Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Difficult Questions for Christians Series - Part 3

Two weeks ago I started a series on "Difficult Questions for Christians." Here is where you can view the last two posts, "Why doesn't prayer work, when the Bible promises that it will?" and "Why does the Bible record scientifically impossible events as factual?" Over the next 3 weeks I'll attempt to answer 3 more of the thousands of difficult questions posed by skeptics and Christians alike. Remember a few things though as you read. 1. This is a short answer to a difficult question that has probably plagued the human heart for thousands of years. 2. God's Word is the ultimate authority with answers, not a fallible pastor. 3. The Bible doesn't give us the answers to every question we have. It tells us what we need to know, not necessarily what we want to know. With that being said, let's jump into our next question in the series.

Where is the justice in punishing us for Adam's sin?

When I was a kid my parents punished me for carving my name into the window sill of our main living room window. Problem is, I didn't do it. First off, my name wasn't spelled correctly. Secondly, I knew I hadn't done it but my parents didn't believe me. Years later my younger sister confessed to the crime. It was not "just" for me to be punished for my sister's sin. This is the viewpoint from which this week's question is being asked. Another argument made by this person would be that Deuteronomy 24:16 says a child cannot be punished for their parents' sins. At the heart of the matter is the justice of the punishment, and how can such a harsh punishment (death) for Adam & all his children be considered just? As with most difficult questions about faith there are a few answers that help point us in the right direction. Here are some for today's question.

We are not punished for Adam's sins. We are punished for our sins.
You can read about how sin entered the world in Genesis 3. We read about Adam & Eve's willful decision to disobey God. We call disobedience to God sin. Adam and Eve exercised their freewill and went against God's commands. With sin introduced into the world, all of creation was affected by it, including their children. You can read about Paul's explanation of sin coming from Adam in Romans 5. But the reality of it is that we all sin because sin has been passed down from Adam to you and me. Think about it this way, do we have to teach babies and small kids to be selfish, greedy, or discontent? Do we have to teach them to lie to avoid getting in trouble? No we don't. Why? Because sin is passed along like a genetic trait from Adam all the way to us. Paul tells us in Romans 3:23 that we've all sinned. That leaves no one out, he means everyone has sinned. We're also told in Romans 6:23 that the punishment for sin is death. So if we've all sinned, then we all deserve the penalty for sin, which is death. That death is both a physical and spiritual death and you can learn more about the way to avoid that spiritual death here. Just so we're all clear, when we are punished for sins, it's not Adam's sins we are being punished for but it's our own sins.

"Justice" depends on your perspective.
There are Muslim countries around the world where someone practicing homosexuality could be executed. In the United States, regardless of your religious views, the great majority of us see that penalty as excessive. Many of us, from our perspective, couldn't imagine such a punishment for that action. From the perspective of those in the aforementioned Muslim countries, it is not excessive. Justice depends on your perspective. From the human perspective death, both physical and spiritual, does seem a bit excessive. We look at it as God could surely come up with something different to punish us with, rather than allowing us to die for our sins. But that is the view of justice from earth looking towards heaven. The view from heaven is vastly different. God is the holy One who created everything and sustains everything. The fact that He is holy means he is perfect and free from evil. Holiness is a basic character trait of God. What that means is that God's holiness is part of His DNA. He is holiness. He is holy. Why does that matter? Since God is holy and perfect and free from evil (sin), He cannot be in the presence of sin. This means that He must do away with those who sin and not allow them to enter His presence in heaven. From God's perspective of maintaining His holiness, physical and spiritual death are a just punishment for sin. If you want to read more about how God offers you a way to get rid of your sin and enjoy heaven with Him, then check out this link. What we have to understand is that from God's holy perspective His punishment for sin is just.

Disobedience must be punished.
What do you get when children (and adults) are not punished for their mistakes and disobedience? The answer: "The world we live in today." We live in a society and culture where many have been raised with an entitlement viewpoint that does not punish the wrongdoer. Instead of being punished for disobedience they've been given "things" to appease them and make them feel "loved." The problem is we have people who are now adults that were raised without punishments and they feel they're entitled to say, do, and have anything they want. The problem is they weren't punished as children and taught to respect the authority of those who seek to discipline them. And now society is worse off for it. Why the rant? Because what we see in our society is a microcosm of what the world at large would look like if God didn't punish us for our sins. The only difference is by now, thousands of years after Adam & Eve's sin, the entire world would look MUCH worse than our society is today. Justice isn't about doing what is fair, justice is about doing what is right. We tell our kids "Life's not fair!" because it isn't. What matters though is that things are done right. For things to be done right, according to God's standards, disobedience must be punished. Our disobedience towards God is met with God's right or just punishment which is physical and spiritual death. But God has given us a way to avoid the spiritual death. By doing so, God has done the right thing by us. He's shown us love, grace, and mercy by giving us a way out of the punishment of spiritual death. You can find out more about God's grace by going to this page. Your disobedience towards God must be punished according to God's standards. Thankfully, He loves us enough to punish us and He loves us enough to show us some grace as well.

I hope this brief look at "Where is the justice in punishing us for Adam's sin?" will help deepen your understanding of why God has to punish us for our sins. As always, I'm open to comments and questions, either here on the blog or via Social Media. If this question brings to mind another difficult question about faith, then by all means ask it.


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Sunday, May 22, 2016

Difficult Questions for Christians Series - Part 2

Last week I started a series on "Difficult Questions for Christians." Here is where you can view last week's post on "Why doesn't prayer work, when the Bible promises that it will?" Over the next 4 weeks I'll attempt to answer 4 more of the thousands of difficult questions posed by skeptics and Christians alike. Remember a few things though as you read. 1. This is a short answer to a difficult question that has probably plagued the human heart for thousands of years. 2. God's Word is the ultimate authority with answers, not a fallible pastor. 3. The Bible doesn't give us the answers to every question we have. It tells us what we need to know, not necessarily what we want to know. With that being said, let's jump into our next question in the series.

Why does the Bible record scientifically impossible events as factual?

You can't get past page one of the Bible without encountering an example that may be used as an argument for this question. The Bible is chocked-full of events that absolutely defy science. Here are a few examples and references should you want to read these awesome stories: God spoke and created everything (Genesis 1&2), a flood that covered the entire earth (Genesis 6-8), God confused the languages of man & dispersed humans around the world (Genesis 11), the Israelites walked on dry land through the Red Sea (Exodus 13-14), the earth quit rotating for a full day (Joshua 10), Jesus physically healed people who were blind, deaf, & lame (Matthew-John), Jesus walked on water (John 6), Jesus fed more than 5,000 people with 5 loaves of bread and 2 fish (Matthew 14, Mark 6, Luke 9, John 6), and Jesus was resurrected from the dead (Matthew 28, Mark 16, Luke 24, John 20). And that is just to name a few. 

According to our modern understanding of science and the way the natural world works, it is easy to see why some would be skeptical of what the Bible says is a factual historical event. The easy answer is because they actually occurred. But to those who don't agree with the Bible that answer will only start an argument that is similar to a fight on Facebook. Its just a bunch of words that end up making everyone look worse. Since that won't get us anywhere let's look at these answers.

To a believer in Christ whose heart has been changed by God their view of the Bible should be different than someone who hasn't been changed by God. 
The Bible talks about this in 1 Corinthians 2:14 where Paul wrote, "The man without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually discerned." To those who's hearts have not been changed by Christ, spiritual matters seem foolish, including supernatural events that go beyond the limits of the natural world. Once we've had our eyes opened through faith, we are able to see what God did for what it is. It's a miracle or in other words, something only God can do.

God is a supernatural, all-powerful being that is not limited by our understanding of the way the natural world works.
If you don't believe in God then you won't believe what the Bible says about supernatural and spiritual matters. That being said, from the Christian standpoint God is viewed as the One who spoke and created everything (Genesis 1-2). Christians view God as an omnipotent (all-powerful) being capable of doing anything. If He is capable of speaking everything in the natural world into existence, then why wouldn't He be able to manipulate it with minimal effort? So from the view of an Almighty God who can is all-powerful, it makes sense that He could cause things to occur outside of our understanding of the natural world.

These events happened to help bring about God's plan for mankind, including providing salvation.
God doesn't do anything without a purpose. There is an order and a purpose to everything God does and everything He has created, including you. All of the science defying events in the Bible were done at their time in history to move along God's plan of redemption for mankind. The Bible is not a scientific textbook, but instead a love letter written to mankind showing God's love and plan for redeeming mankind. From the perspective of faith or one who is spiritually discerning, God weaves the story of sin, redemption, and love throughout the Bible. His whole purpose in the Bible is to point out to mankind their sinfulness, their need for a Savior, and how Jesus is that Savior.

You can't believe just part of the Bible. 
I'll end with this. When I was a Youth Pastor I used to tell my Youth that you couldn't believe the back part of the Bible (New Testament) where it talks about Jesus & salvation and not believe the front (Old Testament). The Bible is not a buffet where we pick what we want to believe because it fits our understanding of the way things should work. We must believe what the Bible says, even in times when we don't fully understand it. Does it sound ludicrous that some 2 million Jews walked across the floor of the Red Sea on dry ground that was dried by a strong east wind? Yes it does. Do I believe it happened? Yes I do. Why? Because the God who provided me with salvation through the miracle of Jesus' resurrection, is the same God who tells me in His Word that 2 million Jews crossed the Red Sea on dry ground.

I hope this brief look at "Why does the Bible record scientifically impossible events as factual?" will help strengthen your faith in God the next time you begin to wonder about the reality of God's miracles. As always, I'm open to comments and questions, either here on the blog or via Social Media. If this question brings to mind another difficult question about faith, then by all means ask it.


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Monday, May 16, 2016

Difficult Questions for Christians Series - Part 1

Google search "Difficult Questions Christians Can't Answer" and you get 71,300,000 results. Needless to say there are many questions out there that skeptics and even Christians have about the Christian faith. Does that mean they can't be answered? No, it doesn't. Does it mean the skeptic, and possibly the Christian, will like the answer? No, it doesn't. With so many difficult questions where would someone start to try and get some answers? Over the next 5 weeks I'll attempt to answer 5 of the thousands of difficult questions posed by skeptics and Christians alike. Remember a few things though as you read. 1. This is a short answer to a difficult question that has probably plagued the human heart for thousands of years. 2. God's Word is the ultimate authority with answers, not a fallible pastor. 3. The Bible doesn't give us the answers to every question we have. It tells us what we need to know, not necessarily what we want to know. With that being said, let's jump into our first question in the series.

Why doesn't prayer work, when the Bible promises that it will?

I don't know the context of the question being asked, but we can assume that someone prayed, asked God to do something, and God didn't answer the prayer in the way the person asked for it to be answered. This person would probably claim that John 14:14 ("You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.") says their prayer must be answered. There are a few ways to answer this question that help lead us to an overall answer.

Prayer isn't a magic spell that gives us everything we want.
I could pray right now "God, I want to fly like Superman. I ask this in the name of Jesus. Amen." Does that mean I will fly like Superman? For many reasons the answer is no. We can ask for anything in Jesus' name but that doesn't mean God will necessarily grant it. Scriptures like 1 John 5:14-15 clarify Jesus remarks so that we better know how to pray. Those verses say, "This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. 15 And if we know that he hears us — whatever we ask — we know that we have what we asked of him." We have to pray according to God's will when seeking an answer. Jesus showed us in the Garden of Gethsemane that it is okay to tell God what our will is but that we must submit to His will (Matthew 26:36-44). The Christian faith is about submitting to God's will for our life rather than living according to our own will and desires. Why wouldn't the answers to our prayers be subject to the same expectations?

Answered prayers are designed to bring glory to God.
When you look at the context of John 14:14 mentioned above, we see that Jesus is telling us that our answered prayers are designed to bring glory to God. Verse 13 says, "And I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the Father." God answers all prayers. Even when we don't understand the answer, God is still answering our prayers. As a youth pastor I used to tell my Youth, "God answers all prayers. He answers them with Yes, No, and sometimes Wait." God's answer to our prayers, regardless of what the answer is, seeks to bring glory to God. Because His ways are higher than our ways (Isaiah 55:8-9) we may not understand or agree with His answers, but His answers to our prayers bring Him glory and seek to fulfill His will.

God is still answering prayers even when His answer is "No".
In the movie Bruce Almighty, we get a glimpse of what it would be like if everyone received a "Yes" to every prayer they prayed. Chaos ensues and the lottery winners each get about a $1.50. The movie gives us great insight into what happens when we get everything we want. Like a loving parent, God has to sometimes tell us "No." When He does, it's not that He doesn't love us. It's not that He doesn't want the best for us. It's because answering "Yes" would go against what He has planned for us. Why doesn't God heal the person dying of cancer when we desperately ask in Jesus' name? I don't know. But He does know and part of living a life of faith means trusting God even when we can't understand why He's told us "No."

I hope this brief look at "Why doesn't prayer work, when the Bible promises that it will?" will help strengthen your faith in God the next time you have a difficult prayer to lift up to God. As always, I'm open to comments and questions, either here on the blog or via Social Media. If this question brings to mind another difficult question about faith, then by all means ask it.


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Monday, May 9, 2016

The beauty of a weed

When I was a kid I grew up in the country. We had acres and acres of hay fields, pastures, and woods to play in. One day, as my mom recounts, I picked a handful of "flowers" in the hay field behind our house. I came and gave them to my mom. Every mom needs flowers from their kids and I guess I thought my mom would love the blue "flowers" I found in the field. Now every Mother's Day I go into our hay field and I pick a small bouquet of these flowers for my mom and for my wife. The irony of it is these beautiful blue flowers are nothing more than a weed in our hay field. Yes, you can call them a wildflower if you want (they're actually called Ragged Robin), but for all intents and purposes on the farm, they're a weed. A weed, plain and simple. There is no real nutritional value to them and they keep good hay from growing where they take over. But try to tell that to a small kid picking flowers for his mother and it won't matter. Why? Because there is beauty in that weed.

The beauty of a weed like the Ragged Robin helps us see the beauty in God's creation. I'm not talking about mountain vistas or endless ocean horizons. What I'm referring to is what God has done in mankind. What we would call useless, God calls useful. What man calls ugly, God calls beautiful. There are plenty of people out there that look at their life and see something useless. They see something ugly. What God sees is completely different. Remember what God said in Genesis 1:31, "God saw all that he had made, and it was very good." That includes you and I because we were created by God. God doesn't see us as the world sees us. God doesn't even see us as we see ourselves. What God sees is something good. He sees something useful. He sees something of beauty. He sees someone He loves.

Here's a dose of encouragement to wrap up today's post. The next time you're struggling with the way others view you or even the way you view yourself, remember how God sees you. He doesn't see a weed. He sees a beautiful flower He's watching bloom. When you see yourself from His perspective it will change the way you see your self.


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Sunday, May 1, 2016

Hmmm...

My wife and I have an interesting little game we like to play. If we're together as a family, watching TV or riding in the car, one of us will make a flirtatious "Hmmm..." sound at the other. The other will respond with the same sound. We will do it back and forth until one of our boys notices. Then they will try their best to interrupt what they see to be mom and dad flirting with each other. But how they interrupt is the amusing part to me and Misty. They will start acting like little mockingbirds making exaggerated "Hmmm..." sounds. When I say exaggerated, I mean Cooper sounds like he's choking on something. Misty and I get a kick out of it because the boys always make us laugh with their "interruptions."

Recently after one of these times playing the "Hmmm..." game, I started to think a little more deeply about what was happening to our kids when we played this game. One thing that is obvious is that our kids are seeing mom and dad "flirting" with each other. As grossed out as they are at the sight of us kissing, what all of this does for them in the long run is far more beneficial than they realize. What it shows them is an example of how they are to treat their future spouses and how they should expect to be treated by those future spouses. What they see is a healthy marriage relationship and hopefully one they will want to imitate. Have our boys seen arguments between Misty and I? Sure. Have we tried to show them how to resolve arguments in a healthy way (Ephesians 4:26-27)? Definitely. But they definitely see much more of the mutual respect and love (Ephesians 5:22-33) that is commanded in the Bible. The other thing I thought about was the fact that our boys were mocking or imitating us. Regardless of what a couple shows outside of the house, their children see it all. They see the good, the bad, and the ugly. And what they see is what they will imitate in their own marriages. If they see dad being abusive or condescending, then they will either act that way towards their wife or allow their husband to treat them that way. If they see mom being non-committal towards dad, home, or family responsibilities, then they will expect the same from their wife or will treat their husbands the same way. When our boys grow up, I hope they copy our actions when it comes to "flirting" with their spouses. I hope they want to continue to date their spouses. Most importantly I want them to treat their spouses with respect and love because they are commanded to do so in the Scriptures and they saw their own parents trying to live that out in their marriage.

I usually try to end my posts with some sort of encouragement and here's today's dose of encouragement. I realize that no one has lived out a perfect marriage in front of their children, myself and Misty included. But what you can do is make a fresh start today. You can start working towards setting an example for your kids that you are proud for them to follow. And what better example to set than one where your kids can tell a noticeable difference between the old way of doing things and the new. Then you can share with them how God is the one who changed you and your marriage.


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