Reflection on Matthew 22:34-46

Scripture

No one could say a word in reply, and from that day on no one dared to ask him any more questions.

Observation

The Pharisees ask Jesus what is the greatest commandment in the Law. Jesus replies that there are two- love God and love your neighbour. Everything else depends on these two.

Jesus then asks them a loaded question: Whose son is the Christ? They answer “The son of David.” But Jesus then says, “How is that David calls him ‘Lord’?”

They could not answer this, and no one dared to ask Jesus any more trick questions from that day.

Application

You can’t fight God. It should be obvious, but many struggle against Him all their life.

The wisdom of the Lord is breath-taking. Every time people tried to pull Jesus down with clever words, He would spin it back at them.

If we follow Jesus and submit ourselves to His ways we will have the wisdom of the Creator on our side. If we resist Jesus we resist life by resisting God.

The choice is obvious.

Prayer

Father I praise you for your great wisdom. You know how our lives best work. Please help me to listen to you in everything I do. Amen.

Reflection on 1 Thessalonians 2:1-8

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Scripture

As apostles of Christ we could have been a burden to you, but we were gentle among you, like a mother caring for her children.

Observation

Paul recounts his ministry in Thessalonica. He has come to them with the gospel. His motives were pure, as all he wanted to do was to please God rather than people.

As an apostle he could have been a imposed himself on the church. Instead he was gentle like a mother caring for her little children, sharing his whole life with them.

Application

The mark of true apostles is gentleness. This is not to be confused with weakness, as those called apostles today and in the past, are strong personalities, They are not afraid to correct error but always in love for the church.

Any form of christian leadership or ministry that does not have the fruit of the Spirit manifested in it is false leadership or, at the very least, immature leadership.

Christians must never think the ends justify the means, that is that harming people to achieve a good outcome is allowable. Jesus told us that we must be wise as serpents but gentle as doves. The goals and directions we set must build others up not tear them down.

Prayer

Father, may I be an example to others of what it means to follow Christ. May the Spirit of Christ be obvious in all that I do for you. Amen.

Book Review: “Strangers to Fire- When Tradition Trumps Scripture”

Last year conservative evangelical Pastor John MacArthur published “Strange Fire” a polemic against charismatic and Pentecostal christians. While MacArthur’s position has been well-known since his book “Charismatic Chaos”, many were surprised by the extreme positions he has since adopted, such as calling the Pentecostal/charismatic movement the biggest deception and worst problem facing the church at this time.

“Strangers to Fire” is a collection of essays by leading theological scholars and is in two sections. The first, smaller, section directly addresses the shortcomings in “Strange Fire”, including its exegetical failings and logical errors. The second, longer, section looks at the scriptural and historical arguments against the doctrine of “cessationism”, the belief that the gifts of the Spirit died out when the apostles died or when the New Testament was completed.

The scriptural arguments against cessationism are quite strong. In fact, nobody who comes to the New Testament without prior instruction would be led to the belief that the gifts of the Holy Spirit are not for today. It is clear that the expectation in Scripture is that miracles,speaking in tongues, prophecy, healing and so on should continue until Jesus returns.

What I found really illuminating is the post-apostolic era. Several authors list the early Church Fathers (approximate time scale is 100-400 AD) and their writings clearly demonstrating that miracles and healings were common in the church. In two instances cited, christians were punished for their faith by having their tongues ripped out, but God miraculously enabled them to keep talking and praising Him. Other writers from the period speak of the vast majority (or even all) of their converts speaking in tongues as they emerged from baptism.

Because this is a scholarly book many people will find it heavy going. The style of the book, a collection of essays written over several decades, means that there is quite a bit of repetition and some readers might find that annoying. Nevertheless this is an important book that will give pastors and teachers sound resources for critiquing the cessationist position and for encouraging parishioners in their experience of the power of the Holy Spirit.

“Strangers to Fire- When Tradition Trumps Scripture” Edited by Robert W. Graves. Published 2014 The Foundation For Pentecostal Scholarship. ISBN 9780996044509.

Reflection on Deuteronomy 34:1-12

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Scripture

For no one has ever shown the mighty power or performed the mighty deeds that Moses did in the sight of all Israel.

Observation

Moses pronounces blessings on all the tribes of Israel and then climbs Mount Nebo. There the Lord shows him all the land He has promised to the people of Israel.

Moses dies there and the Lord Himself buries him, but no one has ever found the grave.

Joshua is filled with the spirit of wisdom, and the people accept him as Moses’ successor. No prophet has since been as powerful as Moses, nor has anyone performed the mighty deeds of Moses.

Application

Moses was exceptional in his fellowship with the Lord, meeting with Him face to face like a friend. He performed matchless acts of power and passionately pursued intimacy with God.

What God did in Moses, He will do in each of us. He has given us all the Holy Spirit. The Spirit dwells in every believer and releases His power in response to our need and our faith.

We don’t have to seek the Lord on special mountains because His Presence is always with us. As we surrender our hearts and minds to God, we will see mighty miracles take place.

Prayer

Holy Spirit thank you for the knowledge that you are with me. Help me to surrender entirely to you. Amen.

Managing Ebola in Liberia, Mismanaging Ebola in the United States.

Jo Nova shares the contrast between effective management of Ebola by private enterprise and the shambles of bureaucratic aqpproaches in the U.S.

Company stops Ebola, Bureaucracy puts it on a plane

Compare the response of The Firestone Rubber Plantation in Liberia to the Hospital in Dallas, Texas.

The rubber plantation has 8,000 workers with 71,000 dependants. It  is an hour north-east of Monrovia, surrounded by Ebola outbreaks. The virus arrived on the plantation in March. Knowing that the UN and the Liberian government were not going to save them, the managers sat around a rubber tree and goggled “Ebola” and learned on the run instead. They turned shipping containers into isolation units, trucks into ambulances, and chemical cleaning suits into “haz-mat” gear. They trained cleaners, and teachers, they blocked visitors, and over the next five months dealt with 71 infections, but by early October were clear of the virus. There were only 17 survivors (the same 70% mortality rate as elsewhere). But without good management, there could have been so many more deaths.

In contrast, the nanny-state takes a good brain and stops it thinking. In Texas,  trained health professionals were caught unprepared, following inadequate protocols they assumed were good enough, and even risking their own lives. A  nurse who cared for a dying Ebola patient — and knew how bad Ebola could be — still needed to phone someone to ask if it was OK to board a plane with a slightly raised temperature (99.5F or 37.5C). The official she spoke to “didn’t Google”, they just said yes because her temperature was lower than the official threshold of 100.4F. Let’s not blame her, she was doing her job, is now fighting for her life, and almost certainly did what so many others would have done. Let’s ask instead how we train workers to know that officials can sometimes get it wrong and they need to think for themselves. When the officials fail so badly, in so many ways, the failure is not single-point, or bad luck, but systemic. The nanny-state is selecting networkers and smoochers instead of decision-making leaders. Officials rarely lose their jobs and golden handshakes, or face a seriously investigative media — which would keep them on their toes. Surely either the nurse who called or the bureaucrat who answered would, if left to their own devices, have figured it was not ok to fly–but by the smothering dumbness of of bureaucracy she ended up flying.

Stability is good, but the system is so stable it’s ossified. Executives were so busy telling everyone not to worry, they forgot to worry themselves. The Firestone plantation is an inspiring story. It gives me hope.

 

Read the full article here

Report- Nigeria Makes a Deal With Boko Haram

If the reports are true, this may be good news for Nigeria and for the girls. We need to keep praying for an end to Boko Haram.

From the ABC

Boko Haram: Nigeria reaches deal with Islamic militant group over abducted schoolgirls, defence chief says

Updated about an hour agoSat 18 Oct 2014, 8:31am

Nigeria’s government has reached a deal with Islamic militant group Boko Haram for a ceasefire and the release of around 200 girls kidnapped six months ago from a school in the northeast town of Chibok, the defence chief said on Friday.

“I wish to inform this audience that a ceasefire agreement has been concluded,” Marshal Alex Badeh said in a statement after three days of talks with the militant group that has wreaked havoc in the northeast of Africa’s biggest oil producer.

A presidency source said the agreement stretched to the girls, who were abducted from a secondary school in Chibok near the Cameroon border in April, sparking a worldwide outcry.

The girls have remained in captivity ever since, although police and a parent of some of the missing students said last month one of the girls had been released.

Read the rest here

Reflection on Matthew 22:15-22

Scripture

Then He said to them, “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.”

Observation

The Pharisees and Herodians hatch a plot to trap Jesus with His words. They start with flattery before springing the trap: “Is it right to pay taxes to Caesar?”

Jesus sees their evil intent, knowing that whichever way He answers will lead to trouble, either from the Roman authorities or the people.

He shows them a coin, asking whose portrait and inscription it bears. “Caesar’s”, they reply. He tells them to give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is due to God

Application

Jesus has a way of cutting through arguments, traps and paradoxes to get to the heart of issues.

In this case the issue is not about courting popularity and political clout, as the Pharisees and Herodians thought.

The issue, as is so often the case, is about where our heart priorities are.

The coins bear Caesar’s portrait and inscription, so he has the right to as many of them as he wants..

But people have been created in God’s image and bear God’s inscription, so we belong to Him.

Sure, pay your taxes. At the end of the day, that is all the government is entitled to. But give God your whole life. He made you and He deserves you.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, please show me what I am holding back from you and help me to give everything I am to your service. Amen.

Reflection on 1 Thessalonians 1:1-10

Scripture

We continually remember before our God and Father

     your work produced by faith

     your labour prompted by love

     and your endurance inspire by hope

     in our Lord Jesus Christ.

Observation

Paul is continually praying for the church at Thessalonica, as he does for many such churches.

The gospel came to them, not just with words but in power, the Holy Spirit and deep conviction.

The Thessalonians are legendary for the depth of their conversion from idolatry to serving the living and true God.

Application

What an awesome church this must have been! When Paul came to preach to them, they received the gospel with deep conviction. They repented from idolatry and served the living God. They took the message everywhere. Signs, wonders and salvations were occurring regularly.

This is not to say that the church was without flaws. However, they were deeply committed to following the way of Jesus and many people were impacted.

The challenge for us is to imitate their behaviour, letting the word of our testimony and the power of the Holy Spirit flow out from us to the world.

Prayer

May I be thoroughly converted Lord, with every gram of my being dedicated to you. Amen.