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Wednesday, July 30, 2025
HOW DOES GOD SPEAK TO YOU?
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
A SURE AND STRONG ANCHOR
My Bible reading today took me to Hebrews 6. It’s about growing in our faith and not turning back or becoming stagnant in our growth and faith. Good stuff!
It also has strong words of encouragement, for instance:
God is fair; he will not forget the work you did and the
love you showed for him by helping his people.
And he will remember that you are still helping them.
We want each of you to go on with the same hard work all
your lives so you will surely get what you hoped for.
We do not want you
to become lazy.
Be like those who through faith and patience will receive what God has promised.
[Hebrews 6:10-12] [All Bible quotes from the NCV unless otherwise noted]
The
chapter goes on to talk about oaths and promises. As I was reading this section
this morning, I began to notice words that were familiar to me. The passage
that triggered my memory follows:
These two things cannot change: God cannot lie when he makes a promise, and he cannot lie when he makes an oath. These things encourage us who came to God for safety. They give us strength to hold on to the hope we have been given. We have this hope as an anchor for the soul, sure and strong. It enters behind the curtain in the Most Holy Place in heaven, where Jesus has gone ahead of us and for us. He has become the high priest forever…[6:18-20]
Did
any of this ring familiar with you?
You’d have to be an old guy like me and raised in a hymn-singing environment. 🙂
The following hymn, “We Have An Anchor”, was written by Priscilla J. Owens and published in 1882. She wrote a number of hymns that were targeted toward children; another was “We Have Heard A Joyful Sound”. She was of Scotch/Welsh descent and lived in Baltimore while teaching school for fifty years.
If you remember this old hymn, why not sing it instead of reading it?
To listen, click the following link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rirjItMxHjk
Will your anchor hold in the storms of life,
when the clouds unfold their wings of strife?
When the strong tides lift, and the cables strain,
will your anchor drift, or firm remain?
Refrain:
We have an anchor that keeps the soul
steadfast and sure while the billows roll;
fastened to the Rock which cannot move,
grounded firm and deep in the Savior’s love.
Monday, July 21, 2025
CAN GOOD COME FROM BAD?
After Pentecost, the New Testament Church grew so fast!
On Pentecost Sunday, Peter’s message to the crowds on the streets of Jerusalem brought 3,000 people into the fledgling church [Acts 2:41]. By 4:4, it is recorded that “There were now about five thousand in the group of believers.”
[All quotes from the New Century Version, unless otherwise noted]
By Acts 5:14, “More and more men and women believed in the Lord and were added to the group of believers.” Acts 6:1 reports: “The number of followers was growing.” Six verses later it reads: “The word of God was continuing to spread. The group of followers in Jerusalem increased, and a great number of the Jewish priests believed and obeyed.”
WOW! PTL!
Apparently, the new church was operating feeding programs for those who were struggling. In this process, some conflict arose:
The Greek-speaking followers had an argument with the other
followers.
[Seemingly] The Greek-speaking widows were not getting
their share of the food that was given out every day. [6:1]
The Apostles – clearly being overwhelmed – delegated seven godly men to oversee this ministry so that they could focus on prayer and the teaching of the Word. [6:4]
One of these men was Stephen – who was described as “(a man with great faith and full of the Holy Spirit). [6:5]
Stephen apparently had a special anointing from God, for just a few verses later, we read:
Stephen was richly blessed by God who gave him the power to
do great miracles and signs
among the people [6:8].
Maybe we ought to read that again!
This guy who was chosen to assist in the daily distribution of food is suddenly – almost immediately – empowered by God to do great miracles?
It’s noteworthy to observe that the other six men chosen to help with the daily distribution of food ARE NEVER MENTIONED AGAIN IN THE BIBLE! However, the lengthy six and seventh chapters are ALL ABOUT STEPHEN!
Stephen was heavily opposed by “people from Cyrene, Alexandria, Cilicia, and Asia. They all came and argued with him” [6:9]. He was essentially arrested and brought before the high priest! A conspiracy of lies was concocted against him. As this injustice unfolded, “All the people in the meeting were watching Stephen closely and saw that his face looked like the face of an angel [6:15].
When questioned by the high priest, Stephen lectured the entire group on the history of Israel! It was a lengthy message! As his message progressed, he eventually accused his listeners by saying:
You stubborn people!
You have not given your hearts to God, nor will you listen
to Him!
You are always against what the Holy Spirit is trying to
tell you,
just as your ancestors were… [7:51]
When the leaders heard this, they became furious.
They were so mad they were grinding their teeth at Stephen.
But Stephen was full of the Holy Spirit.
He looked up to heaven and saw the glory of God and Jesus
standing at God’s right side.[7:54-55]
The angry mob was stirred up to such an extent that they hauled Stephen out of the city and began to stone him to death. As they did so, Stephen prayed:
“Lord Jesus, receive my
spirit.
Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” [7:59-60]
Then,
he died!
______________________________________
Why would God bless and empower a man so richly, and then abandon him to a brutal and painful, public death?
This man had quickly acquired a ministry that nearly paralleled that of the apostles themselves! He clearly had SO MUCH POTENTIAL! Why not rescue him? Why not use him for godly purposes?
Dare we question GOD?
He is omniscient [knows all], omnipotent [all powerful], and omni-present [everywhere at all times]!
Who
are we to question His wisdom?
BESIDES:
In the incidental details of Stephen’s story, we discover something that is quite powerful!
Acts 7:58 tells us that “those who told lies against Stephen left their coats with a young man named Saul.” Acts 8:1 reports that “Saul agreed that the killing of Stephen was good.”
Who is this Saul?
He is a highly motivated, extremely well-educated, aggressive Pharisee who is eager to make a name for himself! He quickly begins to persecute Christians in Jerusalem. His persecution was SO INTENSE that many began to flee Jerusalem! This sounds bad but as these people fled, they carried the gospel in every direction that they went! The result was amazing influence and growth for the Kingdom movement in all of Jerusalem’s surrounding areas!
God was seeing all of this! You must read Acts 9 to capture the power of Saul’s conversion!
Saul was not content to just persecute Christians in Jerusalem! He asked the high priest for permission to go to Damascus and arrest Christians there as well! It was as he drew near to Damascus that God intervened in his life! 😊
God overwhelmed this enemy of the faith and – in doing so – confirmed that this was His choice as Judas’ replacement! This Saul – renamed Paul – was to become the greatest church-planter that the world has ever known!
It’s unstated, but how much did Stephen’s inspiring death impact this young man who held the coats of his killers? How did it affect Saul to hear Stephen – with his dying breath – forgive those who were throwing the stones? This incident has been referred to as THE SEED OF FAITH SOWN IN A FIELD OF HATE!
Kind and Loving God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit,
Thank You for Stephen - his obedience, his submission, his humility, his influence and his outspokenness! His example inspires us!
And thank You for Saul-Paul! What an outstanding leader and example!
These two lives are uniquely intertwined, even though they probably didn't even know one another!
You are the Master Weaver!
We must learn to trust You more!
What are You currently weaving in our lives today?
Help us to tune in so that we can fit in with Your plans!
FOR THE KINGDOM'S SAKE.
AMEN!
Thursday, July 17, 2025
WHY ARE ALTARS BEING REMOVED FROM OUR CHURCHES?
I was a kid in the 1950’s and a teen in the 1960’s. I grew up attending the New Brighton, PA Free Methodist Church. It was a large church for that time period with an average attendance over 200. They maintained a very large Sunday School attendance by using a vehicle [pun intended] common among churches of that day – repurposed school busses.
Sunday morning was a worship time that focused around the pastor’s message. Sunday evening was considered an evangelistic meeting [it had less than half the attendance of the morning service]. There was more singing in the evening, along with occasional testimonies and special music.
Every Free Methodist Church [as far as I knew] had an altar and used it. People commonly responded to the messages by going forward to pray. Sometimes the pastor would give a special invitation related to his/her message. [At that time there were only a few women pastors, but today there are many!]
When a person responded by coming to the altar, it was not uncommon for others to join them by kneeling beside them – or sometimes even across from them. The pastor would also come and pray with individuals at the altar.
If there was a strong response to the altar – which was common – most people would stay in their seats prayerfully. When the needs presented at the altar were satisfied, it was common for the person to give a testimony about how God had helped them. [This was not mandatory!] Our song leader would usually lead us in singing something appropriate and then the service would end.
At Family Camp every July, the altar was used even more frequently. I have seen the altar filled shoulder-to-shoulder MANY TIMES! Pastors present would come to pray with members of their church. Mature believers would also assist the many ‘seekers’. The congregation would largely remain seated throughout the prayer time. Testimonies would be given and general rejoicing would take place with occasional outbursts of songs.
I knelt at those altars many times through the maturation process. I initially opened my heart to the Lord at that altar. Tissue boxes were kept near the altar for those who frequently wept out confessions and experienced the forgiveness of God through His Holy Spirit.
While leading churches from 1976 through 2017, I frequently knelt at the altar before the service began. Other committed lay people sometimes did the same. I always served Holy Communion by having the people come forward to receive the elements of the Lord’s Supper. Most knelt for a few moments while they took Communion – and then returned to their seats. Others simply stood to do so, or made their personal altar at their seat. The atmosphere was one of deep gratitude to God and many people reported that the experience was deeply meaningful!
So, that’s why I’m asking the question: Why are altars being removed from our churches?
Debbie and I have been attending an evangelical Presbyterian church for six years now. There is no altar and no opportunity – during worship – to pray with one another in a personal way.
I occasionally have the opportunity to visit other Free Methodist Churches and find that many simply don’t have an altar. Or, if they do, it’s rarely used.
About
two months ago, I was struggling with some issues in my life. To be honest, at
this point I can’t even remember what they were. However, I remember waking up
on a Sunday and wishing that I could pray at an altar. I know that must sound
odd to some, but it was deeply ingrained in me that the altar is a place of
confession and drawing near to God! I almost went to a neighboring Free
Methodist Church that Sunday because of that strong sense of need I was
experiencing.
My initial submission to God took place at the altar when I opened my heart to Him! I made many trips to the altar through my teen years while dealing with the stresses and confusions of adolescence. The campus church – while attending Roberts Wesleyan College - was quite large (attendance of over a thousand at that time). I don’t remember if the altar was used, however, while attending the Asbury Seminary Free Methodist Church in Wilmore, Kentucky – where we lived for three years while attending seminary – the altar was used frequently!
WHAT HAS CHANGED?
I earnestly wonder about this.
Is confidentiality a factor? Is it that we don’t share openly as we might have in decades past? Have we become more private regarding our need of God and the pressures and stresses we may be facing?
Has the church lost passion for God? Do we not seek Him as vigorously as we once did?
Have we become too proud to humble ourselves in public?
Are our services so time-restrained now that we can’t afford to spare time for personal seeking? Large churches have multiple services that are often tightly scheduled and controlled.
____________________________________
These are honest questions. Perhaps because I’m a retired pastor, I think about this a great deal.
If salvations aren’t happening at the altar anymore, where are they happening? Our denomination is in a cataclysmic decline in membership and attendance. Does the missing [or unused] altar have any connection to this fact?
What was going on a couple of months ago when I felt such a need to pray at an altar? Do others experience this need or desire? I miss kneeling at the altar to receive Holy Communion – even though it was a brief posture change. Does anybody else share these thoughts, longings and questions?
If you have thoughts about this, I’d love to hear from you! I’m active on Facebook. My email is halinasia@psmail.net
[Responses on this blog page always show up as 'Anonymous' - which, of course, leaves me wondering who it is? Please direct your thoughts in a way that allows for dialogue. :-)]
Thursday, July 10, 2025
CAMP FRIENDS
Thursday, July 3, 2025
LET'S CREATE A DUST STORM!
It may surprise some to discover that we have no original copies of biblical books. However, we have many copies and fragments of copies that are carefully compared to produce the Bibles that we possess today. The Dead Sea Scrolls were unearthed between 1947 and 1956 in eleven caves in and around the Wadi Qumran. These scrolls – when scrutinized over the next twenty years – would refine and corroborate the preceding scriptural examinations! Their value is inestimable!
We know that all of our New Testament
was written before 100 A.D. The Old Testament scriptures had obviously been
carefully maintained for well over a thousand years earlier. The original
languages would have been Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek!
There was chaos in the first four
hundred years A.D. trying to determine which books had authority. The process
was not highly structured, but rested in the hands of the early church fathers
who eventually confirmed – by the end of the fourth century – the sixty-six
books that protestants consider the Holy Bible.
But the history of western Asia and
Europe was then enveloped in a period that we know as the Dark Ages. It’s
difficult for us to imagine this period of history. I’m reminded of a joke I
enjoyed as a teenager.
Why was the period
from 500 – 1500 A.D known as the ‘Dark Ages’?
Because there were so
many knights!
It was during this period that monasteries were established
throughout Europe and the feudal system came into being. Most of us know that
this was an incubation period for this new Christianity! Monks busied
themselves meticulously copying the early manuscripts of scripture by
hand-writing copies of the Bible!
By the fourth century when books were copied by hand, there
was a standard rate of pay for scribes. Books were divided into what were
called stichoi. A stichos is not a line. It was originally
the length of sixteen syllables [based on the average length of a line that
Homer wrote].
There is a sixth-century New Testament manuscript called the
“Codex Claromontanus” which gives the number of stichoi in each New Testament book.
It reported that in Matthew there are 2,600 stichoi, in Mark 1,600, in Luke 2,900 and in John 2,000.
Consequently there were 9,100 stichoi
in the four Gospels.
There is also an edict of Diocletian published early in the
fourth century that fixes the prices for all sorts of things; and amongst them it
fixes the rate for the pay of scribes; and the pay is 25 denarii per hundred stichoi. A denarius was a little over five
cents, so the rate was approximately $1.25 per hundred stichoi.
This means that – at that time - one could purchase the four
Gospels for about $124. All the letters of Paul would have cost about $68.
When Wycliffe published the Bible in English for the first
time at the end of the fourteenth century, it was, of course, before printing
was available. The Bible still had to be copied by hand. Later, George Foxe
wrote: “Some gave five marks (equal to about $55), some more, some less for a
book. Some gave a load of hay for a few chapters of St. James or St. Paul in
English.”
“When the Great Bible was published in 1540, Bishop Bonner
placed the six copies in convenient places in St. Paul’s Cathedral; and such
was the eagerness to read them, and to hear them read aloud, that services were
rendered impossible and the traffic disrupted and the crowds so great that
Bonner had to threaten to take the Bibles away if the eager disorder did not
cease.”
When George Foxe had spoken of the eagerness of the people
to read the Wycliffe Bible and of their sacrifices to pay for one, he went on, “To
see their travails, their earnest seekings, their burning zeal, their readings,
their watchings, their sweet assemblies…may make us now in these days of free
profession to blush for shame.” It was 1563 when Foxe wrote that.
There is a lesson in this review for all of us. Something
that was originally hailed as life-transforming has become mundane! At various
points of history, people craved to hear or read the word of God! They would
expend inordinate amounts of money or invest hours of time in order to hear
these precious, life-giving words!
Many over the years have prayed for a revival. Perhaps
instead, we should pray for a rebible!
Gracious God: Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
You have clearly given us Your Word!
You initiated people through many ages to write these sacred
words.
You protected manuscripts through centuries of chaos and
rebellion.
You’ve guided the process through translators and
translations.
And today, we hold in our hands THE WORD OF GOD!
There is no limit to its power especially when energized by
Your Holy Spirit!
Grow in us a DESIRE FOR YOUR WORD!
Create hunger in us for it.
Speak to us through it!
Guide us and use us to incite passion in others for Your
precious messages!
FOR YOUR KINGDOM’S SAKE.
AMEN!
Woodrow Kroll, the late president of Back to the Bible once said: "If Christians blew the dust off their Bibles at the same time, there would be a massive dust storm." [adapted]
Maybe it's time for a dust storm!
Wednesday, July 2, 2025
THAT SLIPPING FEELING
It’s all too familiar.
Those who have battled depression will know what I’m talking about.
It’s an inner awareness that all is not well. It’s an imposing reality that you’re in for a rough ride. It feels unavoidable. It creates dread.
There are very direct results:
·
Greater
difficulty negotiating social connections [desire to isolate]
·
Feelings
of failure
·
Lack
of motivation [have to force oneself to work]
·
Loss
of hope
·
Brooding
·
Disappointment
·
Guilt
The list could go on, but you get the idea.
This slipping feeling is depression’s early warning system! The ultimate destination of bottoming out is inevitable – UNLESS YOU CAN CHANGE YOUR COURSE.
Ah, now comes the essential question: How do you change your course?
The answers here will vary depending on the person and their past experience.
Some possible answers are:
o
Call
the doctor and ask for a prescription.
o
Contact
a counselor and set an appointment.
o
Ask
for prayer in your small group [if you are part of one].
o
Increase
your physical exercise and outdoor exposure – especially sunlight.
o
Talk
with a trusted friend about your feelings.
o
Write
down your thoughts and feelings [Journaling is an excellent practice for
maintaining mental health!]
o
Read
something therapeutic or for pleasure.
o
Call
out to God for understanding and help by searching His Word, talking with a
pastor [or trusted spiritual guide] or simply talking with God Himself!
I’m sure there are other alternatives that could be pursued, but I hope you get the main message: Your body is sending you a message as a warning! Act immediately or the descent of the slide will quickly accelerate your path to a dark place!
If you’ve been to this dark place before, you definitely don’t want to go there again! None of the doors have doorknobs to facilitate your escape! It’s dark! You’re isolated! You morbidly review your life – especially your failures. The loneliness is excruciating!
Make no mistake about it: This miserable, hopeless, dark and depressed place is a carefully laid trap set for you by your spiritual enemy!
MEMORIZE John
10:10,
A thief comes to steal and kill and destroy,
but I [Jesus] came to give life – life in all its fullness.
[NCV]
FIGHT IT! FIGHT HIM – THE ENEMY OF YOUR SOUL!
Don’t be afraid to speak to your enemy out loud! Jesus did! We should! Tell him to go back to hell where he belongs and where he’ll be for all eternity!
MEMORIZE James 4:7-8,
So give yourselves completely to God.
Stand against the devil, and the devil will run from you.
Come near to God, and God will come near to you.
You sinners [that’s all of us] clean sin out of your lives.
You who are trying to follow God and the world at the same
time,
MAKE YOUR THINKING PURE.
[NCV]
READ SCRIPTURE! If you don’t know where to read, check out the following verses in a contemporary Bible like The Message or The Living Bible: [Try meditating on one-per-day]
ü Deuteronomy 31:8
ü Psalm 34:17
ü Psalm 40:1-3
ü Psalm 3:3
ü John 16:33
ü Romans 8:38-39
ü II Corinthians 1:3-4
ü Isaiah 41:10
ü Matthew 11:28
ü I Peter 5:6-7
ü Psalm 23:4
ü Colossians 4:7-8
If you’ve got THAT SLIPPING FEELING, feel free to private message me. I’d be happy to pray for you! I’ve been on that slippery slope many times and care about those who share this struggle!