Tuesday, October 31, 2006

God is really here among you. I Corinthians 14:25

Dear Worshipers,

That is the overarching desire I have for our experience of God at our church. I often pray to this end just before the service. I want unbeliever and believer alike to be able to say, "God is really here among [us]." When I read Pastor David's Thursday thoughts last week [see below], I was reminded of this verse.

In this passage, the apostle Paul is offering some instruction to the Corinthian church with regard to the gifts of tongues. He says, "…in a church meeting I would much rather speak five understandable words that will help others than ten thousand words in an unknown language." [v. 19] In the larger passage here, Paul is defending the superiority of prophecy, "helping others to grow in the Lord, encouraging and comforting them" [v. 3] by speaking the word of the Lord.

Though in our church we rarely if ever experience the gift of tongues, we routinely have opportunity to experience the gift of prophecy as our pastors help us grow in the Lord, encouraging and comforting us. That is what Pastor David experienced when he first came here years ago, and that is what I eventually experienced as well.

My timeline was a little different. I had attended this church off and on for a few years before the night I met Christ and realized He wanted me in this church. But my testimony that night could easily have been, "God is really here among you." I was the unbeliever hearing the word of the Lord. It laid my secret thoughts bare, and I humbled myself before Christ to worship Him as Savior and Lord.

I keep using the word "experience". In conclusion, let me explain what I mean by that. By experience, I am referring to God revealing Himself through the Bible, prayer, circumstances and the church and our responding to Him and that revelation. That experience of God is all about God: God revealing Himself, and our responding to Him sincerely. I pray that happens every time we gather in this place. I trust that it does, even more than we realize corporately.

Some years ago, God revealed Himself to Pastor David, and he responded. Through him some years later, God revealed Himself and I responded. This Sunday through us both and others, God WILL reveal Himself again. I pray you and those around you will be prepared to respond to Him in the way that brings Him the most glory.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Pastor David’s “Thursday Thoughts” 10.26.06

"THE MOMENT I WALKED IN THE DOOR I KNEW THIS WAS THE CHURCH FOR ME!" The lady who said this to me was lying in a hospital, facing a grave diagnosis. Her courage and faith inspired me, and the experience she described was familiar as well. Her family had invited her to church on a number of occasions, but she always had an excuse. On a weekend when she knew they were out of town, she decided to pay a visit. I guess she thought that would be "safe" -- if she didn't like it and didn't want to return, perhaps they would never know she had been there at all.

But she did like it. In fact, she felt "at home" the very first time she came...and she has been coming to church ever since. She said, "Most people think it's strange when I tell them this, but somehow I just felt the presence of the Lord and I knew this was where I was to go to church."

Well, it didn't sound strange at all to me. I remember that winter day in 1977 when I decided to visit The Christian and Missionary Alliance Church here in Morgantown. My parents had been attending for a while and had invited me to come. I wasn't going to church anywhere and had no interest in church. I wasn't reading my Bible, I didn't pray, I was distant from the Lord and really didn't care to draw nearer. It was my last semester of law school and I had "more important" things to do than go to church on Sunday morning.

But then the Lord got my attention by allowing certain reversals and disappointments in my life. I'll spare the details here, but it suffices to say that I decided to pay a visit to the church my parents were attending. And I will never forget that morning. I sensed the real presence of the Almighty God the very moment I stepped through the doors of the carport entrance

The experience was remarkable, for two reasons. First, it was both undeniable and unexpected. It was as though God had posted Himself at the door as the "greeter" to welcome me into "His" house. Second, I knew that I was not in a place to discern what the presence of the Lord "felt" like. I wasn't walking with Him; how would I recognize His presence? Of course, the credit was the Lord's. It had nothing to do with how "discerning" I was; rather, He chose to reveal Himself to me in an unmistakable way. It was all by His grace. It always is.

My experience was no mere happenstance or accident. I'm convinced I sensed God's presence because the people of God were praying for His manifestation and were living in His grace. I walked into a realm where God was at work and the people had yielded to His favor and influence. The building itself was not holy, but the Holy One inhabited the people who worshiped in that space. I came to church and I met the Lord.

It should be the same on any given Sunday What this lady found a decade ago...what I found three decades ago...should be the ordinary experience of every person who arrives on our campus and enters our facility. I pray regularly that when people park their car in the lot they will sense that Jesus is here. I pray that as they walk our hallways, as they greet others in the building, as they find a seat in a pew, as they open their bulletin and anticipate the worship, as they lift their eyes to the video screen and their voices in praise, as their ears welcome the words that honor Jesus and His Word...that in all these ways they will meet the One who is the Lord of the Church, the One whose Body celebrates in this place.

And I enjoin you to pray with me to a like end. Let's expect to meet God in church this Sunday! If you do not attend the Morgantown C&MA, pray for the church you do attend. Pray that every person who comes will say, "The Lord is in this place! This is where I belong!"

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Grace Will Lead Me Home

Dear Worshipers,

"There's no place like home."

Grace is not just something that helps us make it home; it is Grace that leads us home. There is a significant difference between these two thoughts which I did not realize until I was reflecting on that. The difference is as significant as the one between the driver and a passenger in the vehicle. The driver is the one in control; the passenger is really just along for the ride.

The problem we get ourselves into arises too often from the fact that we think we are driving. Grace is such a patient leader that often we actually think we are driving, when in reality we simply reaching over and turn the wheel this way and that as distractions to the journey pull us off course. Grace does not slap our hands and put us in our place. Grace gently turns the wheel with us, allowing us the choice, all the while knowing the true path and refiguring the course back to it, painful as it may be for us.

Yeah, you know what I am talking about. You find yourself in that place and you question Grace for allowing you to come this way. Slowly Grace begins to show you the way back, points out you departed, AND uses the little jog in the journey to show you something about Himself. We have the opportunity to reflect that or ignore it.

Grace does not only help me when I take the wrong turn in the road, it is grace that leads me back. And Grace does so without ever making me fell like an idiot for getting lost, and for not asking for directions in the first place. After all, that is just how Grace works. This analogy could go on and on, and I pray it will in your journey today and tomorrow and…but for now, let us focus on going home.

You know the old phrase that Dorothy used to get back to Kansas, "There's no place like home." Oh, how true that phrase is for any weary traveler as they cross the threshold and enter into that place of rest that is home. In our analogy, and the hymn it was originally stated in, I am speaking of course of heaven, our eternal home. Dorothy's phrase rings truer in this context than in any other, as we will continue to see in Pastor David's series.

Grace WILL lead me home. Have you ever thought of that? It doesn't say, “Grace MIGHT me home" or "Grace COULD lead me home", it says will. For the believer, one who has said essentially, "I have chosen to walk the path of Grace” there is the calm assurance that our journey with Grace will conclude in heaven. For the unbeliever, the one who has chosen not to walk His path, Grace will lead them to their destination as well, but with tears in His eyes for the countless opportunities missed to turn from certain ruin.

I have written today to try to give you a better idea of what Grace looks like. I trust that as you read images came to mind that represented for you the driver of your life, Grace. I trust that you have noticed my capitalizing the word "Grace" through the Tuning, and that you realize the purpose in that was to remind you that Grace is a person. He more often goes by His preferred name-Jesus. I think you know Him well, but pray you will know Him better as you experience Him through obedience to His leading this and every day until Your journey finally finishes and you find yourself at HOME!

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

My Shield, My Portion

Dear Worshipers,

The Lord has promised good to me. His Word my hope secures.
He will my shield and portion be as long as life endures.

I finished last weeks “Tuning” asking for your prayers and I have felt them. I know many of you are praying and we appreciate all your concern for us. Our hope is secure in God’s Word which many of you are living out before us.

The words above are on my heart as I write today. I am hoping in the goodness promised to me – and my family – in Christ. I have experienced God as my shield and portion time and time again in this life, but am looking for Him to Him to protect and provide in this situation. Of course, we desire to be shielded from all harm, but even if pain comes, He will give us the strength needed to persist and prevail.

I asked Samuel on the way to school today what he felt the Lord was saying to him about the “bubble” [cyst] he had removed last week. After some thought, he responded, “Some good, some bad.” When I asked him what he meant by that he replied, “Well, if what they took out was bad, it was good if they got it all out.” WOW! Even if there was bad God can make it all good. Amen.

Just as I was thinking I would rather not be facing these uncertainties, I was reminded of those which others are facing. Many of you will remember Lya Cartwright Stroupe, the pianist from the last two patriotic musicals. She lost her son Ian in the spring to a congenital heart defect, after having lost the previous year had lost her father unexpectedly during the production of the musical. Now she has learned that her mother has liver cancer. She asked me for prayer in a recent email and admitted she is angry with God.

I called her to assure her that I would be praying for her. Will you join me? Pray that Lya will see God as her portion in these days. I know she feels as though God has failed as a “shield”, which He hasn’t, but I am praying that He will show her first that He is sufficient for all that she and her mom are facing in these days.

I know that some of you are facing difficulties right now. I am praying for those of which I am aware. I pray that you too will know God is your portion. He will give you everything you need to keep on until He calls you home.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Grace Has Brought Me Safe Thus Far

Dear Worshipers,

This month our choir is focusing on God’s amazing grace. It has been good to be reminded just how amazing God’s grace is. I recounted to the choir how sweet it was for me to sing that great hymn of faith during communion a week ago Sunday while standing in the same place I stood some 14 ½ years ago just before being baptized three weeks after meeting Christ. He has brought me “through many dangers, toils and snares” in those years, probably the vast majority of which I remain totally unaware. And I am facing a few this week.

Sarah had a procedure yesterday which removed a few suspicious moles. We will wait for the pathology for two to three weeks. We are praying that the areas are benign, but ultimately desire the Lord’s will.

Samuel has oral surgery to remove a cyst in his mouth on Friday. I am not certain how long our wait will be for his results. We are praying that they too will indicate his area of concern is benign, but ultimately again for the Lord’s will.

As I stood to sing a few weeks ago, these things were on my mind. But also were all the things the Lord has brought me through that 14 ½ years ago I could never have imagined. His grace has been sufficient. [2 Corinthians 12:9] His grace will be sufficient.

Don’t get me wrong, there is concern in the heart of this husband/father, but also confidence. I am concerned with these situations, but not without the confidence of the grace of my God. There is uncertainty in them, but it is mingled with certainty. Though we have yet to discover what this path holds for our family, we know the One who is our Pathway to Peace and we are certain to discover once again-and probably in a more profound way than ever before-the amazing grace of our loving Lord.

It may turn out to be “nothing”, benign reports on both counts. Even then in would be something, a demonstration of Gods’ grace to us. If it turns out to be “something”, we are praying for and trusting in the grace that will lead us through it with Jesus holding us safely in His hands. He has done so thus far, and shows no signs of changing. [Hebrews 13:8]

Pastor David’s started a series on heaven this past Sunday. He challenged us with the thought that if we are walking with Jesus, do we know where we are going? Of course we do. We are headed home. Whatever He wants to take us through on the way will only work out for our good and His glory as we journey on toward our eventual, eternal home.

I am praying for you. Will you pray for me and my family? We really need it. Thank you for the love and concern already shown to us.


In Christ,

Pastor Scott

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

What’s on Your Mind?

Dear Worshipers,

I’m not asking that in the usual sense. More accurately, I am asking “What one thing dominates your thinking?” Last week I challenged you to consider if you were single-minded. I asked these questions to clarify what I meant by single-minded.

Do you have a consuming passion? Is there one thing that is always on your mind? When you have a minute to daydream, what is the first thing that your mind trails off to? I think the best way to ask it is this, “What do you think about when you are not thinking about anything else?”

I commented near the end of last week’s “tunings” that I would share what should be on that mind. Here is the answer: GOD – GOD always, GOD only.

James 4:8 tells us, “Come near to God and he will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded.” This is the context of a passage that challenges us to submit ourselves to God. He is to be preeminent in not only our thinking, but in our living.

Where am I going with this? Here. We need to allow our pursuit of God, our submission to God, our worship of God to invade every passion, and every dispassion. Every thought, every word, every deed. All things brought into submission to the purpose of submitting ourselves to God.

There are a number of things that James does not say. He does not say, “Come near to God occasionally”. Implying that this is something you should do once in a while. He also does not say “Come to God conveniently”. In other words, when it serves your purpose. He does not even say “Come to God rightly” which could cause us to imply a legalism of trying to please God through vain repetition or other posturing.. No, James does not say any of those things. He simply says “Come”.

Then he offers this instruction. “Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded.” I am reminded of the Psalmists’ question and answer from 24:3-4 . “Who may ascend the hill of the Lord? He who has clean hands and a pure heart, who does not lift up his soul to an idol or swear by what is false.” The Psalmist was speaking of meeting God in the Temple. We are the temple. [1 Corinthians 6:19]

So, let us be careful to live in such a way as to stay before God. Not just come before Him and then leave, but stay. As cleansing is needed, ask God to do it. Did you do something [hands] or think something [heart] that dishonored God? In His presence be cleansed. Did you notice the progression, come and wash/purify? In His presence we are cleansed. Let us be faithful to come, and to be cleansed. Then we can live with God as our single focus through everything we face every day. May He bless you with a single-minded this day.

In Christ,

Pastor Scott