Easter Sunday – March 31st, 2024

“I couldn’t see the forest for the trees!” 

“Right under your nose.” 

“Hidden in plain sight.”

These are all terms we use to describe a condition known as Inattentional Blindness, or perceptual blindness; a psychological lack of attention that is not associated with any vision defects or deficits.  I’m sure we can all relate to this condition because of being inflicted with it ourselves or living with someone that has this. 

Sunday is Resurrection Day when we celebrate the resurrection of Christ and all that is accomplished by it! Easter is the high point of the Christian calendar and should always be a meaningful day for us as followers of Christ. In our text this Sunday, Luke 24:13-35, we meet two disciples that are afflicted with the above mentioned condition. They were with Jesus, but were not able to recognize him. Jesus was hidden to them in plain sight. 

We may be able to reason and even understand this is a condition people deal with today because Jesus is not walking alongside us as he was for the disciples on the Emmaus Road that day. But it wasn’t the physical presence of Jesus that led them to see the resurrected Christ. It wasn’t the nail prints in His hands or the scars from being tortured. No, it was something totally unexpected. They didn’t see the resurrected Christ until they sat at a table with Him where Jesus broke bread with them. The breaking of the bread took them back to the day Jesus fed the 5000 and showed He could meet their deepest needs. Jesus reminded them that He came to have a relationship with them, and in that relationship He would meet their every need for time and eternity. So it is for people today. People come to see the resurrected Christ not because of some compelling argument or physical evidence. They see the resurrected Christ when they discover what it means to have a relationship with Him, and that relationship becomes the basis of meeting every need of the human heart for time and eternity. Join us this Sunday and see the resurrected Christ.

March 24th, 2024

The Small Group Sue and I belong to has just completed a study based on Tim Keller’s book “The Reason for God.” It’s an excellent study for your small group if you want to know how to address some of the objections society has against Christianity. One of the sessions addressed the question “How can you say there is only one way to God? What about other world religions?” In the course of discussion our group leader, Art Paschal took us to John 14:6 where Jesus states “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.” And that is my text for this Sunday. Jesus is Exclusively and Entirely the only way to come to the Father.
In response to the question, “how can Christianity say there is only one way to God?” it needs to be acknowledged that all religions are exclusive in the claims they make. All religions believe they are right and other religions are wrong. The question people need to decide is which one will I believe – where will I place my faith for my eternal soul?
Christianity is different from other world religions in that the way to God is not through the religion itself, or by obeying a set of rules, or by our own good works, or by some act of fate. Christianity says the way to God is Exclusively and Entirely through Jesus! That is the claim Jesus makes in John 14 and it is the foundation upon which the church is built. Some people think you just need to add a little Jesus to your already good life, but that is not the claim of Christianity. The true gospel is more than just a little Jesus, it’s Exclusively and Entirely Jesus!

March 17, 2024

Jesus has just spent three amazing years with his disciples. They heard firsthand the teaching of Jesus that confounded skeptics and gave life to those that accepted His words. They witnessed the Miracles of Jesus where people were restored and nature obeyed his very words. Life with Jesus was so amazing the disciples might have wondered, how could this get any better? Then in the opening verse of John 14 Jesus tells them the best is yet to come. Now the disciples had a hard time accepting that the best was yet to come because Jesus had just told them he would be leaving them, and they were “troubled.” The disciples had become focused on what they thought Jesus would or should do at that particular time. The thought of Jesus leaving brought up emotions they were not prepared for and they were troubled. It was necessary for Jesus to suffer, die, rise to life again and return to the Father in order for them to receive the gift of Heaven: the best that is to come.
We can be like the disciples by focusing only on what we think Jesus can do for us in the here and now. And while things like His presence, peace and strengthening are amazing during this life, in the gift of Heaven we know the best is yet to come! Christians become troubled when we only focus on the circumstance of the world we live in. Do you ever have emotions you are not prepared to deal with and find yourself in a troubled state of mind? Jesus invites us to see that He and the Father can be trusted because they have a wonderful plan that concludes in Heaven, with the best that is yet to come. Join me this Sunday as we look at the promise of Jesus that the best is yet to come.

March 10th, 2024

The word “Glory” means to extol virtue or to magnify good qualities of a person or thing. We get the image of seeing something from its very best perspective. When you walk into the showroom of a car dealership the new cars they want you to buy are displayed to demonstrate all their best qualities: you see the glory of the car. When a person is being nominated for a position, whether it be to the PTA or as the President of the United States, to convince people to vote for them their virtues are extolled: you hear the glory of the nominee.
Our text in John 13:31 – 38 begins with Jesus saying, “Now is the Son of Man glorified.” When it comes to the glory of God, we might think of His works seen in creation, the miracles recorded in Scripture, or even the poetic description of God in the Psalms. But that is not where the Glory of God is at its greatest. The highest virtue of God and the greatest qualities of God are seen in the cross of Christ. In every other segment of society the cross is seen as a symbol of torture, punishment and defeat. In God’s economy the cross is the opposite of defeat. The cross of Christ is God’s victory over sin, death and the Devil. The cross of Christ is glorious because the perfect love of God is on full display.
Jesus follows His statement regarding the glory of God with a new command for his followers to “love one another, as I have loved you.” This command adds a new twist to the Old Testament command to simply love others as yourself. To love as Christ loved requires sacrifice for the benefit of those we seek to love. In the remaining verses of the chapter Jesus describes how his followers will glorify God after He returns to heaven, followed by a serious threat to our attempts to glorify God.
As we work our way through the Gospel of John I didn’t have a master plan (I think God did) to be on this text for our One Church Service, but I can’t think of a better passage for us on this occasion. As the service closes we will celebrate the Lord’s Table which points us back to our text in John 13. In communion we see both the glory of the cross that brings the unity of the Church and the love that results from that. Join us on Sunday as we explore the Glory of the Cross.

March 3, 2024

Our text in John’s Gospel this Sunday exposes Judas as the betrayer of Jesus. Judas is a perplexing personality in the Gospels. Judas spent the better part of three years with Jesus where he heard Jesus preach, saw the miracles of Jesus, and had the opportunity to know Jesus in private settings. Yet, when the moment of decision came, Judas rejected Jesus?
A reason Judas is a troubling personality in the Gospels is because we wonder, “if it happened to him, could it happen to me?” This Sunday, as we work through the passage, I hope you will be able to see and understand how Judas got to the place where Satan entered him and he did the terrible thing that he did. Judas stands in contrast to the other 11 disciples who, in spite of their faults, accepted Christ as the Savior of their souls. Through this passage we can better understand the security we have as a result of accepting God’s offer of Salvation in Christ and the relationship we have with Him because of that.
The life of Judas is a cautionary tale to anyone who is putting off accepting God’s offer of Salvation in Christ. Judas repeatedly held Jesus at a distance as he pursued his own path to achieve his own goals for life. His heart became hard to Jesus. The Gospel is a call to surrender to God’s offer of salvation in Christ, which includes an acceptance of God’s will for our lives. If you have been putting off trusting Christ, learn from what happened to Judas, and receive God’s gracious offer of salvation in Christ. Join me this Sunday as we see What Happened to Judas?