt, habit, or hang-up, get involved with CR. They meet every Friday at 6 PM in Adventure Beach. Celebrate Recovery is for anybody with any struggle. And if flirting is your hang-up, get involved with CR. The Devil wants to steal, kill, and destroy your marriage through deceit, but God wants to bless your marriage and give you a long and satisfying life.
Guardrails - Do Not Murder
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
Today, we look at the sixth commandment, “Do not Murder.”
I think we would all agree. If you break this commandment, your life will crash and spin out of control! Traditionally, this commandment has been understood as “Thou shalt not kill.” But the first thing we need to understand is that:
DO NOT MURDER DOES NOT MEAN DO NOT KILL
Suppose we understand that this commandment means that Killing other people is a sin. In that case, we immediately run into problems because God demands the death penalty and instructs the Israelites to go to war against other nations.
People are always killed in war, so what does this commandment mean?
In the original Hebrew language, murder involves personal motive and intent. God is not sinning against his command. God is saying, “If you have a problem with somebody, do not take their life!”
My wife was explaining the 10 Commandments to her Kindergarten class. After discussing what it means to Honor your Father and Mother, she asked, “Is there a commandment that teaches us how to treat our brothers and sisters?”
One of the kids answered, “Thou shalt not murder.”
When I would get into a fight in elementary school or middle school, the first thing I would say was, “I am going to kill you!”. I never meant it. I wasn’t really going to kill them. It was an expression to strike fear into their mind to give my scrawny, Steve Urkel body the upper hand. So, of all the commandments, I have not broken this one. Yet, even if I had, God is a forgiving and redeeming God.
The New Testament describes a man who often ordered the death and persecution of followers of Jesus – yet his life was changed, and he became a follower of Jesus. His name was Saul. After he became a follower of Jesus, it was changed to Paul, and Paul wrote most of the letters in the New Testament. God can change anybody and give them hope and a purpose. Why is it important to God that we do not murder anyone? Every person who is born is going to die. Some may die of cancer and disease; some may die of old age. Some may die tragically, and some babies will never be born but will die in miscarriage.
So why are our lives so valuable to God that we do not murder people?
GOD’S GREATEST CREATION IS THE HUMAN BODY. IS IT YOURS?
It may not be politically correct to make this statement, but here it is:
Human beings are the very BEST of God's creations. The human being is the BEST God could create!
Genesis 1:26-28 (NLT2)
26 Then God said, “Let us make human beings in our image, to be like ourselves. They will reign over the fish in the sea, the birds in the sky, the livestock, all the wild animals on the earth, and the small animals that scurry along the ground.” 27 So God created human beings in his own image. In the image of God he created them; male and female he created them. 28 Then God blessed them and said, “Be fruitful and multiply. Fill the earth and govern it. Reign over the fish in the sea, the birds in the sky, and all the animals that scurry along the ground.”
God created human beings in His image to be like Him. Nothing else in all of creation was designed in his image. Nothing. We stare into the galaxies and marvel at the pictures received from NASAS Telescopes that reveal striking images of comets, stars, planets, and other Galaxies…
Yet – there is nothing as awe-inspiring as you. God created you and every other person in his image. So, the next time you want to be amazed, look deeply into the eyes of your spouse, child, or yourself in a mirror.
Ephesians 2:10 (NLT2)
For we are God’s masterpiece…
The beauty of nature, the ocean depths, and the deepest parts of the galaxy pale in comparison to the majestic beauty of people. The person beside you is a masterpiece. Wouldn’t it be amazing if, like visitors to the Grand Canyon, we lined up outside one another’s house and stared, applauded, and snapped pictures appreciating one another…oh…that sounds a little like stalking…But you get the point.
We ought to stand in AWE and WONDER at the beauty of one another. It is not only because of our bodies, brain, and soul's complexity–but because God has stamped HUMANS with His image! God’s most incredible creation is the Human Body – but is it yours?
Do you value human life the way God values human life?
I remember the first time Kristy and I had a 3-D Ultrasound of our firstborn, Sofie. We could see her face, her eyes, her mouth. We could see her heartbeat. Looking at the ultrasound video reminded me that we were catching a peek at what God saw with every person who has ever been born.
Psalm 139:15-16 (NLT2)
15 You watched me as I was being formed in utter seclusion, as I was woven together in the dark of the womb. 16 You saw me before I was born. Every day of my life was recorded in your book. Every moment was laid out before a single day had passed.
God values life so much that every human being is stamped with the image of God, and God is devoted to watching and forming us in the womb. Not only does God see that moment – but he sees every day of our lives played out before a single one of them has passed.
God highly values you.
And poetically, even the tears you have cried matter to God.
The Psalmist writes:
Psalm 56:8 (NLT2)
8 You keep track of all my sorrows. You have collected all my tears in your bottle. You have recorded each one in your book.
Dad came home from work one evening to find his 5-year-old daughter broken and crying because her goldfish (Goldie) had died. Dad offered her a new goldfish, but that didn’t work.
Desperate to bring an end to her tears, he said:
I tell you what, we’ll have a funeral for Goldie. We’ll invite all the kids from the neighborhood. We will have ice cream, cake, lemonade, balloons, jumpy houses, and water slides…all your friends and kids in the neighborhood can come to our house to play. Then we will put Goldie into a box and bury him in the backyard."
This idea of the Celebration of Life did the trick. Instantly, she was her happy, smiling self. Then, inside the tank, Goldie began to move. A few seconds later, he was swimming! Goldie was alive! Seeing the Party plans come to a screeching halt, his innocent, wide-eyed daughter looked up at her daddy and whispered,
Daddy, LET’S KILL IT.
Many people today value life ONLY if life doesn’t stand in the way of what they want.
If life looks like it will ruin their “party,” then it’s time to eliminate the problem – the LIFE! It is estimated that 65 million babies have been aborted since 1973. Almost one million babies are murdered…often because they are in the way of a “party.”
In 2019, USA Today reported that 1% of abortions were rape-related, and ½ percent were incest related. I am grateful to bold women who chose to have their baby even though initially they felt the baby was “too soon.” I am also grateful for the number of women who had an abortion and now counsel and help other young women to prevent more abortions. I am grateful for a God who forgives, redeems, and loves unconditionally. We must cherish and value life the way God values life.
This is why we support Coastline Women's Center here in Myrtle Beach. Coastline Women’s Center educates, supports, and empowers women facing unplanned pregnancies with compassionate and professional medical care. If you think you may be pregnant or considering abortion, their staff have been in your shoes. They are there to help you. If you really value life – and are interested in becoming a volunteer at Coastline, jump online and submit a volunteer application.
Let’s be a church known for what we are FOR not for what we are against. If you say you are pro-life, show it. Be pro-life. Don’t grab a picket sign.
Volunteer to babysit for parents in our church. Become a Foster Family for kids who need placement. Currently, there are 3,800 children in foster care in South Carolina.
If you are unable to foster and adopt, if you are unable to get involved with Coastline, then show you are pro-life and care for the shivering man and woman on the corner. Buy them lunch. Listen to their story. Laugh at their jokes. Tell them Jesus has changed your life. Offer them hope. Those are ways we can value life like God values life. There are other heart issues when it comes to “murder” as well.
HEART ISSUES: ENTERTAINMENT, UNFORGIVENESS, VALUE
Up until the days of Jesus, the religious leaders restricted murder, but they did not restrict hatred. The Jewish people could hate somebody all they wanted to, as long as they did not murder them. But Jesus came along and raised the standard of what it meant to murder somebody.
Matthew 5:21-22 (NLT2)
21 “You have heard that our ancestors were told, ‘You must not murder. If you commit murder, you are subject to judgment.’ 22 But I say, if you are even angry with someone, you are subject to judgment! If you call someone an idiot, you are in danger of being brought before the court. And if you curse someone, you are in danger of the fires of hell.
God’s not just interested in whether you murder. He is more concerned with whether you would murder if you could get away with it. I have lived 51 years without experiencing the temptation of murder. Chances are, by God’s grace, I will live another 51 years without being tempted to murder. But I believe I have been guilty of breaking the heart of the 6th Commandment in a couple of ways:
ENTERTAINMENT:
It is virtually impossible to find any action movie released today where people aren’t shot, stabbed, murdered, decimated, decapitated…If you were to scroll through my Netflix account, you would find movie after movie involving murder. God calls MURDER a sin – but I am entertained by it. One night, we tucked and prayed the girls into bed. Sofia was about 5 years old. I went downstairs and turned on the TV to watch The Walking Dead. About 40 minutes into the show, Sofia stood beside the couch. I jumped up, grabbed the remote, and turned off the TV. “Sofie, what did you see on the TV?”
“I saw that man poke a stick into the other man’s head.”
PARENTING FAIL!
If a child streams 3 to 4 hours of shows per day, he will have seen about 8,000 murders on TV by the time he finishes grade school. I am not saying I do not watch movies with killing and murder (Walking Dead doesn’t count because they are already dead.) But Hollywood knows what we will watch. They know we will entertain ourselves with murder.
So, I ask myself, if I am ok with fictional murder, will I be entertained by:
Fictional adultery?
Fictional Idolatry?
Fictional language that takes the Lord’s name in vain?
Sadly, I often find myself entertained by something God hates…
Another way I break the heart of the 6th Commandment is through:
UNFORGIVENESS:
Cain and Able were two sons of Adam and Eve. Brothers, Cain had some anger issues toward his Abel. They each offered to give to God – God accepted Abel’s and rejected Cain’s. The speculation is that God rejected Cain’s offering not because of what it WAS but because of what was in Cain’s heart. The apostle John wrote about the murder already in Cain’s heart in 1 John 3.
1 John 3:12 (NLT2)
12 We must not be like Cain, who belonged to the evil one and killed his brother. And why did he kill him? Because Cain had been doing what was evil, and his brother had been doing what was righteous.
1 John 3:15 (NLT2)15 Anyone who hates another brother or sister is a murderer at heart. And you know that murderers don’t have eternal life within them.
Anyone who HATES his brother or sister is a murderer. God wants us to LOVE the people He has made in His IMAGE. When we hang onto the junk that bothers us about people, we move down that slippery slope toward hate.
If we hate people, you and I are guilty of murder. So, prevent your life from crashing and honor the heart of the 6th Commandment. Eliminate unforgiveness from your heart. If you have a problem with somebody, forgive them.
Who do you need to clear the air with? Write their name in the space in your notes… begin to pray for them, and ask God to help you value them as He does.
Romans 12:18 (NLT2)
18 Do all that you can to live in peace with everyone.
Repeat after me: “I was wrong. I am sorry. Will you forgive me?”
See. It really is that easy.
Guardrails - Honor Your Father and Mother
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
Today, we look at the Fourth Commandment, “Honor your Father and Mother.”
Exodus 20:12 (NLT2)
12 “Honor your father and mother. Then you will live a long, full life in the land the LORD your God is giving you.
When I was a child growing up in Pennsylvania and Tennessee, my family was the furthest thing from a normal or perfect family. My dad was a “temper tantrum, drunk before-noon alcoholic who raped my mom and sexually abused me.”
Filled with anger and hurt, my brothers and sisters clawed at and fought each other. My parents divorced, and with my mom, I lived in a YWCA shelter and later was placed in a psychiatric hospital for three months; then, I went to live with my grandmother.
So, the question I want us to wrestle with today as we look at the Commandment to Honor our Father and Mother is this,
“How do we honor parents who were not honorable?”
Many of you know exactly what I mean by that question. Maybe the people God placed in your life to nurture you and guide you hurt and abused you instead of protecting and blessing you. You may look at this commandment and cringe at the thought that you would ever Honor your parents because of what they did to you.
I understand. Trust me.
Growing up, I often imagined what it would be like to have a different set of parents and live in a different family. From all appearances, it seemed like many of my friend's families had it all together. Their dads showed up at their Little League games.
Their parents attended school functions and award ceremonies and cheered for their kids. Their siblings stood up for each other rather than tearing each other down. I would think, “If only I had a dad like theirs, a mom like theirs, a big brother like theirs, or a sister like theirs, everything would be perfect.”
As we consider this fourth commandment, it is essential to remember that:
PARENTS ARE NOT PERFECT PEOPLE AND NEED GRACE, TOO.
There is no such thing as a perfect person, and there is certainly no such thing as a perfect parent. We who grew up in abusive households often suffer from this childhood delusion that parents can be perfect, and we try to become perfect parents ourselves.
We show up at the games.
We cheer for our kids and make a fuss over them.
Rather than seeking to become a godly parent, we try to become a perfect parent. We are hard on ourselves when we mess up, and we fear we will repeat some of the same mistakes our parents made.
Let me relieve you of this pressure.
You will make some of the mistakes your parents made! I am not suggesting you will abuse your children, but I am telling you that you will make many mistakes as a parent.
I have.
My wife has.
You have.
So, show yourself grace. Forgive yourself when you mess up, converse with your kiddo, and move on.
Now, the Fifth Commandment doesn’t say Honor your Father and Mother unless…
“they were overbearing or yelled too much.”
“were never home.”
“never helped with your homework.”
“or were abusive.”
No. God says Honor your father and mother.
But he ends the command with a promise:
You will live a long, full life
What does that mean? It means if you honor your father and mother, God will bless you with a long, joy-filled, happy life. It is important to God that we honor our parents. When God gave this commandment, sin had already entered the world. Parents were already imperfect. God knew abuse would happen. None of us were ever perfect but remember, if you are a follower of Jesus – you are in the process of being PERFECTED…and if your parents are followers of Jesus – they are in the process of being perfected, too.
The Apostle Paul said this in Philippians:
Philippians 3:12 (NLT2)
12 I don’t mean to say that I have already achieved these things or that I have already reached perfection. But I press on to possess that perfection for which Christ Jesus first possessed me.
Paul acknowledged something that many people in church today have difficulty admitting:
He told the church he was not perfect! We are all unfinished followers of Jesus. Show yourself grace, and show grace to your parents as well. Now, let’s talk about God’s plan for the family. Paul wrote to the Ephesian church and explained the fifth commandment to them and shed some light on what a “perfect” family could look like:
He wrote:
Ephesians 5:31-6:4 (NLT2)
31 As the Scriptures say, “A man leaves his father and mother and is joined to his wife, and the two are united into one.” 32 This is a great mystery, but it is an illustration of the way Christ and the church are one. 33 So again I say, each man must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband. 1 Children, obey your parents because you belong to the Lord, for this is the right thing to do. 2 “Honor your father and mother.” This is the first commandment with a promise: 3 If you honor your father and mother, “things will go well for you, and you will have a long life on the earth.” 4 Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger by the way you treat them. Rather, bring them up with the discipline and instruction that comes from the Lord.
The Bible teaches us that the family begins with a husband and a wife. A man leaves his parents and marries his wife, and the two people become ONE and the role of parents and children is pretty clear in this passage:
GOD’S DESIGN: PARENTS LEAD, AND CHILDREN OBEY
Parents lead, and children obey. First, Parents, since you have the weighty responsibility to lead your family, it is so important that you lead together. Rather than Mom and Dad working together as they LEAD their family, sometimes it feels more like a tug-of-war. A mom sees their kiddo doing something they are not supposed to be doing, and their sweet, innocent child says, “Dad said I could.” Then, an argument begins because Mom and Dad aren’t leading in the same direction.
Sound familiar?
If it does…Beach Church has a Marriage sermon series this fall to help married couples grow closer. It will be a five-week series that will end with an opportunity for couples to stand and renew their vows at the close of the service. It’s a series I am looking forward to!
Now, if you are a child living with your parents, remember God’s plan is to bless you, protect you, and guard your life, so your responsibility in your family is to Obey your parents. Take out the trash, wash the dishes, clean your room, walk the dog, clean the bathroom, mow the yard, do your homework…
Whatever your Parents ask you to do, your Biblical responsibility is to do it. To obey. And Dad, be patient with your children. Don’t provoke them to anger. Instead, dig into God's word and be patient with your children. Understand that when your children disobey you, they disobey God. And, if they are a follower of Jesus, God will deal with them. The Spirit of the Lord is going to prompt them to obey you.
And if your child is not a follower of Jesus, be as patient with them as God has been with you. Children…when you obey your parents, you HONOR your Father and your Mother!When we look into the mirror of the Word of God, no matter what role you play in your family, Husbands, Wives, Moms, Dads, sons, daughters, brothers, sisters. None of us are perfect! So, remember that experiencing God's Design for Family begins with you.
It doesn’t start with any other family member.
God is working in your life right now, so let that change begin with you. There is a way that you can “open the door” for God to work in your parents' hearts, to the Lord in your family. You know, the bible warns followers of Jesus not to allow the devil a “foothold” in their lives.
But what if you gave God a foothold in your family? Whether you are an adult child who struggles with Honoring your Father and Mother or whether you are a teenager living at home.
What if you gave God a foothold to change your family’s life? Wouldn’t that be awesome?
So, let me encourage you to…
F.A.C.E. each other.
(Forgive, Accept, Communicate, Empathize)
FACE each other. Forgive, accept, communicate, and Empathize. God will heal your family if you begin to do these four things. Whatever part you play in your family, Forgive. Don’t hold a grudge. Everything my Dad did to me, I forgave him.
Forgiveness is a wall-shattering, door-busting weapon that will break open the door to give God room to work in your family. Forgiveness does not mean pretending hurt never happened and going on with life. Time does not heal all wounds. But, if you do not forgive your family who have hurt you, you will live with bitterness and sourness in your soul. That bitterness will begin to impact all of your relationships, so choose to forgive them.
Nelson Mandela spent 27 years in prison in South Africa for advocating for equal rights for all people. When he was finally released, he said, “Resentment is like drinking poison and then hoping it will kill your enemies.”
He was right! Holding a grudge makes you sick.
Forgive because Jesus has forgiven you.
Forgive for your benefit.
Forgive to move on.
Forgive so God can begin knitting your family back together.
Secondly, ACCEPT each other in your family.
Romans 15:7 (NLT2)
7 Therefore, accept each other just as Christ has accepted you so that God will be given glory.
Your parents, your siblings – they are not like you. If you are an adult child, let go of the resentment of not having a “perfect family” and accept your family for who they are.
Why?
Because Jesus gave you an example to follow, he accepted and adopted you into his family.
John 3:3 (NLT2)
3 Jesus replied, “I tell you the truth, unless you are born again, you cannot see the Kingdom of God.”
First, if you are a follower of Jesus, you are born one more time. Then, after you have been born a second time, God does not leave you abandoned on the street. Jesus said
John 14:18 (NLT2)
18 No, I will not abandon you as orphans—I will come to you.
You were not left abandoned as an orphan on the street trying to figure out how to live as a follower of Jesus after you were born that second time. Something exceptional happened to you. Despite your sin, your bad breath, and your bad haircut, you were accepted and got adopted!
Romans 8:15b (NLT2)
…you received God’s Spirit when he adopted you as his own children. Now we call him, “Abba, Father.”
God adopted you into his family. The creator of the Galaxies accepted you. Now, you get to call God “Abba, Father.” He calls you son and daughter, and you call him Father.
He knows you bite your fingernails.
He knows you clink the cereal bowl too much.
He knows your jaw pops when you eat, yet he still accepted you and adopted you into his family.
If you believed in Him and surrendered your life to him, he accepted you and gave you full rights as his child.
John 1:12 (NLT2)
12 But to all who believed him and accepted him, he gave the right to become children of God.
Not only did God accept you into his family, but God gave you all the privileges of his only begotten son, Jesus.
Did you hear that?
God accepted YOU.
God ADOPTED you.
You belong to His family.
And – it keeps getting better!
God’s acceptance of you does not mean you are the black sheep of the family. You are not the odd man out. You are not a weird step-child or a half-sibling.
This is special. This is significant:
Galatians 4:7 (NLT2)
7 Now you are no longer a slave but God’s own child. And since you are his child, God has made you his heir.
Romans 8:17A (NLT2)
17 And since we are his children, we are his heirs. In fact, together with Christ we are heirs of God’s glory…
Galatians 3:29 (NLT2)
29 And now that you belong to Christ, you are the true children of Abraham. You are his heirs, and God’s promise to Abraham belongs to you.
1 Peter 1:4 (NLT2)
4 and we have a priceless inheritance—an inheritance that is kept in heaven for you, pure and undefiled, beyond the reach of change and decay.
We are heirs to God’s throne.
We are co-heirs with Jesus.
We have equal status to Jesus Christ.
What belongs to Jesus will also belong to us!
Ephesians 1:5 (NLT2)
5 God decided in advance to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. This is what he wanted to do, and it gave him great pleasure.
Your second birth, your adoption, and your status as a co-heir with Christ did not come from God reluctantly. He didn’t accept you begrudgingly. He didn’t drag his feet. Your acceptance and adoption into God's family brought him great pleasure!
Like the pleasure new parents have when they hold their newborn, you brought great pleasure to God. He wanted to get you into his family and bless you with everything. He accepted you. Now – because God has accepted you…
ACCEPT others.
Reciprocate God’s acceptance and accept your parents. Accept your siblings. Accept your family. Accept your adult children.
Romans 15:7 (NLT2)
7 Therefore, accept each other just as Christ has accepted you so that God will be given glory.
So, Forgive, Accept, and Communicate…As you forgive and accept your family, communicate with them.
Communication is a sign that “all is well.” When we don’t communicate with one another, especially our family, we communicate that “we have a problem with them.”
When we offer the silent treatment to our parents, we are not honoring them. When we ignore our parents, we do not honor them. So, communicate.
If you are an adult child, pick up the phone and call your mom. Call your dad. Yes, the phone works both ways – but you are a follower of Jesus, and God is working in your life. So, humble yourself, give God a foothold into your family and be the first to pick up the phone and call your parents. Fill them in on what is happening in your and your family's lives.
Invite them to the next birthday party. Invite them to your home for Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, or Easter.
Because you have forgiven them…
Because you have accepted them…
Communicate to them. Empathize with them.
That means understanding their feelings and emotions as best as you can. Understand that your adult parents may live with deep regret and shame over the way they treated you when you were younger. Understand that they may wake up every day ashamed of their reflection in the mirror…and hope you forgive them one day. When Paul was writing to the Corinthian church about a man who professed to be a follower of Jesus but blew it, sinned, and brought shame to the church. He told them to kick him out of the church.
But later, Paul heard that the same man was deeply ashamed of his sin but could not return to his church family.
Paul said this:
2 Corinthians 2:5-7 (NLT2)
5 I am not overstating it when I say that the man who caused all the trouble hurt all of you more than he hurt me. 6 Most of you opposed him, and that was punishment enough. 7 Now, however, it is time to forgive and comfort him. Otherwise he may be overcome by discouragement.
Paul said this man had caused great hurt to the church… but it was now time to forgive him, “otherwise he may be overcome by discouragement.”
The lesson? Sometimes, we, as followers of Jesus, have profound regret and remorse over our past, and guilt and regret can overcome us. When that happens, discouragement settles into the soul of a follower of Jesus. Rather than radiating joy, that person becomes overwhelmed with discouragement, sadness, depression…
It happens.
So, inside your family, show empathy. Showing them empathy means you understand how they feel because you have also felt that way. You have had regret and needed others to forgive you, accept you, and communicate with you…so show them empathy. That means you will be demonstrating to your family what it looks like to “Love your Neighbor as yourself” and “Treat others the way you want to be treated.” If you can learn to FACE your family, you will live in a way that honors your parents and glorifies your Father in Heaven.
I need to work on that.
Guardrails - Rest On The Sabbath
This heartfelt sermon shares a couple's journey of healing after a miscarriage, finding solace in the Fourth Commandment: "Rest on the Sabbath." Against the backdrop of their difficult experience, the message explores the biblical concept of rest, reflecting on the Israelites' struggles and Jesus' transformative role in providing true rest and forgiveness.
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
The year was 2005. Kristy and I had just walked through a difficult loss. We had been trying to conceive for six years and lost our first baby at around ten weeks. So we could rest and recuperate, friends shared their vacation home with us in Destin, Florida.
The crystal blue water, white sand, the sound of the ocean waves hitting the beach…God used that trip to launch healing and give us a great REST from the hurt. During that place of rest, we could smile at one another and mean it.
Do you have a special place to rest where the stress melts away?
Maybe it’s a golf course. Perhaps it’s a restaurant. Maybe it’s a spa…
Today, we are talking about the 4th Commandment, “Rest on the Sabbath.”
Let’s read together:
Exodus 20:8-11 (NLT2)
8 “Remember to observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy. 9 You have six days each week for your ordinary work, 10 but the seventh day is a Sabbath day of rest dedicated to the LORD your God. On that day no one in your household may do any work. This includes you, your sons and daughters, your male and female servants, your livestock, and any foreigners living among you. 11 For in six days the LORD made the heavens, the earth, the sea, and everything in them; but on the seventh day he rested. That is why the LORD blessed the Sabbath day and set it apart as holy.
The command to “rest on the Sabbath” is a Guardrail God gave us to bless us and keep our lives from crashing. I love that God commanded the Israelites to take a day off!
In Genesis, the Bible tells us that God created the World in 6 days, and he rested on the 7th.
I used to work in construction. I labored hard for five days in a row. At the end of the week, my back was hurting, my body was aching, and my feet were tired. I needed to rest at the end of the week! But God did not need to rest after creating the Galaxies. He wasn’t worn down. He didn’t need an ice pack or ibuprofen. He wasn’t tired on day five or day 6. God could have kept on going. He could have kept on creating and imagining. God does not get tired, and he does not need to rest.
In the original Hebrew, “Sabbath” means “CEASED from activity.”
That means, after creation…
GOD DID NOT REST, HE STOPPED
He stopped. God stopped creating. He was finished creating creation and when he stopped, God looked at all he made and said, “It was good.”
From sun up to sundown, the Israelites worked as Farmers and Shepherds. They led the herds to water to drink and to grassy fields to eat. When the animals would fight each other, the shepherds would separate them. Shepherding and farming required constant maintenance.
But on the 7th day, God says, “Stop. Do nothing. And trust me. I will care for your livestock, fields, and you.”
Shepherding reminds me of parenting young children. From sunup till sundown. Parents are leading their kids to get something to drink. Feeding them. Separating them when they fight with their siblings.
Rush to get home after school.
Rush to get homework done.
Rush to the soccer fields, the basketball courts, the baseball fields, and the wrestling match.
Rush to the store to get the cardboard for the school project, the glitter for the lettering.
Rush to get the kids in the bath and in bed.
Then, rush to school the next morning.
Parents, the good news is that God says, “Stop!”
A day with no work. No running around. A day simply just for prayer, worship, family, and laughter. Every. Single Week. Yet, it wasn’t good enough for the people of Israel.
As time went on, they rejected God’s command to stop. Rather than setting the day aside to rest and remember how great God was, the Israelites began working on the 7th day, and they even began to worship false gods.
So, God punished the Israelites for their disobedience. God allowed Babylon to drag the Israelites back into slavery for another 70 years. It was a harsh and cruel slavery.
Psalm 137 was written shortly after the Israelites were freed from slavery in Babylon. Listen to how bad their treatment was:
Psalm 137:8-9 (NLT2)
8 O Babylon, you will be destroyed. Happy is the one who pays you back for what you have done to us. 9 Happy is the one who takes your babies and smashes them against the rocks!
During captivity, the Israelites beat themselves up for failing to keep God’s commands. So when they were finally freed, they were determined always to obey all of God’s Commands…And they overcorrected.
They had this religious book called the Talmud that was equivalent to a modern-day commentary on the bible. A Commentary explains what the Bible means…The Israelites developed a commentary to explain what the Ten Commandments mean and dedicated 24 Chapters to define what it meant to work or not to work on the Sabbath.
24 Chapters to explain one verse. That is OVERCORRECTING!
From that point on, it was considered work to:
Move a lamp from one place to another.
If a woman wore a wig or a clip in her hair
Wear false teeth or a wooden leg
To pick up your infant
So, the Israelites became known to all the other Nations that they trusted God so much that the entire nation would stop working on the Sabbath. The Israelites prided themselves on this distinction…and that is why things got so tense between Jesus and the Religious Leaders. Last year, we spent every weekend in our series called “Meeting Jesus.” What did Jesus do that really got under the skin of the religious leaders?
He WORKED on the Sabbath!
The Jewish leaders harassed Jesus wherever he went to work on the Sabbath.
One of Jesus disciples wrote this:
John 5:16-18 (NLT2)
16 So the Jewish leaders began harassing Jesus for breaking the Sabbath rules. 17 But Jesus replied, “My Father is always working, and so am I.” 18 So the Jewish leaders tried all the harder to find a way to kill him. He not only broke the Sabbath, he called God his Father, thereby making himself equal with God.
The Pharisees were so irritated with Jesus' failure to observe the Sabbath that they began making plans to kill him. Please understand this important distinction. Jesus did not work on the Sabbath to irritate the religious leaders; Jesus worked on the Sabbath because he CREATED the sabbath. He owned the Sabbath. He was Lord of the Sabbath. The Sabbath was a day that belonged to Him.
Luke 6:5 (NLT2)
5 And Jesus added, “The Son of Man is Lord, even over the Sabbath.”
As the Lord of the Sabbath, Jesus could do whatever He pleased because He made the rules. The Israelite people were consistently fearful they would do something wrong and be accused of working on the Sabbath…
But then Jesus shows up and is utterly unintimidated by the Religious Leaders.
Healing people on the Sabbath
Bringing Joy on the Sabbath
Restoring Hope on the Sabbath.
And, ultimately he was crucified and murdered on the cross because the Pharisees had enough of him working on the Sabbath and claiming to be God…ironically, when Jesus died on the cross…
JESUS BECAME OUR REST (Matt 11:28-30)
The Israelites lived with the burden of trying to obey all of God’s Word to enter into heaven when they die. “If they lived a good enough life and sacrificed enough, maybe they have a shot.”
Obey all the commandments. Make all the right sacrifices on the right day, at the right time, and in the correct year. Live perfectly.
The Israelites spent their lives trying to earn their way into heaven.
And when the Pharisees finally killed Jesus for working on the Sabbath, Jesus' death told all of mankind to STOP trying to earn a spot in Heaven.
If you are working hard and trying to be good enough to get into Heaven when you die.
Stop.
If you are attending church to get to Heaven when you die.
Stop.
If you are being generous with your money to try to earn God’s favor so you can get to Heaven.
Stop.
You will never be good enough to get to Heaven. You will never be smart enough to get to Heaven. You will never be sufficient to enter into heaven when you die.
So stop.
Titus 3:5 (NKJV)
5 not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit…
You can never work hard enough, pray hard enough, or give generously enough to be forgiven for your sin.
Jesus' death on the cross paid the price for our sins. And everybody who believes in Him will receive ETERNAL LIFE!
If you want to experience peace with God through the forgiveness of sin, come to Jesus. If you want to know real rest, come to Jesus. If mistakes of your past burden you, things you have done to others if you are weighed down by shame and regret.
Come to Jesus.
Matthew 11:28 (NLT2)
“Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest….
Surrender to Him. Jesus is your rest.
GOD PRESCRIBES REST SO WE CAN RENEW AND RELATE
Listen to something else that Jesus said about the Sabbath.
He said:
Mark 2:27 (NLT2)
27 …“The Sabbath was made to meet the needs of people and not people to meet the requirements of the Sabbath.
The sabbath was made to meet your needs! The sabbath is meant for you to stop the madness!There is always going to be work that needs to be done. If you work seven days a week, it will never be enough…so stop and rest. God designed your body.
He knows precisely how much stress, strain, and work the human body can take. He knows your mental stress limit, your physical stress limit…So rest! The Sabbath was made to meet your needs!
So REST! Stop working one day a week. Play golf. Go for a walk on the beach. Play frisbee golf. Do a puzzle. Do what your body needs you to do to slow down. The Sabbath is a gift from God that helps keep us and our families healthy. I need to do a better job of stopping to enjoy family, rest, renew and relate.
How about you?
Guardrails - Misusing God’s Name
Discover the significance of respecting God's name and the power it holds. Unpack the ways in which we unintentionally misuse God's name in our speech and actions, and learn why recognizing the power in His name is crucial. Pastor Joe Donahue sheds light on the proper usage of God's name, emphasizing its association with life-changing moments. Be inspired to live every aspect of your life in the name of Jesus, honoring His diverse and powerful titles.
No Other Gods.
Do Not Have Idols
Do not misuse God’s name.
Rest on the Sabbath.
Honor your Father and Mother.
Do not Murder.
Do not Commit Adultery.
Do Not Steal.
Do Not Lie.
Do Not Covet.
Today, we look at the third commandment, “Do not misuse God’s name.”
Have you ever thought about the power of a name?
When we were thinking about names for our children, I would say the name out loud, and then I would invite the middle school boy that lives inside my mind and ask if that name rhymed with words that could be used to tease my daughter:
For instance, I was Joe Schmo, Joe Blow, Toe Joe, Joe Donapew, Mojo Jojo, Joe the Hoe…but I had it a little easier than my brother Pat. He was Fatty Patty…Peppermint Patty, Patty Cake…
In naming my daughters, I had a rule. The names of my daughters could not rhyme with a body part, a body function, or something derogatory.
Sofia, Naomi, Violet, Jessica
Good luck finding a derogatory rhyme with those names!
Let’s read together Exodus 20:7:
Exodus 20:7 (NLT2)
7 “You must not misuse the name of the LORD your God. The LORD will not let you go unpunished if you misuse his name.
The first three commandments deal specifically with God’s identity. First, God says, “I am the Lord your God; you will have no other God but me.” Then, the second commandment again deals with God’s Identity, and God says, “No other God but me.”
Now, God addresses his identity a final time, and he says, “Don’t misuse my name.”
That’s because…
THE MISUSE OF GOD’S NAME COMMUNICATES HE IS WORTHLESS
The misuse of God’s name communicates to those around us that we think he is worthless. When we misuse God’s name, we fail to reflect His greatness and goodness.
Before the invention of the printing press, the Bible was copied word-for-word by scribes. As they were copying God’s word, whenever the scribe would encounter a name of God, they would stop writing, rise from their table, wash their hands, change their clothes, pick up a new quill, and then proceed to write the name of God. They would do this every single time, and sometimes, it was three times a verse.
The scribes treated the name of God with respect and humility.
Because we share a common name, I will use our current President, Joe Biden, as an example. If I were facing the President, I would most likely call him President Biden. Whether I agree with his politics or not, I respect his position as President. Out of respect, I would not call him “Joey” or “Joe Shmo.”
And, if we respect and honor God, we would make sure we intentionally do not misuse God’s name…but we often do, don’t we?
First, let’s address how we commonly misuse God’s name through our…
SPEECH
We hear God’s name misused all the time.
As an expression, we may say or hear people say: “OMG.” Oh my God! Or, “Oh God, here we go again…”
We may say or hear people swear they are speaking the truth and say: “I swear to God it’s true…”
Or we may say or hear the name of God used lightly…Here in the South, when somebody turns forty, we may drive past a sign that reads: “Lordy, Lordy, look who forty.”
Or, you may hear people use God’s name as a filler word when they cannot think of anything to pray. “Father …Father, would you, God, In the name of Jesus, Jesus Just…”
And probably the most common thing we think about when God’s name is misused is when God’s name is spoken as a curse word by attaching D-A-M-N after it. Or saying “Jesus Christ” in a manner of cursing is the most obvious way we hear the Lord’s name taken in vain.
God makes it clear in the Third commandment that He does not want his name used as an expression, a filler word, or a curse word. God desires that His name be set apart and used for HOLY things. When we intentionally use His name correctly, He will bless our lives. So, we sin when we say anything that makes Him appear worthless…and we can also make Him appear worthless through our…
ACTIONS
We can misuse God’s name by what we DO.
The Bible tells us that if you are a follower of Jesus…by that, I mean you believe God created mankind, and mankind rebelled against God and chose to sin. The punishment for sin was eternal death, but Jesus became a human being and paid the price for our sins on the cross. You believe that Jesus died, was buried, rose from the dead, and one day He will return. And because you thought that, you surrendered your life to God and said, “I commit to following you. Thank you for dying on the cross for me. I surrender my life to you.”
When you had that moment, you became a follower of Jesus. And when you became a follower of Jesus, you were given the honor and privilege to “bear” the name of Jesus.
James 2:7 (NLT2)
7 Aren’t they the ones who slander Jesus Christ, whose noble name you bear?
1 Peter 4:16a (NLT2)…Praise God for the privilege of being called by his name!
2 Chronicles 7:14 (NLT2)14 Then if my people who are called by my name…
Isaiah 43:7 (ESV)
7 Everyone who is called by my name, whom I created for my glory, whom I formed and made.”
So, since you bear God’s name, you can misuse God’s name through your actions. For example, if a football player commits a crime while wearing their jersey, a good coach will chew them out because that action represents the team.
If I wear a Beach Church hoodie into the grocery store and complain and chew out the cashier for scanning my items too slowly, I have provided a poor example of what the people of Beach Church are like.
But, if I wear my Beach Church hoodie and get involved in serving our community in some capacity, I have provided a positive example to the community. BEARING the NAME of JESUS is similar. If I live in such a way that makes the Life-change I experienced in Jesus appear worthless – I have misused God’s name.
You might argue, “Joe, go easy on yourself; the people around you do not know that you bear the name of Jesus…”
My response is, “If the people I interact with regularly do not know I bear the name of Jesus, I am misusing the name of God with my life. I claim to be a follower of Jesus; I bear his name, and I misuse the name I bear through my actions.
But I thank God for the Grace of second chances, don’t you?
Now, I do not think that followers of Jesus rub their hands together and are intentional about misusing the name of the Lord – but it happens. We misuse the name of God through our speech and actions…
I think we misuse God’s name because we forget that…
THERE IS POWER IN THE NAME OF GOD
The Israelites had been slaves in Egypt for 400 years. Generations of Israelite children grew up and died as slaves. God sent Moses to lead the people out of slavery, and when Moses asked God what he was supposed to say to get the people to follow him, He told Moses to tell the Israelites:
Exodus 3:14 (NLT2)
14 God replied to Moses, “I AM WHO I AM. Say this to the people of Israel: I AM has sent me to you.”
The very POWER of His name would cause the Israelites to turn away from captivity and be willing to follow Moses out of Egypt. Years later, the Israelites were fighting a battle against the Philistines. David was just a shepherd boy bringing his older brothers lunch on the front lines. When he arrived, he saw the Israelites quaking in their armor, refusing to fight the Philistines because they had a giant of a man named Goliath, whom everybody was terrified of. David, the boy, not a man. David, the shepherd, not the warrior, said, “I will fight him!”
The Israelite army put armor on David, but it was too heavy, so he shook it off. He took five stones and a sling. As he marched out to meet Goliath – Goliath laughed and said, “What am I? A dog that you would come out to fight me with some rocks? David said:
1 Samuel 17:45 (NLT2)
45 David replied to the Philistine, “You come to me with sword, spear, and javelin, but I come to you in the name of the LORD of Heaven’s Armies—the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied.
There is a GREAT POWER associated with HIS name. We misuse the name of the Lord through our speech and actions when we fail to recognize the POWER of his name.
In the Lord’s name:
Marriages have been restored.
Drunks are brought to sobriety.
Addicts are made clean.
In the name of the Lord, lives are changed.
Not in the name of Beach Church.
Not in the name of Pastor Joe.
Lives are changed through the name of the Lord.
So, how do followers of Jesus use God’s name correctly?
Colossians 3:17 (ESV)
17 And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.
We use God’s name correctly when we do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus. From the check-out lane to driving through traffic, you live in the name of Jesus. From the time you wake up in the morning till you go to bed at night, you live in the name of Jesus. From Cheer practice and homework to getting dinner on the table or eating fast food one more time, you do it all in the name of Jesus.
Every word spoken to your wife, your husband, your children, or your dog, you do it all in the name of Jesus.
The Bible gives us many names for Jesus; since you are living for him, you may as well get to know them.
The Light of the World
(John 8:12)
The Bread of Life
(John 6:35)
The Living Water
(John 4:10)
The Way, the Truth, and the Life
(John 14:6)
The Good Shepherd
(John 10:11)
The Lamb of God
(John 1:29)
The Prince of Peace
(Isaiah 9:6)
The Mighty God
(Isaiah 9:6)
The King of Kings
(Revelation 19:16)
The Lord of Lords
(Revelation 19:16)
The Alpha and Omega
(Revelation 22:13)
The First and the Last
(Revelation 1:17)
The Beginning and End
(Revelation 22:13)
The Author of Life
(Acts 3:15)
The Living Stone
(1 Peter 2:4)
The Holy One of God
(Mark 1:24)
The Bright Morning Star
(Revelation 22:16)
The Lion of Judah
(Revelation 5:5)
The Son of God
(John 1:34)
The Son of Man
(Matthew 8:20)
The Messiah
(John 4:25-26)
The Christ
(Matthew 16:16)
The Redeemer
(Job 19:25)
The Savior
(Luke 2:11)
The King of the Ages
(Revelation 15:3)
The Great King
(Psalm 48:2)
The King over the whole Earth
(Zechariah 14:9)
The Lord of Glory
(1 Corinthians 2:8)
The Healer
(Luke 9:6)
The Resurrection and the Life
(John 11:25)
The Fountain of Living Waters
(Jeremiah 17:13)
A Friend of Sinners
(Matthew 11:19)
Your Deliverer
(Romans 11:26)
The Image of God
(Colossians 1:15)
The Author and Perfecter of Our Faith
(Hebrews 12:2)
The Rock
(1 Corinthians 10:4)
The Commander of the Lord’s Army
(Joshua 5:14-15)
HIS NAME IS JESUS.
And as followers of Jesus, we represent him…So let’s represent HIM well.