Thursday, January 31, 2019

THE SWEET FRAGRANCE OF FORGIVENESS


My all-time favorite flower is the rose. This genus Rosa belongs to a plant family that includes more than one-hundred plant species. Some are especially fragrant. Others produce jams, jellies, teas and a variety of oils. Yet others go into making skin and beauty makeup products.

Like the rose, Life presents its share of thorny experiences. Lost jobs, nasty divorces, abusing spouses, and unplanned tragedies bring wind clouds and stormy weather. Yet, few plants are more popular, more useful or lovelier, than the rose.

Most of us recognize this wildly popular specimen for its exquisite blooms and fragrant aroma. We value it among our loveliest of specimen plants, in spite of its being well-fortified with sharply-toothed leaves and thorny stems. Like life, this perennial favorite delivers far more than its share of thorns and prickly experiences.

It was in a little known jungle village called Chitana that Missionary Larry Lehman encountered a prickly individual that taught him this lesson (Kreider/The Way of the Cross and Resurrection /Herald Press, 1978/134-35). Most of the villagers in this isolated village feared this prickly personality because of his extra-ordinary strength, but that all changed when he met Jesus and experienced a life-transformation.

 Upon encountering Jesus, strange things began to happen in the life of this much-feared man. First, his cow died quite mysteriously. His pig died shortly, followed by his dog. Soon, his neighbors began avoiding him. Threats became commonplace, first against his life, then against his family. Tough times discourage some people, but adversity seemed to draw this strong man of Chitana closer to God.

 The Spirit of Christ cleansed his heart of hatred and anger. He found that he had a new love for the people mis-treating him. As a result of his persevering faith, thirty-five of his countrymen discovered new life in Christ. The final indignity came, however when fifteen men drew up a paper and declared under oath that this man had removed the images from their local church and burned them.

The authorities soon recognized this as a falsehood and an attempt to destroy this new Christian and they acquitted him. When the day came for the judge to prosecute the accusers; their accusations proved false, and they became subject to perjury. Although this strong man had previously fought everyone who threatened him in anyway, he now pleaded for the judge to pardon the very enemies who tried to destroy him.

The unfolding of this strange drama came when the Judge granted the strongman’s request. As a result of this one man’s powerful witness, the number of believers in that commun-ity increased to one-hundred thirty-five by the end of that year.

Pleading God’s pardon, and experiencing God’s forgiveness, adds a fragrance to life that more than com-pensates for all of its thorns. When we forgive those who would destroy us, we enhance the blooms on life’s plant; we multiply the number of blooms and we discover a fragrance that makes their beauty more satisfying.

This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com, reminding you that forgiveness, as Mark Twain discovered, is the fragrance the violet sheds on the heel that crushed it.
_____ 

Tuesday, January 29, 2019

This Reconciliation...

Forrest Plants once told this story that I find humorous and illustrative.

”Excuse me, can you help me?” yelled a hot air balloonist hovering above a pedestrian on the ground. “I promised a friend I would meet him an hour ago, but I don’t know where I am.”

“You are in a hot air balloon hovering approximately 32 feet above the ground” replied the observer. “You are between 40 and 41 degrees north latitude and between 59-60 degrees west longitude.”

“You must be an engineer,” said the balloonist.
“I am,” replied the woman, “How did you know?”
“Well, everything you told me is technically correct” answered the balloonist, “but I have no idea what to make of your information and the fact is I am still lost. Frankly, you’ve not been much help so far.”

“You must be in management” observed the pedestrian.
“I am, but how did you know?”
“Well, you don’t know where you are or where you are going,” she replied. “You have risen to where you are, due to a large quantity of hot air. You have made a promise, which you have no idea how to keep, and you expect those beneath you to solve your problems. The fact is you are in exactly the same position you were in before we met, but now somehow, it’s my fault.”

Relational perplexities complicate our conciliatory attempts and disrupt our efforts to co-exist as human beings. When Saul of Tarsus met Jesus on the Damascus Road it became his metamorphosis. It exploded Saul’s cocoon of Jewish traditionalism and emerged a magnificent butterfly we remember as Christianity’s Apostle to the Gentiles.

That encounter launched Saul into a history-changing, life-transforming, miracle-producing ministry as the Apostle Paul. Paul’s view of people changed from his pre-Christian days as Saul of Tarsus. He quit viewing people as human demographics, bad attitudes, wrong caste and culture. He began seeing Jews and Gentiles transformable by God’s metamorphosing. Paul discovered birthright and tradition save no one. He found God had already reconciled Jew and Gentile and “re-created” them into “one new man” (cf. Ephesians).

By making peace; i.e. by reconciling the two, he had already brought Jew and Gentile into “one body to God through the cross.” He put to death (killed) their hostility and introduced reconciliation for all humanity (2 Corinthians 5:16-20; Ephesians 2:15-16, NASV).

Reconciliation means making friendly again. It suggests winning another to our view. It describes harmonizing our different ideas, opinions, lifestyles, and cultures and this often includes our accepting the reality of our own lot in life, and being satisfied with our level of achievement. Reconciliation allows for differences, without demanding division or separation. Our differences remind us God is the author of our diversity. It was God that made us unique and different in our creeds, colors, and cultures.

God gave us our minds and hearts to reconcile—to transform--our differences. By birth, I am Caucasian--mostly German-Dutch. My early friends incuded Afro-Americans and Hebrew Americans in all degrees of orthodoxy. I knew no Hispanics and when I found myself a twenty-year-old U. S. Airman in San Antonio, Texas hearing Spanish-speaking conversation was foreign to me. In spite of such differences, we played together, attended school together; lived in community together, and each held our own views, while recognizing our mutual equality and civil worth. 

In later years, I found I had some flawed views, especially of Jews. My hometown was a tourist attraction, a resort community that catered to a large influx of urban Jews from Chicago-Detroit who vacationed each summer on our Lakeside beaches. These were older Orthodox Jews as well as more-progressive Jews. This mix shaped my early life and colored my opinions. Their views often clashed with our white-European, Anglo-Saxon Protestant Wasp culture. 

When I first encountered hardcore Confederate segregation as a young pastor in a southeastern state, it offended my social morality. When riding the San Antonio Transit Lines, I wondered why these “dumb foreigners” don’t learn to speak English, but those were my pre-Hispanic-friends days”. I had not yet learned that Hispanics were NOT all foreigners--or stupid for that matter Yet, I comfortably allowed for my German friends back home to still speak German when going to church. As I matured, I came to envy the bilingualism and celebrate our mutual differences. With new understanding, I celebrated the positive benefits of what became decades of Hispanic friendships. Acquaintance with people like Luz Gonzales enriched my life . The time came when I expected a bear hug from Luz, although his Mexican diet  led him  to enjoy eating his hot peppers as much as I liked slurping ice cream. 

Skin colors and ethnic differences do distinguish us but they need never divide us. In my young adult years, I  served for a time in the Eastern United States where I had Slavic neighbors. I noted that some of them avoided their white Bohemian neighbors. I saw that in some cities crossing a single street signaled a crossed border. Everyone had the same white skin but a different ethnicity. It was no different when I moved west, as a young married Bible-College student. I discovered to my dismay that I fell short of compliance with an old Oregon law on the books at that time that made “unlawful” my marriage of four years. It declared it illegal for a Caucasian (me) to be married to an Indian (my Oklahoma-born English-Irish Cherokee) who had enough Cherokee blood to proudly qualify as a First American--Her father drove a wagon on the “Trail of Tears.”

In later church ministry, I sometimes found it unacceptable to fellowship outside of my established Church of God Reformation boundaries. Some of my peers devalued the Christian Unity they loudly proclaimed by vigorously competing with Christian denominationalism and rejecting any mutual cooperation or fellowship. I learned that reconciliation challenges more than race relations. Social boundaries like divorce, single parenthood, or accepting welfare can still be painful and costly religious border- crossings. It became obvious to me such borders often allowed us to divide from one another because “different”, unacceptable, and even unworthy.



Our colorful shades and multiple hues of color test our being One People. Recon-ciliation calls us to mutual respect, interpersonal sensitivity, and  submission both ways. Experience reinforces for me the truth that reconciliation and Christian unity is easier to proclaim than to practice.



Years of Christian ministry and changing social mores, finally led me to a place where I found it necessary to re-evaluate my practice of marrying people. My traditional views clashed with a changing culture. Whereas I once accepted couples as they were, I found myself feeling overwhelmed by growing numbers of previously married couples, some cohabiting without marriage, some being youngsters caught with a baby en route. Few seemed what I felt “proper” candidates for marriage. I watched divorce decimate my congregation and I felt anger and frustration, and need for a moratorium. Perhaps I should no longer officiate weddings. Or, I might refer prospects to a peer. Depressed and dissatisfied, I was preaching through the Book of Romans when J. B. Phillips’ grabbed my attention: “Do not allow yourself to be overpowered with evil” Rather, “Take the offensive--overpower evil by good” (Romans 12:21, JBP). 


As if God invaded my thoughts, I heard Paul counseling “live fully alive.” Overpower evil by allowing God to re-model from the inside out. A moment of discovery transitioned into a reconciliation that anchored me more firmly in Christ Jesus rather than in my biases. Ministry became a personal reconciliation with God, without reference to achievement, ethnic origin, or other considerations. Reconciliation unfolded as God’s grace; Charis revealed God’s way of transforming me into an open channel of grace that he wanted to dispense through me--at his pleasure, not mine. 


This new concept of intimacy with Christ led to a new sensitivity to God’s call for reconciliation. Our COG Faith Community continues to grapple with varying degrees of challenge and every member is called to personally pursue non-violent means of overcoming the variety of evils confronting us. We are each called to use whatever powers of goodness we have at our disposal (cf. Ephesians 3:20).

As members of the Body of Christ, “WE” share mutual responsibility for influencing the moral consciences of individuals. Is there one word that helps us meet this challenge? Paul called it “reconciliation.” Years ago Pastor Tyrone Cushman preached to a large Youth Convention and I use here his terse conclusion: “Reconciliation -- racial, economic, family, and moral, the works.” What does the Bible say? “God was reconciling the world to Himself in Christ … and he committed us to this “message of reconciliation” (2 Corinthians 5:19 NIV). 

I am walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com … and is this not the word we have mouthed as a movement since 1880, beginning with D. S. Warner and his company of Saints? 

Our practice needs to come up to our proclamation, I believe; what do you think?                                                                                                                                                                                                                               

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Faith's Anchor Holds !


A few months before my father died; I found this affirmation of faith by E. Stanley Jones. I greatly admired Jones after first hearing him preach at our Anderson International Youth Convention in 1944 when barely sixteen. It is a powerful statement of personal faith. I have turned to it many times since finding it and sharing with my father, now deceased nearly three decades. 

It is a statement I have tried to personally model as my own. It is a word I hope might one day be said of me by all who come my way after I have exited this stage called life.

At eighty-seven, Jones wrote during that final decline with his palsied pen:

“When you find Christ and his kingdom, you find yourself. I only testify: bound to him and his kingdom I walk the earth free; low at his feet I stand straight before everything and everybody. I have served him these seventy years, but I have never made a sacrifice for him. Sacrifice? The sacrifice would be to tear from my heart this wonderful, increasingly wonderful, thing he brought me when I entered his kingdom. When my left hand begins to shake, as it has begun to shake at eighty-seven, pre-cursor of the final shaking to the dust of my mortal body, I smile and say; ‘But I belong to an unshaken kingdom, and to an unchanging person, so shake on, you will shake me into immortality. And when the final shaking comes, falsely called death, but which I know to be only an anesthetic which God gives when he changes bodies, I know this final shaking will only do what it did to Paul in prison: loosed his fetters and bade him go to an awaiting home where love and joy abound (italics mine).



From Warner’s World, this is
Walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com - bidding YOU … God’s peace.

Friday, January 25, 2019

HOW THE FIRST CHURCH PLANTER SUCCEEDED


Watching the Apostle Paul enter Corinth to launch his Christian witness, we see both his success and our key to contemporary church planting success. As History’s  first successful church planter, Saul (aka Paul) had no church growth principles to guarantee his success. He lacked sponsors and oftentimes had no one to some personal support. So; how did Paul feel when facing Corinth?

He felt just like my wife and I felt when we sat down in front of three-thousand Texas Aggie Cadets sitting on the visitor’s side of the stadium at Texas Christian University. We could wish our home team Horned Frogs the best! At best, however, we were an island of hope drowning in a sea of noise. 

Our host was an A&M Alumnus and our only choice was to sit on his visitor’s side of the Stadium and that was precisely where Paul found himself when he marched into Corinth preaching and teaching the Gospel of Jesus Christ (I Corinthians 2:1-5).

Paul faced multiple philosophies and lifestyles, each clamoring and competing for acceptance and approval. At best, Paul faced intimidating circumstances and he did it in the only way available to him--in the power of God.

Paul describes his testimony as drowned out by the crowd, with one exception: “My message and my preaching were not with wise and persuasive words, but with the demonstration of the Spirit’s power” (I Cor. 2:4).

Corinth was enemy turf! Paul went to Corinth because he saw a very great need. Scholars describe Corinth as a mixed population, a Heinze-variety of ethnicities, well- seasoned with prostitution and prosperity. Corinth’s population shared the common Greek love of philosophy and speculation and had few men of Letters. They offered Paul no strong lay leadership potential. People came to Corinth for only one reason—to have a good time.

Corinthians quickly discovered an abundance of attractions to occupy their time. The Temple of Aphrodite stood on the high point of the city. Literally hundreds of Temple Women doubled as entertainers in the city’s night life. Archaeologists have long since recovered some of their musical flutes. On the Isthmus nearby stood the stadium where athletic events were second only to the Olympics in popularity. Trades people came, making it a prosperous ethnic melting pot. Corinth contained all the brutality of the West and all the sensuality of the East, all rolled into one fun-filled Vanity Fair.

Paul entered this complex community with trepidation and without sponsorship on his second Missionary Journey. He came as a Tradesman, plying his skills as a Tent-maker (I Cor. 2:5; Acts 18:3). Being bivocational, Paul worked weekdays and spent his weekends teaching in the Synagogues, later assisted by both Silas and Timothy (Acts 18:9).

When forced from the Synagogue, Paul began teaching Gentiles and ended up in Galileo’s Court (Acts 18:9).He stayed flexible, however, and willingly used a non-traditional approach to achieve his goal. As a result, he established a viable body of believers in that city (Acts 18:18).

This new Corinthian congregation comprised a cross-section of Gentiles. This included men of standing like Sosthenes and Erastus, but most were a common lot of people with many slaves (I Cor. 1:26). Many were deeply stained with sin before they found their new life in Christ.

Paul, always willing to go wherever the prospects were, invaded Corinth not in his own strength, but “with proof and power given by the Spirit” (I Cor. 2:4 Williams). He came “in demonstration of the Spirit and power” (I Cor. 2:4 KJV). He announced, “I let the Spirit and His power prove the truth to you” (I Cor. 2:4 Beck). J. B. Phillips paraphrased Paul this way: “What I said and preached had none of the attractiveness of the clever mind, but it was a demonstration of the Spirit” (I Cor. 2:4 JBP).

We sit overwhelmed by the raucous roar of religious winds blowing us about. Like Paul entering Corinth; we need a “demonstration of the Spirit and power,” if we are to succeed. We desire demonstration; indeed, we desperately need it that we may establish a fixed starting point. Luke used the word “demonstration” (apodeixis) here as a technical term of rhetoric. Paul continually looked for needs and for ways to fill those needs, and he spoke directly to the needs of the Corinthian people.

He avoided theological jargon and focused on what he experienced within. He displaying neither philosophical nor rhetorical brilliance, but spoke out of strong internal faith. Rather than depend on the power of educated humanity, he threw himself upon the mercies of God and depended upon God for all he was worth.

We hold certain presuppositions true; then we wait for their demonstration. Christopher Columbus proposed that the world was round rather than flat, but discovery waited for him to journey off the edge of the ocean to prove it. There are always a variety of demonstrations waiting to assert themselves, but we must consider the nature of not only the teacher, but also the learner and the message to be learned.

In this instance, it was not the demonstration of Gamaliel (Saul’s s teacher, or of Paul’s Pharisaical heritage; it was Stephen, a Spirit-filled Christian that most touched Paul (I Cor. 2:4).Thus, Paul entered Corinth “in demonstration of the Spirit” of God, rather than the human propositions of reason or the wise principles of church growth.

Every truth has its own kind of demonstration. In biology and reproduction, the human sperm will not link with animal sperm and produce cross-breeds Historically, World War Two stands as a fact of history, although I have heard this fact denied. However; I lived during that time; I served in the Military; and I met many emigrants who experienced the bloodshed, the suffering, and the powerful trauma.

The Annual Miss America Beauty Pageant produces an annual winner based upon certain criteria that demonstrate beauty and skill. Demonstrations may illustrate affection or faithlessness; nobleness or ignobility; something very right or something terribly wrong. When Adolph Hitler announced “Bolshevism is terror, and can be fought with terror,” he demonstrated Bolshevism  and died affirming the very principle he tried to deny.

On the other hand, Paul, was motivated by his singular belief in God’s intentional ministration of reconciling God’s lost world to himself. Paul invaded Corinth as a spiritual venture in the Will of God. His faith expressed a spiritual truth that he experienced internally; he had no proposition to be debated.

Thyra Bjorn described her family’s move from Sweden to the United States in her historical novel, Papa’s Wife. Bjorn caught the spirit of Paul’s faith in planting the Corinthian church when she wrote the following: “I bet it would take a lot of faith to move them, wouldn’t it?” asked Pella solemnly.

“Move what, dear?” asked Mama, who had been busy with her own thoughts. 

“Why, the houses big as mountains,” Pella replied.
“Everyone laughed, as much at his earnest big eyes as at the question. But papa put his hand on Pella’s shoulder and swallowed hard before he could speak. ‘It would indeed, Pela,

 He answered softly. ‘But just remember, nothing is too big for faith to move’”
[Thyra Ferre Bjorn. Papa’s Wife.
(New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston,
 a Bantam Book,, 1953, p. 101).
Can we, then, take the next logical step and acknowledge that as it was with Paul, so it had been with Stephen and the others of the early church. What reaches the soul is what is real. What reached the Corinthians of the first century will communicate with the Corinthians of the twenty-first century.

When Rick Warren left seminary to plant a church in California’s Saddleback Valley, his target was the young urban professional population. Saddleback Sam, as Warren described him, had some religious training as a child, but Sam had neglected the church for fifteen or twenty years. Affluent, recreation-conscious, interested in health, but stressed-out, Saddleback Sam mostly opposed organized religion. He did not want to be recognized if he did visit the church, and he was quite self-satisfied with himself.

When Saddleback Community Church finally did buy a building site, Warren described their special one-day offering as “the greatest miracle I’ve ever seen.” People sold their houses and bought smaller ones, giving the difference to the church. Some canceled vacations and gave the money. Others gave cars, boats, and one gave his pension. This was a congregation that had begun with two people and grown to more than four-thousand in eight years. During that time, they used thirteen buildings and did not move into the first church building of their own until Easter 1989.

The most amazing part of their story reports that seventy percent of these church members were new Christians. He who knows what Christ has done, knows what Christ is. Only he who knows what Christ is, is truly ready for Christ’s power on his or her own soul.

Paul saw what God had done in Stephen. It was this kind of demonstration that held Paul, the man, and not what the man held. This demonstration continues today in numerous church plantings around our globe.

An analyst described the rolling cameras stopping and the calm following the storm, as he evaluated Richard Burton’s illustrious career. One observation stood clear: Burton achieved the two things he most wanted in life’ to become an accomplished actor, and to become accomplished as a headline stealer. Sooner or later, commented the observer, Burton must give one precedence over the other; then, we shall come to know the real Richard Burton.

Paul worked in Corinth trusting fully in God, rather than the power of his own person and his personal achievements. In fact, Paul saw himself as a limiting factor; his preaching lacking wisdom and persuasiveness (I Cor. 2:4). Paul lived solely dependent upon the message of the crucified Christ and herein we discover the real Paul (I Cor. 2:2).

To reach our twenty-first century world, we must plant new churches. Herein, we will also discover our own true spiritual selves. God will honor us “in demonstration of the Spirit and of power,” when our faith rests squarely upon God’s power rather than our own wealth and wisdom.

This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com 
suggesting our current mission field is very Corinthian in spirit and it waits to be seen what WE CAN ACCOMPLISH WHEN WE, LIKE PAUL give ourselves so that Christ’s mission may go forth 
“in demonstration of the Spirit and of power.”
_____

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

LOVE'S LIFTING POWER


As I write this blog, I want to especially share it with the several young Minister friends who follow me on Facebook. I leave you unnamed but you are in my prayers (particularly several young East African men that I may never meet in this flesh). I offer you this simple story of another young Minister who seriously wondered just how he could best explain the power of God, which he knew could transform a human heart from bad to good (pictured is my first grandson that I asked God to lead into ministry for twenty years; a prayer he graciously honored).

Unable to resolve his dilemma, the pastor in my story sought counsel from friends within his congregation. “I am trying to write a sermon,” he explained, “and it will help me greatly if you will tell me whether you think Christ has the power to make a bad man good.”

The lady of the house listened thoughtfully for a moment to her young pastor; then she turned quietly to her husband. “John,” she responded gently, “you should be able to answer that.”

John stood to his feet, gently clasping her hand in his. Eyeing their pastor rather directly, he passed his finger lightly over an ugly scar on her arm. Caressing her arm, he softly questioned, “Do you remember, dear, the morning I put that there?”

“Yes, John,” she replied, “but I have forgiven you.” He kissed the scar and looked into her face before continuing. “I will never do that again, dear. I am a changed man.”

John shook hands with the visitor and concluded “Preacher, you can go and tell the world that Christ has the power to make a bad man good.”

Should you ever find yourself questioning if it is even possible for God to transform humanity’s sordid behavior into some kind of creative living that builds constructive relationships, pause long enough to remember love‘s lifting power.


“I will exalt you, O Lord,” wrote the Psalmist, “for you have lifted me out of the depths and did not let my enemies gloat over me” (Ps. 30:1 NIV). One day while pondering this awesome power of God’s lifting love, James Rowe wrote these lines:

          I was sinking deep in sin,
                     Far from the peaceful shore,
          Very deeply stained within,
                     Sinking to rise no more;
          But the Master of the sea
                     Heard my despairing cry,
         From the waters lifted me,
                     Now safe am I.

This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com
giving prayerful and thoughtful praise for the lifting power found only in Our Heavenly Father’s love that tenderly lifted each one of us:

          Love lifted me! Love lifted me!
                    When nothing else would help, 
          Love lifted me.
                                                                        * “Love Lifted Me” by James Rowe and Howard E. Smith,                                                                     Worship His Majesty. (Alexandria, IN: Gaither Music Company, 1987), p. 642.                               .

_____

Monday, January 21, 2019

Fortifying Foundations; Removing Shifting Sand; Correcting the Tilt


Remember when the Leaning Tower of Pisa reopened back in 2001? That celebration followed an expensive renovation costing twenty-five million dollars. It kept the world-class tourist attraction closed for a dozen years, during which workmen removed one-hundred-ten tons of dirt from beneath the tower.

Skilled workers then stabilized the foundation and corrected sixteen inches of tilt. The sandy soil in that region lacked the stability needed for sustaining a monument as heavy as the Tower of Pisa. That much weight caused the Tower to tilt heavily to one side—thus its name, the Leaning Tower of Pisa.

When we walk side-by-side with Jesus as Lord, we strengthen the foundation of our lives and minimize the eroding effects of life’s shifting sands. When Jesus returned from the Mount of Trans-figuration with Peter, James, and John, he found a large crowd engaged in noisy confrontation. The disciples that stayed behind had been unable to heal a boy brought to them with an unclean spirit.

A deeply troubled dad had come looking for Jesus but accepted the Disciples’ help. Their lack of spiritual formation revealed that they were powerless to be of much help. They could do nothing but await the return of Jesus. Upon his return, Jesus healed the boy, and when finally they were alone with Jesus, the disciples demanded to know why they could not heal the lad.

“This kind can come out only by prayer,” Jesus concluded (Mark 9:29). Prayer adds a stabilizing dimension into one’s spiritual formation, Prayer enables one to walk with Jesus and serve him in simple trust. By the time they returned to Capernaum, Jesus had heard enough of their conservation to prompt him to ask them what it was they discussed so diligently while they walked.

They were not about to admit their spirit of competition with each other. Jesus consequently went straight to the source of their striving; he gathered them around him and described the true genius of leadership.

So! You want greatness? Serve others! Wait at the end of the line! Assist the least among you (vss. 33-37)! Strong spiritual formation results when prayer rises upward from out of deep trust in God when Christ becomes our bulls-eye, when he alone becomes the target at which we intentionally aim (38-50).  The daily life we live become the message read by the people we encounter (39). We learn to compliment others, rather than compete with them, We do this because we serve only in his name. The reward we receive is the approval that he gives, When all else falls short, the only thing that really counts is the message of loving hospitality that we convey. We are simply God’s Angel (Messenger) and in the name of a loving God, even a cup of cold water can reveal his presence.

The Biblical book of the Acts of the Apostles is expressed in two Greek words that reveal the practice of Apostolic living, their deeds, their acts, their straight living of life, their orthopraxy. Living right brings its own rewards; whereas breaking fellowship, or offending the child, offends God, said Jesus. Disciplined living reduces the torments of clinging hindrances. It improves behavior. It increases one’s delight in God’s presence.

Following are a daily dozen for disciples wanting to fortify their foundations, remove the shifting sands and correct the resulting tilt.

Confess Jesus as Lord (Romans 10:9-10; Philippians 2:11).
Depend daily on the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 5:18; Acts 11:8).
Pray without ceasing (I Thessalonians 5:17; Luke 18:1).
Search the Scriptures daily (John 5:39; Acts 17:11).
Attend public worship regularly (Hebrews 10:25; Psalm 50:5).
 Invest liberally without grudging (2 Corinthians 9:7; Luke 6:38).
 Prioritize Jesus’ mission (John 4:35; Matthew 38:19-20).
 Deny self and live for others (Matthew 20:26-28; I John 3:15).
 Witness to someone daily (Acts 2:42).
 Grow in grace (I Peter 3:18; Ephesians 4:12-16).
 Memorize a Bible verse (Psalm 119:11; Daniel 12:3).                                                                         Carry your Bible as a travelling companion (Titus 1:2;                                                        Philippians 2:16).

Enjoy the full-flavored taste of being at peace with one another, united in purpose, and powerful in sharing benefits of His-story. This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com reminding all of us that second best always costs more than it saves.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

LIVING LIFE FROM THE INSIDE OUT


WE live in a media-driven culture that survives on aesthetics and appearance. We celebrate the political pundits and spin doctors controlling our airwaves, Appearance drives our markets, heavily outweighing content and leaving  the public striving to balance truth with ante-deluvian floods of half-truths? This finds us living life from the outside-in.

True character can only be found by building life from the inside-out, as Jesus taught his disciples.  Trustworthy relationships can only be experienced when they are what they appear to be. Jesus taught his disciples to tenaciously avoid duplicity. Very simply: “Let your statement be, ‘Yes, yes’ or ‘No, no,’” Jesus announced. All else “is of evil” (Matthew 6:37 NASV). 

Judge each other, as you would be judged. Examine “the log” in your own eye before judging “the speck” in your neighbor’s eye, Jesus announced  (7:1-5). We are called to avoid becoming mere façades, mere fronts appearing without supporting structure behind it.

Live life from the inside out. Begin where you are and be yourself, rather than a shadowy illusion or a fading projection. Integrate your life by practicing the wisdom of the proverbial professor who taught his student preachers to “live so that you can in no way be misunderstood.”

Wholesomeness enriches our social fabric. Conform your attitudes and behaviors so the two sides integrate as one coin that is easily recognized, not easily misrepresented, and not readily misunderstood. Avoid duplicity by maintaining simple (pure) values that reflect more substance than appearance.

Vicar Rowland Taylor lived his life with a singleness of purpose that prompted people who knew him best to follow him as a trustworthy Reformer. Taylor was a man of eminent learning, having achieved his degree as Doctor of Civil and Canon Law. His personal commitment to pure and uncorrupted faith resulted in an impeccable integrity. His life and conversation became valued for his life of unfeigned Christian holiness.

In living his life with intentional selflessness, Taylor exhibited a humility that prompted the most vulnerable in his community to take comfort when seeking his assistance. On one hand, he stoutly rebuked sin and evildoing. On the other hand, the richest men in town knew they could expect Taylor’s declaration of fault, when needed. 

Taylor’s community revered their good pastor, finding him mild natured and without guile or ill will. He willingly did good and sought evil against no man. Like the Christ he represented, Taylor forgave his adversaries and made his home a haven for the needy, a place of provision and continual relief. Taylor’s household was occupied by honest, discreet, and well-nurtured, salt-of the-earth individuals that served as candlelight in the surrounding darkness of night.

The Church Hierarchy, however, called Taylor a heretic because he challenged their authority, and the rule of “Bloody Mary,” the Queen. Taylor refused to conduct Mass in the church after concluding it was unbiblical. The Bishop responded by summoning Taylor and giving him a verbal tongue-lashing. To this, the Bishop added an extra two-year prison sentence. Eventually, the Bishop pronounced a sentence of death upon Taylor.

While many stories abound, one story finds Taylor within five days of his death. On February 5, 1555, Taylor presented his beloved son with his last remaining book, a small volume on Christian advice. Taylor further commended his family to God and declared his firm personal conviction of God's faithfulness. He shared one final challenge with his parishioners, which was to walk faithfully in the truths he had taught them.  

Assured of his own heavenly welcome, Taylor reportedly cautioned his followers to avoid the blasphemy of returning to false religion. Then he prayed: “In thee, O Lord, have I trusted: let me never be confounded." The Sheriff terminated Taylor’s prayer by escorting him to Hadleigh--to burn.

As they trudged along the road toward Taylor’s eminent death-by-burning; he gave his shoes away, distributed his remaining coins among the blind in the crowd, and endured the tip of a guard’s staff thrust into his mouth to prevent him from further preaching. Approaching Aldham Common, where his suffering awaited his arrival, he reportedly saw a great multitude of people and questioned, "What place is this, and what meaneth it that so many people are gathered hither?"

Someone allegedly informed him, "It is Aldham Common, the place where you must suffer; and the people have come to look upon you."

"Thanked be God,” Taylor exclaimed, “I am even at home," With that, he exited his horse and
used both hands to rip the hood from his head. The weeping people pleaded, "God save thee,
good Dr. Taylor! Jesus Christ strengthen thee, and help thee, the Holy Ghost comfort thee!" and
other good wishes. 

Taylor walked to the stake, kissed it, and set himself into a pitch barrel they had prepared for him to stand in. Standing upright, his back braced against the stake, his hands folded together and his eyes looking upward towards heaven, Taylor prayed.

They bound him with chains and when someone cast a fagot at him, it cut his face so that the blood ran down, He replied "O friend, I have harm enough; what needed that?"  As they kindled the fire, he held up both hands, called upon God and prayed, "Merciful Father of heaven! for Jesus Christ, my Savior's sake, receive my soul into Thy hands!"      

He is described as standing still without crying or moving, his hands folded together, until Soyce struck him on the head with a halberd until his brains fell out, and the corpse fell down into the fire. Thus; this humble Man of God entered the eternal presence of his merciful Father in Heaven. He loved with his life, after preaching earnestly and faithfully. Following God obediently, even unto death, Vicar Rowland Taylor glorified God in his untimely death.

Appearance rates a very high value in our contemporary culture, but the teachings of Jesus challenge us to restructure our lives and live from the inside out. We are invited to experience a metamorphosis rather than doing a mere makeover. We are invited to experience a transformation rather than merely project a façade. We are promised the empowerment of God’s Holy Spirit, integration into a single personality whose external appearance will coincide with our internal self.

By building from the inside out, and integrating our internal beliefs with our external behaviors, we will discover what Jesus called abundant living. 
This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com
remembering those labels installed on every Zenith radio during my boyhood. Every radio came with this label: “where the quality is built in.” The Christian life is one lived where the quality is built in and that is when we really begin living.
_____

For additional material, read the following links:
3 http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Taylor,_Rowland_(DNB00)
4 http://rowlandtaylor.wordpress.com/category/1510/
5 http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/TAYLOR/2000-03/0952801386
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RESTLESS LEG SYNDROME


It was December 2001 when I read Allan Perkins report on reopening the “Leaning Tower of Piza.” This tourist landmark had been closed a dozen years when I read Perkin’s story reporting how Engineers completed their $25 million renovation project designed to stabilize this landmark attraction that had become unstable across the years.


Construction workers removed 110 tons of dirt from around the base of the tower and reduced its famous “lean” by about sixteen inches. This was necessary because of the increasing tilt from hundreds of years now threatened the stability of the facility. The top of the 185-foot tower actually leaned a full seventeen feet further south than the base of the tower. Authorities feared the eventual collapse and the loss of their profitable tourist attraction.

It seems the sandy soil on which the city of Pisa was built lacked stability to sustain a monument of this size. This created a potential hazard. It provided an insecure foundation, built on shifting sand. It also offered a true-to-life metaphor for understanding the story we find in Mark Nine about the disciples that could not heal the son of the desperate dad who brought his son to them with an unclean spirit.

On returning from his extraordinary transformation experience, Jesus found a crowd gathered around this despairing Father. His disciples had been unable to heal the boy and they watched Jesus heal the lad and quickly move on. When finally alone with Jesus, the disciples questioned him as to why they could not heal the boy. Jesus replied simply but directly, “this kind cannot be driven out by anything but prayer” (Mark 9:29 RSV).

After Jesus healed the boy and they left that place, Jesus had further conversation with his disciples, warning them that he would be killed, but alerting that he would also return three days later (v31). Of course, they did not comprehend. Yet, fearing to ask for further clarification, they journeyed on further with Jesus, trusting but uncertain and unknowing.

Our metaphor of the tower built on sinking sand opens to us new dimensions of meaning when we learn to trust Jesus implicitly as to who he is. Seldom do we journey far with Jesus without experiencing opportunities for developing deeper trust in him. When Jesus approached the disciples and asked them what they were discussing so diligently among themselves, he already knew they needed an “attitude adjustment.” He knew they needed to learn to complement one another rather than compete among themselves. They were still unwilling to confess their competitive spirits and because he understood the nature of their strivings, he gathered them around him and taught them a lesson on true greatness.

You want greatness, Jesus asked: serve others. Wait patiently at the end of the line. Give assistance to the least among you (33-37). Genuine prayer, rising upward out of deep trust in Jesus, makes walking with him increasingly important. Our life of prayer needs to center on Christ as the bulls-eye, the target at which we take direct aim (38-50).

When we hit the bulls-eye, our behavior matches our belief (our proclamation). We do not hinder others of our fellowship. We mutually compliment rather than compete. We serve in the name of Jesus. We anticipate mutual receiving of full and fair reward by all. When all else falls short, we offer a cold drink to the weary traveler, in Jesus’ name.  Our message becomes the issue, rather than the message-bearer. Living the life of holiness , our orthopraxy brings its own rewards.

On the other hand, breaking fellowship—offending the child—offends God. Personal discipline minimizes hindrances and enriches our lives mutually, making it more pleasurable to delight in the blessings of God’s presence rather than enduring the torments of clinging to hindrances.

Jesus was ever the realist; thus, he assured his disciples that everyone will be “salted with fire” (49). Salt enhances tastiness, unless it loses its saltiness. The disciples needed that saltiness and they needed to be at peace among themselves, as do we. When faced with the fires of temptation, adversity, and failure, we all stand in need of proper seasoning, salt appropriately sprinkled. 

Similarly, prayer enhances and provides the full flavoring  that enables us to experience an adequately salted (seasoned) relationship . In turn, this finds us at peace with one another, united in purpose, and powerful in sharing his-story.

Have you seen those TV commercials advertising relief for restless legs and cramping muscles? Pharmaceuticals have discovered how to formulize our aches and pains and offer solutions in simple phrases and acrostic forms we easily remember. This makes it easier for us to self-diagnose our ailments and ask our family doctor for assistance.

Prayer becomes that deep trust that comes when walking daily with our Lord. It results in fuller living and living out our relationships with growing trust. In time, it becomes our lifestyle. Restless Leg Syndrome is my simple formula (TRL Syndrome) for  introducing you to the essential ingredient you need as a Christ-believer.

This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com
leaving you with a simple formula for reminding you how to transform your daily life into a fuller,  richer and meaningful experience.   

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

THINKING PEACE


Until people willingly “think”
             (1) outside the box” of normal thought, and security, and such issues
                        AND
                                    (2) convert their patriotic one-upsmanship; 
                                                AND
                                                           (3) transform their Nationalistic hubris of Patriotism;

NOT UNTIL THEN

            can we hope to discover a win-win formula that will allow everyone to come to our common table of global humanity. UNTIL THEN, we will ignore the pleas of working families for a living wage; we will scoff at those who call us to wage peace; we will continue ignoring the eternal truth that hostile relationships are a useless waste of time and words

AND

That historical phenomenon we know as the Pax Romana will remain a dusty reference in Father History’s Book of Time. Meanwhile, the age-old story of “Peace on earth among men of good will” will remain a mere figment of legendary history.


Peace requires
alternatives to war, other than violence, hatred, hostility and refusal to forgive.

            Peace requires high levels of optimism and faith; all-be-it, at the risk of trust.
            Peace provides choices -  war or peace, violence or non-violence, trust or distrust.
            War demands spoils --but the spoils of war most often plant the seeds of the next                                conflict.


ON THE OTHER HAND,

Peace steps back-and-away peaceably in an attempt to avoid confrontation by intent.
Peace offers cooperation, complementation, and conflict resolution as an achievable solution. Peace asks, “How can we mutually benefit by intentionally cooperating?

Peace attempts to avoid conflicts of interest:
Peace puts Common Good above politics and Party interests.

Peaceful Politicians could work together and inch OUR COUNTRY forward, IF they had the character and integrity; rather than quarrel singularly and suffer the agony and ecstacy of political hubris found on either side of the aisle.

The Pharisee of Pharisees, Saul of Tarsus, encountered the peaceful Jesus on the Damascus Road. Saul began his journey full of bigotry and filled with the pride in the purity of his Phariseeism, READY TO TAKE CAPTIVES, He angrily determined to exterminate these heretic followers of This Jesus who put a blemish on unity of God (monotheism).

Saul left on his journey a catapillar vigorously intent on fulfilling his mission. Somewhere en route, he had  a vision of God; call it what you will. His experience so transformed his Jewish Monotheism that the lowly catapillar metamorphosed into a beautiful butterfly we know as the Christian Apostle to the Gentiles--Paul. 

In his metamorphosis, he discovered the power of a personal conversion. He discovered a broken relationship could recover peace and renewal by introducing reconciling processes that allowed people to gain mutually from their relationships. Paul consequently challenged his every audience to accept God’s higher authority of

LOVE…………………………JOY……………………… AND PEACE.

Paul gave value to a world that favored neither Jew nor Gentile, while strongly affirming that every individual was a person of value for whom Jesus died. 

Becoming Christ’s personal Ambassador, Paul met a global community of citizens, soldiers, and slaves that were badly in need of a model for building intentional peace and friendship. As an Ambassador for Christ, Paul put his life on the line, like a simple slave, just to bring healing to multitudes of broken people oftentimes scorned as unproductive political drones and social parasites (Eph. 4:1, 7, 26; John 3:16).

Real Peace can only come by beginning with being reconciled to God in one’s self.
Peace with God internally, leads to external peace with one’s neighbor, whoever that be. 
God calls us to follow him, and through God's Spirit in Christ he commissions each of us, not only to follow him but to share him by introducing peaceful negotiations into our hostile world environment of interpersonal relationships (2 Cor. 5:16-21).

As individuals; we become God’s Ambassadors. It becomes our stated purpose to give “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests” (Luke 2:14, NIV). Only as we learn to relate individually, can we learn to relate globally as nations. Paul summarized his Mission Statement quite well when he announced, “as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone” (Romans 12:18, NIV). 

This ancient message of Peace launched in Bethlehem and went far beyond Jerusalem —Calvary. Pentecost gave God’s Rocket of Peace the thrust it needed to enter into the orbit of history’s  time and space. Christmas to Easter nicely frames in our basic Christian year, but further research reveals Paul never strayed far from the teachings of Jesus. It is a truth: if we walk any distance with Jesus, we will discover we are “called” to love [even] our enemies, and to think peace, not war.

This is walkingwithwarner.blogspot.com
thinking we should take more seriously than we do, Paul’s advice to the Romans to make the second mile a thinking man’s choice, to share one coat when we have two, and to give a cup of cold water when we have nothing else
. . .Be blessed.