Friday, September 3, 2010

Wolves in Sheep's Clothing

"I know he awaits at the threshold, don't let him in, no, don't let him in. Though he is dressed like the rest of us, he has the Jackal's eyes, the Jackal's eyes!" -The Un-Manifest by Haste the Day

I'd like you to read the following Bible passage, but first I want to set a tone. The Bible is a beautifully written Book. The analogies and parables contained insided are not rivaled by any mere man-made work. Read this passage, and focus. Focus on the beauty of the content.

[7] So Jesus again said to them, “Truly, truly, I say to you, I am the door of the sheep. [8] All who came before me are thieves and robbers, but the sheep did not listen to them. [9] I am the door. If anyone enters by me, he will be saved and will go in and out and find pasture. [10] The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life and have it abundantly. [11] I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. [12] He who is a hired hand and not a shepherd, who does not own the sheep, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and flees, and the wolf snatches them and scatters them. [13] He flees because he is a hired hand and cares nothing for the sheep. [14] I am the good shepherd. I know my own and my own know me, [15] just as the Father knows me and I know the Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep. [16] And I have other sheep that are not of this fold. I must bring them also, and they will listen to my voice. So there will be one flock, one shepherd. (John 10:7-16 ESV)

We are the Sheep. Jesus is the Shepherd. Look at the italics and see just how much beauty Jesus creates to draw a comparison for the love He has for His sheep.

Shepherds were shepherds from birth. In biblical times, they lived and breathed sheep. I'm sure as a young man growing up with a particular flock of sheep would merit the same emotional connection as a child growing up with a puppy. The love a shepherd had for his sheep went several layers deep. The sheep were the shepherd's livlihood, and he would do anything to protect them from wolves and other threats such as thieves and murderers. A constant watch had to be kept in order to ensure the flock's safety. If one went missing, a good shepherd would go off to fetch it after making sure the other sheep were safe in their pen. Just as a sword is an extension of a Samurai's self, the flock was an extension of the shepherd, going where he commands, and guided with skill and precision. He takes the sheep where the grazing is good. He doesn't deliberately lead them off cliffs or through thickets, but sometimes the sheep wandered. After all, sheep are stupid. If a sheep is leading the flock, and it jumps over a stick, the following flock will proceed to jump over the stick even if the stick is removed.

The point is sheep need a Shepherd to survive well. Sheep are defenseless. We are defenseless. Ever felt that way? Re-read the passage and double check me on this: Jesus will do anything for His sheep. He will do anything for us. Just as a good shepherd loves his sheep, so Jesus love His children. Jesus even mentions that there are some of His sheep not in the fold. Does this refer to those that currently don't believe in Jesus' sacrifice that will within their lifetime? Some will also say this is Christ referring to the liberation of the Gentiles through His death on the cross. However you want to look at it, if you're unsaved, Jesus has His eyes on you too. Eyes of love. Eyes screaming repentance to bring you into a love of Jesus rather than a fear or anxiety of Him.

I guess the bottom line is for us all to wake up to the struggles that are in the world. The wolves are coming to try to steal from the fold. Don't let them in, no don't let them in. Rather look to the Good Shepherd for protection, and He will give it to you without hesitation.

Now, Redeemed, arise! Stand up! Take your place with Jesus and the beauty He has bestowed on His followers!

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Thursday, September 2, 2010

War

What if we could take up arms in a war that's not politically-charged and media-hyped? What if we could put our energy into something useful? Something of value? What if we could carry weapons not to kill, but to change and love and correct? What if we could soldier in a conflict that made use of our generation's creativity and talent with no holds barred?
The problem isn't that we're trying to fight the war and losing. Oh, no, this war is already won. We know the future on this one. It's just a matter of time.
No, the problem is that we're not fighting. We are too complacent to care. We just want to go to work and come home and chill. Play some games, eat some food, and then hit the sack to prepare to do it again in the morning. This is wrong. This is sin. This needs help. We need help. You and I need help.
We're Americans, we're practically born into complacency. Doesn't matter if our parents are Baptist, Catholic, Presbyterian, or Methodist, American Christians are neutered Christians, ashamed of Jesus to the point of not talking about Him outside of the "safe zone": Church. If we do talk about Jesus outside of church, we're so out of practice that it sounds fake; it's like we're just nuts talking about aliens. No one listens. Why? Because we don't live like Christ even existed.

See, Truth is, we are in a war. We're in many wars. I'm not talking about politics or government. I'm talking about the "real" world: our lives. Because in the end, even if our American freedoms are taken away from us, even if we lose to terrorist groups overseas or even in our homeland, the war that occurs in real life still exists and is being waged up until the day we die. We either follow Christ or we don't. People try to over-complicate this concept. I won't. It's a do or die type scenario. One that we can't afford to die on.
Listen, we don't want God to spit us out of His mouth for being lukewarm.

Christ should excite us, not just at concerts or revivals. "You were made to burn, and let the whole world see" -For Today-Breaker-Seraphim

Fight the Good Fight. Give God the Glory.

"If God is for us, than who can stand against us?"-Romans 8:31

We are in a war that is already won. Lets start fighting like Christ's sacrifice is real.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

To the Enslaved [And The Free...?]

I just realized that there is some interesting "dialectic thinking" in the New Testament. Jesus says that He came to set those who believe in Him free from their sin [John 8:36]...yet Paul says in Romans [and elsewhere] that we are slaves to God [Rom. 6:22]. So which is it?? Well obviously, it has to be both!

As soon as we are born, we are born bad, not good [the human condition]. There is nothing good we can do that has eternal value while we are under this state [Rom. 3:23]. This poses a problem. Heaven as we all know it, is perfect, and we can't go bringing our crap-lives into it and still call it perfect. That's when Jesus steps in, takes our place [dies for us], and resurrects [leaving sin in the tomb]. Thus opening the gateway for all who believe in Him to get to be where He resides forever: Heaven. Therefore He has set us free from the bondage of sin [wrongdoing. That thing that we could do nothing but until Jesus stepped in....]. We [saved Christians] have been freed from the grip of sin, and now have the freedom to choose to do good. This is new. Before we could only do evil, and now we have the choice to do good. So we're free right?? Sounds like it until we hit something like Romans 6:22 which says: But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God...

Paul's point: We're always slaves to something. Well, actually, we're always slaves to one of two things: 1. Jesus 2. Ourselves [sin]. Conversely, if we are slaves to one of those two things, we are free from the other [that's where we see phrases like "free from sin" and phrases like "free from righteousness-Rom. 6:20]. Paul continues to extrapolate in Romans 6, saying the consequences of our voluntary slavery ["you present yourselves...as obedient slaves" Rom. 6:16].
The consequence are this if we choose ourselves :
But what fruit were you getting at that time from the things of which you are now ashamed? For the end of those things is death.
(Romans 6:21)


The consequence of choosing obedient slavery to Jesus is this:
But now that you have been set free from sin and have become slaves of God, the fruit you get leads to *sanctification and its end, eternal life.
(Romans 6:22 )


*Sanctification is the process whereby we are continually growing more like Jesus*
Thanks for reading, and be sure to hit me up on Facebook for questions, comments, or stuff I need to clarify more. My Facebook badge is on the right if you need my profile.

Friday, August 20, 2010

To All Who Exist- The Brink

I was on my way to transfer a patient out of ICU when I heard a Code Blue [Adult Medical Emergency]...on ICU. I proceeded to get my equipment, hoping that the code was not the patient I needed to transfer. Fortunately it was not. It was one room over. As I introduced myself to my patient, we struck up casual conversation between him, his family, and myself. We talked about the Eagles, his condition, and so on. Even when I was just one thin wall away from a coding patient, I still didn't realize that we are all on the Brink.

The Brink is the line between life and death that no one can control.

We all forget about the Brink. It's not until a loved one is injured or dies that we think of it, or when the consequences are forced upon us by some thriller/action movie. But the Brink is more real than a movie, and more widespread than just our families...the Brink is upon us all.

We, as humans, have a fear of the unknown. Some try to hide it, but we all know it's there. If it weren't we wouldn't be...human. We all fear the Brink. The Brink is unknown.

When we turn to face the Brink, we have two decisions. Humanity is boiled down into two options: Purpose, or No Purpose? "There are two kinds of people in this world. Those that see signs, and those that see coincidence. The question is, which one are you?"-Mel Gibson, Signs.

If there is no purpose, we should all just kill ourselves now and end this game. However, if things happen for a reason, then we have something to search for; we have a reason to live. Many people have different ideas as to what purpose we're all living for. Those ideas are called religion. Religion is mankind striving for answers. For some, science is religion, for others it could be Buddhism, Catholicism, or Islam.

Mine is Christianity how the Bible describes it: Your soul belongs to Jesus or Hell. Jesus is the ONLY way to heaven, and one must accept the miraculous life, death, and burial of Jesus in order to receive his gift: answers.

Facebook message me [click on the badge on the left to go to my profile] to contact me with deeper questions and answers.

Remember, you exist in the Brink. Welcome to Security. Welcome to Jesus.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Three Steps: From Wrong to Right

We all, as humans, have those moments when we say something that completely devastates our best friend. It really doesn’t matter if we “meant it” or not; we still let it slip. I really do not think that there is such an instance when someone “didn’t mean” what they said. Every word we say is for a reason, and what we do has a motive behind it. But what can we do? We’ve just said something detrimental to our friend, on a personal level that we know we should not have said. Even if it was the truth, there were better ways to share it than the way we just chose. There is a quote from the movie The Village that I think could help speak into these situations: “The world moves for love. It kneels before it in awe.” Love will be the mediator that will come between us and our friend to try to mend the broken relationship. There are three ways to put a patch on what we’ve just said to our friend: realize, react, and restore.

The first thing that must happen to fix the relationship is to humble ourselves and take responsibility for the wrong we’ve done. How many times a day do we hurt people without even realizing it? We do wrong things all the time without turning around and making it right. The lies we tell our parents, children, and spouses often go unnoticed or justified in our minds. There’s no need to own our wrong if they deserve it. That way of thinking is completely motivated by self, not love. Remember that love is what will motivate us to fix the relationship. One of the writers of the Bible, Paul, says this in his letter called First Corinthians: “[If I] understand all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing.”

Realizing is not where we stop “righting our wrong”. In order to truly own our wrongdoing, we need to act on what we’ve just realized. Responding is the next step to a renewed relationship. A humble apology is in order. We need to take responsibility for what we’ve done by walking up to our friend and saying, “I really screwed up. What I said earlier was way out of line, and I meant it for harm, not for good. Please forgive me for saying those things to you, and consequently hurting our friendship.” [emphasis mine]. Sometimes “sorry” doesn’t heal the harm. I know I have hurt friends even more by just saying “sorry”. Sometimes we owe our friends more than that. By asking for their forgiveness, it shows them that we mean it. Forgiveness goes much deeper than a “Whoops, I’m sorry”. Forgiveness doesn’t hide. It shows that we know what we did wrong It shows that we understand that we mean what we said. We need to be on the same page about the hurtful things we’ve communicated. Once we’ve called our wrong for the ugliness it really is, it is time to change.

Restoring the relationship is often a hard, ugly process not devoid of hurt and sorrow. Some people never find restoration from the people they’ve wronged, and rightfully so. If someone drives drunk and kills a family member, we may be able to forgive them, but we’re probably not going to act as if it never happened. There are consequences that forgiveness may not be able to remove in every case. If the friend we transgressed is not willing to make an immediate restoration, than we need to be humble and accept that. We deserve what we’re getting; we’re the transgressors. We messed up and deserve some kind of consequence for what we’ve done. Sometimes restoration isn’t available right away, but once we change our actions, it may become available after our friend realizes that we’re serious about changing. Our love for our friend needs to help us persevere through this stage. As I said, it can hurt, but if/once restoration is made, it is cause to rejoice! We need to randomly throw an invite out to lunch to give an appropriate reaction to our renewed relationship! Restoration should always be the goal when we’ve hurt one of our loved ones. If it isn’t, then we probably have selfish intents. Selfishness, not hate, is the opposite of love. Love is all about the other person. It cares about others more than ourselves.

Restoration is supreme once it occurs, and only love can motivate us to get there. It will take a lot of personal sacrifice, and possibly tears, but it is always worth it. Our friendships should not be sacrificed because we aren’t willing to realize, react, and restore. The Village also says, “One love [the love of self] to sacrifice another love is not right!” Selfishness will always bring us down to destruction very quickly. I hope we all can realize that our friends are worth more than what we give them on a day to day basis; they are invaluable.


[This was an essay I wrote for my English Comp 1 Class at Camden County College]

Sunday, July 11, 2010

To Those Wondering About Judging and Matt. 7

[7:1] “Judge not, that you be not judged. [2] For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you.
(Matthew 7:1-2 ESV)

This is the famous passage that every0ne says "Do not judge anyone." I disagree. I think that we need to read verse 2 along with verse one. By doing that I think we reach a more full picture of what the text is saying.

Verse 2 says: ] For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you.

I think that this combined with the first verse means that one should not judge by our own standards. Verse 2 warns that what we use to judge other people, is what other people use to judge us. Therefore anyone saved by Jesus NEEDS TO USE SCRIPTURE AS THEIR MEASURING ROD. Any Christian should not object to having their life compared to Scripture at any time. Therefore it should be imperative that Christians use Scripture to judge other Christians, as well as use Scripture to determine what is and is not biblically ethical among our culture as well. If we remain complacent and judge no one, then sin will run rampant in our churches and in our culture.

That said, it is still necessary to introspect before we determine how others compare to Scripture as stated in vs 3-5:

[3] Why do you see the speck that is in your brother's eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? [4] Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when there is the log in your own eye? [5] You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother's eye.
(Matthew 7:3-5 ESV)

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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

My [new] Official Position on "She Said" Jokes

Some recent events have got me thinking about "She said" jokes.

(Pro 6:12) A worthless person, a wicked man, goes about with crooked speech,

Pretty clear huh? I now think so.

There are no redeeming qualities to those jokes. Sexual innuendo and foolishness are the only products of such behavior.

Therefore I will treat these jokes as sinful, both in my life, and in the lives of others. The world will continue to turn [if the Lord wills] without saying "she said" jokes.

Please forgive me for my sinful foolishness. I will now repent, and turn from that kind of behavior

(Pro 16:21) The wise of heart is called discerning, and sweetness of speech increases persuasiveness.

May my words be wise and persuasive, winning people for Christ, and purposefully not identifying myself with the world in this manner.

I give Christ the glory for this victory.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

To Those Who Wonder: My Personal Struggle

I’m not a doctor or physician, but I am in the medical field. I’m a transporter at Kennedy Hospital in Washington Township. I push people back and forth all day from room to test and back again. I like my job and my area of study: Nursing. So I guess you can call me a science guy…and a Christian.

Even with my limited knowledge and understanding of the scientific world, sometimes these two “worldviews” collide. Of course Christ is the Author and Perfecter; He is ruler of my life, not science. But still, these two areas of my life can come into conflict with each other in some areas. Are ‘vegetables’ worthy to spend medical funding on? Do they have souls still? Why should we purposefully prolong their lives? Why try?

Granted, I don't know why I ask these questions, but sometimes I still find myself asking them. As I pull a braindead patient into their bed, sometimes I wonder. I feel terrible, but I wonder. Sometimes I ask God “Why? Why prolong this life? What good can this person do? How are You loving them through this?” Then I stop and pause. I realize that…I just don’t understand God. I don’t always understand why He does what He does. At first this scares me, but then it comforts me. If I always understood Him, then I would be God. Anyone who knows me knows that that isn’t a good scenario!

All throughout the Gospels, I can see that God keeps things hidden only to be shown if He wants it to be known. That is true power. That same power is given to me with salvation; the same Spirit that filled Jesus, fills me. This is Truth. This is what I have to live by in order to remain sane. This is the peace that Christ has given me.

While I don’t have the answers to my own questions earlier, I must ask myself another series of questions: Who am I to judge between life and death? Who am I to judge the degree of God’s love poured out on any given individual? Who am I to judge who has a soul and who doesn’t?

Answer: I am nothing. BUT Christ is everything, including both omniscient and loving. I trust that.

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

To Challenge the Logic of my Psychology

The fist thing I'd like to say, is that if my logic isn't sound, let me know via Facebook message or something like that. The last thing I want to do is look like a jerk talking about logic while using logic that is invalid!

Ok, so there are several things that my Psych professor taught that logically makes sense. Let me start off by saying that I believe that if I [or anyone] were to introduce a line of logic that applies to one area, then it would make logical sense to apply it to different areas to see if the logic holds. What this does, to me in a Christian realm, eliminates Moralism, which says "Black, white. Do it." As I'm sure many who read this realize. As a Christian these areas of "gray" fall into the realm of what's called Christian Liberty. This takes anything not directly declared black or white in Scripture and says, "This is a gray area. This is good, and even beneficial to some people, but to others it is sin." Call it a "Relativistic Doctrine" if you want. But even this follows the logic "Not all things are black and white," therefore it is sound.

Ok, the background has been laid down, here's the meat. The most prominent piece of logic that I'd like to challenge has to do with disciplining your children with some type of hitting, spanking, or what have you. He makes his introductory statements consist of many instances where ordinary children are killed by ordinary disciplines [not abusive in nature]. He gives us some statistics and news articles to back up his claims, and then procedes to concoct an allegory of sorts. He calls it "The Lottery Man." This is how the story goes:
Your child disobeys, and needs a spanking. Instead of just spanking the kid, time seems to slow and you pick up the phone and dial "666." This is the number of the Lottery Man. Upon dialing, A man in appears with a large bin full of lottery balls [one million to be in line with calculatory correctness]. The Lottery Man hands you a ball and you write your child's name on it. The Lottery Man says, "If I pick this ball out of the million contained in my container, then I take your child and lop his head off. But if I don't your child will live to see another disciplining." You pick a ball, and it's blank. The Lottery Man disappears and life continues as normal. It comes time for another spanking, and the same scenario plays out. Soon enough, you end up picking the ball with your child's name on it, and the Lottery Man goes up to your child and cuts his head off. The head then proceeds to bounce across the floor as the Lottery Man laughs at the deed.

That's the end of the story. The story if followed by my professor saying, "Now, you must admit, even if there were 1/1,000,000 chances that you would kill your child accidentally when disciplining them, you'd never hit them again, and believe me, the odds are much greater than that!"

This is the line of logic I'd like to challenge. I challenge it, not because that in this particular instance it's wrong. On the contrary! While it may not be practical, it is at least logical. But it doesn't follow "Jesse's rule for sound logic."

Why? you may ask? Here's why:
Because even though that logic is sound, it should be tested in other areas of his mind. For instance, in any case where there is a small percentage of possible destruction, his logic would say, do not participate. Therefore activities such as driving a car, having gas/electric heat, going out in the sun, eating, drinking, and breathing are all included in that realm. pretty much living is included in that realm. To be more specific, we can narrow the list down to only driving and heating the home, since those have ramifications outside of ourselves. I'm trying to do that in all fairness.

But one area that I think that culture in general would disagree with is that of premarital birth control. Ooooh I said it.
Even with things like condoms and other forms of birth control, there is still a small percentage of STDs that can be transmitted and become infectious. Therefore using birth control is pointless, but so would having sex. Even moreso for the latter.
This poses a new problem. The whole concept of evolutionary thinking is that of Survival of the Fittest, rather the ones that are more likely to reproduce are the ones that will pass down more viable genes to create a better species down the road.
If there is potential to give/contract an STD through sex, then according to his original logic of not participating in something harmful if there is even a small percentage of possibility of that chance occurring, then the very purpose of evolution [which is the religion to which he subscribes] is null, void, and impractical!!!!
Wow, fun huh?

Anyway, I'm not going to even try to create a logical way of thinking to come up with a solution for his statistics on child disciplining. All I'll stick to for that area are the bounds given to me and Scripture.

Again Facebook me with questions/comments on ANY of my blog posts!

Monday, March 8, 2010

To Those of Us Who Need to Become Active Redeemers

Life changing events are some of the most dangerous things one could encounter. These decisions may not necessarily be extraordinarily different from other garden variety experiences, but they carry much more weight to them. These decisions will carry with you for the rest of your life, and you will have to try very hard to change back to the opposite of what you've chosen [if what you've chosen is the wrong choice].

It would be wrong of me to say "These choices define the way your life will play out," because...it's not true. If I said that, then I would be stealing power away from a sovereign God, and that's just wrong. We can't let Life Changing Events define who we are or what we will be, but neither can we act like they never happened, because that would ruin opportunities for us to change and grow and persevere.
Rom 5:3 More than that, we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance,
Rom 5:4 and endurance produces character, and character produces hope,
So what is this hope we have? If we endure these trials for Jesus' sake, then will we have any hope left?

The hope we have is in Jesus and only in Him. Jesus redeemed us all with His blood. He lived a life we cannot live. He died a death we should have died. He paid a price we deserved to pay.That price was death.

The Bible teaches that the life is in the blood. We know that to be pretty much Truth today. Without blood, there is no oxygen transfer without that we would stop functioning [die]. So there's no reason not to believe that teaching. When Jesus shed His blood, He shed His life. There is only one reason in the entire universe [which is His by the way] is because He loves us and does NOT want us to spend eternity separated from Him.

re·deem

tr.v. re·deemed, re·deem·ing, re·deems
  1. To recover ownership of by paying a specified sum.

The specified sum, is a perfect sacrifice. All of Scripture points to Jesus as the only perfect sacrifice that would meet God's standard of perfection. Jesus redeemed us with His sacrifice.

I submit that the least we can do for Jesus is to allow Him to redeem things through us as we live our lives daily.
Music.
Friends.
Video Games.
Family.
School.
Work.
All can be redeemed by Jesus through us, His servants.
Lets get our there and use our own Life Changing Experiences to better other people, rather than ourselves; to be outward redeemers, rather than selfish fools.

Monday, February 22, 2010

To Those Who Do Whatever

"1Co 10:31 So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God."

This verse, as many others, transcends generations. I've heard this verse taught wrong all my life by Christian institutions, and I'm getting annoyed. This passage is in the context of Christian Liberty and conscience.
Christ has set us free. Has opened up a choice that we never had before: the choice to do good, or evil. Before we were enslaved to various passions [Titus 3:3], but the passages that speak of Christ setting us free from those lusts are all over the place [2 Cor. 3:17, Gal. 2:4, 5:1, etc.].
In everything we have this choice now. In every situation there is a choice to do good, as well as a choice to do selfishness. That is what this verse means.
But that is not what I have been taught all these years. The legalists tell me that we don't have this freedom that Christ gave us. They say that we can only do good, and when we fail, we change our relationship with God. Does this make sense? Did Jesus pay for only some of our sins on the cross? No...He paid for all of them. He chose death for my eternal life, that can't be taken back. That's pretty "all or nothing". God never moves farther from me, if anything I move farther from Him.
When I choose myself over Jesus, God doesn't say, "Dang, oh well. I'm leaving!" He's a fighter, and He'd die to get me back...quite literally.
These are the reasons why Scripture says "whatever you do" not "don't do this in order to glorify God". Reason being, there's a choice for Jesus in every situation, and it's our responsibility as Christians to take those opportunities, or consciously walk away from Jesus. That's what life comes down to.

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